10
My life is consumed by anguish and my years by groaning; my strength fails because of my affliction,[a]and my bones grow weak.
11
Because of all my enemies, I am the utter contempt of my neighbors and an object of dread to my closest friends— those who see me on the street flee from me.
12
I am forgotten as though I were dead; I have become like broken pottery.
13
For I hear many whispering, “Terror on every side!” They conspire against me and plot to take my life.
14
But I trust in you, LORD; I say, “You are my God.”
15
My times are in your hands; deliver me from the hands of my enemies, from those who pursue me.
16
Let your face shine on your servant; save me in your unfailing love.
17
Let me not be put to shame, LORD, for I have cried out to you; but let the wicked be put to shame and be silent in the realm of the dead.
To the chief Musician, a Psalm of David. This psalm, according to Arama, was composed by David when in Keilah; but, according to Kimchi and others, when the Ziphites proposed to deliver him up into the hands of Saul; and who, upon their solicitations, came down and surrounded him with his army, from whom in haste he made his escape, and to which he is thought to refer in Psalm 31:22. Theodoret supposes it was written by David when he fled from Absalom, and that it has some respect in it to his sin against Uriah, in that verse.