1
Do you indeed speak righteousness, silent ones?Do you
judge blamelessly, you sons of men?
+2
No, in your
heart you plot injustice.You
measure out the violence of your hands in the earth.
+3
The wicked go astray from the womb.They are wayward as soon as they are born, speaking lies. +
4
Their
poison is like the poison of a snake;like a deaf cobra that stops its ear,
+5
which doesn't listen to the voice of charmers,no matter how skillful the
charmer may be.
6
Break their teeth, God, in their mouth.Break out the great teeth of the young lions, The LORD. +
7
Let them vanish like water that flows away.When they draw the bow, let their
arrows be made blunt.
+8
Let them be like a
snail which melts and passes away,like the stillborn child, who has not seen the sun.
+9
Before your pots can feel the heat of the thorns,he will sweep away the green and the burning alike. +
10
The righteous shall rejoice when he sees the vengeance.He shall wash his feet in the
blood of the wicked;
+11
so that men shall say, "Most certainly there is a reward for the righteous.Most certainly there is a God who judges the earth."
Ps 58:1-11. David's critical condition in some period of the Sauline persecution probably occasioned this Psalm, in which the Psalmist teaches that the innate and actual sinfulness of men deserves, and shall receive, God's righteous vengeance, while the pious may be consoled by the evidence of His wise and holy government of men.
1. O congregation--literally, "Oh, dumb"; the word used is never translated "congregation." "Are ye dumb? ye should speak righteousness," may be the translation. In any case, the writer remonstrates with them, perhaps a council, who were assembled to try his cause, and bound to give a right decision.