David
Psalm 20:5BSB·superscription

May we shout for joy at your victory and raise a banner in the name of our God. May the LORD grant all your petitions.

John Calvin Reformed

David wrote this psalm not as a royal command for his own glory, but as a teacher giving the Church a common form of prayer, that God's kingdom, which He Himself erected, might continue safe and prosperous. The occasion may have been a particular battle, but the Spirit's design was to deliver a standing prayer for all God's people.

AI summary

Commenting on Psalm 20:1-9

C.H. Spurgeon Reformed Baptist

"We will rejoice in thy salvation." In Jesus there is salvation; it is his own, and hence it is called thy salvation; but it is ours to receive and ours to rejoice in. We should fixedly resolve that come what may, we will rejoice in the saving arm of the Lord Jesus.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

Even great men who pray well must not despise the prayers of others for them; David himself desired his people's intercession. Those in power ought to prize praying people as their true strength and do nothing to forfeit their prayers, for a ruler's greatness cannot exempt him from trouble or excuse him from devotion.

AI summary

Commenting on Psalm 20:1-5