I am become a stranger unto my brethren, and an alien unto my mother’s children.
David here resembles the twenty-second psalm in lamenting the cruelty of his enemies, though we cannot fix which persecution occasioned it, Saul's or Absalom's. Yet the New Testament quotes it of Christ at least seven times, making clear it is prophetic of Him. David's affliction did not shake his trust in God or weaken his holy conduct; rather, his zeal for God's glory provoked the world's hatred against him.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 69:1-36
His own brothers by blood turned from Him, His disciples fled in terror, one sold Him and another cursed His name, what agony for the heart that loved them. These arrows pierced Him because those nearest Him were ashamed to own Him. Never let us treat Him as a stranger; resolve rather to be crucified with Him.
AI summary
When afflictions enter the soul itself, not merely threatening life but disquieting the mind, the spirit becomes wounded and cannot sustain. All that David sought to prop his hope upon failed him; he sank in mire without footing, overwhelmed in deep waters, this points to Christ's inward agony when He cried that His soul was exceedingly sorrowful.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 69:1-12