Psalm 37 A Psalm of David. 8,6,8,6
For evil-doers fret thou not
thyself unquietly; Nor do thou envy bear to those that work iniquity.
For, even like unto the
grass, soon be cut down shall they; And, like the green and tender herb, they
wither shall away.
Set thou thy trust upon the
Lord, and be thou doing good; And so thou in the land shalt dwell, and verily
have food.
Delight thyself in God; he'll
give thine heart's desire to thee.
Thy way to God commit, him
trust, it bring to pass shall he.
And, like unto the light, he
shall thy righteousness display; and he thy judgment shall bring forth like
noon-tide of the day.
Rest in the Lord, and
patiently wait for him: do not fret For him who, prosp'ring in his way, success
in sin doth get.
Do thou from anger cease, and
wrath see thou forsake also: Fret not thyself in any wise, that evil thou
should'st do.
For those that evil doers are
shall be cut off and fall: But those that wait upon the Lord the earth inherit
shall.
For yet a little while, and
then the wicked shall not be; His place thou shalt consider well, but it thou
shalt not see.
But by inheritance the earth
the meek ones shall possess: They also shall delight themselves in an abundant
peace.
The wicked plots against the
just, and at him whets his teeth:
The Lord shall laugh at him,
because his day he coming seeth.
The wicked have drawn out the
sword, and bent their bow, to slay The poor and needy, and to kill men of an
upright way.
But their own sword, which
they have drawn, shall enter their own heart: Their bows which they have bent
shall break, and into pieces part.
A little that a just man hath
is more and better far than is the wealth of many such as lewd and wicked are.
For sinners' arms shall
broken be; but God the just sustains.
God knows the just man's
days, and still their heritage remains.
They shall not be asham'd
when they the evil time do see; And when the days of famine are, they satisfy'd
shall be.
But wicked men, and foes of
God, as fat of lambs, decay; they shall consume, yea, into smoke they shall
consume away.
The wicked borrows, but the
same again he doth not pay; Whereas the righteous mercy shews, and gives his
own away.
For such as blessed be of him
the earth inherit shall; And they that cursed are of him shall be destroyed
all.
A good man's footsteps by the
Lord are ordered aright; and in the way wherein he walks he greatly doth
delight.
Although he fall, yet shall
he not be cast down utterly; because the Lord with his own hand upholds him mightily.
I have been young, and now am
old, yet have I never seen The just man left, nor that his seed for bread have
beggars been.
He's ever merciful, and
lends: his seed is bless'd therefore.
Depart from evil, and do
good, and dwell for evermore.
For God loves judgment, and
his saints leaves not in any case; they are kept ever: but cut off shall be the
sinner's race.
The just inherit shall the
land, and ever in it dwell:
The just man's mouth doth
wisdom speak; his tongue doth judgment tell.
In's heart the law is of his
God, his steps slide not away.
The wicked man doth watch the
just, and seeketh him to slay.
Yet him the Lord will not
forsake, nor leave him in his hands: The righteous will he not condemn, when he
in judgment stands.
Wait on the Lord, and keep
his way, and thee exalt shall he Th' earth to inherit; when cut off the wicked
thou shalt see.
I saw the wicked great in
pow'r, spread like a green bay-tree:
He pass'd, yea, was not; him
I sought, but found he could not be.
Mark thou the perfect, and
behold the man of uprightness; because that surely of this man the latter end
is peace.
But those men that
transgressors are shall be destroy'd together; the latter end of wicked men
shall be cut off for ever.
But the salvation of the
just is from the Lord above; He in the time of their distress their stay and
strength doth prove.
The Lord shall help, and them
deliver: he shall them free and save From wicked men; because in him their
confidence they have.