Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done this
evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, and be
clear when thou judgest (Ps. 51:4).
It is the opinion of some that he here adverts to the
circumstance of his sin, although it was committed against man, being concealed
from every eye but that of God. None was aware of the double wrong which he had
inflicted upon Uriah, nor of the wanton manner in which he had exposed his army
to danger; and his crime being thus unknown to men, might be said to have been
committed exclusively against God. According to others, David here intimates,
that however deeply he was conscious of having injured men, he was chiefly
distressed for having violated the law of God.
But I conceive his meaning to be, that though all the world
should pardon him, he felt that God was the Judge with whom he had to do, that
conscience hailed him to his bar, and that the voice of man could administer no
relief to him, however much he might be disposed to forgive, or to excuse, or
to flatter. His eyes and his whole soul were directed to God, regardless of
what man might think or say concerning him.
To one who is thus overwhelmed with a sense of the
dreadfulness of being obnoxious to the sentence of God, there needs no other
accuser. God is to him instead of a thousand. There is every reason to believe
that David, in order to prevent his mind from being soothed into a false peace
by the flatteries of his court, realised the judgment of God upon his offense,
and felt that this was in itself an intolerable burden, even supposing that he
should escape all trouble from the hands of his fellow-creatures. This will be
the exercise of every true penitent. (Commentaries)
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