Psalms 19:7
The law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple.
Original Language Analysis
Cross References
Historical Context
This verse inaugurates what would become Psalm 119's theme: passionate love for God's word. The celebration of Torah was central to Israel's identity. Moses commanded: "Ye shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it" (Deuteronomy 4:2). The Shema declared: "These words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart" (Deuteronomy 6:6). God's word was not peripheral but central to covenant life.
The "law" (torah) in David's time would have included the Pentateuch—Genesis through Deuteronomy. Later generations added the prophets and writings. Yet the principle remained constant: God's revealed word possesses unique authority and power to transform. Unlike human philosophies that change with cultural fashion, God's word remains "sure"—generation after generation proves its reliability.
The contrast between general and special revelation in Psalm 19 became foundational for Christian theology. Creation reveals God's existence, power, and divinity (Romans 1:20), but Scripture reveals His character, will, and plan of salvation. Creation leaves humanity without excuse, but Scripture provides the knowledge necessary for salvation. Both are divine communications, but they serve different purposes.
Questions for Reflection
- How does Scripture's 'perfection' differ from human wisdom or philosophy?
- What does it mean for God's word to 'convert' or 'restore' the soul?
- Why is God's 'testimony' described as 'sure' or 'trustworthy,' and what difference does this make?
- How does Scripture make 'wise the simple'—what kind of wisdom does it impart?
Analysis & Commentary
The law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple. This verse begins the psalm's second movement, shifting from general revelation (creation) to special revelation (Scripture). While the heavens declare God's glory, His word reveals His will. The following verses (7-9) present six statements about Scripture using six different terms, six divine attributes, and six transformative effects—a comprehensive celebration of God's revealed word.
"The law of the LORD" (torat Yahweh, תּוֹרַת יְהוָה) uses torah, meaning instruction, teaching, or law. This encompasses not merely legal code but God's entire revealed will—His guidance for life. The divine name Yahweh (LORD) emphasizes covenant relationship: this is instruction from Israel's covenant God, not abstract philosophy.
"Is perfect" (temimah, תְּמִימָה) means complete, whole, without defect. Tamim describes sacrificial animals without blemish, persons of integrity (Noah, Job, Abraham), and God Himself. Scripture lacks nothing necessary and contains nothing harmful. It is comprehensive, reliable, and flawless—contrasting with human wisdom that is always incomplete and often flawed.
"Converting the soul" (meshivat naphesh, מְשִׁיבַת נָפֶשׁ) describes Scripture's effect. Shuv means to turn, return, restore. The nephesh (soul, life, whole person) is turned back from sin, restored from brokenness, revived from spiritual death. This is conversion in the fullest sense—not merely behavioral modification but fundamental reorientation of the entire person toward God.
"The testimony of the LORD is sure" (edut Yahweh ne'emanah, עֵדוּת יְהוָה נֶאֱמָנָה) uses edut (testimony, witness). God's word testifies to reality; it bears witness to truth. Ne'eman (sure, faithful, trustworthy) means absolutely reliable—God's testimony never misleads or fails. "Making wise the simple" (machkimat peti, מַחְכִּימַת פֶּתִי) shows another effect. The peti (simple, naive, gullible) lacks experience and discernment. God's word imparts chokmah (wisdom)—not mere knowledge but skillful living, moral insight, and understanding of reality.