“When I Am Afraid,
I Put My Trust in You”
Martin Luther once wrote: “Where do you find more miserable, more wretched, more depressing words than in the Psalms of lamentation? There you see into the heart of all the saints as into death, even as into hell. How sad and dark it is there in every wretched corner of the wrath of God.” Psalm 56 belongs to that tradition of lament, opening the raw places of the human heart before God.
David composed this psalm “when the Philistines had seized him in Gath” (see the superscription). The setting takes us back to 1 Samuel 21:10–15, when David fled from King Saul and sought refuge in Philistine territory. Gath was the hometown of Goliath, the very giant David had slain years before. Seeking safety among the enemies of Israel was both desperate and dangerous—his reputation preceded him, and the Philistines quickly recognized him as the famous warrior.
In Gath, David was vulnerable, utterly out of his element. He pretended to be insane to escape (1 Samuel 21:13), a humiliating yet necessary act of survival. This psalm captures that tension: the fear of captivity, the awareness of being surrounded by enemies, and the humiliation of dependence on God alone when every human resource failed.
Yet what shines through the psalm is not despair but trust and praise. David names his fear honestly—“When I am afraid”—but then immediately declares his confidence: “I will trust in You” (v.3). His tears, his wanderings, and his dangers are not ignored by God; they are remembered and recorded (v.8). The psalm is both a cry for mercy and a bold affirmation that “God is for me” (v.9). In other words, this is not just a prayer from a moment of weakness, but a testimony forged in the furnace of danger: faith thrives not after fear has vanished but right in the heart of it.
Psalm 56 shows us that lament and trust are not opposites but companions: the darker the valley, the brighter faith shines.
Opening Prayer
Lord, when we are afraid, help us to put our trust in You. Calm our restless hearts, steady our faltering wills, and remind us that You see every tear we cry. Fill this time with Your life-giving light and teach us to walk before You with faith and praise. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Verses 1–2 – Plea for Mercy
“O God, have mercy on me, for people are hounding me. My foes attack me all day long. I am constantly hounded by those who slander me, and many are boldly attacking me.”
Psalms 56:1-2
Verses 1–2 open with David’s desperate cry: “Be merciful unto me, O God.” His first instinct under pressure is not to devise a plan of escape but to throw himself on the mercy of God. Surrounded by enemies who seem eager to devour him, David likens their threat to being swallowed alive. Spurgeon paints this vividly: humanity is like a beast with its mouth wide open, ready to consume him, but the mercy of God stands like a protecting wall. Matthew Henry observes that when men were merciless, David fled to the only refuge where mercy was certain—God Himself. This sets the tone for the psalm: not denial of danger, but dependence on divine compassion.
Patrick Miller draws attention to the word “daily.” Twice David repeats it: “he fighting daily oppresseth me… mine enemies would daily swallow me up.” The relentlessness of hostility is real—trouble hounds him every day. Yet Miller points out that the psalm itself becomes David’s daily counterpoint: prayer is his answer to oppression, keeping pace with his enemies’ pursuit. Psalm 57:1 echoes this same cry for refuge, while Psalm 34:19 assures that though the righteous may face many troubles, the Lord delivers them from them all. Thus these opening verses frame the psalm not as a single outburst of fear, but as a rhythm of life—opposition comes daily, but so does God’s mercy.
Verse 3 – Trust in Fear
“But when I am afraid, I will put my trust in you.”
Psalms 56:3
Verse 3 stands as the heart of Psalm 56: “When I am afraid, I will put my trust in you.” David does not deny his fear—he names it honestly. Yet the moment fear arises, trust is summoned to meet it. Trust is not a delayed reaction once fear has passed, but an immediate choice in the very midst of trembling. Donald Coggan reminds us that “faith is not the absence of fear, but the choice to hand over fear into God’s keeping.” Alexander Maclaren adds a crucial insight: fear and faith are not opposites. Rather, faith is born precisely within fear’s grip, like a candle lit in the darkness. This verse is not about eliminating dread, but about redirecting it—lifting trembling hands to the One who holds them secure.
C. S. Lewis points us back to the central truth of the Christian life: the fear of God is the only fear that rightly orders our hearts. Every other fear—poverty, illness, loss, rejection—is either misplaced or magnified by our imagination. He reminds us that God gives strength for what actually happens, not for the countless “what-ifs” that crowd our minds. Much of our anxiety comes not from reality but from rehearsing sufferings that may never come. Lewis’s wisdom dovetails with David’s prayer: fear is not banished by ignoring it, but by setting it in proper order under the fear of God, where trust can flourish.
At the same time, this verse acknowledges the conflict of emotions and spirit that believers experience. Jesus Himself said, “The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak” (Matthew 26:41). That weakness often shows up in fear, hesitation, or wavering trust. Paul describes this same battle in Romans 7: “I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out… For I do not do the good I want to do, but the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing” (vv.18–19). The war between flesh and spirit is real, and David’s prayer in Psalm 56 becomes a model for us: even when fear wells up from the weakness of flesh, faith responds by turning immediately to God. To declare trust while afraid is not hypocrisy—it is discipleship. It is letting the Spirit’s willingness carry us when our flesh falters.
This verse also provokes deep questions: What can man do to me? (cf. Psalm 56:4). Even if people slander, scheme, or threaten the body, can they ultimately touch the soul? Jesus echoes this in Matthew 10:28: “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.” Isaiah 12:2 and John 14:1 reinforce the same confidence: “I will trust and not be afraid… Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God; believe also in me.” The real question becomes: will we allow human threats to loom larger than divine promises? Or will we, like David, learn to meet fear with trust, letting faith answer the trembling heart with the stronger voice of the Spirit?
Verses 4–5 – Confidence in God’s Word
“I praise God for what he has promised. I trust in God, so why should I be afraid? What can mere mortals do to me? They are always twisting what I say; they spend their days plotting to harm me.”
Psalms 56:4-5
Here, David anchors his trust in the Word of God. Matthew Henry points out that praising God’s Word is itself an act of faith—by rehearsing God’s promises, the soul steadies itself against trembling. David is not praising his own courage or circumstances, but the unshakable Word that secures his hope. Spurgeon captures this beautifully: “God’s promises are the warriors’ song and the sufferers’ balm.” When the battle rages outside and turmoil stirs within, the melody of God’s promises becomes both shield and comfort.
Patrick Miller draws attention to the realism in these verses: the enemy’s plots are daily, relentless, and deceitful—“they twist my words; all their thoughts are against me for evil.” Yet David sees their limits. They are but “flesh,” bound by mortality and unable to ultimately thwart God’s purposes. Romans 8:31 echoes this defiant confidence: “If God is for us, who can be against us?” Likewise, Hebrews 13:6 declares: “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can mere mortals do to me?” The contrast is striking: human schemes may distort, plot, and threaten, but God’s Word endures beyond their lies. Thus, David sings not only of survival, but of a trust so firm that it transforms daily assaults into opportunities to magnify the promises of God.
Verses 6–7 – Cry for Justice
“They come together to spy on me— watching my every step, eager to kill me. Don’t let them get away with their wickedness; in your anger, O God, bring them down.”
Psalms 56:6-7
Verses 6–7 intensify the picture of danger: “They gather themselves together, they hide themselves, they mark my steps, when they wait for my soul.” David describes enemies who plot in secret, watching his every move, waiting to pounce. Their attacks are not the single, sudden shot of a rifle, but the relentless barking and bullying of dogs as they circle their prey—noisy, intimidating, and unrelenting. David feels hounded, cornered, and stalked without mercy. This image of being surrounded by dogs appears repeatedly in the psalms. In Psalm 59:6, David says of his foes: “They come out at night, snarling like vicious dogs as they prowl the streets.” Most striking is Psalm 22:16: “My enemies surround me like a pack of dogs; an evil gang closes in on me. They have pierced my hands and feet.” This cry, quoted in the Gospels, is fulfilled in Jesus’ suffering, where the snarling hostility of men pressed upon Him at the cross. The picture of David hounded by enemies finds its ultimate expression in Christ surrounded by mockers and executioners.
Matthew Henry reminds us that while the conspiracies of the wicked may be hidden from human eyes, they are never hidden from God. Spurgeon puts it starkly: “Men lurk in the dark, but God sees clearly; the hunted soul prays for divine judgment.” These verses remind us that no scheme is beyond God’s notice, and no snare can finally succeed when the Lord is our keeper (cf. Psalm 121:7–8). David’s plea rises: “Shall they escape by iniquity? In thine anger cast down the people, O God.” Alexander Maclaren observes that this is not thirst for revenge, but a yearning for God’s justice to prevail. Revelation 6:10 echoes this same cry from the martyrs: “How long, O Sovereign Lord, holy and true, until you judge the people of the world for what they have done to us?” Just as David entrusted himself to God’s righteous judgment, so too did Christ, who “when he was reviled, he did not revile in return… but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly” (1 Peter 2:23).
Verse 8 – God’s Care for Tears
“You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.”
Psalms 56:8
David confesses that every restless step, every sleepless night, and every anxious wandering is carefully noted by God. Nothing in his distress is overlooked or forgotten. Matthew Henry beautifully reminds us that “our sorrows are registered in heaven; God records every sigh of His children.” Spurgeon adds a moving picture: “God’s bottle is never full till the last tear of the last saint is wiped away forever.” Each tear is seen, collected, and valued by the Lord who treasures His people’s pain.
This verse reminds us that God cares! Jesus assured us that even the very hairs on our heads are numbered (Matthew 10:30). Though we often vacillate between faith and fear, God’s intimate knowledge of us means that when discouragement sets in and it feels like no one understands, He understands every problem and watches every tear. Eugene Peterson calls this verse a portrait of “intimacy of care,” showing that nothing we endure is wasted. He also invites us to pause and ponder: How often do you find yourself wishing for revenge against your enemies? What do you find encouraging about the thought that God keeps track of your tears and aches? These questions move us from self-absorbed reactions toward the deeper assurance that God sees, remembers, and redeems.
Donald Coggan emphasizes that our grief carries eternal weight in God’s sight. Walter Brueggemann adds a profound dimension: God is the great Rememberer who treasures pain so that the psalmist is free to move beyond that pain. In other words, because God holds our sorrow, we are released from being trapped in it. The psalmist envisions a heavenly book where sorrows are written (cf. Psalm 139:16), dignifying human pain by placing it under God’s keeping. Revelation 7:17 carries this promise to its fulfillment: “God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.”
This speaks deeply to the life of a wanderer. David’s own wanderings were both physical and spiritual—fleeing from enemies, restless in heart, never sure where the next step might lead. So too, many of us walk through seasons of displacement, confusion, or aimlessness. Yet every mile of the journey is traced by God’s hand, every sigh remembered, every tear kept. And in Christ, even the road of sorrow bends toward hope: “Yet what we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will reveal to us later” (Romans 8:18, NLT).
Samuel Longfellow captured this same comfort in verse:
“Thy calmness bends serene above, my restlessness to still;
around me flows Thy quickening life, to nerve my faltering will:
Thy presence fills my solitude;
Thy providence turns all to good.”
His words echo the psalmist’s assurance that God not only notices our tears but also bends down in serenity to quiet our inner storms. Where David speaks of wanderings and tears kept in God’s book, Longfellow pictures divine calm descending upon human restlessness, and God’s life flowing into our weakness to steady faltering steps. The image moves from personal solitude to providence: even what feels chaotic or wasted is turned to good by God’s faithful care. Together, the psalm, the poem, and the theologians testify that God meets us in fear, solitude, and sorrow—not only recording our tears but transforming them with His calming presence and sovereign love.
Verses 9–11 – Assurance of God’s Help
“My enemies will retreat when I call to you for help. This I know: God is on my side! I praise God for what he has promised; yes, I praise the Lord for what he has promised. I trust in God, so why should I be afraid? What can mere mortals do to me?”
Psalms 56:9-11
Verses 9–11 mark a triumphant shift from lament to confidence: “When I cry unto thee, then shall mine enemies turn back: this I know; for God is for me.” Here David declares with certainty that his cry to God will not go unheard. Matthew Henry stresses how he finds courage in rehearsing this truth—God is for him. This assurance changes the tone of the psalm: from hunted and harassed, David now speaks as one upheld and protected. Paul echoes this in Romans 8:31: “If God is for us, who can be against us?” Spurgeon seizes on this with boldness: “If God be for me, it matters little who is against me.” The reality of God’s presence reframes human opposition—not denying its pain, but stripping it of ultimate power.
Walter Brueggemann adds that “the reference to the Most High transforms fear into fearlessness.” Earlier David admitted, “When I am afraid, I will trust in you” (v.3). Now, after lifting his eyes to the Most High, he is able to say, “I will not be afraid. What can mere mortals do to me?” (v.11). This shows the psalm’s progression: from fear to trust, from trust to assurance, and from assurance to fearlessness. It is not bravado but a reorientation of perspective. When the psalmist looks at his enemies, they seem overwhelming; when he looks at God, those same enemies shrink into powerlessness. Faith is forged in that upward gaze—confidence born from remembering who God is.
The repetition in verses 10–11—“In God will I praise his word: in the LORD will I praise his word. In God have I put my trust…”—is what Alexander Maclaren calls “hammer strokes driving assurance deep.” Each phrase strikes the heart with fresh certainty, nailing faith into place. Eugene Peterson paraphrases this as the psalmist singing the promises back to God until trust overcomes fear. Patrick Miller highlights the progression from petition to proclamation—what began as a desperate plea now becomes confident testimony. The earlier question, “What can flesh do to me?” is finally answered in Hebrews 13:6: “The Lord is my helper, so I will have no fear. What can mere people do to me?”
Thus, in these verses we see David’s transformation: trust in God leading to assurance, assurance giving birth to confidence, and confidence rising into fearless praise of the Most High.
Verses 12–13 – Vows and Deliverance
“I will fulfill my vows to you, O God, and will offer a sacrifice of thanks for your help. For you have rescued me from death; you have kept my feet from slipping. So now I can walk in your presence, O God, in your life-giving light.”
Psalms 56:12-13
Verses 12–13 bring Psalm 56 to a beautiful close, turning fear and petition into gratitude and resolve. For thou hast delivered my soul from death: wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling, that I may walk before God in the light of the living?” David acknowledges that he is bound by vows of praise. In Hebrew thought, a vow was not only a promise made in desperation but a sacred obligation to give thanks when God delivered. Matthew Henry observes that past deliverances fuel present confidence—David remembers that God has already saved his life from death, and therefore trusts He will continue to keep his steps steady.
Spurgeon comments, “Gratitude is the soul’s debt; praise is the interest we pay.” Deliverance demands a response, and for David that response is worship. Eugene Peterson captures the imagery of “walking in the light of the living” as living openly and joyfully in God’s presence—no longer shadowed by fear, but illumined by grace. Donald Coggan notes that worship here is both response and resolve: thanksgiving for what God has done, and commitment to live faithfully in the light of His deliverance. Psalm 116:8–9 mirrors this same thought—“For you, Lord, have delivered me from death… that I may walk before the Lord in the land of the living.” And Jesus Himself fulfills it in John 8:12: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” Thus the psalm ends where all prayers should lead: not only relief from danger, but a renewed life of praise, lived in the radiant presence of God.
Living Faith in the Midst of Fear
Psalm 56 reminds us that faith is not the absence of fear, but the decision to trust God right in the middle of trembling. David’s enemies pressed him on every side, yet he learned to answer fear with confidence: “When I am afraid, I will trust in You.” His strength did not come from his circumstances but from God’s Word—promises rehearsed, praised, and believed until they steadied his heart. Lament and trust walk hand in hand; the darker the valley, the brighter faith shines.
The psalm also gives us one of the most tender assurances in all of Scripture: God collects our tears and records our sorrows. None of our suffering is wasted or unnoticed; every sigh has eternal weight before Him. Walter Brueggemann reminds us that God is the great Rememberer, who treasures pain so that His people are free to move beyond it. And with that assurance comes bold confidence: “God is for me.” If the Lord is our helper, what can mere mortals do? (Hebrews 13:6). What begins in fear moves through trust into assurance, and assurance blossoms into fearlessness.
Yet beneath this confidence runs a deeper foundation: God is love. As John writes, “We know how much God loves us, and we have put our trust in his love. God is love, and all who live in love live in God, and God lives in them” (1 John 4:16, NLT). To trust God is to open ourselves to His love—to let Him gather our tears, calm our restlessness, and wipe away our grief. That is the promise of Psalm 56 carried forward to Revelation 7:17: “God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.” In His presence, sorrow is not merely remembered but redeemed, transformed into the joy of basking in His unfailing love.
Finally, deliverance calls forth gratitude. David resolves not just to survive, but to praise—to walk before God “in the light of the living.” Psalm 56 leaves us with five enduring themes: faith amid fear, strength from God’s Word, God’s remembrance of our tears, confidence in His presence, and gratitude that leads to worship. Together they remind us that the life of trust is not fragile hope but resilient praise—rooted in love, forged in trials, and crowned with thanksgiving.
Closing Prayer
Gracious Father,
We come before You like David, confessing both our fears and our faith. You see our trembling hearts and our weary steps. Yet we hold to the truth: “But when I am afraid, I will put my trust in you” (Psalm 56:3, NLT). Teach us not to wait until fear disappears, but to lean on You right in the midst of it.
Thank You for the power of Your Word. “I praise God for what he has promised; I trust in God, so why should I be afraid? What can mere mortals do to me?” (Psalm 56:4, NLT). Your promises are our song and shield. Remind us daily that “If God is for us, who can ever be against us?” (Romans 8:31, NLT).
Lord, You keep track of all our sorrows. “You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book” (Psalm 56:8, NLT). What comfort to know that every restless night, every sigh, every tear is precious to You. Jesus told us, “The very hairs on your head are all numbered” (Matthew 10:30, NLT). Nothing escapes Your notice, and nothing we suffer is wasted. We look forward to the day when “God will wipe every tear from their eyes” (Revelation 7:17, NLT). Until then, quiet our restlessness and steady our faltering wills.
We confess the conflict inside us. Jesus said, “The spirit is willing, but the body is weak” (Matthew 26:41, NLT). Paul admitted, “I want to do what is right, but I don’t do it. Instead, I do what I hate” (Romans 7:15, NLT). Yet even here, we trust You. To reach for You while afraid is not failure but faith. Strengthen us by Your Spirit when our flesh falters.
And now we give You thanks. “For you have rescued me from death; you have kept my feet from slipping. So now I can walk in your presence, O God, in your life-giving light” (Psalm 56:13, NLT). Gratitude is our debt; praise is the offering we gladly bring. May our lives overflow with thanksgiving as we walk in Your light.
We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ, the Light of the world (John 8:12, NLT), who turns our fear into trust, our mourning into joy, our tears into praise, our darkness into light.
Amen.