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Psalm 26[a]

Prayer for the Righteous

Of David.

Lord, come to my defense,
    for I have lived a blameless life.
I have placed my trust in the Lord,
    and never have I wavered in that regard.
Test me, O Lord, and try me;
    probe my heart and my mind.

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Footnotes

  1. Psalm 26:1 This psalm is a prayer for God’s discerning mercies to spare his faithful servant from the death that overtakes the wicked. In the psalms of supplication, we often hear this protestation from those accused who call upon God to bear witness to their innocence. The prayer that we now read is perhaps that of a Levite, but certainly of a man who loves the life of the temple. He is very sure of his rectitude in the face of others’ accusations. Possibly he is also quite conscious of the faults that everyone has in his life.
    He teaches us a great certainty: it is better to throw ourselves upon the judgment of God than to let ourselves be crushed by the judgment of others. This believer, who is at ease to praise the Lord in the temple, loves a clear and decided fidelity. Who would fail to be attracted by such a desire for uprightness and sincerity before God!
    In praying this psalm, we can recall that since we share by faith and Baptism in the mystery of Christ dead and risen, our old self has been crucified with Christ so that the sinful body might be destroyed and we might cease to be enslaved by sin. Divested of our old nature and invested with the new nature of Christ who becomes all in all (see Col 3:9-11), we share in his holiness and irreproachable innocence before God, being purified from all injustice (see Rom 8:1; 1 Jn 1:9).