What does Psalm 108:10 mean?
What is the meaning of Psalm 108:10?

Who will bring me to the fortified city?

“Who will bring me into the fortified city?” (Psalm 108:10a)

• David recognizes that the next stage of victory requires entrance into an apparently impenetrable stronghold. Fortified cities were designed to defy human assault; thus he immediately looks beyond human ability and asks who can accomplish what no army can guarantee (cf. 2 Samuel 5:6–10; Psalm 20:7–8).

• By phrasing the question this way, he confesses dependence on God alone, the same One who “subdues peoples under us” (Psalm 47:3) and “teaches my hands to war” (Psalm 144:1).

• The fortified city represents any obstacle that stands between God’s people and the fulfillment of His promises. David’s confidence is not in siege engines but in the Lord who “opens doors no one can shut” (Isaiah 22:22; Revelation 3:8).

• For believers today, the verse calls us to acknowledge that spiritual strongholds—sin patterns, cultural opposition, personal weaknesses—fall only when God leads the charge (2 Corinthians 10:3–4).


Who will lead me to Edom?

“Who will lead me to Edom?” (Psalm 108:10b)

• Edom, descended from Esau, was a long-standing adversary of Israel (Genesis 25:23; Numbers 20:14–21). God had promised eventual victory over Edom (Obadiah 1:18), yet its mountainous terrain and fortified cities made conquest daunting.

• David’s question underlines that even a divinely promised triumph still demands God’s ongoing guidance. Past victories do not guarantee present success apart from Him (Joshua 7:2–13).

• The king trusts the Lord to “tread down our foes” (Psalm 108:13), echoing earlier assurances: “Moab is My washbasin; on Edom I cast My sandal” (Psalm 60:8).

• Edom thus pictures every arena where God’s people confront entrenched opposition. The verse invites believers to keep relying on the Lord to “lead us in triumph in Christ” (2 Corinthians 2:14) and to remember that He alone grants dominion over the enemy (Romans 16:20).


summary

Psalm 108:10 portrays David asking who can secure entry into an impregnable city and who can guide him through hostile Edom. The answer, implied in the surrounding verses, is God Himself. The passage affirms that victories promised in Scripture are achieved not by human ingenuity but by unwavering dependence on the Lord who overcomes every fortress and foe.

Why is Edom referred to as a place to 'cast My shoe' in Psalm 108:9?
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