What is the meaning of Psalm 7:15? He has dug a hole • The verse opens with intentional action. The wicked person is not stumbling into sin; he is actively “digging,” shaping circumstances to trap someone else (Psalm 57:6; Proverbs 26:27). • Scripture consistently presents evil as deliberate craftsmanship—schemes laid out in advance (Micah 2:1). • By describing sin as excavation, the psalm reminds us that every moral choice leaves a mark on the landscape of life, carving either righteous paths or destructive pits. and hollowed it out • The image intensifies: after digging, he “hollowed it out,” working the edges, deepening the snare. Sin rarely stops at first impulse; it grows through sustained effort (James 1:15). • This speaks to premeditation—evil refined, planned, perfected (Psalm 10:2). • The Bible warns that persistent plotting hardens the heart (Hebrews 3:13) and blinds the sinner to looming consequences. he has fallen into a pit • Suddenly the hunter becomes the victim. Divine justice overturns his plan (Psalm 9:15; Esther 7:10). • God’s sovereignty ensures that no scheme escapes His notice (Proverbs 21:30). • The fall is more than poetic irony; it is a real, often visible outcome—evil inevitably rebounds on the perpetrator (Job 18:7-8). of his own making • The final phrase nails home responsibility: the pit is “his own.” No blaming others, no circumstantial excuses. • Scripture’s principle of sowing and reaping stands firm (Galatians 6:7; Job 4:8). • This truth offers comfort to the righteous—God balances the scales—and warning to the wicked: every deed returns with interest (Proverbs 11:5-6). summary Psalm 7:15 paints a vivid picture of self-destructive sin. The wicked invest time and energy crafting traps, yet God turns their work back on them. What begins as calculated harm ends in personal ruin, demonstrating the unbreakable law of moral retribution woven throughout Scripture. |