Verse explainer
This isn't a general promise to everyone — it's a personal declaration of trust by someone who has already taken shelter in God.
I will say of the LORD, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust.
BSBI will say to the LORD, "You are my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust."
The plain meaning
Psalm 91 opens by describing a person who already "dwells in the secret place of the Most High" (v. 1) — someone in an established, abiding relationship with God. Verse 2 is that person's own voice responding: a deliberate, spoken act of trust. The two images — refuge and fortress — are complementary. A refuge is a place you flee to when danger breaks out; a fortress is a fortified stronghold that holds off a siege. Both are active images, not passive ones. The psalmist isn't simply wishing for safety; he is staking his confidence on a God he already knows. The personal language matters: "my refuge," "my fortress," "my God." This is covenantal, relational speech — the kind of trust that has a history behind it, not a first hope whispered in a crisis.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Gill emphasizes that the verse is the psalmist's personal expression of faith, taking encouragement from the character of God already described in v. 1. He notes God is a refuge that never fails — one no enemy can break through — and that calling him 'my God' is covenantal language pointing to a relationship in Christ, making God a proper and always-available object of trust for temporal and spiritual needs alike.
Spurgeon observes that the psalmist speaks aloud his confidence — "I will say" — as a deliberate, voiced commitment, not a silent sentiment. Saying it matters: faith declared strengthens faith felt. The pairing of refuge and fortress covers both the panic of sudden danger and the grinding pressure of sustained assault, showing that God meets every shape of threat his people face.
Henry reads the verse as the believer's personal appropriation of God's protection — not content to speak of God in the third person, the psalmist turns the truth into a direct confession: 'He is mine.' Henry stresses that this trust is grounded not in feeling but in God's own character and covenant faithfulness, which gives the declaration its stability regardless of outward circumstances.
The word behind it
"Refuge" — from a root meaning to flee for shelter. It is not a passive hiding place but a destination you run to with intent. Gesenius notes it carries the sense of hope and confident expectation, not mere concealment. The word appears again in v. 9 ("thou hast made the LORD thy refuge"), forming a bracket around the psalm's central promise and showing that the protection described flows from this prior act of deliberate trust.
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