Verse explainer
Not "enjoy God and He'll hand you whatever you want" — delighting in God reshapes your desires, so what your heart wants becomes Him.
Delight thyself also in the LORD; and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart.
BSBDelight yourself in the LORD, and He will give you the desires of your heart.
The plain meaning
Psalm 37 counsels the believer not to envy the prosperous wicked but to trust and rest in the LORD (vv. 1-7). In that frame, v. 4 isn't a wish-granting formula. To "delight in the LORD" is to make Him your chief joy — and the promise works two ways at once: God satisfies the heart whose deepest desire is now Himself, and He reshapes lesser desires toward what is good. The gift isn't separate from God; increasingly, He is the desire. It's about reordered wanting, not a guarantee of getting your prior wish list.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Henry holds that those who delight in God will have their desires fulfilled because their desires are conformed to His will — God gives them either the thing they wish or something far better, satisfying the heart that finds its joy in Him.
Spurgeon argues that delighting in the Lord purifies and elevates desire, so the promise is safe: the man whose heart's delight is God will not crave what is evil, and God grants the longings of a soul thus tuned to Himself.
Calvin reads it within the psalm's call to patient trust: as the godly rest and delight in God rather than fret over the wicked, He bestows what their renewed hearts truly desire, chiefly Himself and His favor.
The word behind it
"Delight thyself" — a verb meaning to be soft, pliant, to take exquisite pleasure in. It pictures the soul made tender and joyful in God, even luxuriating in Him. That delighting is the condition: a heart softened toward God is a heart whose desires are being reshaped, which is why God can safely satisfy them.
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