In Psalms, chapter sixty-nine, verses one through four, the expression of the oppressive sufferings of a righteous person also captures the feelings of the Savior as He underwent persecution from the ungodly and experienced the agony of the cross. Similarly, any righteous believer who undergoes great trouble and sees no way out may cry to God, confident that as God eventually delivers Christ from all His suffering, He will save all His children at His own appointed time.
The theme verses from The Prayer of Deliverance section describe the godly who must persevere under these conditions of trouble from the ungodly or circumstances beyond their control. During these moments, the pressure for relief will cause believers to feel overwhelmed until they cannot find any answer around them but only go through it. First Corinthians ten, verse three, “There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.” The people of God will undergo different things in this ungodly world. For believers, there are no ways of choosing what situations or challenges we face, only to go through them with the help of God as they come.
Save Me, oh God, is the theme title. The trials and tests of life seem impossible to overcome for the believer who is determined to trust in God. “For with God, nothing shall be impossible,” as in Luke one, verse thirty-seven. The cry of one asking God to save them is a compassionate call, looking for the Master of Creation to intervene and save them from the potential danger of being defeated by the enemy.