
Text -- Psalms 12:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 12:8
They fill all places, and go about boldly and securely.
JFB -> Psa 12:8
The wicked roam undisturbed doing evil, when vileness and vile men are exalted.
Clarke: Psa 12:8 - -- The wicked walk on every side - The land is full of them. When the vilest men are exalted; rather, As villany gains ground among the sons of Adam. S...
The wicked walk on every side - The land is full of them. When the vilest men are exalted; rather, As villany gains ground among the sons of Adam. See the Hebrew. The Vulgate has, " In circuito impii ambulant; secundum altitudinem tuam multiplicasti filios hominum ;"which is thus translated and paraphrased in my old MS.: -
Trans. In umgang wiked gos: eftir thy heenes thu has multiplied the sons of man.
Par - Us thy kepes; bot wiked gas in umgang; that es, in covatyng of erdley gudes, that turned with the whele of seven daies: in the qwilk covatys, thai ryn ay aboute; for that sett nane endyng of thaire syn: and tharfor settes God na terme of thair pyne, but sons of men that lyfs skilwisly and in ryghtwisnes, thu has multiplied, aftir thi heghnes in vertus; aftir the heghnes of thi consayll, thou hast multiplied men bath il and gude; for na man may perfitely witt in erd, qwy God makes so many men, the qwilk he wote well sal be dampned: bot it es the privete of his counsayle, so ryghtwis, that no thyng may be ryghtwiser
In this we find a number of singular exrpressions, which, while they elucidate the text, will not be uninteresting to the antiquary. Here, for instance, we see the true etymology of the words righteous and righteousness, i.e., right wise and right wiseness. For we have it above as a noun, "rightwisnes": as an adjective, "rightwis"; and as an adjective in the comparative degree, "rightwiser": and we should have had it as an adverb, ryghtwisely, had not the word "skilwisly"occurred to the author
Righteousness is right wiseness, or that which is according to true wisdom. A righteous man is one who is right wise; properly instructed in Divine wisdom, and acts according to its dictates; and among them who act rightwisely, there are some who act rightwiser than others; and nothing can be rightwiser than ever to think and act according to the principles of that wisdom which comes from above
Right,

Clarke: Psa 12:8 - -- The vilest men are exalted - Were we to take this in its obvious sense, it would signify that at that time wickedness was the way to preferment, and...
The vilest men are exalted - Were we to take this in its obvious sense, it would signify that at that time wickedness was the way to preferment, and that good men were the objects of persecution
Calvin -> Psa 12:8
Calvin: Psa 12:8 - -- 8.The ungodly walk about on every side The Hebrew word סביב , sabib, which we have translated on every side, signifies a circuit, or a goi...
8.The ungodly walk about on every side The Hebrew word
TSK -> Psa 12:8
TSK: Psa 12:8 - -- wicked : Pro 29:12; Hos 5:11; Mic 6:16
when : Judg. 9:18-57; 1Sa 18:17, 1Sa 18:18; Est 3:6-15; Isa 32:4-6; Mar 14:63-65
men : Heb. of the sons of men,...
wicked : Pro 29:12; Hos 5:11; Mic 6:16
when : Judg. 9:18-57; 1Sa 18:17, 1Sa 18:18; Est 3:6-15; Isa 32:4-6; Mar 14:63-65

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 12:8
Barnes: Psa 12:8 - -- The wicked walk on every side - Everywhere. They have full license, or seem to be wholly unrestrained. When the vilest men are exalted - ...
The wicked walk on every side - Everywhere. They have full license, or seem to be wholly unrestrained.
When the vilest men are exalted - Margin, "The vilest of the sons of men are exalted."This expression has been very variously translated. Dr. Horsley renders it, "When the scorn of the sons of men is exalted."De Wette, "They exalt themselves; terror to the sons of men."Luther, "Where such wicked people rule among the sons of men."Hengstenberg, "Like exaltation is disgrace to the sons of men."Prof. Alexander seems inclined to favor this last view. According to this interpretation, the meaning is, that "although the wicked are now in the ascendant, and the righteous are treated with contempt, this disgrace is realy an exaltation, because only ... in man’ s judgment, not in God’ s, who will abundantly indemnity his people for the dishonor put upon them."The word rendered in our version "the vilest"-
Perhaps, however, the common version expresses the idea more accurately than any of these proposed amendments. I would offer the following as a fair translation of the passage: "The wicked walk on every side; (it is) as the lifting up, or the exaltation of vileness among the sons of men."That is, the state of things is as if the vilest were exalted, or were honored. It seems to be the very exaltation of wickedness or depravity in the world. A state of things exists in which, from the prevalence of iniquity, the wicked seem to go unrestrained; in which no regard is paid to truth; in which falsehood and flattery abound; and it is as if honor were done to the worst forms of sin, and the most abandoned seem to be the most exalted. This appears to be the reason in the mind of the psalmist why the divine interposition is necessary; with this idea the psalm commences, and with this it appropriately closes. There was a state of widespread depravity and successful iniquity, as if all honor were conferred on wicked and abandoned men, while the virtuous were oppressed and degraded. The psalm expresses "confidence"in God - confidence in his faithful word and promises; but the psalmist sees a state of things wherein it was eminently desirable that God should interpose, for the righteous seemed to have failed out of the earth, and the wicked seemed to be wholly in the ascendancy.
Poole -> Psa 12:8
Poole: Psa 12:8 - -- The wicked walk on every side which phrase may note,
1. Their great numbers; they fill all places.
2. Their freedom and safety; they are not restra...
The wicked walk on every side which phrase may note,
1. Their great numbers; they fill all places.
2. Their freedom and safety; they are not restrained nor punished, but go about boldly and securely whither they please.
3. Their proficiency and success, which is sometimes signified by this verb, as Gen 26:13 1Sa 2:21 Isa 40:31 . They grow worse and worse, and prosper in and by their wickedness.
4. Their incessant and unwearied industry in doing mischief to good men. Compare 1Pe 5:8 . And this is very fitly here added, as another argument to prevail with God to arise to help his poor people who are oppressed by wicked men.
The vilest men Heb. vilenesses , i.e. all manner of wickedness, lying and slandering, profaneness; oppression, cruelty, and the like; or, vile persons, the abstract being put for the concrete, which is frequent, as pride , Psa 36:11 , for a proud man, and many such like; both comes to one, vile persons and vile practices were both advanced and encouraged through Saul’ s misgovernment, whereby all the foundations were destroyed, as he complained, Psa 11:3 . The Hebrew word zolel (whence this zuloth comes) signifies first a glutton or drunkard , as Deu 21:20 Pro 23:21 , and thence any vile person , as Jer 15:19 Lam 1:11 .
Gill -> Psa 12:8
Gill: Psa 12:8 - -- The wicked walk on every side,.... Of the poor and needy, of the righteous ones, to watch them, lay snares for them, and hurt them; therefore, Lord, k...
The wicked walk on every side,.... Of the poor and needy, of the righteous ones, to watch them, lay snares for them, and hurt them; therefore, Lord, keep and preserve them: the wicked are everywhere in great numbers, the whole world lies in wickedness; and the men of it are like their father the devil, they go about to do all the mischief they can to the saints; wherefore they stand in need continually of divine preservation;
when the vilest men are exalted: either to great dignities and high offices, to be magistrates and rulers; see Pro 29:2; or are highly esteemed and caressed; which shows the sad degeneracy and badness of the times, and the unsafe and dangerous condition the people of God are in, unless kept by him; see Mal 3:15; or else these words may be considered as expressive of the judgment of God upon wicked men, and so confirm what the psalmist had said of God's regard to and preservation of his own people; and the sense be, that the wicked shall walk up and down here and there, as outcasts and vagabonds, in a most desolate, destitute, and miserable condition; and as the latter clause may be rendered, "according to their exaltation shall be the vileness", depression, or humiliation "of the children of men" r; they shall be brought as low as they have been made high; by how much the more highly they have been exalted, by so much the more deeply they shall be humbled: or else the meaning is, they shall walk about here and there fretting and vexing, when they shall see such who in their opinion are the meanest and basest of men, of low degree, and of a mean extract, exalted to the highest posts of honour and dignity; as David, who was taken from the sheepfold, and placed on the throne of Israel; so Jarchi, who observes that the Haggadah explains it of the Israelites, who will be exalted in time to come.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
