
Text -- Psalms 31:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 31:7
Loved me, and cared for me.
JFB -> Psa 31:7
Had regard to me in trouble.
Clarke -> Psa 31:7
Clarke: Psa 31:7 - -- Thou hast known my soul in adversities - When all forsook me; when none could help me; when I could not save my own life; when my enemies were sure ...
Thou hast known my soul in adversities - When all forsook me; when none could help me; when I could not save my own life; when my enemies were sure that I could not escape; then I found thee to be my Friend and Supporter. When friend, so called, finds it convenient not to know his friend in affliction and poverty, then thou didst acknowledge me as thine own, all worthless as I was. Human friendships may fail; but the Friend of sinners never fails. Cicero defines a real friend, Amicus certus in re incerta cernitor: "A friend in need is a friend indeed."Reader, such a Friend is the Lord.
Calvin -> Psa 31:7
Calvin: Psa 31:7 - -- 7.I will be glad and rejoice in thy goodness Here is inserted a thanksgiving, although many are rather of opinion that David’s prayer is suspended,...
7.I will be glad and rejoice in thy goodness Here is inserted a thanksgiving, although many are rather of opinion that David’s prayer is suspended, and that he makes a vow, when he shall be delivered from present danger. But as no condition is annexed, I am rather inclined to think that stopping all at once in the middle of his prayer, he promises himself a deliverance, for which he will have abundant matter for giving thanks. Nor is it to be wondered at that different feelings are mingled in the psalms in which David has set forth his own temptations, as well as the resistance which his faith made to them, considering also that when he sung the praises of God, after having already obtained deliverance from him, he embraces different periods in his song, as he here says, that God had regarded his affliction, intimating by this the effect of the assistance which God had afforded him. And that he may the better confirm this, he adds, that he had not been delivered into the hands of his enemies: in which words there is an implied antithesis, namely, that when he was encompassed on every side by severe afflictions, he was marvellously delivered by God. This is also farther intimated by the following sentence, Thou hast set my feet in a large place, 642 which denotes a sudden and unexpected change.
TSK -> Psa 31:7
TSK: Psa 31:7 - -- I will : Psa 13:5; Isa 49:13; Jer 33:11
for : Psa 9:13, Psa 25:18, Psa 71:20, Psa 119:153; Neh 9:32; Job 10:9; Lam 3:50, Lam 5:1
known : Psa 1:6, Psa ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 31:7
Barnes: Psa 31:7 - -- I will be glad and rejoice in thy mercy - I will triumph and joy in thy mercy; that is, in the mercy which he had already experienced, and in t...
I will be glad and rejoice in thy mercy - I will triumph and joy in thy mercy; that is, in the mercy which he had already experienced, and in that which he still hoped to enjoy. He had had abundant proofs of that mercy; he hoped for still further proofs of it; and he says that he would find his joy in that, and not in what idols could give.
For thou hast considered my trouble - In times past and now. He felt assured that his prayer would be regarded, and that God would relieve and deliver him.
Thou hast known my soul in adversities - In the troubles that have come upon me. That is, God had seen and known all the feelings of his heart in the time of adversity; his sorrow and anxiety; his hope and trust; his uncomplaining spirit; his feeling of entire dependence on God, and his belief that He would interpose to save him. God had not turned away from him, but had shown that he regarded with interest all his feelings, his desires, his hopes. It is much, in the time of trouble, to know that all our feelings are understood by God, that He sees all our sorrows, and that He will not be regardless of them. There are no states of mind more interesting than those which occur in adversities; there is no one who can fully understand the soul in adversities but God; there is no one but God who can entirely meet the needs of the soul in such seasons.
Poole -> Psa 31:7
Poole: Psa 31:7 - -- Thou hast known i.e. loved me, and cared for me; for words of knowledge commonly imply affection.
Thou hast known i.e. loved me, and cared for me; for words of knowledge commonly imply affection.
Haydock -> Psa 31:7
Haydock: Psa 31:7 - -- Refuge. Hebrew, "hiding," (Psalm xxx. 21.; Haydock) or asylum. (Calmet) ---
Which. Hebrew, "thou shalt surround me with songs of deliverance. S...
Refuge. Hebrew, "hiding," (Psalm xxx. 21.; Haydock) or asylum. (Calmet) ---
Which. Hebrew, "thou shalt surround me with songs of deliverance. Sela." Or "my praise saving, thou wilt environ me always." (St. Jerome) (Haydock) ---
Perhaps th may now occupy the pase of m, as the Greeks all agree; and the sense is at least the same. (Berthier)
Gill -> Psa 31:7
Gill: Psa 31:7 - -- I will be glad, and rejoice in thy mercy,.... Both because of the nature of it, which is large and abundant, free and sovereign, from everlasting to e...
I will be glad, and rejoice in thy mercy,.... Both because of the nature of it, which is large and abundant, free and sovereign, from everlasting to everlasting, and is communicated in and through Christ, and is a good ground of hope and trust; and because of the effects of it, or what it has produced; for to it are owing the covenant of grace, and all the sure mercies of it; the mission of Christ, and redemption by him; regeneration, and the forgiveness of sins, and even eternal life and glory; besides a multitude of blessings, deliverances, and salvations in Providence; on account of all which there is great reason for joy and gladness; of which the following are particulars;
for thou hast considered my trouble; inward, arising from indwelling sin, doubts and fears, desertions and darkness, and Satan's temptations; and outward, from the world, and the men of it, and by reason of bodily afflictions: now the Lord looks upon the troubles of his people, and upon them in them, with an eye of pity and compassion; he sympathizes with them; he considers the nature of their trouble, their weakness to bear it, and the best way, in tans, and time to deliver out of it; he working all things after the counsel of his own will; see Exo 3:7;
thou hast known my soul in adversities; that is, the Lord had took notice of him, approved of him, loved him, had visited him, and made known his love to him, and owned him for his own, and had chosen him in the furnace of affliction; a time and season when oftentimes friends and acquaintance are shy, and will not look upon men, know them, and own them; but the Lord does otherwise, and which is another reason of joy and gladness in his mercy.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 31:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Psa 31:1-24 - --1 David, shewing his confidence in God, craves his help.7 He rejoices in his mercy.9 He prays in his calamity.19 He praises God for his goodness.
MHCC -> Psa 31:1-8
MHCC: Psa 31:1-8 - --Faith and prayer must go together, for the prayer of faith is the prevailing prayer. David gave up his soul in a special manner to God. And with the w...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 31:1-8
Matthew Henry: Psa 31:1-8 - -- Faith and prayer must go together. He that believes, let his pray - I believe, therefore I have spoken: and he that prays, let him believe, for th...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 31:1-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 31:1-8 - --
(Heb.: 31:2-9) The poet begins with the prayer for deliverance, based upon the trust which Jahve, to whom he surrenders himself, cannot possibly di...
Constable -> Psa 31:1-24; Psa 31:2-7
Constable: Psa 31:1-24 - --Psalm 31
This psalm grew out of an experience in David's life in which his foes plotted to kill him. Tha...
