
Text -- Psalms 40:11 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 40:11
Wesley: Psa 40:11 - -- hold not - David, having been transported by the spirit of God to the commemoration of the great mystery of the Messiah, he now seems to be led back b...
hold not - David, having been transported by the spirit of God to the commemoration of the great mystery of the Messiah, he now seems to be led back by the same spirit, to the consideration of his own case.
JFB -> Psa 40:11
Clarke: Psa 40:11 - -- Thy tender mercies - רחמיך rachameycha , such propensities and feelings as a mother bears to her child; or animals in general to their young
Thy tender mercies -

Clarke: Psa 40:11 - -- Let thy loving-kindness - חסדך chasdecha , thy overflowing and superabundant mercy
Let thy loving-kindness -

Clarke: Psa 40:11 - -- And thy truth - What is revealed in thy word: continually preserve me. Mercy to help me, truth to direct me; and, by the operation of both, I shall ...
And thy truth - What is revealed in thy word: continually preserve me. Mercy to help me, truth to direct me; and, by the operation of both, I shall be continually preserved from sin and evil.
Calvin -> Psa 40:11
Calvin: Psa 40:11 - -- 11.O thou Jehovah! withhold not thy tender mercies from me We now see more clearly, what I have just adverted to, that David speaks of his own thankf...
11.O thou Jehovah! withhold not thy tender mercies from me We now see more clearly, what I have just adverted to, that David speaks of his own thankfulness, that he might secure a continuance of God’s favor towards him; and that he opened his mouth in the praises of God, that he might continue to acquire new favors, against which our perverse and ungrateful silence very often closes the gate. We ought, therefore, carefully to observe the relation which the clause, in which David affirms that he closed not his lips, bears to what follows, namely, that God on his part would not contract or stop up the course of his tender mercies; for by this we are taught that God would always be ready to relieve us by his goodness, or rather that it would flow down upon us as from a never-failing fountain, if our own ingratitude did not prevent or cut off its course. The tender mercies of God, which he expresses by the word
TSK -> Psa 40:11
TSK: Psa 40:11 - -- Withhold : From this verse to the end, we have quite a new subject; for the former contains a thanksgiving, and this contains a supplication. It is n...
Withhold : From this verse to the end, we have quite a new subject; for the former contains a thanksgiving, and this contains a supplication. It is nearly the same as the seventieth, and probably formed a distinct Psalm. Psa 69:13, Psa 69:16
let thy : Psa 23:6, Psa 43:3, Psa 57:3, Psa 61:7, Psa 85:10; Heb 5:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 40:11
Barnes: Psa 40:11 - -- Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from me, O Lord - Do not restrain or hold back thy compassions. Let thy mercies - the expressions of thy l...
Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from me, O Lord - Do not restrain or hold back thy compassions. Let thy mercies - the expressions of thy love - flow out freely toward me in connection with what I have done. As applicable to the Redeemer, this is a prayer that God would bestow upon him in connection with his work, and as a reward of his work, appropriate proofs of his goodness. And especially is this to be understood here as a prayer for support and deliverance in the sorrows that came upon him in the accomplishment of his work. The prayer is intermediate between the expression of his purpose to do the will of God when all other means of salvation had failed Psa 40:6-8, and the sorrows or sufferings that would come upon him in the accomplishment of his work Psa 40:12-13. He saw himself at this point of his life, as represented in the psalm, as about to sink into the depth of woes. He had kept the law of God, and had by his obedience thus far done His will. He had made known the truth of God, and had declared His great message to the assembled multitude that had crowded his path, and thronged to hear him. He saw himself now about to enter the vale of sorrow; to plunge into that depth of the unutterable woes connected with the making of an atonement. He prayed, therefore, that, in these approaching sorrows, God would not withhold the expression of his tender mercy. The point of time, therefore, in the Redeemer’ s life which the verse before us occupies, is that awful and sorrowful hour when, his public work of teaching and of miracles finished, he was about to endure the agonies of Gethsemane and of the cross.
Let thy loving-kindness - Thy mercy. "And thy truth."Thy promises; thy plighted support and strength; thy fidelity. That is, he prayed that God would show himself true and faithful in bearing him through the great work of the atonement.
Continually - Through the whole of these sorrows. Do not for a moment leave or forsake me.
Preserve me - Keep me from sinking under these woes; from speaking any improper word; from shrinking back; from being overcome by the tempter; from failing in the great work now to be accomplished. As the Redeemer had a human as well as a divine nature; as he was man, with all human susceptibilities to suffering, it was not inappropriate that he should utter this prayer, and lift up his heart with the utmost earnestness to God, that he might not be forsaken in the consummation of the great work of his life, and that this work might not fail.
Poole -> Psa 40:11
Poole: Psa 40:11 - -- This prayer is uttered by David, either,
1. In the person of Christ; to whom it may agree. Or,
2. In his own person. Having been transported and c...
This prayer is uttered by David, either,
1. In the person of Christ; to whom it may agree. Or,
2. In his own person. Having been transported and carried forth by the Spirit of God to the contemplation and commemoration of the great mystery of the Messias, of whom he was an illustrious type, now he seems to be led back by the same Spirit to the consideration of himself and his own particular case.
Haydock -> Psa 40:11
Haydock: Psa 40:11 - -- Them. No one is ignorant of the destruction of Jerusalem, and of the miserable condition of the Jews (Menochius) throughout the world. (Calmet) ---...
Them. No one is ignorant of the destruction of Jerusalem, and of the miserable condition of the Jews (Menochius) throughout the world. (Calmet) ---
Christ will render every one according to his deserts. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 40:11
Gill: Psa 40:11 - -- Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from me, O Lord,.... this is a petition of Christ to his Father, when in the midst of his sorrows and sufferings,...
Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from me, O Lord,.... this is a petition of Christ to his Father, when in the midst of his sorrows and sufferings, before related; and particularly when he hid his face from him, and withheld the discoveries of his tender and affectionate love;
let thy lovingkindness and thy truth continually preserve me; as he had promised; of which promise some notice is given, Isa 49:8, in the fulfilment of which the lovingkindness, truth, and faithfulness of God, would appear. Some read these words as expressive of faith in these things, "thou wilt not withhold", &c. "thy lovingkindness and thy truth shall continually preserve me" o.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 40:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Psa 40:1-17 - --1 The benefit of confidence in God.6 Obedience is the best sacrifice.11 The sense of David's evils inflames his prayer.
Maclaren -> Psa 40:4-11
Maclaren: Psa 40:4-11 - --Two Innumerable Series
Many, O Lord my God, are Thy wonderful works which Thou hast done, and Thy thoughts which are to us-ward: they cannot be recko...
MHCC -> Psa 40:11-17
MHCC: Psa 40:11-17 - --The best saints see themselves undone, unless continually preserved by the grace of God. But see the frightful view the psalmist had of sin. This made...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 40:11-17
Matthew Henry: Psa 40:11-17 - -- The psalmist, having meditated upon the work of redemption, and spoken of it in the person of the Messiah, now comes to make improvement of the doct...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 40:10-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 40:10-11 - --
The self-presentation before Jahve, introduced by אז אמרתּי , extends from הנה to מעי ; consequently בּשּׂרתּי yltn joins on ...
Constable -> Psa 40:1-17; Psa 40:10-16
Constable: Psa 40:1-17 - --Psalm 40
In this psalm David offered himself as a sacrifice to God because the Lord had delivered him. H...
