
Text -- Psalms 73:22 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 73:22 - -- Although I gave thee just cause to cast me off, yet thou didst continue thy care and kindness to me.
Although I gave thee just cause to cast me off, yet thou didst continue thy care and kindness to me.

Literally, "not discerning," had been his course of thought.

Literally, "with Thee," in conduct respecting Thee.
Calvin -> Psa 73:22
Calvin: Psa 73:22 - -- 22.And I was foolish and ignorant David here rebuking himself sharply, as it became him to do, in the first place declares that he was foolish; secon...
22.And I was foolish and ignorant David here rebuking himself sharply, as it became him to do, in the first place declares that he was foolish; secondly, he charges himself with ignorance; and, thirdly, he affirms that he resembled the brutes. Had he only acknowledged his ignorance, it might have been asked, Whence this vice or fault of ignorance proceeded? He therefore ascribes it to his own folly; and the more emphatically to express his folly, he compares himself to the lower animals. The amount is, that the perverse envy of which he has spoken arose from ignorance and error, and that the blame of having thus erred was to be imputed wholly to himself, inasmuch as he had lost a sound judgment and understanding, and that not after an ordinary manner, but even the length of being reduced to a state of brutish stupidity. What we have previously stated is undoubtedly true, that men never form a right judgment of the works of God; for when they apply their minds to consider them, all their faculties fail, being inadequate to the task; yet David justly lays the blame of failure upon himself, because, having lost the judgment of a man, he had fallen as it were into the rank of the brute creatures. Whenever we are dissatisfied with the manner of God’s providence in governing the world, let us remember that this is to be traced to the perversity of our understanding. The Hebrew word
TSK -> Psa 73:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 73:22
Barnes: Psa 73:22 - -- So foolish was I, and ignorant - Such low and imperfect views did I take of the subject. The margin is, "I knew not."So the Hebrew: "And I am b...
So foolish was I, and ignorant - Such low and imperfect views did I take of the subject. The margin is, "I knew not."So the Hebrew: "And I am brutish, and know not;"that is, I did not understand the case; I had no correct views in regard to it.
I was as a beast before thee - Margin, as in Hebrew, "with thee."That is, in thy very presence; or, I was guilty of such foolishness in the very presence of my Maker. If it had been when I was alone, or when no one saw me, the folly would not have been so aggravated, and so much to be regretted, but it was when the very eye of God was upon me. Compare Isa 1:7; Jer 7:30; Jer 18:10; Psa 51:4. When he says that he was as a beast, he means that he was stupid and senseless; he had no proper understanding of the case; he did not take any just views of it.
Poole -> Psa 73:22
Poole: Psa 73:22 - -- As a beast Heb. beasts , which may signify a great beast; a most stupid and sottish creature, like one not only void of grace, but of reason too; fo...
As a beast Heb. beasts , which may signify a great beast; a most stupid and sottish creature, like one not only void of grace, but of reason too; for reason itself, especially assisted by the Holy Scriptures, did sufficiently discover that, all things considered, I had no sufficient cause to envy the prosperity of wicked men. I minded only present things, as the brutes do. and did not consider things to come, as reasonable creatures do, and ought to do.
Before thee in thy sight or judgment, and therefore in truth, Rom 2:2 , howsoever I seemed to myself or others to have some degree of reason and discretion.
Gill -> Psa 73:22
Gill: Psa 73:22 - -- So foolish was I,.... To envy the prosperity of the wicked, which is of so short a continuance; to arraign the providence and perfections of God, and ...
So foolish was I,.... To envy the prosperity of the wicked, which is of so short a continuance; to arraign the providence and perfections of God, and to conclude so hastily that there was nothing in religion:
and ignorant; or, "I knew not" w; what he attempted to know, Psa 73:16, nor the end of the wicked, till he went into the sanctuary of the Lord; nor the counsel and design of God, in his methods of providence towards wicked men:
I was as a beast before thee, or "with thee" x; in the knowledge of the ways and works of God, even those of providence; see Psa 92:5, unteachable, untractable, kicking against God and his providential dispensations; not behaving like a man, much, less like a saint; but even as the worst of brutes, as the behemoth in Job 40:15, for the same word is here used; he concluded that God, who saw all the wickedness of his heart, the workings and reasonings of his mind, which were so vain and foolish, could esteem him no other than as a beast; so the Targum,
"as a beast I am accounted with thee:''
the words may be rendered, "I was the veriest beast before thee"; there being no note of similitude in the text; the word for "beast" being in the plural number, may be used for a superlative; Plautus y uses the word "bellua", beast, for a stupid man.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 73:1-28
TSK Synopsis: Psa 73:1-28 - --1 The prophet, prevailing in a temptation,2 shews the occasion thereof, the prosperity of the wicked;13 the wound given thereby, diffidence;15 the vic...
MHCC -> Psa 73:21-28
MHCC: Psa 73:21-28 - --God would not suffer his people to be tempted, if his grace were not sufficient, not only to save them from harm, but to make them gainers by it. This...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 73:21-28
Matthew Henry: Psa 73:21-28 - -- Behold Samson's riddle again unriddled, Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong sweetness; for we have here an account of the good...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 73:19-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 73:19-22 - --
The poet calms himself with the solution of the riddle that has come to him; and it would be beneath his dignity as a man to allow himself any furth...
Constable: Psa 73:1--89:52 - --I. Book 3: chs 73--89
A man or men named Asaph wrote 17 of the psalms in this book (Pss. 73-83). Other writers w...

Constable: Psa 73:1-28 - --Psalm 73
In this psalm Asaph related his inner mental struggle when he compared his life as one committe...
