Text -- Psalms 77:2 (NET)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 77:2
Which to others was a time of rest and quietness.
Clarke -> Psa 77:2
Clarke: Psa 77:2 - -- My sore ran in the night, and ceased not - This is a most unaccountable translation; the literal meaning of ידי נגרה yadi niggerah , which w...
My sore ran in the night, and ceased not - This is a most unaccountable translation; the literal meaning of
Calvin -> Psa 77:2
Calvin: Psa 77:2 - -- 2.I sought the Lord in the day of my trouble In this verse he expresses more distinctly the grievous and hard oppression to which the Church was at t...
2.I sought the Lord in the day of my trouble In this verse he expresses more distinctly the grievous and hard oppression to which the Church was at that time subjected. There is, however, some ambiguity in the words. The Hebrew word
TSK -> Psa 77:2
TSK: Psa 77:2 - -- In the : Psa 18:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 88:1-3, Psa 102:1, Psa 102:2, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2; Gen 32:7-12, Gen 32:28; 2Ki 19:3, 2Ki 19:4, 2Ki 19:15-20; Isa 26...
In the : Psa 18:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 88:1-3, Psa 102:1, Psa 102:2, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2; Gen 32:7-12, Gen 32:28; 2Ki 19:3, 2Ki 19:4, 2Ki 19:15-20; Isa 26:9, Isa 26:16; Jon 2:1, Jon 2:2; 2Co 12:7, 2Co 12:8; Heb 5:7
my : Psa 6:2, Psa 6:3, Psa 38:3-8; 2Ch 6:28; Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6; Hos 5:13, Hos 6:1
sore : Heb. hand
my soul : Gen 37:35; Est 4:1-4; Pro 18:14; Jer 31:15; Joh 11:31
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 77:2
Barnes: Psa 77:2 - -- In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord - Compare the notes at Psa 50:15. This trouble may have been either mental or bodily; that is, it ma...
In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord - Compare the notes at Psa 50:15. This trouble may have been either mental or bodily; that is, it may have arisen from some form of disease, or it may have been that which sprang from difficulties in regard to the divine character, government, and dealings. That it "assumed"the latter form, even if it had its beginning in the former, is apparent from the following verses. Whether it was connected with any form of bodily disease must be determined by the proper interpretation of the next clause in this verse.
My sore ran in the night - Margin, "My hand."It is evident that our translators sup. posed that there was some bodily disease - some running sore - which was the cause of his trouble. Hence, they so rendered the Hebrew word. But it is now generally agreed that this is without authority. The Hebrew word is "hand"-
And ceased not - The word used here -
My soul refused to be comforted - I resisted all the suggestions that came to my own mind, that might have comforted me. My heart was so melancholy and downcast; my spirits were so crushed; my mind was so dark; I had become so morbid, that I loved to cherish these thoughts. I chose to dwell on them. They had obtained possession of me, and I could not let them go. There was nothing that my own mind could suggest, there was nothing that occurred to me, that would relieve the difficulty or restore peace to my soul. These sad and gloomy thoughts filled all my soul, and left no room for thoughts of consolation and peace. A truly pious man may, therefore, get into a state of mind - a sad, dispirited, melancholy, morbid state - in which nothing that can be said to him, nothing that will occur to himself, will give him comfort and peace. Compare Jer 31:15.
Poole -> Psa 77:2
Poole: Psa 77:2 - -- My sore ran : the hand in the Hebrew tongue, and Scripture use, is oft put for a blow or stroke given by the hand. Heb. My hand , or hands , (the ...
My sore ran : the hand in the Hebrew tongue, and Scripture use, is oft put for a blow or stroke given by the hand. Heb. My hand , or hands , (the singular number being frequently put for the plural,)
flowed or poured forth i.e. spread abroad to God in prayer. This phrase he useth rather than were stretched out, which is frequent in like cases, to imply that his case was low and almost desperate, his spirits and strength quite gone, so that he was not able to stretch them out, as he had done.
In the night which to others was a time of rest and quietness, but to me of torment.
My soul refused to be comforted I rejected all those consolations which either my friends or my own mind suggested to me.
Haydock -> Psa 77:2
Haydock: Psa 77:2 - -- Propositions. Deep and mysterious sayings. By this it appears, that the historical facts of ancient times, commemorated in this psalm, were deep an...
Propositions. Deep and mysterious sayings. By this it appears, that the historical facts of ancient times, commemorated in this psalm, were deep and mysterious; as being figures of great truths appertaining to the time of the New Testament. (Challoner) ---
St. Matthew (xiii. 35.) has, things hidden from the foundation of the world. Hebrew minni kedem, "from of old." St. Jerome, "ancient riddles." (Haydock) ---
Mashal and chidoth, "parables and enigmas." frequently denote things very plain, but spoken in a sententious poetic style, Numbers xxiii. 7. (Calmet) ---
The facts, &c., of the Old Testament, prefigured the mysteries of the New. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 77:2
Gill: Psa 77:2 - -- In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord,.... Not the creature, for help, and creature amusements to drive away trouble, but the Lord, in private, b...
In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord,.... Not the creature, for help, and creature amusements to drive away trouble, but the Lord, in private, by prayer and supplication; a time of trouble is a time for prayer, Jam 5:13, all men have their trouble, but the people of God more especially; and there are some particular times in which they have more than usual, and then it may be said to be "a day of trouble" with them; which sometimes arises from themselves, the strength of their corruptions, the weakness of their graces, their backwardness to duties, or poor performance of them; sometimes from others, from the profaneness or persecutions of the men of the world, from the heretical notions or wicked lives of professors; sometimes from the temptations of Satan, and at other times from the Lord himself more immediately, by his withdrawing his presence from them, or by laying his afflicting hand upon them; but, let the trouble come from what quarter it may, it is always right to seek the Lord. Some think reference is had to the time of trouble mentioned in Dan 12:1,
my sore ran in the night; my "stroke", or "wound" i; so Kimchi interprets it; the wound that was made in his soul, and the pain and anguish, grief and trouble, which flowed from it; see Jer 6:7 though the word may be literally rendered "my hand" k; and the sense is, either that his hand flowed or was wet with wiping his eyes, or with the tears that flowed from his eyes, which ran down to his fingers' ends; so the Targum,
"in the night my eye dropped with tears;''
or rather that his hand was stretched out, as waters, that are poured out and run, are spread, that is, in prayer; the stretching out of the hand being a prayer gesture:
and ceased not; was not remiss and feeble, or was not let down, as Moses's, Exo 17:11, it denotes the constancy of prayer, and his continuance in it; he prayed without ceasing:
my soul refused to be comforted: such was the greatness of his distress, like that of Jacob's and Rachel's, Gen 37:35, it is right to refuse comfort and peace, which men speak to themselves upon the false foundation of their own merit and works; or any but what comes from the God of all comfort, and through Christ, in whom is all solid consolation, and by his Spirit, who is the Comforter; but it is wrong to refuse any that comes from hence, and by means of the promises, the word and ordinances and ministries of the Gospel, or Christian friends; this shows the strength of unbelief.