Text -- Psalms 84:2 (NET)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Exhausted with desire.
As tabernacles (Psa 84:1) --the whole building.
JFB: Psa 84:2 - -- Literally, "sings for joy"; but here, and Lam 2:19, expresses an act of sorrow as the corresponding noun (Psa 17:1; Psa 61:2).
Clarke: Psa 84:2 - -- My soul longeth - It is a Levite that speaks, who ardently longs to regain his place in the temple, and his part in the sacred services
My soul longeth - It is a Levite that speaks, who ardently longs to regain his place in the temple, and his part in the sacred services
Clarke: Psa 84:2 - -- My heart and my flesh - All the desires of my soul and body; every appetite and wish, both animal and spiritual, long for thy service.
My heart and my flesh - All the desires of my soul and body; every appetite and wish, both animal and spiritual, long for thy service.
Calvin -> Psa 84:2
Calvin: Psa 84:2 - -- I have observed, that in the second verse a more than ordinary ardor of desire is expressed. The first verb, כספ , casaph, signifies vehementl...
I have observed, that in the second verse a more than ordinary ardor of desire is expressed. The first verb,
TSK -> Psa 84:2
TSK: Psa 84:2 - -- soul : Psa 42:1, Psa 42:2, Psa 63:1, Psa 63:2, Psa 73:26, Psa 119:20, Psa 119:81, Psa 143:6; Son 2:4, Son 2:5, Son 5:8
heart : Job 23:3; Isa 26:9, Isa...
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 84:2
Barnes: Psa 84:2 - -- My soul longeth - The word used here means properly to be pale; then, to be faint or weak; and then, to pine after, to long for, to desire earn...
My soul longeth - The word used here means properly to be pale; then, to be faint or weak; and then, to pine after, to long for, to desire earnestly. It would properly denote such a longing or desire as to make one faint or exhausted; that is, it indicates intense desire. In Psa 17:12, it is applied to a hungry lion; "Like a lion that is greedy of its prey."In Gen 31:30, it conveys the idea of intense desire: "Because thou sore longedst after thy father’ s house."For an illustration of the sentiment here expressed, see the notes at Psa 42:1-2.
Yea, even fainteth - Is exhausted; fails of its strength. The word means properly to be completed, finished; then to be consumed, to be spent, to waste or pine away. Gen 21:15; Jer 16:4; Lam 2:11; Job 19:27.
For the courts of the Lord - The word used here refers to the different areas around the tabernacle or temple, within which many of the services of public worship were conducted, and which were frequented by different classes of persons. See the notes at Mat 21:12.
My heart and my flesh - My whole nature; my body and my soul; all my desires and aspirations - all the longings of my heart are there. The body - the flesh - cries out for rest; the heart - the soul - for communion with God. Our whole nature demands the benefits which spring from the worship of God. Body and soul were made for his service, and the necessities of neither can be satisfied without religion.
Crieth out - The word used here -
For the living God - God, the true God, considered as living, in contradistinction from idols, always spoken of as dead. Compare Psa 63:1.
Poole -> Psa 84:2
Poole: Psa 84:2 - -- Fainteth or, is consumed , with grief for want of them, and with vehement desire to enjoy them, and with the deferring and disappointment of his hop...
Fainteth or, is consumed , with grief for want of them, and with vehement desire to enjoy them, and with the deferring and disappointment of his hopes. See Pro 13:12 .
For the courts to enter into the outward court with the people, and to see what is done by the priests in the inner court, and to join with them in their religious exercises.
My heart and my flesh crieth out with a doleful cry, of which this word is used also Lam 2:19 , which elsewhere and commonly signifies a joyful shout. The sense is, my soul and body are pained; or the passion of my heart maketh my tongue cry out.
Haydock -> Psa 84:2
Haydock: Psa 84:2 - -- Blessed. Hebrew, "taken into favour," or "hast rendered fruitful." (Judea) (Calmet) ---
God had bestowed many benefits upon his people, rescuing ...
Blessed. Hebrew, "taken into favour," or "hast rendered fruitful." (Judea) (Calmet) ---
God had bestowed many benefits upon his people, rescuing them from the Egyptian bondage, and not punishing them as much as they deserved. (Worthington) ---
Others explain it of the captivity at Babylon, or under the devil. (Menochius) ---
David speaks of the former event by the prophetic spirit, and the latter misfortune was always deplorable, and to be terminated only by the Messias. (Berthier) ---
The redemption of man was prefigured by the liberation of the Jews. (Du Hamel)
Gill -> Psa 84:2
Gill: Psa 84:2 - -- My soul longeth, yea, even fainteth for the courts of the Lord,.... The courts of the tabernacle now at Gibeon, though the ark was in Zion, 2Ch 1:3 as...
My soul longeth, yea, even fainteth for the courts of the Lord,.... The courts of the tabernacle now at Gibeon, though the ark was in Zion, 2Ch 1:3 as the court of the priests, and the court of the Israelites, in which latter the people in common stood: after these David longed; he longed to enter into them, and stand in them, and worship God there; which soul longings and hearty desires were the fruits and evidences of true grace, of being born again; so newly born souls desire the sincere milk of the word, and the breasts of Gospel ordinances, as a newly born babe desires its mother's milk and breast; and he even "fainted", through disappointment, or length of time, being impatient of the returning season and opportunity of treading in them; see Psa 42:1,
my heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God; he only inwardly desired, and secretly fainted, but audibly cried out in his distress, and verbally expressed, great vehemence, his desire to enjoy the living God: it was not merely the courts, but God in them, that he wanted; even that God which has life in himself, with whom is the fountain of life; who gives life to others, natural, spiritual, and eternal, and in whose favour is life; yea, whose lovingkindness is better than life, and which was the thing longed and thirsted after: and these desires were the desires of the whole man, soul and body; not only he cried with his mouth and lips, signified by his flesh, but with his heart also, sincerely and heartily; his heart went along with his mouth.