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Text -- Psalms 10:14-18 (NET)

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Context
10:14 You have taken notice, for you always see one who inflicts pain and suffering. The unfortunate victim entrusts his cause to you; you deliver the fatherless. 10:15 Break the arm of the wicked and evil man! Hold him accountable for his wicked deeds, which he thought you would not discover. 10:16 The Lord rules forever! The nations are driven out of his land. 10:17 Lord, you have heard the request of the oppressed; you make them feel secure because you listen to their prayer. 10:18 You defend the fatherless and oppressed, so that mere mortals may no longer terrorize them.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: VULGATE | Rulers | Prayer | Poor | PSALMS, BOOK OF | Orphan | Oppression | OUTRAGE; OUTRAGEOUS | MISCHIEF | JUDGING JUDGMENT | Humility | Heart | God | FATHERLESS | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | EAR | Children | Arm | Afflictions and Adversities | ANTHROPOLOGY | more
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Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 10:14 - -- Heb. to give (to restore or pay the mischief which they have done to others) with thy hand, by thy own extraordinary providence, because the oppressed...

Heb. to give (to restore or pay the mischief which they have done to others) with thy hand, by thy own extraordinary providence, because the oppressed were destitute of all other succours.

Wesley: Psa 10:14 - -- Of such as have no friend or helper, one kind of them being put for all.

Of such as have no friend or helper, one kind of them being put for all.

Wesley: Psa 10:15 - -- Search for it, and punish these wicked atheists.

Search for it, and punish these wicked atheists.

Wesley: Psa 10:15 - -- No such wickedness be left in the world, or at least in the church.

No such wickedness be left in the world, or at least in the church.

Wesley: Psa 10:16 - -- To whom it belongs to protect his subjects. Therefore his peoples case is never desperate, seeing he ever lives to help them.

To whom it belongs to protect his subjects. Therefore his peoples case is never desperate, seeing he ever lives to help them.

Wesley: Psa 10:16 - -- The Canaanites; whom God, as king of the world, expelled, and gave their land to his people. By which great example he confirms his faith and hope for...

The Canaanites; whom God, as king of the world, expelled, and gave their land to his people. By which great example he confirms his faith and hope for the future.

Wesley: Psa 10:16 - -- Out of Canaan, which God calls his land, because he gave it to them, and fixed his presence and dwelling in it.

Out of Canaan, which God calls his land, because he gave it to them, and fixed his presence and dwelling in it.

Wesley: Psa 10:17 - -- By thy grace and good spirit, that they may so pray as thou wilt hear.

By thy grace and good spirit, that they may so pray as thou wilt hear.

Wesley: Psa 10:18 - -- To give sentence for them, and against their enemies.

To give sentence for them, and against their enemies.

Wesley: Psa 10:18 - -- Earthly and mortal men, who yet presume to contend with thee their maker.

Earthly and mortal men, who yet presume to contend with thee their maker.

JFB: Psa 10:13-14 - -- It is in vain to suppose God will overlook sin, however forbearing; for He carefully examines or beholds all wickedness, and will mark it by His provi...

It is in vain to suppose God will overlook sin, however forbearing; for He carefully examines or beholds all wickedness, and will mark it by His providential (Thine hand) punishment.

JFB: Psa 10:14 - -- Provocation and trouble of the sufferer (compare Psa 6:7; Psa 7:14).

Provocation and trouble of the sufferer (compare Psa 6:7; Psa 7:14).

JFB: Psa 10:14 - -- Or, "leaves (his burden) on Thee."

Or, "leaves (his burden) on Thee."

JFB: Psa 10:15 - -- Power.

Power.

JFB: Psa 10:15 - -- So far from not requiting (Psa 10:11, Psa 10:13), God will utterly destroy the wicked and his deeds (Psa 9:5-6; Psa 34:16; Psa 37:36).

So far from not requiting (Psa 10:11, Psa 10:13), God will utterly destroy the wicked and his deeds (Psa 9:5-6; Psa 34:16; Psa 37:36).

JFB: Psa 10:16-18 - -- God reigns. The wicked, if for a time successful, shall be cut off. He hears and confirms the hearts of His suffering people (Psa 112:7), executes jus...

God reigns. The wicked, if for a time successful, shall be cut off. He hears and confirms the hearts of His suffering people (Psa 112:7), executes justice for the feeble, and represses the pride and violence of conceited, though frail, men (compare Psa 9:16).

Clarke: Psa 10:14 - -- Thou hast seen it - Nothing can escape thy notice. Thou hast not forgotten thy justice, though judgment is not speedily executed on an evil work. Bu...

Thou hast seen it - Nothing can escape thy notice. Thou hast not forgotten thy justice, though judgment is not speedily executed on an evil work. But thou wilt requite it with thy hand. By thy power thou wilt cast down and destroy the wicked

Clarke: Psa 10:14 - -- The poor committeth himself unto thee - To thee he has given up his body, his soul, and his cause; with the full conviction that thou who art the he...

The poor committeth himself unto thee - To thee he has given up his body, his soul, and his cause; with the full conviction that thou who art the helper of fatherless, will not forget him.

Clarke: Psa 10:15 - -- Break thou the arm - Destroy his power, deprive him of his influence, that he may be no longer able to oppress

Break thou the arm - Destroy his power, deprive him of his influence, that he may be no longer able to oppress

Clarke: Psa 10:15 - -- Seek out his wickedness till thou find none - All his public haunts and private ways shall be investigated; thou wilt bring all his villanies to lig...

Seek out his wickedness till thou find none - All his public haunts and private ways shall be investigated; thou wilt bring all his villanies to light, and continue to inflict punishment, while there is a crime to punish. Or, "Continue to judge and punish transgressors, till not one is to be found."This agrees with the following verse.

Clarke: Psa 10:16 - -- The Lord is king for ever - He has, and ever will have, the supreme power

The Lord is king for ever - He has, and ever will have, the supreme power

Clarke: Psa 10:16 - -- The heathen are perished out of his land - They are all either cut off or converted. This may refer to the Canaanites. What a mercy that we can say ...

The heathen are perished out of his land - They are all either cut off or converted. This may refer to the Canaanites. What a mercy that we can say this of our own country! Once it was entirely heathen; now not one heathen family in the whole land.

Clarke: Psa 10:17 - -- Lord, thou hast heard - Thou hast not permitted thy tempted and afflicted followers to pray in vain

Lord, thou hast heard - Thou hast not permitted thy tempted and afflicted followers to pray in vain

Clarke: Psa 10:17 - -- Thou wilt prepare their heart - See the economy of the grace of God 1.    God prepares the heart 2.    Suggests the pr...

Thou wilt prepare their heart - See the economy of the grace of God

1.    God prepares the heart

2.    Suggests the prayer

3.    Hears what is prayed

4.    Answers the petition

He who has got a cry in his heart after God, may rest assured that that cry proceeded from a Divine preparation, and that an answer will soon arrive. No man ever had a cry in his heart after salvation, but from God. He who continues to cry shall infallibly be heard.

Clarke: Psa 10:18 - -- That the man of the earth may no more oppress - I believe the Hebrew will be better translated thus: "That he may not add any more to drive away the...

That the man of the earth may no more oppress - I believe the Hebrew will be better translated thus: "That he may not add any more to drive away the wretched man from the land."Destroy the influence of the tyrant; and let him not have it again in his power to add even one additional act of oppression to those which he has already committed

How many for the sake of their religion, and because they would serve God with a pure conscience, have, by wicked lords, proud and arrogant land owners, been driven off their farms, turned out of their houses, deprived of their employments, and exposed to wretchedness! While they served the devil, and were regardless of their souls, they had quiet and peaceable possession; but when they turned to the Lord, and became sober and industrious, attended the means of grace, read their Bible, and were frequent in prayer, then the vile man of the earth drove them from their dwellings! In the sight of such Philistines, piety towards God is the highest of crimes. What a dreadful account must these give to the Judge of the Fatherless and the oppressed

Calvin: Psa 10:14 - -- 14.Thou hast seen it; for thou, etc Here David, suddenly kindled with a holy zeal, enters into conflict, and, armed with the shield of faith, courage...

14.Thou hast seen it; for thou, etc Here David, suddenly kindled with a holy zeal, enters into conflict, and, armed with the shield of faith, courageously repels these execrable opinions; but as he could derive no advantage by making his appeal to men, he has recourse to God, and addresses him. As the ungodly, in the hope of enjoying unrestrained license in the commission of all kinds of wickedness, withdraw to the greatest possible distance from God, 231 and through the dictates of a perverse mind, imagine themselves to be far beyond his reach; so, on the contrary, the faithful ought carefully to keep themselves aloof from those wild opinions, which are afloat in the world, and with minds lifted upward, to speak to God as if present with them. Accordingly, David, in order to prevent himself from being overcome by the blasphemies of men, very properly turns away his attention from them. There is added a reason in confirmation of the first sentence of the verse, namely, because God considers mischief and vexation Since it is the peculiar province of God to take cognisance of all wrongs, David concludes that it is impossible for God to shut his eyes when the ungodly are recklessly and without restraint committing their outrages. Moreover, he descends from the general to the particular, which ought to be attentively marked: for nothing is easier than to acknowledge in general terms that God exercises a care about the world, and the affairs of men; but it is very difficult to apply this doctrine to its various uses in every-day life. And yet, all that the Scripture says concerning the power and righteousness of God will be of no advantage to us, and, as it were, only matter of meagre speculation, 232 unless every one apply these statements to himself, as his necessity may require. Let us therefore learn, from the example of David, to reason thus: that, since it belongs to God to take notice of all the mischief and injuries which are inflicted on the good and simple, He considers our trouble and sorrows even when he seems for a time to take no notice of them. The Psalmist also adds, that God does not look down from heaven upon the conduct of men here below as an idle and unconcerned spectator, but that it is his work to pass judgment upon it; for to take the matter into his own hand, is nothing else than duly and effectually to examine and determine it as a judge.

It is, however, our duty to wait patiently so long as vengeance is reserved in the hand of God, until he stretch forth his arm to help us. We see, therefore, the reason why it is immediately added, Upon thee shall the poor leave. By these words David means, that we ought to give the providence of God time to manifest itself. The godly, when they are afflicted, may with confidence cast their cares into his bosom, and commit themselves to his protection. They ought not, however, to be in haste for the accomplishment of their wishes; but, being now disburdened, they should take their breath till God manifestly declare that the fit time of interfering in their behalf is come. The man, therefore, leaves upon God who betakes himself to his protection, and who, fully persuaded of his faithfulness in keeping what is entrusted to him, quietly waits till the fit time of his deliverance come. Some read the verb passively, The poor shall be left upon thee. The first reading, however, is more correct, and it agrees with the rules of grammar; only it is a defective form of expression, inasmuch as the thing which the poor leaves is not expressed. But this defect is common in Hebrew; and there is no obscurity in the thing itself, namely, that, when the godly commit themselves and their concerns to God by prayer, their prayers will not be in vain; for these two clauses are closely connected, Upon thee shall the poor leave, and, Thou shalt be a helper to the fatherless By a metaphor he terms the person fatherless whom he had in the preceding clause called poor. And the verb being in the future tense denotes a continued act.

Calvin: Psa 10:15 - -- 15.Break thou the arm This form of expression just means breaking the power of the wicked. And it is not simply a prayer; it may also be regarded as ...

15.Break thou the arm This form of expression just means breaking the power of the wicked. And it is not simply a prayer; it may also be regarded as a prophecy. As the ungovernable fury of our enemies very often makes us lose courage, as if there were no means by which it could be restrained, David, in order to support his faith, and preserve it from failing through the fears which presented themselves, sets before himself the consideration, that whenever it shall please God to break the power of the ungodly, he will bring to nothing both themselves and all their schemes. To make the meaning the more evident, the sentence may be explained in this way, — Lord, as soon as it shall seem good to thee to break the arm of the wicked, thou wilt destroy him in a moment, and bring to nought his powerful and violent efforts in the work of doing mischief. David, indeed, beseeches God to hasten his assistance and his vengeance; but, in the meantime, while these are withheld, he sustains himself by the consolatory reflection, that the ungodly cannot break forth into violence and mischief except in so far as God permits them; since it is in his power, whenever he ascends into the judgment-seat, to destroy them even with his look alone. And certainly, as the rising sun dissipates the clouds and vapours by his heat, and clears up the dark air, so God, when he stretches forth his hand to execute the office of a Judge, restores to tranquillity and order all the troubles and confusions of the world. The Psalmist calls the person of whom he speaks not only wicked, but the wicked and the evil man, and he does so, in my judgment, for the purpose of setting forth in a stronger light the greatness of the wickedness of the character which he describes. His words are as if he had said, Wicked men may even be frantic in their malice and impiety; but God can promptly and effectually remedy this evil whenever he pleases.

Calvin: Psa 10:16 - -- 16.Jehovah is King for ever and ever David now, as if he had obtained the desires of his heart, rises up to holy rejoicing and thanksgiving. When he ...

16.Jehovah is King for ever and ever David now, as if he had obtained the desires of his heart, rises up to holy rejoicing and thanksgiving. When he calls God King for ever and ever, it is a token of his confidence and joy. By the title of King, he vindicates God’s claim to the government of the world, and when he describes him as King for ever and ever, this shows how absurd it is to think to shut him up within the narrow limits of time. As the course of human life is short, even those who sway the scepter over the greatest empires, being but mortal men, very often disappoint the expectations of their servants, 234 as we are taught in Psa 146:3,

“Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help. His breath goeth forth, he returneth to his earth; in that very day his thoughts perish.”

Often the power of giving assistance to others fails them, and while they are delaying to give it, the opportunity slips away from them. But we ought to entertain more exalted and honorable conceptions of our heavenly King; for although he does not immediately execute his judgments, yet he has always the full and the perfect power of doing so. In short, he reigns, not for himself in particular; it is for us that he reigns for ever and ever. As this, then, is the duration of his reign, it follows that a long delay cannot hinder him from stretching forth his hand in due season to succor his people, even when they are, as it were, dead, or in a condition which, to the eye of sense and reason, is hopeless. — The heathen are perished out of the land The meaning is, that the holy land was at length purged from the abominations and impurities with which it had been polluted. It was a dreadful profanation, when the land which had been given for an inheritance to the people of God, and allotted to those who purely worshipped him, nourished ungodly and wicked inhabitants. By the heathen he does not mean foreigners, and such as did not belong to the race of Abraham according to the flesh, 235 but hypocrites, who falsely boasted that they belonged to the people of God, just as at this day many, who are Christians only in name, occupy a place in the bosom of the Church. It is no new thing for the prophets to call apostates, who have degenerated from the virtues and holy lives of their fathers, by the reproachful name of heathen, and to compare them not only to the uncircumcised, but also to the Canaanites, who were the most detestable among all the heathen.

“Thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite,” (Eze 16:3)

Many other similar passages are to be met with in Scripture. David, therefore, in applying the dishonorable name of heathen to the false and bastard children of Abraham, gives God thanks for having expelled such a corrupt class out of his Church. By this example we are taught, that it is no new thing if we see in our own day the Church of God polluted by profane and irreligious men. We ought, however, to beseech God quickly to purge his house, and not leave his holy temple exposed to the desecration of swine and dogs, as if it were a dunghill.

Calvin: Psa 10:17 - -- 17.O Jehovah, thou hast heard the desire of the needy In these words the prophet confirms what I have just now said, that when hypocrites prevail in ...

17.O Jehovah, thou hast heard the desire of the needy In these words the prophet confirms what I have just now said, that when hypocrites prevail in the Church, or exceed the faithful in number, we ought, unceasingly, to beseech God to root them out; for such a confused and shameful state of things ought surely to be matter of deep grief to all the true servants of God. By these words, also, the Holy Spirit assures us, that what of old God granted to the fathers in answer to their prayers, we at the present day will obtain, provided we have that anxious solicitude about the deliverance of the Church which we ought to entertain. The clause which follows, Thou wilt direct their hearts, is variously interpreted by expositors. Some think it signifies the same thing, as if it had been said, Thou wilt give success to their desires. According to others, the meaning is, Thou wilt frame and sanctify their hearts by thy grace, that they may ask nothing in prayer but what is right and according to the divine will, as Paul teaches us that the Holy Spirit

“stirs up within us groanings which cannot be uttered,” (Rom 8:26)

Both these expositions are perhaps too forced. David, in this clause, magnifies the grace of God in sustaining and comforting his servants in the midst of their troubles and distresses, that they may not sink into despondency, — in furnishing them with fortitude and patience, - in inspiring them with good hope, - and in stirring them up also to prayer. This is the import of the verb כין , Kin, which signifies not only to direct, but also to establish. It is a singular blessing which God confers upon us, when, in the midst of temptation, he upholds our hearts, and does not suffer them to recede from him, or to turn aside to any other quarter for support and deliverance. The meaning of the clause which immediately follows, Thou wilt cause thine ear to hear, is, that it is not in vain that God directs the hearts of his people, and leads them, in obedience to his command, to look to Himself, and to call upon him in hope and patience — it is not in vain, because his ears are never shut against their groanings. Thus the mutual harmony between two religious exercises is here commended. God does not suffer the faith of his servants to faint or fail, nor does he suffer them to desist from praying; but he keeps them near him by faith and prayer, until it actually appear that their hope has been neither vain nor ineffectual. The sentence might, not improperly, be rendered thus: Thou shalt establish their heart, until thine ear hear them.

Calvin: Psa 10:18 - -- 18.That thou mayest judge Here the Psalmist applies the last sentence of the preceding verse to a special purpose, namely, to prevent the faithful, w...

18.That thou mayest judge Here the Psalmist applies the last sentence of the preceding verse to a special purpose, namely, to prevent the faithful, when they are unjustly oppressed, from doubting that God will at length take vengeance on their enemies, and grant them deliverance. By these words he teaches us, that we ought to bear with patience and fortitude the crosses and afflictions which are laid upon us, since God often withholds assistance from his servants until they are reduced to extremity. This is, indeed, a duty of difficult performance, for we would all desire to be entirely exempted from trouble; and, therefore, if God does not quickly come to our relief, we think him remiss and inactive. But if we are anxiously desirous of obtaining his assistance, we must subdue our passion, restrain our impatience, and keep our sorrows within due bounds, waiting until our afflictions call forth the exercise of his compassion, and excite him to manifest his grace in succouring us.

That the man who is of earth may no more terrify them David again commends the power of God in destroying the ungodly; and he does it for this purpose, - that in the midst of their tumultuous assaults we may have this principle deeply fixed in our minds, that God, whenever he pleases, can bring all their attempts to nothing. Some understand the verb ארף , arots, which we have translated to terrify, as neuter, and read the words thus, — that mortal man may be no more afraid. But it agrees better with the scope of the passage to render it transitively, as we have done. And although the wicked prosper in their wicked course, and lift up their heads above the clouds, there is much truth in describing them as mortal, or men liable to many calamities. The design of the Psalmist is indirectly to condemn their infatuated presumption, in that, forgetful of their condition, they breathe out cruel and terrible threatenings, as if it were beyond the power of even God himself to repress the violence of their rage. The phrase, of earth, contains a tacit contrast between the low abode of this world and the height of heaven. For whence do they go forth to assault the children of God? Doubtless, from the earth, just as if so many worms should creep out of the crevices of the ground; but in so doing, they attack God himself, who promises help to his servants from heaven.

TSK: Psa 10:14 - -- Thou hast : Psa 35:22; Pro 15:3; Jer 16:17, Jer 23:24; Heb 4:13 for thou : Hab 1:13 to requite : Jdg 1:7; 2Ki 9:26; 2Ch 6:23; Jer 51:56; Joe 3:4 the p...

Thou hast : Psa 35:22; Pro 15:3; Jer 16:17, Jer 23:24; Heb 4:13

for thou : Hab 1:13

to requite : Jdg 1:7; 2Ki 9:26; 2Ch 6:23; Jer 51:56; Joe 3:4

the poor : Psa 55:22; 2Ti 1:12; 1Pe 4:19, 1Pe 5:7

committeth : Heb. leaveth, Isa 10:3; Jer 49:11

helper : Psa 68:5, Psa 146:9; Deu 10:18; Hos 14:3

TSK: Psa 10:15 - -- Break : Psa 3:7, Psa 37:17; Job 38:15; Eze 30:21, Eze 30:22; Zec 11:17 seek : Psa 7:9; 2Ki 21:12-15; Jer 2:34; Eze 23:48; Zep 1:12

TSK: Psa 10:16 - -- The Lord : Psa 29:10, Psa 93:1, Psa 145:13, Psa 146:10; Isa 33:22; Jer 10:10; Lam 5:19; Dan 4:34; Dan 6:26; 1Ti 1:17, 1Ti 6:15, 1Ti 6:16 heathen : Psa...

TSK: Psa 10:17 - -- Lord : Psa 9:12, Psa 9:18, Psa 37:4, Psa 145:19; Pro 10:24 humble : 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13, 2Ch 34:27; Pro 15:8; Mat 5:3; Luk 18:13, Luk 18:14; Jam 4:6,...

TSK: Psa 10:18 - -- judge : Psa 10:14, Psa 72:4, Psa 82:3, Psa 94:1-6; Isa 11:4; Luk 18:7, Luk 18:8 the man : Psa 17:14; Luk 16:25; 1Co 15:47, 1Co 15:48; Phi 3:18, Phi 3:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 10:14 - -- Thou hast seen it - Thou seest all. Though people act as if their conduct was not observed, yet thou art intimately acquainted with all that th...

Thou hast seen it - Thou seest all. Though people act as if their conduct was not observed, yet thou art intimately acquainted with all that they do. The workers of iniquity cannot hide themselves. The idea here is, that although God seemed not to notice the conduct of the wicked, and though the wicked acted as if he did not, yet that all this was seen by God, and that he would deal with men according to justice and to truth.

For thou beholdest mischief - All that is done on the earth, though perhaps in this case referring particularly to that which gave the psalmist trouble.

And spite - The word spite with us, though it originally denoted rancour, malice, ill-will, now denotes usually a less deliberate and fixed malice than is indicated by those words, but is used to denote a sudden fit of ill-will excited by temporary vexation. It relates to small subjects, and is accompanied with a desire of petty revenge, and implies that one would be gratified with the disappointment or misfortune of another. The word here, however, in the original, means anger, wrath, malice; and the idea is, that God had seen all the anger of the enemies of the psalmist.

To requite it with thy hand - By thine own interposition or agency - the hand being the instrument by which we accomplish anything. The idea is, that the psalmist felt assured that God would not pass this over. Though the wicked acted as if he did not see or regard their conduct, yet the psalmist felt assured that God would not be unmindful of it, but would, in due time, visit them with deserved punishment.

The poor committeth himself unto thee - Margin, "leaveth."The word rendered poor is the same as that which occurs in Psa 10:10. It means here those who are helpless and defenseless; the oppressed and the downtrodden. The word committeth or leaveth means that he leaves his cause with God; he trusts in his protection and interposition; he gives himself no anxiety as to the result. He knows that God can deliver him if he sees that it is best; and he is assured that God will do that which it is best should be done.

Thou art the helper of the fatherless - That is, this is the general character of God - the character in which he has revealed himself to man. Compare Exo 22:22; Deu 10:18; Isa 1:17; Psa 68:5; Psa 82:3; Jer 49:11; Hos 14:3; Mal 3:5; Jam 1:27. The psalmist here refers to the "general character"of God as that in which all the oppressed, the crushed, the helpless may trust; and he mentions this particular case as one that best illustrated that character.

Barnes: Psa 10:15 - -- Break thou the arm of the wicked - The arm is the instrument by which we effect a purpose, and especially in wielding a sword or a spear, as in...

Break thou the arm of the wicked - The arm is the instrument by which we effect a purpose, and especially in wielding a sword or a spear, as in battle; and if the arm is broken, we are powerless. The psalmist, therefore, prays that God would render the wicked, in this respect, powerless.

And the evil man - Of all the evil, or the wicked. In regard to the prayer here, see the note at Psa 5:10.

Seek out his wickedness until thou find none - Until it is all punished; until there has been a full recompense. This is a wish that no wicked act of his should be forgotten; that exact justice should be rendered. If it is right to punish the wicked at all, it is right to deal with them just as they deserve; if any wickedness may properly be punished, all may be; and, whatever may occur, the sinner may be assured that he will not be punished merely for a part of his sins. If God punishes the wicked at all, there will be nothing left unpunished.

Barnes: Psa 10:16 - -- The Lord is King forever and ever - That is, he reigns, and he will reign forever. This is one of the instances which frequently occur in the P...

The Lord is King forever and ever - That is, he reigns, and he will reign forever. This is one of the instances which frequently occur in the Psalms, where, though there is a desponding spirit, or an apprehension of danger expressed in the beginning of the poem, it ends with the language of exultation and triumph. The psalmist speaks here as if what he had desired was actually accomplished, and as if the enemies that had encompassed him, and all the enemies of the Lord, were actually overthrown, and God now reigned supreme. He was so confident that this would be so, that he speaks of it as if it were already done. Compare Rom 4:17; see also Psa 6:8-9; Psa 7:17; Psa 9:18.

The heathen are perished out of his land - That is, this would so certainly occur that he might speak of it as if it were actually done. The word "heathen"here refers to the enemies of God and of his cause, who are the principal subjects of the psalm. Compare Psa 9:5. The "land,"here, refers to the land of Palestine, or the holy land, regarded as a land sacred to God, or in the midst of which he himself dwelt.

Barnes: Psa 10:17 - -- Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the humble - Their desire or their prayer that thou wouldst interpose in their behalf in the time of danger...

Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the humble - Their desire or their prayer that thou wouldst interpose in their behalf in the time of danger, and rescue them. Compare Psa 6:8-9. The word "humble"here refers to those who were poor, downtrodden, oppressed; and the original reference is, doubtless, to the psalmist himself, and to his friends. He was so certain that God would interpose, he had such assurance that his prayer would he answered, that his mind was perfectly calm.

Thou will prepare their heart - Margin, "or, establish."The margin seems most accurately to express the meaning of the original word - תכין tākiyn . The idea is, that he would settle or confirm their heart; that is, that he would dispel their fears and allay their apprehensions by the assurances of his favor, and by his gracious interposition. They had been full of apprehension and alarm, but the assurances of the divine favor would establish their hearts and give them peace.

Thou wilt cause thine ear to hear - Another form of expressing assurance of the same thing. The idea is, that he would incline his ear, or make it attentive to the cry of his afflicted people.

Barnes: Psa 10:18 - -- To judge the fatherless - That is, to vindicate the orphan; to rescue him from the hand of those who would oppress and wrong him. In other word...

To judge the fatherless - That is, to vindicate the orphan; to rescue him from the hand of those who would oppress and wrong him. In other words, the psalmist prays that God would manifest himself in his real and proper character as the vindicator of the fatherless (see the note at Psa 10:14), or of those who are represented by the fatherless - the feeble and the helpless.

And the oppressed - Those who are downtrodden, crushed, and wronged. See the note at Psa 9:9.

That the man of the earth - literally, "the man from the earth;"that is, that man springing from the earth, or created of the dust Gen 2:7 - man frail, short-lived, feeble - should no more set up an unjust authority, trample on the rights of his fellow-worms, or suppose that he is superior to his fellow-creatures.

May no more oppress - Margin, "terrify."The original word means properly to terrify, to make afraid; that is, in this place, to terrify by his harsh and oppressive conduct. It is to be observed here that the original word - ערץ ‛ârats - has a very close resemblance in sound to the word rendered earth - ארץ 'erets - and that this is commonly supposed to be an instance of the figure of speech called paronomasia, when the words have the same sound, but are of different significations. It is not certain, however, that there is in this case any designed resemblance, but it is rather to be supposed that it was accidental. In regard to the prayer in this verse, it may be proper to observe that there is always occasion to utter it, and will be until the Gospel shall pervade the hearts of all men. One of the most common forms of wickedness in our world is oppression - the oppression of the fatherless, of the poor, of the dependent - the oppression of the subjects of government, and the oppression of the slave. One of the most affecting things in regard to this is, that it is done by a man made "from the earth,"- a child of dust - a creature composed of clay - of no better mould than others, and soon to return "to"the dust from which he was taken. Yet frail and weak man strives to feel that he is better than those clothed with a skin not colored like his own, or those born in a more bumble condition of life; and, in defiance of all the laws of God, and all the rights of his fellow-men, he crushes and grinds them to the earth. For such sins God will interpose, and he will yet show himself to be the helper of the fatherless and the oppressed. May He hasten the day when oppression and wrong shall cease in the world!

Poole: Psa 10:14 - -- Thou hast seen it or, but thou hast seen it , and therefore they are horribly mistaken, as they will find to their cost. For ; or, surely , as thi...

Thou hast seen it or, but thou hast seen it , and therefore they are horribly mistaken, as they will find to their cost. For ; or, surely , as this particle is oft used, as Job 8:6 Psa 73:18 .

Thou beholdest not as an idle spectator, but with an eye of observation and vindication, as it follows. Mischief and spite , i.e. all the injurious and spiteful or malicious carriages of wicked men towards those who are more righteous than they.

To requite it with thy hand Heb. to give (i.e. to restore or pay, the simple verb for the compound; which is usual in the Hebrew tongue) it (to wit, the mischief which they have done to others)

with thy hand i.e. by thy own immediate and extraordinary providence, because the oppressed were destitute of all other succours. Or, to put ( giving being oft used for putting , as hath been observed before) it in or into thy hand , that thou mayst have it always in thine eye, and under thy care and consideration, as the like phrase is evidently used, Isa 49:16 Therefore thou dost not and canst not forget it, but wilt certainly require it.

Committeth himself or, his matters or cause , i.e. the care of his person and righteous cause. Heb. he leaveth ; which word is used for committing to the trust of another, Gen 39:6 Job 39:14 Isa 10:3 .

Of the fatherless i.e. of such poor oppressed ones as have no friend nor helper; one kind of them being put for all the rest.

Poole: Psa 10:15 - -- Break thou or, Thou wilt break . For it may be either a prayer or a prophecy. The arm i.e. his strength, the instrument of violence and mischief. ...

Break thou or, Thou wilt break . For it may be either a prayer or a prophecy.

The arm i.e. his strength, the instrument of violence and mischief.

Seek out his wickedness search for it so strictly, and punish these wicked atheists so severely.

Till thou find none i.e. no such wickedness, to wit, undiscovered and unpunished, or indeed left in the world, or at least in the church; which might happen, because those wicked men here spoken of should be generally either convinced or rooted out, and the rest should be warned and reformed by their example, and so this lewdness should cease out of the land, as the phrase is, Eze 23:48 . That is said to be sought for , and not found , which is utterly lost, as Job 20:7,8 Ps 37:36 Rev 16:20 18:21 . And this phrase is used both of good men, whose sins are taken away by God’ s grace and mercy, pardoning and purging them away, and of wicked men in the sense above mentioned.

Poole: Psa 10:16 - -- The Lord is King to whom it belongs to protect his subjects. Therefore thou wilt save the humble, and punish the oppressors. For ever and ever ther...

The Lord is King to whom it belongs to protect his subjects. Therefore thou wilt save the humble, and punish the oppressors.

For ever and ever therefore his people’ s case is never desperate, seeing he ever lives and reigns to help them, and therefore he will help them in his time sooner or later.

The heathen either,

1. Those impious Israelites who oppressed David and other good men, whom, although they were reputed Israelites by themselves and others, yet he might call them heathens for their heathenish opinions of God and his providence, and for their ungodly and unrighteous lives. Compare Isa 1:9 Amo 9:7 . Or,

2. The Canaanites, whom God as King of the world did expel or destroy, and gave their land to his people; by which great example he confirms his faith and hope for the future.

Out of his land i.e. out of Canaan, which God calls his land, Lev 25:23 , because he spied it out for them, Eze 20:6 , and gave it to them, and fixed his presence and dwelling in it.

Poole: Psa 10:17 - -- Thou hast heard the desire of the humble and therefore wilt still do it, being unchangeable and the same for ever. Thou wilt prepare or direct , o...

Thou hast heard the desire of the humble and therefore wilt still do it, being unchangeable and the same for ever.

Thou wilt prepare or direct , or fit , by thy grace and good Spirit, either that they may so pray as thou wilt hear, or that they may be made fit to receive the mercies which they desire; which when they are, they shall have their prayers heard. Or, thou wilt confirm or stablish (as this verb is oft used) their heart, to bear their present pressures, and to wait upon and hope and trust in thee for deliverance, until thou seest fit to hear and help them:

Thou wilt cause thine ear to hear in due time , though for a season thou seemest to turn a deaf ear to them. But this and the foregoing verb may be taken as a prayer, future verbs being oft used imperatively; prepare or stablish their hearts , (by giving them support and assurance of help in the time of need, and then,) cause thine ear to hear.

Poole: Psa 10:18 - -- To judge i.e. to defend them, and give sentence for them, and against their enemies, as this word is used, Deu 32:36 Psa 7:8 135:14 . The man of the...

To judge i.e. to defend them, and give sentence for them, and against their enemies, as this word is used, Deu 32:36 Psa 7:8 135:14 .

The man of the earth i.e. earthly and mortal men, who are made of the dust, and must return to it, such as the oppressors of thy people are; who yet presume most audaciously and madly to contend with thee their Maker and Judge. Therefore it is time for thee to repress such insolency, and to show how unable they are to stand before thee.

May no more oppress to wit, the fatherless last mentioned.

Gill: Psa 10:14 - -- Thou hast seen it,.... Though the wicked say God will never see, Psa 10:11; he sees all things in general, all men and all their actions; all are man...

Thou hast seen it,.... Though the wicked say God will never see, Psa 10:11; he sees all things in general, all men and all their actions; all are manifest and open to him, and everything in particular, especially the wickedness of men; even that which is said or thought in the heart;

for thou beholdest mischief and spite; that mischief which arises from spite or malice in the heart; God beholds the inward principle from whence it proceeds, as well as that itself; the mischief devised in the heart, on the bed, and which lies under the tongue, designed against the people of God, either to the injury of their characters and estates, or to their bodies, and even to their souls, as much as in them lies, proceeding from implacable malice and enmity to them;

to requite it with thy hand: of power, to retaliate it upon their own heads, to render tribulation to them that trouble the saints, which is but a righteous thing with God: or "to put it in thy hand" k; and the sense is, that God looks upon all the injuries the wicked out of spite devise to do to his people, and puts them in his hand, that they may be ever before him, and always in his sight, and he will take a proper opportunity of avenging them. The Targum interprets it of God's rewarding good men, as well as punishing the wicked, paraphrasing the whole thus,

"it is manifest before thee that thou wilt send sorrow and wrath upon the wicked; thou lookest to render a good reward to the righteous with thy hand;''

the poor committeth himself unto thee: his body, and the outward concerns of life, as to a faithful Creator; his soul, and the spiritual and eternal welfare of it, as to the only Saviour and Redeemer; he commits all his ways to him, as the God of providence and grace; and at last he commits his spirit to him at death, as to his covenant God and Father: the words may be rendered, "the poor leaveth upon thee" l; that is, he leaves himself and his upon the Lord; he leaves his burden on him, he casts all his care upon him, as he is advised and encouraged to do; he leaves his cause with him to plead it for him, who will plead it thoroughly and maintain it: the phrase is expressive of the poor's faith and hope in God; hence the Chaldee paraphrase renders it, "on thee will thy poor ones hope"; for the supply of their wants, and for help and assistance against their enemies;

thou art the helper of the fatherless; God is the Father of them, provides for them, supplies, supports, and defends them; nor will he in a spiritual sense leave his people orphans or comfortless, but will visit and help them; see Psa 68:5;

Gill: Psa 10:15 - -- Break thou the arm of the wicked and the evil man,.... His power and strength, so that he shall not be able to hold the sword, to strike a blow, or d...

Break thou the arm of the wicked and the evil man,.... His power and strength, so that he shall not be able to hold the sword, to strike a blow, or do any hurt to the people of God; see Eze 30:21. This prayer is in some measure already fulfilled in antichrist, the man of sin, or pope of Rome; though his kingdom is not broke to pieces; as it will be when Christ's kingdom shall be more visibly set up, to which reference is had in Psa 10:16; see Dan 2:44; yet his strength is weakened, his arm is broken, he has not the power he had, nor can he tyrannise and do the mischief he once did: "but as for the evil man" m, for so the words should be read, there being an "athnach" under the word "wicked", which ends the proposition there:

seek out his wickedness till thou find none; which designs a thorough search after sin, full punishment of it, and the entire ruin and destruction of the wicked; and the sense is, that God would make a strict inquiry into the wickedness of the man of sin, which he promised himself he would not, Psa 10:13; and that he would punish him and his followers to the uttermost for it, until there should not be one of the antichristian party found upon earth; with which sense agrees Psa 10:16; see Psa 104:35.

Gill: Psa 10:16 - -- The Lord is King for ever and ever,.... Christ was King from everlasting, and during the Old Testament dispensation he was promised and prophesied of...

The Lord is King for ever and ever,.... Christ was King from everlasting, and during the Old Testament dispensation he was promised and prophesied of as King; and he had a kingdom when he was here on earth, though not of this world; nor was it with observation. At his ascension to heaven, and session at the right hand of God, he sat down upon the same throne with his Father, and was made or declared Lord and Christ, and appeared more visibly in his kingly office; and in the latter day it will be yet more manifest that he is King of saints, and when indeed he will be King over all the earth, and his kingdom will be an everlasting one: he will have no successor in it, nor will any usurper obtain any more; the devil, beast, and false prophet, will be cast into the lake of fire; all antichristian states will be destroyed, and all authority, rule, and power, put down; nor can his kingdom ever be subverted, he must reign till all enemies are put under his feet; he will reign to the end of the present world, and with the saints a thousand years in the new heaven and earth, and in the ultimate glory to all eternity; nor will his government cease when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to the Father, only the mode of the administration of it. Here begins the song of praise; the reign of Christ is matter of joy; see Psa 97:1;

the Heathen are perished out of his land: not the seven nations which were driven out of the land of Canaan, to make way for the people of Israel, that was long ago; nor the wicked and degenerate Jews, called the Heathen, Psa 2:1; compared with Act 4:27; on whom, and on whose temple, city, and nation, Christ's native land, wrath is come to the uttermost; and they are perished out of it: nor hypocrites out of churches, which are Christ's property; but the antichristian party out of the world, which is Christ's land by creation, as God, and by the gift of his father to him, as Mediator. The followers of antichrist are called Gentiles, and the nations of the earth, Rev 11:2; and these will be no more; they will be utterly destroyed, when the man of sin shall be consumed with the breath of Christ's mouth and the brightness of his coming. The seventh vial will clear the world of all the remains of Christ's enemies: this also is cause of rejoicing, Psa 132:16.

Gill: Psa 10:17 - -- Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the humble,.... See Psa 10:12; for the coming of Christ's kingdom, and that the kingdoms of this world may become ...

Lord, thou hast heard the desire of the humble,.... See Psa 10:12; for the coming of Christ's kingdom, and that the kingdoms of this world may become his; for the destruction of antichrist, and for the avenging the blood of the saints. The prayers of God's people sometimes lie in inward and secret desires of the soul, and are not expressed in words; and these desires are all before the Lord, and are well known unto him; yea, such prayers of the heart, and which come from it, are principally regarded by him; they being his own preparation, as is suggested in the next clause, and the breathings of his Spirit; and especially the desires of humble souls are regarded, whose prayers he never despises, nor sends them away empty, but fills with his good things;

thou wilt prepare their heart; for prayer, by pouring a spirit of grace and supplication on them, impressing their minds with a sense of things to be prayed for, and drawing out the desires of their souls unto them, and making intercession for them with groanings according to the will of God, and so helping their infirmities; and it is God's work to prepare the heart for prayer, as well as to put words into the mouth, Pro 16:1; or "thou wilt direct their heart" n; to the object of prayer, himself, and to the things to be prayed for, for they know not what to pray for, nor how as they should; and to what may encourage to it, as the love of God, the covenant of grace, the person, blood, and righteousness of Christ: or "confirm" or "establish their heart" o; strengthen and fix them, that they be not wavering and doubtful, but certain and assured of success, believing that their desires will be fulfilled in God's own time;

thou wilt cause thine ear to hear; God has an ear to hear the prayers of his people, nor is his ear heavy that it cannot hear; his ears are open to the cries of righteous ones; nor will he ever turn a deaf ear to them, but will give an answer in his own time and way; which is an instance of his sovereign grace and goodness. These words express the faith of the psalmist in God being a God hearing and answering prayer, particularly in things relating to the ruin of antichrist and his followers, and to the kingdom and glory of his son Jesus Christ.

Gill: Psa 10:18 - -- To judge the fatherless and the oppressed,.... That is, God will cause his ear to hear the cries of his people, so as to avenge the wrongs done to the...

To judge the fatherless and the oppressed,.... That is, God will cause his ear to hear the cries of his people, so as to avenge the wrongs done to the fatherless, and them that are oppressed by the man of sin; see Rev 11:18;

that the man of the earth may no more oppress: or "terrify" p, the dear children of God, and faithful witnesses of Christ, as he has done; for by "the man of the earth" is not meant carnal worldly men in general, "the wicked of the earth", as the Targum renders it; who are so called because their original is from the earth, and they dwell in earthly tabernacles, and shall return to the earth again, and are earthly minded men, and have much of this world's things; and are therefore sometimes called the men and children of this world, and who, generally speaking, are oppressors of the saints; and who shall cease to be so in the latter day, when the kingdom shall be given to the saints of the most High; but particularly the man of sin, the Romish antichrist, seems intended, who is the beast that is risen up out of the earth, Rev 13:11; and so the words may be rendered here, "the man out of the earth" q; whose kingdom and government is an earthly one, and is supported by the kings of the earth, and with earthly power and grandeur, and with earthly views and worldly ends: he has been the great oppressor and terrifier of the poor people of God; but when Christ comes to avenge them on him, he will no more oppress, he will be taken and cast alive into the lake of fire; see Rev 13:10. The words may be rendered according to the accents thus, "to judge the fatherless and the oppressed; he shall not add any more": for there is an "athnach" which makes a proposition "under" עוד, "any more": and the sense is, God shall so thoroughly avenge the injuries of the fatherless and the oppressed, that there will be no need to add thereunto or repeat the vengeance, it will be an utter destruction; and then follows another distinct end of causing his ear to hear, namely, "to shake terribly the man of the earth", or "to shake terribly man from off the earth" r, the man of sin, as before; see Isa 2:19; or, as Jarchi interprets the words, "to beat and break in pieces"; that is, antichrist and his kingdom; so Montanus.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 10:14 The fatherless. Because they were so vulnerable and were frequently exploited, fatherless children are often mentioned as epitomizing the oppressed (s...

NET Notes: Psa 10:15 Heb “you will not find.” It is uncertain how this statement relates to what precedes. Some take בַל (bal), which is used...

NET Notes: Psa 10:16 The nations may be the underlying reality behind the psalmist’s references to the “wicked” in the earlier verses. This reference to ...

NET Notes: Psa 10:17 Heb “you make firm their heart, you cause your ear to listen.”

NET Notes: Psa 10:18 Heb “he will not add again [i.e., “he will no longer”] to terrify, man from the earth.” The Hebrew term אֱנ&...

Geneva Bible: Psa 10:14 Thou hast seen [it]; for thou beholdest mischief and spite, to ( h ) requite [it] with thy hand: the poor committeth himself unto thee; thou art the h...

Geneva Bible: Psa 10:15 Break thou the arm of the wicked and the evil [man]: seek out his wickedness [till] thou find ( i ) none. ( i ) For you have utterly destroyed him.

Geneva Bible: Psa 10:16 The LORD [is] King for ever and ever: the ( k ) heathen are perished out of his land. ( k ) The hypocrites or such as live not after God's law, will ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 10:18 ( l ) To judge the fatherless and the oppressed, that the man of the earth may no more oppress. ( l ) God helps when man's help ceases.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Psa 10:1-18 - --1 David complains of the wicked.12 He prays for remedy.16 He professes his confidence.

MHCC: Psa 10:12-18 - --The psalmist speaks with astonishment, at the wickedness of the wicked, and at the patience and forbearance of God. God prepares the heart for prayer,...

Matthew Henry: Psa 10:12-18 - -- David here, upon the foregoing representation of the inhumanity and impiety of the oppressors, grounds an address to God, wherein observe, I. What h...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 10:14 - -- Now comes the confirmation of his cry to God: It is with Him entirely different from what the ungodly imagine. They think that He will not punish; b...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 10:15-16 - -- The desire for Jahve's interposition now rises again with fresh earnestness. It is a mistake to regard דּרשׁ and מצא as correlative notions....

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 10:17-18 - -- Still standing on this eminence from which he seems to behold the end, the poet basks in the realisation of that which has been obtained in answer t...

Constable: Psa 10:1-18 - --Psalm 10 This psalm is a prayer for immediate help in affliction. It contains a powerful description of ...

Constable: Psa 10:12-18 - --2. Cry for vengeance 10:12-18 10:12-15 David appealed to God to act for the righteous against the wicked. He could not understand why God allowed the ...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Psa 10:18 All men who are eminently useful are made to feel their weakness in a supreme degree. CHARLES SPURGEON

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 10 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 10:1, David complains of the wicked; Psa 10:12, He prays for remedy; Psa 10:16, He professes his confidence.

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

Poole: Psalms 10 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This Psalm contains David’ s complaint unto God against his malicious enemies, especially those of his own people, whose wicked a...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 10 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 10:1-11) The psalmist complains of the wickedness of the wicked. (Psa 10:12-18) He prays to God to appear for the relief of his people.

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 10 (Chapter Introduction) The Septuagint translation joins this psalm with the ninth, and makes them but one; but the Hebrew makes it a distinct psalm, and the scope and sty...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 10 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 10 This psalm in the Septuagint version, and those that follow it, is a part and continuation of the preceding psalm, and mak...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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