
Text -- Psalms 103:2 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 103:2
Not any, none of His benefits.
Clarke -> Psa 103:2
Clarke: Psa 103:2 - -- Forget not all his benefits - Call them into recollection; particularize the chief of them; and here record them for an everlasting memorial.
Forget not all his benefits - Call them into recollection; particularize the chief of them; and here record them for an everlasting memorial.
Calvin -> Psa 103:2
Calvin: Psa 103:2 - -- 2.And forget not any of his benefits Here, he instructs us that God is not deficient on his part in furnishing us with abundant matter for praising h...
2.And forget not any of his benefits Here, he instructs us that God is not deficient on his part in furnishing us with abundant matter for praising him. It is our own ingratitude which hinders us from engaging in this exercise. In the first place, he teaches us that the reason why God deals with such liberality towards us is, that we may be led to celebrate his praise; but at the same time he condemns our inconstancy, which hurries us away to any other object rather than to God. How is it that we are so listless and drowsy in the performance of this the chief exercise of true religion, if it is not because our shameful and wicked forgetfulness buries in our hearts the innumerable benefits of God, which are openly manifest to heaven and earth? Did we only retain the remembrance of them, the prophet assures us that we would be sufficiently inclined to perform our duty, since the sole prohibition which he lays upon us is, not to forget them.
TSK -> Psa 103:2
TSK: Psa 103:2 - -- forget not : Psa 105:5, Psa 106:7, Psa 106:21, Psa 116:12; Deu 8:2-4, Deu 8:10-14, Deu 32:6, Deu 32:18; 2Ch 32:25; Isa 63:1, Isa 63:7; Jer 2:31, Jer 2...
forget not : Psa 105:5, Psa 106:7, Psa 106:21, Psa 116:12; Deu 8:2-4, Deu 8:10-14, Deu 32:6, Deu 32:18; 2Ch 32:25; Isa 63:1, Isa 63:7; Jer 2:31, Jer 2:32; Luk 17:15-18; Eph 2:11-13

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 103:2
Barnes: Psa 103:2 - -- Bless the Lord, O my soul - The repetition here denotes the intensity or earnestness of the wish or desire of the psalmist. It is an emphatic c...
Bless the Lord, O my soul - The repetition here denotes the intensity or earnestness of the wish or desire of the psalmist. It is an emphatic calling upon his soul, that is, himself, never to forget the many favors which God was continually conferring upon him.
And forget not all his benefits - Any of his favors. This refers not to those favors in the aggregate, but it is a call to remember them in particular. The word rendered "benefits"-
Haydock -> Psa 103:2
Haydock: Psa 103:2 - -- Light. In this manner he always appeared, 1 Timothy vi. 16., and Exodus iii. 2. (Calmet) ---
Christ only once assumed such a glorious form at this...
Light. In this manner he always appeared, 1 Timothy vi. 16., and Exodus iii. 2. (Calmet) ---
Christ only once assumed such a glorious form at this transfiguration, because he came to instruct our mind and heart. (Berthier) ---
Stretchest. Hebrew and Septuagint have the verbs in the third person, till ver. 6., as the Vulgate has here extendens. But St. Jerome and others agree with us, though St. Paul quotes according to the Hebrew, ver. 4. (Haydock) ---
Pavilion. The idea of the heavens resting like a tent upon the earth was very prevalent, Job ix. 8., and Isaias xl. 22.
Gill -> Psa 103:2
Gill: Psa 103:2 - -- Bless the Lord, O my soul,.... Which is repeated to show the importance of the service, and the vehement desire of the psalmist, that his soul should ...
Bless the Lord, O my soul,.... Which is repeated to show the importance of the service, and the vehement desire of the psalmist, that his soul should be engaged in it:
and forget not all his benefits; not any of them; the least of them are not to be forgotten, being such as men are altogether unworthy of; they flow not from the merit of men, but from the mercy of God; and they are many, even innumerable; they are new every morning, and continue all the day; and how great must the sum of them be, and not one should be forgotten; and yet even good men are very apt to forget them; as the Israelites of old, who sung the praises of the Lord, and soon forgot his works: the Lord, knowing the weakness of his people's memories, has not only, under the Gospel dispensation, appointed an ordinance, to be continued to the end of the world, to commemorate a principal blessing and benefit of his, redemption by his Son; but has also promised his Spirit, to bring all things to their remembrance; and this they should be concerned for, that they do remember what God has done for them, in order both to show gratitude and thankfulness to him, and for the encouragement of their faith and hope in him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 103:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Psa 103:1-22 - --1 An exhortation to bless God for his mercy,15 and for the constancy thereof.
MHCC -> Psa 103:1-5
MHCC: Psa 103:1-5 - --By the pardon of sin, that is taken away which kept good things from us, and we are restored to the favor of God, who bestows good things on us. Think...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 103:1-5
Matthew Henry: Psa 103:1-5 - -- David is here communing with his own heart, and he is no fool that thus talks to himself and excites his own soul to that which is good. Observe, I....
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 103:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 103:1-5 - --
In the strophe Psa 103:1 the poet calls upon his soul to arise to praiseful gratitude for God's justifying, redeeming, and renewing grace. In such s...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...

Constable: Psa 103:1-22 - --Psalm 103
This popular Davidic psalm reviews God's mercies and expresses confident hope in His covenant ...
