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Text -- Psalms 104:26-35 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:26; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:35
The whale.
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Wesley: Psa 104:26 - -- Who being of such a vast strength and absolute dominion in the sea, tumbles in it with great security, and sports himself with other creatures.
Who being of such a vast strength and absolute dominion in the sea, tumbles in it with great security, and sports himself with other creatures.
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Withdrawest the care of thy providence.
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Wesley: Psa 104:30 - -- That quickening power of God, by which he produces life in the creatures from time to time. For he speaks not here of the first creation, but of the c...
That quickening power of God, by which he produces life in the creatures from time to time. For he speaks not here of the first creation, but of the continued production of living creatures.
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Wesley: Psa 104:30 - -- Other living creatures are produced; the word created being taken in its largest sense for the production of things by second causes.
Other living creatures are produced; the word created being taken in its largest sense for the production of things by second causes.
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Wesley: Psa 104:30 - -- And thus by thy wise and wonderful providence thou preservest the succession of living creatures.
And thus by thy wise and wonderful providence thou preservest the succession of living creatures.
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Wesley: Psa 104:31 - -- Thus God advances the glory of his wisdom and power and goodness, in upholding the works of his hands from generation to generation, and he takes plea...
Thus God advances the glory of his wisdom and power and goodness, in upholding the works of his hands from generation to generation, and he takes pleasure in the preservation of his works, as also in his reflection upon these works of his providence.
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Wesley: Psa 104:32 - -- This is a farther illustration of God's powerful providence: as when he affords his favour to creatures, they live and thrive, so on the contrary, one...
This is a farther illustration of God's powerful providence: as when he affords his favour to creatures, they live and thrive, so on the contrary, one angry look or touch of his upon the hills or earth, makes them tremble and smoke, as Sinai did when God appeared in it.
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Wesley: Psa 104:35 - -- Heb. Hallelujah. This is the first time that this word occurs. And it comes in here on occasion of the destruction of the wicked. And the last time it...
Heb. Hallelujah. This is the first time that this word occurs. And it comes in here on occasion of the destruction of the wicked. And the last time it occurs, Rev 19:1, Rev 19:3-4, Rev 19:6, it is on a like occasion, the destruction of Babylon.
JFB: Psa 104:24-26 - -- From a view of the earth thus full of God's blessings, the writer passes to the sea, which, in its immensity, and as a scene and means of man's activi...
From a view of the earth thus full of God's blessings, the writer passes to the sea, which, in its immensity, and as a scene and means of man's activity in commerce, and the home of countless multitudes of creatures, also displays divine power and beneficence. The mention of
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JFB: Psa 104:26 - -- (Job 40:20) heightens the estimate of the sea's greatness, and of His power who gives such a place for sport to one of His creatures.
(Job 40:20) heightens the estimate of the sea's greatness, and of His power who gives such a place for sport to one of His creatures.
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JFB: Psa 104:27-30 - -- The entire dependence of this immense family on God is set forth. With Him, to kill or make alive is equally easy. To hide His face is to withdraw fav...
The entire dependence of this immense family on God is set forth. With Him, to kill or make alive is equally easy. To hide His face is to withdraw favor (Psa 13:1). By His spirit, or breath, or mere word, He gives life. It is His constant providence which repairs the wastes of time and disease.
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JFB: Psa 104:31-34 - -- While God could equally glorify His power in destruction, that He does it in preservation is of His rich goodness and mercy, so that we may well spend...
While God could equally glorify His power in destruction, that He does it in preservation is of His rich goodness and mercy, so that we may well spend our lives in grateful praise, honoring to Him, and delightful to pious hearts (Psa 147:1).
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JFB: Psa 104:35 - -- Those who refuse such a protector and withhold such a service mar the beauty of His works, and must perish from His presence.
Those who refuse such a protector and withhold such a service mar the beauty of His works, and must perish from His presence.
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JFB: Psa 104:35 - -- The Psalm closes with an invocation of praise, the translation of a Hebrew phrase, which is used as an English word, "Hallelujah," and may have served...
The Psalm closes with an invocation of praise, the translation of a Hebrew phrase, which is used as an English word, "Hallelujah," and may have served the purpose of a chorus, as often in our psalmody, or to give fuller expression to the writer's emotions. It is peculiar to Psalms composed after the captivity, as "Selah" is to those of an earlier date.
Clarke -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:26; Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:35
Clarke: Psa 104:26 - -- There go the ships - By means of navigation, countries the most remote are connected, and all the inhabitants of the earth become known to each othe...
There go the ships - By means of navigation, countries the most remote are connected, and all the inhabitants of the earth become known to each other. He appears at this time to have seen the ships under sail
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Clarke: Psa 104:26 - -- That leviathan - This may mean the whale, or any of the large marine animals. The Septuagint and Vulgate call it dragon. Sometimes the crocodile is ...
That leviathan - This may mean the whale, or any of the large marine animals. The Septuagint and Vulgate call it dragon. Sometimes the crocodile is intended by the original word
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Clarke: Psa 104:26 - -- To play therein - Dreadful and tempestuous as the sea may appear, and uncontrollable in its billows and surges, it is only the field of sport, the p...
To play therein - Dreadful and tempestuous as the sea may appear, and uncontrollable in its billows and surges, it is only the field of sport, the play-ground, the bowling-green to those huge marine monsters.
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Clarke: Psa 104:27 - -- These wait all upon thee - The innumerable fry of the smaller aquatic animals, as well as whales, dolphins, porpoises, and sharks, all have their me...
These wait all upon thee - The innumerable fry of the smaller aquatic animals, as well as whales, dolphins, porpoises, and sharks, all have their meat from God. He has in his gracious providence furnished that sort of food which is suitable to all. And this provision is various; not only for every kind of fish does God provide food, but a different kind of aliment for each in its different periods of growth. Here are displayed the goodness and infinitely varied providence of God: "He giveth them their meat in due season."
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Clarke: Psa 104:28 - -- That thou givest them they gather - All creatures are formed with such and such digestive organs, and the food proper for them is provided. Infinite...
That thou givest them they gather - All creatures are formed with such and such digestive organs, and the food proper for them is provided. Infinitely varied as are living creatures in their habits and internal economy, so are the aliments which God has caused the air, the earth, and the waters to produce
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Clarke: Psa 104:28 - -- Thou openest thine hand - An allusion to the act of scattering grain among fowls.
Thou openest thine hand - An allusion to the act of scattering grain among fowls.
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Clarke: Psa 104:29 - -- Thou hidest thy face - If thou bring dearth or famine on the land, contagion in the air, or any destruction on the provision made by the waters, the...
Thou hidest thy face - If thou bring dearth or famine on the land, contagion in the air, or any destruction on the provision made by the waters, then beasts, fowl, and fish die, and are dissolved.
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Clarke: Psa 104:30 - -- Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created - יבראון yibbareun , "They are created again.
Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created -
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Clarke: Psa 104:30 - -- And thou renewest the face of the earth - Do not these words plainly imply a resurrection of the bodies which have died, been dissolved, or turned t...
And thou renewest the face of the earth - Do not these words plainly imply a resurrection of the bodies which have died, been dissolved, or turned to dust? And is not the brute creation principally intended here? Is it not on this account it is said, Psa 104:31, "the glory of the Lord shall endure for ever, (
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He looketh on the earth - Even the look of God terrifies all created nature
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Clarke: Psa 104:32 - -- He toucheth the hills - So easy is it for God to burn up the earth and the worlds thereof, that even his touch kindles the mountains into flames! Se...
He toucheth the hills - So easy is it for God to burn up the earth and the worlds thereof, that even his touch kindles the mountains into flames! See Etna, Vesuvius, Stromboli, etc.; these are ignited by the touch of God. How majestic are these figures
The renewal of the earth, and re-creation of deceased animals, shall take place when he shall shake terribly the heavens and the earth; when they shall be wrapped together as a scroll, and the earth and its works be dissolved, that is, after the general convulsion and conflagration of the world.
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Clarke: Psa 104:33 - -- I will sing unto the Lord - The psalmist exulting in the glorious prospect of the renovation of all things, breaks out in triumphant anticipation of...
I will sing unto the Lord - The psalmist exulting in the glorious prospect of the renovation of all things, breaks out in triumphant anticipation of the great event, and says, I will sing unto the Lord
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Clarke: Psa 104:33 - -- I will sing praise to my God - בעודי beodi , "in my eternity;"my going on, my endless progression. What astonishing ideas! But then, how shall...
I will sing praise to my God -
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Clarke: Psa 104:35 - -- Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be no more - Or, He shall consume the wicked and ungodly, till no more of them be f...
Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be no more - Or, He shall consume the wicked and ungodly, till no more of them be found. Then the wicked shall be turned into hell, with all the nations that forget God. No wonder, with these prospects before his eyes, he cries out, "Bless Jehovah, O my soul! Hallelujah!"And ye that hear of these things, bless the Lord also
Calvin: Psa 104:27 - -- 27.All these wait upon thee The prophet here again describes God as acting the part of the master of a household, and a foster-father towards all sor...
27.All these wait upon thee The prophet here again describes God as acting the part of the master of a household, and a foster-father towards all sorts of living creatures, by providing liberally for them. He had said before, that God made food to grow on the mountains for the support of cattle, and that sustenance is ministered to the very lions by the hand of the same God, although they live upon prey. Now he amplifies this wonder of the divine beneficence by an additional circumstance. While the different species of living creatures are almost innumerable, and the number in each species is so great, there is yet not one of them which does not stand in need of daily food. The meaning then of the expression, All things wait upon thee, is, that they could not continue in existence even for a few days, unless God were to supply their daily need, and to nourish each of them in particular. We thus see why there is so great a diversity of fruits; for God assigns and appoints to each species of living creatures the food suitable and proper for them. The brute beasts are not indeed endued with reason and judgment to seek the supply of their wants from God, but stooping towards the earth, they seek to fill themselves with food; still the prophet speaks with propriety, when he represents them as waiting upon God; for their hunger must be relieved by his bounty, else they would soon die. Nor is the specification of the season when God furnishes them with food superfluous, since God lays up in store for them, that they may have the means of sustenance during the whole course of the year. As the earth in winter shuts up her bowels, what would become of them if he did not provide them with food for a long time? The miracle, then, is the greater from the circumstance, that God, by making the earth fruitful at stated seasons, extends in this way his blessing to the rest of the year which threatens us with hunger and famine. How wretched would we be when the earth in winter shuts up her riches, were not our hearts cheered with the hope of a new increase? In this sense, the Psalmist appropriately affirms, that God opens his hand If wheat should grow up daily, God’s providence would not be so manifest. But when the earth becomes barren, it is as if God shut his hand. Whence it follows, that when he makes it fruitful, he, so to speak, stretches out his hand from heaven to give us food. Now if he supply wild and brute beasts with sustenance in due season, by which they are fed to the full, his blessing will doubtless be to us as an inexhaustible source of plenty, provided we ourselves do not hinder it from flowing to us by our unbelief.
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Calvin: Psa 104:29 - -- 29.Thou shalt hide thy face, and they shall be afraid In these words, the Psalmist declares, that we stand or fall according to the will of God. We c...
29.Thou shalt hide thy face, and they shall be afraid In these words, the Psalmist declares, that we stand or fall according to the will of God. We continue to live, so long as he sustains us by his power; but no sooner does he withdraw his life-giving spirit than we die. Even Plato knew this, who so often teaches that, properly speaking, there is but one God, and that all things subsist, or have their being only in him. Nor do I doubt, that it was the will of God, by means of that heathen writer, to awaken all men to the knowledge, that they derive their life from another source than from themselves. In the first place, the Psalmist asserts, that if God hide his face they are afraid; and, secondly, that if he take away their spirit they die, and return to their dust; by which words he points out, that when God vouchsafes to look upon us, that look gives us life, and that as long as his serene countenance shines, it inspires all the creatures with life. Our blindness then is doubly inexcusable, if we do not on our part cast our eyes upon that goodness which gives life to the whole world. The prophet describes step by step the destruction of living creatures, upon God’s withdrawing from them his secret energy, that from the contrast he may the better commend that continued inspiration, by which all things are maintained in life and rigor. He could have gone farther, and have asserted, that all things, unless upheld in being by God, would return to nothing; but he was content with affirming in general and popular language, that whatever is not cherished by Him falls into corruption. He again declares, that the world is daily renewed, because God sends forth his spirit In the propagation of living creatures, we doubtless see continually a new creation of the world. In now calling that God’s spirit, which he before represented as the spirit of living creatures, there is no contradiction. God sendeth forth that spirit which remains with him whither he pleases; and as soon as he has sent it forth, all things are created. In this way, what was his own he makes to be ours. But this gives no countenance to the old dream of the Manicheeans, which that filthy dog Servetus has made still worse in our own day. The Manicheeans said that the soul of man is a particle of the Divine Spirit, and is propagated from it as the shoot of a tree; but this base man has had the audacity to assert, that oxen, asses, and dogs, are parts of the divine essence. The Manichees at least had this pretext for their error, that the soul was created after the image of God; but to maintain this with respect to swine and cattle, is in the highest degree monstrous and detestable. Nothing was farther from the prophet’s intention, than to divide the spirit of God into parts, so that a portion of it should dwell essentially in every living creature. But he termed that the spirit of God which proceeds from him. By the way, he instructs us, that it is ours, because it is given us, that it may quicken us. The amount of what is stated is, that when we see the world daily decaying, and daily renewed, the life-giving power of God is reflected to us herein as in a mirror. All the deaths which take place among living creatures, are just so many examples of our nothingness, so to speak; and when others are produced and grow up in their room, we have in that presented to us a renewal of the world. Since then the world daily dies, and is daily renewed in its various parts, the manifest conclusion is, that it subsists only by a secret virtue derived from God.
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Calvin: Psa 104:31 - -- 31.Glory be to Jehovah for ever The inspired writer shows for what purpose he has celebrated in the preceding part of the psalm the power, wisdom, an...
31.Glory be to Jehovah for ever The inspired writer shows for what purpose he has celebrated in the preceding part of the psalm the power, wisdom, and goodness of God in his works, namely, to stir up men to praise him. It is no small honor that God for our sake has so magnificently adorned the world, in order that we may not only be spectators of this beauteous theater, but also enjoy the multiplied abundance and variety of good things which are presented to us in it. Our gratitude in yielding to God the praise which is his due, is regarded by him as a singular recompense. What the Psalmist adds, Let Jehovah rejoice in his works, is not superfluous; for he desires that the order which God has established from the beginning may be continued in the lawful use of his gifts. As we read in Gen 6:6, that “it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth,” so when he sees that the good things which he bestows are polluted by our corruptions, he ceases to take delight in bestowing them. And certainly the confusion and disorder which take place, when the elements cease to perform their office, testify that God, displeased and wearied out, is provoked to discontinue, and put a stop to the regular course of his beneficence; although anger and impatience have strictly speaking no place in his mind. What is here taught is, that he bears the character of the best of fathers, who takes pleasure in tenderly cherishing his children, and in bountifully nourishing them. In the following verse it is shown, that the stability of the world depends on this rejoicing of God in his works; for did he not give vigor to the earth by his gracious and fatherly regard, as soon as he looked upon it with a severe countenance, he would make it tremble, and would burn up the very mountains.
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Calvin: Psa 104:33 - -- 33.I will sing to Jehovah whilst I live Here the Psalmist points out to others their duty by his own example, declaring, that throughout the whole co...
33.I will sing to Jehovah whilst I live Here the Psalmist points out to others their duty by his own example, declaring, that throughout the whole course of his life he will proclaim the praises of God without ever growing weary of that exercise. The only boundary which he fixes to the celebration of God’s praises is death; not that the saints, when they pass from this world into another state of existence, desist from this religious duty, but because the end for which we are created is, that the divine name may be celebrated by us on the earth. Conscious of his unworthiness to offer to God so precious a sacrifice, he humbly prays, (verse 34,) that the praises which he will sing to God may be acceptable to him, although they proceed from polluted lips. It is true, that there is nothing more acceptable to God, nor any thing of which he more approves, than the publication of his praises, even as there is no service which he more peculiarly requires us to perform. But as our uncleanness defiles that which in its own nature is most holy, the prophet with good reason betakes himself to the goodness of God, and on this ground alone pleads that He would accept of his song of praise. Accordingly, the Apostle, in Heb 13:15 teaches that our sacrifices of thanksgiving are well pleasing to God, when they are offered to him through Christ. It being however the case, that whilst all men indiscriminately enjoy the benefits of God, there are yet very few who look to the author of them, the prophet subjoins the clause, I will rejoice in the Lord; intimating, that this is a rare virtue; for nothing is more difficult than to call home the mind from those wild and erratic joys, which disperse themselves through heaven and earth in which they evanish, that it may keep itself fixed on God alone.
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Calvin: Psa 104:35 - -- 35.Let sinners perish from the earth This imprecation depends on the last clause of the 31st verse, Let Jehovah rejoice in his works As the wicked ...
35.Let sinners perish from the earth This imprecation depends on the last clause of the 31st verse, Let Jehovah rejoice in his works As the wicked infect the world with their pollutions, the consequence is, that God has less delight in his own workmanship, and is even almost displeased with it. It is impossible, but that this uncleanness, which, being extended and diffused through every part of the world, vitiates and corrupts such a noble product of his hands, must be offensive to him. Since then the wicked, by their perverse abuse of God’s gifts, cause the world in a manner to degenerate and fall away from its first original, the prophet justly desires that they may be exterminated, until the race of them entirely fail. Let us then take care so to weigh the providence of God, as that being wholly devoted to obeying him, we may rightly and purely use the benefits which he sanctities for our enjoying them. Farther, let us be grieved, that such precious treasures are wickedly squandered away, and let us regard it as monstrous and detestable, that men not only forget their Maker, but also, as it were, purposely turn to a perverse and an unworthy end, whatever good things he has bestowed upon them.
Defender: Psa 104:26 - -- The "leviathan" was a great sea-serpent or dragon (Isa 27:1) almost certainly corresponding to the plesiosaurs or other marine reptiles like dinosaurs...
The "leviathan" was a great sea-serpent or dragon (Isa 27:1) almost certainly corresponding to the plesiosaurs or other marine reptiles like dinosaurs now only known as fossils. "Playing" in the deep ocean where ships go, it obviously was not a mere crocodile, as modern commentators allege."
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Defender: Psa 104:30 - -- The creation of plant, animal and human life, both physical and biological, had been completed in the creation week (Gen 2:1-3), so is not going on to...
The creation of plant, animal and human life, both physical and biological, had been completed in the creation week (Gen 2:1-3), so is not going on today. This repeated "creation" must apply to the marvelous ability of reproduction as created in each kind of organism at the beginning. It may refer to the actual creation of each human soul/spirit in God's image at conception."
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Defender: Psa 104:32 - -- Earthquakes and volcanoes which were non-existent in the pre-Flood world, remind us repeatedly today of the great upheavals that took place at the tim...
Earthquakes and volcanoes which were non-existent in the pre-Flood world, remind us repeatedly today of the great upheavals that took place at the time of the Flood. The Flood left many on-going effects in the form of "residual catastrophism." These should remind us that God does eventually judge the wickedness of man and also should serve to warn us of a coming worldwide judgment by fire (see note on Psa 104:35)."
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Defender: Psa 104:35 - -- In this concluding verse the psalm looks forward to the consummation and the renewed earth (2Pe 3:10, 2Pe 3:13).
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Defender: Psa 104:35 - -- This particular exhortation, "Bless the Lord O my soul" only occurs at the beginning and end of Psalms 103 and 104 and indicates both a continuity of ...
This particular exhortation, "Bless the Lord O my soul" only occurs at the beginning and end of Psalms 103 and 104 and indicates both a continuity of authorship and of theme.
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Defender: Psa 104:35 - -- This final exhortation, "Praise ye the Lord" is essentially one word in Hebrew, hallelujah. This is the first of twenty-two occurrences in the book of...
This final exhortation, "Praise ye the Lord" is essentially one word in Hebrew,
TSK -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:34; Psa 104:35
TSK: Psa 104:26 - -- There go : Psa 107:23; Gen 49:13
leviathan : Psa 74:14; Job 3:8 *marg. Job 41:1-34; Isa 27:1
made : Heb. formed
to play : Job 41:5, Job 41:29
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TSK: Psa 104:27 - -- Psa 36:6, Psa 136:25, Psa 145:15, Psa 145:16, Psa 147:9; Job 38:41; Luk 12:24-28
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TSK: Psa 104:29 - -- hidest : Psa 30:7; Job 13:24, Job 34:29; Rom 8:20-22
thou takest : Psa 146:4; Job 34:14, Job 34:15; Ecc 12:7; Act 17:25
return : Psa 90:3; Gen 3:19
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TSK: Psa 104:30 - -- sendest : Psa 33:6; Job 26:13, Job 33:4; Isa 32:14, Isa 32:15; Eze 37:9; Eph 2:1, Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; Tit 3:5
renewest : Isa 65:17, Isa 66:22; Rev 21:5
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TSK: Psa 104:31 - -- The glory : Psa 102:16; Rom 11:36; Gal 1:5; Eph 3:21; 2Ti 4:18; Heb 13:21; 1Pe 5:11; 2Pe 3:18; Rev 5:12, Rev 5:13
endure : Heb. be
rejoice : Gen 1:31;...
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TSK: Psa 104:32 - -- looketh : Psa 77:16, Psa 97:4, Psa 97:5, Psa 114:7; Isa 64:2; Jer 4:23-26, Jer 5:22; Amo 8:8; Nah 1:5, Nah 1:6; Hab 3:5, Hab 3:6, Hab 3:10; Rev 20:11
...
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TSK: Psa 104:34 - -- meditation : Psa 1:2, Psa 63:5, Psa 63:6, Psa 77:12, Psa 119:15, Psa 119:16, Psa 119:111, Psa 119:127, Psa 119:128, Psa 119:167, Psa 139:17, Psa 139:1...
meditation : Psa 1:2, Psa 63:5, Psa 63:6, Psa 77:12, Psa 119:15, Psa 119:16, Psa 119:111, Psa 119:127, Psa 119:128, Psa 119:167, Psa 139:17, Psa 139:18; Pro 24:14
I will be : Psa 32:11; Hab 3:17, Hab 3:18; Luk 1:47; Phi 4:4
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TSK: Psa 104:35 - -- sinners : Psa 1:4, Psa 37:38, Psa 59:13, Psa 68:1, Psa 68:2, Psa 73:27, Psa 101:8; Jdg 5:31; Pro 2:22; Rev 19:1, Rev 19:2
Bless : Psa 104:1, Psa 103:1...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:34; Psa 104:35
Barnes: Psa 104:26 - -- There go the ships - There the vessels move along - objects that would, of course, attract the attention of one looking at the sea, and admirin...
There go the ships - There the vessels move along - objects that would, of course, attract the attention of one looking at the sea, and admiring its wonders. The psalmist is describing the active scenes on the surface of the globe, and, of course, on looking at the ocean, these would be among the objects that would particularly attract his attention.
There is that leviathan - The Septuagint and the Vulgate render this, dragon. On the meaning of the word "leviathan,"see the notes at Job 41:1.
Whom thou hast made - Margin, as in Hebrew, "formed."The idea of creation is implied in the word.
To play therein - As his native element. To move about therein; to make quick and rapid motions, as if in sport.
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Barnes: Psa 104:27 - -- These wait all upon thee - That is, These are all dependent on thee. It does not, of course, mean that they "wait"in the sense that they are co...
These wait all upon thee - That is, These are all dependent on thee. It does not, of course, mean that they "wait"in the sense that they are conscious of their dependence on God, but that they are "actually"dependent. The original word implies the idea of "expecting"or "hoping,"and is so rendered in the Septuagint and Vulgate. They have no other ground of expectation or hope but in thee.
That thou mayest give them their meat in due season - Their food at the proper time. That is, They are constantly dependent on thee, that thou mayest give them food from day to day. Perhaps there is also the idea that they do not lay up or hoard anything; or that they cannot anticipate their own needs, but must receive from one day to another all that they want directly from God.
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Barnes: Psa 104:28 - -- That thou givest them they gather - What thou dost place before them they collect. They have no resources of their own. They can invent nothing...
That thou givest them they gather - What thou dost place before them they collect. They have no resources of their own. They can invent nothing; they cannot vary their food by art, as man does; they cannot make use of reason, as man does, or of skill, in preparing it, to suit and pamper the appetite. It comes prepared for them direct from the hand of God.
Thou openest thine hand - As one does who bestows a gift on another. The point in the passage is, that they receive it immediately from God, and that they are wholly dependent on him for it. They have not to labor to prepare it, but it is made ready for them, and they have only to gather it up. The allusion in the "language"may be to the gathering of manna in the wilderness, when it was provided by God, and people had only to collect it for their use. So it is with the brute creation on land and in the waters.
They are filled with good - They are "satiated"with good; that is, They are satisfied with what to them is good, or with what supplies their needs.
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Barnes: Psa 104:29 - -- Thou hidest thy face - As if God turned away from them; as if he was displeased with them; as if he withdrew from them the tokens of his friend...
Thou hidest thy face - As if God turned away from them; as if he was displeased with them; as if he withdrew from them the tokens of his friendship and favor.
They are troubled - They are confounded; they are overwhelmed with terror and amazement. The word "troubled"by no means conveys the sense of the original word -
Thou takest away their breath - Withdrawing that which thou gavest to them.
They die, and return to their dust - Life ends when thou dost leave them, and they return again to earth. So it is also with man. When God withdraws from him, nothing remains for him "but to die."
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Barnes: Psa 104:30 - -- Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created - That is, New races are created in their place, or start up as if they were created directly b...
Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created - That is, New races are created in their place, or start up as if they were created directly by God. They derive their being from him as really as those did which were first formed by his hand, and the work of creation is constantly going on.
And thou renewest the face of the earth - The earth is not suffered to become desolate. Though one generation passes off, yet a new one is made in its place, and the face of the earth constantly puts on the aspect of freshness and newness.
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Barnes: Psa 104:31 - -- The glory of the Lord shall endure for ever - Margin, as in Hebrew, "shall be."It might be rendered, "Let the glory of the Lord be for ever,"im...
The glory of the Lord shall endure for ever - Margin, as in Hebrew, "shall be."It might be rendered, "Let the glory of the Lord be for ever,"implying a strong desire that it should be so. But the language may denote a strong conviction that it would be so. The mind of the writer was filled with wonder at the beauty and variety of the works of God on the land, in the air, and in the waters; and he exclaims, with a heart full of admiration, that the glory of a Being who had made all these things could never cease, but must endure forever. All the glory of man would pass away; all the monuments that he would rear would be destroyed; all the works of art executed by him must perish; but the glory of One who had made the earth, and filled it with such wonders, could not but endure forever and ever.
The Lord shall rejoice in his works - See Gen 1:31. The idea here is, that God finds pleasure in the contemplation of his own works; in the beauty and order of creation; and in the happiness which he sees as the result of his work of creation. There is no impropriety in supposing that God finds pleasure in the manifestation of the wisdom, the power, the goodness, the mercy, and the love of his own glorious nature.
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Barnes: Psa 104:32 - -- He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth - There is great sublimity in this expression, as indicating the power and the majesty of God. He has...
He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth - There is great sublimity in this expression, as indicating the power and the majesty of God. He has only to "look"upon his works, and they stand in awe and tremble. The most mighty and fearful convulsions of nature occur as if they were the mere effect of God’ s "looking"on the earth. Compare Hab 3:10 - "The mountains saw thee, and they trembled."
He toucheth the hills, and they smoke - That is, as Mount Sinai did when God came down upon it. Exo 19:18. It is as if the hills were conscious of his presence, and were awed.
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Barnes: Psa 104:33 - -- I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live - That is, I will continue to praise him; I will never cease to adore him. The result of the psalmi...
I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live - That is, I will continue to praise him; I will never cease to adore him. The result of the psalmist’ s meditations on the wonderful works of God is to awaken in his mind a desire to praise God forever. He is so filled with a sense of his greatness and glory that he sees that there would be occasion for eternal praise; or that the reason for praise could never be exhausted. He who has any proper sense of the greatness, the majesty, and the glory of God "intends"to praise him forever. He sees that there is enough in the character of God to demand eternal praise, and he does not anticipate that a period can ever occur in all the future when he will feel that the causes for praise have come to an end, or when his heart will be indisposed to celebrate that praise.
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Barnes: Psa 104:34 - -- My meditation of him shall be sweet - That is, I will find pleasure in meditating on his character and works. See the notes at Psa 1:2. It is o...
My meditation of him shall be sweet - That is, I will find pleasure in meditating on his character and works. See the notes at Psa 1:2. It is one of the characteristics of true piety that there is a "disposition"to think about God; that the mind is "naturally"drawn to that subject; that it does not turn away from it, when it is suggested; that this fills up the intervals of business in the day-time, and that it occupies the mind when wakeful at night. Psa 63:6. It is also a characteristic of true piety that there is "pleasure"in such meditations; happiness in thinking of God. The sinner has no such pleasure. The thought of God is painful to him; he does not desire to have it suggested to him; he turns away from it, and avoids it. Compare the notes at Isa 30:11. It is one of the evidences of true piety when a man "begins"to find pleasure in thinking about God; when the subject, instead of being unpleasant to him, becomes pleasant; when he no longer turns away from it, but is sensible of a desire to cherish the thought of God, and to know more of him.
I will be glad in the Lord - That is, I will rejoice that there is such a Being; I will seek my happiness in him as my God.
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Barnes: Psa 104:35 - -- Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth - Compare Psa 37:38. This might with propriety be rendered, "Consumed are the sinners out of the e...
Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth - Compare Psa 37:38. This might with propriety be rendered, "Consumed are the sinners out of the earth,"expressing a fact and not a desire; and it may have been prompted by the feeling of the psalmist that such an event would occur; that is, that the time would come when sin would no more abound, but when the world would be filled with righteousness, and all the dwellers on the earth would praise God. The word translated "consumed"- from
And let the wicked be no more - Let there not be anymore wicked persons; let the time come when there shall be no bad people on the earth, but when all shall be righteous. In this prayer all persons could properly unite.
Bless thou the Lord, O my soul - The psalm closes (as Ps. 103 does) as it began. The psalmist commenced with the expression of a purpose to bless God; it closes with the same purpose, confirmed by a survey of the wonderful works of God.
Praise ye the Lord - Hebrew, Hallelu-jah. The psalmist expresses the earnest desire of a truly pious heart (in looking upon a world so beautiful, so varied in its works, so full of the expressions of the wisdom and goodness of God - a world where all the inferior creation so completely carries out the purpose of the Creator), that man, the noblest of all the works of God, might unite with the world around and beneath him in carrying out the great purpose of the creation - so that he might, in his own proper place, and according to the powers with which he is endowed, acknowledge God. How beautiful - how sublime - would be the spectacle on earth, if man accomplished the purpose of his creation, and filled his place, as well as the springs, the hills, the trees, the fowls, the wild goats, the moon, the sun, the young lions, and the inhabitants of the "great and wide sea"do in their spheres! Oh, come the time when on earth there shall be harmony in all the works of God, and when all creatures here shall carry out the purpose which was contemplated when God called the earth into existence.
Poole -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:34; Psa 104:35
Poole: Psa 104:26 - -- That leviathan either the whale or the crocodile; of which See Poole "Job 40:1" , See Poole "Job 41:1" ; who being of such vast strength and absolu...
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Poole: Psa 104:27 - -- These all both beasts and fishes,
wait upon thee expect supplies only from thy providence; which is said of them figuratively, and with an allusion...
These all both beasts and fishes,
wait upon thee expect supplies only from thy providence; which is said of them figuratively, and with an allusion to the manner of tame beasts and fowls, which commonly look after and wait upon those persons who bring their food to them.
In due season when it is necessary or convenient for them; by which expression he intimates the moderation of the beasts in their desires of food, and tacitly reproves the intemperance of men who feed themselves in season and out of season.
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Poole: Psa 104:28 - -- Whatsoever they receive is from thy bounty and gift.
Thou openest thine hand thou providest plentifully for them; as this phrase implies, Deu 15:1...
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Poole: Psa 104:29 - -- Thou hidest thy face when thou withdrawest or suspendest the favour and care of thy providence.
Troubled dejected and distressed.
Takest away so ...
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Poole: Psa 104:30 - -- Thy spirit either,
1. That spirit by which they live, which is called the spirit of a beast , Ecc 3:21 , which is called their breath or spirit , ...
Thy spirit either,
1. That spirit by which they live, which is called the spirit of a beast , Ecc 3:21 , which is called their breath or spirit , (for the word is the same there and here,)Psa 104:29 , and here may be called God’ s spirit , because it was given and preserved by him. Or rather,
2. Thy quickening spirit; for here seems to be an opposition between their spirit , Psa 104:29 , and thy spirit here , and this latter is mentioned as the creating or productive cause of the former. And this may be understood either,
1. Of the Holy Ghost; to whom, no less than to the Father and the Son, the work of creation is ascribed, Job 33:4 Psa 33:6 . Or rather,
2. That quickening power of God by which he produceth life in the creatures from time to time. For he speaks not here of the first creation, but of the continued and repeated production of living creatures.
They are created either,
1. The same living creatures which were languishing and dying are strangely revived and restored; which may not unfitly be called a creation , as that word is sometimes used, because it is in a manner the giving of a new life and being to a creature. Or,
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Poole: Psa 104:31 - -- So the sense is, Thus God doth and will advance the glory of his wisdom, and power, and goodness in upholding and continuing the works of his hands ...
So the sense is, Thus God doth and will advance the glory of his wisdom, and power, and goodness in upholding and continuing the works of his hands from generation to generation, and he doth and will take pleasure both in the preservation and blessing of his works, as also in his reflection upon these works of his providence, as he did rest and delight himself in the contemplation of his works of creation, as is noted, Gen 1:31 2:2,3 . But the words are by divers, and, it may seem, more agreeably to the Hebrew text, rendered thus, Let (for the first word is of the imperative mood) the glory of the Lord endure for ever, and let the Lord have joy (or, then shall the Lord rejoice) in his works . So this is added as a convenient doxology or thanksgiving after the commemoration of his great and gracious works; and the sense may be this, Seeing therefore God hath enriched the earth and us with so many fruits of his bounty, let it be our constant desire and endeavour that God may be perpetually served and glorified in and by them, and that God may be no more grieved at the remembrance of his kindness to us, as he was, Gen 6:5,6 , and thereby be again provoked to destroy us, but may take pleasure in beholding and cherishing of his own workmanship.
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Poole: Psa 104:32 - -- This is a further illustration of God’ s powerful providence over all the creatures, and their dependence upon him; as when he affords his favo...
This is a further illustration of God’ s powerful providence over all the creatures, and their dependence upon him; as when he affords his favour to creatures, they live and thrive, so one the contrary one angry look or touch of his upon the hills or earth makes them tremble and smoke, as once Sinai did when God appeared in it. And this consideration he may possibly suggest to enforce the foregoing exhortation of glorifying God, because if we do not give him the glory due to his name, he call quickly right himself, and destroy us and all his works.
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Poole: Psa 104:33 - -- But whatsoever others do, I will not fail to give God his glory and due praises.
But whatsoever others do, I will not fail to give God his glory and due praises.
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Poole: Psa 104:34 - -- My meditation or, my speech , or discourse ; my praising of God, mentioned Psa 104:33 . Of him ; concerning the glory of his works.
Shall be swee...
My meditation or, my speech , or discourse ; my praising of God, mentioned Psa 104:33 . Of him ; concerning the glory of his works.
Shall be sweet either,
1. To God; he will graciously accept it; praise being his most acceptable sacrifice, as is affirmed, Psa 69:30,31 . Or rather,
2. To myself, as may be gathered from the next clause. He implies that he shall not only do this work, which a man may do unwillingly, or by constraint, but that he will do it cheerfully, and with delight; which is most pleasing to God.
I will be glad in the Lord I will rejoice in the contemplation of God’ s works, and in praising him for them.
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Poole: Psa 104:35 - -- But as for those ungodly creatures who do not regard the works of the Lord, which is noted as a most grievous sin, and punished with a grievous impr...
But as for those ungodly creatures who do not regard the works of the Lord, which is noted as a most grievous sin, and punished with a grievous imprecation, like this, Psa 27:4,5 , nor give him the glory due to his name, but dishonour God, and abuse his creatures, and thereby provoke God to destroy the earth, and the men and things which are upon it, it is my prayer for thine honour, and for the safeguard of all mankind, that those sinners who obstinately and resolutely continue in this practice of dishonouring and disobeying their Creator, may be taken out of this world, that they may no longer infect it, nor procure its total destruction. Or it may be a prediction delivered in the form of an imprecation, as hath been noted before in like cases. But thou, O my soul, come not into this wretched society, but employ thyself in this great work of blessing and praising God; and it is my desire and hope that others will follow my example.
Haydock: Psa 104:27 - -- He gave. Hebrew, "they placed in them the words of their signs." (Calmet) (Houbigant) ---
But the Chaldean and St. Jerome are conformable to the ...
He gave. Hebrew, "they placed in them the words of their signs." (Calmet) (Houbigant) ---
But the Chaldean and St. Jerome are conformable to the Septuagint. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 104:28 - -- Grieved not his words. That is, he was not wanting to fulfil his words: or he did not grieve Moses and Aaron, the carriers of his words: or he did n...
Grieved not his words. That is, he was not wanting to fulfil his words: or he did not grieve Moses and Aaron, the carriers of his words: or he did not grieve his words, that is, his sons, the children of Israel, who enjoyed light whilst the Egyptians were oppressed with darkness. (Challoner) ---
He performed what he had threatened without reluctance. (Worthington) ---
We may also translate, "he added no threat (Haydock) before this ninth plague was inflicted." Hebrew, "and they did not irritate (or transgress) his word." The envoys of God were obedient to him. The copies of the Septuagint are not uniform; (Calmet) some omit the negation, which would give a very good sense; though it must be allowed to be inaccurate, unless the Hebrew be read with an interrogation, "did they not resist his word?" alluding to the Egyptians. (Berthier) ---
Almost all the ancients have the plural exacerbaverunt, except St. Jerome, in his commentary. (Calmet)
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Blood. In reality, so that the fishes were killed. (St. Athanasius)
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Haydock: Psa 104:30 - -- Land. Including the rivers, Exodus vii. 1., and viii. 3. ---
Kings, or noblemen. (Berthier)
Land. Including the rivers, Exodus vii. 1., and viii. 3. ---
Kings, or noblemen. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 104:31 - -- Flies. This was revealed to David, or known by tradition, as it is not recorded by Moses. (Worthington) ---
Some copies of the Septuagint have, "t...
Flies. This was revealed to David, or known by tradition, as it is not recorded by Moses. (Worthington) ---
Some copies of the Septuagint have, "the dog-fly," cinifes (Exodus viii. 16.) gnats, (Haydock) which are very common and tormenting in Egypt. The Jews understand lice. (Joseph and the Chaldean) (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 104:32 - -- Rain. Which fall in Egypt, though less frequently. (Calmet) (Wisdom xvi. 17.)
Rain. Which fall in Egypt, though less frequently. (Calmet) (Wisdom xvi. 17.)
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Haydock: Psa 104:34 - -- Bruchus. An insect of the locust kind, (Challoner) or a worm which spoils corn, &c. (Worthington)
Bruchus. An insect of the locust kind, (Challoner) or a worm which spoils corn, &c. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:30; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:32; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:34; Psa 104:35
Gill: Psa 104:26 - -- There go the ships,.... From place to place, from one end of the world to the other, for the sake of merchandise r; this is one of the four things tha...
There go the ships,.... From place to place, from one end of the world to the other, for the sake of merchandise r; this is one of the four things that were too wonderful for Solomon, "the way of a ship in the midst of the sea", Pro 30:19 though navigation was improved in his times indeed not so much as it is now. The original of ships was doubtless Noah's ark, so that they owe their first draught to God himself. They seem to be an emblem of the church and people of God passing through the sea of this world to the haven of eternal rest. The ship is but a small vessel, and takes up but a small room in comparison of the vast ocean on which it is; and so the church of Christ is but small, a little city, and few men in it, a little flock, a small remnant: a ship is unfixed and unsettled, sometimes here and sometimes there; so the church of Christ is sometimes in one place, and sometimes in another; nor is this world the rest of God's people, nor have they any continuing city here; for, as a ship is tossed with tempests, so are they with the waves of afflictions, the temptations of Satan, and the persecutions of men; and sometimes, like Paul, and the mariners with him, have no sight of sun and stars for many days, of the sun of righteousness, or of the stars, the ministers of the word; when sailing is dangerous it bodes perilous times, through the impure lives of professors, and impious doctrines of false teachers, whereby many suffer shipwreck; yet all the Lord's people get safe ashore, having a good pilot, Christ, to conduct them; and the good anchor of hope, sure and steadfast.
There is that leviathan, whom thou hast made to play therein; the Targum adds,
"for the righteous at the feast of the house of his habitation.''
Of this creature there is an account in Job 41:1. Some take it to be the crocodile, which is both a sea and river fish; the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Ethiopic, and Arabic versions, and so Apollinarius, call it the dragon; it is more generally thought to be the whale; Aben Ezra says it is the name of every great fish; it is a sportive creature, tumbles about in the great sea, and plays with the waters of it, which it tosses up in great quantities; and with the fishes of the sea, which it devours at pleasure; and laughs at the shaking of the spear; and to which mariners throw out their empty casks to play with, when near them, and they in danger by it; see Job 41:5. This creature is generally reckoned by the ancients a figure of Satan, it being king over all the children of pride, Job 41:34 as he is the prince of the power of the air, and god of this world; who has been playing his tricks in it from the beginning of it, not only deceiving our first parents, but all the nations of the world; nor are saints ignorant of his devices. It sometimes describes a tyrannical prince, as the kings of Babylon and of Egypt, Isa 27:1 and is a true picture of antichrist, the beast which rose out of the sea; nor is there any like him on earth; see Rev 13:1.
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Gill: Psa 104:27 - -- These wait all upon thee,.... Or "hope in thee" s; not only the fishes of the sea, but the beasts of the field; for to them the psalmist returns, as A...
These wait all upon thee,.... Or "hope in thee" s; not only the fishes of the sea, but the beasts of the field; for to them the psalmist returns, as Aben Ezra observes; to whom hope and expectation of their food and waiting for it at the hands of God, are ascribed; the allusion seems to be to tame creatures, who come at their certain times and wait on them that have been used to give them their food; and it may instruct us to wait on the Lord, as for our daily bread, so for our spiritual food, in prayer, and in public ordinances, where and from whom we may hope and expect to have it.
That thou mayest give them their meat in due season; or "in his time" t; everyone in its own time, which is natural to them, and they have been used to; at which time the Lord gives it to them and they take it; it would be well if men would do so likewise, eat and drink in proper and due time, Ecc 10:17. Christ speaks a word in season to weary souls; his ministers give to everyone their portion of meat in due season; and a word spoken in due season, how good and sweet is it? Isa 1:4.
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Gill: Psa 104:28 - -- That thou givest them they gather,.... What God bestows upon them as a bounty of Providence they take and make use of, and in their way thankfully, an...
That thou givest them they gather,.... What God bestows upon them as a bounty of Providence they take and make use of, and in their way thankfully, and without repining; some gather it up for immediate use and service, and not into barns; others gather it up for time to come, as the ant, Mat 6:26. Kimchi understands this of a time of scarcity, when they gather here a little and there a little; as he does the following clause of a time of plenty.
Thou openest thine hand, they are filled with good; God, in whose hand all things are, and from whence all things come, opens his hand of providence, and liberally and bountifully gives, as this phrase signifies, Deu 15:11 and all his creatures are filled with his good things to their satisfaction: and thus the spiritual food which he gives his people, they gather it by the hand of faith, as the Israelites gathered the manna in the wilderness every morning, and according to their eating, what was sufficient for them; and to whom he gives liberally, even all things richly to enjoy; all things pertaining to life and godliness; Christ, and all things along with him; abundance of grace here, and glory hereafter; and they are satisfied with his good things as with marrow and fatness.
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Gill: Psa 104:29 - -- Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled,.... God may be said to hide his face from the creatures when he withholds their food from them, when there is...
Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled,.... God may be said to hide his face from the creatures when he withholds their food from them, when there is a scarcity of provisions, a famine in the land; when there is no pasture for them to feed on, nor brooks of water to drink of; then are they troubled or perplexed, as in Joe 1:18 and know not what to do, nor where to go for help, but faint, and sink, and die. So in a spiritual sense when God hides his face from his people, removes his Shechinah, or divine Majesty and Presence, as the Targum here; and withdraws the influences of his grace and Spirit; or when they have no food for their souls, or what they have is not blessed, then are they troubled, Psa 30:7.
Thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust; their original dust, from whence they sprung, as man himself does; the breath of all is from the Lord; he gives it to his creatures, and when he pleases he takes it away; and when he does, they die and become dust again.
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Gill: Psa 104:30 - -- Thou sendest forth thy Spirit, they are created,.... Thy Holy Spirit, as the Targum, who was at first concerned in the creation of all things, the hea...
Thou sendest forth thy Spirit, they are created,.... Thy Holy Spirit, as the Targum, who was at first concerned in the creation of all things, the heavens and the earth, and man upon it, Gen 1:2, Job 26:13 which may be alluded to here; though it seems chiefly to intend the generation and production of creatures in the room of those that die off; that so their species may be preserved, and there may be a constant succession of them, as there is in all ages, Ecc 1:4.
And thou renewest the face of the earth; by a new set of creatures of all kinds being brought upon it to fill it. As there is also a daily renewing it every morning by the rising sun, giving fresh life and vigour to all created beings; and a yearly one every spring, when the face of all nature is renewed and revived. Jarchi and Arama understand it of the resurrection of the dead; this sense Kimchi mentions as an article of their faith, but not as the sense of the text. It may be applied to the renewing work of the Spirit of God in the souls of men, by whom they are made new, and by whom they are daily renewed in the Spirit of their minds. And there are particular seasons in which God sends forth his Spirit and renews the face of things in the world, and in his churches; upon the effusion of his Spirit in the first times of the Gospels, there was a new face of things, not only in the land of Judea, but throughout the whole Gentile world, where old things passed away, and all things became new; as in the latter day, when the Spirit shall be poured forth from on high, there will be a renewing of the face of the earth again; it will be filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea; the kingdoms of it will become Christ's; new heavens and a new earth will be created, and Jerusalem will be made a rejoicing, and her people a joy, Isa 65:17.
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Gill: Psa 104:31 - -- The glory of the Lord shall endure for ever,.... The glory which arises from the works of his hands, which is due unto him, and shall be given him; th...
The glory of the Lord shall endure for ever,.... The glory which arises from the works of his hands, which is due unto him, and shall be given him; this is opposed to the perishing and fading glory of all created beings: and as Christ is the person spoken of throughout the whole psalm, this may be understood of his glory as the only begotten of the Father; and which is equal to his Father's glory, and is the same yesterday, today, and for ever; and of the glory of his office as Mediator: and of all his works of nature and grace, of creation and redemption: nor will there be creatures wanting, angels and men to glorify his name, to all eternity. The Targum, Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions render it as a prayer, "let the glory of the Lord be for ever"; or, let him be for ever glorified, on account of the perfections of his nature, and the works of his hands; as he will and ought to be.
The Lord shall rejoice in his works; being well pleased with them, as he was with the works of creation; they appearing, on a survey of them, to be all very good, Gen 1:31 so he rejoices in the sustaining and preservation of them; and the rather when he is glorified in them. And this should be a reason why glory should be given him, that he may rejoice in his works, and not be grieved, as he is sometimes said to be and to repent of his making them, Gen 6:6. Christ rejoices in the work of redemption, which he undertook and performed with pleasure; he rejoiced at the finishing it, and he rejoices in the application of it to his people and will rejoice in their complete enjoyment of it; they being the objects of his love, in whom he has an interest; whom he engaged for, are the purchase of his blood, and for whom he prays and intercedes; he rejoices in them as the work of his hands now; in their persons, who are his "hephzibah", in whom he delights; "his beulah", to whom he is married: he rejoices in his own grace wrought in them, and in the exercise of it on him; he rejoices over them to do them good, and never ceases doing good to them and for them.
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Gill: Psa 104:32 - -- He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth,.... As Sinai did when he descended on it, Psa 68:8, to which the allusion seems to be; and a look from him,...
He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth,.... As Sinai did when he descended on it, Psa 68:8, to which the allusion seems to be; and a look from him, a severe one, a frowning one, will make the inhabitants of the earth to tremble; a providential look, sending famine, pestilence or the sword among them. A displeased look will make the hearts of his own children tremble, as no doubt Peter's did, when the Lord looked upon him, and he remembered his word; and if a look, much more a word, an awful word, as his voice in the law, pronouncing such cursed as keep it not; and especially the tremendous sentence he will pronounce on the wicked at the last day,
go, ye cursed, &c. and if a look and a word are so terrible, what will be the lighting down of his arm, with the indignation of his anger upon those who have refused to give him glory? For the words seem to carry in them a reason why he should be glorified, taken from the consequence of not glorifying him, who has such a majesty in his looks, such a terror in his countenance, and such power in his hands.
He toucheth the hills, and they smoke; as Sinai likewise did, when he was upon it, Exo 19:18, and as other hills do, when touched with lightning; the tops of mountains, the higher they are, the sooner and the more they smoke u. God, with a touch of his hand, can set mountains on fire, open "volcanos", and cause them to burn for years together; as Etna, Vesuvius, Hecla, and others: and how easily can he set on fire the course of nature, burn the world, and all that is in it! It is but touching it, and it takes fire immediately: this he can as easily do as a man can light a torch or a candle; and as easily can he destroy sinners with the fire of his wrath, or cast them into everlasting fire, with the devil and his angels, which will burn to the lowest hell; and what are hills and mountains, or the greatest personages on earth, if he does but touch them, or lay his hand upon them in wrath? They are crushed as the moth; they are nothing before our great Zerubbabel.
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Gill: Psa 104:33 - -- I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live,.... Or, "in my life or lives w", throughout the whole of it. This was what the psalmist determined to do,...
I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live,.... Or, "in my life or lives w", throughout the whole of it. This was what the psalmist determined to do, let others do what they would; even sing songs of praise to the Lord; since he was the God of his life, who had fed him all his life long; from whom he had all the mercies of life, and by whom he had been followed with goodness and mercy all his days, and on whom his life and the comforts of it depended.
I will sing praise unto my God while I have my being: because he lived, and moved, and had his being in him; and it was continued to him, and he was upheld in it; and not only for his being, but for his well being; as for his temporal, so for his spiritual mercies, which he had from him as his God, as his covenant God; such as peace, pardon, righteousness, and eternal life: a view of God as our own God, such a view as Thomas had of Christ, when he said, "my Lord, and my God", is enough to make a man sing; and when the psalmist says he would do this as long as he lived and had a being, this is not to be understood as if this work would end with his life, or that he had no thought of praising him hereafter; but it signifies his constancy in this employment, while in the land of the living; knowing that in the grave he could not praise the Lord with his bodily organs as now; though he knew that this would be his eternal employ in the world of spirits, in his soul, during its separate state, and in soul and body after the resurrection.
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Gill: Psa 104:34 - -- My meditation of him shall be sweet,.... Of the glories, excellencies, and perfections of his person; of his offices, as Mediator, King, Priest, and P...
My meditation of him shall be sweet,.... Of the glories, excellencies, and perfections of his person; of his offices, as Mediator, King, Priest, and Prophet, the Saviour and Redeemer; of his works of creation, providence, and redemption; of his word, the blessed truths and comfortable doctrines of it; of his providential dispensations, and gracious dealings with his people in the present state; which to meditate upon, when grace is in exercise, is very sweet, delightful, and comfortable. The Targum renders it as a petition,
"let my meditation be sweet before him;''
that is, grateful and acceptable to him: or, as the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, "let my speech", discourse, colloquy, address in prayer; see Psa 141:2, or, "let my praise", so the Arabic and Syriac versions: the spiritual sacrifices both of prayer and praise are acceptable to God through Christ; and the speech of the church, and every believer, whether in the one way or the other, is sweet to Christ, very pleasant and delightful to him, Son 2:14.
I will be glad in the Lord: the Targum is,
"in the Word of the Lord;''
in the essential Word, the Lord Jesus Christ; in his person, the greatness, glory, beauty, and fulness of it; in his righteousness, its purity, perfection, and perpetuity; in his salvation, being so suitable, complete, and glorious.
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Gill: Psa 104:35 - -- Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth,.... Not in common, for all men are sinners, even good men are not without sin; but notorious sinners, wh...
Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth,.... Not in common, for all men are sinners, even good men are not without sin; but notorious sinners, whose lives are one continued series and course of sinning; such as will not have Christ to reign over them, and do not give him the glory due unto him; particularly antichrist, the man of sin, and his followers; they that worship the beast and his image: these will be consumed with the breath of his mouth, and with the brightness of his coming, and will perish out of his land, 2Th 2:3.
And let the wicked be no more; as the wicked one, antichrist, will be no more when consumed; there will never rise another, when the beast and false prophet are taken and cast alive into the lake of fire; there will no more of the antichristian party remain, the remnant of them will be slain with the sword; after the battle of Armageddon, there will be none left of the followers of antichrist, nor any ever rise up any more.
Bless thou the Lord, O my soul; as for his mercies, spiritual and temporal, so for the destruction of all his enemies. The psalm begins and ends alike as the preceding.
Praise ye the Lord, or hallelujah: this is the first time this word is used in this book of Psalms, though frequently afterwards: and it is observable that it is only used, in the New Testament, at the prophecy of the destruction of antichrist, Rev 19:1 which may serve to confirm the sense before given; and is to be considered as a call upon the saints to praise the Lord, on account of his righteous judgments on his and his church's enemies; so Aben Ezra.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 104:26; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:27; Psa 104:28; Psa 104:29; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:31; Psa 104:33; Psa 104:34; Psa 104:35
NET Notes: Psa 104:26 Heb “[and] this Leviathan, [which] you formed to play in it.” Elsewhere Leviathan is a multiheaded sea monster that symbolizes forces host...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 104:27 ( o ) These wait all upon thee; that thou mayest give [them] their meat in due season.
( o ) God is a nourishing father, who provides for all creatur...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 104:29 Thou ( p ) hidest thy face, they are troubled: thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
( p ) As by your presence all thing...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 104:30 Thou ( q ) sendest forth thy spirit, they are created: and thou renewest the face of the earth.
( q ) As the death of creatures shows that we are not...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 104:32 He looketh on the earth, and it trembleth: he toucheth the hills, and they ( r ) smoke.
( r ) God's merciful face gives strength to the earth, but hi...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 104:35 Let the sinners be ( s ) consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be no more. Bless thou the LORD, O my soul. Praise ye the LORD.
( s ) Who infe...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 104:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Psa 104:1-35 - --1 A meditation upon the mighty power,7 and wonderful providence of God.31 God's glory is eternal.33 The prophet vows perpetually to praise God.
MHCC -> Psa 104:19-30; Psa 104:31-35
MHCC: Psa 104:19-30 - --We are to praise and magnify God for the constant succession of day and night. And see how those are like to the wild beasts, who wait for the twiligh...
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MHCC: Psa 104:31-35 - --Man's glory is fading; God's glory is everlasting: creatures change, but with the Creator there is no variableness. And if mediation on the glories of...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 104:19-30; Psa 104:31-35
Matthew Henry: Psa 104:19-30 - -- We are here taught to praise and magnify God, I. For the constant revolutions and succession of day and night, and the dominion of sun and moon over...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 104:31-35 - -- The psalmist concludes this meditation with speaking, I. Praise to God, which is chiefly intended in the psalm. 1. He is to be praised, (1.) As a gr...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 104:24-30; Psa 104:31-35
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 104:24-30 - --
Fixing his eye upon the sea with its small and great creatures, and the care of God for all self-living beings, the poet passes over to the fifth an...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 104:31-35 - --
The poet has now come to an end with the review of the wonders of the creation, and closes in this seventh group, which is again substantially decas...
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...
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Constable: Psa 104:1-35 - --Psalm 104
This psalm is quite similar to Psalm 103. Both begin and end with similar calls to bless God. ...
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Constable: Psa 104:24-32 - --3. Praise of the Creator 104:24-32
104:24-30 The psalmist broke out in praise to Yahweh for His wisdom in creating as He did. He also acknowledged tha...
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Constable: Psa 104:33-35 - --4. Proper responses 104:33-35a
The psalmist vowed to praise God with his mouth and with his mind...
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