
Text -- Psalms 105:18 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Joseph was sent of God (Gen 45:5).

JFB: Psa 105:18 - -- Literally, "his soul" (see on Psa 16:10), or, "he came into iron," or, he was bound to his grief (compare Psa 3:2; Psa 11:1). The "soul" is put for th...
Literally, "his soul" (see on Psa 16:10), or, "he came into iron," or, he was bound to his grief (compare Psa 3:2; Psa 11:1). The "soul" is put for the whole person, because the soul of the captive suffers still more than the body. Joseph is referred to as being an appropriate type of those "bound in affliction and iron" (Psa 107:10).
Calvin -> Psa 105:18
Calvin: Psa 105:18 - -- 18.They afflicted his feet in the fetters It is not without cause that the Psalmist prosecutes the winding course of Jacob’s early history, which m...
18.They afflicted his feet in the fetters It is not without cause that the Psalmist prosecutes the winding course of Jacob’s early history, which might so confuse the minds of men as to prevent them from directing their attention to the counsel of God. What seemed less likely than to believe that God, by so directly opposite and circuitous a path, meant to accomplish what he had purposed? But his providence, by surmounting so many obstacles, is brought out more conspicuously, than if he had despatched the whole matter by a short and easy road. Had Joseph, as soon as he arrived in Egypt, been presented to the king, and made its governor, the way to what followed would have been easy. But when he was carried away to prison, and lay there separated from the society of men, living as one half-dead; and when his becoming known to the king was a long time subsequent to this, and beyond all expectation, such a sudden change renders the miracle much more evident. This circuitous course then, which the prophet recounts, serves not a little to illustrate the subject in hand. Joseph was many times dead before he was sold. Hence it follows, that God as often showed his care of his Church by delivering him who might be termed her father. When after, having been brought into Egypt, Joseph was conveyed from hand to hand till he descended into another grave, is it not the more clearly manifest from this that God, while he seems to be asleep in heaven, is all the while keeping the strictest watch over his servants, and that he is carrying forward his purpose more effectually by these various windings, than if he had gone straight forward, yea, than if he had run with rapid pace? For this reason the prophet affirms that his feet were afflicted in the fetters; a fact which, although not stated in the narrative of Moses, he speaks of as well known. And no doubt, many things were delivered by tradition to the Jews of which no mention is made in the Scriptures. 212 It is also probable enough, that, instead of being put at first under mild restraint, as was afterwards the case, he was rigorously confined. Whether we read, his soul entered into the iron, or the iron entered into his soul, 213 the meaning, which, in either case, is exactly the same, amounts to this, that the holy man was so galled with fetters, that it seemed as if his life had been given over to the sword. Whence it follows, that the safety of his life was as hopeless as the restoration of life to a dead body.
TSK -> Psa 105:18
TSK: Psa 105:18 - -- Whose : Gen 39:20, Gen 40:15; Act 16:24
he was laid in iron : Heb. his soul came into iron, Psa 107:10
Whose : Gen 39:20, Gen 40:15; Act 16:24
he was laid in iron : Heb. his soul came into iron, Psa 107:10

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 105:18
Barnes: Psa 105:18 - -- Whose feet they hurt with fetters - In Gen 40:3; it is said of Joseph that he was "bound"in prison. It is not improbable that his "feet"were bo...
Whose feet they hurt with fetters - In Gen 40:3; it is said of Joseph that he was "bound"in prison. It is not improbable that his "feet"were bound, as this is the usual way of confining prisoners.
He was laid in iron - In the prison. The margin is, "his soul came into iron."The version in the Prayer-Book of the Episcopal Church is, the iron entered into his soul. This is a more striking and beautiful rendering, though it may be doubted whether the Hebrew will permit it. DeWette renders it, "In iron lay his body."
Poole -> Psa 105:18
Poole: Psa 105:18 - -- Heb. his soul came into iron ; which seems to be added emphatically to aggravate his imprisonment, and to show how grievous it was to his very soul...
Heb. his soul came into iron ; which seems to be added emphatically to aggravate his imprisonment, and to show how grievous it was to his very soul, which must needs sympathize with his body, and moreover was greatly vexed to consider both the great injury which was done to him, and yet the foul and public scandal which lay upon him.
Haydock -> Psa 105:18
Haydock: Psa 105:18 - -- Wicked. Two hundred and fifty accomplices, (Numbers xv. 35.; Calmet) and fourteen thousand seven hundred murmurers. (Menochius)
Wicked. Two hundred and fifty accomplices, (Numbers xv. 35.; Calmet) and fourteen thousand seven hundred murmurers. (Menochius)
Gill -> Psa 105:18
Gill: Psa 105:18 - -- Whose feet they hurt with fetters,.... For it seems Joseph was not only cast into prison, upon the calumny of his mistress; but had fetters put upon h...
Whose feet they hurt with fetters,.... For it seems Joseph was not only cast into prison, upon the calumny of his mistress; but had fetters put upon him, and his feet were made fast with them; and these were so close and heavy, as to pinch and gall and hurt him; which, though not mentioned in his history, was undoubtedly true; see Gen 39:20.
He was laid in iron: or "the iron" (or, as the Targum, "the iron chain") "went into his Soul" f; his body; it ate into him, and gave him great pain: or rather, as it is in the king's Bible, "his soul went into the iron chain"; there being, as Aben Ezra observes, an ellipsis of the particle

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 105:18; Psa 105:18
NET Notes: Psa 105:18 Heb “his neck came [into] iron.” The Hebrew term נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) with the suffix could mean simply ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 105:1-45
TSK Synopsis: Psa 105:1-45 - --1 An exhortation to praise God, and to seek out his works.7 The story of God's providence over Abraham;16 over Joseph;23 over Jacob in Egypt;26 over M...
MHCC -> Psa 105:8-23
MHCC: Psa 105:8-23 - --Let us remember the Redeemer's marvellous works, his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth. Though true Christians are few number, strangers and pil...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 105:8-24
Matthew Henry: Psa 105:8-24 - -- We are here taught, in praising God, to look a great way back, and to give him the glory of what he did for his church in former ages, especially wh...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 105:16-24
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 105:16-24 - --
"To call up a famine"is also a prose expression in 2Ki 8:1. To break the staff of bread (i.e., the staff which bread is to man) is a very old met...
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 105:1-45 - --Psalm 105
This psalm praises God for His faithful dealings with Israel. it reviews Israel's history from...

Constable: Psa 105:7-41 - --2. The record of God's faithfulness to Israel 105:7-41
105:7-11 God remembered His people (v. 7, cf. v. 42) so His people should remember Him (v. 5). ...
