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Text -- Psalms 105:20 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 105:17-21
Joseph was sent of God (Gen 45:5).
Calvin -> Psa 105:20
Calvin: Psa 105:20 - -- 20.The king sent and loosed him The Psalmist celebrates in high terms the deliverance of Joseph; for God’s singular power was conspicuously display...
20.The king sent and loosed him The Psalmist celebrates in high terms the deliverance of Joseph; for God’s singular power was conspicuously displayed in a matter so incredible. What is of more rare occurrence than for a most powerful monarch to bring a stranger out of prison to constitute him ruler over his whole kingdom, and to raise him to a rank of honor, second only to himself? The phrase in verse 22, to bind his princes, is commonly explained as implying that Joseph was invested with the chief sovereignty in the administration of the government, so that he could cast into prison, at his pleasure, even the nobles of the realm. Others, conceiving this interpretation to be somewhat harsh, derive the verb
TSK -> Psa 105:20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 105:20
Barnes: Psa 105:20 - -- The king sent and loosed him - Released him from prison. Gen 41:14. The object was that he might interpret the dreams of Pharaoh. The rule...
The king sent and loosed him - Released him from prison. Gen 41:14. The object was that he might interpret the dreams of Pharaoh.
The ruler of the people, and let him go free - Hebrew, "peoples,"in the plural - referring either to the fact that there were "many"people in the land, or that Pharaoh ruled over tributary nations as well as over the Egyptians.
Haydock -> Psa 105:20
Haydock: Psa 105:20 - -- Grass. This enhances their folly. God is often styled the glory of his people. (Calmet) ---
Osee (x. 5.) contemptuously calls the golden calf, ...
Grass. This enhances their folly. God is often styled the glory of his people. (Calmet) ---
Osee (x. 5.) contemptuously calls the golden calf, the glory of Samaria. (Haydock) ---
This idolatry was truly blameable, (Romans i. 23.) and not the veneration paid by Catholics to the images of Christ, &c. (Worthington) ---
Those who pretend that the Hebrews meant to adore the true God, and not the idol Apis, are here clearly refuted; they forgot God, &c., Acts vii. 40. (Berthier)
Gill -> Psa 105:20
Gill: Psa 105:20 - -- The king sent and loosed him,.... That is, Pharaoh king of Egypt sent messengers to the prison, and ordered Joseph to be loosed, as soon as ever he he...
The king sent and loosed him,.... That is, Pharaoh king of Egypt sent messengers to the prison, and ordered Joseph to be loosed, as soon as ever he heard the account which the chief butler gave of him, and of his skill in interpreting dreams.
Even the ruler of the people; or "peoples": the subjects of Pharaoh's kingdom being very numerous.
And let him go free, ordered his fetters to be taken off, and him to be set at liberty, to go where he pleased; or, however, that he might come to court, whither he was brought, and which was the end of his releasement; see Gen 41:14, in this he was a type of Christ in his resurrection from the dead; who for a while was under the dominion of death, was held with the pains and cords of it, and was under the power and in the prison of the grave; but it was not possible, considering the dignity of his person, and the performance of his work as a surety, that he should be held here. Wherefore the cords and pains of death were loosed, and he was brought out of prison; God his Father, the King of kings, sent an angel from heaven, to roll away the stone of the sepulchre, and let the prisoner free; so that he was legally and judicially discharged and acquitted; as it was proper he should, having satisfied both law and justice; he was justified in the Spirit when he rose from the dead, and all his people were justified in him, for he rose again for their justification.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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...




