
Text -- Psalms 112:6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 112:6
Wesley: Psa 112:6 - -- Though he may for a season be afflicted, yet he shall not be eternally destroyed.
Though he may for a season be afflicted, yet he shall not be eternally destroyed.
JFB -> Psa 112:5-9; Psa 112:6
JFB: Psa 112:5-9 - -- Generosity, sound judgment in business, and confidence in God, form a character which preserves from fear of evil and ensures success against enemies....
Generosity, sound judgment in business, and confidence in God, form a character which preserves from fear of evil and ensures success against enemies. While a man thus truly pious is liberal, he increases in substance.
Calvin -> Psa 112:6
Calvin: Psa 112:6 - -- 6.Surely he shall not be moved The Hebrew particle כי , ki, may here be taken in its natural or causal meaning, and thus be rendered for, espe...
6.Surely he shall not be moved The Hebrew particle
TSK -> Psa 112:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 112:6
Barnes: Psa 112:6 - -- Surely he shall not be moved for ever - Luther, "For he shall remain always."He shall be fixed, stable, firm, prosperous. He shall not be drive...
Surely he shall not be moved for ever - Luther, "For he shall remain always."He shall be fixed, stable, firm, prosperous. He shall not be driven from place to place. He shall have a permanent home. He shall have a steady reputation. He shall have a constant influence. He shall be a firm, establislied, prosperous man. Of course this is to be taken in the general, and should not be pressed to mean that it will be, in the most literal sense, and always, true, for a good man "may"be "unfortunate in business,"and suffer with others; he may be sick; he may see reason to change his residence; he will certainly die. But still it is true that religion "tends"to produce this permanency, and that in this respect there is a marked difference between people who are truly pious, and those who are not.
The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance - In Pro 10:7, it is said that "the name of the wicked shall rot;"and the meaning here is, that the way to secure a grateful remembrance among people after we are dead is to be righteous - to do something that shall deserve to be remembered. It cannot mean that a man who is righteous will "never"be forgotten, or that his name and deeds will never pass from the recollection of mankind - for that would not be true; but that people will delight to cherish the memory of the righteous; that they will be disposed to do justice to their character after they are dead; that the benevolent and the upright will be remembered when the names of the wicked shall be forgotten. The world has no interest in keeping up the memory of bad people, and as soon as it can be done hastens to forget them. Wicked people are remembered only when their deeds are enormous, and then their memory is cherished only to admonish and to warn. The world has no interest in keeping up the memory of Benedict Arnold, or Alexander VI, or Caesar Borgia except to warn future generations of the guilt and baseness of treason and profligacy; it "has"an interest in never suffering the names of Howard, of Wilberforce, of Henry Martyn, to die, for those names excite to noble feelings and to noble efforts wherever they are known. Such names are to be had "in everlasting remembrance."
Poole -> Psa 112:6
Poole: Psa 112:6 - -- Shall not be moved for ever though he may for a season be afflicted, yet he shall not be utterly and eternally destroyed, as wicked men shall. Shall ...
Shall not be moved for ever though he may for a season be afflicted, yet he shall not be utterly and eternally destroyed, as wicked men shall. Shall be in everlasting remembrance; though whilst he lives he may be exposed to the censures, and slanders, and contradictions of sinners, yet after death his memory will be precious and honourable, both with God and with all men, his very enemies not excepted.
Haydock -> Psa 112:6
Haydock: Psa 112:6 - -- Earth. Providence watches over all, Psalm cxxxvii. 6. (Haydock) ---
With respect to God, even those who are in heaven are low. (Worthington)
Earth. Providence watches over all, Psalm cxxxvii. 6. (Haydock) ---
With respect to God, even those who are in heaven are low. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 112:6
Gill: Psa 112:6 - -- Surely he shall not be moved for ever,.... Out of the heart of God, and from his love and affections; out of the covenant of grace, and from an intere...
Surely he shall not be moved for ever,.... Out of the heart of God, and from his love and affections; out of the covenant of grace, and from an interest in it; out of the hands of Christ, or off of him the foundation; out of the house and family of God; out of a state of grace and righteousness, into condemnation: and though he may be distressed by afflictions, yet not destroyed; and though he may be so shaken, as to fall from some degree of steadfastness in the faith, and into sin, yet not so as to perish everlastingly: the saint's perseverance is a sure and certain truth, and to be depended upon.
The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance; with good men, and especially such whose names are recorded in Scripture: and even others are remembered after death; and for a long time after, their pious characters, sayings, actions, sufferings, works, and writings; and with God, who remembers his love to them, his covenant with them, his promises to them; has a book of remembrance for their thoughts, words, and actions; which will be remembered and spoken of at the last day, when forgotten by them; see Pro 10:9 &c.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 112:1-10
TSK Synopsis: Psa 112:1-10 - --1 Godliness has the promises of this life,4 and of the life to come.10 The prosperity of the godly shall be an eyesore to the wicked.
MHCC -> Psa 112:1-10
MHCC: Psa 112:1-10 - --We have to praise the Lord that there are a people in the world, who fear him and serve him, and that they are a happy people; which is owing entirely...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 112:6-10
Matthew Henry: Psa 112:6-10 - -- In these verses we have, I. The satisfaction of saints, and their stability. It is the happiness of a good man that he shall not be moved for ever,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 112:1-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 112:1-10 - --
As in the preceding Psalm. Psa 112:1 here also sets forth the theme of that which follows. What is there said in Psa 112:3 concerning the righteousn...
Constable: Psa 107:1--150:6 - --V. Book 5: chs. 107--150
There are 44 psalms in this section of the Psalter. David composed 15 of these (108-110...

Constable: Psa 112:1-10 - --Psalm 112
This is also an acrostic psalm. It focuses attention on the blessings those who fear God enjoy...
