
Text -- Psalms 114:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 114:7
The mountains did more than what was fit at the appearance of the great God.
JFB -> Psa 114:5-8; Psa 114:7
The questions place the implied answers in a more striking form.

JFB: Psa 114:7 - -- Literally, "from before," as if affrighted by the wonderful display of God's power. Well may such a God be trusted, and great should be His praise.
Literally, "from before," as if affrighted by the wonderful display of God's power. Well may such a God be trusted, and great should be His praise.
Calvin -> Psa 114:7
Calvin: Psa 114:7 - -- 7.At the presence of the Lord Having aroused the senses of men by interrogations, he now furnishes a reply, which many understand to be a personifica...
7.At the presence of the Lord Having aroused the senses of men by interrogations, he now furnishes a reply, which many understand to be a personification of the earth; because they take
TSK -> Psa 114:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 114:7
Barnes: Psa 114:7 - -- Tremble, thou earth, at the presence of the Lord ... - This is at the same time an explanation of the facts referred to in the previous verses,...
Tremble, thou earth, at the presence of the Lord ... - This is at the same time an explanation of the facts referred to in the previous verses, and the statement of an important truth in regard to the power of God. The true explanation - as here implied - of what occurred to the sea, to the Jordan, to the mountains, and to the hills, was the fact that God was there; the inference from that, or the truth which followed from that, was, that before that God in whose presence the very mountains shook, and from whom the waters of the sea fled in alarm the whole earth should tremble.
Poole -> Psa 114:7
Poole: Psa 114:7 - -- But why do I ask these questions? Ye mountains did no more than what was just and fit at the approach and appearance of the great God; yea, the whol...
But why do I ask these questions? Ye mountains did no more than what was just and fit at the approach and appearance of the great God; yea, the whole earth hath reason to tremble and quake upon such occasions.
Haydock -> Psa 114:7
Haydock: Psa 114:7 - -- Rest. The peace of the soul, which must precede eternal happiness. ---
Bountiful to. Hebrew, "rewarded." The Chaldean termination i, occurs tw...
Rest. The peace of the soul, which must precede eternal happiness. ---
Bountiful to. Hebrew, "rewarded." The Chaldean termination i, occurs twice in this verse, whence some would prove that it was written after the captivity. This argument is weak, as such things have been observed in the books which were certainly written before. It would only follow, that Esdras might make such alterations, (Berthier) or they may be attributed to some negligent transcriber. (Haydock)
Gill -> Psa 114:7
Gill: Psa 114:7 - -- Tremble, thou earth, at the presence of the Lord,.... Or, "the earth has trembled at the presence of the Lord"; so the Syriac and Arabic versions rend...
Tremble, thou earth, at the presence of the Lord,.... Or, "the earth has trembled at the presence of the Lord"; so the Syriac and Arabic versions render it; the imperative is sometimes put for the preterite or past tense, see Psa 22:9, likewise the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions thus render it, "the earth is moved at the presence of the Lord"; and then the sense is by a prosopopoeia. Is it to be wondered at, that we, the sea, the river of Jordan, the mountains and hills, have fled, or have been driven back, or have skipped like rams and lambs, when the whole earth, of which we are a part, has trembled at the presence of God? who, when he does but look, the earth trembles; and when he touches the hills, they smoke, Psa 104:32. It is at the same presence of God we have been thus moved, the power of which we have felt, even
at the presence of the God of Jacob; who brought Jacob out of Egypt, led him through the sea, and gave him the law on Sinai. This is not to be understood of the general and common presence of God, which is everywhere, and with all his creatures for this is not attended with such wonderful phenomena as here mentioned, either in the literal or mystic sense; but of the majestic, powerful, and gracious presence of God; such as he sometimes causes to attend his ministers, his word, his churches, his martyrs and confessors; and so as to strike an awe upon, and terror into, their greatest enemies, as well as to convert his own people.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 114:1-8
TSK Synopsis: Psa 114:1-8 - --1 The miracles wrought by God, when he brought his people out of Egypt, are a just ground of fearing him.
MHCC -> Psa 114:1-8
MHCC: Psa 114:1-8 - --Let us acknowledge God's power and goodness in what he did for Israel, applying it to that much greater work of wonder, our redemption by Christ; and ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 114:1-8
Matthew Henry: Psa 114:1-8 - -- The psalmist is here remembering the days of old, the years of the right hand of the Most High, and the wonders which their fathers told them of (...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 114:5-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 114:5-8 - --
The poet, when he asks, "What aileth thee, O sea, that thou fleest...?"lives and moves in this olden time as a contemporary, or the present and the ...
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 114:1-8 - --Psalm 114
As mentioned previously, the Israelites sang this song at Passover. This was appropriate since...
