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Text -- Psalms 116:1-4 (NET)

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Context
Psalm 116
116:1 I love the Lord because he heard my plea for mercy, 116:2 and listened to me. As long as I live, I will call to him when I need help. 116:3 The ropes of death tightened around me, the snares of Sheol confronted me. I was confronted with trouble and sorrow. 116:4 I called on the name of the Lord, “Please Lord, rescue my life!”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Sheol the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: VULGATE | Testimony | Temple, the Second | TEXT OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | Psalms | Prayer | Praise | PSALMS, BOOK OF | PAIN | Net | Love | Hymn | Hell | Hallel | Hades | HALLELUJAH | God | ETHICS OF JESUS | Disease | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 116:3 - -- Dangerous and deadly calamities.

Dangerous and deadly calamities.

Wesley: Psa 116:3 - -- Such agonies and horrors, as dying persons use to feel.

Such agonies and horrors, as dying persons use to feel.

JFB: Psa 116:1-2 - -- The writer celebrates the deliverance from extreme perils by which he was favored, and pledges grateful and pious public acknowledgments. (Psa. 116:1-...

The writer celebrates the deliverance from extreme perils by which he was favored, and pledges grateful and pious public acknowledgments. (Psa. 116:1-19)

A truly grateful love will be evinced by acts of worship, which calling on God expresses (Psa 116:13; Psa 55:16; Psa 86:7; compare Psa 17:6; Psa 31:2).

JFB: Psa 116:3-4 - -- For similar figures for distress see Psa 18:4-5.

For similar figures for distress see Psa 18:4-5.

JFB: Psa 116:3-4 - -- Another sense ("found") of the same word follows, as we speak of disease finding us, and of our finding or catching disease.

Another sense ("found") of the same word follows, as we speak of disease finding us, and of our finding or catching disease.

Clarke: Psa 116:1 - -- I love the Lord because he hath heard - How vain and foolish is the talk, "To love God for his benefits to us is mercenary, and cannot be pure love!...

I love the Lord because he hath heard - How vain and foolish is the talk, "To love God for his benefits to us is mercenary, and cannot be pure love!"Whether pure or impure, there is no other love that can flow from the heart of the creature to its Creator. We love him, said the holiest of Christ’ s disciples, because he first loved us; and the increase of our love and filial obedience is in proportion to the increased sense we have of our obligation to him. We love him for the benefits bestowed on us. Love begets love.

Clarke: Psa 116:2 - -- Because he hath inclined his ear - The psalmist represents himself to be so sick and weak, that he could scarcely speak. The Lord, in condescension ...

Because he hath inclined his ear - The psalmist represents himself to be so sick and weak, that he could scarcely speak. The Lord, in condescension to this weakness, is here considered as bowing down his ear to the mouth of the feeble suppliant, that he may receive every word of his prayer

Clarke: Psa 116:2 - -- Therefore will I call upon him - I have had such blessed success in my application to him, that I purpose to invoke him as long as I shall live. He ...

Therefore will I call upon him - I have had such blessed success in my application to him, that I purpose to invoke him as long as I shall live. He that prays much will be emboldened to pray more, because none can supplicate the throne of grace in vain.

Clarke: Psa 116:3 - -- The sorrows of death - חבלי מות chebley maveth , the cables or cords of death; alluding to their bonds and fetters during their captivity; o...

The sorrows of death - חבלי מות chebley maveth , the cables or cords of death; alluding to their bonds and fetters during their captivity; or to the cords by which a criminal is bound who is about to be led out to execution; or to the bandages in which the dead were enveloped, when head, arms, body, and limbs were all laced down together

Clarke: Psa 116:3 - -- The pains of hell - מצרי שאול metsarey sheol the straitnesses of the grave. So little expectation was there of life, that he speaks as if...

The pains of hell - מצרי שאול metsarey sheol the straitnesses of the grave. So little expectation was there of life, that he speaks as if he were condemned, executed, and closed up in the tomb. Or, he may refer here to the small niches in cemeteries, where the coffins of the dead were placed

Because this Psalm has been used in the thanksgiving of women after safe delivery, it has been supposed that the pain suffered in the act of parturition was equal for the time to the torments of the damned. But this supposition is shockingly absurd; the utmost power of human nature could not, for a moment, endure the wrath of God, the deathless worm, and the unquenchable fire. The body must die, be decomposed, and be built up on indestructible principles, before this punishment can be borne.

Calvin: Psa 116:1 - -- 1.I have loved, because Jehovah will hear the voice of my supplication At the very commencement of this psalm David avows that he was attracted with ...

1.I have loved, because Jehovah will hear the voice of my supplication At the very commencement of this psalm David avows that he was attracted with the sweetness of God’s goodness, to place his hope and confidence in him alone. This abrupt mode of speaking, I have loved, is the more emphatic, intimating that he could receive joy and repose nowhere but in God. We know that our hearts will be always wandering after fruitless pleasures, and harassed with care, until God knit them to himself. This distemper David affirms was removed from him, because he felt that God was indeed propitious towards him. And, having found by experience that, in general, they who call upon God are happy, he declares that no allurements shall draw him away from God. When, therefore, he says, I have loved, it imports that, without God, nothing would be pleasant or agreeable to him. From this we are instructed that those who have been heard by God, but do not place themselves entirely under his guidance and guardianship, have derived little advantage from the experience of his grace.

The second verse also refers to the same subject, excepting that the latter clause admits of a very appropriate meaning, which expositors overlook. The phrase, during my days I will call upon him, is uniformly understood by them to mean, I, who hitherto have been so successful in addressing God, will pursue the same course all my life long. But it should be considered whether it may not be equally appropriate that the days of David be regarded as denoting a fit season of asking assistance, the season when he was hard pressed by necessity. I am not prevented from adopting this signification, because it may be said that the prophet employs the future tense of the verb אקרא , ekra. In the first verse also, the term, he shall hear, is to be understood in the past tense, he has heard, in which case the copulative conjunction would require to be taken as an adverb of time, when, a circumstance this by no means unusual among the Hebrews. The scope of the passage will run very well thus: Because he has bowed his ear to me when I called upon him in the time of my adversity, and even at the season, too, when I was reduced to the greatest straits. If any are disposed to prefer the former exposition, I will not dispute the matter with them. The subsequent context, however, appears to countenance the latter meaning, in which David commences energetically to point out what those days were. And, with the design of magnifying God’s glory according to its desert, he says that there was no way of his escaping from death, for he was like one among enemies, bound with fetters and chains, from whom all hope of deliverance was cut off. He acknowledges, therefore, that he was subjected to death, that he was overtaken and seized, so that escape was impossible. And as he declares that he was bound by the cords of death, so he, at the same the adds, that he fell into tribulation and sorrow And here he confirms what he said formerly, that when he seemed to be most forsaken of God, that was truly the proper time, and the right season for him to give himself to prayer.

TSK: Psa 116:1 - -- am 3468, bc 536 (Title), From several instances of the Chaldee dialect being used in this Psalm, it appears to have been written after the Babylonian ...

am 3468, bc 536 (Title), From several instances of the Chaldee dialect being used in this Psalm, it appears to have been written after the Babylonian captivity.

love : Psa 18:1-6, Psa 119:132; Mar 12:33; Joh 21:17; 1Jo 4:19, 1Jo 5:2, 1Jo 5:3

because : Psa 18:6, Psa 31:22, Psa 31:23, Psa 34:3, Psa 34:4, Psa 40:1, Psa 66:19, Psa 66:20, Psa 69:33; Gen 35:2; 1Sa 1:26; Joh 16:24

TSK: Psa 116:2 - -- therefore : Psa 55:16, Psa 55:17, Psa 86:6, Psa 86:7, Psa 88:1, Psa 145:18, Psa 145:19; Job 27:10; Luk 18:1; Phi 4:6; Col 4:2 as long as I live : Heb....

therefore : Psa 55:16, Psa 55:17, Psa 86:6, Psa 86:7, Psa 88:1, Psa 145:18, Psa 145:19; Job 27:10; Luk 18:1; Phi 4:6; Col 4:2

as long as I live : Heb. in my days

TSK: Psa 116:3 - -- sorrows : Psa 18:4-6, Psa 88:6, Psa 88:7; Jon 2:2, Jon 2:3; Mar 14:33-36; Luk 22:44; Heb 5:7 gat hold upon me : Heb. found me I found : Psa 32:3, Psa ...

sorrows : Psa 18:4-6, Psa 88:6, Psa 88:7; Jon 2:2, Jon 2:3; Mar 14:33-36; Luk 22:44; Heb 5:7

gat hold upon me : Heb. found me

I found : Psa 32:3, Psa 32:4, Psa 38:6; Isa 53:3, Isa 53:4

TSK: Psa 116:4 - -- called : Psa 22:1-3, Psa 30:7, Psa 30:8, Psa 34:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 118:5, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2; 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13; Isa 37:15-20, Isa 38:1-3; Joh 2:2...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 116:1 - -- I love the Lord - The Hebrew rather means, "I love, because the Lord hath heard,"etc. That is, the psalmist was conscious of love; he felt it g...

I love the Lord - The Hebrew rather means, "I love, because the Lord hath heard,"etc. That is, the psalmist was conscious of love; he felt it glowing in his soul; his heart was full of that special joy, tenderness, kindness, peace, which love produces; and the source or reason of this, he says, was that the Lord had heard him in his prayers.

Because he hath heard ... - That is, This fact was a reason for loving him. The psalmist does not say that this was the only reason, or the main reason for loving him, but that it was the reason for that special joy of love which he then felt in his soul. The main reason for loving God is his own excellency of nature; but still there are other reasons for doing it, and among them are the benefits which he has conferred on us, and which awaken the love of gratitude. Compare the notes at 1Jo 4:19.

Barnes: Psa 116:2 - -- Because he hath inclined his ear unto me - See the notes at Psa 5:1. Because he has been gracious to me, and has heard my prayers. This is a po...

Because he hath inclined his ear unto me - See the notes at Psa 5:1. Because he has been gracious to me, and has heard my prayers. This is a pood reason for serving God, or for devoting ourselves to him, but it is not the only reason. We ought to worship and serve God whether he hears our prayers or not; whether he sends joy or sorrow; whether we are favored with prosperity, or are sunk in deep affliction. People have worshipped God even when they have had no evidence that he heard their prayers; and some of the most pure acts of devotion on earth are those which come from the very depths of darkness and sorrow.

Therefore will I call upon him as long as I live - Margin, as in Hebrew, "in my days."Encouraged by the past, I will continue to call upon him in the future. I will retain a firm faith in the doctrine that he hears prayer, and I will express my practical belief in the truth of that doctrine by regular and constant habits of worship. When a man once has evidence that God has heard his prayer, it is a reason why he should always call on him in similar circumstances, for God does not change.

Barnes: Psa 116:3 - -- The sorrows of death - What an expression! We know of no intenser sorrows pertaining to this world than those which we associate with the dying...

The sorrows of death - What an expression! We know of no intenser sorrows pertaining to this world than those which we associate with the dying struggle - whether our views in regard to the reality of such sorrows be correct or not. We may be - we probably are - mistaken in regard to the intensity of suffering as ordinarily experienced in death; but still we dread those sorrows more than we do anything else, and all that we dread may be experienced then. Those sorrows, therefore, become the representation of the intensest forms of suffering; and such, the psalmist says, he experienced on the occasion to which he refers. There would seem in his case to have been two things combined, as they often are:

(1) actual suffering from some bodily malady which threatened his life, Psa 116:3, Psa 116:6,Psa 116:8-10;

(2) mental sorrow as produced by the remembrance of his sins, and the apprehension of the future, Psa 116:4. See the notes at Psa 18:5.

And the pains of hell - The pains of Sheol - Hades; the grave. See Psa 16:10, note; Job 10:21-22, notes; Isa 14:9, note. The pain or suffering connected with going down to the grave, or the descent to the nether world; the pains of death. There is no evidence that the psalmist here refers to the pains of hell, as we understand the word, as a place of punishment, or that he mean, to say that he experienced the sorrows of the damned. The sufferings which he referred to were these of death - the descent to the tomb.

Gat hold upon me - Margin, as in Hebrew, "found me."They discovered me - as if they had been searching for me, and had at last found my hiding place. Those sorrows and pangs, ever in pursuit of us, will soon find us all. We cannot long escape the pursuit Death tracks us, and is upon our heels.

I found trouble and sorrow - Death found me, and I found trouble and sorrow. I did not seek it, but in what I was seeking I found this. Whatever we fail to "find"in the pursuits of life, we shall not fail to find the troubles and sorrows connected with death. They are in our path wherever we turn, and we cannot avoid them.

Barnes: Psa 116:4 - -- Then called I upon the name of the Lord - Upon the Lord. I had no other refuge. I felt that I must perish unless he should interpose, and I ple...

Then called I upon the name of the Lord - Upon the Lord. I had no other refuge. I felt that I must perish unless he should interpose, and I pleaded with him for deliverance and life. Compare the notes at Psa 18:6.

O Lord, I beseech thee, deliver my soul - My life. Save me from death. This was not a cry for salvation, but for life. It is an example for us, however, to call on God when we feel that the soul is in danger of perishing, for then, as in the case of the psalmist, we have no other refuge but God.

Poole: Psa 116:2 - -- Heb. in my days ; as long as I have a day to live, as this phrase is used, 2Ki 20:19 Isa 39:8 . Compare Job 27:6 .

Heb. in my days ; as long as I have a day to live, as this phrase is used, 2Ki 20:19 Isa 39:8 . Compare Job 27:6 .

Poole: Psa 116:3 - -- The sorrows of death dangerous and deadly calamities, as bitter as death. Or, the cords of death. Of hell or, of the grave; or, of death; either ki...

The sorrows of death dangerous and deadly calamities, as bitter as death. Or, the cords of death.

Of hell or, of the grave; or, of death; either killing pains, or such agonies and horrors as dying persons use to feel within themselves.

Gat hold upon me Heb. found me, i.e. surprised me. Having been long pursuing me, at last they overtook me, and seized upon me, and I gave up myself for lost.

Haydock: Psa 116:1 - -- All nations are called upon to praise God for his mercy and truth.

All nations are called upon to praise God for his mercy and truth.

Haydock: Psa 116:1 - -- Alleluia. This word is found at the end of the last psalm, in Hebrew. (Haydock) --- The captives invite all to thank God for their delivery, which...

Alleluia. This word is found at the end of the last psalm, in Hebrew. (Haydock) ---

The captives invite all to thank God for their delivery, which was a most striking figure of the world's redemption, in which sense the apostle (Romans xv. 11.) quotes this psalm, with the holy Fathers, though Ven. Bede puts it in the mouth of Ezechias, after the retrogradation of the sun. Kimchi allows that it regards the times of the Messias. (Calmet) ---

Praise him. St. Paul reads, magnify him, as the Hebrew means, "extol" by your praises. (Berthier) ---

All are invited to praise, as the redemption is sufficient, (Worthington) and designed for all the posterity of Adam.

Haydock: Psa 116:2 - -- Remaineth is not in Hebrew. Mercy and truth confirm us. (Haydock) --- The psalmist acknowledges that he also stands in need of them, and St. John ...

Remaineth is not in Hebrew. Mercy and truth confirm us. (Haydock) ---

The psalmist acknowledges that he also stands in need of them, and St. John assures us, that grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. [John i. 17.] (Berthier) ---

No promise had been made to the Gentiles (Worthington) by the law; though they were all included in the original promise, Genesis iii. 15. (Haydock) ---

God hath withdrawn them from idolatry, to impart to them his mercies. (Calmet)

Gill: Psa 116:1 - -- I love the Lord,.... As the Messiah, David's antitype, did; of which he gave the fullest proof by his obedience to his will; and as David, the man aft...

I love the Lord,.... As the Messiah, David's antitype, did; of which he gave the fullest proof by his obedience to his will; and as David, the man after God's own heart, did, and as every good man does; and the Lord is to be loved for the perfections of his nature, and especially as they are displayed in Christ, and salvation by him; and for his works of creation, providence, and grace, and particularly for his great love shown in redemption, regeneration, and other blessings of grace, as well as for what follows.

Because he hath heard my voice and my supplication; in the original text the words lie thus, "I love, because the Lord hath heard", or "will hear"; and so read the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin, Ethiopic, Syriac, and Arabic versions, and so the Targum; and may be rendered, "I love that the Lord should hear me", so the Syriac and Arabic versions; nothing is more desirable and grateful to good men than that the Lord should hear them; but Kimchi and others transpose the words as we do, which gives a reason why he loved the Lord; because he heard his prayers, which were vocal, put up in a time of distress, in an humble and submissive manner, under the influence of the Spirit of grace and supplication, in the name of Christ, for his righteousness sake, and through his mediation; and such supplications are heard and answered by the Lord, sooner or later; and which engages the love of his people to him; see Psa 34:1. It may be applied to Christ, who offered up prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, and was always heard; and for which he thanked his Father and loved him, Heb 5:7.

Gill: Psa 116:2 - -- Because he hath inclined his ear unto me,.... Not as hard of hearing, for his ear is not heavy that it cannot hear; he is quick of hearing, and his ea...

Because he hath inclined his ear unto me,.... Not as hard of hearing, for his ear is not heavy that it cannot hear; he is quick of hearing, and his ears are always open to the righteous; it rather denotes his readiness to hear; he hearkens and hears, he listens to what his people say, and hears them at once, and understands them, though ever so broken and confused; when their prayers are but like the chatterings of a crane or swallow, or only expressed in sighs and groans, and even without a voice; when nothing is articulately pronounced: moreover, this shows condescension in him; he bows his ear as a rattler to a child, he stoops as being above them, and inclines his ear to them.

Therefore will I call upon him as long as I live; or "in my days" d; in days of adversity and affliction, for help and relief; in days of prosperity, with thankfulness for favours received; every day I live, and several times a day: prayer should be constantly used; men should pray without ceasing always, and not faint; prayer is the first and last action of a spiritual life; it is the first thing a regenerate man does, "behold, he prays"; as soon as he is born again he prays, and continues praying all his days; and generally goes out of the world praying, as Stephen did, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit"; and it is the Lord's hearing prayer that encourages his people to keep on praying, and which makes the work delightful to them. Christ was often at this work in life, and died praying, Luk 6:12.

Gill: Psa 116:3 - -- The sorrows of death compassed me,.... Christ, of whom David was a type, was a man of sorrows all his days; and in the garden he was surrounded with s...

The sorrows of death compassed me,.... Christ, of whom David was a type, was a man of sorrows all his days; and in the garden he was surrounded with sorrow; exceeding sorrowful even unto death, in a view of the sins of his people imputed to him, and under a sense of wrath for them, he was about to bear; and his agonies in the article of death were very grievous, he died the painful and accursed death of the cross. This was true of David, when Saul and his men compassed him on every side, threatening to cut him off in a moment; when he despaired of life, and had the sentence of death in himself, and saw no way to escape; and such a case is that of the people of God, or they may be said to be compassed about with the sorrows of death, when through a slavish fear of it they are all their lifetime subject to bondage; and especially when under dreadful apprehensions of eternal death.

And the pains of hell gat hold upon me; or "found me" e; overtook him, and seized upon him; meaning either the horrors of a guilty conscience under a sense of sin, without a view of pardon; which is as it were a hell in the conscience, and like the pains and torments of it: or "the pains of the grave" f; not that there are any pains felt there, the body being destitute of life, and senseless; but such sorrows or troubles are meant which threaten to bring down to the grave, which was the case of Jacob on the loss of his children, Gen 37:35. This applied to Christ may design the wrath of God and curse of the law, which he endured in the room and stead of his people, as their surety; and which were equivalent to the pains of the damned in hell; or it may refer to his being laid in the grave, in a strait and narrow place, as the word g signifies; where he lay bound in grave clothes, till he was loosed from the pains and cords of death, it being not possible he should be held by them, Act 2:24; see Gill on Psa 18:4, Psa 18:5.

I found trouble and sorrow; without seeking for them; they seized and took hold of him, on David, and his antitype, when in the above circumstances; and often do the saints find trouble and sorrow from a body of sin and death, from the temptations of Satan, divine desertions, and afflictive providences. Aben Ezra refers the one to the body, the other to the soul.

Gill: Psa 116:4 - -- Then called I upon the name of the Lord,.... Upon the Lord himself in prayer for speedy deliverance; or "in the name of the Lord" h, in the name of th...

Then called I upon the name of the Lord,.... Upon the Lord himself in prayer for speedy deliverance; or "in the name of the Lord" h, in the name of the Messiah, the only Mediator between God and man; "saying", as follows, and which word may be supplied,

O Lord, I beseech thee, deliver my soul; from these sorrows and pains, from these afflictions and distresses, from death and the grave, and from wrath, and a sense of it, and fears about it.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 116:1 Heb “I love because the Lord heard my voice, my pleas.” It is possible that “the Lord” originally appeared directly after R...

NET Notes: Psa 116:2 Heb “and in my days I will cry out.”

NET Notes: Psa 116:3 The translation assumes the prefixed verbal form is a preterite. The psalmist recalls the crisis from which the Lord delivered him.

Geneva Bible: Psa 116:1 I ( a ) love the LORD, because he hath heard my voice [and] my supplications. ( a ) He grants that no pleasure is so great as to feel God's help in o...

Geneva Bible: Psa 116:2 Because he hath inclined his ear unto me, therefore will I call upon [him] ( b ) as long as I live. ( b ) That is in convenient time to seek help, wh...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Psa 116:1-19 - --1 The psalmist professes his love and duty to God for his deliverance.12 He studies to be thankful.

MHCC: Psa 116:1-9 - --We have many reasons for loving the Lord, but are most affected by his loving-kindness when relieved out of deep distress. When a poor sinner is awake...

Matthew Henry: Psa 116:1-9 - -- In this part of the psalm we have, I. A general account of David's experience, and his pious resolutions (Psa 116:1, Psa 116:2), which are as the co...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 116:1-4 - -- Not only is כּי אהבתּי "I love (like, am well pleased) that,"like ἀγαπῶ ὅτι , Thucydides vi. 36, contrary to the usage of ...

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 116:1-19 - --Psalm 116 An unnamed writer gave thanks to God for delivering him from imminent death and lengthening hi...

Constable: Psa 116:1-2 - --1. A promise to praise God from a loving heart 116:1-2 The psalmist loved God because the Lord h...

Constable: Psa 116:3-11 - --2. The psalmist's account of his deliverance 116:3-11 116:3 Evidently the writer had been very close to death. He pictured it as reaching out to him w...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 116 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 116:1, The psalmist professes his love and duty to God for his deliverance; Psa 116:12, He studies to be thankful.

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

Poole: Psalms 116 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This Psalm contains a solemn thanksgiving to God for a glorious deliverance from grievous and dangerous calamities; as also from great...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 116 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 116:1-9) The psalmist declares his love to the Lord. (Psa 116:10-19) His desire to be thankful.

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 116 (Chapter Introduction) This is a thanksgiving psalm; it is not certain whether David penned it upon any particular occasion or upon a general review of the many gracious ...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 116 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 116 Theodoret applies this psalm to the distresses of the Jews in the times of the Maccabees under Antiochus Epiphanes; and R...

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