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Text -- Psalms 119:103 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 119:101-104
JFB: Psa 119:101-104 - -- Avoidance of sinful courses is both the effect and means of increasing in divine knowledge (compare Psa 19:10).
Avoidance of sinful courses is both the effect and means of increasing in divine knowledge (compare Psa 19:10).
Clarke -> Psa 119:103
Clarke: Psa 119:103 - -- Sweeter than honey to my mouth! - What deep communion must this man have had with his Maker! These expressions show a soul filled with God. O Christ...
Sweeter than honey to my mouth! - What deep communion must this man have had with his Maker! These expressions show a soul filled with God. O Christians, how vastly superior are our privileges! and alas! how vastly inferior in general, are our consolations, our communion with God, and our heavenly-mindedness!
Calvin -> Psa 119:103
Calvin: Psa 119:103 - -- 103.O how sweet have been thy words to my palate! He again repeats what he had previously stated in different words, that he was so powerfully attrac...
103.O how sweet have been thy words to my palate! He again repeats what he had previously stated in different words, that he was so powerfully attracted by the sweetness of the Divine Law, as to have no desire after any other delight. It is possible that a man may be affected with reverence towards the Law of God; but no one will cheerfully follow it, save he who has tasted this sweetness. God requires from us no slavish service: he will have us to come to him cheerfully, and this is the very reason why the prophet commends the sweetness of God’s word so often in this psalm. If it is demanded in what sense he declares that he took such sweet delight in God’s Law, which, according to the testimony of Paul, (1Co 3:9,) does nothing else but strike fear into men, the solution is easy: The prophet does not speak of the dead letter which kills those who read it, but he comprehends the whole doctrine of the Law, the chief part of which is the free covenant of salvation. When Paul contrasts the Law with the Gospel, he speaks only of the commandments and threatening. Now if God were only to command, and to denounce the curse, the whole of his communication would, undoubtedly, be deadly. But the prophet is not here opposing the Law to the Gospel; and, therefore, he could affirm that the grace of adoption, which is offered in the Law, was sweeter to him than honey; that is to say, that no delight was to him equal to this. What I have previously said must be remembered, that the Law of God will be unsavory to us, or, at least, that it will never be so sweet to us, as to withdraw us from the pleasures of the flesh, until we have struggled manfully against our own nature, in order to subdue the carnal affections which prevail within us.
TSK -> Psa 119:103
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 119:103
Barnes: Psa 119:103 - -- How sweet are thy words unto my taste ... - Margin, as in Hebrew, "palate."The reference is to the taste, perhaps because the sense of taste wa...
How sweet are thy words unto my taste ... - Margin, as in Hebrew, "palate."The reference is to the taste, perhaps because the sense of taste was supposed to reside in the palate. The Hebrew word "may"include also the whole of the inside of the mouth. The word rendered "sweet"does not occur elsewhere. It properly means "to be smooth,"and hence, is applied to kind or agreeable words. On the sentiment here, see the notes at Psa 19:10.
Poole -> Psa 119:103
Poole: Psa 119:103 - -- Ver. 103. The study and obedience of thy words yields me more satisfaction and delight than any worldly men find in their sensual pleasures.
Ver. 103. The study and obedience of thy words yields me more satisfaction and delight than any worldly men find in their sensual pleasures.
Gill -> Psa 119:103
Gill: Psa 119:103 - -- How sweet are thy words unto my taste!.... Who had a spiritual one; and could discern perverse things, and could taste how good and gracious the Lord ...
How sweet are thy words unto my taste!.... Who had a spiritual one; and could discern perverse things, and could taste how good and gracious the Lord is: and so his words were sweet unto him; the doctrines of grace, the truths of the Gospel, were delightful and pleasant to him; like unadulterated milk, desirable by him: like good wine, that goes down sweetly; like good food, that is exceeding palatable; or like honey, and even sweeter than that, as follows. And that words "may be tasted and eaten", is not only agreeable to Scripture language, Jer 15:16; but to classical writers g;
yea, sweeter than honey to my mouth; not only had they the nourishing nature and the refreshing virtue of honey, but the sweetness of it; yea, exceeded it in sweetness; see Psa 19:10.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 119:103
NET Notes: Psa 119:103 Heb “How smooth they are to my palate, your word, more than honey to my mouth.” A few medieval Hebrew mss, as well as several other ancien...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 119:1-176
TSK Synopsis: Psa 119:1-176 - --1 This psalm contains sundry prayers, praises, and professions of obedience.
MHCC -> Psa 119:97-104
MHCC: Psa 119:97-104 - --What we love, we love to think of. All true wisdom is from God. A good man carries his Bible with him, if not in his hands, yet in his head and in his...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 119:103-104
Matthew Henry: Psa 119:103-104 - -- Here is, 1. The wonderful pleasure and delight which David took in the word of God; it was sweet to his taste, sweeter than honey. There is such a...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 119:97-104
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 119:97-104 - --
The eightfold Mem . The poet praises the practical wisdom which the word of God, on this very account so sweet to him, teaches. God's precious law,...
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...
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Constable: Psa 119:1-176 - --Psalm 119
The anonymous psalmist who wrote this longest psalm sought refuge from his persecutors and fou...
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