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Text -- Psalms 119:109 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 119:109
Exposed to perpetual danger.
JFB -> Psa 119:109-110
JFB: Psa 119:109-110 - -- In the midst of deadly perils (the phrase is drawn from the fact that what we carry in our hands may easily slip from them, Jdg 12:3; 1Sa 28:21; Job 1...
Clarke -> Psa 119:109
Clarke: Psa 119:109 - -- My soul is continually in my hand - נפשי naphshi , my life; that is, it is in constant danger, every hour I am on the confines of death
The exp...
My soul is continually in my hand -
The expression signifies to be in continual danger. So Xenarchus in Athenaeus, lib. xiii., c. 4:
"Always presenting my life to the dangers of the fight.
My soul is in thy hand, is the reading of the Syriac, Septuagint, Ethiopic, and Arabic; but this is a conjectural and useless emendation.
Calvin -> Psa 119:109
Calvin: Psa 119:109 - -- 109.My soul is continually in my hand He declares, that no calamities, afflictions, or dangers, which he had experienced: had withdrawn him from the ...
109.My soul is continually in my hand He declares, that no calamities, afflictions, or dangers, which he had experienced: had withdrawn him from the service of God, and the observance of his law. To bear his soul in his hand, is equivalent to his being in danger of his life, so that the soul was, as it were abandoned to the wind. Thus Job, (Job 13:14,) when he pines in his miseries: and is looking for death every moment, and dreading it, complains that his soul was in his hand; as if he had said, It is plucked from its own dwelling-place: and is under the dominion of death. 434 This form of expression is therefore unhappily wrested to an absurd meaning by ignorant people, who understand the prophet as intimating, that it was in his own power to govern his life as he pleased. So far from intending to convey such an idea, by this circumstance he commends his own piety, declaring, that although he was tossed among shipwrecks, and death in a hundred forms hovered before his eyes, so that he could not rest in security for a single moment, yet he had not cast from him the love and study of the Divine law. Here, again, it is well to notice the severe and arduous conflicts by which the fathers, under the law, were tried, that dangers and fears may not frighten us, or, by the weariness they produce, deprive us of courage, and thus prevent the remembrance of the Divine law from remaining impressed on our hearts.
TSK -> Psa 119:109
TSK: Psa 119:109 - -- My soul : Rather, ""My life naphshee is continually in my hand;""i.e., it is in constant danger; every hour I am on the confines of death. The LXX...
My soul : Rather, ""My life
yet do I not : Psa 119:83, Psa 119:117, Psa 119:152
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 119:109
Barnes: Psa 119:109 - -- My soul is continually in my hand - The Septuagint renders this, "My soul is always in thy hands,"but the Hebrew will not admit of this constru...
My soul is continually in my hand - The Septuagint renders this, "My soul is always in thy hands,"but the Hebrew will not admit of this construction. The idea in the original is that his soul - his life - was always in jeopardy. The expression seems to be proverbial. Anything taken in the hand is liable to be rudely snatched away. Thus a casket of jewels, or a purse of gold in the hand, may at any moment be seized by robbers. See the notes at Job 13:14. Compare 1Sa 19:5; Jdg 12:3. The meaning here is, that his life was constantly in danger.
Yet do I not forget thy law - Notwithstanding the danger to which I am exposed, and the care necessary to defend my life, I do not allow my mind to be turned from meditating on thy law, nor do I suffer any danger to deter me from obeying it. Compare the notes at Psa 119:61.
Poole -> Psa 119:109
Poole: Psa 119:109 - -- Ver. 109. In my hand exposed to perpetual and extreme danger, as any precious and frail thing is which a man carrieth openly in his hand, whence it ...
Gill -> Psa 119:109
Gill: Psa 119:109 - -- My soul is continually in my hand,.... In the utmost jeopardy, always exposed to danger, ever delivered unto death; killed all the day long, or liabl...
My soul is continually in my hand,.... In the utmost jeopardy, always exposed to danger, ever delivered unto death; killed all the day long, or liable to be so: this is the sense of the phrase; see Jdg 12:3; for what is in a man's hands may easily fall, or be taken out of them: so the Targum,
"my soul is in danger upon the back of my hands continually;''
the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Arabic versions, read, "in thy hands"; but wrongly;
yet do I not forget thy law; it was written on his heart, and fixed in his mind; he had a true affection for it, and a hearty desire to keep it; and no danger could divert him from his duty; as Daniel, though he carried his life in his hand, yet continued to pray to his God as usual; nor could anything move the Apostle Paul from the doctrine of the Gospel, and preaching it.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 119:109
Geneva Bible -> Psa 119:109
Geneva Bible: Psa 119:109 My ( d ) soul [is] continually in my hand: yet do I not forget thy law.
( d ) That is, I am in continual danger of my life.
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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 119:105-112
MHCC: Psa 119:105-112 - --The word of God directs us in our work and way, and a dark place indeed the world would be without it. The commandment is a lamp kept burning with the...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 119:109-110
Matthew Henry: Psa 119:109-110 - -- Here is, 1. David in danger of losing his life. There is but a step between him and death, for the wicked have laid a snare for him; Saul did so m...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 119:105-112
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 119:105-112 - --
The eightfold Nun . The word of God is his constant guide, to which he has entrusted himself for ever. The way here below is a way through darkness...
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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