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Text -- Psalms 119:67 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 119:67
JFB: Psa 119:67 - -- Referred by HENGSTENBERG to the chastening effect produced on the Jews' minds by the captivity (Jer 31:18-19). The truth is a general one (Job 5:6; Jo...
Referred by HENGSTENBERG to the chastening effect produced on the Jews' minds by the captivity (Jer 31:18-19). The truth is a general one (Job 5:6; Joh 15:2; Heb 12:11).
Clarke -> Psa 119:67
Clarke: Psa 119:67 - -- Before I was afflicted I went astray - Many have been humbled under affliction, and taught to know themselves and humble themselves before God, that...
Before I was afflicted I went astray - Many have been humbled under affliction, and taught to know themselves and humble themselves before God, that probably without this could never have been saved; after this, they have been serious and faithful. Affliction sanctified is a great blessing; unsanctified, it is an additional curse.
Calvin -> Psa 119:67
Calvin: Psa 119:67 - -- 67.Before I was brought low I went astray As the verb ענה anah, sometimes signifies to speak, or to testify, some adopt this rendering, B...
67.Before I was brought low I went astray As the verb
The next verse needs no explanation, being nearly of the same import as the last verse of the former eight. He beseeches God to exercise his goodness towards him, not by causing him to increase in riches and honors, or to abound in pleasures, but by enabling him to make progress in the knowledge of the law. It is usual for almost all mankind to implore the exercise of God’s goodness towards them, and to desire that he would deal bountifully with them, in the way of gratifying the diversity of the desires into which they are severally hurried by the inclinations of the flesh; but David protests that he would be completely satisfied, provided he experienced God to be liberal towards him in this one particular, which almost all men pass over with disdain.
TSK -> Psa 119:67
TSK: Psa 119:67 - -- Before : Psa 119:176, 73:5-28; Deu 32:15; 2Sa 10:19, 11:2-27; 2Ch 33:9-13; Pro 1:32; Jer 22:21
but now : Psa 119:71, Psa 119:75; Jer 31:18, Jer 31:19;...
Before : Psa 119:176, 73:5-28; Deu 32:15; 2Sa 10:19, 11:2-27; 2Ch 33:9-13; Pro 1:32; Jer 22:21
but now : Psa 119:71, Psa 119:75; Jer 31:18, Jer 31:19; Hos 2:6, Hos 2:7, Hos 5:15, Hos 6:1; Heb 12:10, Heb 12:11; Rev 3:10
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 119:67
Barnes: Psa 119:67 - -- Before I was afflicted - The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate, "Before I was humbled."The Hebrew word has the general sense of being afflicted,...
Before I was afflicted - The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate, "Before I was humbled."The Hebrew word has the general sense of being afflicted, and may refer to any kind of trial.
I went astray - The Hebrew word means to wander; to err; to do wrong; to transgress. Num 15:28; Job 12:16. It here means that he forgot his duty; that he fell into sin; that he departed from what was right; that he embraced erroneous views; that he lived in the neglect of his soul, the neglect of duty, and the neglect of God. Prosperity had not led him to fulfill duty; to seek salvation; to trust in God. This was, in his case, as it is in thousands of others, the experience of his life. Hence, affliction often becomes so necessary to check us when we are going astray, and so useful in recalling us to the ways of duty and of truth.
But now have I kept thy word - Since I was afflicted. The effect has been to recall me from my wanderings, and to turn me to paths of duty and holiness. This is an effect often - very often - experienced; this is language which can be used by many a child of God. Of those who are the children of God it may be said that they are "always"benefited "sooner"or "later"by afflictions. It may not be at the time of the affliction (compare Heb 12:11), but the "ultimate"effect is in all cases to benefit them. Some error is corrected; some evil habit changed; some mode of life not consistent with religion is forsaken; pride is humbled; the heart is quickened in duty; habits of prayer are resumed or formed; the affections are fixed on a better world; the soul is made more gentle, calm, humble, spiritual, pure. Afflictions are among the most precious means of grace. They are entirely under the direction of God. They may be endlessly varied, and adapted to the case of every individual.
God knows every heart, and the best way to reach any heart. By sickness; by disappointment; by loss of property; by bereavement; by blighted hopes; by the ingratitude of others; by the unkindness of professed friends, and the malice of enemies; by domestic troubles; by the misconduct of children - perhaps the most severe of all human ills, and the hardest to bear; in ten thousand ways God can reach the heart, and break and crush it, and make it ready for the entrance of truth - as the farmer breaks and pulverizes the soil by the plow and the harrow, so that it shall be prepared to receive the seed. Compare the notes at Isa 28:24-29. Among those things for which good men have most occasion for thankfulness are afflictions; and when we lie down on the bed of death, and look over life and the divine dealings with us through life, as the glories of heaven are about to open upon us, we shall feel that among the chiefest mercies of God are those dealings of his holy hand, trying at the time, which kept us from going astray, or which recalled us when we had wandered from him - and "that in our life, now closing, there has not been one trial too much."
Poole -> Psa 119:67
Poole: Psa 119:67 - -- I went astray as men generally do in their prosperity. See Deu 32:15 Psa 73:4-6 , &c.; Pro 1:32 Jer 22:21 .
I went astray as men generally do in their prosperity. See Deu 32:15 Psa 73:4-6 , &c.; Pro 1:32 Jer 22:21 .
Gill -> Psa 119:67
Gill: Psa 119:67 - -- Before I was afflicted, I went astray,.... From God; from his word, his ways and worship; like a lost sheep from the shepherd, the fold, the flock, an...
Before I was afflicted, I went astray,.... From God; from his word, his ways and worship; like a lost sheep from the shepherd, the fold, the flock, and the footsteps of it; see Psa 119:176; Not that he wilfully, wickedly, maliciously, and through contempt, departed from his God; this he denies, Psa 18:21; but through the weakness of the flesh, the prevalence of corruption, and force of temptation, and very much through a careless, heedless, and negligent frame of spirit, he got out of the right way, and wandered from it before he was well aware. The word is used of erring through ignorance, Lev 5:18; this was in a time of prosperity, when, though he might not, like Jeshurun, wax fat and kick, and forsake and lightly esteem the Rock of his salvation; or fall into temptations and harmful lusts, and err from the faith, and be pierced with many sorrows, as too much love of the world brings men into; yet he might become inattentive to the duties of religion, and be negligent of them, which is a common case;
but now have I kept thy word: having been afflicted with outward and inward afflictions, afflictions of body and mind; afflictions in person, in family and estate; afflictions in soul, through indwelling sin, the temptations of Satan, and the hidings of God's face: all this brought him back again to God, to his word, ways, and worship; he betook himself to reading and hearing the word, if he might find any thing to relieve and comfort him under his trials; he observed the doctrines of grace in it, and kept the precepts of it, and walked in all the commandments and ordinances of it, being restored by afflictions.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 119:67; Psa 119:67
Geneva Bible -> Psa 119:67
Geneva Bible: Psa 119:67 Before I was ( b ) afflicted I went astray: but now have I kept thy word.
( b ) So Jeremiah says, that before the Lord touched him, he was like a cal...
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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 119:65-72
MHCC: Psa 119:65-72 - --However God has dealt with us, he has dealt with us better than we deserve; and all in love, and for our good. Many have knowledge, but little judgmen...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 119:67
Matthew Henry: Psa 119:67 - -- David here tells us what he had experienced, 1. Of the temptations of a prosperous condition: " Before I was afflicted, while I lived in peace and ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 119:65-72
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 119:65-72 - --
The eightfold Teth . The good word of the gracious God is the fountain of all good; and it is learned in the way of lowliness. He reviews his life,...
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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