
Text -- Psalms 120:1-6 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 120:4 - -- The wrath and vengeance of the mighty God, which in scripture is often compared to arrows, and here to coals of juniper, which burn very fiercely and ...
The wrath and vengeance of the mighty God, which in scripture is often compared to arrows, and here to coals of juniper, which burn very fiercely and retain their heat for a long time.

Wesley: Psa 120:5 - -- Mesech and Kedar are two sorts of people often mentioned in scripture, and reckoned amongst the barbarous nations. But their names are here to be unde...
Mesech and Kedar are two sorts of people often mentioned in scripture, and reckoned amongst the barbarous nations. But their names are here to be understood metaphorically. And so he explains himself in the next verse.
JFB: Psa 120:2-3 - -- This is the first of fifteen Psalms (Psalms 120-134) entitled "A Song of Degrees" (Psa 121:1 --literally, "A song for the degrees"), or ascents. It se...
This is the first of fifteen Psalms (Psalms 120-134) entitled "A Song of Degrees" (Psa 121:1 --literally, "A song for the degrees"), or ascents. It seems most probable they were designed for the use of the people when going up (compare 1Ki 12:27-28) to Jerusalem on the festival occasions (Deu 16:16), three times a year. David appears as the author of four, Solomon of one (Psa 127:1), and the other ten are anonymous, probably composed after the captivity. In this Psalm the writer acknowledges God's mercy, prays for relief from a malicious foe, whose punishment he anticipates, and then repeats his complaint. (Psa 120:1-7)
Slander and deceit charged on his foes implies his innocence.

JFB: Psa 120:4 - -- Which retain heat long. This verse may be read as a description of the wicked, but better as their punishment, in reply to the question of Psa 120:3.
Which retain heat long. This verse may be read as a description of the wicked, but better as their punishment, in reply to the question of Psa 120:3.

A residence in these remote lands pictures his miserable condition.

JFB: Psa 120:6-7 - -- While those who surrounded him were maliciously hostile, he was disposed to peace. This Psalm may well begin such a series as this, as a contrast to t...
While those who surrounded him were maliciously hostile, he was disposed to peace. This Psalm may well begin such a series as this, as a contrast to the promised joys of God's worship.
In my distress - Through the causes afterwards mentioned

I cried unto the Lord - Made strong supplication for help

Clarke: Psa 120:1 - -- And he heard one - Answered my prayer by comforting my soul
It appears to be a prayer of the captives in Babylon for complete liberty; or perhaps he...
And he heard one - Answered my prayer by comforting my soul
It appears to be a prayer of the captives in Babylon for complete liberty; or perhaps he recites the prayer the Israelites had made previously to their restoration.

Clarke: Psa 120:2 - -- Lying lips, and from a deceitful tongue - From a people without faith, without truth, without religion; who sought by lies and calumnies to destroy ...
Lying lips, and from a deceitful tongue - From a people without faith, without truth, without religion; who sought by lies and calumnies to destroy them.

Clarke: Psa 120:3 - -- What shall be given unto thee? - Thou art worthy of the heaviest punishments.
What shall be given unto thee? - Thou art worthy of the heaviest punishments.

Clarke: Psa 120:4 - -- Sharp arrows - The Chaldee has, "The strong, sharp arrows are like lightning from above, with coals of juniper kindled in hell beneath."On the junip...
Sharp arrows - The Chaldee has, "The strong, sharp arrows are like lightning from above, with coals of juniper kindled in hell beneath."On the juniper, see the note on Job 30:4, where this passage is explained. Fiery arrows, or arrows wrapped about with inflamed combustibles, were formerly used in sieges to set the places on fire. See my notes on Eph 6:16 (note).

Clarke: Psa 120:5 - -- That I sojourn in Mesech - The Chaldee has it, "Wo is me that I am a stranger with the Asiatics, ( אוסאי useey ), and that I dwell in the tent...
That I sojourn in Mesech - The Chaldee has it, "Wo is me that I am a stranger with the Asiatics, (

Clarke: Psa 120:6 - -- My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace - A restless, barbarous, warlike, and marauding people.
My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace - A restless, barbarous, warlike, and marauding people.
Calvin: Psa 120:1 - -- 1.I cried to Jehovah in my distress The name of the author of the Psalm is not expressed, but the style of it throughout presents David to our view. ...
1.I cried to Jehovah in my distress The name of the author of the Psalm is not expressed, but the style of it throughout presents David to our view. Although, therefore, I cannot positively affirm, yet I am rather inclined to think that it was composed by him. Nor will it be improper, in my judgment, to explain it as if his name had been mentioned in the inscription. This, then, being granted, I would observe that although David, when in this verse he affirms that the Lord had heard him, gives thanks to him, yet his chief purpose was to set forth, in the form of complaint, how wickedly and cruelly Saul’s flatterers employed all their ingenuity and power to accomplish his destruction. He, however, sets out with an expression of his gratitude to God, telling us that he had not called upon Him in vain; and he does this, that by his own example he might encourage others, especially when oppressed with adversity, to confidence in prayer. Men, it is true, have need of God’s help every moment; but there is not a more suitable season for seeking him than when some great danger is immediately menacing us. It is therefore worthy of notice, that he was heard when, constrained and shut up by tribulation, he betook himself to the protection of God.

Calvin: Psa 120:2 - -- 2.O Jehovah! deliver my soul from the lip of falsehood David now points out the kind of his affliction, declaring that he was loaded with false accus...
2.O Jehovah! deliver my soul from the lip of falsehood David now points out the kind of his affliction, declaring that he was loaded with false accusations. In charging his enemies with lying and falsehood, he asserts his own innocence of the crimes which they slanderously imputed to him. His complaint therefore amounts to this, that as he was conscious of having committed no fault, he was assaulted by the wicked contrary to all law, human and divine, and that they brought him into hatred without his having given them any occasion for such injurious treatment. Deceitful tongues assault good and simple people in two ways’ they either circumvent them by wiles and snares, or wound their reputation by calumnies. It is of the second way that the Prophet here complains. Now if David, who was endued with such eminent virtue, and free from every mark of disgrace, and far removed from every wicked action, was yet assailed with contumely, is it to be wondered at if the children of God in the present day labor under false accusations, and that when they have endeavored to conduct themselves uprightly they are yet in reported of? As they have the devil for their enemy, it is indeed impossible for them to escape being loaded with his lies. Yea, we see that slanderous tongues did not spare even the Son of God — a consideration which should induce us to bear the more patiently our condition, when the wicked traduce us undeservedly; since it is certain that we have here described the common lot of the whole Church.

Calvin: Psa 120:3 - -- 3.What shall the tongue of deceit give thee? 50 The Prophet aggravates the malice of his enemies by asserting that they were so wickedly inclined as ...
3.What shall the tongue of deceit give thee? 50 The Prophet aggravates the malice of his enemies by asserting that they were so wickedly inclined as to be driven to evil speaking when they saw no prospect of deriving any advantage from such a course of conduct. He however seems to express more than this, — he seems farther to intimate, that after they have poured forth all the venom of their calumnies, their attempts will nevertheless be vain and ineffectual. As God is the maintainer of the innocence of his servants, David, inspired with hope from this truth, rises up against them with heroic courage, as if about to triumph over the whole crowd of his calumniators, 51 reproaching them for doing nothing else than betraying an impotent passion for evil speaking, which God at length would cause to recoil upon their own heads. It is a consideration well fitted to assuage the grief of all the godly, when their good name is unrighteously wounded by calumniators, that such malicious characters will gain nothing thereby in the end, because God will disappoint their expectation.

Calvin: Psa 120:4 - -- 4.The arrows of a strong man sharpened, with coals of juniper Here the Psalmist amplifies in another way the malice of such as distress the simple an...
4.The arrows of a strong man sharpened, with coals of juniper Here the Psalmist amplifies in another way the malice of such as distress the simple and innocent by their calumnies, affirming that they throw out their injurious reports just like a man who should draw an arrow, and with it pierce through the body of his neighbor; and that their calumnies were like coals of juniper, 52 which penetrate more effectually, and burn more intensely the substances with which they come in contact than the coals of any other kind of wood. The amount is, that the tongues of these slanderers were inflamed with the burning heat of fire, and, as it were, dipped in deadly poison; and that such persons were the less excusable, from the fact that, without deriving any advantage from it, they were impelled by an unbridled passion to inflict upon others deadly mischief. As the Prophet records nothing here which he did not experience in his own person, it may be inferred that if it behoved him and men of a similar character to be assailed by their enemies with lies, which were to them as arrows to pierce them, or coals to burn them, we need not be surprised at seeing the most eminent servants of God exercised with similar assaults.

Calvin: Psa 120:5 - -- 5.Alas for me! that I have been a sojourner in Mesech David complains that he was doomed to linger for a long time among a perverse people; his condi...
5.Alas for me! that I have been a sojourner in Mesech David complains that he was doomed to linger for a long time among a perverse people; his condition resembling that of some wretched individual who is compelled to live till he grows old in sorrowful exile. The Mesechites and Kedarenes, as is well known, were Eastern tribes; the former of which derived their original from Japhet, as Moses informs us in Gen 10:2; and the latter from a son of Ishmael. (Gen 25:13.) To take the latter for a people of Italy, who were anciently called Hetrurians, is altogether absurd, and without the least color of probability, Some ‘would have the word Mesech to be an appellative noun; and because

Calvin: Psa 120:6 - -- 6.My soul 58 hath long dwelt with him who hateth peace. The Psalmist now shows, without figure, and, so to speak, points with the finger to those 5...
6.My soul 58 hath long dwelt with him who hateth peace. The Psalmist now shows, without figure, and, so to speak, points with the finger to those 59 whom he had before indirectly marked out by the terms Mesech and kedar, namely, the perfidious Israelites, who had degenerated from the holy fathers, and who rather wore the mask of Israelites than were the true seed of Israel. 60 He calls them haters of peace, 61 because they wilfully, and with deliberate malice, set themselves to make war upon the good and unoffending. To the same purpose he adds immediately after, that his heart was strongly inclined to seek after peace, or rather, that he was wholly devoted to it, and had tried every means in order to win their favor, but that the implacable cruelty of their disposition invariably impelled them to do him mischief. When he says, I peace, it is an abrupt, yet not an obscure expression, implying that he had not done them any injury or wrong which could give occasion for their hatred there having been always peace on his part. He even proceeds farther, asserting, that when he saw them inflamed with resentment against him, he endcavourcd to pacify them, and to bring them to a good understanding; for to speak, is here equivalent to offering conditions of peace in an amicable spirit, or to treating of reconciliation. From this it is still more apparent, how savage and brutal was the pride of David’s enemies, since they disdained even to speak with him — to speak with a man who had deserved well at their hands, and who had never in any respect injured them. We are taught by his example, that it is not enough for the faithful to abstain from hurting others: they must, moreover, study to allure them by gentleness, and to bend them to good will. Should their moderation and kindness be rejected, let them wait in patience, until God at length show himself from heaven as their protector. Let us, however, remember, that if God does not immediately stretch forth his hand in our behalf, it is our duty to bear the wearisomeness occasioned by delay, like David, whom we find in this Psalm giving, thanks to God for his deliverance, while, at the same time, as if worn out with the weariness of waiting for it, he bewails the long oppression to which he had been subjected by his enemies.
Defender: Psa 120:1 - -- Psalms 120 through 134 are the "songs of degrees." They are fifteen short psalms sung by pilgrims ascending to Jerusalem to sacrifice and worship in t...
Psalms 120 through 134 are the "songs of degrees." They are fifteen short psalms sung by pilgrims ascending to Jerusalem to sacrifice and worship in the temple. Five psalms were written by David (Psa 122:1-9, Psa 124:1-8, Psa 127:1-5, Psa 131:1-3, Psa 133:1-3); the other ten are anonymous. It could well be that Hezekiah was the author as the word "degrees" (which appears in each superscript) is the same as the "degrees" on the dial of Ahaz (Isa 38:8). As a sign to King Hezekiah that He would add fifteen years to his life (Isa 38:5, Isa 38:7) God had supernaturally caused the shadow on the sun dial to go back ten degrees. In commemoration of this gracious miracle Hezekiah promised to "sing my songs ... all the days of our life in the house of the Lord" (Isa 38:20). It would be appropriate for him to compose ten songs, one for each degree moved by the shadow, and then add five of David's songs to make fifteen, one for each year added to his life.

Defender: Psa 120:1 - -- The fifteen songs of degrees occur in a beautiful sequence. One could read them either as outlining the hope of Israel for future restoration and eter...
The fifteen songs of degrees occur in a beautiful sequence. One could read them either as outlining the hope of Israel for future restoration and eternal blessing or as a type of "Pilgrim's Progress," applicable to each believer as he or she progresses through the Christian life. The first in the series, Psa 120:1-7, is essentially a cry for salvation. Psa 121:1-8 gives assurance of salvation. Psa 122:1-9 speaks of fellowship with other believers. Psa 133:1-3 speaks of the end of the journey and Psa 134:1-3 of eternal praise and blessing."

Defender: Psa 120:5 - -- Mesech (same as Meshech) was far north of Israel, now probably represented by Moscow, whereas Kedar was far south in Arabia. Both are prophetically in...
Mesech (same as Meshech) was far north of Israel, now probably represented by Moscow, whereas Kedar was far south in Arabia. Both are prophetically indicated as enemies of Israel in the last days. They may also represent the state of someone living far away from God's will but longing for salvation."
TSK: Psa 120:1 - -- my distress : Psa 18:6, Psa 30:7, Psa 30:8, Psa 50:15, Psa 107:13, Psa 116:3, Psa 116:4, Psa 118:5; Isa 37:3, Isa 37:4, Isa 37:14-20; Isa 38:2-5; Jon ...
my distress : Psa 18:6, Psa 30:7, Psa 30:8, Psa 50:15, Psa 107:13, Psa 116:3, Psa 116:4, Psa 118:5; Isa 37:3, Isa 37:4, Isa 37:14-20; Isa 38:2-5; Jon 2:2; Luk 22:44; Heb 5:7

TSK: Psa 120:2 - -- from lying lips : Psa 35:11, Psa 52:2-4, Psa 109:1, Psa 109:2, Psa 140:1-3; Mat 26:59-62
from lying lips : Psa 35:11, Psa 52:2-4, Psa 109:1, Psa 109:2, Psa 140:1-3; Mat 26:59-62

TSK: Psa 120:3 - -- What shall : etc. or, What shall the deceitful tongue give unto thee, or, What shall it profit thee, Job 27:8; Mat 16:26; Rom 6:21
done : Heb. added

TSK: Psa 120:4 - -- Sharp : etc. or, It is as the sharp arrows of the mighty man, with coals of juniper. Psa 57:4, Psa 59:7; Pro 11:9, Pro 11:12, Pro 11:18, Pro 16:27, Pr...

TSK: Psa 120:5 - -- Woe : Jer 9:2, Jer 9:3, Jer 9:6, Jer 15:10; Mic 7:1, Mic 7:2; 2Pe 2:7, 2Pe 2:8; Rev 2:13
Mesech : Gen 10:2; Eze 27:13, Meshech.
the tents : Gen 25:13;...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 120:1 - -- In my distress - In my suffering, as arising from slander, Psa 120:2-3. There are few forms of suffering more keen than those caused by slander...
In my distress - In my suffering, as arising from slander, Psa 120:2-3. There are few forms of suffering more keen than those caused by slander:
"Whose edge is sharper than the sword; whose tongue
Outvenoms all the worms of Nile; whose breath
Rides on the posting winds, and doth belie
All corners of the world: kings, queens, and states,
Maids, matrons, nay, the secrets of the grave
This viperous slander enters."
Cymbeline, iii. 4.
It is one of those things which a man cannot guard against; which he cannot repel by force; whose origin he cannot always trace; which will go where a vindication will not follow; whose effects will live long after the slander is refuted; which will adhere to a man, or leave a trait of suspicion, even after the most successful vindication, for the effect will be to make a second slander more easily credited than the first was.
I cried unto the Lord, and he heard me - I had no other resource. I could not meet the slander. I could not refute it. I could not prevent its effects on my reputation, and all that I could do was to commit the case to the Lord. See the notes at Psa 37:5-6.

Barnes: Psa 120:2 - -- Deliver my soul, O Lord - My soul is harassed and distressed. Perhaps the meaning also may be, My life is in danger. Or, if it refers to the so...
Deliver my soul, O Lord - My soul is harassed and distressed. Perhaps the meaning also may be, My life is in danger. Or, if it refers to the soul as such, then it means that everything pertaining to his soul was deeply affected by the course which was pursued. He was maligned, slandered, misrepresented, deceived, and he had no comfort or peace.
From lying lips - False, deceitful, slanderous. Compare the notes at Psa 31:18.
And from a deceitful tongue - From a tongue whose statements cannot be relied on; whose words are deceptive; whose promises are false. David was often called to experience troubles of this sort; and this is a kind of trial which may come upon anyone in a form which he can no more anticipate or prevent than he can the coming of a "mist from the ocean."No man can certainly guard against the influence of falsehood; no man can be sure that all that will be said to him is true; no man can be certain that all the promises made to him - save those made to him by God - will be performed.

Barnes: Psa 120:3 - -- What shall be given unto thee? - Margin, "What shall the deceitful tongue give unto thee;"or, "what shall it profit thee?"Luther, "What can the...
What shall be given unto thee? - Margin, "What shall the deceitful tongue give unto thee;"or, "what shall it profit thee?"Luther, "What can the false tongue do?"Others render this, "How will God punish thee?"Others, "What will he (God) give to thee?"That is, What recompence can you expect from God for these malignant calumnies? A literal translation of this verse would be, "What shall the tongue of deceit give to thee, and what shall it add to thee?"- referring to the offender himself. The essential idea is, What will be the result of such conduct? What must be expected to follow from it? That is, either
(a) from the unprofitableness of such a course; or
(b) from the natural consequences to one’ s reputation and happiness; or
© from the judgment of God.
The answer to these questions is found in Psa 120:4.
Or what shall be done unto thee? - Margin, as in Hebrew, "added."What must be the consequence of this? what will follow?
Thou false tongue - This may be either an address to the tongue itself, or, as above, the word "tongue"may be used as the nominative to the verbs in the sentence. The sense is not materially affected either way.

Barnes: Psa 120:4 - -- Sharp arrows of the mighty - This is an answer to the question in Psa 120:3. The consequence - the effect - of such a use of the tongue must be...
Sharp arrows of the mighty - This is an answer to the question in Psa 120:3. The consequence - the effect - of such a use of the tongue must be like sharp and piercing arrows, or like intensely burning coals. The "sharp arrows of the mighty"are the arrows of the warrior - as war was conducted mainly by bows and arrows. Those arrows were, of course, sharpened to make them piercing, penetrating, more deadly.
With coals of juniper - On the word here rendered "juniper,"see the notes at Job 30:4. The idea here is, that coals made from that would be intensely hot, and would cause severer pain than if made from other wood. The word refers to a species of broom or shrub growing in the deserts of Arabia, with yellowish flowers and a bitter root. See "Robinson’ s Biblical Researches,"vol. i., p. 299. Burchardt says that he found the Bedouin of Sinai burning the roots into coal, and says that they make the best charcoal, and throw out the most intense heat. The shrub sometimes grows so large as to furnish a shade to those exposed to the heat of the sun in the desert, 1Ki 19:4; "Land and the Book"(Thomson), vol. ii., pp. 438, 439. The cut given below will give an idea of this plant.

Barnes: Psa 120:5 - -- Woe is me - My lot is a sad and pitiable one, that I am compelled to live in this manner, and to be exposed thus to malignant reproaches. It is...
Woe is me - My lot is a sad and pitiable one, that I am compelled to live in this manner, and to be exposed thus to malignant reproaches. It is like living in Mesech or in Kedar.
That I sojourn - The word used here does not denote a permanent abode, but it usually refers to a temporary lodging, as when one is a traveler, a pilgrim, a stranger, and is under a necessity of passing a night in a strange land on his way to the place of his destination. The trouble or discomfort here referred to is not that which would result from having his home there, or abiding there permanently, but of feeling that he was a stranger, and would be exposed to all the evils and inconveniences of a stranger among such a people. A man who resided in a place permanently might be subject to fewer inconveniences than if he were merely a temporary lodger among strangers.
In Mesech - The Septuagint and Vulgate render this, "that my sojourning is protracted."The Hebrew word -
That I dwell in the tents of Kedar - The word Kedar means properly dark skin, a darkskinned man. Kedar was a son of Ishmael Gen 25:13, and hence, the name was given to an Arabian tribe descended from him, Isa 42:11; Isa 60:7; Jer 49:28. The idea here also is, that to dwell among slanderers was like dwelling among barbarians and savages.

Barnes: Psa 120:6 - -- My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace - This trouble is no new thing. It has been long continued, and has become intolerable. Who ...
My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace - This trouble is no new thing. It has been long continued, and has become intolerable. Who this was that thus gave him trouble is, of course, now unknown. It is only necessary to remark that there can scarcely be any source of trouble more bitter than that of sustaining such relations to others either in business, or in office, or by family-ties - whether by marriage or by blood - in school, in college, or in corporate bodies - as to expose us always to a quarrel: to be compelled to have constant contact with people of sour, perverse, crooked tempers, who are satisfied with nothing; who are suspicious or envious; who pervert our motives and our conduct; who misrepresent our words; who demand more than is due to them; who refuse to perform what may reasonably be expected of them; and who make use of every opportunity to involve us in difficulties with others. There are many trials in human life, but there are few which are more galling, or more hard to bear than this. The literal rendering of the passage would be, "Long for her has my soul dwelt,"etc. That is, long (or too long) for her good - for the welfare of my soul. It has been an injury to me; to my piety, to my comfort, to my salvation. it has vexed me, tried me, hindered me in my progress in the divine life. Nothing would have a greater tendency of this kind than to be compelled to live in the manner indicated above.
Poole: Psa 120:2 - -- From lying lips from the unjust censures and malicious slanders of mine enemies, who traduce me as an egregious hypocrite, as a rebel and traitor.
F...
From lying lips from the unjust censures and malicious slanders of mine enemies, who traduce me as an egregious hypocrite, as a rebel and traitor.
From a deceitful tongue which covereth mischievous designs with pretences of kindness.

Poole: Psa 120:3 - -- What shall be given unto thee whosoever thou art who art guilty of these practices? He applies himself severally to the consciences of every one of t...
What shall be given unto thee whosoever thou art who art guilty of these practices? He applies himself severally to the consciences of every one of them. Or he designs Doeg or some other person in Saul’ s court eminent for this wickedness. The sense may be this, It is true, thou dost me some mischief; but what benefit dost thou get by it, if all thy accounts be cast up? For although thou mayst thereby obtain some favour and advantage from Saul, yet thou wilt assuredly bring upon thyself the curse and vengeance of God; and then thou wilt be no gainer by the bargain. And to do mischief to another without benefit to thyself, is an inhuman and diabolical wickedness.

Poole: Psa 120:4 - -- So this verse contains an answer to the question Ps 120 3 , and declares the slanderer’ s recompence; which is the wrath and vengeance of the m...
So this verse contains an answer to the question Ps 120 3 , and declares the slanderer’ s recompence; which is the wrath and vengeance of the mighty God, which in Scripture, and particularly in this book, is oft compared to at. rows, as Psa 7:13,14 , &c, and here to arrows of the mighty , i.e. shot by the hands of a strong man; and to coals, Psa 140:10 , and here to
coals of juniper which being kindled burn very fiercely, and retain their heat for a long time. And the psalmist may possibly express it in these words, to show, the suitableness of the punishment to the sin; as thy tongue shoots arrows, (for so calumnies are called, Psa 57:4 64:3 ) and kindles coals, so thou shalt bring God’ s arrows and coals kindled by the fire of his wrath upon thyself. But according to the other translation, which is in the margin, this is a further declaration of the sin of calumny. Though, all things considered, it doth thee no good, yet it doth others much hurt, to whom it is like sharp arrows, &c.

Poole: Psa 120:5 - -- Mesech and
Kedar are two sorts of people, oft mentioned in Scripture, and reckoned amongst the heathen and barbarous nations. But their nurses are ...
Mesech and
Kedar are two sorts of people, oft mentioned in Scripture, and reckoned amongst the heathen and barbarous nations. But their nurses are not here to be understood properly, (for we do not read that either David or the Israelites in the Babylonish captivity dwelt in their lands,) but only metaphorically, as the ungodly Israelites are called Sodom and Gomorrah, Isa 1:10 , and Amorites and Hittithes, Eze 16:3,45 , and as in common speech among us, men of an evil character are called Turks or Jews. And so he explains himself in the next verse by this description of them, him or them that hated peace, although David sought peace with them, Psa 120:7 . And so he speaks either,
1. Of the Philistines, among whom he sojourned for a time. But he did not seek peace with them, but sought their ruin, as the event showed; nor did they wage war against him, whilst he lived peaceably among them. Or rather,
2. The courtiers and soldiers of Saul, and the generality of the Israelites, who, to curry favour with Saul, sought David’ s ruin, and that many times by treachery and pretences of friendship; of which he oft complains in this book; whom as he elsewhere calls heathen , as Psa 9:5 59:5 , it is not strange if he compares them here to the savage Arabians. And amongst such persons David was oft forced to sojourn in Saul’ s time, and with them he sought peace by all ways possible; but they hated peace, and the more he pursued peace, the more eagerly did they prosecute the war, as it here follows.
Haydock: Psa 120:1 - -- Canticle. David wrote this during his flight from Absalom; (Grotius) and de Muis judges from the martial air, that it was composed in the midst of d...
Canticle. David wrote this during his flight from Absalom; (Grotius) and de Muis judges from the martial air, that it was composed in the midst of danger. It relates to the captives, (Origen; Calmet) and to all in the pilgrimage of this world. (Berthier) ---
Mountains. Jerusalem, and heaven, whence all our help must come. God most readily hears the prayers which are poured forth in places appointed by him. (Worthington) ---
Jerusalem was situated among mountains, and the Jews turned towards it in prayer, Daniel vi. 10. They did not depend on human aid, Jeremias iii. 22.

Haydock: Psa 120:1 - -- God is the keeper of his servants.
Keepeth. Hebrew also, "shall or may." The words of a prophet are always true, and the tenses are varied at plea...
God is the keeper of his servants.
Keepeth. Hebrew also, "shall or may." The words of a prophet are always true, and the tenses are varied at pleasure by St. Jerome, &c. (Berthier) ---
Soul, or spiritual life. (Worthington) (1 Peter i. 4.)

Haydock: Psa 120:3 - -- May. Hebrew, "he will not." Many have read in the second person, both in the Hebrew and Septuagint, "Suffer not thy," &c. (Aquila; St. Augustine, ...
May. Hebrew, "he will not." Many have read in the second person, both in the Hebrew and Septuagint, "Suffer not thy," &c. (Aquila; St. Augustine, &c.) (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 120:4 - -- Israel. The Church militant. (Worthington) ---
These figurative expressions shew that God will never cease to protect his people. (Berthier)
Israel. The Church militant. (Worthington) ---
These figurative expressions shew that God will never cease to protect his people. (Berthier)

Hand. Always ready, Psalm xc. 4., and xv. 8. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 120:6 - -- Night. Neither prosperity nor adversity shall hurt thee, (St. Jerome) or the Church. (Worthington) ---
Cold is said to burn or parch up, Genesis x...
Night. Neither prosperity nor adversity shall hurt thee, (St. Jerome) or the Church. (Worthington) ---
Cold is said to burn or parch up, Genesis xxxi. 40. Justin (2) writes of the Scythians, Quanquam continuis frigoribut urantur, as the effects of extreme heat and cold are similar. The Jews were protected from both at their return; (Isaias iv. 6., and xlix. 10.; Calmet) though we may doubt of this explanation, as the text is applied to those in heaven, Apocalypse vii. 16. (Berthier)
Gill: Psa 120:1 - -- In my distress I cried unto the Lord,.... Being at a distance from his own country, or, however, from the house of God; persecuted by men, under the l...
In my distress I cried unto the Lord,.... Being at a distance from his own country, or, however, from the house of God; persecuted by men, under the lash of their tongues; reproached, abused, and belied by them: in this his case and circumstances, he betook himself by prayer to the Lord, and importuned help and deliverance of him, knowing that none could help him as he; see Psa 18:6;
and he heard me; answered him, and delivered him. The petition he put up follows, which shows his case, and his particular distress.

Gill: Psa 120:2 - -- Deliver my soul, O Lord, from lying lips, and from a deceitful tongue. Not from such lips, and such a tongue of his own, which David abhorred; though...
Deliver my soul, O Lord, from lying lips, and from a deceitful tongue. Not from such lips, and such a tongue of his own, which David abhorred; though every good man desires to be kept from speaking lies and deceit; nor from the company of those who have such lips and tongues, which he was determined should not dwell with him; but from the malignity of them, from being hurt in his character and reputation by them; God can restrain them, and prevent the ill influence of them when he pleases, Psa 31:20. Such were the lips and tongues of Doeg the Edomite, Psa 52:2, and of Saul's courtiers, who insinuated to him that David sought his hurt, 1Sa 24:9; and of the Scribes and Pharisees, that flattered Christ to his face, and reproached him to the people; and of Judas, that betrayed him with "Hail, master", Mat 26:49; and of the false witnesses suborned against him; and of false teachers, deceitful workers, that lie in wait to deceive, and, by their good words and fair speeches, do deceive the hearts of the simple; and of antichrist and his followers, who, as they are given up to believe a lie, speak lies in hypocrisy; and of Satan the father of lies, and who is the old serpent, the devil, that deceives the whole world: and to be delivered from the bad effects of such lips and tongues is very desirable.

Gill: Psa 120:3 - -- What shall be given unto thee?.... Or, "what shall it give unto thee?" s That is, what shall the deceitful tongue give unto thee, O my soul? or to th...
What shall be given unto thee?.... Or, "what shall it give unto thee?" s That is, what shall the deceitful tongue give unto thee, O my soul? or to thee, to anyone that hears and reads this psalm? It is capable of giving thee a deal of trouble, of doing thee a deal of mischief; and of injuring thy character, and hurting thy peace and comfort, if permitted;
or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue? or, "what shall the false tongue add unto thee?" t it shall increase thy sorrows and distress: or rather, what gain, profit, and advantage, shall the deceitful tongue get to itself by its lies and deceit? none at all; it may do harm to others, but gets no good to itself; see Isa 28:15; Or, "what shall he (God) give unto thee?" u or, "what shall he add unto thee, thou false tongue?" so Jarchi. What punishment will not he inflict upon thee, who hates lying lips? what plagues will not he add unto thee, who knows all the deceit that is in thee, and spoken by thee? The answer is as follows:

Gill: Psa 120:4 - -- Sharp arrows of the mighty, with coals of juniper. Some think these words describe lying lips, and a false tongue; which are like arrows, sharp ones, ...
Sharp arrows of the mighty, with coals of juniper. Some think these words describe lying lips, and a false tongue; which are like arrows, sharp ones, sent out from a bow drawn with a mighty hand, which come with great force, suddenly and swiftly, and do much mischief; see Psa 11:2; and to "coals of juniper", very distressing and tormenting; the tongue being a fire, set on fire of hell, and sets on fire the course of nature; and throws out devouring words, which consume like fire, Jam 3:6. But rather the punishment of an evil tongue from the Lord is intended, whose sore judgments are often compared to arrows, Deu 32:23; because they come from above, and bring swift and sudden destruction with them; and are very sharp in the hearts of his enemies; are very severe and cutting, and come with power irresistible, being the arrows of the Almighty, Job 6:4; see Jer 50:9; and these may be compared to "coals of juniper", which are very vehement and strong, and very lasting and durable. Jerom w and Isidore x say they will last a whole year; and the Midrash on the place reports of two men, who had prepared food with them, and at the end of a year returned and found them burning, and warmed their feet at them. These fitly express the lake of fire and brimstone, the portion of liars; whose fire is very strong, and flames devouring, being kindled by the breath of the Lord of hosts, like a stream of brimstone: and the fire of hell is everlasting; its burnings are everlasting burnings; a worm that dieth not, a fire that is not quenched; the smoke of the torments of which ascend for ever and ever, Isa 30:23. The Targum speaks of these arrows as lightnings from above, and of the coals of juniper as kindled in hell below; and they are interpreted of hell in the Talmud y.

Gill: Psa 120:5 - -- Woe is me, that I sojourn in Mesech,.... Meshech was a son of Japheth, Gen 10:2; whose posterity are thought by some to be the Muscovites z and Scythi...
Woe is me, that I sojourn in Mesech,.... Meshech was a son of Japheth, Gen 10:2; whose posterity are thought by some to be the Muscovites z and Scythians, a barbarous sort of people: Mesech is frequently mentioned with Tubal and his brother, and with Gog and Magog, Eze 38:2; the Targum here calls them Asiatics. Rather the Cappadocians, according to Josephus a; and Strabo b makes mention of a city of theirs, called Mazaca: and the rather, since they are mentioned with the Kedarenes, or Arabian Scenites, and were nearer to the land of Judea than the former;
that I dwell in the tents of Kedar; Kedar was a son of Ishmael, Gen 25:13; whose posterity were Arabians, as the Targum here renders it; and Suidas c says, they dwelt not far from Babylon, when he wrote; they lived a pastoral life, and dwelt in tents: Pliny d makes mention of Arabs, called Cedrei; and also of Scenite Arabs, from the tents they dwelt in, which they could remove from place to place for the sake of pasturage. And among these David dwelt, when in the wilderness of Paran, 1Sa 25:1; though some think David never dwelt among any of those people, but among such who were like unto them for ignorance, idolatry, and barbarity. Some render the words, "woe is me, that I sojourn so long, dwelling as in the tents of Kedar" e; as when he was among the Philistines and Moabites; nay, even he may compare his own people to those, many of whom it was as disagreeable dwelling with as with these: and we find Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, speaking of them in their times in like manner, and making the same complaints, Isa 6:5. And very grieving and distressing it is to good men to have their abode among wicked men; as well as it is infectious and dangerous: to hear their profane and blasphemous talk, to see their wicked and filthy actions, and to observe their abominable conversation, is very vexatious, and gives great uneasiness, as it did to righteous Lot, 2Pe 2:7. The first clause is rendered by the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions, "woe is me, that my sojourning is prolonged"; to which the next words agree, Psa 120:6.

Gill: Psa 120:6 - -- My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace. The God of peace, against whom their carnal minds are enmity itself; Christ, the Prince of peace, ...
My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace. The God of peace, against whom their carnal minds are enmity itself; Christ, the Prince of peace, the Man, the Peace, who has made peace by the blood of his cross, whom the world hates; the sons of peace, the quiet in the land, against whom the wicked devise evil things; the Gospel of peace, which the natural man abhors as foolishness; the way of peace, pardon, and salvation by Christ, which carnal men know not, and do not approve of; and the ordinances of the Gospel, which are paths of peace. In short, some are of such restless, quarrelsome, and contentious spirits, that they hate peace with any; are like the troubled sea, that cannot rest; and cannot sleep, unless they do mischief to their fellow creatures: it is very uncomfortable living, especially living long with such. The Targum is,
"my soul hath long dwelt with Edom, hating peace;''
that is, with the Romans or Christians, who are intended; for the Jews understand this psalm of their present captivity.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 120:1 The precise significance of this title, which appears in Pss 120-134, is unclear. Perhaps worshipers recited these psalms when they ascended the road ...


NET Notes: Psa 120:3 Heb “What will he give to you, and what will he add to you, O tongue of deception?” The psalmist addresses his deceptive enemies. The Lord...

NET Notes: Psa 120:4 Heb “with coals of the wood of the broom plant.” The wood of the broom plant was used to make charcoal, which in turn was used to fuel the...

NET Notes: Psa 120:5 Meshech was located in central Anatolia (modern Turkey). Kedar was located in the desert to east-southeast of Israel. Because of the reference to Keda...

NET Notes: Psa 120:6 The singular participial form probably has a representative function here. The psalmist envisions the typical hater of peace who represents the entire...
Geneva Bible: Psa 120:1 "A Song of ( a ) degrees." In my ( b ) distress I cried unto the LORD, and he heard me.
( a ) That is, of lifting up the tune and rising in singing. ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 120:3 What shall be given unto thee? or what shall be done unto thee, thou ( c ) false tongue?
( c ) He assured himself that God would turn their craft to ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 120:4 ( d ) Sharp arrows of the mighty, with coals of juniper.
( d ) He shows that there is nothing so sharp to pierce, nor so hot to set on fire, as a sla...

Geneva Bible: Psa 120:5 Woe is me, that I sojourn in ( e ) Mesech, [that] I dwell in the tents of ( f ) Kedar!
( e ) These were people of Arabia, who came from Japheth, (Gen...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 120:1-7
TSK Synopsis: Psa 120:1-7 - --1 David prays against Doeg;3 reproves his tongue;5 complains of his necessary conversation with the wicked.
MHCC -> Psa 120:1-4; Psa 120:5-7
MHCC: Psa 120:1-4 - --The psalmist was brought into great distress by a deceitful tongue. May every good man be delivered from lying lips. They forged false charges against...

MHCC: Psa 120:5-7 - --It is very grievous to a good man, to be cast into, and kept in the company of the wicked, from whom he hopes to be for ever separated. See here the c...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 120:1-4; Psa 120:5-7
Matthew Henry: Psa 120:1-4 - -- Here is, I. Deliverance from a false tongue obtained by prayer. David records his own experience of this. 1. He was brought into distress, into grea...

Matthew Henry: Psa 120:5-7 - -- The psalmist here complains of the bad neighbourhood into which he was driven; and some apply the two foregoing verses to this: "What shall the dece...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 120:1-4; Psa 120:5-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 120:1-4 - --
According to the pointing ויּענני , the poet appears to base his present petition, which from Psa 120:2 onwards is the substance of the whole...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 120:5-7 - --
Since arrows and broom-fire, with which the evil tongue is requited, even now proceed from the tongue itself, the poet goes on with the deep heaving...
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 120:1-7 - --Psalm 120
Psalms 120-134 are all "songs of ascent." They received this title because the pilgrim Israeli...

Constable: Psa 120:1-2 - --1. God's deliverance from liars 120:1-2
The psalmist testified that he had prayed to God for del...

Constable: Psa 120:3-4 - --2. God's destruction of liars 120:3-4
The writer asked the liar what would befall him and then a...
