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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
With excessive heat.
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Wesley: Psa 121:6 - -- With that cold and moisture which come into the air by it. Intemperate heats and colds are the springs of many diseases.
With that cold and moisture which come into the air by it. Intemperate heats and colds are the springs of many diseases.
God keeps His people at all times and in all perils.
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JFB: Psa 121:6-8 - -- Poetically represents the dangers of the night, over which the moon presides (Gen 1:16).
Poetically represents the dangers of the night, over which the moon presides (Gen 1:16).
Clarke: Psa 121:6 - -- The sun shall not smite thee by day - Thus expressed by the Chaldee: "The morning spectres shall not smite thee by day, during the government of the...
The sun shall not smite thee by day - Thus expressed by the Chaldee: "The morning spectres shall not smite thee by day, during the government of the sun; nor the nocturnal spectres by night, during the government of the moon."I believe the psalmist simply means, they shall not be injured by heat nor cold; by a sun-stroke by day, nor a frost-bite by night.
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Clarke: Psa 121:7 - -- The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil - Spiritual and corporeal, natural and moral
The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil - Spiritual and corporeal, natural and moral
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Clarke: Psa 121:7 - -- He shall preserve thy soul - Take care of thy life, and take care of thy soul.
He shall preserve thy soul - Take care of thy life, and take care of thy soul.
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Clarke: Psa 121:8 - -- Thy going out and thy coming in - Night and day - in all thy business and undertakings; and this through the whole course of thy life: for evermore
Thy going out and thy coming in - Night and day - in all thy business and undertakings; and this through the whole course of thy life: for evermore
Calvin: Psa 121:6 - -- 6.The sun shall not smite thee by day By these forms of expression the Psalmist magnifies the advantages which result to us from our having God prese...
6.The sun shall not smite thee by day By these forms of expression the Psalmist magnifies the advantages which result to us from our having God present with us; and, by the figure synecdoche, under one particular, he declares in general that the faithful shall be safe from all adversities, defended as they are by Divine power. The language is metaphorical, the cold of night and the heat of day denoting all kind of inconveniences. The sense then is, that although God’s people may be subject in common with others to the miseries of human life, yet his shadow is always at their side to shield them from thereby receiving any harm. The Prophet does not, however, promise the faithful a condition of such felicity and comfort as implies an exemption from all trouble; he only, for the purpose of assuaging their sorrows, sets before them this consolation — that being interested in the Divine layout, they shall be secure from all deadly harm; a point which he unfolds more distinctly in the following verses, where he tells us that God will so keep his own people from all evils, as to maintain their life in safety. The statement in the text before us is indeed general, but he afterwards specifies the chief parts of human life.
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Calvin: Psa 121:8 - -- 8.Jehovah will keep thy going out and thy coming in The sense is, Whatever thou shalt undertake or engage in during thy life shall come to a happy an...
8.Jehovah will keep thy going out and thy coming in The sense is, Whatever thou shalt undertake or engage in during thy life shall come to a happy and successful termination. God no doubt directs by his Holy Spirit the, deliberations of his servants; but it appears to me, that this passage is rather to be referred to prosperous issues. If, however, any one would give it a more extended meaning I have no objection. It is enough for me to embrace that sense which is indisputably certain and solid, That God will be the continual guide of his people, so that stretching out his hand to them he will conduct them according to their hearts’ desire from the beginning even to the end. Farther, it is of importance to mark the reason why the Prophet repeats so often what he had briefly and in one word expressed with sufficient plainness. Such repetition seems at first sight superfluous; but when we consider how difficult it is to correct our distrust, it will be easily perceived that he does not improperly dwell upon the commendation of the divine providence. How few are to be found who yield to God the honor of being a keeper, in order to their being thence assured of their safety, and led to call upon him in the midst of their perils! On the contrary, even when we seem to have largely experienced what this protection of God implies, we yet instantly tremble at the noise of a leaf falling from a tree, as if God had quite forgotten us. Being then entangled in so many unholy misgivings, and so much inclined to distrust, we are taught from the passage that if a sentence couched in a few words does not suffice us, we should gather together whatever may be found throughout the whole Scriptures concerning the providence of God, until this doctrine-” That God always keeps watch for us” — is deeply rooted in our hearts; so that depending upon his guardianship alone we may bid adieu to all the vain confidences of the world.
the sun : Psa 91:5-10; Isa 49:10; Rev 7:16
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TSK: Psa 121:7 - -- preserve : Psa 91:9, Psa 91:10; Job 5:19-27; Pro 12:21; Mat 6:13; Rom 8:28, Rom 8:35-39; 2Ti 4:18
he shall : Psa 34:22, Psa 41:2, Psa 97:10, Psa 145:2...
preserve : Psa 91:9, Psa 91:10; Job 5:19-27; Pro 12:21; Mat 6:13; Rom 8:28, Rom 8:35-39; 2Ti 4:18
he shall : Psa 34:22, Psa 41:2, Psa 97:10, Psa 145:20
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 121:6 - -- The sun shall not smite thee by day - The Septuagint renders this, "shall not burn thee"- συγκαύσει sungkausei . So the Latin...
The sun shall not smite thee by day - The Septuagint renders this, "shall not burn thee"-
Nor the moon by night - The psalmist here refers to some prevalent opinion about the influence of the moon, as endangering life or health. Some have supposed that he refers to the sudden cold which follows the intense heat of the day in Oriental countries, and which, because the moon rules the night, as the sun does the day, is either poetically or literally attributed to the moon. Lackmann and Michaelis suppose that there is some allusion to the influence of the moon in producing various kinds of disease, and especially lunacy - an idea which gave origin to that name. Compare the notes at Mat 4:24. See Mat 17:15; Mar 9:17; Luk 9:39. Knapp supposes the idea is, that from the moon’ s not giving a clear and full light like the sun, travelers trusting to its guidance may be led into rivers or quagmires. Macrobius refers to a custom among the Orientals of covering the faces of children when asleep, from some imagined effect of the moon on the health of the child. Andersen (Orient. Reise-Beschreib. i. 8) refers to an effect, which he says is common, and which he had often seen, of sleeping in the moon-beams, of making the neck stiff, so that it could not be turned from side to side as before. See Rosenmuller, Morgenland, in loc . Others have supposed that the allusion is to the effect of the moon, and of sleeping under the open air, in producing ophthalmia - a disease very common in the East - an effect guarded against by covering the face. The influence of the moon, in producing madness or disease - the general influence of it on health - is often referred to. Thus Shakespeare says:
"The moon, the governess of floods,
Pale in her anger, washes all the air,
That rheumatic diseases do abound."
Midsummer Night’ s Dream, ii. 2.
"It is the very error of the moon;
She comes more near the earth than she was wont,
And makes men mad."
Othello, v. 2.
Some of these things are evidently purely imaginary. The true idea seems to be that there were effects to be dreaded from the sudden changes from the heat of day to the cold of night, and that these effects were attributed to the moon. See Gen 31:40. The meaning is, that God would be a Protector alike in the dangers of the day and of the night.
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Barnes: Psa 121:7 - -- The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil - This is an advance of the thought. The psalmist had in the previous verses specified some particul...
The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil - This is an advance of the thought. The psalmist had in the previous verses specified some particular evils from which he says God would keep those who put their trust in him. He now makes the remark general, and says that God would not only preserve from these particular evils, but would keep those who trusted in him from all evil: he would be their Protector in all the perils of life.
He shall preserve thy soul - Thy life. See Psa 41:2; Psa 97:10.
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Barnes: Psa 121:8 - -- The Lord shall preserve thou going out and thy coming in - Preserve thee in going out and coming in; in going from thy dwelling, and returning ...
The Lord shall preserve thou going out and thy coming in - Preserve thee in going out and coming in; in going from thy dwelling, and returning to it; in going from home and coming back; that is, everywhere, and at all times. Compare Deu 28:6. See the notes also at Job 5:24. "From this time forth, and even forevermore."Through this life and for ever. This is the gracious assurance which is made to all who put their trust in God. At home and abroad; in the house, in the field, and by the way; on the land and on the ocean; in their native country and in climes remote; on earth, in the grave, and in the eternal world, they are always safe. No evil that will endanger their salvation can befal them; nothing can happen to them here but what God shall see to be conducive to their ultimate good; and in the heavenly world they shall be safe forever from every kind of evil, for in that world there will be no sin, and consequently no need of discipline to prepare them for the future.
"In foreign realms, and lands remote,
Supported by thy care,
Through burning climes they pass unhurt,
And breathe in tainted air.
When by the dreadful tempest borne,
High on the broken wave,
They know thou art not slow to hear,
Nor impotent to save.
The storm is laid - the winds retire,
Obedient to thy will;
The sea that roars at thy command,
At thy command is still.
In midst of dangers, fears, and death,
Thy goodness we’ ll adore;
We’ ll praise thee for thy mercies past,
And humbly hope for more.
Our life, while thou preserv’ st that life,
Thy sacrifice shall be;
And death, when death shall be our lot,
Shall join our souls to thee."
Addison’ s Spec.
Poole: Psa 121:6 - -- The sun shall not smite thee with excessive heat,
nor the moon with that cold and moisture which comes into the air by it and with it. Intemperate ...
The sun shall not smite thee with excessive heat,
nor the moon with that cold and moisture which comes into the air by it and with it. Intemperate heats and colds are the two springs of many diseases. He alludes both to the conditions of soldiers or travellers, who are exposed to the open air by day and by night, and also to the cloudy pillar which defended the Israelites both by day and by night. The sense is, He shall protect thee from all evils both by day and night.
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Poole: Psa 121:8 - -- Shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in shall guard and assist thee in all thy expeditions, and affairs, and actions, either at home or abroad...
Haydock: Psa 121:6 - -- Pray. Septuagint, "ask Jerusalem for," &c., (Haydock) as if she were to give it. (Calmet) ---
And may there be abundance. Hebrew, "those who l...
Pray. Septuagint, "ask Jerusalem for," &c., (Haydock) as if she were to give it. (Calmet) ---
And may there be abundance. Hebrew, "those who love thee shall be at rest." (Haydock) ---
Christ encourages us to ask; as Catholics exhort each other to pray for the Church. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 121:7 - -- Strength. Fortifications, (Berthier) or army. ---
Towers, or "palaces." (Hebrew) (Jeremias xxxi. 23.) (Calmet) ---
He insists so much on the b...
Strength. Fortifications, (Berthier) or army. ---
Towers, or "palaces." (Hebrew) (Jeremias xxxi. 23.) (Calmet) ---
He insists so much on the blessing of peace, because he foresaw that Jerusalem would one day neglect it, Luke xix. 42. Charity dwells in the towers or saints, (Berthier) and makes us resemble God. (St. Chrysostom, de Laud. S. Paul. iii.)
Gill: Psa 121:6 - -- The sun shall not smite thee by day,.... With its rays, which it shoots forth like darts, and which fly swiftly, and pierce and hurt: hence Apollo, th...
The sun shall not smite thee by day,.... With its rays, which it shoots forth like darts, and which fly swiftly, and pierce and hurt: hence Apollo, the same with the sun, is represented with a bow and arrows o; so the rays of the sun seem to be called in Hab 2:11;
nor the moon by night; this clause should be supplied, as a learned man p observes, thus, "neither shall the moon cool thee by night"; for that has no warmth in it, and cannot smite with heat, as the sun does: for even, as he observes, its rays focused by a magnifying glass will not communicate the least degree of sensible heat to bodies objected thereunto; yet some say q the moon is not only moist, but heats bodies as the sun. And Isaac Vossius r observes, that there can be no light, which, separately considered, does not contain some heat at least: and Macrobius s speaks of the lunar heat; and Plutarch t ascribes heat and inflammation to it, and asserts it to be fire. It is said u that some men of good credit, in a voyage to Guinea, strongly affirmed, that, in the night season, they felt a sensible heat to come from the beams of the moon. The Septuagint version is, "the sun shall not burn thee by day, nor the moon by night". And burning may be ascribed to the cold frosty air in a moonlight night, as to the north wind, as in the Apocrypha:
"20 When the cold north wind bloweth, and the water is congealed into ice, it abideth upon every gathering together of water, and clotheth the water as with a breastplate. 21 It devoureth the mountains, and burneth the wilderness, and consumeth the grass as fire.'' (Sirach 43)
see Gen 31:40; and our English poet w expresses a sentiment to this effect; yet not what affects the bodies of men, but plants, trees, &c. and this not owing to the moon, but to the air. However, these clauses are not to be understood literally; for good men may be smitten and hurt by the heat of the one and the cold of the other, as Jacob and Jonah, Gen 31:40; but mystically, of persecuting antichristian tyrants, which are sometimes signified by the sun and moon, as both in Rome Pagan and Papal, Rev 6:12; and of persecution and tribulation itself, Mat 13:6; and is sometimes applied to the perfect state of the saints, either in the New Jerusalem, or ultimate glory, when there will be nothing more of this kind, Rev 7:15. And there are some periods in the present state, when those entirely cease; nor are the saints ever really hurt by them, they being always for their good; or, however, not so as to affect their eternal happiness. The Targum is,
"in the day, when the sun rules, the morning spirits shall not smite thee; nor the nocturnal ones in the night, when the moon rules.''
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Gill: Psa 121:7 - -- Thee Lord shall preserve them from all evil,.... The Word of the Lord, as the Targum. Not from the evil of affliction, though from that as a penal evi...
Thee Lord shall preserve them from all evil,.... The Word of the Lord, as the Targum. Not from the evil of affliction, though from that as a penal evil; or as a real one, it being made to work for good: but from the evil of sin; not from the being or commission of it; but from its dominion and damning power, or from a final and total falling away by it: and from the evil of the world; not from tribulation in it, nor from the reproach or persecution of it; but from the wickedness and lusts that are in it, and from the wicked men of it, their power, rage, and fury: and from the evil one, Satan; not from his temptations, but from sinking under them, and perishing by them; see Joh 17:12;
he shall preserve thy soul: he preserves the bodies of his people, oftentimes from diseases and disasters, and from death, till the appointed time comes; and then he preserves their dust in the grave, and raises it up at the last day; but more especially their souls, the redemption and salvation of which he undertook, and has effected; and which are preserved by him safe to his coming, kingdom, and glory.
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Gill: Psa 121:8 - -- The Lord shall preserve thy going out, and thy coming in,.... In transacting all the business of life, in going in and out about it; in all ways, work...
The Lord shall preserve thy going out, and thy coming in,.... In transacting all the business of life, in going in and out about it; in all ways, works, and conversation; in journeying and travelling; in all affairs, civil and religious; and not only preserve, but prosper in all, Psa 1:3; the Lord blessing him, coming in and going out, Deu 28:6; and such, with the poet x, are said to go with a good or prosperous foot. And such persons, in the Punic language, are called Namphanians, as Austin observes y; who says the word signifies a man of a good foot: and the word seems to be the contraction of
"the Lord will keep thy going out to business, and thy coming in to study in the law.''
from this time forth, and even for evermore; for the Lord not only preserves his people in life and at death, but in heaven, to all eternity; in the utmost safety and peace from all molestations by men or devils, and from their wrath and malice: not only his purpose and decree, but his power and providence, are the vast gulf between the one and the other; by means of which the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest, Luk 16:26.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 121:6 One hardly thinks of the moon’s rays as being physically harmful, like those of the sun. The reference to the moon may simply lend poetic balanc...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 121:6 The sun shall not ( c ) smite thee by day, nor the moon by night.
( c ) Neither heat nor cold, nor any inconvenience will be able to destroy God's Ch...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 121:8 The LORD shall preserve thy ( d ) going out and thy coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore.
( d ) Whatever you attempt will have good ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 121:1-8
TSK Synopsis: Psa 121:1-8 - --1 The great safety of the godly, who put their trust in God's protection.
MHCC -> Psa 121:1-8
MHCC: Psa 121:1-8 - --We must not rely upon men and means, instruments and second causes. Shall I depend upon the strength of the hills? upon princes and great men? No; my ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 121:1-8
Matthew Henry: Psa 121:1-8 - -- This psalm teaches us, I. To stay ourselves upon God as a God of power and a God all-sufficient for us. David did so and found the benefit of it. 1....
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 121:5-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 121:5-8 - --
That which holds good of "the Keeper of Israel"the poet applies believingly to himself, the individual among God's people, in Psa 121:5 after Gen 28...
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 121:1-8 - --Psalm 121
This psalm directed the thoughts of the pilgrim to God as his source of help. It gives assuran...
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