
Text -- Psalms 124:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 124:4-5
Calvin -> Psa 124:4
Calvin: Psa 124:4 - -- 4.The waters had then overwhelmed us He embellishes by an elegant metaphor the preceding sentiment, comparing the dreadful impetuosity of the enemies...
4.The waters had then overwhelmed us He embellishes by an elegant metaphor the preceding sentiment, comparing the dreadful impetuosity of the enemies of the Jews to an inundation, which swallows up whatever it meets with in its overflowing course. And he continues to preserve the character of a man affrighted. He names the waters, next the torrent, thirdly, the proud or impetuous waters. He says, over us, and over our soul, as if, by presenting the thing to the eye, he intended to strike terror into the people. And certainly this impassioned language ought to have all the effect of a graphic representation, that the faithful might the better feel from what a profound gulf they had been rescued by the hand of God. He only truly attributes his deliverance to God, who acknowledges himself to have been lost before he was delivered. The adverb them is here either demonstrative, as if the Psalmist had pointed to the thing with the finger, or it is taken for long ago. The former signification is, however, more suitable to the present passage.
TSK -> Psa 124:4
TSK: Psa 124:4 - -- the waters : Psa 18:4, Psa 42:7, Psa 69:15; Isa 8:7, Isa 8:8, Isa 28:2, Isa 59:19; Jer 46:7, Jer 46:8; Dan 9:26; Rev 12:15, Rev 12:16, Rev 17:1, Rev 1...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 124:4
Barnes: Psa 124:4 - -- Then the waters had overwhelmed us - Our destruction would have been as if the waves of the ocean had overwhelmed us. The stream had gone ...
Haydock -> Psa 124:4
Haydock: Psa 124:4 - -- Heart. This God will certainly perform. (Worthington) ---
He asks not for himself alone, and leaves all to the divine disposal. (Haydock)
Heart. This God will certainly perform. (Worthington) ---
He asks not for himself alone, and leaves all to the divine disposal. (Haydock)
Gill -> Psa 124:4
Gill: Psa 124:4 - -- Then the waters had overwhelmed us,.... People, comparable to waters for their multitude, Strength, force, and impetuosity; which bear down all before...
Then the waters had overwhelmed us,.... People, comparable to waters for their multitude, Strength, force, and impetuosity; which bear down all before them, and against which there is no standing; which, like the waters of the flood, overflow and destroy all they pass over. These are the floods of ungodly men, which are very destructive and terrible; see Rev 17:15; together with all those reproaches, afflictions, and persecutions, which come along with them; which the presence of God only can bear up his people under, and carry them through, Son 8:7;
the stream had gone over our soul; and so deprived them of life; the whole force of the enemy; which, like a stream, flows in with great strength and rapidity, when a breach is made and spreads itself, Arama interprets it of the stream of the Egyptians, and restrains it to them, their armies and forces; but it rather designs others, and the enemies of God's people in general, which threaten their ruin, even their very souls and lives: it may be applied to the stream of corruptions, the flood of temptation and flow of persecutions, such as the flood the dragon cast out of his mouth after the woman; which, were it not for divine grace and assistance, would destroy the saints, who have no might against this great force, 2Ch 20:12.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 124:4 Heb “our being.” The Hebrew term נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) with a pronominal suffix is often equivalent to a pro...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 124:4
Geneva Bible: Psa 124:4 Then the ( c ) waters had overwhelmed us, the stream had gone over our soul:
( c ) He uses proper similitudes to express the great danger that the Ch...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 124:1-8
MHCC -> Psa 124:1-5
MHCC: Psa 124:1-5 - --God suffers the enemies of his people sometimes to prevail very far against them, that his power may be seen the more in their deliverance. Happy the ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 124:1-5
Matthew Henry: Psa 124:1-5 - -- The people of God, being here called upon to praise God for their deliverance, are to take notice, I. Of the malice of men, by which they were reduc...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 124:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 124:1-5 - --
It is commonly rendered, "If it had not been Jahve who was for us."But, notwithstanding the subject that is placed first (cf. Gen 23:13), the שׁ b...
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 124:1-8 - --Psalm 124
David voiced praise to God for not allowing the pagan nations that surrounded Israel to defeat...
