
Text -- Psalms 130:1 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 130:1-2; Psa 130:1-2
The penitent sinner's hope is in God's mercy only. (Psa 130:1-8)

Clarke -> Psa 130:1
Clarke: Psa 130:1 - -- Out of the depths - The captives in Babylon represent their condition like those who are in a prison - an abyss or deep ditch, ready to be swallowed...
Out of the depths - The captives in Babylon represent their condition like those who are in a prison - an abyss or deep ditch, ready to be swallowed up.
Calvin -> Psa 130:1
Calvin: Psa 130:1 - -- 1.Out of the deep places have I cried to thee, O Jehovah! It is to be noticed that the Prophet speaks of himself as sending forth his voice, as it we...
1.Out of the deep places have I cried to thee, O Jehovah! It is to be noticed that the Prophet speaks of himself as sending forth his voice, as it were from out of a deep gulf, 118 feeling himself overwhelmed with calamities. As the miseries to which there is no prospect of a termination commonly bring despair in their train, nothing is more difficult than for persons, when involved in grievous and deep sorrow, to stir up their minds to the exercise of prayer. And it is wonderful, considering that whilst we enjoy peace and prosperity we are cold in prayer, because then our hearts are in a state of infatuated security, how in adversities, which ought to quicken us, we are still more stupefied. But the Prophet derives confidence in coming to the throne of grace from the very troubles, cares, dangers and sorrow into which he was plunged. He expresses his perplexity and the earnestness of his desire both by the word cry, and by the repetition continued in the second verse. So much the more detestable then is the barbarous ignorance of the Papist’s, in shamefully profaning this Psalm by wresting it to a purpose wholly foreign to its genuine application. To what intent do they mumble it over for the dead, if it is not that, in consequence of Satan having bewitched them, they may by their profanity extinguish a doctrine of singular utility? From the time that this Psalm was, by a forced interpretation, applied to the souls of the dead, it is very generally believed to be of no use whatever to the living, and thus the world has lost an inestimable treasure.
TSK -> Psa 130:1
TSK: Psa 130:1 - -- Out of : Psa 18:4-6, Psa 18:16, Psa 25:16-18, Psa 40:2, Psa 42:7, Psa 69:1, Psa 69:2, Psa 69:14, Psa 69:15, Psa 71:20, Psa 88:6, Psa 88:7; Psa 116:3, ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 130:1
Barnes: Psa 130:1 - -- Out of the depths - The word rendered "depths"is from a verb - עמק ‛âmaq - which means to be deep; then, to be unsearchable; then...
Out of the depths - The word rendered "depths"is from a verb -
(a) to affliction - the depths of sorrow from loss of friends, property, or bodily suffering;
(b) sin - the depths into which the soul is plunged under the consciousness of guilt;
© mental trouble - low spirits - melancholy - darkness of mind - loss of comfort in religion - powerful temptation - disappointment - the anguish caused by ingratitude - or sadness of heart in view of the crimes and the sorrows of people - or grief at the coldness, the hardness, the insensibility of our friends to their spiritual condition.
From all these depths of sorrow it is our privilege to call upon the Lord; in those depths of sorrow it is proper thus to implore his help. Often he brings us into these "depths"that we may be led to call upon him; always when we are brought there, we should call upon him.
Have I cried unto thee, O Lord - Or rather, "do I now invoke thee,"or call earnestly upon thee. The language does not refer so much to the past as the present. I now cry for mercy; I now implore thy blessing. The condition is that of one who in deep sorrow, or under deep conviction for sin, pleads earnestly that God would have compassion on him.
The prophet's humility.

Haydock: Psa 130:1 - -- Of David, is not in Septuagint. But he probably composed this psalm to exculpate himself from the accusation of pride. (Berthier) ---
It may agree...
Of David, is not in Septuagint. But he probably composed this psalm to exculpate himself from the accusation of pride. (Berthier) ---
It may agree with Esther, Nehemias, &c., 2 Esdras v. 15. (Calmet) ---
David proposes his own humility to the imitation of others, without any evil intention. (Worthington) ---
Sometimes the saints may speak their own praises, as St. Paul, did, particularly when they are inspired. (Berthier) ---
Above me. This deportment is admirable in the great. (Calmet) ---
We must neither undertake nor pry into things above our ability. (Menochius)
Gill -> Psa 130:1
Gill: Psa 130:1 - -- Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord. Out of deep waters, out of the depths of the sea; not literally, as Jonah, who really was there, and...
Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord. Out of deep waters, out of the depths of the sea; not literally, as Jonah, who really was there, and from thence cried unto the Lord, Jon 2:2; but figuratively; meaning that he had been in the depths of sin, or brought into a low estate by it, as all men are: they are brought into debt by it, and so to a prison, the prison of the law, to be under its sentence of curse and condemnation; to a ditch, a horrible pit, a pit wherein is no water, and out of which men cannot extricate themselves; to a dunghill, to the most extrem poverty and beggary; to a dungeon, a state of thraldom, bondage, and captivity; into an hopeless and helpless condition. The depths the psalmist was now in were a deep sense of sin, under which he lay, and which brought him low; as every man is low in his own eyes, when he has a thorough sense of sin; then he sees himself unworthy of any favour from God, deserving of his wrath and displeasure; as a polluted guilty creature, loathsome and abominable; as wretched and undone in himself; as the chief of sinners, more brutish than any man, and as a beast before the Lord: but then, though the psalmist was in the depths of distress for sin, yet not in the depths of despair; he cried to God, he hoped in him, and believed there was pardon with him: or he might be in the depths of afflictions; which are sometimes, because of the greatness of them, compared to deep waters; to the deep waters of the sea, which threaten to overflow and overwhelm, but shall not; see Psa 42:7; and in such circumstances the psalmist cried to God for help and deliverance; not to man, whose help is vain; but to God, who is able to save, and is a present help in time of need. Theodoret understands this of the psalmist's crying to God from the bottom of his heart, in the sincerity of his soul; and so his cry is opposed to feigned and hypocritical prayers.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 130:1 Heb “depths,” that is, deep waters (see Ps 69:2, 14; Isa 51:10), a metaphor for the life-threatening danger faced by the psalmist.
Geneva Bible -> Psa 130:1
Geneva Bible: Psa 130:1 "A Song of degrees." Out of the ( a ) depths have I cried unto thee, O LORD.
( a ) Being in great distress and sorrow.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 130:1-8
TSK Synopsis: Psa 130:1-8 - --1 The psalmist professes his hope in prayer;5 and his patience in hope.7 He exhorts Israel to trust in God.
MHCC -> Psa 130:1-4
MHCC: Psa 130:1-4 - --The only way of relief for a sin-entangled soul, is by applying to God alone. Many things present themselves as diversions, many things offer themselv...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 130:1-4
Matthew Henry: Psa 130:1-4 - -- In these verses we are taught, I. Whatever condition we are in, though ever so deplorable, to continue calling upon God, Psa 130:1. The best men may...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 130:1-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 130:1-4 - --
The depths ( מעמקּים ) are not the depths of the soul, but the deep outward and inward distress in which the poet is sunk as in deep waters (P...
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 130:1-8 - --Psalm 130
The poet uttered a cry for God to show mercy to His people and encouraged his fellow Israelite...

Constable: Psa 130:1-2 - --1. A desperate cry for mercy 130:1-2
The writer felt that he was at the very bottom of his resou...
