
Text -- Psalms 139:1 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Clarke -> Psa 139:1
Clarke: Psa 139:1 - -- O Lord, thou hast searched me - חקרתני chakartani ; thou hast investigated me; thou hast thoroughly acquainted thyself with my whole soul an...
O Lord, thou hast searched me -
Calvin -> Psa 139:1
Calvin: Psa 139:1 - -- 1.O Jehovah! thou hast searched me David declares, in the outset of this Psalm, that he does not come before God with any idea of its being possible ...
1.O Jehovah! thou hast searched me David declares, in the outset of this Psalm, that he does not come before God with any idea of its being possible to succeed by dissimulation, as hypocrites will take advantage of secret refuges to prosecute sinful indulgences, but that he voluntarily lays bare his innermost heart for inspection, as one convinced of the impossibility of deceiving God. It is thine, he says, O God! to discover every secret thought, nor is there anything which can escape thy notice, He then insists upon particulars, to show that his whole life was known to God, who watched him in all his motions — when he slept, when he arose, or when he walked abroad. The word
The verb
Defender -> Psa 139:1
Defender: Psa 139:1 - -- Psalm 139 is a remarkable testimony to the attributes of God. It divides into four stanzas of six verses each. Psa 139:1-6 describes His omniscience; ...
Psalm 139 is a remarkable testimony to the attributes of God. It divides into four stanzas of six verses each. Psa 139:1-6 describes His omniscience; Psa 139:7-12 deals with His omnipresence; Psa 139:13-18 emphasizes His omnipotence; and Psa 139:19-24 stresses what might be called His omnirighteousness. The first stanza says that God knows everything about us; the second says He sees everything around us; the third shows that He does everything for us; and the last notes that He judges everything in us."
TSK -> Psa 139:1
TSK: Psa 139:1 - -- thou hast : Psa 139:23, Psa 11:4, Psa 11:5, Psa 17:3, Psa 44:21; 1Ki 8:39; 1Ch 28:9; Jer 12:3, Jer 17:9, Jer 17:10; Joh 21:17; Heb 4:13; Rev 2:18, Rev...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 139:1
Barnes: Psa 139:1 - -- O Lord, thou hast searched me - The word rendered searched, has a primary reference to searching the earth by boring or digging, as for water o...
O Lord, thou hast searched me - The word rendered searched, has a primary reference to searching the earth by boring or digging, as for water or metals. See Job 28:3. Then it means to search accurately or closely.
And known me - As the result of that search, or that close investigation. Thou seest all that is in my heart. Nothing is, or can be, concealed from thee. It is with this deep consciousness that the psalm begins; and all that follows is but an expansion and application of this idea. It is of much advantage in suggesting right reflections on our own character, to have this full consciousness that God knows us altogether; that he sees all that there is in our heart; that he has been fully acquainted with our past life.
A prayer to be delivered from the wicked.

Haydock: Psa 139:1 - -- David. He, (Calmet) Ezechias, (Ven. Bede) the captives, (Bossuet) or Jesus Christ and his servants under persecution, speak in this psalm. (Holy Fa...
David. He, (Calmet) Ezechias, (Ven. Bede) the captives, (Bossuet) or Jesus Christ and his servants under persecution, speak in this psalm. (Holy Fathers) See Psalm lv. (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 139:1
Gill: Psa 139:1 - -- O Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me. The omniscience of God reaches to all persons and things; but the psalmist only takes notice of it as re...
O Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me. The omniscience of God reaches to all persons and things; but the psalmist only takes notice of it as respecting himself. God knows all men in general, and whatever belongs to them; he knows his own people in a special manner; and he knows their particular persons, as David and others: and this knowledge of God is considered after the manner of men, as if it was the fruit of search, to denote the exquisiteness of it; as a judge searches out a cause, a physician the nature of a disease, a philosopher the reason of things; who many times, after all their inquiries, fail in their knowledge; but the Lord never does: his elect lie in the ruins of the fall, and among the men of the world; he searches them out and finds them; for be knows where they are, and the time of finding them, and can distinguish them in a crowd of men from others, and notwithstanding the sad case they are in, and separates them from them; and he searches into them, into their most inward part, and knows them infinitely better than their nearest relations, friends and acquaintance do; he knows that of them and in them, which none but they themselves know; their thoughts, and the sin that dwells in them: yea, he knows more of them and in them than they themselves, Jer 17:9. And he knows them after another manner than he does other men: there are some whom in a sense he knows not; but these he knows, as he did David, so as to approve of, love and delight in, Mat 7:23.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 139:1-24
TSK Synopsis: Psa 139:1-24 - --1 David praises God for his all-seeing providence;17 and for his infinite mercies.19 He defies the wicked.23 He prays for sincerity.
MHCC -> Psa 139:1-6
MHCC: Psa 139:1-6 - --God has perfect knowledge of us, and all our thoughts and actions are open before him. It is more profitable to meditate on Divine truths, applying th...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 139:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 139:1-6 - -- David here lays down this great doctrine, That the God with whom we have to do has a perfect knowledge of us, and that all the motions and actions b...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 139:1-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 139:1-7 - --
The Aramaic forms in this strophe are the ἅπαξ λεγομ רע (ground-form רעי ) in Psa 139:2 and Psa 139:17, endeavour, desire, thin...
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 139:1-24 - --Psalm 139
David praised God for His omniscience, omnipresence, and omnipotence in this popular psalm. It...
