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Text -- Psalms 139:1-10 (NET)

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Context
Psalm 139
139:1 For the music director, a psalm of David. O Lord, you examine me and know. 139:2 You know when I sit down and when I get up; even from far away you understand my motives. 139:3 You carefully observe me when I travel or when I lie down to rest; you are aware of everything I do. 139:4 Certainly my tongue does not frame a word without you, O Lord, being thoroughly aware of it. 139:5 You squeeze me in from behind and in front; you place your hand on me. 139:6 Your knowledge is beyond my comprehension; it is so far beyond me, I am unable to fathom it. 139:7 Where can I go to escape your spirit? Where can I flee to escape your presence? 139:8 If I were to ascend to heaven, you would be there. If I were to sprawl out in Sheol, there you would be. 139:9 If I were to fly away on the wings of the dawn, and settle down on the other side of the sea, 139:10 even there your hand would guide me, your right hand would grab hold of me.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · David a son of Jesse of Judah; king of Israel,son of Jesse of Judah; king of Israel
 · Sheol the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: TONGUE | SHEOL | SEARCH | Praise | OMNISCIENCE | OMNIPRESENCE | KNOW; KNOWLEDGE | Holy Ghost | Heart | Hades | HOLY SPIRIT, 1 | God | GOD, 2 | FOREKNOW; FOREKNOWLEDGE | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | DECEASE, IN THE OLD TESTAMENT AND APOCYPHRA | DEATH | BESET | ASTRONOMY, I | ACQUAINT; ACQUAINTANCE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 139:2 - -- Thou knowest what my thoughts will be in such and such circumstances, long before I know it, yea from all eternity.

Thou knowest what my thoughts will be in such and such circumstances, long before I know it, yea from all eternity.

Wesley: Psa 139:3 - -- Thou discernest every step I take. It is a metaphor from soldiers besieging their enemies, and setting watches round about them.

Thou discernest every step I take. It is a metaphor from soldiers besieging their enemies, and setting watches round about them.

Wesley: Psa 139:5 - -- With thy all - seeing providence.

With thy all - seeing providence.

Wesley: Psa 139:5 - -- Thou keepest me, as it were with a strong hand, in thy sight and under thy power.

Thou keepest me, as it were with a strong hand, in thy sight and under thy power.

Wesley: Psa 139:6 - -- Apprehend in what manner thou dost so presently know all things.

Apprehend in what manner thou dost so presently know all things.

Wesley: Psa 139:8 - -- If I could hide myself in the lowest parts of the earth.

If I could hide myself in the lowest parts of the earth.

Wesley: Psa 139:9 - -- If I should flee from east to west: for the sea being the western border of Canaan, is often put for the west in scripture. And wings are poetically a...

If I should flee from east to west: for the sea being the western border of Canaan, is often put for the west in scripture. And wings are poetically ascribed to the morning here, as they are elsewhere to the sun, and to the winds.

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 - חקרתני chakartani ; thou hast investigated me; thou hast thoroughly acquainted thyself with my whole soul and conduct.

Clarke: Psa 139:2 - -- My downsitting and mine uprising - Even these inconsiderable and casual things are under thy continual notice. I cannot so much as take a seat, or l...

My downsitting and mine uprising - Even these inconsiderable and casual things are under thy continual notice. I cannot so much as take a seat, or leave it, without being marked by thee

Clarke: Psa 139:2 - -- Thou understandest my thought - לרעי lerei , "my cogitation."This word is Chaldee, see Dan 2:29, Dan 2:30

Thou understandest my thought - לרעי lerei , "my cogitation."This word is Chaldee, see Dan 2:29, Dan 2:30

Clarke: Psa 139:2 - -- Afar off - While the figment is forming that shall produce them.

Afar off - While the figment is forming that shall produce them.

Clarke: Psa 139:3 - -- Thou compassest my path - זרית zeritha thou dost winnow, ventilate, or sift my path; and my lying down, רבעי ribi , my lair, my bed

Thou compassest my path - זרית zeritha thou dost winnow, ventilate, or sift my path; and my lying down, רבעי ribi , my lair, my bed

Clarke: Psa 139:3 - -- And art acquainted - Thou treasurest up. This is the import of סכן sachan . Thou hast the whole number of my ways, and the steps I took in them...

And art acquainted - Thou treasurest up. This is the import of סכן sachan . Thou hast the whole number of my ways, and the steps I took in them.

Clarke: Psa 139:4 - -- There is not a word in my tongue - Although ( כי ki ) there be not a word in my tongue, behold O Jehovah, thou knowest the whole of it, that is, ...

There is not a word in my tongue - Although ( כי ki ) there be not a word in my tongue, behold O Jehovah, thou knowest the whole of it, that is, thou knowest all my words before they are uttered as thou knowest all my thoughts while as yet they are unformed.

Clarke: Psa 139:5 - -- Thou hast beset me behind and before - אחור וקדם צרתני achor vekodam tsartani , "The hereafter and the past, thou hast formed me."I th...

Thou hast beset me behind and before - אחור וקדם צרתני achor vekodam tsartani , "The hereafter and the past, thou hast formed me."I think Bishop Horsley’ s emendation here is just, uniting the two verses together. "Behold thou, O Jehovah, knowest the whole, the hereafter and the past. Thou hast formed me, and laid thy hand upon me."

Clarke: Psa 139:6 - -- Such knowledge is too wonderful - I think, with Kennicott, that פלאיה דעת pelaiah daath should be read פלאי הדעת peli haddaath ,...

Such knowledge is too wonderful - I think, with Kennicott, that פלאיה דעת pelaiah daath should be read פלאי הדעת peli haddaath , "This knowledge," ממני mimmenni , "is beyond or above me."This change is made by taking the ה he from the end of פלאיה pelaiah , which is really no word, and joining it with דעת daath ; which, by giving it an article, makes it demonstrative, הדעת haddaath , "This knowledge."This kind of knowledye, God’ s knowledge, that takes in all things, and their reasons, essences, tendencies, and issues, is far beyond me.

Clarke: Psa 139:7 - -- Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? - Surely רוח ruach in this sense must be taken personally, it certainly cannot mean either breath or wind;...

Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? - Surely רוח ruach in this sense must be taken personally, it certainly cannot mean either breath or wind; to render it so would make the passage ridiculous

Clarke: Psa 139:7 - -- From thy presence? - מפניך mippaneycha , "from thy faces."Why do we meet with this word so frequently in the plural number, when applied to Go...

From thy presence? - מפניך mippaneycha , "from thy faces."Why do we meet with this word so frequently in the plural number, when applied to God? And why have we his Spirit, and his appearances or faces, both here? A Trinitarian would at once say, "The plurality of persons in the Godhead is intended;"and who can prove that he is mistaken?

Clarke: Psa 139:8 - -- If I ascend - Thou art in heaven, in thy glory; in hell, in thy vindictive justice; and in all parts or earth, water, space, place, or vacuity, by t...

If I ascend - Thou art in heaven, in thy glory; in hell, in thy vindictive justice; and in all parts or earth, water, space, place, or vacuity, by thy omnipresence. Wherever I am, there art thou; and where I cannot be, thou art there. Thou fillest the heavens and the earth.

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 רע , rea, which we have rendered thought, signifies also a friend or companion, on which account some read — thou knowest what is nearest me afar off, a meaning more to the point than any other, if it could be supported by example. The reference would then be very appropriately to the fact that the most distant objects are contemplated as near by God. Some for afar off read beforehand, in which signification the Hebrew word is elsewhere taken, as if he had said — O Lord, every thought which I conceive in my heart is already known to thee beforehand. But I prefer the other meaning, That God is not confined to heaven, indulging in a state of repose, and indifferent to human concerns, according to the Epicurean idea, and that however far off we may be from him, he is never far off from us.

The verb זרה , zarah, means to winnow as well as to compass, so that we may very properly read the third verse — thou winnowest my ways, 201 a figurative expression to denote the bringing of anything which is unknown to light. The reader is left to his own option, for the other rendering which I have adopted is also.appropriate. There has been also a difference of opinion amongst interpreters as to the last clause of the verse. The verb סכן , sachan, in the Hiphil conjugation, as here, signifies to render successful, which has led some to think that David here thanks God for crowning his actions with success; but this is a sense which does not at all suit the scope of the Psalmist in the context, for he is not speaking of thanksgiving. Equally forced is the meaning given to the words by others — Thou hast made me to get acquainted or accustomed with my ways; 202 as if he praised God for being endued with wisdom and counsel. Though the verb be in the Hiphil, I have therefore felt no hesitation in assigning it a neuter signification — Lord, thou art accustomed to my ways, so that they are familiar to thee.

Calvin: Psa 139:4 - -- 4.For there is not a word, etc. The words admit a double meaning. Accordingly some understand them to imply that God knows what, we are about to say ...

4.For there is not a word, etc. The words admit a double meaning. Accordingly some understand them to imply that God knows what, we are about to say before the words are formed on our tongue; others, that though we speak not a word, and try by silence to conceal our secret intentions, we cannot elude his notice. Either rendering amounts to the same thing, and it is of no consequence which we adopt. The idea meant to be conveyed is, that while the tongue is the index of thought to man, being the great medium of communication, God, who knows the heart, is independent of words. And use is made of the demonstrative particle lo! to indicate emphatically that the innermost recesses of our spirit stand present to his view.

Calvin: Psa 139:5 - -- In verse fifth some read — behind and before thou hast fashioned me; 203 but צור , tsur, often signifies to shut up, and David, there can ...

In verse fifth some read — behind and before thou hast fashioned me; 203 but צור , tsur, often signifies to shut up, and David, there can be no doubt, means that he was surrounded on every side, and so kept in sight by God, that he could not escape in any quarter. One who finds the way blocked up turns back; but David found himself hedged in behind as well as before. The other clause of the verse has the same meaning; for those put a very forced interpretation upon it who think that it refers to God’s fashioning us, and applying his hand in the sense of an artizan to his work; nor does this suit with the context. And it is much better to understand it as asserting that God by his hand, laid as it were upon men, holds them strictly under his inspection, so that they cannot move a hair’s breadth without his knowledge. 204

Calvin: Psa 139:6 - -- 6.Thy knowledge is wonderful above me Two meanings may be attached to ממני : mimmenni. We may read upon me, or, in relation to me, and un...

6.Thy knowledge is wonderful above me Two meanings may be attached to ממני : mimmenni. We may read upon me, or, in relation to me, and understand David to mean that God’s knowledge is seen to be wonderful in forming such a creature as man, who, to use an old saying’, may be called a little world in himself; nor can we think without astonishment of the consummate artifice apparent in the structure of the human body, and of the excellent endowments with which the human soul is invested. But the context demands another interpretation; and we are to suppose that David, prosecuting the same idea upon which he had already insisted, exclaims against the folly of measuring God’s knowledge by our own, when it rises prodigiously above us. Many when they hear God spoken of conceive of him as like unto themselves, and such presumption is most condemnable. Very commonly they will not allow his knowledge to be greater than what comes up to their own apprehensions of things. David, on the contrary, confesses it to be beyond his comprehension, virtually declaring that words could not express this truth of the absoluteness with which all things stand patent to the eye of God, this being a knowledge having’ neither bound nor measure, so that he could only contemplate the extent of it with conscious imbecility.

Calvin: Psa 139:7 - -- 7.Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? I consider that David prosecutes the same idea of its being’ impossible that men by any subterfuge should elu...

7.Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? I consider that David prosecutes the same idea of its being’ impossible that men by any subterfuge should elude the eye of God. By the Spirit of God we are not here, as in several other parts of Scripture, to conceive of his power merely, but his understanding and knowledge. 205 In man the spirit is the seat of intelligence, and so it is here in reference to God, as is plain from the second part of the sentence, where by the face of God is meant his knowledge or inspection. David means in short that he could not change from one place to another without God seeing him, and following him with his eyes as he moved. They misapply the passage who adduce it as a proof of the immensity of God’s essence; for though it be an undoubted truth that the glory of the Lord fills heaven and earth, this was not at present in the view of the Psalmist, but the truth that God’s eye penetrates heaven and hell, so that, hide in what obscure corner of the world he might, he must be discovered by him. Accordingly he tells us that though he should fly to heaven, or lurk in the lowest abysses, from above or from below all was naked and manifest before God. The wings of the morning, 206 or of Lucifer, is a beautiful metaphor, for when the sun rises on the earth, it transmits its radiance suddenly to all regions of the world, as with the swiftness of flight. The same figure is employed in Mal 4:2. And the idea is, that though one should fly with the speed of light, he could find no recess where he would be beyond the reach of divine power. For by hand we are to understand power, and the assertion is to the effect that should man attempt to withdraw from the observation of God, it were easy for him to arrest and draw back the fugitive. 207

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."

Defender: Psa 139:2 - -- This psalm is intensely personal. The first person pronouns ("I," "me," etc.) occur forty-eight times in these twenty-four verses and the second perso...

This psalm is intensely personal. The first person pronouns ("I," "me," etc.) occur forty-eight times in these twenty-four verses and the second person pronouns ("thou," "thine," etc.) occur twenty-eight times.

Defender: Psa 139:2 - -- It is striking to realize that God because of His omnipresence and omniscience knows continually the thoughts of all His creatures."

It is striking to realize that God because of His omnipresence and omniscience knows continually the thoughts of all His creatures."

Defender: Psa 139:5 - -- Psa 139:5 notes God's knowledge of the past, the future and the present."

Psa 139:5 notes God's knowledge of the past, the future and the present."

Defender: Psa 139:6 - -- Psa 139:6 stresses the foolishness of men who would try to comprehend the mysteries of God's omniscience. This surely includes the attempt to understa...

Psa 139:6 stresses the foolishness of men who would try to comprehend the mysteries of God's omniscience. This surely includes the attempt to understand the mystery of the paradoxical relation between divine sovereignty and human liberty."

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...

TSK: Psa 139:2 - -- knowest : Psa 56:8; Gen 16:13; 2Ki 6:12, 2Ki 19:27; Pro 15:3; Isa 37:28; Zec 4:10 understandest : Psa 94:11; Mat 9:4; Luk 9:47; Joh 2:24, Joh 2:25; 1C...

TSK: Psa 139:3 - -- compassest : or, winnowest, Job 13:26, Job 13:27, Job 14:16, Job 14:17, Job 31:4; Mat 3:12 my path : Psa 139:18, Psa 121:3-8; Gen 28:10-17; 2Sa 8:14, ...

TSK: Psa 139:4 - -- there is not : Psa 19:14; Job 8:2, Job 38:2, Job 42:3, Job 42:6-8; Zep 1:12; Mal 3:13-16; Mat 12:35-37; Jam 1:26, Jam 3:2-10 thou knowest : Psa 50:19-...

TSK: Psa 139:5 - -- beset me : Deu 33:27; Job 23:8, Job 23:9 and laid : Exo 24:11; Rev 1:17

beset me : Deu 33:27; Job 23:8, Job 23:9

and laid : Exo 24:11; Rev 1:17

TSK: Psa 139:6 - -- knowledge : Psa 40:5, Psa 13:1; Job 11:7-9, Job 26:14, Job 42:3; Pro 30:2-4; Rom 11:33

TSK: Psa 139:7 - -- Jer 23:23, Jer 23:24; Jon 1:3, Jon 1:10; Act 5:9

TSK: Psa 139:8 - -- I ascend : Eze 28:12-17; Amo 9:2-4; Oba 1:4 in hell : Job 26:6, Job 34:21, Job 34:22; Pro 15:11; Jon 2:2

TSK: Psa 139:9 - -- If I take : Light has been proved, by many experiments, to travel at the astonishing rate of 194,188 miles in one second of time; and comes from the s...

If I take : Light has been proved, by many experiments, to travel at the astonishing rate of 194,188 miles in one second of time; and comes from the sun to the earth, a distance of 95,513,794 miles in 8 minutes and nearly 12 seconds! But, could I even fly upon the wings or rays of the morning light, which diffuses itself with such velocity over the globe from east to west, instead of being beyond Thy reach, or by this sudden transition be able to escape Thy notice, Thy arm could still at pleasure prevent or arrest my progress, and I should still be encircled with the immensity of Thy essence. The sentiment in this noble passage is remarkably striking and the description truly sublime.

the wings : Psa 18:10, Psa 19:6; Mal 4:2

dwell : Psa 74:16, Psa 74:17; Isa 24:14-16

TSK: Psa 139:10 - -- Psa 63:8, Psa 73:23, Psa 143:9, Psa 143:10; Isa 41:13

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

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.

Barnes: Psa 139:2 - -- Thou knowest my downsitting ... - In the various circumstances of life, thou knowest me. Thou knowest me in one place as well as in another. I ...

Thou knowest my downsitting ... - In the various circumstances of life, thou knowest me. Thou knowest me in one place as well as in another. I cannot so change my position that thou will not see me, and that thou wilt not be perfectly acquainted with all that I say, and all that I do. In every posture, in every movement, in every occupation, thou hast a full knowledge of me. I cannot go out of thy sight; I cannot put myself into such a position that thou wilt not see me.

Thou understandest my thought - Hebrew, "As to my thought."That is, Thou seest what my plans are; what I design to do; "what I am thinking about."A most solemn reflection! How unwilling would bad people be - would even good people be - to have those round about them know always "what they are thinking about."

Afar off - Not when the "thought"is far off; but "thou,"being far off, seest us as clearly as if thou wert near. I cannot go to such a distance from thee that thou wilt not see perfectly all that I am thinking about.

Barnes: Psa 139:3 - -- Thou compassest my path ... - Margin, "winnowest."The Hebrew word - זרה zârâh - means properly "to scatter,"to cast loosely about...

Thou compassest my path ... - Margin, "winnowest."The Hebrew word - זרה zârâh - means properly "to scatter,"to cast loosely about - as the wind does dust; and then, to winnow - to wit, by throwing grain, when it is thrashed, up to the wind: Isa 30:24; Jer 4:11; Rth 3:2. Then it means "to winnow out;"that is, to winnow out all the chaff, and to leave all the grain - to save all that is valuable. So here it means that God, as it were, "sifted"him. Compare Isa 30:28; Amo 9:9; Luk 22:31. He scattered all that was chaff, or all that was valueless, and saw what there was that was real and substantial. When it is said that he did this in his "path and his lying down,"it is meant that he did it in every way; altogether; entirely.

And art acquainted with all my ways - All the paths that I tread; the whole course of my life. All that I do, in all places and at all times, is fully known to thee.

Barnes: Psa 139:4 - -- For there is not a word in my tongue - All that I say; all that I have power to say; all that I am disposed at any time to say. But lo, O ...

For there is not a word in my tongue - All that I say; all that I have power to say; all that I am disposed at any time to say.

But lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether - All that pertains to it. What is "said,"and what is "meant."Merely to "hear"what is spoken does not imply necessarily a full knowledge of what is said - for it may be false, insincere, hypocritical. God knows exactly what is said and what is "meant."

Barnes: Psa 139:5 - -- Thou hast beset me behind and before - The word rendered "beset"- צור tsûr - means properly to press; to press upon; to compress. I...

Thou hast beset me behind and before - The word rendered "beset"- צור tsûr - means properly to press; to press upon; to compress. It has reference commonly to the siege of a city, or to the pressing on of troops in war; and then it comes to mean to besiege, hem in, closely surround, so that there is no way of escape. This is the idea here - that God was on every side of him; that he could not escape in any direction. He was like a garrison besieged in a city so that there was no means of escape. There is a transition here (not an unnatural one), from the idea of the Omniscience of God to that of His Omnipresence, and the remarks which follow have a main reference to the latter.

And laid thine hand upon me - That is, If I try to escape in any direction I find thine band laid upon me there. Escape is impossible.

Barnes: Psa 139:6 - -- Such knowledge is too wonderful for me - literally, "Wonderful knowledge away from me,"or, more than I can comprehend. It is beyond my reach; i...

Such knowledge is too wonderful for me - literally, "Wonderful knowledge away from me,"or, more than I can comprehend. It is beyond my reach; it surpasses all my powers to comprehend it.

It is high, I cannot attain unto it - It is so exalted that I cannot grasp it; I cannot understand how it can be.

Barnes: Psa 139:7 - -- Whither shall I go from thy spirit? - Where shall I go where thy spirit is not; that is, where thou art not; where there is no God. The word "s...

Whither shall I go from thy spirit? - Where shall I go where thy spirit is not; that is, where thou art not; where there is no God. The word "spirit"here does not refer particularly to the Holy Spirit, but to God "as"a spirit. "Whither shall I go from the all-pervading Spirit - from God, considered as a spirit?"This is a clear statement that God is a "Spirit"(compare Joh 4:24); and that, as a spirit, he is Omnipresent.

Or whither shall I flee from thy presence? - Hebrew, From his face; that is, where he will not be, and will not see me. I cannot find a place - a spot in the universe, where there is not a God, and the same God. Fearful thought to those that hate him - that, much as they may wish or desire it, they can never find a place where there is not a holy God! Comforting to those that love him - that they will never be where they may not find a God - their God; that nowhere, at home or abroad, on land or on the ocean, on earth or above the stars, they will ever reach a world where they will not be in the presence of that God - that gracious Father - who can defend, comfort, guide, and sustain them.

Barnes: Psa 139:8 - -- If I ascend up into heaven - The word "heaven"here, in the original is in the plural number - "heavens,"- and includes all that there is above ...

If I ascend up into heaven - The word "heaven"here, in the original is in the plural number - "heavens,"- and includes all that there is above the earth - the highest worlds.

If I make my bed - Properly, "If I strew or spread my couch."If I should seek that as the place where to lie down.

In hell - Hebrew, "Sheol."See the notes at Isa 14:9, where the word is fully explained. The word here refers to the under-world - the abodes of the dead; and, in the apprehension of the psalmist, corresponds in depth with the word "heaven"in height. The two represent all worlds, above and below; and the idea is, that in neither direction, above or below, could he go where God would not be.

Thou art there - Or, more emphatically and impressively in the original, "Thou!"That is, the psalmist imagines himself in the highest heaven, or in the deepest abodes of the dead - and lo! God is there also! he has not gone from "him"! he is still in the presence of the same God!

Barnes: Psa 139:9 - -- If I take the wings of the morning - literally, "I will take the wings of the morning."That is, I will take this as a supposable case; I will i...

If I take the wings of the morning - literally, "I will take the wings of the morning."That is, I will take this as a supposable case; I will imagine what would occur, should I be able to take to myself the wings of the morning, and endeavor to escape "by flight"from the presence of God, or go where he could not pursue me, or where he would not be. The "wings of the morning"evidently mean that by which the light of the morning "seems to fly"- the most rapid object known to us. It is not to be supposed that the psalmist had an idea of the exact velocity of light, but to him that was the most rapid object known; and his language is not the "less"striking because the laws of its flight have become accurately known. The word rendered "morning"refers to the dawn - the daybreak - the Aurora - the "first"beams of the morning light. The beams of light are in fact no swifter then than at any other time of the day, but they seem to be swifter, as they so quickly penetrate the darkness.

And dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea - The end of the sea; that is, the "west,"as the sea referred to undoubtedly is the Mediterranean, which was west of Palestine, and which became another name for the west. The idea is, that if he could fly with the rapidity of light, and could be in an instant over the sea, even beyond its remotest border, still God would be there before him. He could not escape from the divine presence.

Barnes: Psa 139:10 - -- Even there shall thy hand lead me - I shall find thee there; thy hand would be upon me; I should not have gone from thy presence. And thy ...

Even there shall thy hand lead me - I shall find thee there; thy hand would be upon me; I should not have gone from thy presence.

And thy right hand shall hold me - Still hold me; still be laid upon me. I should find myself there, as certainly as here, in thy hand; and in the same sense - either to seize upon me if I went astray, or to protect me, if obedient, supported by thee in all the perils of the flight. God, still the same - the same in all respects - would be with me there as he is here.

Poole: Psa 139:2 - -- Known me i.e. known me exactly, as men do those things which they diligently search out. My downsitting and mine uprising all my postures and motio...

Known me i.e. known me exactly, as men do those things which they diligently search out.

My downsitting and mine uprising all my postures and motions, my actions and my cessations from action.

My thought all my secret counsels and designs.

Afar off before they are perfectly formed in my mind. Thou knowest what my thoughts will be in such and such circumstances long before I know it, yea, from all eternity.

Poole: Psa 139:3 - -- Thou compassest my path thou watchest me on every side, and therefore discernest every step which I take. It is a metaphor either from huntsmen watch...

Thou compassest my path thou watchest me on every side, and therefore discernest every step which I take. It is a metaphor either from huntsmen watching all the motions and lurking-places of wild beasts, that they may catch them; or from soldiers besieging their enemies in a city, and setting watches round about them.

My lying down me, when I lie down in my bed, where men oft contrive what they execute in the day time.

Poole: Psa 139:4 - -- Thou knowest what I speak, and with what design and disposition of mind. Or rather, as others render it, and which is more admirable, When there is...

Thou knowest what I speak, and with what design and disposition of mind. Or rather, as others render it, and which is more admirable, When there is not a word , &c. Thou knowest what I intend to speak, either in prayer to thee, or in conversation with men, when I have not yet uttered one word of it.

Poole: Psa 139:5 - -- Thou hast beset me behind and before with thine all-seeing and all-disposing providence. And laid thine hand upon me thou keepest me, as it were, w...

Thou hast beset me behind and before with thine all-seeing and all-disposing providence.

And laid thine hand upon me thou keepest me, as it were, with a strong hand, in thy sight and under thy power.

Poole: Psa 139:6 - -- I am so far from equalling thy knowledge, that I cannot apprehend it, in what manner thou dost so perfectly know all things, even such as are most s...

I am so far from equalling thy knowledge, that I cannot apprehend it, in what manner thou dost so perfectly know all things, even such as are most secret, and have yet no being, and seem to depend upon many casualties and uncertainties.

Poole: Psa 139:7 - -- From thy spirit either, 1. From the Holy Ghost, the third person in the Trinity: or, 2. From thee, who art a Spirit, and therefore canst penetrate ...

From thy spirit either,

1. From the Holy Ghost, the third person in the Trinity: or,

2. From thee, who art a Spirit, and therefore canst penetrate into the most secret parts: or,

3. From thy mind or understanding, of which he is here speaking, as this word seems to be taken, Isa 40:13 , compared with Rom 11:34 ; for what there is called the spirit of the Lord , is here called the mind of the Lord. And as the Spirit of God is oft used in Scripture for its gifts and graces, so the spirit of God in this place may be put for that knowledge which is an attribute or action of God.

From thy presence a man can go to no place which is out of thy sight.

Poole: Psa 139:8 - -- If I make my bed in hell if I should or could repose and hide myself in the grave, or in the lowest parts of the earth, which are at the farthest dis...

If I make my bed in hell if I should or could repose and hide myself in the grave, or in the lowest parts of the earth, which are at the farthest distance from heaven.

Poole: Psa 139:9 - -- If I should flee as swiftly from try presence as the morning light doth, which in an instant scattereth itself from east to west; for the sea being ...

If I should flee as swiftly from try presence as the morning light doth, which in an instant scattereth itself from east to west; for the sea being the western border of Canaan, is oft put for the west in Scripture. And wings are poetically ascribed to the morning or morning light here, as they are elsewhere to the sun, as Mal 4:2 , and to the winds, as Psa 18:10 104:3 , and to other things of eminent swiftness.

Poole: Psa 139:10 - -- I could neither go thither without thy conduct, nor subsist there without thy powerful support, and much less could I go out of try sight; for a man...

I could neither go thither without thy conduct, nor subsist there without thy powerful support, and much less could I go out of try sight; for a man may see many things which, are out of his power.

Haydock: Psa 139:1 - -- A prayer to be delivered from the wicked.

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)

Haydock: Psa 139:2 - -- Man. Saul, (Calmet) Judas, (St. Hilary) or self-love, the old man, who is our most dangerous enemy. (Berthier)

Man. Saul, (Calmet) Judas, (St. Hilary) or self-love, the old man, who is our most dangerous enemy. (Berthier)

Haydock: Psa 139:3 - -- Battles. And formed plots to destroy the just. (Worthington)

Battles. And formed plots to destroy the just. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 139:4 - -- Serpent. So Plautus says, "A double-tongued and wicked man is like a creeping beast," in Persa. (Haydock)

Serpent. So Plautus says, "A double-tongued and wicked man is like a creeping beast," in Persa. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 139:6 - -- Side. The enemies of David calumniated him, and strove to make him follow idols, 1 Kings xxvi. 19.

Side. The enemies of David calumniated him, and strove to make him follow idols, 1 Kings xxvi. 19.

Haydock: Psa 139:8 - -- Battle. Against Goliath, or against the attempts of Saul, &c. (Calmet) --- Prayer and divine grace are necessary, to guard us from sin. (Worthing...

Battle. Against Goliath, or against the attempts of Saul, &c. (Calmet) ---

Prayer and divine grace are necessary, to guard us from sin. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 139:9 - -- Desire. If I yield to my passions, (St. Augustine) or after I have expressed my request, contrary to my desire, &c. Hebrew, "Grant not the desire o...

Desire. If I yield to my passions, (St. Augustine) or after I have expressed my request, contrary to my desire, &c. Hebrew, "Grant not the desire of the sinner, complete not his thought. They will be elated." Some supply, "lest they be." The ancients seem not to have read in the same manner. (Berthier) ---

Abandon not my soul, which is all my care, (Psalm xxi. 21.) to the sinner. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 139:10 - -- Head. Hebrew also, "poison," (Berthier) or "sum" of their mischievous devices. (Worthington) --- Labour, or punishment. (Calmet) --- Their subt...

Head. Hebrew also, "poison," (Berthier) or "sum" of their mischievous devices. (Worthington) ---

Labour, or punishment. (Calmet) ---

Their subtle persuasions shall turn to their ruin. (Worthington)

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.

Gill: Psa 139:2 - -- Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising,.... Here the psalmist proceeds to observe the particular circumstances and actions of his life, which w...

Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising,.... Here the psalmist proceeds to observe the particular circumstances and actions of his life, which were known to God; as his "downsitting", either to take rest, as weary persons do. Schultens a explains it of the quiet rest in sleep; this the Lord knew when he betook himself to it, and to whose care he committed himself and family; under whose protection he laid himself down, and on whom he depended for safety, Psa 4:8. Or, since lying down to sleep is afterwards mentioned, this may respect sitting down at table to eat and drink; when the Lord knows whether men use the creatures aright, or abuse them; whether they receive their food with thankfulness, and eat and drink to the glory of God: or else this downsitting was to read the word of God, and meditate upon it; so the Targum paraphrases it,

"my sitting down to study the law.''

When men do this, the Lord knows whether in reading they understand what they read, or read attentively and with affection; whether it is to their comfort and edification, and for doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness; whether their meditation on it is sweet, and is attended with profit and pleasure. "Uprising" may respect either rising from bed, when the Lord knows whether the heart is still with him, Psa 139:18; what sense is had of the divine protection and sustentation, and what thankfulness there is for the mercies of the night past; and whether the voice of prayer and praise is directed to him in the morning, as it should be, Psa 3:5; or else rising from the table, when the Lord knows whether a man's table has been his snare, and with what thankfulness he rises from it for the favours he has received. The Targum interprets this of rising up to go to war; which David did, in the name and strength, and by the direction, of the Lord;

thou understandest my thought afar off; God knows not only his own thoughts, but the thoughts of men, which none but themselves know; by this Christ appears to be truly God, the omniscient God, being a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart, Mat 9:3, Heb 4:12. God knows what thoughts his people have of him, and of his lovingkindness in Christ; what thoughts they have of Christ himself, his person, offices, and grace; what thoughts they have of themselves, their state, and condition: he knows all their vain thoughts, and complains of them, and which also they hate; and all their good thoughts, for they come from him. And he knows them "afar off", or "of old" b, even before they are; so Aben Ezra interprets it, a long time past, and compares it with Jer 31:3; where the same word is rendered "of old": God knows the thoughts of his people, as well as his own, from all eternity; see Isa 25:1; as he knew what they would say and do, so what they would think; he knows thoughts that are past long ago, and forgotten by men, or were unobserved when thought; how else should he bring them into judgment? or though he is afar off in the highest heavens, yet he sees into the hearts of men, and is privy to all their thoughts.

Gill: Psa 139:3 - -- Thou compassest my path and my lying down,.... The Targum adds, "to study in the law.'' His walk in the daytime, and every step he took, and his...

Thou compassest my path and my lying down,.... The Targum adds,

"to study in the law.''

His walk in the daytime, and every step he took, and his lying down at night. It denotes his perfect knowledge of all his actions, day and night; he surrounds every path of man, that they cannot escape his knowledge. Or, "thou winnowest", as some render the word c; he distinguishes actions; he discerns and separates the good from the bad, or the goodness of an action from the evil and imperfection of it, as in winnowing the wheat is separated from the chaff. Or, "thou measurest my squaring" d; all his dimensions, his length and breadth, as he lay down in his bed;

and art acquainted with all my ways; the whole of his life and conversation, all his works and doings: God knows all the evil ways and works of his people; he takes notice of them, and chastises for them; and all their good works, and approves and accepts of them; he knows from what principles of faith and love they spring, in what manner they are performed, and with what views, aims, and ends; see Rev 2:2, Psa 1:6.

Gill: Psa 139:4 - -- For there is not a word in my tongue,.... Expressed by it or upon it, just ready to be spoken; or, as the Targum, "when there is no word in my ton...

For there is not a word in my tongue,.... Expressed by it or upon it, just ready to be spoken; or, as the Targum,

"when there is no word in my tongue:''

so Aben Ezra,

"before it was perfect in my tongue:''

before it is formed there; while it is in the mind, and not expressed, and even before that;

but, lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether; the whole of it, from whence it springs; the reason of it, what is designed, or the ends to be answered by it. The Lord knows the good words of his people, which they speak to him in prayer, even before and while they are speaking them; and what they say to one another in private conversation, Isa 65:24. See an instance of words known by Christ before spoken, in Luk 19:31.

Gill: Psa 139:5 - -- Thou hast beset me behind and before,.... Art on every side of me, all around me, like one besieged in a strait place; so that there is nothing I can ...

Thou hast beset me behind and before,.... Art on every side of me, all around me, like one besieged in a strait place; so that there is nothing I can think, say, or do, but what is known unto thee. The two Kimchis, father and son, render the word, "thou hast formed me": and interpret it of the formation of his body, of which, in Psa 139:14; see Job 10:8 but it denotes how God compasses men with his presence and providence, so that nothing escapes his knowledge;

and laid thine hand upon me; not his afflicting hand, which sometimes presses hard; though the Targum thus paraphrases it,

"and stirred against me the stroke of thine hand:''

but rather his hand of power and providence, to preserve, protect, and defend him. Or it signifies that he was so near to him that his hand was upon him, and he was perfectly known; as anything is that is before a man, and he has his hand upon.

Gill: Psa 139:6 - -- Such knowledge is too wonderful for me,.... Meaning either the knowledge of himself, such as God had of him, which was vastly superior to what he ha...

Such knowledge is too wonderful for me,.... Meaning either the knowledge of himself, such as God had of him, which was vastly superior to what he had of himself; and especially the knowledge of other persons and things, whether visible or invisible, in heaven, earth, or hell; things past, present, and to come; or else the manner in which God knew all this was amazing to him, and quite impenetrable by him; that he did know him, his thoughts, his words and actions, and so those of all others, was easy of belief; but how he should know all this was past his conception, and struck him with the profoundest admiration;

it is high; sublime, out of his reach, beyond his comprehension;

I cannot attain unto it; neither to such knowledge, nor to comprehend what it is in God; and how he should have it, and in what manner he exercises it. Kimchi, Jarchi, and Aben Ezra, connect the words with the following, as if the matter of his wonder and astonishment was the omnipresence of God, or where he should find a place to flee from him.

Gill: Psa 139:7 - -- Whither shall I go from thy spirit?.... Or, "from thy wind?" which some interpret literally, the wind being God's creature; which he brings out of his...

Whither shall I go from thy spirit?.... Or, "from thy wind?" which some interpret literally, the wind being God's creature; which he brings out of his treasures, and holds in his fists, and disposes of as he pleases; this takes its circuit through all the points of the heavens, and blows everywhere, more or less. Rather God himself is meant, who is a Spirit, Joh 4:24 not a body, or consisting of corporeal parts, which are only ascribed to him in a figurative sense; and who has something analogous to spirit, being simple and uncompounded, invisible, incorruptible, immaterial, and immortal; but is different from all other spirits, being uncreated, eternal, infinite, and immense; so that there is no going from him, as to be out of his sight; nor to any place out of his reach, nor from his wrath and justice, nor so as to escape his righteous judgment. It may signify his all-conscious mind, his all-comprehending understanding and knowledge, which reaches to all persons, places, and things; compare Isa 40:13; with Rom 11:34; though it seems best of all to understand it of the third Person, the blessed Spirit, which proceeds from the Father and the Son; and who is possessed of the same perfections, of omniscience, omnipresence, and immensity, as they are; who is the Creator of the heavens and the earth, and pervades them all; and is the Maker of all men, and is present with them to uphold their souls in life, and there is no going from him; particularly he is in all believers, and dwells with them; nor do they desire to go from him, but deprecate his departure from them;

or whither shall I flee from thy presence? which is everywhere, for God's presence is omnipresence; his powerful presence and providence are with all his creatures, to support and uphold them in being; he is not far from, but near to them; in him they live, move, and have their being: and so there is no fleeing from him or that; and as to his gracious presence, which is with all his people, in all places at the same time; they do not desire to flee from it, but always to have it; and are concerned for it, if at any time it is removed from them, as to their apprehension of it. Or, "from thy face" e; that is, from Christ, who is the face of Jehovah; the image of the invisible God, the express image of his person, in whom all the perfections of God are displayed; and such a likeness, that he that has seen the one has seen the other; he is the Angel of his face or presence, and who always appears before him, and in whom he is seen. Now there is no fleeing from him, for he is everywhere; where God is, his face is: and a sensible sinner desires to flee to him, and not from him; for there is no other refuge to flee unto for life and salvation but to him; and gracious souls desire to be always with him now, and hope to be for ever with him hereafter; they seek him, the face of God, now, and expect to see it more clearly in the world to come.

Gill: Psa 139:8 - -- If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there,.... No man hath ascended or can ascend to heaven of himself; it is an hyperbolical expression, as are tho...

If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there,.... No man hath ascended or can ascend to heaven of himself; it is an hyperbolical expression, as are those that follow; none but Christ has ascended to heaven by his own power, who descended from it; saints hope to go there at death, and, when they do, they find God there; that is his habitation, his throne is there, yea, that is his throne; here he keeps court and has his attendants, and here he will be seen and enjoyed by his people to all eternity;

if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there; which, if understood of the place of the damned, is a place of torment, and a very unfit one to make a bed in, being a lake burning with fire and brimstone; and where the smoke of their torment ascends for ever, and they have no rest day nor night; their worm never dies, and their fire is not quenched; and even here God is: hell is not only naked before him, and all its inhabitants in his view; but he is here in his powerful presence, keeping the devils in chains of darkness; turning wicked men daily into it, pouring out his wrath upon them, placing and continuing an unpassable gulf between them and happy souls: though rather this is to be understood of the grave, in which sense the word is often used; and so Kimchi, Aben Ezra, and Arama, interpret it of the lowest parts of the earth, as opposed to heaven; the grave is a bed to the saints, where they lie down and rest, and sleep till the resurrection morn, Job 14:12; and here the Lord is watching over and keeping their dust, and will raise it up again at the last day. The Targum is,

"there is thy Word.''

Gill: Psa 139:9 - -- If I take the wings of the morning,.... And fly as swift as the morning light to the east, to the extremity of it, as Ben Melech; as far as he could ...

If I take the wings of the morning,.... And fly as swift as the morning light to the east, to the extremity of it, as Ben Melech; as far as he could go that way, as swiftly as the wings of the morning could carry him thither; so the morning is represented by the Heathens as having wings f; or as the rays of the rising sun, called wings for the swiftness of them, Mal 4:2;

and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; in the most distant isles of it, in the farthest parts of the world, the sea being supposed the boundary of it: or "in the uttermost parts of the west" g, as opposed to the morning light and rising sun, which appear in the east; and the sea is often in Scripture put for the west, the Mediterranean sea being to the west of the land of Palestine; and could he go from east to west in a moment, as the above writer observes, there would God be. The Heathens represent Jupiter, their supreme god, as having three eyes, because he reigns in heaven, and in earth, and under the earth h.

Gill: Psa 139:10 - -- Even there shall thy hand lead me,.... For he could not get there with all the assistance of the wings of the morning, could they be had, without the ...

Even there shall thy hand lead me,.... For he could not get there with all the assistance of the wings of the morning, could they be had, without the leadings of divine Providence; and when there, being a good man, should experience the leadings of divine grace; let the people of God be where they will, he heads them as a parent his child, teaching him to go; and as a shepherd his flock, into green pastures, and to fountains of living water; he leads to himself, and to his Son by his Spirit; into communion and fellowship with them, and to a participation of all blessings grace; guides them with his counsel, and directs all their ways and going;

and thy right hand shall hold me; the Lord lays hold on his people, and apprehends them for himself, and claims his interest in them; he holds them in his ways, that they slip and fall not; he upholds them with the right hand of his righteousness, and they are safe; and he holds them from going into or on in wrong ways to their hurt.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 139:1 The statement is understood as generalizing – the psalmist describes what God typically does.

NET Notes: Psa 139:3 Heb “all my ways.”

NET Notes: Psa 139:4 Heb “look, O Lord, you know all of it.”

NET Notes: Psa 139:6 Heb “too amazing [is this] knowledge for me, it is elevated, I cannot attain to it.”

NET Notes: Psa 139:7 Heb “Where can I go from your spirit, and where from your face can I flee?” God’s “spirit” may refer here (1) to his pre...

NET Notes: Psa 139:8 Heb “look, you.”

NET Notes: Psa 139:9 Heb “at the end.”

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:2 Thou knowest my ( a ) downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar off. ( a ) He confesses that neither our actions, thoughts or...

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:3 Thou ( b ) compassest my path and my lying down, and art acquainted [with] all my ways. ( b ) So that they are evidently known to you.

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:4 For [there is] not a word in my ( c ) tongue, [but], lo, O LORD, thou knowest it altogether. ( c ) You know my meaning before I speak.

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:5 Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid thine ( d ) hand upon me. ( d ) You so guide me with your hand, that I can turn no way, but where you ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:7 Whither shall I go from thy ( e ) spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence? ( e ) From your power and knowledge?

Geneva Bible: Psa 139:10 Even there shall thy hand ( f ) lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me. ( f ) Your power holds me so fast that there is no way I can escape from y...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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...

MHCC: Psa 139:7-16 - --We cannot see God, but he can see us. The psalmist did not desire to go from the Lord. Whither can I go? In the most distant corners of the world, in ...

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...

Matthew Henry: Psa 139:7-16 - -- It is of great use to us to know the certainty of the things wherein we have been instructed, that we may not only believe them, but be able to tell...

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...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 139:8-12 - -- The future form אסּק , customary in the Aramaic, may be derived just as well from סלק ( סלק ), by means of the same mode of assimilation...

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...

Constable: Psa 139:1-6 - --1. God's omniscience 139:1-6 139:1 This opening verse expresses the theme of the psalm. God knew David intimately because of His penetrating examinati...

Constable: Psa 139:7-12 - --2. God's omnipresence 139:7-12 139:7 Evidently the confining awareness of God's omniscience led David to try to escape from the Lord. His two rhetoric...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Psa 139:2 God’s presence . The ungodly are unaware of the immediate presence of a holy Creator. They think that God somehow becomes present when we bow our he...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 139 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 139:1, David praises God for his all-seeing providence; Psa 139:17, and for his infinite mercies; Psa 139:19, He defies the wicked; P...

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

Poole: Psalms 139 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This Psalm is esteemed by the Hebrews the most excellent in the whole book. The matter of it is noble and sublime, and so is the style...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 139 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 139:1-6) God knows all things. (Psa 139:7-16) He is every where present. (Psa 139:17-24) The psalmist's hatred to sin, and desire to be led ari...

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 139 (Chapter Introduction) Some of the Jewish doctors are of opinion that this is the most excellent of all the psalms of David; and a very pious devout meditation it is upon...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 139 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 139 To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David. This psalm was written by David, when he lay under the reproach and calumnies of...

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