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Text -- Psalms 143:1-5 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Upon terms of strict justice.
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Wesley: Psa 143:3 - -- This is not a reason of what he last said, but an argument to enforce his petition delivered, Psa 143:1.
This is not a reason of what he last said, but an argument to enforce his petition delivered, Psa 143:1.
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My life; nothing less will satisfy him.
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Wesley: Psa 143:3 - -- I am in as hopeless a condition in the eye of man, as those that have lain long in the grave.
I am in as hopeless a condition in the eye of man, as those that have lain long in the grave.
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What thou hast done for thy servants in former times.
JFB -> Psa 143:1; Psa 143:1; Psa 143:2; Psa 143:2; Psa 143:3-4; Psa 143:3-4; Psa 143:5-6; Psa 143:5-6
JFB: Psa 143:1 - -- In structure and style, like the preceding (Psalms 104-142), this Psalm is clearly evinced to be David's. It is a prayer for pardon, and for relief fr...
In structure and style, like the preceding (Psalms 104-142), this Psalm is clearly evinced to be David's. It is a prayer for pardon, and for relief from enemies; afflictions, as usual, producing confession and penitence. (Psa 143:1-12)
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JFB: Psa 143:1 - -- Or, God's regard to the claims which He has permitted His people to make in His covenant.
Or, God's regard to the claims which He has permitted His people to make in His covenant.
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His afflictions--led to confession as just made: he now makes the complaint.
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JFB: Psa 143:5-6 - -- The distress is aggravated by the contrast of former comfort (Psa 22:3-5), for whose return he longs.
The distress is aggravated by the contrast of former comfort (Psa 22:3-5), for whose return he longs.
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JFB: Psa 143:5-6 - -- Which needs rain, as did his spirit God's gracious visits (Psa 28:1; Psa 89:17).
Clarke: Psa 143:1 - -- In thy faithfulness answer me - Thou hast promised to support me in my difficulties, and, though my children should forsake me, never to withdraw th...
In thy faithfulness answer me - Thou hast promised to support me in my difficulties, and, though my children should forsake me, never to withdraw thy loving-kindness from me. See the present unnatural rebellion of my son. Lord, undertake for me!
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Clarke: Psa 143:2 - -- Enter not into judgment - אל תבוא al tabo . Do not come into court, either as a Witness against me, or as a Judge, else I am ruined; for tho...
Enter not into judgment -
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Clarke: Psa 143:3 - -- He hath made me to dwell in darkness - Literally, in dark places. This may be understood of David’ s taking refuge in caves and dens of the ear...
He hath made me to dwell in darkness - Literally, in dark places. This may be understood of David’ s taking refuge in caves and dens of the earth, to escape from his persecuting son; yea, even to take refuge in the tombs, or repositories of the dead.
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Clarke: Psa 143:4 - -- Therefore is my spirit - I am deeply depressed in spirit, and greatly afflicted in body
Therefore is my spirit - I am deeply depressed in spirit, and greatly afflicted in body
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Clarke: Psa 143:4 - -- My heart within me is desolate - It has no companion of its sorrows, no sympathetic friend. I am utterly destitute of comfort.
My heart within me is desolate - It has no companion of its sorrows, no sympathetic friend. I am utterly destitute of comfort.
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Clarke: Psa 143:5 - -- I remember the days of old - Thou hast often helped me, often delivered me. I will therefore trust in thee, for thy mercy is not clean gone from me.
I remember the days of old - Thou hast often helped me, often delivered me. I will therefore trust in thee, for thy mercy is not clean gone from me.
Calvin: Psa 143:1 - -- 1.Hear my prayer, O Jehovah ! It is evident that the oppression of his enemies must have been extreme, when David laments his case in such earnest an...
1.Hear my prayer, O Jehovah ! It is evident that the oppression of his enemies must have been extreme, when David laments his case in such earnest and pathetic terms. The introductory words show that the grief he felt was great. His reason for speaking of the justice and faithfulness of God in connection we have shown elsewhere. Under the term justice, or righteousness, we are not to suppose that he speaks of merit, or hire, as some ignorantly imagine, but of that goodness of God which leads him to defend his people. To the same effect does he speak of God’s truth or faithfulness; for the best proof he can give of his faithfulness is in not forsaking those whom he has promised to help. In helping his people he shows himself to be a just and true God, both in not frustrating their expectation, and in so far as he shows in this extension of mercy what his nature is, that David very properly encourages himself in prayer by making mention of both.
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Calvin: Psa 143:2 - -- 2.And enter not into judgment, 249 etc. I have hinted already why he proceeds to pray for pardon. When overtaken by adversity, we are ever to conclu...
2.And enter not into judgment, 249 etc. I have hinted already why he proceeds to pray for pardon. When overtaken by adversity, we are ever to conclude that it is a rod of correction sent by God to stir us up to pray. Although he is far from taking pleasure in our trials, it is certain that our sins are the cause of his dealing towards us with this severity. While those to whom David was opposed were wicked men, and he was perfectly conscious of the rectitude of his cause as regarded them, he freely acknowledged his sin before God as a condemned suppliant. We are to hold this as a general rule in seeking to conciliate God, that we must pray for the pardon of our sins. If David found refuge nowhere else than in prayer for pardon, who is there amongst us who would presume to come before God trusting in his own righteousness and integrity? Nor does David here merely set an example before God’s people how they ought to pray, but declares that there is none amongst men who could be just before God were he called to plead his cause. The passage is one fraught with much instruction, teaching us, as I have just hinted, that God can only show favor to us in our approaches by throwing aside the character of a judge, and reconciling us to himself in a gratuitous remission of our sins. All human righteousnesses, accordingly, go for nothing, when we come to his tribunal. This is a truth which is universally acknowledged in words, but which very few are seriously impressed with. As there is an indulgence which is mutually extended to one another amongst men, they all come confidently before God for judgment, as if it were as easy to satisfy him as to gain man’s approval. In order to obtain a proper view of the whole matter, we are first to note what is meant by being justified. The passage before us clearly proves that the man who is justified, is he who is judged and reckoned just before God, or whom the heavenly Judge himself acquits as innocent. Now, in denying that any amongst men can claim this innocence, David intimates that any righteousness which the saints have is not perfect enough to abide God’s scrutiny, and thus he declares that all are guilty before God, and can only be absolved in the way of acknowledging they might justly be condemned. Had perfection been a thing to be found in the world, he certainly of all others was the man who might justly have boasted of it; and the righteousness of Abraham and the holy fathers was not unknown to him; but he spares neither them nor himself, but lays it down as the one universal rule of conciliating God, that we must cast ourselves upon his mercy. This may give us some idea of the satanic infatuation which has taken hold of those who speak so much of perfection in holiness, with a view to supersede remission of sins. Such a degree of pride could never be evinced by them, were they not secretly influenced by a brutish contempt of God. They speak in high and magnificent terms of regeneration, as if the whole kingdom of Christ consisted in purity of life. But in doing away with the principal blessing of the everlasting covenant — gratuitous reconciliation — which God’s people are commanded to seek daily, and in puffing up both themselves and others with a vain pride, they show what spirit they are of. Let us hold them in detestation, since they scruple not to put open contempt upon God. This of itself, however, which we have stated, is not enough; for the Papists themselves acknowledge that were God to enter upon an examination of men’s lives as a judge, all would lie obnoxious to just condemnation. And in this respect they are sounder, more moderate and sober, than those Cyclopses and monsters in heresy of whom we have just spoken. But though not arrogating to themselves righteousness in the whole extent of it, they show, by obtruding their merits and satisfactions, that they are very far from following the example of David. They are always ready to acknowledge some defect in their works, and so, in seeking God’s favor, they plead for the assistance of his mercy. But there is nothing intermediate between these two things, which are represented in Scripture as opposites — being justified by faith and justified by works. It is absurd for the Papists to invent a third species of righteousness, which is partly wrought out by works of their own, and partly imputed to them by God in his mercy. Without all doubt, when he affirmed that no man could stand before God were his works brought to judgment, David had no idea of this complex or twofold righteousness, but would shut us up at once to the conclusion that God is only favorable upon the ground of his mercy, since any reputed righteousness of man has no significance before him.
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Calvin: Psa 143:3 - -- 3.For the enemy hath persecuted my soul. Having acknowledged that he only suffered the just punishment of his sins, David comes now to speak of his e...
3.For the enemy hath persecuted my soul. Having acknowledged that he only suffered the just punishment of his sins, David comes now to speak of his enemies; for to have begun by speaking of them would have been a preposterous order. Their cruelty was shown in their not resting satisfied but with the destruction of one who was a saint of God; he declares that he must even now perish unless God should help him speedily. The comparison is not merely to a dead man, but a putrid corpse; for by the dead of an age 250 are meant those who have been long removed from the world. Such language intimates that he not only trusted in God as he who could heal him of a deadly disease, but considered that though his life should be buried, as it were, and long out of mind, God could raise it again, and restore his very ashes.
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Calvin: Psa 143:4 - -- 4.And my spirit, etc. Hitherto he has spoken of the troubles that were without, now he acknowledges the feebleness of his spirits, from which it is e...
4.And my spirit, etc. Hitherto he has spoken of the troubles that were without, now he acknowledges the feebleness of his spirits, from which it is evident that his strength, vas not like that of the rock, imperturbable or without feeling, but that, while overwhelmed with grief as to the feeling of the flesh, he owed his support entirely to faith and the grace of the Spirit,. We are taught by his example not to throw up the conflict in despair, however much we may be weakened, and even exanimated by afflictions, as God will enable us to surmount them, if we only rise to him with our hearts amidst all our anxieties.
In the next verse David mentions that he had diligently sought means whereby to mitigate his grief. It is not to be wondered at, that many who spontaneously give themselves up to inaction, should sink under their trials, not using means to invigorate themselves by calling to remembrance the grace of God. Sometimes, it is true, our trials are only more keenly felt when we recall the former kindness which God may have shown to us, the comparison tending to awaken our feelings, and render them more acute; but David proposed a different end than this to himself, and gathered confidence from the past mercies of God. The very best method in order to obtain relief in trouble, when we are about to faint under it, is to call to mind the former loving-kindness of the Lord. Nor does David mean such as he had experienced from childhood, as some have thought, adopting in my judgment too restricted a sense; for the word
Defender -> Psa 143:2
Defender: Psa 143:2 - -- No man is good enough to earn salvation by his own merits (Rom 3:10, Rom 3:23). Anyone who would be saved must come only through faith in Christ, "bei...
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TSK: Psa 143:2 - -- enter not : Psa 130:3; Job 14:3
in thy sight : Exo 34:7; Job 4:17, Job 9:2, Job 9:3, Job 15:14, Job 25:4; Ecc 7:20; Rom 3:20; Gal 2:16; 1Jo 1:10
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TSK: Psa 143:3 - -- the enemy : Psa 7:1, Psa 7:2, Psa 17:9-13, Psa 35:4, Psa 54:3, Psa 142:6
smitten : Psa 7:5; 2Sa 2:22, 2Sa 18:11
made me : Psa 31:12, Psa 31:13, Psa 88...
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TSK: Psa 143:4 - -- is my spirit : Psa 55:5, Psa 61:2, Psa 77:3, Psa 102:1 *title Psa 124:4, Psa 142:3; Job 6:27
my heart : Psa 25:16, Psa 102:3, Psa 102:4, Psa 119:81-83...
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TSK: Psa 143:5 - -- remember : Psa 42:6, Psa 77:5, Psa 77:6, Psa 77:10-12, Psa 111:4; Deu 8:2, Deu 8:3; 1Sa 17:34-37, 1Sa 17:45-50; Isa 63:7-14; Mic 6:5
remember : Psa 42:6, Psa 77:5, Psa 77:6, Psa 77:10-12, Psa 111:4; Deu 8:2, Deu 8:3; 1Sa 17:34-37, 1Sa 17:45-50; Isa 63:7-14; Mic 6:5
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 143:1 - -- Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear ... - See Psa 4:1, note; Psa 5:1, note. In thy faithfulness answer me - That is, Show thy faithfulness t...
Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear ... - See Psa 4:1, note; Psa 5:1, note.
In thy faithfulness answer me - That is, Show thy faithfulness to thy promises. God had made gracious promises to David (compare Ps. 89:19-37), and he now pleads that he would remember those promises, and accomplish in his behalf what he had said he would. God has also made gracious promises to his people, and they may always plead those promises as a reason why they should be heard, and why their prayers should be answered.
And in thy righteousness - Compare Psa 31:1. In thy disposition to do right; to vindicate a righteous cause; to interpose when wrong is done. We, though sinners before God, may feel that our cause is a just one as toward our fellowmen, and, when wronged, we may ask God to interpose, as a righteous God, in our behalf. We cannot, however, ask him to save us on the ground of our righteousness toward him, for we have no such righteousness. See Psa 143:2.
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Barnes: Psa 143:2 - -- And enter not into judgment with thy servant - Do not deal with me on the ground of justice as toward "thee;"do not mark my own offences agains...
And enter not into judgment with thy servant - Do not deal with me on the ground of justice as toward "thee;"do not mark my own offences against thee, when I plead that justice may be done as between me and my fellow-men. While I plead that thou wouldst judge righteously between me and them, I am conscious that I could not claim thy needed interposition on the ground of any righteousness toward thee. There I must confess that I am a sinner; there I can rely only on mercy; there I could not hope to be justified.
For in thy sight - As before thee; in thy presence; by thee.
Shall no man living - No one of the race, no matter what his rank, his outward conduct, his gentleness, his amiableness, his kindness; no matter how just and upright he may be toward his fellow-men.
Be justified - Be regarded as righteous; be acquitted from blame; be held to be innocent. The meaning is, "I do not come before thee and plead for thy favor on the ground of any claim on thee, for I am conscious that I am a sinner, and that my only hope is in thy mercy."See the notes at Rom 3:20. Compare Job 4:17; Job 9:2, Job 9:20; Job 15:14-16; Job 25:4-6. This is a great and momentous truth in regard to man; it is the foundation of the necessity for a plan of salvation through an atonement - for some way in which man "may"properly be regarded and treated as righteous. Assuredly every man, conscious of what he is in himself, may and should fervently pray that God "would"not enter into judgment with him; that he would not mark his offences; that he would not judge him as strict justice would demand. Our hope is in the "mercy,"not in the "justice"of God.
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Barnes: Psa 143:3 - -- For the enemy hath persecuted my soul - Has persecuted me; has sought my life. He hath smitten my life down to the ground - He has, as it...
For the enemy hath persecuted my soul - Has persecuted me; has sought my life.
He hath smitten my life down to the ground - He has, as it were, trampled me down to the earth. The word rendered "smitten"means to break in pieces, to beat small, to crush. See Psa 72:4; Psa 89:10; Job 6:9. His very life seemed to be crushed out as one that is trodden down to the ground.
He hath made me to dwell in darkness - He has made my life like that of one who dwells in darkness; he has made it a life of sorrow, so that I have no comfort - no light.
As those that have been long dead - A similar expression occurs in Lam 3:6 : "He hath set me in dark places, as they that be dead of old."The same Hebrew words are used. The word rendered "long"means, age, duration, eternity: Psa 139:24. The idea here is, that his condition was like that of those who had been long in their graves; who had long since ceased to see any light; whose abode was utter and absolute gloom.
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Barnes: Psa 143:4 - -- Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me - See the notes at Psa 77:3. Compare Psa 42:5-7. His spirit was broken and crushed. He was in a st...
Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me - See the notes at Psa 77:3. Compare Psa 42:5-7. His spirit was broken and crushed. He was in a state of despair as to any human help.
My heart within me is desolate - I have no comfort; no cheerfulness; no hope. My soul is like the waste desert where there is no water; where nothing grows; where there are only rocks and sands.
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Barnes: Psa 143:5 - -- I remember the days of old - Former times. (1) as contrasted with my present condition. (2) as times when I called upon thee, and thou didst in...
I remember the days of old - Former times.
(1) as contrasted with my present condition.
(2) as times when I called upon thee, and thou didst interpose.
(3) as encouraging me now to come to thee, and spread out my case before thee. See Psa 77:5-11, note; Psa 42:4, note.
I meditate on all thy works ... - On what thou hast done; on thy gracious interpositions in the time of trial; on the manifestations of thy power in my behalf, and in behalf of thy people. I call all this to mind, remembering that thou art an unchangeable God; that thou hast the same power still; that thou canst interpose now as thou didst then; and that, as an unchangeable God, thou wilt do it in the same circumstances. I, therefore, come to thee, and pray that thou wilt interpose in my behalf.
Poole: Psa 143:2 - -- But when I appeal to thy righteousness, I do it only with respect to mine enemies, whose cause as well as their persons is worse than mine, but not ...
But when I appeal to thy righteousness, I do it only with respect to mine enemies, whose cause as well as their persons is worse than mine, but not in reference to thee, as if I could absolutely justify myself upon a severe trial at the tribunal of thy justice; for if thou shouldst rigorously examine all the passages of my heart and life, I dread the thoughts and consequences of it.
Be justified to wit, upon terms of strict justice, without thy indulgence and infinite mercy.
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Poole: Psa 143:3 - -- This is not a reason of what he last said, Psa 143:2 , but an argument to enforce his petition delivered Psa 143:1 , and repeated Psa 143:7 , &c. Fo...
This is not a reason of what he last said, Psa 143:2 , but an argument to enforce his petition delivered Psa 143:1 , and repeated Psa 143:7 , &c. For though I am not faultless, if thou shouldst make an exact search into me, yet mine enemies are more culpable and highly unjust, and therefore I hope for thy help against them, from thy justice as well as mercy.
My soul i.e. my life; for nothing less will satisfy him.
He hath smitten my life down to the ground he hath beaten me down to the ground, where I lie struggling for life.
He hath made me to dwell in darkness he hath forced me to have mine abode in dark vaults and caves, where I am out of sight and memory, and in as forlorn and hopeless a condition in the eye of man as those that have lain long rotting in the grave.
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Poole: Psa 143:4 - -- My spirit overwhelmed within me See Poole "Psa 61:2" See Poole "Psa 142:3".
Is desolate deprived of all hope and comfort. Or, is astonished.
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Poole: Psa 143:5 - -- I remember the days of old i.e. what thou hast done for thy servants in former times; which he mentions either,
1. As matter of terror, to consider ...
I remember the days of old i.e. what thou hast done for thy servants in former times; which he mentions either,
1. As matter of terror, to consider how unlike God now was unto himself and to his former dealings; or,
2. As matter of support from former experience, because God was still the same. Either way it drives him to his prayers, which here follow.
Haydock: Psa 143:1 - -- The prophet praiseth God, and prayeth to be delivered from his enemies. No worldly happiness is to be compared with that of serving God.
Whose. He...
The prophet praiseth God, and prayeth to be delivered from his enemies. No worldly happiness is to be compared with that of serving God.
Whose. Hebrew, "our." This makes quite a different sense from the ancient versions, which refer what follows to the rebels, who had no cause to complain of David's government, ver. 14. (Calmet) ---
St. Jerome, however, agrees with the Hebrew, "that our sons may be, " &c. Protestants asher means "whose (ver. 11.) and that." (Haydock) ---
If we supply, they said, the text and versions will give the same sense, (Genebrard; Berthier) as it is inserted [in] ver. 15. (Haydock) ---
Decked. Hebrew, "our daughters, like corner-stones cut like a temple," (Montanus) or "palace." (Protestants)
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Haydock: Psa 143:1 - -- Goliath. Hebrew has simply, "of David." (Haydock) ---
St. Hilary thinks that the Septuagint added the rest by inspiration, (Calmet) because this w...
Goliath. Hebrew has simply, "of David." (Haydock) ---
St. Hilary thinks that the Septuagint added the rest by inspiration, (Calmet) because this was David's first exploit in war. (Worthington) ---
But others pay no deference to this part of the title. The Chaldean, however, seems to allude to the same victory, (ver. 10.) and the Syriac to that which David obtained over Asaph, brother of Goliath, 1 Paralipomenon xx. 5. (Calmet) ---
David prays that he may overcome the Philistines, and give thanks in Psalm xvii. (Ferrand) ---
These two psalms are very much alike, and this seems to have been written after the rebels were discomfited, while the 17th expresses the sentiments of the prophet, towards the end of his life, for all his victories. (Calmet) ---
Zorobabel after the defeat of God, (Ezechiel xxxviii.; Origen) or the Machabees; (Greek paraphrast.) or Jesus Christ might adopt these sentiments. (Holy Fathers) ---
Kimchi and Goan refer the psalm to the Messias. (Calmet) ---
God. Hebrew, "rock." ---
Fingers. Which chose the five pebbles. He was to exert himself, and yet to acknowledge that all success came from God. (Berthier) ---
He had not been trained to war, when he overcame Goliath. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 143:2 - -- Mercy. "All the titles of God remind us of his benefits." (St. Jerome) ---
My people. After the defeat of the rebels, (Calmet) and the death of ...
Mercy. "All the titles of God remind us of his benefits." (St. Jerome) ---
My people. After the defeat of the rebels, (Calmet) and the death of Isboseth. (Berthier) ---
Hebrew may also be "peoples," as Psalm xvii, (Syriac, &c.) including them, and the various nations that were subdued by David. (Calmet) ---
Conquerors are generally in confusion, while those who keep their passions under are free, 2 Corinthians iii. 17. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 143:3 - -- To him. Hebrew, "thou dost acknowledge him." (St. Jerome) (Haydock) ---
In the transport of gratitude, he reflects on his own weakness, Job vii....
To him. Hebrew, "thou dost acknowledge him." (St. Jerome) (Haydock) ---
In the transport of gratitude, he reflects on his own weakness, Job vii. 17., and Romans viii. 31. (Calmet) ---
Before Christ, all mankind were undeserving of revelation. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 143:4 - -- Vanity. Hebrew hebel, "nothing, a vapour," &c., Ecclesiastes i. 1., and James iv. 15. (Haydock) ---
Our lives resemble a shadow, which is the le...
Vanity. Hebrew hebel, "nothing, a vapour," &c., Ecclesiastes i. 1., and James iv. 15. (Haydock) ---
Our lives resemble a shadow, which is the less distinct, the more it increases. (Berthier) ---
As it cannot subsist of itself, so neither can man without God. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 143:5 - -- Mountains. The proud, (Origen) spirits. (St. Hilary) ---
Come to my assistance, as thou didst appear on Sinai, Exodus xix. 16., and Psalm xvii. 8....
Mountains. The proud, (Origen) spirits. (St. Hilary) ---
Come to my assistance, as thou didst appear on Sinai, Exodus xix. 16., and Psalm xvii. 8. (Calmet) ---
This is a poetical description of God's aid.
Gill: Psa 143:1 - -- Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear to my supplications,.... With these requests David begins the psalm; for it was to no purpose to pray and were heard;...
Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear to my supplications,.... With these requests David begins the psalm; for it was to no purpose to pray and were heard; and for which he always appears to be concerned, as every good man will, and not to be heard only, but to be answered, as follows;
in thy faithfulness answer me, and in thy righteousness; he does not plead his own faith, with which he believed in God, as rama interprets it; though the prayer of faith is very effectual; but the faithfulness of God to his promises; he had promised to hear, answer, and deliver such as called on him in a time of trouble; and he is faithful that has promised, nor will he suffer his faithfulness to fail; he cannot deny himself; and on this the psalmist relied for an answer, as well as desired and expected it; not on account of his own righteousness, but either on account of the goodness and grace of God, sometimes designed by righteousness, or because of the righteousness of Christ, or for the sake of Christ, the Lord our righteousness; on whose account God is just and faithful to forgive sin, the blessing the psalmist wanted, as appears from Psa 143:2.
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Gill: Psa 143:2 - -- And enter not into judgment with thy servant,.... The house of judgment, as the Targum, or court of judicature; God is a Judge, and there is and will ...
And enter not into judgment with thy servant,.... The house of judgment, as the Targum, or court of judicature; God is a Judge, and there is and will be a judgment, universal, righteous, and eternal; and there is a day fixed for it, and a judgment seat before which all must stand, and a law according to which all must be judged; but the psalmist knew he was but a man, and could not contend with God; and a sinful creature, and could not answer him for one of a thousand faults committed by him; and though his servant, yet an unprofitable one; his nature, his heart, his thoughts, words, and actions, would not bear examining, nor stand the test of the holy law of God; nor was he able to answer the demands of divine justice in his own person; and therefore pleads for pardon and acceptance through Christ and his righteousness, and entreats that God would not proceed against him in a judicial way, now nor hereafter;
for in thy sight shall no man living be justified; in a legal sense, so as to be acquitted in open court, and not condemned; that is, by the deeds of the law, as the apostle explains it, Rom 3:20; by obedience to it, by a man's own works of righteousness; because these are imperfect, are opposed to the grace of God, and would disannul the death of Christ, and encourage boasting; and much less in the sight of God; for, however men may be justified hereby in their own sight, and before men, in their esteem and account, yet not before God, the omniscient God; who sees not as man sees, and judges not according to the outward appearance, and is perfectly holy and strictly just; and none but the righteousness of Christ can make men righteous, or justify them before him; and this can and does, and presents men unblamable and irreprovable in his sight.
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Gill: Psa 143:3 - -- For the enemy hath persecuted my soul,.... Which is to be connected with Psa 143:1; and is a reason why he desires his prayer might be answered, seein...
For the enemy hath persecuted my soul,.... Which is to be connected with Psa 143:1; and is a reason why he desires his prayer might be answered, seeing his enemy, either Saul, or Absalom his own son, persecuted him, or pursued him in order to take away his soul, or life; or Satan, the enemy and avenger, who goes about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour; or persecuting men, who are his emissaries and instruments, whom he instigates to persecute the Lord's people, and employs them therein;
he hath smitten my life down to the ground: brought him into a low, mean, and abject state, and near to death; had with a blow struck him to the ground, and left him wallowing in the mire and dirt, just ready to expire. The phrase is expressive of a very distressing state and condition. Some render it "my company" r; meaning the men that were with him, his soldiers, who were reduced to a low condition with him, and greatly enfeebled and dispirited;
he hath made me to dwell in darkness: in the sides of the cave, as Kimchi; see 2Sa 24:3; or in great affliction of body and mind, frequently signified by darkness, as prosperity is by light; he was not only obliged by his enemy to hide himself in woods and wildernesses, and in caves and dens, but was filled with gloomy apprehensions of things, Psa 88:6;
as those that have been long dead; or "of old" s, an age or two ago, who are out of mind and forgotten, and of whom there is no hope of their coming to life again until the resurrection; or who are "dead for ever" t; will remain so till that time comes; signifying hereby his hopeless, helpless, and forlorn state and condition; see Psa 31:12.
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Gill: Psa 143:4 - -- Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me,.... Covered over with grief, borne down with sorrow, ready to sink and fail; See Gill on Psa 142:3;
m...
Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me,.... Covered over with grief, borne down with sorrow, ready to sink and fail; See Gill on Psa 142:3;
my heart within me is desolate; destitute of the spirit and presence of God, and with respect to the exercise of grace, and filled with fears and misgivings; or "astonished" u, at the providence he was under, like one stunned and filled with sore amazement, not knowing what to make of things, or what the issue of them would be; so David's antitype was "sore amazed" in the garden, when his troubles and agonies came upon him, Mar 14:33.
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Gill: Psa 143:5 - -- I remember the days of old,.... Former times he had read and heard of, in which the Lord appeared for his people that trusted in him; or the former pa...
I remember the days of old,.... Former times he had read and heard of, in which the Lord appeared for his people that trusted in him; or the former part of his own life, his younger days, when the Lord delivered him from the lion and bear, and from the uncircumcised Philistine, whom he slew; and made him victorious in battles, and preserved him from the rage and malice of Saul. If this was written on account of Absalom, those times of deliverance he called to mind, in order to encourage his faith and hope, and cheer his drooping spirits;
I meditate on all thy works; I muse on the work of thy hands; the works of creation and providence, in order to observe the instances of divine power, wisdom, and goodness in them; and from thence fetch arguments, to engage his trust and confidence in the Lord: he both thought of these things within himself, and he "talked" w of them to his friends that were with him, as the last of these words used may signify; and all this he did to cheer his own spirit, and the spirits of the men that were with him, in the time of distress and danger.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 143:1 Psalm 143. As in the previous psalm, the psalmist laments his persecuted state and asks the Lord to deliver him from his enemies.
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NET Notes: Psa 143:3 Dark regions refers to Sheol, which the psalmist views as a dark place located deep in the ground (see Ps 88:6).
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NET Notes: Psa 143:4 Heb “in my midst my heart is shocked.” For a similar use of the Hitpolel of שָׁמֵם (shamem), see Isa 5...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 143:1 "A Psalm of David." Hear my prayer, O LORD, give ear to my supplications: ( a ) in thy faithfulness answer me, [and] in thy ( b ) righteousness.
( a ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 143:2 And enter not into judgment with thy servant: for in thy ( c ) sight shall no man living be justified.
( c ) He know that his afflictions were God's ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 143:3 For the enemy hath persecuted my soul; he hath smitten my life down to the ground; he hath made me to dwell in darkness, as those that have been ( d )...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 143:4 Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me; my ( e ) heart within me is desolate.
( e ) So that only by faith and by the grace of God's Spirit was ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 143:5 I remember the ( f ) days of old; I meditate on all thy works; I muse on the work of thy hands.
( f ) That is, your great benefits of old, and the ma...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 143:1-12
TSK Synopsis: Psa 143:1-12 - --1 David prays for favour in judgment.3 He complains of his griefs.5 He strengthens his faith by meditation and prayer.7 He prays for grace;9 for deliv...
MHCC -> Psa 143:1-6
MHCC: Psa 143:1-6 - --We have no righteousness of our own to plead, therefore must plead God's righteousness, and the word of promise which he has freely given us, and caus...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 143:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 143:1-6 - -- Here, I. David humbly begs to be heard (Psa 143:1), not as if he questioned it, but he earnestly desired it, and was in care about it, for, having d...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 143:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 143:1-6 - --
The poet pleads two motives for the answering of his prayer which are to be found in God Himself, viz., God's אמוּנה , truthfulness, with whic...
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 143:1-12 - --Psalm 143
In this psalm David prayed for deliverance and guidance. As in the previous psalm, he called o...
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