
Text -- Psalms 18:12 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
His glorious and powerful appearance.

Or, passed away, vanished, being dissolved into showers.
JFB -> Psa 18:12
JFB: Psa 18:12 - -- Out of this obscurity, which impresses the beholder with awe and dread, He reveals Himself by sudden light and the means of His terrible wrath (Jos 10...
Clarke: Psa 18:12 - -- At the brightness that was before him his thick clouds passed - The word נגה nogah signifies the lightning. This goes before him: the flash is...
At the brightness that was before him his thick clouds passed - The word

Clarke: Psa 18:12 - -- Hail-stones and coals of fire - This was the storm that followed the flash and the peal; for it is immediately added: -
Hail-stones and coals of fire - This was the storm that followed the flash and the peal; for it is immediately added: -
Calvin -> Psa 18:12
Calvin: Psa 18:12 - -- 12.At the brightness, etc The Psalmist again returns to the lightnings which, by dividing and as it were cleaving the clouds, lay open the heaven; an...
12.At the brightness, etc The Psalmist again returns to the lightnings which, by dividing and as it were cleaving the clouds, lay open the heaven; and, therefore, he says, that the clouds of God (that is to say, those which he had set before him, in token of his anger, for the purpose of depriving men of the enjoyment of the light of his countenance) passed away at the brightness which was before him These sudden changes affect us with a much more lively sense of the power and agency of God than natural phenomena which move on in one uniform course. He adds, that there followed hail-storm and coals of fire; for when the thunder separates and rends asunder the clouds, it either breaks out in lightnings, or the clouds resolve themselves into hail.
TSK -> Psa 18:12

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 18:12
Barnes: Psa 18:12 - -- At the brightness that was before him - From the flash - the play of the lightnings that seemed to go before him. His thick clouds passed ...
At the brightness that was before him - From the flash - the play of the lightnings that seemed to go before him.
His thick clouds passed - or, vanished. They seemed to pass away. The light, the flash, the blaze, penetrated those clouds, and seemed to dispel, or to scatter them. The whole heavens were in a blaze, as if there were no clouds, or as if the clouds were all driven away. The reference here is to the appearance when the vivid flashes of lightning seem to penetrate and dispel the clouds, and the heavens seem to be lighted up with a universal flame.
Hail-stones - That is, hailstones followed, or fell.
And coals of fire - There seemed to be coals of fire rolling along the ground, or falling from the sky. In the corresponding place in 2Sa 22:13 the expression is, "Through the brightness before him were coals of fire kindled."That is, fires were kindled by the lightning. The expression in the psalm is more terse and compact, but the reason of the change cannot be assigned.
Poole -> Psa 18:12
Poole: Psa 18:12 - -- At his glorious and powerful appearance
his thick clouds passed away i.e. vanished, (as this word is oft taken, as Psa 90:5,6 Isa 29:5 Hab 3:10 ) ...
At his glorious and powerful appearance
his thick clouds passed away i.e. vanished, (as this word is oft taken, as Psa 90:5,6 Isa 29:5 Hab 3:10 ) being dissolved into showers of hail-stones, &c.
Haydock -> Psa 18:12
Haydock: Psa 18:12 - -- For. I speak from experience. (Calmet) ---
If I had no other inducement, I would observe this law for the consolation, (Haydock) and repeated adva...
For. I speak from experience. (Calmet) ---
If I had no other inducement, I would observe this law for the consolation, (Haydock) and repeated advantages which I have derived from it. (Theodoret) ---
Those who keep the same [law], and content not themselves with reading or hearing only, may feel the same impressions. ---
Reward: on which account the prophet declares that he observed the justifications; (Psalm cxviii. 112.) though that passage is corrupted in the Protestant version. (Worthington) ---
Hebrew, "wherefore thy servant shall teach them;" (St. Jerome) or rather, "is instructed by them, and convinced that in keeping them there are frequent falls. Who," &c., 13. (Calmet) ---
Hekeb may indeed signify "a fall," or tripping up the heels. But it is more commonly rendered "a reward," (as Protestants, Montanus, &c., here agree) or end, as 1 Peter (i. 9.) has it. (Haydock) ---
The instruction, which the observer of the laws obtains, arises from that observance, inasmuch as "he is attentive to them." Septuagint, Greek: phulassei auta. This must therefore be understood, and is well expressed by Custodit. Taste, and see that the Lord is sweet, Psalm xxxiii. 9. (Berthier)
Gill -> Psa 18:12
Gill: Psa 18:12 - -- At the brightness that was before him, The lightning that came out of the thick clouds; which may denote, either the coming of Christ to take vengean...
At the brightness that was before him, The lightning that came out of the thick clouds; which may denote, either the coming of Christ to take vengeance on the Jewish nation, which was swift and sudden, clear and manifest; or the spreading of the Gospel in the Gentile world, in which Christ, the brightness of his Father's glory, appeared to the illumination of many; see Mat 24:27; and both may be intended, as the effects following show;
his thick clouds passed; that is, passed away; the gross darkness, which had for so many years covered the Gentile world, was removed when God sent forth his light and truth; and multitudes, who were darkness itself, were made light in the Lord;
hail stones and coals of fire; the same Gospel that was enlightening to the Gentiles, and the savour of life unto life unto them, was grievous, like hail stones, and tormenting, scorching, irritating, and provoking, like coals of fire, and the savour of death unto death, to the Jews; when God provoked them, by sending the Gospel among the Gentiles, and calling them: or these may design the heavy, awful, and consuming judgments of God upon them, which are sometimes signified by hail storms; see Rev 8:7. In 2Sa 22:13, it is only, "through the brightness before him were coals of fire kindled".

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 18:1-50
MHCC -> Psa 18:1-19
MHCC: Psa 18:1-19 - --The first words, " I will love thee, O Lord, my strength," are the scope and contents of the psalm. Those that truly love God, may triumph in him as ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 18:1-19
Matthew Henry: Psa 18:1-19 - -- The title gives us the occasion of penning this psalm; we had it before (2Sa 22:1), only here we are told that the psalm was delivered to the chief...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 18:10-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 18:10-12 - --
(Heb.: 18:11-13) The storm, announcing the approaching outburst of the thunderstorm, was also the forerunner of the Avenger and Deliverer. If we co...
Constable -> Psa 18:1-50; Psa 18:3-28
Constable: Psa 18:1-50 - --Psalm 18
As the title indicates, David wrote this psalm after he had subdued his political enemies and h...
