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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 27:2 - -- My counsellor in all my difficulties, and my comforter and deliverer in all my distresses.
My counsellor in all my difficulties, and my comforter and deliverer in all my distresses.
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The supporter and preserver of my life.
JFB: Psa 27:1 - -- With a general strain of confidence, hope, and joy, especially in God's worship, in the midst of dangers, the Psalmist introduces prayer for divine he...
With a general strain of confidence, hope, and joy, especially in God's worship, in the midst of dangers, the Psalmist introduces prayer for divine help and guidance. (Psa 27:1-14)
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JFB: Psa 27:1 - -- Or, "stronghold"--affording security against all violence. The interrogations give greater vividness to the negation implied.
Or, "stronghold"--affording security against all violence. The interrogations give greater vividness to the negation implied.
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"they" is emphatic; not I, but they were destroyed.
Clarke: Psa 27:1 - -- The Lord is my light and my salvation - This light can never be extinguished by man; the Lord is my salvation, my safeguard, my shield, and my defen...
The Lord is my light and my salvation - This light can never be extinguished by man; the Lord is my salvation, my safeguard, my shield, and my defense; of whom then should I be afraid?
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Clarke: Psa 27:2 - -- When the wicked - came upon me - Near as I appeared to you to be in danger of losing my life, I was safe enough in the hands of the Lord; and those ...
When the wicked - came upon me - Near as I appeared to you to be in danger of losing my life, I was safe enough in the hands of the Lord; and those who thought to have eaten me up, stumbled, failed of their purpose and fell; the Philistine lost his own life.
Calvin: Psa 27:1 - -- 1.Jehovah is my light This commencement may be understood as meaning that David, having already experienced God’s mercy, publishes a testimony of h...
1.Jehovah is my light This commencement may be understood as meaning that David, having already experienced God’s mercy, publishes a testimony of his gratitude. But I rather incline to another meaning, namely, that, perceiving the conflict he had to wage with the sharpest temptations, he fortifies himself beforehand, and as it were brings together matter for confidence: for it is necessary that the saints earnestly wrestle with themselves to repel or subdue the doubts which the flesh is so prone to cherish, that they may cheerfully and speedily betake themselves to prayer. David, accordingly, having been tossed with various tempests, at length recovers himself, and shouts triumphantly over the troubles with which he had been harassed, rejoicing that whenever God displays his mercy and favor, there is nothing to be feared. This is farther intimated by the accumulation of terms which he employs, when he calls God not only his light, but his salvation, and the rock or strength of his life His object was, to put a threefold shield, as it were, against his various fears, as sufficient to ward them off. The term light, as is well known, is used in Scripture to denote joy, or the perfection of happiness. Farther, to explain his meaning, he adds that God was his salvation and the strength of his life, as it was by his help that he felt himself safe, and free from the terrors of death. Certainly we find that all our fears arise from this source, that we are too anxious about our life, while we acknowledge not that God is its preserver. We can have no tranquillity, therefore, until we attain the persuasion that our life is sufficiently guarded, because it is protected by his omnipotent power. The interrogation, too, shows how highly David esteemed the Divine protection, as he thus boldly exults against all his enemies and dangers. Nor assuredly do we ascribe due homage to God, unless, trusting to his promised aid, we dare to boast of the certainty of our safety. Weighing, as it were, in scales the whole power of earth and hell, David accounts it all lighter than a feather, and considers God alone as far outweighing the whole.
Let us learn, therefore, to put such a value on God’s power to protect us as to put to flight all our fears. Not that the minds of the faithful can, by reason of the infirmity of the flesh, be at all times entirely devoid of fear; but immediately recovering courage, let us, from the high tower of our confidence, look down upon all our dangers with contempt. Those who have never tasted the grace of God tremble because they refuse to rely on him, and imagine that he is often incensed against them, or at least far removed from them. But with the promises of God before our eyes, and the grace which they offer, our unbelief does him grievous wrong, if we do not with unshrinking courage boldly set him against all our enemies. When God, therefore, kindly allures us to himself, and assures us that he will take care of our safety, since we have embraced his promises, or because we believe him to be faithful, it is meet that we highly extol his power, that it may ravish our hearts with admiration of himself. We must mark well this comparison, What are all creatures to God? Moreover, we must extend this confidence still farther, in order to banish all fears from our consciences, like Paul, who, when speaking of his eternal salvation, boldly exclaims,
“If God be for us, who can be against us?” (Rom 8:34.)
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Calvin: Psa 27:2 - -- 2.When the wicked, etc There is no reason for translating this sentence, as some interpreters do, into the future tense. 579 But while we retain the ...
2.When the wicked, etc There is no reason for translating this sentence, as some interpreters do, into the future tense. 579 But while we retain the past tense which the prophet employs, the words may be explained in a twofold manner. The meaning but in the prophetic writings it is often used for the future. There does not, however, as Calvin remarks, appear to be any necessity for translating the verbs into the future tense in this passage, in which David may be considered as contemplating the past evidences of the goodness of God towards him, and from them taking encouragement with respect to the future. either is, that David celebrates the victory which he had obtained by the blessing of God; or there is a reference to the manner in which he had encouraged himself to hope the best, even in the midst of his temptations, namely, by thinking of God’s former favors. The latter is the exposition which I prefer. They both, however, amount to the same thing, and imply that David had no reason henceforth to doubt of God’s assistance when he considered his former experience; for nothing is of greater use to confirm our faith, than the remembrance of those instances in which God has clearly given us a proof not only of his grace, but of his truth and power. I connect this verse, accordingly, with the following one. In the former, David recalls to mind the triumphs which, by God’s help, he had already obtained; and from this he concludes, that by what hosts soever he may be environed, or whatever mischief his enemies may devise against him, he would fearlessly stand up against them. The Hebrew word
TSK: Psa 27:1 - -- light : Psa 18:28, Psa 84:11; Job 29:3; Isa 2:5, Isa 60:1-3, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20; Mic 7:7, Mic 7:8; Mal 4:2; Joh 1:1-5, Joh 1:9, Joh 8:12; Rev 21:23,...
light : Psa 18:28, Psa 84:11; Job 29:3; Isa 2:5, Isa 60:1-3, Isa 60:19, Isa 60:20; Mic 7:7, Mic 7:8; Mal 4:2; Joh 1:1-5, Joh 1:9, Joh 8:12; Rev 21:23, Rev 22:5
salvation : Psa 3:8, Psa 18:2, Psa 62:2, Psa 62:6, Psa 68:19, Psa 68:20, Psa 118:14, Psa 118:15, Psa 118:21; Exo 15:2; Isa 12:2, Isa 51:6-8; Isa 61:10; Luk 2:30, Luk 3:6; Rev 7:10
strength : Psa 18:1, Psa 18:2, Psa 18:46, Psa 19:14, Psa 28:7, Psa 28:8, Psa 43:2; Isa 45:24; 2Co 12:9; Phi 4:13
of whom : Psa 11:1, Psa 46:1, Psa 46:2, Psa 56:2-4, Psa 118:6; Mat 8:26; Rom 8:31; Heb 13:6
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TSK: Psa 27:2 - -- wicked : Psa 3:7, Psa 18:4, Psa 22:16, Psa 62:3, Psa 62:4
came upon : Heb. approached against
to : Psa 14:4, Psa 53:4; Job 19:22, Job 31:31
they : Psa...
wicked : Psa 3:7, Psa 18:4, Psa 22:16, Psa 62:3, Psa 62:4
came upon : Heb. approached against
to : Psa 14:4, Psa 53:4; Job 19:22, Job 31:31
they : Psa 18:38-42, Psa 118:12; Isa 8:15; Joh 18:3-6
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 27:1 - -- The Lord is my light - He is to me the source of light. That is, He guides and leads me. Darkness is the emblem of distress, trouble, perplexit...
The Lord is my light - He is to me the source of light. That is, He guides and leads me. Darkness is the emblem of distress, trouble, perplexity, and sorrow; light is the emblem of the opposite of these. God furnished him such light that these troubles disappeared, and his way was bright and happy.
And my salvation - That is, He saves or delivers me.
Whom shall I fear? - Compare Rom 8:31. If God is on our side, or is for us, we can have no apprehension of danger. He is abundantly able to protect us, and we may confidently trust in Him. No one needs any better security against the objects of fear or dread than the conviction that God is his friend.
The Lord is the strength of my life - The support of my life. Or, in other words, He keeps me alive. In itself life is feeble, and is easily crushed out by trouble and sorrow; but as long as God is its strength, there is nothing to fear.
Of whom shall I be afraid? - No one has power to take life away while He defends me. God is to those who put their trust in Him a stronghold or fortress, and they are safe.
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Barnes: Psa 27:2 - -- When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me - This refers, doubtless, to some particular period of his past life when he was i...
When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me - This refers, doubtless, to some particular period of his past life when he was in very great danger, and when God interposed to save him. The margin here is, "approached against me."The literal rendering would be, "in the drawing near against me of the wicked to eat up my flesh."The reference is to some period when they purposed an attack upon him, and when he was in imminent danger from such a threatened attack.
To eat up my flesh - As if they would eat me up. That is, they came upon me like ravening wolves, or hungry lions. We are not to suppose that they literally purposed to eat up his flesh, or that they were cannibals; but the comparison is one that is drawn from the fierceness of wild beasts rushing on their prey. Compare Psa 14:4.
They stumbled and fell - They were overthrown. They failed in their purpose. Either they were thrown into a panic by a false fear, or they were overthrown in battle. The language would be rather applicable to the former, as if by some alarm they were thrown into consternation. Either they differed among themselves and became confused, or God threw obstacles in their way and they were driven back. The general idea is, that God had interposed in some way to prevent the execution of their purposes.
Poole -> Psa 27:2
Poole: Psa 27:2 - -- To eat up my flesh greedy to devour me at one morsel. Compare Job 19:22 31:31 .
To eat up my flesh greedy to devour me at one morsel. Compare Job 19:22 31:31 .
David's prayer that his enemies may not prevail over him.
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Haydock: Psa 27:1 - -- Himself. The Hebrew and Septuagint (Roman and Alexandrian) have simply "of David." ---
Ledavid. (Haydock) ---
The psalm appears to be a sequel o...
Himself. The Hebrew and Septuagint (Roman and Alexandrian) have simply "of David." ---
Ledavid. (Haydock) ---
The psalm appears to be a sequel of the preceding, and we may adopt the rule of the Jews, who refer the psalms which have no title, to the same author and events as those which go before. It may relate to the captives, (Calmet) or to David under persecution, though the Fathers explain it of Christ suffering, &c., and rising again. ---
My God. Hebrew, "rock." This term is so often applied to God, that it might be added to his other ten titles. (Berthier) ---
Lest....to me, is not in the Roman psalter. (Euthymius, &c.) ---
Pit, grave; though it also denote "a prison." (Calmet) ---
St. Jerome has "be not deaf to me," &c. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 27:2 - -- Pray. Hebrew, "cry....to the recess of thy sanctuary, (Haydock) or to thy oracle." Septuagint place the whole for a part. The tabernacle was oft...
Pray. Hebrew, "cry....to the recess of thy sanctuary, (Haydock) or to thy oracle." Septuagint place the whole for a part. The tabernacle was often styled temple, 1 Kings i. 9. To lift up the hands was customary in prayer, (1 Timothy ii. 8., and Lamentations iii. 41.; Berthier) to testify whence our aid must come. (Haydock) ---
The Jews turned towards the holy place in prayer, (3 Kings viii. 48., and Ezechiel viii. 16.) even after the temple was destroyed. (Calmet)
Gill: Psa 27:1 - -- The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?.... The Targum in the king of Spain's Bible explains it, "the Word of the Lord is my light"...
The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?.... The Targum in the king of Spain's Bible explains it, "the Word of the Lord is my light"; and so Ainsworth cites it; that is, Christ the eternal Word, in whom "was life, and that life was the light of men", Joh 1:4; and the psalmist is not to be understood of the light of nature and reason, with which the Logos, or Word, enlightens every man that comes into the world; nor merely in a temporal sense, of giving him the light of prosperity, and delivering him from the darkness of adversity; but of the light of grace communicated to him by him who is the sun of righteousness, and the light of the world; and by whom such who are darkness itself, while in an unregenerate state, are made light, and see light; all the light which is given to men at first conversion is from Christ; and all the after communications and increase of it are from him; as well as all that spiritual joy, peace, and comfort they partake of, which light sometimes signifies, Psa 97:11; and which the psalmist now had an experience of; enjoying the light of God's countenance, and having discoveries of his love, which made him fearless of danger and enemies: and such who are made light in the Lord have no reason to be afraid of the prince of darkness; nor of the rulers of the darkness of this world; nor of all the darkness, distress, and persecutions they are the authors of; nor of the blackness of darkness reserved for ungodly men; for their light is an everlasting one, and they are made meet to be partakers of the inheritance with the saints in light: and the more light they have, the less fear; and what made the psalmist still more fearless was, that Christ was his "salvation"; by the light which the Lord was to him, he saw his need of salvation, he knew that his own righteousness would not save him; he was made acquainted with the design and appointment of the Lord, that Christ should be salvation to the ends of the earth; he had knowledge of the covenant of grace, and faith in it, which was all his salvation, 2Sa 23:5. Salvation was revealed to the Old Testament saints, in the promises, sacrifices, types, and figures of that dispensation; and they looked through them to him for it, and were saved by him, as New Testament believers are; and they had faith of interest in Christ, and knew him to be their Saviour and Redeemer, as did Job, and here the psalmist David: and such who know Christ to be their salvation need not be afraid of any person or thing; not of sin, for though they fear, and should fear to commit it, they need not fear the damning power of it, for they are saved from it; nor of Satan, out of whose hands they are ransomed; nor of the world, which is overcome by Christ; nor of the last enemy, death, which is abolished by him; nor of hell, and wrath to come, for he has delivered them from it;
the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid? meaning not of his natural life, though he was the God of his life, who had given it to him, and had preserved it, and upheld his soul in it; but of his spiritual life: Christ is the author of spiritual life, he implants the principle of it in the hearts of his people, yea, he himself is that life; he lives in them, and is the support of their life; he is the tree of life, and the bread of life, by which it is maintained; and he is the security of it, it is bound up in the bundle of life with him, it is hid with Christ in God; and because he lives they live also; and he gives unto them eternal life, so that they have no reason to be afraid that they shall come short of heaven and happiness; nor need they fear them that kill the body and can do no more; nor any enemy whatever, who cannot reach their spiritual life, nor hurt that, nor hinder them of the enjoyment of eternal life.
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Gill: Psa 27:2 - -- When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me,.... They are wicked men, men of malignant spirits, and evildoers, who are the enemies a...
When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me,.... They are wicked men, men of malignant spirits, and evildoers, who are the enemies and foes of the people of God, and who hate them with an implacable hatred, and do everything they can to distress and afflict them; and such enemies David had, who were many and mighty; and these "came upon" him, or "approached against" him c, they drew near to him to make war with him, as the word signifies d; they attacked him in an hostile manner; and their view was, as he says,
to eat up my flesh, as they eat bread, Psa 14:4; to devour him at once, to make but one morsel of him, to destroy his life, to strip him of his substance, to take away his wives and children, as the Amalekites at Ziklag, 1Sa 30:1;
they stumbled and fell; the Lord put stumbling blocks in their way, and retarded their march, and hindered them from executing their designs; and they fell into the hands of David, and were subdued under him, or fell by death; and these past instances of divine goodness the psalmist calls to mind, to keep up his heart and courage, and animate and strengthen him against the fears of men, of death and hell.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 27:1 Heb “Of whom shall I be afraid?” The rhetorical question anticipates the answer, “No one!”
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NET Notes: Psa 27:2 The Hebrew verbal forms are perfects. The translation assumes the psalmist is generalizing here, but another option is to take this as a report of pas...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 27:1
Geneva Bible: Psa 27:1 "[A Psalm] of David." The LORD [is] my ( a ) light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? the LORD [is] the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afra...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 27:1-14
MHCC -> Psa 27:1-6
MHCC: Psa 27:1-6 - --The Lord, who is the believer's light, is the strength of his life; not only by whom, but in whom he lives and moves. In God let us strengthen ourselv...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 27:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 27:1-6 - -- We may observe here, I. With what a lively faith David triumphs in God, glories in his holy name, and in the interest he had in him. 1. The Lord is...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 27:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 27:1-3 - --
In this first strophe is expressed the bold confidence of faith. It is a hexastich in the caesural schema. Let darkness break in upon him, the darkn...
Constable -> Psa 27:1-14; Psa 27:1-3
Constable: Psa 27:1-14 - --Psalm 27
Many of the psalms begin with a lament and end in trust. This one begins with trust, then sinks...
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