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Text -- Psalms 28:1-2 (NET)

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Context
Psalm 28
28:1 By David. To you, O Lord, I cry out! My protector, do not ignore me! If you do not respond to me, I will join those who are descending into the grave. 28:2 Hear my plea for mercy when I cry out to you for help, when I lift my hands toward your holy temple!
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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
 · Pit the place of the dead
 · pit the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: SHEOL | Rock | Psalms | Prayer | Poetry | PIT | Oracle | Holy of Holies | GOD, NAMES OF | David | Church | CRY, CRYING | BIBLE, THE, IV CANONICITY | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , 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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 28:2 - -- Towards the holy of holies, because there the ark was; from whence God gave oracular answers to his people.

Towards the holy of holies, because there the ark was; from whence God gave oracular answers to his people.

JFB: Psa 28:1 - -- An earnest cry for divine aid against his enemies, as being also those of God, is followed by the Psalmist's praise in assurance of a favorable answer...

An earnest cry for divine aid against his enemies, as being also those of God, is followed by the Psalmist's praise in assurance of a favorable answer, and a prayer for all God's people. (Psa 28:1-9)

JFB: Psa 28:1 - -- (Psa 18:2, Psa 18:31).

JFB: Psa 28:1 - -- Literally, "from me," deaf or inattentive.

Literally, "from me," deaf or inattentive.

JFB: Psa 28:1 - -- Share their fate.

Share their fate.

JFB: Psa 28:1 - -- Or, "grave" (Psa 30:3).

Or, "grave" (Psa 30:3).

JFB: Psa 28:2 - -- A gesture of prayer (Psa 63:4; Psa 141:2).

A gesture of prayer (Psa 63:4; Psa 141:2).

JFB: Psa 28:2 - -- Place of speaking (Exo 25:22; Num 7:89), where God answered His people (compare Psa 5:7).

Place of speaking (Exo 25:22; Num 7:89), where God answered His people (compare Psa 5:7).

Clarke: Psa 28:1 - -- O Lord my rock - צורי tsuri not only means my rock, but my fountain, and the origin of all the good I possess

O Lord my rock - צורי tsuri not only means my rock, but my fountain, and the origin of all the good I possess

Clarke: Psa 28:1 - -- If thou be silent - If thou do not answer in such a way as to leave no doubt that thou hast heard me, I shall be as a dead man. It is a modern refin...

If thou be silent - If thou do not answer in such a way as to leave no doubt that thou hast heard me, I shall be as a dead man. It is a modern refinement in theology which teaches that no man can know when God hears and answers his prayers, but by an induction of particulars, and by an inference from his promises. And, on this ground, how can any man fairly presume that he is heard or answered at all? May not his inductions be no other than the common occurrences of providence? And may not providence be no more than the necessary occurrence of events? And is it not possible, on this skeptic ground, that there is no God to hear or answer? True religion knows nothing of these abominations; it teaches its votaries to pray to God, to expect an answer from him, and to look for the Holy Spirit to bear witness with their spirits that they are the sons and daughters of God.

Clarke: Psa 28:2 - -- Toward thy holy oracle - דביר קדשך debir kodshecha ; debir properly means that place in the holy of holies from which God gave oracular ...

Toward thy holy oracle - דביר קדשך debir kodshecha ; debir properly means that place in the holy of holies from which God gave oracular answers to the high priest. This is a presumptive proof that there was a temple now standing; and the custom of stretching out the hands in prayer towards the temple, when the Jews were at a distance from it, is here referred to.

Calvin: Psa 28:1 - -- 1.Unto thee, O Jehovah! will I cry The Psalmist begins by declaring that he would betake himself to the help of God alone, which shows both his faith...

1.Unto thee, O Jehovah! will I cry The Psalmist begins by declaring that he would betake himself to the help of God alone, which shows both his faith and his sincerity. Although men labor every where under a multitude of troubles, yet scarcely one in a hundred ever has recourse to God. Almost all having their consciences burdened with guilt, and having never experienced the power of divine grace which might lead them to betake themselves to it, either proudly gnaw the bit or fill the air with unavailing complaints, or, giving way to desperation, faint under their afflictions. By calling God his strength, David more fully shows that he confided in God’s assistance, not only when he was in the shade and in peace, but also when he was exposed to the severest temptations. In comparing himself to the dead, too, he intimates how great his straits were, although his object was not merely to point out the magnitude of his danger, but also to show that when he needed succor, he looked not here and there for it, but relied on God alone, without whose favor there remained no hope for him. It is, therefore, as if he had said, I am nothing if thou leavest me; if thou succourest me not, I perish. It is not enough for one who is in such a state of affliction to be sensible of his misery, unless, convinced of his inability to help himself, and renouncing all help from the world, he betake himself to God alone. And as the Scriptures inform us that God answers true believers when he shows by his operations that he regards their supplications, so the word silent is set in opposition to the sensible and present experience of his aid, when he appears, as it were, not to hear their prayers.

Calvin: Psa 28:2 - -- 2.Hear the voice of my prayers when I cry to thee This repetition is a sign of a heart in anguish. David’s ardor and vehemence in prayer are also i...

2.Hear the voice of my prayers when I cry to thee This repetition is a sign of a heart in anguish. David’s ardor and vehemence in prayer are also intimated by the noun signifying voice, and the verb signifying to cry. He means that he was so stricken with anxiety and fear, that he prayed not coldly, but with burning, vehement desire, like those who, under the pressure of grief, vehemently cry out. In the second clause of the verse, by synecdoche, the thing signified is indicated by the sign. It has been a common practice in all ages for men to lift up their hands in prayer. Nature has extorted this gesture even from heathen idolaters, to show by a visible sign that their minds were directed to God alone. The greater part, it is true, contented with this ceremony, busy themselves to no effect with their own inventions; but the very lifting up of the hands, when there is no hypocrisy and deceit, is a help to devout and zealous prayer. David, however, does not say here that he lifted his hands to heaven, but to the sanctuary, that, aided by its help, he might ascend the more easily to heaven. He was not so gross, or so superstitiously tied to the outward sanctuary, as not to know that God must be sought spiritually, and that men then only approach to him when, leaving the world, they penetrate by faith to celestial glory. But remembering that he was a man, he would not neglect this aid afforded to his infirmity. As the sanctuary was the pledge or token of the covenant of God, David beheld the presence of God’s promised grace there, as if it had been represented in a mirror; just as the faithful now, if they wish to have a sense of God’s nearness to them, should immediately direct their faith to Christ, who came down to us in his incarnation, that he might lift us up to the Father. Let us understand, then, that David clung to the sanctuary with no other view than that by the help of God’s promise he might rise above the elements of the world, which he used, however, according to the appointment of the Law. The Hebrew word דביר , debir, which we have rendered sanctuary, 594 signifies the inner-room of the tabernacle or temple, or the most holy place, where the ark of the covenant was contained, and it is so called from the answers or oracles which God gave forth from thence, to testify to his people the presence of his favor among them.

TSK: Psa 28:1 - -- Unto : Psa 3:4, Psa 5:2, Psa 22:2, Psa 77:1, Psa 142:1 O : Psa 18:2, Psa 42:9; Isa 26:4 *marg. be : Psa 35:22, Psa 83:1 to : Heb. from I become : Psa ...

TSK: Psa 28:2 - -- when : Psa 63:4, Psa 125:5, Psa 134:2, Psa 141:2, Psa 143:6; 2Ch 6:13; 1Ti 2:8 thy holy oracle : or, the oracle of thy sanctuary, Psa 5:7, Psa 138:2; ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 28:1 - -- Unto thee will I cry - That is, under the consciousness of the danger to which I am exposed - the danger of being drawn away into the society o...

Unto thee will I cry - That is, under the consciousness of the danger to which I am exposed - the danger of being drawn away into the society of the wicked. In such circumstances his reliance was not on his own strength; or on his own resolutions; on his own heart; or on his fellowmen. He felt that he was safe only in God, and he appeals to Him, therefore, in this earnest manner, to save him.

O Lord my rock - See the notes at Psa 18:2.

Be not silent to me - Margin, "from me."So the Hebrew. The idea is that of one who will not speak to us, or who will not attend to us. We pray, and we look for an "answer"to our prayers, or, as it were, we expect God to "speak"to us; to utter words of kindness; to assure us of His favor; to declare our sins forgiven.

Lest, if thou be silent to me - If thou dost not answer my supplications.

I become like unto them that go down into the pit - Like those who die; or, lest I be crushed by anxiety and distress, and die. The word "pit"here refers to the grave. So it is used in Psa 30:3; Psa 88:4; Isa 38:18; Isa 14:15, Isa 14:19. The meaning is, that if he did not obtain help from God he despaired of life. His troubles would overwhelm and crush him. He could not bear up under them.

Barnes: Psa 28:2 - -- Hear the voice of my supplications - It was not mental prayer which he offered; it was a petition uttered audibly. When I lift up my hands...

Hear the voice of my supplications - It was not mental prayer which he offered; it was a petition uttered audibly.

When I lift up my hands - To lift up the hands denotes supplication, as this was a common attitude in prayer. See the notes at 1Ti 2:8.

Toward thy holy oracle - Margin, as in Hebrew, "toward the oracle of thy holiness."The word "oracle"as used here denotes the place where the answer to prayer is given. The Hebrew word - דביר de bı̂yr - means properly the inner sanctuary of the tabernacle or the temple, the place where God was supposed to reside, and where He gave responses to the prayers of His people: the same place which is elsewhere called the holy of holies. See the notes at Heb 9:3-14. The Hebrew word is found only here and in 1Ki 6:5, 1Ki 6:16, 1Ki 6:19-23, 1Ki 6:31; 1Ki 7:49; 1Ki 8:6, 1Ki 8:8; 2Ch 3:16; 2Ch 4:20; 2Ch 5:7, 2Ch 5:9. The idea here is that he who prayed stretched out his hands toward that sacred place where God was supposed to dwell. So we stretch out our hands toward heaven - the sacred dwelling-place of God. Compare the notes at Psa 5:7. The Hebrew word is probably derived from the verb to "speak;"and, according to this derivation, the idea is that God spoke to His people; that he "communed"with them; that He answered their prayers from that sacred recess - His special dwelling-place. See Exo 25:22; Num 7:89.

Poole: Psa 28:2 - -- i.e. Towards the holy of holies, which is so called, 1Ki 6:23 , compared with 2Ch 3:10 : compare also 1Ki 6:5 8:6 , because there the ark was; from ...

i.e. Towards the holy of holies, which is so called, 1Ki 6:23 , compared with 2Ch 3:10 : compare also 1Ki 6:5 8:6 , because there the ark was; from whence God gave oracular answers to his people; and to which they accordingly directed their prayers, not only when they drew near to it, but when they were at a distance from it, as Dan 6:10 .

Haydock: Psa 28:1 - -- An invitation to glorify God, with a commemoration of his mighty works. Prepareth. Hebrew, "delivereth," as a midwife (St. Jerome, 5 Edition, Aquil...

An invitation to glorify God, with a commemoration of his mighty works.

Prepareth. Hebrew, "delivereth," as a midwife (St. Jerome, 5 Edition, Aquila) "maketh the hinds to calve;" (Protestants; Haydock) or "to leap, (from eul; Berthier) or frighteneth." Hinds are supposed to bring forth with great difficulty. But the reverse seems to be the case. (St. Chrysostom in Job xxxix. 3.) (Calmet) ---

They are very swift, and trample serpents under their feet, nature having given them this power. (St. Jerome) (Pliny, [Natural History?] vii. 32.) The text may be understood of the last sacrament, which prepares us for our passage; (Berthier) or of matrimony, by means of which the world is peopled with rational beings, whose duty it is to glorify God in his temple. (Haydock) ---

This is also the effect of grace, and of the preaching of the gospel, (Berthier) which inspires people with a desire of running on in the way of perfection. Christ explains to them hidden mysteries in his Church, to which he bring multitudes, like the waters, ruling over them, and enabling them to overcome all temptations, till he crown his elect with eternal peace. (Worthington) ---

Glory. Running thither through fear, or to thank God for rain after a drought.

Haydock: Psa 28:1 - -- Finishing. Septuagint, Greek: exodiou or exodou, may also signify "the going out;" (Haydock) as if the sacred ministers exhorted their successor...

Finishing. Septuagint, Greek: exodiou or exodou, may also signify "the going out;" (Haydock) as if the sacred ministers exhorted their successors to perform their duty in the ensuing week, or on the last day of the feast of tabernacles, Leviticus xxiii. 36. (Calmet) ---

Hebrew has only "A canticle of David," (Haydock) and the rest was not in the Hexapla in the time of Theodoret, so that many pay no attention to it. The author seems to have supposed that the psalm was composed when David had finished the tabernacle, on Sion. (Calmet) (2 Kings vi., and 1 Paralipomenon xvi.) ---

But the psalmist had in view things of far greater importance, the propagation of Christianity among many great potentates. (Worthington) ---

The Fathers explain it in this sense, though it may literally allude (Calmet) to the storm procured by the prayer of Elias, 3 Kings xviii. 1, 41. (Haydock) ---

It might be composed in a thunderstorm, and used on similar occasions, (Muis) when a person had to go from home. (Haydock) ---

The seven voices may allude to the seven sacraments, or trumpets, Apocalypse x. 3. (Berthier) ---

God. Septuagint seem to have read Aleim, or they have taken elim in the same sense, as it signifies "the mighty" as well as "rams." On account of this ambiguity, a double translation is given either by the Septuagint, or rather by some later writer, who may have inserted the explanation, O ye children of God, bring ye to the Lord; (Haydock) which has crept from the margin into the text. (Amama) ---

It is marked as superfluous by Grabe, (Haydock) not being found in the best Greek copies; or at least have an obel, (Eusebius) to insinuate that it was not in Hebrew, in which state it appears in the Gal. Psalter, published in St. Jerome's works. (Calmet) ---

It is not contrary to the original, though more explicit, (Berthier) as the address is made to all the faithful, (Menochius) or to the priests and nobility. (Haydock) ---

The apostles are styled rams, because they beat down error with the two Testaments; whence bishops' mitres have two horns. (Lombard; Amama) ---

"Give praise to the Lord, ye troops of angels; render to the Lord glory and strength." (Chaldean) (Calmet) ---

Be grateful for the favours which are here recounted. (Worthington) ---

Most people now translate, "sons of the mighty." Yet St. Jerome and Houbigant have, "offspring of rams;" filios arietum. Bring lambs to the Lord, as the original may certainly mean; though many who are attached to the Hebrew allow also sons of God. (Berthier) ---

Montfaucon says that Origen marked with a lemniscus, what he judged "a better reading," and thus obelized the first of these versions, and added the second with an asterisk. This liberty has been attended both with good and bad consequences. (Kennicott)

Haydock: Psa 28:2 - -- Honour. Hebrew, "strength," which we must acknowledge. (Haydock) --- The first design of sacrifice is to adore God in spirit. (Worthington) --- ...

Honour. Hebrew, "strength," which we must acknowledge. (Haydock) ---

The first design of sacrifice is to adore God in spirit. (Worthington) ---

Holy court. Hebrew, "in the holy beauty," 1 Paralipomenon xvi. 29. Even the priests were obliged to remain in the court, where they adored God, as sitting upon the Cherubim, in the most holy place (Calmet) in the Catholic Church. (Worthington) ---

External worship must be observed. (Berthier)

Gill: Psa 28:1 - -- Unto thee will I cry,.... This denotes the distress the psalmist was in, fervency and ardour in prayer, resolution to continue in it, and singularity ...

Unto thee will I cry,.... This denotes the distress the psalmist was in, fervency and ardour in prayer, resolution to continue in it, and singularity with respect to the object of it; determining to cry to the Lord only; to which he was encouraged by what follows;

O Lord my rock; he being a strong tower and place of defence to him, in whom were all his safety, and his trust and confidence, and in whom he had an interest;

be not silent to me; or "deaf" q; persons that do not hear are silent, and make no answer; as the Lord seems to be, when he returns no answer to the cries of his people; when he does not arise and help them; when he seems not to take any notice of his and their enemies, but stands at a distance from them, and as if he had forsaken them; see Psa 39:12; the words may be considered, as they are by some, as an address to Christ his rock, his advocate and intercessor; that he would not be silent, but speak for him, and present his supplications to God, with the much incense of his mediation; see 1Sa 7:8;

lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit; either like such that fall into a ditch, and cannot help themselves out, and they cry, and there is none to take them out from thence; or like such that die in battle, and are cast into a pit, and there buried in common with others; which David might fear would be his case, through Saul's violent pursuit after him; or lest he should be like the dead, who are not regarded, and are remembered no more; or lest he should really die by the hands of his enemies, and so be laid in the grave, the pit of corruption; or be in such distress and despair as even the damned in hell be, the pit out of which there is no deliverance.

Gill: Psa 28:2 - -- Hear the voice of my supplications,.... Which proceed from the Spirit of grace and of supplication, and are put up in an humble manner, under a sense ...

Hear the voice of my supplications,.... Which proceed from the Spirit of grace and of supplication, and are put up in an humble manner, under a sense of wants and unworthiness, and on the foot of grace and mercy, and not merit;

when I cry unto thee; as he now did, and determined he would, and continue so doing, until he was heard;

when I lift up my hands toward thy holy oracle: the holy of holies, in the tabernacle and in the temple, which was sometimes so called, 1Ki 6:23; compared with 2Ch 3:10; where were the ark, the mercy seat, and cherubim, between which the Lord dwelt, and gave responses to his people; or heaven itself, which the holy of holies was a figure of; where is the throne of God, and from whence he hears the prayers of his people directed to him; or else Christ himself, who is the most Holy, and the "Debir", or Oracle, who speaks to the Lord for his people; and by whom the Lord speaks to them again, and communes with them. The oracle had its name, "debir", from speaking. Lifting up of the hands is a prayer gesture, and here designs the performance of that duty to God in heaven, through Christ; see Lam 3:41; it was frequently used, even by the Heathens, as a prayer gesture r; see Psa 141:2.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 28:1 Heb “the pit.” The noun בּוֹר (bor, “pit, cistern”) is sometimes used of the grave and/or the re...

NET Notes: Psa 28:2 The Hebrew term דְּבִיר (dÿvir, “temple”) actually refers to the most holy place within the...

Geneva Bible: Psa 28:2 Hear the voice of my supplications, when I cry unto thee, when I lift up my hands toward thy ( b ) holy oracle. ( b ) He counts himself as a dead man...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Psa 28:1-9 - --1 David prays earnestly against his enemies;6 and for the people.

MHCC: Psa 28:1-5 - --David is very earnest in prayer. Observe his faith in prayer; God is my rock, on whom I build my hope. Believers should not rest till they have receiv...

Matthew Henry: Psa 28:1-5 - -- In these verses David is very earnest in prayer. I. He prays that God would graciously hear and answer him, now that, in his distress, he called upo...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 28:1-5 - -- This first half of the Psalm (Psa 28:1) is supplicatory. The preposition מן in connection with the verbs חרשׁ , to be deaf, dumb, and חשׁ...

Constable: Psa 28:1-9 - --Psalm 28 This psalm is similar to Psalm 26 except in this one David's distress was imminent. He believed...

Constable: Psa 28:1-4 - --1. Urgent petition for deliverance 28:1-4 28:1 David cried out in prayer for the Lord's deliverance from his enemies so he would not die. The "pit" re...

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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 28 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 28:1, David prays earnestly against his enemies; Psa 28:6, and for the people.

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 28 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This Psalm seems to be made upon the same occasion with the former, and is mixed, as many others of his Psalms are, of hopes and fears...

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 28 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 28:1-5) A prayer in distress. (Psa 28:6-9) Thanksgiving for deliverance.

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 28 (Chapter Introduction) The former part of this psalm is the prayer of a saint militan and now in distress (Psa 28:1-3), to which is added the doom of God's implacable ene...

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 28 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 28 A Psalm of David. This psalm, Aben Ezra says, David either composed himself, or one of the singers for him; the former see...

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