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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Which implies contempt and reproach.
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Wesley: Psa 3:7 - -- Their strength and the instruments of their cruelty. He compares them to wild beasts.
Their strength and the instruments of their cruelty. He compares them to wild beasts.
Or, "myriads," any very great number (compare 2Sa 16:18).
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JFB: Psa 3:7 - -- God is figuratively represented as asleep to denote His apparent indifference (Psa 7:6). The use of "cheekbone" and "teeth" represents his enemies as ...
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God took his part, utterly depriving the enemy of power to injure.
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An ascription of praise to a delivering God, whose favor is an efficient benefit.
Clarke: Psa 3:6 - -- I Will not be afraid of ten thousands - Strength and numbers are nothing against the omnipotence of God. He who has made God his refuge certainly ha...
I Will not be afraid of ten thousands - Strength and numbers are nothing against the omnipotence of God. He who has made God his refuge certainly has no cause to fear.
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Clarke: Psa 3:7 - -- Arise, O Lord - Though he knew that God had undertaken his defense, yet he knew that his continued protection depended on his continual prayer and f...
Arise, O Lord - Though he knew that God had undertaken his defense, yet he knew that his continued protection depended on his continual prayer and faith. God never ceases to help as long as we pray. When our hands hang down, and we restrain prayer before him, we may then justly fear that our enemies will prevail
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Clarke: Psa 3:7 - -- Those blast smitten - That is, Thou wilt smite. He speaks in full confidence of God’ s interference; and knows as surely that he shall have the...
Those blast smitten - That is, Thou wilt smite. He speaks in full confidence of God’ s interference; and knows as surely that he shall have the victory, as if he had it already. Breaking the jaws and the teeth are expressions which imply, confounding and destroying an adversary; treating him with extreme contempt; using him like a dog, etc.
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Clarke: Psa 3:8 - -- Salvation belongeth unto the Lord - It is God alone who saves. He is the fountain whence help and salvation come; and to him alone the praise of all...
Salvation belongeth unto the Lord - It is God alone who saves. He is the fountain whence help and salvation come; and to him alone the praise of all saved souls is due. His blessing is upon his people. Those who are saved from the power and the guilt of sin are his people. His mercy saved them; and it is by his blessing being continually upon them, that they continue to be saved. David adds his selah here also: mark this
1. Salvation comes from God
2. Salvation is continued by God
These are great truths; mark them
Calvin: Psa 3:7 - -- 7.Arise, O Lord As in the former verses David boasted of his quiet state, it would now appear he desires of the Lord to be preserved in safety during...
7.Arise, O Lord As in the former verses David boasted of his quiet state, it would now appear he desires of the Lord to be preserved in safety during the whole of his life; as if he had said, Lord, since thou hast overthrown my enemies, grant that this thy goodness may follow me, and be continued even to the end of my course. But because it is no uncommon thing for David, in the Psalms, to mingle together various affections, it seems more probable, that, after having made mention of his confidence in God, he returns again to make the same prayers as at the beginning. 45 He therefore asks to be preserved, because he was in eminent peril. What follows concerning the smiting of his enemies, may be explained in two ways: either that in praying he calls to his remembrance his former victories, or that having experienced the assistance of God, and obtained the answer of his prayers, he now follows it up by thanksgiving: and this last meanings I am much inclined to adopt. In the first place, then, he declares that he fled to God for help in dangers, and humbly prayed for deliverance, and after salvation had been granted him, he gives thanks, by which he testifies, that he acknowledged God to be the author of the deliverance which he had obtained. 46
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Calvin: Psa 3:8 - -- 8.Salvation belongeth unto the Lord Because ל is sometimes used by the Hebrews for מך Min, some not improperly translate this clause, Salva...
8.Salvation belongeth unto the Lord Because
Defender -> Psa 3:8
Defender: Psa 3:8 - -- This is the first of seventy-four occurrences of Selah in the Bible, seventy-one in Psalms, three in Habakkuk. Its precise meaning is uncertain, but i...
This is the first of seventy-four occurrences of
TSK: Psa 3:6 - -- I will : Psa 27:1-3, Psa 46:2, Psa 46:7, Psa 118:10-12; 2Ki 6:15-17; Rom 8:31
ten : 2Sa 18:7
set : Psa 2:2
I will : Psa 27:1-3, Psa 46:2, Psa 46:7, Psa 118:10-12; 2Ki 6:15-17; Rom 8:31
ten : 2Sa 18:7
set : Psa 2:2
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TSK: Psa 3:7 - -- Arise : Psa 10:12, Psa 12:5, Psa 35:23, Psa 44:23, Psa 59:5, Psa 74:11, Psa 76:9; Isa 51:9; Hab 2:19
thou : Psa 58:6; Job 16:10, Job 29:17; Lam 3:30
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TSK: Psa 3:8 - -- Salvation : Psa 37:39, Psa 37:40; Pro 21:31; Isa 43:11, Isa 45:21, Isa 45:22; Jer 3:23; Hos 13:4; Jon 2:9; Act 4:12; Rev 7:10, Rev 19:1
thy blessing :...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 3:6 - -- I will not be afraid - As the result of this new proof of the divine protection, and in view of all that God has done and has promised, the psa...
I will not be afraid - As the result of this new proof of the divine protection, and in view of all that God has done and has promised, the psalmist now says that he would not be afraid though any number of foes should rise up against him. Perhaps this confiding and exulting spirit may be regarded in some measure as the "result"of the calm and refreshing slumber which he had enjoyed. The mind as well as the body had been refreshed and invigorated. With the bright light of a new morning he looked with more cheerful views and hopes on the things around him, and felt new strength to meet the dangers to which he was exposed. Who in trouble and sorrow has not felt this? Who has not experienced the influence of the slumbers of a night and of the light of the morning, in giving new vigour and inspiring new hopes, as if the returning day was an emblem of brighter scenes in life, and the passing away of the shades of night a token that all trouble and sorrow would flee away?
Of ten thousands of people - Myriads: Though myriads are arrayed against me. He does not, of course, pretend to any exactness here; but he felt that the number of his enemies was very great. This "was"the case in the rebellion of Absalom. Ahithophel proposed to Absalom to "choose out twelve thousand men"with whom he might pursue after David, implying that the number with him was actually much greater than that, 2Sa 17:1)
That have set themselves against me - That have arrayed themselves against me; or that have risen up in rebellion against me.
Round about - Intending to hem me in on every side. Of course this was to be apprehended in such a rebellion; yet David says that he could now look with calmness on all this, for he had confidence in God. Compare Psa 56:3.
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Barnes: Psa 3:1-8 - -- :Title A Psalm of David - literally, belonging to David; that is, belonging to him as the author. This is marked in the Hebrew as the first vers...
:Title
A Psalm of David - literally, belonging to David; that is, belonging to him as the author. This is marked in the Hebrew as the first verse, and so in the Syriac version, the Latin Vulgate, and the Septuagint, making in the Hebrew, and in each of these versions, nine verses in the psalm instead of eight, as in our translation. This may have been prefixed to the psalm by the author himself, for it was not uncommon in ancient times for an author to prefix his name to his own composition, as is commonly done by the apostle Paul in his epistles. It is not absolutely certain, however, that this was done in the Psalms by the authors themselves, but it may have been done by him who collected and arranged the Psalms, indicating the prevalent belief in regard to the authorship, and under the Spirit of inspiration.
When he fled - On the occasion of his fleeing. That is, it was composed at that time, or was subsequently composed in remembrance of it. See Introduction, Section 2.
From Absalom his son - See the introduction, Section 2.
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Barnes: Psa 3:7 - -- Arise, O Lord - This is a common mode of calling upon God in the Scriptures, as if he had been sitting still, or had been inactive. It is, of c...
Arise, O Lord - This is a common mode of calling upon God in the Scriptures, as if he had been sitting still, or had been inactive. It is, of course, language taken from human conceptions, for in the intervals of active effort, in labor or in battle, we sit or lie down, and when we engage in toil we arise from our sitting or recumbent posture. So the mind accustoms itself to think of God. The idea is simply that David now calls upon God to interpose in his behalf and to deliver him.
Save me, O my God - He was still surrounded by numerous enemies, and he, therefore, calls earnestly upon God to help him. In accordance with a common usage in the Scriptures, and with what is right for all the people of God, he calls him "his"God: "O my God."That is, he was the God whom he recognized as his God in distinction from all idols, and who had manifested himself as his God by the many mercies which he had conferred on him.
For thou hast smitten all mine enemies - That is, in former exigencies, or on former occasions. In his conflicts with Saul, with the Philistines, and with the surrounding nations, he had done this; and as the result of all he had established him on the throne, and placed him over the realm. In the remembrance of all this he appeals with the full confidence that what God had done for him before He would do now, and that, notwithstanding he was surrounded with numerous foes, He would again interpose. So we may derive comfort and assurance in present trouble or danger from the recollection of what God has done for us in former times. He who has saved us in former perils can still save us; we may believe that he who did not forsake us in those perils will not leave us now.
Upon the cheek-bone - This language seems to be taken from a comparison of his enemies with wild beasts; and the idea is, that God had disarmed them as one would a lion or tiger by breaking out his teeth. The cheek-bone denotes the bone in which the teeth are placed; and to smite that, is to disarm the animal. The idea here is not that of "insult,"therefore; but the meaning is simply that he had deprived them of the power of doing him wrong.
Thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly - The same idea is here expressed under another form, "as if"the teeth of wild animals were broken out, rendering them harmless. As God had thus disarmed his enemies in times past, the psalmist hoped that he would do the same thing now, and he confidently called on him to do it.
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Barnes: Psa 3:8 - -- Salvation belongeth unto the Lord - That is, it pertains to God alone to save. The psalmist had no expectation of saving himself; he had no con...
Salvation belongeth unto the Lord - That is, it pertains to God alone to save. The psalmist had no expectation of saving himself; he had no confidence in the unaided prowess of his own arm. If he was to be saved he felt that it was to be only by God, and the praise of this was to be given to Him. The particular reference here is to temporal deliverance, or deliverance from the dangers which surrounded him then; but the declaration is as true of spiritual deliverance - of the salvation of the soul - as it is of deliverance from temporal danger. In both cases it is true that God only saves, and that all the praise is due to him.
Thy blessing is upon thy people - Or perhaps, rather, "thy blessing be upon thy people,"regarding this as a "prayer"rather than an "affirmation."It is true, indeed, as an affirmation (compare Psa 2:12); but it accords better with the connection here, and is a more appropriate conclusion of the psalm to regard it as a petition, expressing an earnest desire that the blessing of God might ever rest upon his own people. Then the thoughts of the psalmist are turned away from his own perils to the condition of others; from his individual case to that of the Church at large; and he prays that all others may find the same favors from God which he had so richly enjoyed, and which he hoped still to enjoy. It is one of the characteristics of true piety thus to turn from our own condition to that of others, and to desire that what we enjoy may be partaken of by the people of God everywhere.
So that I see no human way to escape.
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Poole: Psa 3:7 - -- Arise bestir thyself on my behalf, and be no longer as an idle spectator of my miseries.
O my God who art mine by special relation and covenant, an...
Arise bestir thyself on my behalf, and be no longer as an idle spectator of my miseries.
O my God who art mine by special relation and covenant, and I am thy son and thy servant; Lord, save thine own.
Thou hast smitten all mine enemies thou hast hitherto helped me, do not now leave me.
Upon the cheek-bone which implies either contempt and reproach, as this phrase signifies, 1Ki 22:24 Mic 5:1 Joh 18:22 19:3 ; or the smartness and soreness of the blow, whereby, as the next clause explains it, their teeth were struck out; and so they did not only receive hurt themselves, but were disenabled from doing that mischief to others which they desired and were accustomed to do.
The teeth i.e. their strength and the instruments of their cruelty. He compares them to wild beasts.
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Poole: Psa 3:8 - -- I expect not salvation from my forces, but from thy power and favour alone.
Thy blessing is or rather, let it be, (so he closeth with a prayer,)
...
I expect not salvation from my forces, but from thy power and favour alone.
Thy blessing is or rather, let it be, (so he closeth with a prayer,)
upon thy people either upon my friends and followers, who alone are thy people, the rest being rebels to thee as well as to me; or, upon all thy people Israel, to preserve my friends, to convince and convert mine enemies, and to save the body of the nation, which without thy mercy are likely by this civil war to be brought to utter ruin.
Haydock: Psa 3:6 - -- Rest, in sin; (St. Athanasius) or, I have not lost my confidence in God, though dangers threaten on every side. (Calmet) ---
Jesus remained undaunt...
Rest, in sin; (St. Athanasius) or, I have not lost my confidence in God, though dangers threaten on every side. (Calmet) ---
Jesus remained undaunted, when his enemies surrounded him; he continued (Theodoret, &c.) free among the dead, and rose again by his own power. (Haydock) ---
If he prayed that the chalice might be removed, it was to teach us how to behave. (Calmet) ---
He was buried, and rose again, and his disciples believed the Scriptures (John ii. 22.) recorded here, and in other places. (Worthington) ---
The same word refers to past and future things. (St. Gregory, Mor. xx. 1.) (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 3:7 - -- Thousands. Septuagint, "myriads." (Haydock) ---
If my enemies were still more numerous, I should not fear. (Calmet) ---
I beseech thee to help m...
Thousands. Septuagint, "myriads." (Haydock) ---
If my enemies were still more numerous, I should not fear. (Calmet) ---
I beseech thee to help me. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 3:8 - -- Without cause. Hebrew, "on the jaw." (Haydock) ---
Without redress. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint seems to have read leinom, as "some Jews say that ...
Without cause. Hebrew, "on the jaw." (Haydock) ---
Without redress. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint seems to have read leinom, as "some Jews say that the ancient copies were different." (Origen, A.D. 231.) (Kennicott) ---
Teeth. Strength and fury.
Gill: Psa 3:6 - -- I will not be afraid of ten thousands of the people,.... David was a man of courage from his youth; the instances of his attacking the lion and the be...
I will not be afraid of ten thousands of the people,.... David was a man of courage from his youth; the instances of his attacking the lion and the bear, when he kept his father's sheep, his engaging with Goliath, and his military exploits, show it; and though there were now many thousands up in arms against him, and his own son at the head of them; all the tribes of Israel were revolting from him, and he was only attended with a few of his friends, yet he was not dismayed; for that he refers to this insurrection appears by what follows,
that have set themselves against me round about; and this was owing not to himself; but to the Lord's sustaining of him; see Psa 27:1; and such courage and greatness of soul did his antitype the Messiah express, and to a greater degree, when Judas, with his band of soldiers, and the multitude with clubs and staves, entered the garden to apprehend him; and when the prince of this world was marching towards him, and when he was engaged with all the powers of darkness, and when the sorrows of death compassed him about, yet he failed not, nor was he discouraged: and something of this spirit appears in true believers, When they are in the exercise of faith, have the presence of God, and the discoveries of his love; they are then not afraid what man can do unto them; nor are they afraid of devils themselves, but wrestle against them; nor of any nor all their enemies, they having victory over them, given by God through Christ.
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Gill: Psa 3:7 - -- Arise, O Lord; save me, O my God,.... God sometimes, in the apprehension of his people, seems to be as if he was asleep: when he does not appear to th...
Arise, O Lord; save me, O my God,.... God sometimes, in the apprehension of his people, seems to be as if he was asleep: when he does not appear to them and for them, and does not exert his power on their behalf, then they call to him to awake and arise; see Psa 44:23; and it may be some respect is had to the words of Moses when the ark set forward, Num 10:35; and it may be observed, that though David enjoyed so much peace and tranquillity of mind, and was in such high spirits as not to be afraid of ten thousands of men, yet he did not neglect the right means of deliverance and safety, prayer to God, who he knew was his God; and he addresses him as such, and uses his covenant interest in him, as an argument with him to arise and save him from his enemies, who was able to do it, and to whom salvation belongs: so Christ, his antitype, prayed to God as his God to save him, and was heard by him in like manner; so the saints call upon God in a day of trouble, cry to him in their distresses, to be delivered out of them;
for thou hast smitten all mine enemies upon the cheekbone; to smite anyone upon the cheek is reckoned reproachful, and is casting contempt upon them; see Job 16:10 and the sense is, that God had poured contempt upon his enemies in time past, and had brought them to shame and confusion: hence he puts up the above prayer as a prayer of faith for salvation, founded on past experience of God's goodness; he prayed that his God would arise and save him, and he believed he would because he had hitherto appeared for him, and against his enemies;
thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly; who were like to beasts of prey, whose strength lies in their teeth, whereby they do the mischief they do; and the breaking of their teeth signifies the taking away from them the power of hurting, and refers to the victories which God had given David over the Philistines, Edomites, Syrians, and others; and maybe applied to Christ, and be expressive of sin, Satan, the world, and death, being overcome and abolished by him, and of the victory which the saints have through him over the same enemies.
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Gill: Psa 3:8 - -- Salvation belongeth unto the Lord,.... As the author of it; temporal salvation is of him; all the deliverances of the saints out of their troubles ar...
Salvation belongeth unto the Lord,.... As the author of it; temporal salvation is of him; all the deliverances of the saints out of their troubles are from him; and to him is owing their spiritual and eternal salvation; this belongs to Jehovah, Father, Son, and Spirit: Jehovah the Father resolved upon it, chose men to it from everlasting, contrived the scheme of it in his infinite wisdom, made a covenant with his Son, in which he secured it, and appointed him to be the author of it, and sent him in the fulness of time to effect it; and Christ the Son of God, being qualified for it, being mighty to save, came into this world for that purpose, and is become the author of eternal salvation; his own arm has brought it to him, though there were many difficulties in the way; such as fulfilling the law, satisfying justice, making an end of sin, grappling with all the powers of darkness, and undergoing an accursed death: and the Spirit of God, he makes men sensible of their need of this salvation; he brings it near to them, and works faith in them to lay hold upon it, and shows them their interest in it; and in consequence of all this the glory of salvation belongs to the Lord, Father, Son, and Spirit, and should be given to the Father as the contriver of it, to the Son as the author of it, and to the Spirit as the applier of it; see Rev 7:10;
thy blessing is upon thy people; or it may be considered prayer wise, let "thy blessing be upon thy people" b; either upon those that were on the side of David, or on those, as others interpret it, who had imprudently joined themselves to Absalom; which latter sense, if right, shows in what a divine frame and disposition of mind the psalmist was, to pray for his enemies: or the words are an assertion, that the blessing of the Lord was come upon his covenant people, and does descend upon them as they are called by grace; even all spiritual blessings, the blessings of a justifying righteousness, of pardon of sin, of reconciliation and peace by the blood of Christ, of adoption, and of eternal life; the blessing of grace, and the blessing of glory.
Selah; on this word; see Gill on Psa 3:2.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 3:8 Heb “upon your people [is] your blessing.” In this context God’s “blessing” includes deliverance/protection, vindication...
Geneva Bible: Psa 3:6 I will not be afraid of ( c ) ten thousands of people, that have set [themselves] against me round about.
( c ) When he considered the truth of God's...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 3:8 ( d ) Salvation [belongeth] unto the LORD: thy blessing [is] upon thy people. Selah.
( d ) No matter how great or many the dangers may be, yet God al...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 3:1-8
MHCC -> Psa 3:4-8
MHCC: Psa 3:4-8 - --Care and grief do us good, when they engage us to pray to God, as in earnest. David had always found God ready to answer his prayers. Nothing can fix ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 3:4-8
Matthew Henry: Psa 3:4-8 - -- David, having stirred up himself by the irritations of his enemies to take hold on God as his God, and so gained comfort in looking upward when, if ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 3:5-6 - --
(Heb.: 3:6-7) That this God will protect him, His protection during the past night is now a pledge to him in the early morning. It is a violation o...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 3:7-8 - --
(Heb.: 3:8-9) The bold קוּמה is taken from the mouth of Moses, Num 10:35. God is said to arise when He takes a decisive part in what takes pla...
Constable: Psa 3:1-8 - --Psalm 3
The title of this psalm identifies the writer as David. All but four of the psalms in Book 1 of ...
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