
Text -- Psalms 32:9 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 32:9
Wesley: Psa 32:9 - -- Unless they be forced to it by a bit or bridle. And so all the ancient translators understand it.
Unless they be forced to it by a bit or bridle. And so all the ancient translators understand it.
JFB -> Psa 32:9
JFB: Psa 32:9 - -- The latter clause, more literally, "in that they come not near thee"; that is, because they will not come, &c., unless forced by bit and bridle.
The latter clause, more literally, "in that they come not near thee"; that is, because they will not come, &c., unless forced by bit and bridle.
Clarke -> Psa 32:9
Clarke: Psa 32:9 - -- Be ye not as the horse or as the mule - They will only act by force and constraint; be not like them; give a willing service to your Maker. "They ha...
Be ye not as the horse or as the mule - They will only act by force and constraint; be not like them; give a willing service to your Maker. "They have no understanding;"you have a rational soul, made to be guided and influenced by reason. The service of your God is a reasonable service; act, therefore, as a rational being. The horse and the mule are turned with difficulty; they must be constrained with bit and bridle. Do not be like them; do not oblige your Maker to have continual recourse to afflictions, trials, and severe dispensations of providence, to keep you in the way, or to recover you after you have gone out of it.
Calvin -> Psa 32:9
Calvin: Psa 32:9 - -- 9.Be not like the horse or mule David now briefly explains the amount of the counsel which he formerly said he would give. He exhorts all to learn wi...
9.Be not like the horse or mule David now briefly explains the amount of the counsel which he formerly said he would give. He exhorts all to learn with quietness, to lay aside stubbornness, and to put on the spirit of meekness. There is much wisdom, too, in the advice which he gives to the godly to correct their hardihood; for if we were as attentive to God’s corrections as we ought, every one would eagerly hasten to seek his favor. Whence is so much slowness to be found in all, but that we are either stupid or refractory? By likening the refractory, therefore, to brute beasts, David puts them to shame, and at the same time declares that it will avail them nothing to “kick against the pricks.” Men, says he, know how to tame the fierceness of horses by bridles and bits; what then do they think God will do when he finds them intractable?
TSK -> Psa 32:9

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 32:9
Barnes: Psa 32:9 - -- Be ye not as the horse - The horse as it is by nature - wild, ungoverned, unwilling to be caught and made obedient. The counsel referred to in ...
Be ye not as the horse - The horse as it is by nature - wild, ungoverned, unwilling to be caught and made obedient. The counsel referred to in the previous verse is here given; and it is, that one who wishes to obtain the favor of God should not be as the wild and unbroken horse, an animal that can be subdued only by a curb, but should evince a calm, submissive spirit - a spirit "disposed"to obey and submit. If he becomes a subject of God’ s government, he is not to be subdued and held as the horse is - by mere force; there must be the cheerful submission of the will. People are not brought into the service of God by physical power; they are not kept there by an iron "curb."They come and yield themselves willingly to his law; they "must"come with that spirit if they would find the favor of God.
Or as the mule - The mule is distinguished for its obstinacy, and this is evidently the ground of comparison here. The meaning is, be tractable, gentle, yielding; submit to the guidance and direction of God and his truth.
Which have no understanding - That cannot be controlled by reason and conscience. They are governed only by power and by fear. People have reason and conscience, and they should allow themselves to be controlled by appeals TO their reason and to their moral sense. They are not made to be governed as brutes are. Since they have a higher nature, they should permit themselves to be governed by it.
Whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle - More literally, "in bit and bridle is their ornament to restrain them;"that is, the trappings or the ornaments of the horse and the mule consist of the bridle and the bit, the purpose of which is to restrain or control them. The allusion, however, is not to the bit and bridle as an "ornament,"but as the ordinary trappings of the mule and the horse.
Lest they come near unto thee - Or rather, "because of its not approaching thee;"that is, because the horse and the mule will not come to thee of their own accord, but must be restrained and controlled.
Poole -> Psa 32:9
Poole: Psa 32:9 - -- Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule be not such brutish and sottish creatures as I have been, not having reason or grace to govern yourselves, nor...
Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule be not such brutish and sottish creatures as I have been, not having reason or grace to govern yourselves, nor hearkening to the counsels and admonitions of others. Lest they come near unto thee ; lest they should come too near to thee, so as to bite or kick thee. But neither is this the common practice of horses or mules, of which he seems to speak; nor is this the proper use of a bit or bridle, to keep them from so doing; but rather to bring them nearer to the rider for his use, and to keep them under his conduct and power, from whom they are otherwise apt to run away. The words therefore are and may be otherwise rendered, because they do not or will not come near unto thee , to wit, for thy service, unless they be forced to it by a bit or bridle. And so all the ancient translators understand it.
Haydock -> Psa 32:9
Haydock: Psa 32:9 - -- Created. Hebrew, "on foot," to express God's absolute dominion. (Calmet) ---
This passage shews that bra means properly created out of nothing, ...
Created. Hebrew, "on foot," to express God's absolute dominion. (Calmet) ---
This passage shews that bra means properly created out of nothing, Genesis i. Matter did not exist before God spoke. (Berthier)
Gill -> Psa 32:9
Gill: Psa 32:9 - -- Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding,.... The design of this exhortation is to direct men how to behave under the ins...
Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding,.... The design of this exhortation is to direct men how to behave under the instructions given; not as brutes, which have no rational faculties, but as men; that they should not show themselves thoughtless, stupid, and unteachable, as these animals, or worse than they; nor stubborn and obstinate, refractory and untractable, resolving not to be taught, stopping the ear, and pulling away the shoulder; nor ill natured and mischievous; not only hating instruction, casting away the law of the Lord, but kicking and spurning at, and persecuting such who undertake to instruct them; as these creatures sometimes attempt to throw their riders, and, when down, kick at them;
whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee; to do mischief, bite or kick; or "because they do not come near to thee" t; and that they may come near, and be brought into subjection, and become obedient; therefore such methods are used; see Jam 3:3; there is in the words a tacit intimation, that men are commonly, and for the most part, like these creatures, stupid, stubborn, and mischievous; and therefore severe methods are used by the Lord, sore chastenings, to humble and instruct them; see Jer 31:18; the mule, more especially, is remarkable for its stupidity u; and though the horse is docile, yet he is sometimes stubborn and refractory.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 32:9 Heb “with a bridle and bit, its [?] to hold, not to come near to you.” The meaning of the Hebrew noun עֲדִי ...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 32:9
Geneva Bible: Psa 32:9 Be ye not as the horse, [or] as the mule, [which] have no understanding: whose ( i ) mouth must be held in with bit and bridle, lest they come near un...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 32:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 32:1-11 - --1 Blessedness consists in remission of sins.3 Confession of sins gives ease to the conscience.8 God's promises bring joy.
MHCC -> Psa 32:8-11
MHCC: Psa 32:8-11 - --God teaches by his word, and guides with the secret intimations of his will. David gives a word of caution to sinners. The reason for this caution is,...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 32:7-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 32:7-11 - -- David is here improving the experience he had had of the comfort of pardoning mercy. I. He speaks to God, and professes his confidence in him and ex...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 32:8-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 32:8-10 - --
It is not Jahve, who here speaks in answer to the words that have been thus far addressed to Him. In this case the person addressed must be the poet...
Constable -> Psa 32:1-11; Psa 32:6-11
Constable: Psa 32:1-11 - --Psalm 32
In this psalm David urged those who sin against the Lord to seek His pardon with the encouragem...
