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Text -- Psalms 34:17 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 34:17-18
JFB: Psa 34:17-18 - -- Humble penitents are objects of God's special tender regard (Psa 51:19; Isa 57:15).
Clarke -> Psa 34:17
Clarke: Psa 34:17 - -- The righteous cry - There is no word in the present Hebrew text for righteous; but all the versions preserve it. I suppose it was lost through its s...
The righteous cry - There is no word in the present Hebrew text for righteous; but all the versions preserve it. I suppose it was lost through its similitude to the word
Calvin -> Psa 34:17
Calvin: Psa 34:17 - -- 17.They 700 cried, and Jehovah heard them. The Psalmist’s meaning is, that they are heard as often as they cry. This is a doctrine applicable to ...
17.They 700 cried, and Jehovah heard them. The Psalmist’s meaning is, that they are heard as often as they cry. This is a doctrine applicable to all times; and David does not merely relate what God has done once or twice, but what he is accustomed to do. It is also a confirmation of the preceding sentence, where he had said that the ears of the Lord are open to the cry of the righteous; for he now demonstrates by the effect, that God is not deaf when we lay our complaints and groanings before him. By the word cry we are taught, that although God defend the righteous, they are not exempt from adversity. He regulates the protection which he affords them in such a wonderful manner, as that he notwithstanding exercises them by various trials. In like manner, when we here see that deliverance is promised only to those who call upon God, this ought to prove no small encouragement to us to pray to him; for it is not his will that the godly should so regard his providence as to indulge in idleness, but rather that, being firmly persuaded that he is the guardian of their safety, they should direct their prayers and supplications to him.
TSK -> Psa 34:17
TSK: Psa 34:17 - -- The righteous : There is no word for the righteous in the present Hebrew Text; but it is preserved in all the versions; and it was probably lost from ...
The righteous : There is no word for the righteous in the present Hebrew Text; but it is preserved in all the versions; and it was probably lost from its similitude to
cry : Psa 34:6, Psa 34:15, Psa 34:19, Psa 91:15, Psa 145:18-20; 2Ch 32:20, 2Ch 32:21, 2Ch 32:24; Isa 65:24; Act 12:5-11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 34:17
Barnes: Psa 34:17 - -- The righteous cry, and the Lord heareth - That is, one of the advantages or benefits of being righteous is the privilege of crying unto God, or...
The righteous cry, and the Lord heareth - That is, one of the advantages or benefits of being righteous is the privilege of crying unto God, or of calling on his name, with the assurance that he will hear and deliver us. No one has ever yet fully appreciated the "privilege"of being permitted to call upon God; the privilege of prayer. There is no blessing conferred upon man in his present state superior to this; and no one can fully understand the force of the argument derived from this in favor of the service of God. What a world would this be - how sad, how helpless, how wretched - if there were no God to whom the guilty, the suffering, and the sorrowful might come; if God were a Being who never heard prayer at all; if he were a capricious Being who might or might not hear prayer; if He were a Being governed by fitful emotions, who would now hear the righteous, and then the wicked, and then neither, and who dispensed His favors in answer to prayer by no certain rule!
And delivereth them out of all their troubles -
(1) He often delivers them from trouble in this life in answer to prayer.
(2) he will deliver them literally from all trouble in the life to come.
The promise is not indeed, that they shall be delivered from all trouble on earth, but the idea is that God is able to rescue them from trouble here; that He often does it in answer to prayer; and that there will be, in the case of every righteous person, a sure and complete deliverance from all trouble hereafter. Compare the notes at Psa 34:6 : see Psa 34:19.
Poole -> Psa 34:17
Poole: Psa 34:17 - -- Heb. They cry, to wit, the righteous, as is manifest both from the nature of the thing, and from Psa 34:15 , where they are so called, and with w...
Heb. They cry, to wit, the righteous, as is manifest both from the nature of the thing, and from Psa 34:15 , where they are so called, and with which this verse is to be continued, the 16th verse coming in by way of parenthesis, as is very usual in many places of Scripture.
Haydock -> Psa 34:17
Haydock: Psa 34:17 - -- One. Septuagint, "daughter." Aquila, "solitary," Greek: monachen. Protestants, "darling," or my soul which is so desolate, Psalm xxi. 21. (Hayd...
One. Septuagint, "daughter." Aquila, "solitary," Greek: monachen. Protestants, "darling," or my soul which is so desolate, Psalm xxi. 21. (Haydock) ---
So Christ said, Why hast thou abandoned me? (Matthew xxvii.) not affording me such consolation as other saints enjoy in their agony. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 34:17
Gill: Psa 34:17 - -- The righteous cry,.... The word "righteous" is not in the original text, but is rightly supplied in our version, as it is in the Targum, and by Jarch...
The righteous cry,.... The word "righteous" is not in the original text, but is rightly supplied in our version, as it is in the Targum, and by Jarchi; and so Kimchi and Ben Melech observe, that these words are not to be connected with Psa 34:16, but with Psa 34:15; and they are indeed an amplification of the last clause of it; and the cry of the righteous is meant, to which the ears of the Lord are open; though Aben Ezra thinks that these words are to be understood of them that do evil, and of their cry to the Lord, when they turn from their evil ways; but the former sense is best;
and the Lord heareth, and delivereth them out of all their troubles; their inward troubles, through the workings of corruption in their hearts; through the violent assaults of Satan, the blasphemous thoughts he injects into them, and his solicitations of them to sin; and through divine desertions, and their outward troubles; through afflictions of body, losses of estate and friends, and the reproaches and persecutions of men; out of all these the Lord sooner or later delivers his people who cry unto him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 34:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Psa 34:1-22 - --1 David praises God, and exhorts others thereto by his experience.8 They are blessed that trust in God.11 He exhorts to the fear of God.15 The privile...
MHCC -> Psa 34:11-22
MHCC: Psa 34:11-22 - --Let young persons set out in life with learning the fear of the Lord, if they desire true comfort here, and eternal happiness hereafter. Those will be...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 34:11-22
Matthew Henry: Psa 34:11-22 - -- David, in this latter part of the psalm, undertakes to teach children. Though a man of war, and anointed to be king, he did not think it below him; ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 34:16-21
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 34:16-21 - --
x180 x360 (Heb.: 34:17-22) The poet now recommends the fear of God, to which he has given a brief direction, by setting forth its reward in contr...
Constable -> Psa 34:1-22; Psa 34:10-21
Constable: Psa 34:1-22 - --Psalm 34
In this psalm David glorified God for delivering His people, and he reflected on the Lord's pro...




