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Text -- Psalms 34:9 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 34:9
Wesley: Psa 34:9 - -- Reverence, serve, and trust him: for fear is commonly put for all the parts of God's worship.
Reverence, serve, and trust him: for fear is commonly put for all the parts of God's worship.
Clarke -> Psa 34:9
Clarke: Psa 34:9 - -- There is no want to them that fear him - He who truly fears God loves him; and he who loves God obeys him, and to him who fears, loves, and obeys Go...
There is no want to them that fear him - He who truly fears God loves him; and he who loves God obeys him, and to him who fears, loves, and obeys God, there can be no want of things essential to his happiness, whether spiritual or temporal, for this life or for that which is to come. This verse is wanting in the Syriac.
Calvin -> Psa 34:9
Calvin: Psa 34:9 - -- 9.Fear Jehovah, ye his saints Here the people of God are exhorted to the pursuit of holiness and righteousness, that they may open up a channel for d...
9.Fear Jehovah, ye his saints Here the people of God are exhorted to the pursuit of holiness and righteousness, that they may open up a channel for divine blessings. We know that men are accustomed to provide for their wants, by resorting to fraud, plunder, and even to wrongful violence. Nor is it possible but that the faithful must feel some stirrings of a desire to imitate the wicked, and envy them in some degree in their prosperity, so that they permit themselves sometimes to howl among the wolves. And although they voluntarily abstain from all wrongful violence, yet the common way of living among those around them carries them away like a tempest; and, in the meantime, they think that the plea of necessity is sufficient to excuse them. David represses, as with a bridle, these temptations, promising that all will be well with the people of God, provided they keep themselves in the fear of God, which he opposes to all wicked and deceitful counsels; because the greater part of men reckon those to be fools who aim at simplicity, since in so doing they do not consult their own interests and profit. While, therefore, ungodly men are afraid of poverty, and carnal reason urges them to attempt whatever their fancy may suggest for keeping themselves from it, David here testifies that God takes care of the godly, so that he never suffers them to be in want. Let no fear or distrust, says he, withdraw you from the pursuit of what is right, because God never forsakes those who walk righteously before him. The Psalmist, therefore, bids them yield to God the honor of expecting more from him alone than the wicked expect from their deceitful traffic and unlawful practices. Moreover, as iniquity rages with unbridled fury everywhere throughout the world, he calls expressly upon the saints to be on their guard, because he would be of no service to the promiscuous multitude. It is a sentiment contrary to the generally received opinion among men, that while the integrity of the good and simple is exposed to the will of the wicked, there should yet be greater security in integrity than in all the resources of fraud and injustice. There is, therefore, no inconsistency in his admonishing the saints who, of their own accord, are endeavoring to walk uprightly, not to depart from the fear of God; for we know how easily the light of piety may be obscured and extinguished, when there appears no hope of living happily and prosperously, except in the pursuit of the world and its enticing pleasures.
TSK -> Psa 34:9
TSK: Psa 34:9 - -- fear : Psa 22:23, Psa 31:23, Psa 89:7; Gen 22:12; Isa 8:13, Isa 8:14; Hos 3:5; Rev 15:3, Rev 15:4
for : Psa 23:1; Luk 12:30-32; Rom 8:32; 1Co 3:22, 1C...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 34:9
Barnes: Psa 34:9 - -- O fear the Lord - Reverence him; honor him; confide in him. Compare Psa 31:23. Ye his saints - His holy ones. All who profess to be his f...
O fear the Lord - Reverence him; honor him; confide in him. Compare Psa 31:23.
Ye his saints - His holy ones. All who profess to be his friends. This exhortation is addressed especially to the saints, or to the pious, because the speaker professed to be a friend of God, and had had personal experience of the truth of what he is here saying. It is the testimony of one child of God addressed to others, to encourage them by the result of his own experience.
For there is no want to them that fear him - All their needs will be abundantly supplied. Sooner or later all their real necessities will be met, and God will bestow upon them every needed blessing. The statement here cannot be regarded as absolutely and universally true - that is, it cannot mean that they who fear the Lord will never, in any instance, be hungry or thirsty, or destitute of raiment or of a comfortable home; but it is evidently intended to be a general affirmation, and is in accordance with the other statements which occur in the Bible about the advantages of true religion in securing temporal as well as spiritual blessings from God. Thus, in 1Ti 4:8, it is said, "Godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come."Thus, in Isa 33:16, it is said of the righteous man, "Bread shall be given him; his waters shall be sure."
And so, in Psa 37:25, David records the result of his own observation at the end of a long life, "I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread."But while these statements should not be interpreted as affirming absolutely that no child of God will ever be in need of food, or drink, or raiment, or home, or friends, yet it is generally true that the needs of the righteous are supplied, often in an unexpected manner, and from an unexpected source. It is true that virtue and religion conduce to temporal prosperity; and it is almost universally true that the inmates of charity-houses and prisons are neither the pious, nor the children of the pious. These houses are the refuge, to a great extent, of the intemperate, the godless, and the profligate - or of the families of the intemperate, the godless, and the profligate; and if all such persons were to be discharged from those abodes, our almshouses and prisons would soon become tenantless. A community could most easily provide for all those who have been trained in the ways of religion, but who are reduced to poverty by fire, or by flood, or by ill health; and they would most cheerfully do it. Nothing can be more true than that if a man wished to do all that could be done in the general uncertainty of human affairs to secure prosperity, it would be an advantage to him to be a virtuous and religious man. God never blesses or prospers a sinner as such, though he often does it notwithstanding the fact that he is a sinner; but he does and will bless and prosper a righteous man as such, and because he is righteous. Compare the notes at 1Ti 4:8.
Poole -> Psa 34:9
Poole: Psa 34:9 - -- i.e. Reverence and serve him, and trust in him; for fear is commonly put for all the parts of God’ s worship.
i.e. Reverence and serve him, and trust in him; for fear is commonly put for all the parts of God’ s worship.
Haydock -> Psa 34:9
Haydock: Psa 34:9 - -- Salvation. In the midst of troubles he is not devoid of hope, and after his deliverance he looks for eternal happiness. (Worthington)
Salvation. In the midst of troubles he is not devoid of hope, and after his deliverance he looks for eternal happiness. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 34:9
Gill: Psa 34:9 - -- O fear the Lord, ye his saints,.... Who are sanctified by his Spirit, and so are openly and manifestly his; these are exhorted to fear the Lord with r...
O fear the Lord, ye his saints,.... Who are sanctified by his Spirit, and so are openly and manifestly his; these are exhorted to fear the Lord with reverence and godly fear; and great reason there is why they should fear him, since he is King of saints, and fear is due to him from them; and seeing they have received many instances of grace and goodness from him, and therefore should fear him for his goodness's sake; and besides they, and they only, know him, and have the grace of fear in them, and so only can exercise it on him;
for there is no want to them that fear him; not in spirituals, since so much goodness is laid up for them; the heart of God is towards them, his secret is with them, his eye is upon them, and the sun of righteousness arises on them; and both grace and glory are given to them; nor in temporals, since godliness, or the fear of God, has the promise of this life, as well as of that which is to come.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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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...
Maclaren -> Psa 34:9
Maclaren: Psa 34:9 - --Struggling And Seeking
The young lions do lack, and suffer hunger; but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing.'--Psalm 34:10.
IF we ma...
MHCC -> Psa 34:1-10
MHCC: Psa 34:1-10 - --If we hope to spend eternity in praising God, it is fit that we should spend much of our time here in this work. He never said to any one, Seek ye me ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 34:1-10
Matthew Henry: Psa 34:1-10 - -- The title of this psalm tells us both who penned it and upon what occasion it was penned. David, being forced to flee from his country, which was ma...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 34:7-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 34:7-10 - --
(Heb.: 34:8-11) This praise is supported by a setting forth of the gracious protection under which God's saints continually are. The מלאך יה...
Constable -> Psa 34:1-22; Psa 34:1-9
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...
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Constable: Psa 34:1-9 - --1. God's goodness to His people 34:1-10
34:1-3 David exulted in the Lord and called on his people to praise God with him.
34:4-7 The psalmist's recen...
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