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Text -- Psalms 41:1-9 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 41:3 - -- Give him ease and comfort, which sick men receive by the help of those who turn and stir up their bed, to make it soft and easy for them.
Give him ease and comfort, which sick men receive by the help of those who turn and stir up their bed, to make it soft and easy for them.
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The soul is said to be healed, when it is pardoned and purged.
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Wesley: Psa 41:6 - -- Even when he is with me, and pretends hearty affection, his heart is devising mischief against me.
Even when he is with me, and pretends hearty affection, his heart is devising mischief against me.
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Wesley: Psa 41:9 - -- These words were literally fulfilled in David, and yet the Holy Ghost looked farther in them, even to Christ and Judas, in whom they received a fuller...
These words were literally fulfilled in David, and yet the Holy Ghost looked farther in them, even to Christ and Judas, in whom they received a fuller accomplishment.
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Wesley: Psa 41:9 - -- A phrase implying injury, joined with insolency and contempt; taken from an unruly horse, which kicks at him that owns and feeds him.
A phrase implying injury, joined with insolency and contempt; taken from an unruly horse, which kicks at him that owns and feeds him.
JFB -> Psa 41:1-3; Psa 41:1-3; Psa 41:2; Psa 41:2; Psa 41:3; Psa 41:4; Psa 41:4; Psa 41:5-6; Psa 41:6; Psa 41:6; Psa 41:7-8; Psa 41:8; Psa 41:8; Psa 41:8; Psa 41:9; Psa 41:9; Psa 41:9
JFB: Psa 41:1-3 - -- The Psalmist celebrates the blessedness of those who compassionate the poor, conduct strongly contrasted with the spite of his enemies and neglect of ...
The Psalmist celebrates the blessedness of those who compassionate the poor, conduct strongly contrasted with the spite of his enemies and neglect of his friends in his calamity. He prays for God's mercy in view of his ill desert, and, in confidence of relief, and that God will vindicate his cause, he closes with a doxology. (Psa 41:1-13)
God rewards kindness to the poor (Pro 19:17). From Psa 41:2, Psa 41:11 it may be inferred that the Psalmist describes his own conduct.
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JFB: Psa 41:4 - -- (Compare Psa 30:2). "Sin and suffering are united," is one of the great teachings of the Psalms.
(Compare Psa 30:2). "Sin and suffering are united," is one of the great teachings of the Psalms.
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A graphic picture of the conduct of a malignant enemy.
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JFB: Psa 41:6 - -- Or, "he speaketh vanity as to his heart"--that is, does not speak candidly, "he gathereth iniquity to him," collects elements for mischief, and then d...
Or, "he speaketh vanity as to his heart"--that is, does not speak candidly, "he gathereth iniquity to him," collects elements for mischief, and then divulges the gains of his hypocrisy.
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Literally, "a word of Belial," some slander.
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Who has now laid down, "he is utterly undone and our victory is sure."
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Who depended on me or was well treated by me.
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JFB: Psa 41:9 - -- In scornful violence. As David and his fortunes typified Christ and His (compare Introduction), so these words expressed the treatment he received, an...
In scornful violence. As David and his fortunes typified Christ and His (compare Introduction), so these words expressed the treatment he received, and also that of his Son and Lord; hence, though not distinctly prophetical, our Saviour (Joh 13:18) applies them to Judas, "that the Scripture may be fulfilled." This last phrase has a wide use in the New Testament, and is not restricted to denote special prophecies.
Clarke: Psa 41:1 - -- Blessed is he that considereth - God is merciful; he will have man to resemble him: as far as he is merciful, feels a compassionate heart, and uses ...
Blessed is he that considereth - God is merciful; he will have man to resemble him: as far as he is merciful, feels a compassionate heart, and uses a benevolent hand, he resembles his Maker; and the mercy he shows to others God will show to him. But it is not a sudden impression at the sight of a person in distress, which obliges a man to give something for the relief of the sufferer, that constitutes the merciful character. It is he who considers the poor; who endeavors to find them out; who looks into their circumstances; who is in the habit of doing so; and actually, according to his power and means, goes about to do good; that is the merciful man, of whom God speaks with such high approbation, and to whom he promises a rich reward.
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Clarke: Psa 41:2 - -- The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive - It is worthy of remark, that benevolent persons, who consider the poor, and especially the sick poo...
The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive - It is worthy of remark, that benevolent persons, who consider the poor, and especially the sick poor; who search cellars, garrets, back lanes, and such abodes of misery, to find them out, (even in the places where contagion keeps its seat), very seldom fall a prey to their own benevolence. The Lord, in an especial manner, keeps them alive, and preserves them; while many, who endeavor to keep far from the contagion, are assailed by it, and fall victims to it. God loves the merciful man.
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Clarke: Psa 41:3 - -- The Lord will strengthen him - Good, benevolent, and merciful as he is, he must also die: but he shall not die as other men; he shall have peculiar ...
The Lord will strengthen him - Good, benevolent, and merciful as he is, he must also die: but he shall not die as other men; he shall have peculiar consolations, refreshment, and support, while passing through the valley of the shadow of death
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Clarke: Psa 41:3 - -- Thou wilt make all his bed - הפכת haphachta , thou hast turned up, tossed, and shaken it; and thou wilt do so to all his bed - thou wilt not le...
Thou wilt make all his bed -
1. He is generally blessed, Psa 41:1
2. He will be delivered in the time of trouble, Psa 41:1
3. He will be preserved by a particular providence, Psa 41:2
4. He shall be kept alive amidst infection and danger, Psa 41:2
5. He shall be blessed on the earth in his temporal concerns, Psa 41:2
6. His enemies shall not be able to spoil or destroy him, Psa 41:2
7. He shall be strengthened on a bed of languishing, to enable him to bear his afflictions, Psa 41:3
8. He shall have ease, comfort, and support in his last hours, Psa 41:3.
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Clarke: Psa 41:4 - -- I said, Lord, be merciful unto me - I need thy mercy especially, because I have sinned against thee, and my sin is a deadly wound to my soul; theref...
I said, Lord, be merciful unto me - I need thy mercy especially, because I have sinned against thee, and my sin is a deadly wound to my soul; therefore heal my soul, for it has sinned against thee.
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Clarke: Psa 41:5 - -- Mine enemies speak evil - It is often a good man’ s lot to be evil spoken of; to have his motives, and even his most benevolent acts, misconstr...
Mine enemies speak evil - It is often a good man’ s lot to be evil spoken of; to have his motives, and even his most benevolent acts, misconstrued.
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Clarke: Psa 41:6 - -- And if he come to see me - This may relate to Ahithophel; but it is more likely that it was to some other person who was his secret enemy, who prete...
And if he come to see me - This may relate to Ahithophel; but it is more likely that it was to some other person who was his secret enemy, who pretended to come and inquire after his health, but with the secret design to see whether death was despatching his work
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Clarke: Psa 41:6 - -- When he goeth abroad, he telleth it - He makes several observations on my dying state; intimates that I am suffering deep remorse for secret crimes;...
When he goeth abroad, he telleth it - He makes several observations on my dying state; intimates that I am suffering deep remorse for secret crimes; that God is showing his displeasure against me, and that I am full of sorrow at the approach of death.
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Clarke: Psa 41:7 - -- All that hate me whisper together against me - This is in consequence of the information given by the hypocritical friend, who came to him with the ...
All that hate me whisper together against me - This is in consequence of the information given by the hypocritical friend, who came to him with the lying tongue, and whose heart gathereth iniquity to itself, which, when he went abroad, he told to others as illminded as himself, and they also drew their wicked inferences.
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Clarke: Psa 41:8 - -- An evil disease, say they, cleaveth fast unto him - דבר בליעל יצוק בו debar beliyaal yatsuk bo , a thing, word, or pestilence of Beli...
An evil disease, say they, cleaveth fast unto him -
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Clarke: Psa 41:8 - -- He shall rise up no more - His disease is incurable without a miracle; and he is too much hated of God to have one wrought for him. Some apply this ...
He shall rise up no more - His disease is incurable without a miracle; and he is too much hated of God to have one wrought for him. Some apply this to the death and resurrection of Christ; he lieth - he is dead and buried; he shall never rise again from the dead.
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Clarke: Psa 41:9 - -- Mine own familiar friend - This is either a direct prophecy of the treachery of Judas, or it is a fact in David’ s distresses which our Lord fo...
Mine own familiar friend - This is either a direct prophecy of the treachery of Judas, or it is a fact in David’ s distresses which our Lord found so similar to the falsity of his treacherous disciple, that he applies it to him, Joh 13:18. What we translate mine own familiar friend,
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Clarke: Psa 41:9 - -- Did eat of my bread - Was an inmate in my house. Applied by our Lord to Judas, when eating with him out of the same dish. See Joh 13:18, Joh 13:26. ...
Calvin: Psa 41:1 - -- 1.Blessed is he that judgeth wisely of the poor Interpreters are generally of opinion that the exercise of kindness and compassion manifested in taki...
1.Blessed is he that judgeth wisely of the poor Interpreters are generally of opinion that the exercise of kindness and compassion manifested in taking care of the miserable, and helping them, is here commended. Those, however, who maintain that the Psalmist here commends the considerate candour of those who judge wisely and charitably of men in adversity, form a better judgment of his meaning. Indeed, the participle
The Lord will deliver him in the day of evil Some connect these words, in the day of evil, with the preceding clause; and the reading thus suggested might indeed be admitted; but the distinction which I have followed is better adapted to the sense, and is also supported by the Hebrew accent. Thus at least the doctrine deducible from these words is susceptible of a fuller meaning, namely, that the Lord will deliver the poor in the day of his adversity. Some think that David here prays for a blessing in behalf of the upright and compassionate; as if he had said, May the Lord himself recompense them again for their kindness, if at any time it happen that they are grievously afflicted! Others suppose that David here records the language of such men from which we may come to the knowledge of their wisdom and uprightness. In my opinion, however, both are equally in error in reading this clause in the form of a desire or prayer. Whether, indeed, David speaks in his own name, or in the name of others, he briefly recommends and enjoins the kindness which we ought to exercise towards the afflicted; for although God may for a time manifest his displeasure against them, yet he will, nevertheless, be gracious to them, so that the issue will at length be happier and more joyful than the judgment we might be led to form from the present aspect of things. We now see that the sense in which I have explained this verse is much more copious and fuller of meaning, namely, that we ought to hope for salvation and deliverance from the hand of the Lord, even in the day of adversity; for otherwise, no man who had once fallen into a state of sorrow and sadness would ever be able to rise again. And this I say, because the design of the Holy Spirit in this passage is not only to exhort the faithful to be ready in showing kindness towards their brethren when they see them in affliction, but also to point out the remedy which has been provided for the mitigation of our sorrow, whenever our faith is shaken by adversity.
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Calvin: Psa 41:2 - -- 2.Jehovah will keep him, and preserve him in life Here David follows out the same sentiment expressed in the preceding verse, when he says that the L...
2.Jehovah will keep him, and preserve him in life Here David follows out the same sentiment expressed in the preceding verse, when he says that the Lord will keep the afflicted, whose destruction cruel and unjust men represent as inevitable. It is likewise necessary always to bear in mind the contrast which is stated between the day of evil and the blessing of deliverance. In this verse the expressions denoting restoration to life, and blessedness on the earth, are of similar import. By these expressions, David means to show that although he had been to all appearance a dead man, yet the hope of life both for himself and for all the faithful had not been extinguished. There might, it is true, appear some inconsistency in his promising himself a happy life in this world, seeing our condition here would be miserable indeed if we had not the expectation of a better state in the world to come. But the answer to this is, that as many had despaired of his recovery, he expressly declares that he will yet be restored to his former state, and will continue alive, nay, that in him there will be seen manifest tokens of the favor of God. He does not in the least exclude by these expressions the hope of a better life after death. What follows concerning the bed of sorrow has led some to form a conjecture which, in my opinion, is not at all probable. What David says of affliction in general, without determining what kind of affliction, they regard as applicable exclusively to sickness. But it is no uncommon thing for those who are sorrowful and grieved in their minds to throw themselves upon their bed, and to seek repose; for the hearts of men are sometimes more distressed by grief than by sickness. It is, certainly, highly probable that David was at that time afflicted with some very heavy calamity, which might be a token that God was not a little displeased with him. In the second clause of the verse there is some obscurity. Some understand the expression, turning the bed, in the same sense as if God, in order to give some alleviation to his servant in the time of trouble, had made his bed and arranged it, as we are wont to do to those who are sick, that they may lay themselves more softly. 102 Others hold, and, in my opinion, more correctly, that when David was restored to health, his bed, which had formerly served him as a sick couch, was turned, that is to say, changed. 103 Thus the sense would be, that although he now languish in sorrow, whilst the Lord is chastening him and training him by means of affliction, yet in a little while he will experience relief by the hand of the same God, and thus recover his strength.
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Calvin: Psa 41:4 - -- 4.I have said, O Jehovah! have mercy upon me By this verse he shows that in his adversity he did not seek to soothe his mind by flattery, as the grea...
4.I have said, O Jehovah! have mercy upon me By this verse he shows that in his adversity he did not seek to soothe his mind by flattery, as the greater part of men do, who endeavor to assuage their sorrows by some vain consolation. And, certainly, the man who is guided by the Spirit of God will, when warned of God by the afflictions with which he is visited, frankly acknowledge his sins, and quietly submit to the admonitions of his brethren, nay, he will even anticipate them by a voluntary confession. David here lays down a mark by which he distinguishes himself from the reprobate and wicked, when he tells us that he earnestly entreated that his sin might not be laid to his charge, and that he had sought refuge in the mercy of God. He indeed requests that some alleviation might be granted to him under the affliction which he endured: but he rises to a higher source of relief, when he asks that through the forgiveness of his sins he might obtain reconciliation to God. Those, as we have said elsewhere, invert the natural order of things, who seek a remedy only for the outward miseries under which they labor, but all the while neglect the cause of them; acting as a sick man would do who sought only to quench his thirst, but never thought of the fever under which he labors, and which is the chief cause of his trouble. Before David, therefore, speaks at all of the healing of his soul, that is to say, of his life 104 he first says, Have mercy upon me: and with this we must connect the reason which immediately follows — for I have sinned against thee. In saying so, he confesses that God is justly displeased with him, and that he can only be restored again to his favor by his sins being blotted out. I take the particle
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Calvin: Psa 41:5 - -- 5.My enemies have spoken evil of me. To speak is here used in the sense of to imprecate. In thus describing the unbecoming conduct of his enemies, ...
5.My enemies have spoken evil of me. To speak is here used in the sense of to imprecate. In thus describing the unbecoming conduct of his enemies, he seeks, as has been elsewhere said, to induce God to have mercy upon him: because the more that God sees his own people cruelly treated, he is so much the more disposed mercifully to succor them. Thus David, by his own example, stirs up and encourages us to greater confidence in God; because the more that our enemies break forth in their cruelty towards us, so much the more does it procure for us favor in the sight of God. The terms in which his enemies uttered this imprecation show how cruel their hatred had been towards him, since it could only be appeased by his destruction, and that, too, accompanied with shame and ignominy; for they wished that with his life the very remembrance of his name should also be blotted out.
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Calvin: Psa 41:6 - -- 6.And if he come to see me, he speaketh lies What is contained in this verse relates to his false and treacherous friends. Those who were his profess...
6.And if he come to see me, he speaketh lies What is contained in this verse relates to his false and treacherous friends. Those who were his professed enemies made no secret of their enmity against him, but openly persecuted him; and that he has already shown in the preceding verse. In addition to this, he now complains that many came to him with professions of attachment to him, as if they had been his friends, who, nevertheless, afterwards poured forth their malicious ill-will in secret against him. Enemies of this sort, who thus cover and conceal their malice, and insinuate themselves under the mask of a fair appearance, only for the purpose of secretly doing us mischief, are indeed much more to be feared than those who openly declare their wicked intentions. Accordingly, having complained of his open enemies, he proceeds to speak of his pretended friends, of whom he declares that they come to see him with no other design than to speak lies, and yet that they are meanwhile devising some deceitful and malicious purpose against him, nay, that they are even secretly heaping up iniquity, and, so to speak, laying it up in store in their hearts; and then he adds, that when they have gone forth from his presence, they manifest their hypocrisy and deceitfulness.
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Calvin: Psa 41:7 - -- 7.All they that hate me whisper together against me Here he seems generally to include both classes of his enemies; those who sought to oppress him i...
7.All they that hate me whisper together against me Here he seems generally to include both classes of his enemies; those who sought to oppress him in an open manner, and in the character of avowed enemies; and those who, under the pretense of friendship, attempted to do the same thing by deceit and stratagem. Accordingly, he says that all of them took counsel together about his destruction, just as we know that wicked men hold much secret consultation respecting their intended deeds of treachery, and whisper to one another concerning them. Hence he adds the words to meditate, or plot, which he employs to denote their base conspiracies and sinful consultations.
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Calvin: Psa 41:8 - -- 8.An evil deed of Belial cleaved fast to him From this verse it appears that they had thus conspired together for his destruction, on the ground that...
8.An evil deed of Belial cleaved fast to him From this verse it appears that they had thus conspired together for his destruction, on the ground that they regarded him as a wicked man, and a person worthy of a thousand deaths. The insolence and arrogance which they manifested towards him proceeded from the false and wicked judgment which they had formed concerning him, and of which he made mention in the beginning of the psalm. They say, therefore, that an evil deed of Belial holds him shut up, and, as it were, bound fast. This the verb
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Calvin: Psa 41:9 - -- 9.Even the man of my peace As the very height of all his miseries, David here declares that he had found the same treachery in some one, or, indeed, ...
9.Even the man of my peace As the very height of all his miseries, David here declares that he had found the same treachery in some one, or, indeed, in many of his greatest friends. For the change of number is very frequent in the Hebrew language, so that he may speak of several individuals as if they were only one person. Thus the meaning would be: Not only the common people, or strangers of whom I had no knowledge or acquaintance, but my greatest friends, nay, even those with whom I was most intimate, and those of my own household, whom I admitted to eat and drink with me at my table, vaunt themselves reproachfully against me. Among the Hebrews, the expression, men of peace, denotes their kinsfolk and connections; but it was a much closer alliance, and one which ought to have secured a stricter observance of the laws of friendship, to eat the bread of David in company with himself: for it is as if he had employed the appellation, My companion. 107 If, however, any would rather understand it of some particular traitor than of several persons, I have no objection to it. To lift up the heel is, in my opinion, to be understood metaphorically, and signifies to rise up disdainfully against a man who is afflicted and cast down. 108 Others explain the expression by to lay wait secretly; but the former interpretation is more appropriate, That the wicked, seeing that David was placed in embarrassed circumstances, or already prostrated in the dust, took occasion from this to assail him indirectly indeed, but, nevertheless, always with insolence; a thing which usually happens among people of a wicked and servile disposition. Christ, in quoting this passage, (Joh 13:18,) applies it to the person of Judas. And certainly we ought to understand that, although David speaks of himself in this psalm, yet he speaks not as a common and private person, but as one who represented the person of Christ, inasmuch as he was, as it were, the example after which the whole Church should be conformed — a point well entitled to our attention, in order that each of us may prepare himself for the same condition. It was necessary that what was begun in David should be fully accomplished in Christ; and, therefore, it must of necessity come to pass, that the same thing should be fulfilled in each of his members, namely, that they should not only suffer from external violence and force, but also from internal foes, ever ready to betray them, even as Paul declares that the Church shall be assailed, not only by “fightings without,” but also by “fears within,” (2Co 7:5.)
Defender -> Psa 41:9
Defender: Psa 41:9 - -- This prophecy was fulfilled by Judas at the last supper (Joh 13:18), confirming that the main context of the psalm is the betrayal of Christ."
This prophecy was fulfilled by Judas at the last supper (Joh 13:18), confirming that the main context of the psalm is the betrayal of Christ."
TSK: Psa 41:1 - -- (Title), This Psalm is supposed to have been written on the same occasion as the three former; and to relate to David’ s affliction, and the evil...
(Title), This Psalm is supposed to have been written on the same occasion as the three former; and to relate to David’ s affliction, and the evil treatment he received from his enemies during its continuance.
Blessed : Psa 112:9; Deu 15:7-11; Job 29:12-16, Job 31:16-20; Pro 14:21, Pro 19:17; Ecc 11:1, Ecc 11:2; Isa 58:7-11; Mar 14:7; Luk 14:13, Luk 14:14; 2Co 9:8-14; Gal 2:10
the poor : or, the weak, or sick, Mat 25:34-39; Act 20:35; 1Th 5:14
Lord : Psa 34:19, Psa 37:26, Psa 37:39, Psa 37:40; Heb 6:10; Jam 2:13
time of trouble : Heb. the day of evil, Psa 37:19; Pro 16:14; Ecc 12:1; Rev 3:10
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TSK: Psa 41:2 - -- preserve : Psa 33:19, Psa 91:3-7; Jer 45:4, Jer 45:5
blessed : Psa 128:1-6; 1Ti 4:8
thou wilt not : or, do not thou, Psa 27:12, Psa 37:32, Psa 37:33, ...
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TSK: Psa 41:3 - -- strengthen : Psa 73:26; 2Ki 1:6, 2Ki 1:16, 2Ki 20:5, 2Ki 20:6; 2Co 4:16, 2Co 4:17; Phi 2:26, Phi 2:27
make : Heb. turn
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TSK: Psa 41:4 - -- Lord : Psa 32:5, Psa 51:1-3
heal : Psa 6:2-4, Psa 103:3, Psa 147:3; 2Ch 30:18-20; Hos 6:1; Jam 5:15, Jam 5:16
Lord : Psa 32:5, Psa 51:1-3
heal : Psa 6:2-4, Psa 103:3, Psa 147:3; 2Ch 30:18-20; Hos 6:1; Jam 5:15, Jam 5:16
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TSK: Psa 41:6 - -- speaketh : Psa 12:2; Pro 26:24, Pro 26:25; Neh 6:1-14; Pro 26:24-26; Dan 11:27; Mic 7:5-7; Luk 11:53, Luk 11:54, Luk 20:20-23; 2Co 11:26
when : Jer 20...
speaketh : Psa 12:2; Pro 26:24, Pro 26:25; Neh 6:1-14; Pro 26:24-26; Dan 11:27; Mic 7:5-7; Luk 11:53, Luk 11:54, Luk 20:20-23; 2Co 11:26
when : Jer 20:10
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TSK: Psa 41:7 - -- whisper : Pro 16:28, Pro 26:20 *marg. Rom 1:29; 2Co 12:20
against : Psa 31:13, Psa 56:5, Psa 56:6; Mat 22:15, Mat 26:3, Mat 26:4
my hurt : Heb. evil t...
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TSK: Psa 41:8 - -- An evil disease : Heb. A thing of Belial, Psa 38:3-7; Job 2:7, Job 2:8; Luk 13:16
and : Psa 3:2, Psa 71:11; Mat 27:41-46, Mat 27:63, Mat 27:64
An evil disease : Heb. A thing of Belial, Psa 38:3-7; Job 2:7, Job 2:8; Luk 13:16
and : Psa 3:2, Psa 71:11; Mat 27:41-46, Mat 27:63, Mat 27:64
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TSK: Psa 41:9 - -- Yea : Psa 55:12-14, Psa 55:20-22; 2Sa 15:12; Job 19:19; Jer 20:10
mine own familiar friend : Heb. the man of my peace
which : Deu 32:15; Oba 1:7; Joh ...
Yea : Psa 55:12-14, Psa 55:20-22; 2Sa 15:12; Job 19:19; Jer 20:10
mine own familiar friend : Heb. the man of my peace
which : Deu 32:15; Oba 1:7; Joh 13:18, Joh 13:26, Joh 13:27
lifted up : Heb. magnified
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 41:1 - -- Blessed is he - See the notes at Psa 1:1. Literally, "Oh the blessings of him that considers the poor."The object is to describe the advantages...
Blessed is he - See the notes at Psa 1:1. Literally, "Oh the blessings of him that considers the poor."The object is to describe the advantages of doing what is here said; or the excellence of the spirit which would be manifested in such a case, and the effect which this would have on his own happiness. These happy effects are described in the remainder of this verse, and in the two following verses.
That considereth - The word used here - from
The poor - Margin, "the weak,"or "the sick."The word used in the Hebrew -
The Lord will deliver him in time of trouble - Margin, as in Hebrew: "in the day of evil."This is the first happy effect or result of showing proper sympathy with others in their troubles. It is a statement of the general principle that the Lord will deal with us as we do with others. See this principle stated and illustrated in Psa 18:24-26.
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Barnes: Psa 41:2 - -- The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive - This is a farther statement of the same principle, and it refers to a general, not a universal...
The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive - This is a farther statement of the same principle, and it refers to a general, not a universal rule in the divine administration, that acts of piety will be partially rewarded on the earth; or that the divine favor will be shown to those who deal kindly with others. This principle is often referred to in the Scriptures. See Psa 1:3, note; Psa 37:3-4, note; Psa 37:11, note; Psa 37:23-26, note; Psa 37:37, note; compare Mat 5:5; 1Ti 4:8. The par ticular application here is, that if any one showed kindness to him that was sick or enfeebled by disease, he might expect that God would interpose in his case under similar circumstances, and would "preserve"him, or "keep him alive."Of course this is to be regarded as a statement made under the general principle. It is not to be interpreted as teaching that this would be universally true, or that he who did this would never die, but the meaning is, that he might look for special divine aid and favor, when he in turn should be sick.
And he shall be blessed upon the earth - This is in accordance with the doctrine noticed above, and so often referred to in the Psalms and elsewhere, that the effect of religion will be to promote happiness and prosperity in this life.
And thou wilt not deliver him unto the will of his enemies - Margin: "Do not thou deliver."The margin, perhaps, expresses most correctly the sense of the original, but still it is an expression of the confident belief of the psalmist that this will not occur; a belief expressed here rather in the form of a prayer than of a direct assertion. The idea is, that he would find God to be a defender and a helper when he was attacked by his foes.
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Barnes: Psa 41:3 - -- The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing - The word rendered strengthen here means to support; to uphold; to sustain. The idea ...
The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing - The word rendered strengthen here means to support; to uphold; to sustain. The idea here is, that God would enable him to bear his sickness, or would impart strength - inward strength - when his body failed, or when but for this aid he must sink under his disease and die. The word rendered languishing means properly languor or sickness; and more generally something sickening; that is, something unclean, unwholesome, nauseating, Job 6:6. The idea here, in accordance with what is stated above, is, that acts of religion will tend to promote our welfare and hap piness in this life; and more particularly that the man who shows favor Psa 41:1 to those who are weak, sick, helpless, will find in turn that God will support him when he is sick. Thus, Psa 18:25, "With the merciful thou wilt show thyself merciful."
Thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness - Margin, as in Hebrew: "turn."So the Septuagint,
(a) The recollection itself will do much to impart inward satisfaction then, for we shall then appreciate better than we did when we performed the act the value of this trait of character, and have a deeper sense of gratitude that we have been able to relieve the sufferings of others;
(b) we may believe and trust that God will remember what we have done, and that he will manifest himself to us then as our gracious supporter and our comforter.
It will not be because by our own acts we have merited his favor, but because this is his gracious purpose, and because it is in accordance with his nature thus to bestow kindness on those who have been kind to others.
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Barnes: Psa 41:4 - -- I said, Lord - I said in my sickness, or in the trial referred to in the psalm. I called on God to be merciful to me when others had no mercy; ...
I said, Lord - I said in my sickness, or in the trial referred to in the psalm. I called on God to be merciful to me when others had no mercy; to be near to me when others turned away; to save me when pressed down with disease on account of my sins. All that follows relates, like this passage, to what occurred when he was sick; to the thoughts that passed through his mind, and to the treatment which he then experienced from others.
Be merciful unto me - In forgiving my sins, and restoring me to health.
Heal my soul - In restoring my soul to spiritual health by forgiving the sin which is the cause of my sickness; or it may mean, Restore my life - regardng his life as (as it were) diseased and in danger of extinction. The probability, however, is that he had particular reference to the soul as the word is commonly understood, or as designating himself; heal, or restore me.
For I have sinned against thee - Regarding his sin as the cause of his sickness. See the notes at Psa 38:3-5.
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Barnes: Psa 41:5 - -- Mine enemies speak evil of me - They take occasion to speak evil of me in my weak and feeble state, thus adding to my sorrows. The word "evil"h...
Mine enemies speak evil of me - They take occasion to speak evil of me in my weak and feeble state, thus adding to my sorrows. The word "evil"here refers to their calumnies or reproaches. They spoke of him as a bad man; as if it were desirable that he should die; that his influence in the world should come to an end, and that his name should be forgotten.
When shall he die - " He is sick; sick on account of his sins; it seems certain that he will die; and it is desirable that such a man should die. But he seems to linger on, as if there were no hope of his dying."Nothing can be imagined more unkind, cutting, severe than this - the desire that a man who is sick shall die, and be out of the way. Nothing could add more to the sorrows of sickness itself than such a wish; than to have it talked about among men - whispered from one to another - that such a man was a nuisance; that he was a bad man; that he was suffering on account of his sins; that it was desirable that his death should occur as soon as possible, and that all remembrance of him on earth should cease.
And his name perish - That he should be forgotten altogether; that his name should be no more mentioned; that all the influence of his life should cease forever. Of a truly bad man - a corrupter of the faith and the virtue of others - this is desirable, for the sooner such men are forgotten the better. Forgotten they will be Pro 10:7, but there is no more malignant feeling in regard to a good man, and especially when such a man is suffering under a severe disease, than the wish that he should die, and that his name should wholly fade away from recollection.
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Barnes: Psa 41:6 - -- And if he come to see me - If he condescends to visit me in my sickness. The word me is not in the original; and perhaps the idea is not that h...
And if he come to see me - If he condescends to visit me in my sickness. The word me is not in the original; and perhaps the idea is not that he came to see the sufferer, but that he came to see "for himself,"though under pretence of paying a visit of kindness. His real motive was to make observation, that he might find something in the expressions or manner of the sufferer that would enable him to make a report unfavorable to him, and to confirm him in his impression that it was desirable such a man should die. He would come under the mask of sympathy and friendship, but really to find something that would confirm him in the opinion that he was a bad man, and that would enable him to state to others that it was desirable he should die.
He speaketh vanity - He utters no expressions of sincerity and truth; he suggests nothing that would console and comfort me; his words are all foreign to the purpose for which a man should visit another in such circumstances, and are, therefore, vain words. What he says is mere pretence and hypocrisy, and is designed to deceive me, as if he had sympathy with me, while his real purpose is to do me mischief.
His heart gathereth iniquity to itself - Or, in his heart he is gathering mischief. That is, in his heart, or in his secret purpose, under the pretence of sympathy and friendship, he is really aiming to gather the materials for doing me wrong. He is endeavoring to find something in my words or manner; in my expressions of impatience and complaining; in the utterances of my unguarded moments, when I am scarcely conscious - something that may be uttered in the honesty of feeling when a man thinks that he is about to die - some reflections of my own on my past life - some confession of sin, which he may turn to my disadvantage, or which may justify his slanderous report that I am a bad man, and that it is desirable that such a man should live no longer. Can anything be imagined more malicious than this?
When he goeth abroad, he telleth it - literally, he tells it to the street, or to those who are without. Perhaps his friends, as malicious as himself, are anxiously waiting without for his report, and, like him, are desirous of finding something that may confirm them in their opinion of him. Or perhaps he designs to tell this to the friends of the sufferer, to show them now that they were deceived in the man; that although in the days of his health, and in his prosperity, he seemed to be a good man, yet that now, when the trial has come, and a real test has been applied, all his religion has been found false and hollow; his impatience, his complaining, his murmuring, and his unwillingness to die, all showing that he was a hypocrite, and was at heart a bad man. Compare the notes at Job 1:9-11.
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Barnes: Psa 41:7 - -- All that hate me whisper together against me - They talk the matter over where they suppose that no one can hear; they endeavonr to collect and...
All that hate me whisper together against me - They talk the matter over where they suppose that no one can hear; they endeavonr to collect and arrange all that can be said against me; they place all that they can say or think as individuals, all that they have separately known or suspected, into "common stock,"and make use of it against me. There is a conspiracy against me - a purpose to do me all the evil that they can. This shows that, in the apprehension of the sufferer, the one who came to see for himself Psa 41:6 came as one of a company - as one deputed or delegated to find some new occasion for a charge against him, and that he had not to suffer under the single malignity of one, but under the combined malignity of many.
Against me do they devise my hurt - Margin, as in Hebrew: "evil to me."That is, they devise some report, the truth of which they endeavor to confirm by something that they may observe in my sickness which will be injurious to me, and which will prove to the world that I am a bad man - a man by whose death the world would be benefited. The slanderous report on which they seemed to agree is mentioned in the following verse - that he was suffering under a disease which was directly and manifestly the result of a sinful life, and that it must be fatal.
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Barnes: Psa 41:8 - -- An evil disease - Margin, "a thing of Belial."The Hebrew is literally "a word of Belial."This has been very variously understood and interprete...
An evil disease - Margin, "a thing of Belial."The Hebrew is literally "a word of Belial."This has been very variously understood and interpreted. The Septuagint renders it:
Then it means worthlessness, wickedness, destruction; and hence, in connection with man, denotes one who is wicked, worthless, abandoned. It is difficult to determine its meaning here. The connection Psa 41:3 would seem to suggest the idea adopted by our translators; the words themselves would seem rather to convey the idea of some reproach, or harsh saying - some vain, wicked, malicious words that were uttered against him. That there was disease in the case, and that the psalm was composed in view of it, and of the treatment which the author experienced from those who had been his professed friends when suffering under it, seems to me to be manifest from Psa 41:1, Psa 41:3-4, Psa 41:8; but it is probable that the reference in this expression is not to the disease, but to the words or the conduct of his calumniators. It is evident from the pronoun him - the third person - that this refers, as our translators have indicated by the words they say to something that they said in regard to him; something which they affirmed as the result of their observations on his condition, Psa 41:6-7. The true idea, therefore, I think is this: "They say - that is, those who came to see me said - A ‘ word of evil’ - "a sentence of evil or destruction"- is poured upon him. He is suffering under such a ‘ word of destruction;’ or, such a word (that is, sentence) as will involve his destruction, by way of punishment for his sins; therefore all is over with him, and he must die. He can hope to rise no more."This would express the idea that they regarded his death as certain, for he seemed to be under a sentence which made that sure.
Cleaveth fast unto him - Or rather, "is poured upon him."The word used here -
(1) to be narrow, straitened, compressed; and then
(2) to pour out - as metal is poured out Job 28:2, or as words are poured out in prayer Isa 26:16.
Here it would seem to mean that such a sentence was poured upon him, or that he had become submerged or swallowed up under it. It was like the pouring out of a torrent on him, overwhelming him with floods of water, so that he could not hope to escape, or to rise again.
And now that he lieth, he shall rise up no more - There is no hope for him; no prospect that he will ever get up again. They felt that they might indulge their remarks, therefore, freely, as he would not be able to take revenge on them, and their expectations and hopes were about to be accomplished by his death. Compare Psa 41:5. As a part of his sufferings, all this was aggravated by the fact that they regarded those sufferings as full proof of his guilt; that he could not reply to their accusations; and that be was about to die under that imputation.
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Barnes: Psa 41:9 - -- Yea, mine own familiar friend - Margin, as in Hebrew: "the man of my peace."The man with whom I was at peace; who had no cause of alienation fr...
Yea, mine own familiar friend - Margin, as in Hebrew: "the man of my peace."The man with whom I was at peace; who had no cause of alienation from me; with whom I was associated in the most peaceful and friendly relations.
In whom I trusted - He whom I made my confidential friend, and on whom I supposed I could rely in the time of trouble.
Which did eat of my bread - This may either denote one who was supported by him as one of his family, or else one who partook of his hospitality. In the former case, if that is the meaning, he bad a right to expect that, as a matter of gratitude, such an one would stand by him, and not be found among his enemies. In the latter case, if that is the meaning, he had a right to expect that one who had shared his hospitality would not be found among his foes.
Hath lifted up his heel against me - Margin, as in Hebrew: "magnified."So the Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate. Lather renders this, "hath trodden me under his feet."The figure here is taken from a horse that turns and kicks him that had fed him. This passage is applied Joh 13:18 to Judas, with the statement, in regard to him, that what he had done was done "that the Scripture might be fulfilled:"see the notes at that passage. It is not necessary to suppose that the Saviour meant to say that the passage in the psalm had original and exclusive reference to Judas; the phrase employed by the Saviour, "that the Scripture might be fulfilled,"may have been used by him in that large sense in which these words are often used as denoting, either:
(a) that the language found in the Scriptures, and applicable originally to another case, "would properly express the idea,"or describe the fact; or
(b) that the case referred to was one of a class; or that, as it was accomplished in the case of David, so in a similar sense it was accomplished in the case of the Saviour.
In other words, Judas was regarded as belonging to the same class as the individual to whom the psalm refers. He was one to whom the language of the psalm was applicable; and the Saviour endured the same kind of suffering which the person did who is referred to in the psalm. Thus the language of the Scriptures, applicable to all such cases, received a complete fulfillment in Him. It is remarkable that, in the reference to Judas, the Saviour quotes only a part of the verse: "He that eateth bread with me."He omits, apparently from design, the former part of the verse in the psalm, "mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted,"as if he would not even seem to convey the idea that he ever regarded Judas as his intimate friend, or as if he had ever really "trusted"him. He conveys the idea that Judas had partaken largely of his favors, but not that He himself was ever really a stranger to the baseness of his heart, Joh 6:64, Joh 6:70.
Poole: Psa 41:2 - -- Keep him alive Heb. quicken him , i.e. revive and restore him. Either he will preserve him from trouble; or if God see trouble necessary or fit for ...
Keep him alive Heb. quicken him , i.e. revive and restore him. Either he will preserve him from trouble; or if God see trouble necessary or fit for him, and therefore suffer him to fall into it, he will raise him out of it.
Unto the will of his enemies i.e. to destruction, which they earnestly desire and endeavour to procure.
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Poole: Psa 41:3 - -- Either,
1. Change or overturn his bed of sickness; which is done when a man is restored to health. Or rather,
2. Give him ease and comfort, which ...
Either,
1. Change or overturn his bed of sickness; which is done when a man is restored to health. Or rather,
2. Give him ease and comfort, which sick men receive by the help of those who turn and stir their whole bed, to make it soft and easy for them; for the words foregoing and following these suppose him to be and continue in a state of sickness. Thus the Lord elsewhere compares himself to a servant, waiting upon his people at table, Luk 12:37 ; as here, to one that makes their bed; metaphors implying strange condescension.
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Poole: Psa 41:4 - -- My soul i.e. either,
1. Myself, to wit, my body. So it is a double synecdoche. And the soul is so taken Psa 16:10 . Or,
2. My soul properly so ca...
My soul i.e. either,
1. Myself, to wit, my body. So it is a double synecdoche. And the soul is so taken Psa 16:10 . Or,
2. My soul properly so called; which is said to be healed , when it is pardoned and purged, as 2Ch 30:20 Isa 53:5 , compared with 1Pe 2:24 Mat 13:15 , compared with Mar 4:12 Jam 5:16 . So he strikes at the root of his misery, and prays for the removal of the sin of his soul, as the cause of the disease of his body.
For I have sinned against thee: this may be added, either,
1. As a reason or motive to God; Grant this request, for I have sinned , and therefore thy grace in healing me will be more glorious and admirable. Or, for I acknowledge that I have sinned; for the act is oft put for the declaration of it, as Exo 33:13 Psa 51:5 . Or,
2. As a reason moving him thus to pray, I said, Lord, be merciful unto me: heal my soul ; and great reason I had to say so, for I have sinned against thee.
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Speak evil of me vent their ill wishes against me, in the following words.
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Poole: Psa 41:6 - -- To see me to visit me in my sickness, according to the custom.
He speaketh vanity or falsehood ; pretending sympathy with me, and friendship to me...
To see me to visit me in my sickness, according to the custom.
He speaketh vanity or falsehood ; pretending sympathy with me, and friendship to me, whilst they plot mischief in their hearts against me.
His heart gathereth iniquity to itself even when he is with me, and pretends hearty affection to me, his heart cannot forbear its customary practice of meditating and devising mischief against me; for which he watcheth and seeketh for all occasions from my speeches, or carriage, or the circumstances of my condition, which he observes.
He telleth it partly to delight his companions, and partly to encourage them to and direct them in their malicious designs against me.
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Poole: Psa 41:7 - -- Whisper together against me i.e. secretly defame me, and closely plot against me.
Whisper together against me i.e. secretly defame me, and closely plot against me.
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Poole: Psa 41:8 - -- An evil disease Heb. a word or thing of Belial , i.e. either,
1. Some wicked calumny which they had raised, and which stuck close to him. Or,
2. H...
An evil disease Heb. a word or thing of Belial , i.e. either,
1. Some wicked calumny which they had raised, and which stuck close to him. Or,
2. His great wickedness, whereof this is a sign. Or rather,
3. This sore disease or mischief; either sent upon him in way of vengeance for his horrid crimes; or such as God useth to inflict upon the sons of Belial, to show that he is in truth such a one, whatsoever he pretends to the contrary.
He shall rise up no more seeing God hath begun to punish him, he will make an end of him.
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Poole: Psa 41:9 - -- Mine own familiar friend he means either Ahithophel, or some other perfidious counsellor or courtier, who was a type of Judas, to whom therefore it i...
Mine own familiar friend he means either Ahithophel, or some other perfidious counsellor or courtier, who was a type of Judas, to whom therefore it is applied, Joh 13:18 , as David was a type of Christ in being thus betrayed. So these words were literally fulfilled in David, and yet the Holy Ghost, which dictated them, looked further in them, even to Christ and Judas, in whom they received a further and fuller accomplishment.
Hath lifted up his heel a phrase implying injury, joined with insolency and contempt; taken from an unruly horse, which kicks at him that owns and feeds him.
The fervent desire of the just after God: hope in afflictions.
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Haydock: Psa 41:1 - -- Understanding. See Psalm xxxi. (Menochius) ---
Core, who composed, (Tirinus) or sung (Menochius) most of the psalms in this second part. (Tirinu...
Understanding. See Psalm xxxi. (Menochius) ---
Core, who composed, (Tirinus) or sung (Menochius) most of the psalms in this second part. (Tirinus) ---
Pieces of a joyful nature were generally assigned to them, according to the Jews and St. Jerome, Psalm lxxxiv. (Menochius) ---
They were descendants of the famous schismatic, the miraculous preservation of whose innocent children teaches us, that the good will not be punished with the guilty, and that we must be raised above this earth, lest hell devour us, Numbers xvi. 31., and xxvi. 10. (Worthington) ---
The sentiments of the captives, (Calmet) and of every sincere Christian, are here expressed. (St. Augustine) ---
David may have been the author, (Calmet) as it is generally believed. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 41:2 - -- Waters. This was sung at the baptism of Catechumens, (St. Augustine) teaching them to thirst after heaven. (Haydock) ---
The hart being infected w...
Waters. This was sung at the baptism of Catechumens, (St. Augustine) teaching them to thirst after heaven. (Haydock) ---
The hart being infected with poison, thirsts exceedingly, as sinners must do for pardon. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 41:3 - -- Strong. Most Bibles before Clement VIII read "fountain." (Calmet) ---
El signifies both God and strong. (Berthier) ---
The Levites desired earn...
Strong. Most Bibles before Clement VIII read "fountain." (Calmet) ---
El signifies both God and strong. (Berthier) ---
The Levites desired earnestly to serve God in his temple; Christians must wish to appear before him in heaven, (Calmet) when they will be free from temptations. Idols may destroy, but they cannot give life. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 41:4 - -- Bread. Ovid imitates this: Cura dolorque animi lachrymæque alimenta fuere. (Met. x.) ---
The tears of compunction obtain the remission of sin. ...
Bread. Ovid imitates this: Cura dolorque animi lachrymæque alimenta fuere. (Met. x.) ---
The tears of compunction obtain the remission of sin. (St. Jerome) ---
God . Thus the idolaters derided those who could not point at their God. (Haydock) ---
The Babylonians had conquered all the surrounding nations, and despised their deities. (Calmet) ---
The wicked laugh at the just, who are for a time in distress, comforting themselves with weeping. (Worthington) ---
Those who saw David wandering (Haydock) in the mountains, at a distance from the tabernacle, might ask him what religion or God he followed. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 41:5 - -- These sarcasms fill me with grief, (Calmet) while the solemn ceremonies of religion, which, I remember, where observed in the temple, cause my heart ...
These sarcasms fill me with grief, (Calmet) while the solemn ceremonies of religion, which, I remember, where observed in the temple, cause my heart to overflow with joy. (Berthier) ---
I shall. Protestants, "I had gone with the multitude; I went with them to the house of God with the voice of joy and praise; with a multitude that kept holiday." Yet the holidays of the Catholic Church are now ridiculed by many. (Protestants) (Haydock) ---
The original may have several other meanings. The tabernacle may here designate the musach of Levites, 4 Kings xvi. 18. (Calmet) ---
Feasting. Some such religious feasts were prescribed, Deuteronomy xii. 12. (Haydock) ---
David was not permitted to build the temple, nor to enter the tabernacle: but he speaks of heaven. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 41:6 - -- My countenance. Hebrew, "his," as Aquila, &c., read. (Calmet) ---
Yet as the words are repeated, (ver. 12.) there seems to be a fault in the text,...
My countenance. Hebrew, "his," as Aquila, &c., read. (Calmet) ---
Yet as the words are repeated, (ver. 12.) there seems to be a fault in the text, (Berthier) owing to v, "his" being taken in here, instead of explaining it by and, ver. 7. (Haydock) ---
The arrangement of the letters in the Vulgate is preferable. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 41:7 - -- Little hill of Sion. I hope that I shall soon again behold the fertile regions along the Jordan. (Calmet) ---
But these hills of Hermon, &c., are ...
Little hill of Sion. I hope that I shall soon again behold the fertile regions along the Jordan. (Calmet) ---
But these hills of Hermon, &c., are nothing when compared with heaven: They serve only to remind us of our banishment. (Berthier) ---
The difficulties of our present abode, hemmed in on all sides, teach us to place our hopes in heaven. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 41:8 - -- Flood-gates. The Hebrews imagined there were immense reservoirs of water above, (Calmet) which might serve to drown the earth, as at the deluge, Gen...
Flood-gates. The Hebrews imagined there were immense reservoirs of water above, (Calmet) which might serve to drown the earth, as at the deluge, Genesis vii. 11. Both heaven and earth seemed to be armed against the psalmist. (Haydock) ---
One affliction succeeded another, (Calmet) and God appeared to have abandoned his servants to temptations. But he enables them to come off with victory, and fills them with more joy in their trials: so that they may sing in heart, and pray. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 41:9 - -- Night. In affliction, as well as in prosperity, we must praise the Lord. Roman Septuagint, "in the night he will manifest it." ---
Mercy. (Haydo...
Night. In affliction, as well as in prosperity, we must praise the Lord. Roman Septuagint, "in the night he will manifest it." ---
Mercy. (Haydock) ---
This is very beautiful, but not agreeable with the original. (Berthier)
Gill: Psa 41:1 - -- Blessed is he that considereth the poor,.... Not the poor of the world in common, nor poor saints in particular, but some single poor man; for the wo...
Blessed is he that considereth the poor,.... Not the poor of the world in common, nor poor saints in particular, but some single poor man; for the word is in the singular number, and designs our Lord Jesus Christ, who, in Psa 40:17, is said to be "poor and needy": and so read the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and Ethiopic versions here; who became poor for our sakes, that we might be enriched by his poverty; being born of poor parents, educated in a mean manner, and in public life was ministered to by others: the word q here used signifies one that is attenuated, weak, and exhausted either of his substance or strength, or both; as Christ was in his state of humiliation, when he was emptied of his riches, and, though Lord of all, had not where to lay his head; and whose strength was dried up like a potsherd, when he suffered on the cross; and indeed at best he was encompassed with weaknesses and infirmities: and in this his low estate he is to be wisely considered, or attended to with wisdom and understanding; and he may be said wisely to consider him, who considers how great a person he is, that came into such a low estate for us; not a mere man, but above angels and men, that has all the perfections of deity in him, is the eternal Son of God, truly and properly God, and the Creator of all things, and Governor of the universe; which consideration will engage to and encourage faith and hope in him, lead to adore his wonderful grace, and to admire his condescension and humility in becoming poor and weak; as also who considers that the poverty of Christ was for our sakes, and that we might be made rich with the riches of grace and glory; and considers it so as not to be offended with it; see Mat 11:6; and which may serve to support us under all meanness and infirmity, and in whatsoever estate saints may come into; and likewise who considers him in his offices which he exercised in that his estate as the apostle and high priest of our profession; and him in his exalted state in heaven; see Heb 12:3; in a word, he wisely considers him, who believes in him as his Saviour, prizes him as the pearl of great price, cleaves close unto him, and follows him wherever he goes; who desires to know more of him, is concerned for his honour, interest, kingdom and glory, and pities his poor members, and freely and bountifully communicates to them; and so the Targum,
"blessed is the man that wisely considers the afflictions of the poor, that he may have mercy on him;''
and such an one is an happy man, and the following things said of him prove him to be so;
the Lord will deliver him in time of trouble: or "in the evil day" r; out of all his trouble, temporal and spiritual, of body and soul; in every time of affliction, private and personal; or in a time of public calamity; perhaps reference may be had to the time of Jerusalem's destruction, which was a time of great tribulation, Mat 24:21; when those who did not consider Christ in his poor and low estate, but despised and rejected him, were destroyed; and such as did were saved from that calamity: and it may also include the day of judgment, which is the evil day, unto which the wicked are reserved, and when they will be punished with everlasting destruction; but then those that consider Christ, and believe in him, will be saved from wrath. Some s take these words, with what follows in the two next verses, as a prayer, and as delivered by him that visits the sick, for his comfort; and so Joseph Kimchi interprets it of an honourable man visiting a sick man, and instructing and comforting him with such words as these, that "the Lord will deliver him", &c.
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Gill: Psa 41:2 - -- The Lord will preserve him and keep him alive,.... Amidst a thousand deaths, to which he is exposed for making a profession of his faith in Christ; se...
The Lord will preserve him and keep him alive,.... Amidst a thousand deaths, to which he is exposed for making a profession of his faith in Christ; see 2Co 1:10; or this may refer to his spiritual life, which is hid and preserved in Christ, in whom he believes; and is safe and secure; because Christ lives he shall live also, and shall never die the second death, nor be hurt by it, but shall have everlasting life;
and he shall be blessed upon the earth; with temporal blessings; for whatever he has, be it more or less, he has it with the blessing of God, and as a blessing of the covenant, and in love, and so is a blessing indeed: and with spiritual blessings; with peace, pardon, righteousness, and a right and title to eternal glory and happiness; and he will be blessed in the new earth, in which righteousness will dwell, and where he will dwell, live, and reign with Christ a thousand years;
and thou wilt not deliver him into the will of his enemies; not into the will of Satan, that roaring lion who would devour him if he might; nor of wicked men, and furious persecutors, whose wrath the Lord makes to praise him; and the remainder of it is restrained by him; some read these words as a prayer, "do not thou deliver him", &c. see Psa 27:12; so Pagninus, Montanus, Junius and Tremellius, Ainsworth, and others.
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Gill: Psa 41:3 - -- The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing,.... When on a sick bed, or a death bed, where he lies languishing, and ready to expire; when...
The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of languishing,.... When on a sick bed, or a death bed, where he lies languishing, and ready to expire; when his natural strength, spirits, and heart fail him, then the Lord strengthens him with strength in his soul; and is the strength of his heart, and his portion for ever. The Targum is,
"the Word of the Lord shall help him in his life, and shall appear to him on the bed of his illness, to quicken him;''
thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness; or "all his bed thou hast turned" or "wilt turn in his sickness" t; meaning not the recovery of him from a bed of sickness to a state of health, which is the sense given by many; much less a turning him from a state of ease and rest into trouble and distress; but making him easy and comfortable on a bed of sickness; which, in a literal sense, is done when a sick person's bed is turned or made, or he is turned upon it from side to side; so the Lord, by the comforts of his Spirit, makes a sick and death bed easy to them that believe in Christ, and often puts that triumphant song into their mouths in their dying moments, "O death! where is that sting?" &c. 1Co 15:55; and this is the peaceful end and blissful state of such who wisely consider Christ and believe in him; low estate, through the sins of his the insults of his enemies, and the treachery of one of his disciples, is described in the following verses.
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Gill: Psa 41:4 - -- I said, Lord, be merciful unto me,.... See Gill on Psa 40:11;
heal my soul; not that it was diseased with sin in such sense as the souls of other m...
I said, Lord, be merciful unto me,.... See Gill on Psa 40:11;
heal my soul; not that it was diseased with sin in such sense as the souls of other men are; but it is to be understood as a petition for comfort while bearing the sins of others, and which Christ as man stood in need of when in the garden and on the cross; so healing signifies comfort in trouble, as in Isa 57:18;
for I have sinned against thee; or "unto thee", or "before thee", as the Targum; not that any sin was committed by him in his own person, but he having all the sins of his people on him, which he calls his own, Psa 40:12; he was treated as a sinner, and as guilty before God, Isa 53:12; and so the words may be read, "for I am a sinner unto thee" u; I am counted as one by thee, having the sins of my people imputed to me; and am bound unto thee, or under obligation to bear the punishment of sin; or thus, "for I have made an offering for sin unto thee" w, so the word is used, Lev 6:26; and so it might be rendered in Lev 5:7; and perhaps may be better rendered so in Lev 4:3; and be understood, not of the sin of the anointed priest, but of his offering a sacrifice for the soul that sinned through ignorance, Psa 41:2, which offering is directed to: and then the sense here is, heal me, acquit me, discharge me, and deliver me out of this poor and low estate in which I am; for I have made my soul an offering for sin, and thereby have made atonement for all the sins of my people laid upon me; and accordingly he was acquitted and justified, 1Ti 3:16.
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Gill: Psa 41:5 - -- Mine enemies speak evil of me,.... That is, the Jews, who were enemies to his person, people, doctrines and ordinances, and would not have him to reig...
Mine enemies speak evil of me,.... That is, the Jews, who were enemies to his person, people, doctrines and ordinances, and would not have him to reign over them; these spake evil of him, charged him with being a glutton and a winebibber; said he had a devil, and was a Samaritan; imputed his miracles to diabolical influence; branded his doctrine with blasphemy, and spoke against his religion and worship, and wished him ill, saying,
when shall he die; they had a good will to assassinate him privately, but upon mature deliberation they consulted and determined to take what advantage they could against him, and deliver him up to the Roman governor; they feared, should he go on and succeed, through his doctrines and miracles, as he did, it would go ill with them; and they concluded, could he be brought to death, it would clearly appear to the common people that he was not the Messiah; though this was the very thing he came into the world for, and which he himself was very desirous of; because hereby, and hereby only, the salvation of his people could be brought about; and though this was a thing foretold in prophecy, yet it seems as if Christ's enemies the Jews, and Satan himself, were ignorant of it, and of its virtue and use to save men; however, though it was an ill wish in them, it was well for us that he did die, though the consequence is not as they wished;
and his name perish? that is, the fame of his doctrine and miracles, the memory of him and his worthy deeds, particularly his Gospel, which so fully expresses the glory of his person and grace; yea, he himself, for they hoped that upon his death he would come into general disgrace, that his name would never be mentioned but with reproach, that his Gospel would be no more preached, and that he would be accursed of God and men: in all which they were sadly disappointed; for, upon his resurrection from the dead, he had a name given him above every name; his memory became precious to thousands; an ordinance was appointed to remember him to the end of the world in all his churches; his Gospel was ordered to be preached to all the world, as it was; and he himself is blessed for evermore.
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Gill: Psa 41:6 - -- And if he come to see me,.... Meaning anyone of his enemies, when they came, as pretended, to pay him a friendly visit. A late learned writer x inter...
And if he come to see me,.... Meaning anyone of his enemies, when they came, as pretended, to pay him a friendly visit. A late learned writer x interprets this of Absalom, who visited his father when he had the smallpox, which he thinks, after mentioned, of which his enemies expected he would die, when Absalom pretended great concern for his life; though he, with others, were plotting against him, should he live, to destroy him;
he speaketh vanity; lies and falsehoods, in an hypocritical manner, with a double heart; his mouth and his heart not agreeing together; see Mat 22:16;
his heart gathereth iniquity to itself; amasses to itself greater treasures of wickedness still, thought that itself is desperately wicked, and very wickedness: this is to be understood of the enemies of Christ observing his words and actions, and laying them up, with a wicked intention, against a proper time;
when he goeth abroad, he telleth it; as in the instances concerning giving tribute to Caesar, destroying the temple, and saying he was the son of God, Mat 22:17; compared with Luk 23:2; compared with Mat 26:60, compared with Joh 19:5.
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Gill: Psa 41:7 - -- All that hate me whisper together against me,.... That is, they privately conspired against him; see Mat 22:15;
against me do they devise my hurt; ...
All that hate me whisper together against me,.... That is, they privately conspired against him; see Mat 22:15;
against me do they devise my hurt; not only to take away his name and credit, but his life.
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Gill: Psa 41:8 - -- An evil disease, say they, cleaveth fast unto him,.... Not any bodily one, of which they might hope he would die; much less any foul disease, the dis...
An evil disease, say they, cleaveth fast unto him,.... Not any bodily one, of which they might hope he would die; much less any foul disease, the disease of sin; but, as the phrase may be rendered, "a word of Belial" y; that is, a wicked charge or accusation; a charge of sin brought against him by the sons of Belial, as of blasphemy and sedition, which they concluded would be fastened upon him, and stick by him, and in which they should succeed to their wishes; or else the shameful punishment the death of the cross, inflicted on him, which they fancied would fix an indelible mark of infamy and scandal on him, since cursed is he that hangeth on a tree;
and now that he lieth, let him rise up no more; has much as he was dead, of which they had full proof, and was laid in the grave, his tomb watched, and the stone rolled to it sealed; they thought all was safe, and it was all over with him, that he would never rise again, as he had given out, and his disciples incapable of committing a fraud they afterwards accused them with: this, according to the above learned writer, see Psa 41:6, was said by Absalom, as he thinks Ahithophel is the person designed in Psa 41:9.
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Gill: Psa 41:9 - -- Yea, mine own familiar friend,.... Or, "the man of my peace" z; who did live peaceably with him, and ought always to have done so; whom he treated as ...
Yea, mine own familiar friend,.... Or, "the man of my peace" z; who did live peaceably with him, and ought always to have done so; whom he treated as his friend, as the rest of the apostles; calling him to that high office, and ordaining him to it, and qualifying him for it; and whom he called by the name of friend, when he came to betray him; Judas is meant;
in whom I trusted; with the bag and the money in it, both for the sustenance of his own family, the apostles, and for the relief of the poor, Joh 12:6;
which did eat of my bread; of his bread in common with the rest of the apostles; and who was eating with him when he gave the sign who should betray him; and who seems to have eaten of the bread in the Lord's supper: even this same person
hath lifted up his heel against me; by supplanting him, dealing hypocritically with him, and betraying him into the hands of his enemies: the metaphor is either taken from an unruly horse throwing his rider, and then ungenerously spurning at him, and trampling on him; or from wrestlers, who seek to supplant and trip up each other's heels; which shows the ingratitude, baseness, and treachery of Judas; see Joh 13:18.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 41:1 That is, the one who has been kind to the poor. The prefixed verbal form could be taken as jussive of prayer (“may the Lord deliver,” see ...
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NET Notes: Psa 41:3 Heb “all his bed you turn in his illness.” The perfect is used here in a generalizing sense (see v. 1) or in a rhetorical manner to emphas...
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NET Notes: Psa 41:4 In vv. 4-10 the psalmist recites the prayer of petition and lament he offered to the Lord.
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NET Notes: Psa 41:7 Heb “together against me they whisper, all those who hate me.” The Hitpael of לָחַשׁ (lakhash) refers ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:1 "To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David." Blessed [is] he that ( a ) considereth the poor: the LORD will deliver him in time of trouble.
( a ) Not c...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:3 The LORD will strengthen him upon the ( b ) bed of languishing: thou wilt make all his ( c ) bed in his sickness.
( b ) When for sorrow and grief of ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:5 Mine enemies ( d ) speak evil of me, When shall he die, and his name perish?
( d ) That is, curse me and cannot have their cruel hate quenched but wi...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:6 And if he come to see [me], he speaketh ( e ) vanity: his heart gathereth iniquity to itself; [when] he goeth abroad, he telleth [it].
( e ) For pret...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:8 ( f ) An evil disease, [say they], cleaveth fast unto him: and [now] that he lieth he shall rise up no more.
( f ) The enemies thought by his sharp p...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 41:9 Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, ( g ) hath lifted up [his] heel against me.
( g ) As David felt this fal...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 41:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Psa 41:1-13 - --1 The recompence of the charitable.4 David complains of his enemies' treachery.10 He flees to God for succour.
MHCC -> Psa 41:1-4; Psa 41:5-13
MHCC: Psa 41:1-4 - --The people of God are not free from poverty, sickness, or outward affliction, but the Lord will consider their case, and send due supplies. From his L...
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MHCC: Psa 41:5-13 - --We complain, and justly, of the want of sincerity, and that there is scarcely any true friendship to be found among men; but the former days were no b...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 41:1-4; Psa 41:5-13
Matthew Henry: Psa 41:1-4 - -- In these verses we have, I. God's promises of succour and comfort to those that consider the poor; and, 1. We may suppose that David makes mention o...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 41:5-13 - -- David often complains of the insolent conduct of his enemies towards him when he was sick, which, as it was very barbarous in them, so it could not ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 41:1-3 - --
(Heb.: 41:2-4) The Psalm opens by celebrating the lot, so rich in promises, of the sympathetic man. דּל is a general designation of the poor (e....
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 41:4-6 - --
(Heb.: 41:5-7) He, the poet, is treated in his distress of soul in a manner totally different from the way just described which is so rich in promi...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 41:7-9 - --
(Heb.: 41:8-10) Continuation of the description of the conduct of the enemies and of the false friend. התלחשׁ , as in 2Sa 12:19, to whisper t...
Constable: Psa 41:1-13 - --Psalm 41
David assured the godly in this psalm that those who help the needy would experience deliveranc...
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Constable: Psa 41:1-2 - --1. God's blessings on the merciful 41:1-3
41:1 This verse succinctly states the lesson this whole psalm teaches. God blesses people who take care of t...
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Constable: Psa 41:3-8 - --2. God's punishment of the treacherous 41:4-9
David continued to address the congregation of Israel, but presented the alternative to caring for the h...
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Constable: Psa 41:9-12 - --3. God's deliverance of the upright 41:10-13
41:10 David had asked God to restore his health so he might repay his enemies. This may seem to be an unw...
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