
Text -- Psalms 42:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 42:3
Clarke -> Psa 42:3
Clarke: Psa 42:3 - -- My tears have been my meat day and night - My longing has been so intense after spiritual blessings, that I have forgotten to take my necessary food...
My tears have been my meat day and night - My longing has been so intense after spiritual blessings, that I have forgotten to take my necessary food; and my sorrow has been so great, that I have had no appetite for any. I feel more for the honor of my God and his truth than for myself, when the idolaters, who have thy people in captivity, insultingly cry, Where is thy God?
Calvin -> Psa 42:3
Calvin: Psa 42:3 - -- 3.My tears have been my bread Here the Psalmist mentions another sharp piercing shaft with which the wicked and malevolent grievously wounded his hea...
3.My tears have been my bread Here the Psalmist mentions another sharp piercing shaft with which the wicked and malevolent grievously wounded his heart. There can be no doubt that Satan made use of such means as these to fan the flame that consumed him with grief. “What,” we may suppose that adversary to say, “wouldst thou have? Seest thou not that God hath cast thee off? For certainly he desires to be worshipped in the tabernacle, to which you have now no opportunity of access, and from which you are as it were banished.” These were violent assaults, and enough to have overturned the faith of this holy man, unless, supported by the power of the Spirit in a more than ordinary degree, he had made a strong and vigorous resistance. It is evident that his feelings had been really and strongly affected. We may be often agitated, and yet not to such an extent as to abstain from eating and drinking; but when a man voluntarily abstains from food, and indulges so much in weeping, that he daily neglects his ordinary meals, and is continually overwhelmed in sorrow, it is obvious that he is troubled in no light degree; but that he is wounded severely, and even to the heart. 115 Now, David says, that he did not experience greater relief in any thing whatever than from weeping; and, therefore, he gave himself up to it, just in the same manner as men take pleasure and enjoyment in eating; and this he says had been the case every day, and not only for a short time. Let us, therefore, whenever the ungodly triumph over us in our miseries, and spitefully taunt us that God is against us, never forget that it is Satan who moves them to speak in this manner, in order to overthrow our faith; and that, therefore, it is not time for us to take our ease, or to yield to indifference, when a war so dangerous is waged against us. There is still another reason which ought to inspire us with such feelings, and it is this, that the name of God is held up to scorn by the ungodly; for they cannot scoff at our faith without greatly reproaching him. If, then, we are not altogether insensible, we must in such circumstances be affected with the deepest sorrow.
TSK -> Psa 42:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 42:3
Barnes: Psa 42:3 - -- My tears have been my meat - The word rendered tears in this place is in the singular number, and means literally weeping. Compare Psa 39:12. T...
My tears have been my meat - The word rendered tears in this place is in the singular number, and means literally weeping. Compare Psa 39:12. The word meat here means literally bread, and is used in the general signification of food, as the word meat is always used in the English version of the Bible. The English word meat, which originally signified food, has been changed gradually in its signification, until it now denotes in common usage animal food, or flesh. The idea here is, that instead of eating, he had wept. The state described is that which occurs so often when excessive sorrow takes away the appetite, or destroys the relish for food, and occasions fasting. This was the foundation of the whole idea of fasting - that sorrow, and especially sorrow for sin, takes away the desire for food for the time, and leads to involuntary abstinence. Hence arose the correlative idea of abstaining from food with a view to promote that deep sense of sin, or to produce a condition of the body which would be favorable to a proper recollection of guilt.
Day and night - Constantly; without intermission. See the notes at Psa 1:2. "While they continually say unto me."While it is constantly said to me; that is, by mine enemies. See Psa 42:10.
Where is thy God? - See Psa 3:2; Psa 22:8. The meaning here is, "He seems to be utterly forsaken or abandoned by God. He trusted in God. He professed to be his friend. He looked to him as his protector. But he is now forsaken, as if he had no God; and God is treating him as if he were none of his; as if he had no love for him, and no concern about his welfare."
Poole -> Psa 42:3
Poole: Psa 42:3 - -- My tears have been my meat which notes both the great abundance and constant course of his tears, and the secret satisfaction and ease which he found...
My tears have been my meat which notes both the great abundance and constant course of his tears, and the secret satisfaction and ease which he found in giving vent to his passion this way. Possibly his tears and grief took away his appetite, and so were to him instead of food.
Where is thy God of whom thou hast so often boasted, as of one so able and ready to help all that trust in him and call upon him, and particularly as one engaged to time by many great and special promises? He is gone and departed from thee, and no where to be found of thee. He is either unable or unwilling to help thee, or regardless of thee.
Haydock -> Psa 42:3
Haydock: Psa 42:3 - -- Light, your Messias, as the Jews confess, (Jarchi) truth, the holy Spirit. (St. Chrysostom) ---
Both the titles may be applied to our Saviour. (...
Light, your Messias, as the Jews confess, (Jarchi) truth, the holy Spirit. (St. Chrysostom) ---
Both the titles may be applied to our Saviour. (Berthier) (St. Jerome) ---
We are in the utmost distress; be pleased to send us relief. (Calmet) ---
As thou hast sent Christ into the world to impart these graces, grant that we may know, and comply with our duties, before we approach to they holy altar. ---
Holy hill, the Church, (Worthington) or tabernacle on Sion, where the Jews wished to be present. (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 42:3
Gill: Psa 42:3 - -- My tears have been my meat day and night,.... That is, he could not eat for sorrow, like Hannah,
1Sa 1:7,8; or while he was eating tears fell in pl...
My tears have been my meat day and night,.... That is, he could not eat for sorrow, like Hannah,
1Sa 1:7,8; or while he was eating tears fell in plenty, and they were as common, day and night, as his food, and mixed with it f; see Psa 80:5;
while they continually say unto me, his enemies the Philistines,
where is thy God? theirs were to be seen and pointed at, as the host of heaven, the sun, moon, and stars, and idols of gold, silver, brass, wood, and stone; wherefore they ask, where was his? but David's God was invisible; he is in the heavens, and does what he pleases, Psa 115:2; or the sense is, that if there was such a God he believed in and professed, and he was his servant, surely he would never have suffered him to fall into so much distress and calamity, but would have appeared for his relief and deliverance; and therefore tauntingly, and by way of reproach, ask where he was.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 42:3 Heb “when [they] say to me all the day.” The suffixed third masculine plural pronoun may have been accidentally omitted from the infinitiv...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 42:3
Geneva Bible: Psa 42:3 ( c ) My tears have been my meat day and night, while they continually say unto me, Where [is] thy God?
( c ) As others take pleasure in eating and d...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 42:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 42:1-11 - --1 David's zeal to serve God in the temple.5 He encourages his soul to trust in God.
MHCC -> Psa 42:1-5
MHCC: Psa 42:1-5 - --The psalmist looked to the Lord as his chief good, and set his heart upon him accordingly; casting anchor thus at first, he rides out the storm. A gra...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 42:1-5
Matthew Henry: Psa 42:1-5 - -- Holy love to God as the chief good and our felicity is the power of godliness, the very life and soul of religion, without which all external profes...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 42:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 42:1-5 - --
(Heb.: 42:2-6) The poet compares the thirsting of his soul after God to the thirsting of a stag. איּל (like other names of animals is epicoene,...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...

Constable: Psa 42:1-11 - --Psalm 42
Some ancient Hebrew manuscripts united Psalms 42 and 43 as one. This is understandable since th...
