
Text -- Psalms 44:13 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 44:13-14
Calvin -> Psa 44:13
Calvin: Psa 44:13 - -- 13.Thou hast made us a reproach to our neighbors Here the Psalmist speaks of their neighbors, who were all actuated either by some secret ill-will, o...
13.Thou hast made us a reproach to our neighbors Here the Psalmist speaks of their neighbors, who were all actuated either by some secret ill-will, or avowed enmity to the people of God. And certainly it often happens, that neighborhood, which ought to be the means of preserving mutual friendship, engenders all discord and strife. But there was a special reason in respect of the Jews; for they had taken possession of the country in spite of all men, and their religion being hateful to others, so to speak, served as a trumpet to stir up war, and inflamed their neighbors with rage against them. Many, too, cherished towards them a feeling of jealousy, such as the Idumeans, who were inflated on the ground of their circumcision, and imagined that they also worshipped the God of Abraham as well as the Jews. But what proved the greatest calamity to them was, that they were exposed to the reproach and derision of those who hated them on the ground of their worship of the true God. The faithful illustrate still farther the greatness of their calamity by another circumstance, telling us, in the last clause of the verse, that they were met by reproaches on all sides; for they were beset round about by their enemies, so that they would never have enjoyed one moment of peace unless God had miraculously preserved them. Nay, they add still farther, (verse 14,) that they were a proverb, a byword, or jest, even among the nations that were far off. The word
TSK -> Psa 44:13

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 44:13
Barnes: Psa 44:13 - -- Thou makest us a reproach to our neighbors - Compare the notes at Psa 39:8. The word neighbors here refers to surrounding people or nations. Th...
Thou makest us a reproach to our neighbors - Compare the notes at Psa 39:8. The word neighbors here refers to surrounding people or nations. They were reproached, scorned, and derided as forsaken by God, and given up to their foes. They no longer commanded the admiration of mankind as a prosperous, favored, happy people. Surrounding nations treated them with contempt as inspiring no fear, and as having nothing to entitle them to respect.
Poole -> Psa 44:13
They contemn our persons, and sport themselves in our miseries.
Haydock -> Psa 44:13
Haydock: Psa 44:13 - -- Daughters of Tyre; the city, with her dependant villages. (Bossuet) ---
Tyre might send presents on this grand occasion, or might even pay tribute,...
Daughters of Tyre; the city, with her dependant villages. (Bossuet) ---
Tyre might send presents on this grand occasion, or might even pay tribute, 2 Paralipomenon ix. 26. (Calmet) ---
Idolatrous nations submitted to Christ. (Berthier)
Gill -> Psa 44:13
Gill: Psa 44:13 - -- Thou makest us a reproach to our neighbours,.... Which is the common lot of Christians: Christ and his apostles have given reason for the saints in al...
Thou makest us a reproach to our neighbours,.... Which is the common lot of Christians: Christ and his apostles have given reason for the saints in all ages to expect it, and have fortified their minds to bear it patiently, yea, to esteem it an honour, and greater riches than the treasures of the antichristian Egypt;
a scorn and a derision to them that are round about us; being always represented as mean and despicable, and reckoned ignorant and accursed, and as the faith of the world, and the offscouring of all things.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 44:1-26
TSK Synopsis: Psa 44:1-26 - --1 The church, in memory of former favours,7 complains of her present evils.17 Professing her integrity,24 she fervently prays for succour.
MHCC -> Psa 44:9-16
MHCC: Psa 44:9-16 - --The believer must have times of temptation, affliction, and discouragement; the church must have seasons of persecution. At such times the people of G...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 44:9-16
Matthew Henry: Psa 44:9-16 - -- The people of God here complain to him of the low and afflicted condition that they were now in, under the prevailing power of their enemies and opp...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 44:13-16
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 44:13-16 - --
(Heb.: 44:14-17) To this defeat is now also added the shame that springs out of it. A distinction is made between the neighbouring nations, or thos...
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 44:1-26 - --Psalm 44
The writer spoke for the nation of Israel in this psalm. He lamented a national disaster, namel...
