
Text -- Psalms 44:20 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 44:20-21; Psa 44:20-21
A solemn appeal to God to witness their constancy.

Clarke: Psa 44:20 - -- If we have forgotten the name of our God - That name, יהוה Jehovah , by which the true God was particularly distinguished, and which implied th...
If we have forgotten the name of our God - That name,

Clarke: Psa 44:20 - -- Or stretched out our hands - Made supplication; offered prayer or adoration to any strange god - a god that we had not known, nor had been acknowled...
Or stretched out our hands - Made supplication; offered prayer or adoration to any strange god - a god that we had not known, nor had been acknowledged by our fathers. It has already been remarked, that from the time of the Babylonish captivity the Jews never relapsed into idolatry. It was customary among the ancients, while praying, to stretch out their hands towards the heavens, or the image they were worshipping, as if they expected to receive the favor they were asking.
TSK -> Psa 44:20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 44:20
Barnes: Psa 44:20 - -- If we have forgotten the name of our God - That is, if we have apostatized from him. Or stretched out our hands to a strange god - Or hav...
If we have forgotten the name of our God - That is, if we have apostatized from him.
Or stretched out our hands to a strange god - Or have been guilty of idolatry. The act of stretching out the hands, or spreading forth the hands, was significant of worship or prayer: 1Ki 8:22; 2Ch 6:12-13; see the notes at Isa 1:15. The idea here is, that this was not the cause or reason of their calamities; that if this had occurred, it would have been a sufficient reason for what had taken place; but that no such cause actually existed, and therefore the reason must be found in something else. It was the fact of such calamities having come upon the nation when no such cause existed, that perplexed the author of the psalm, and led to the conclusion in his own mind Psa 44:22 that these calamities were produced by the malignant designs of the enemies of the true religion, and that, instead of their suffering for their national sins, they were really martyrs in the cause of God, and were suffering for his sake.
Poole -> Psa 44:20
Poole: Psa 44:20 - -- In the place : or rather into , as others render it; which seems much more emphatical. And so this verb may be rendered, thou hast humbled , or ...
In the place : or rather into , as others render it; which seems much more emphatical. And so this verb may be rendered, thou hast humbled , or brought us down , as all the ancients rendered it. Or this is a pregnant verb, as they call them, or one verb put for two; of which there are many instances, as hath been showed. So it may be rendered, thou hast sore broken us , casting us into ; or, thou hast by sore breaking brought us into . By inflicting upon us one breach after another, thou hast at last brought us to this pass. The place of dragons ; which signifies a place extremely desolate, such as dragons love, Isa 13:21,22 34:13 35:7 , and therefore full of horror, and danger, and mischief. Thou hast thrown us among people as fierce and: cruel as dragons. With the shadow of death , i.e. with deadly horrors and miseries. See Poole "Job 3:5" ; See Poole "Psa 23:4" .
The name of God i.e. either God himself; or his worship and service; which we have denied that we have done, Psa 44:17 .
Stretched out our hands in way of prayer or adoration, whereof this is a gesture, Exo 9:29 1Ki 8:22 Psa 143:6 .
Gill -> Psa 44:20
Gill: Psa 44:20 - -- If we have forgotten the name of our God,.... As antichrist, and the antichristian party did in those times, Dan 11:36;
or stretched out our hands ...
If we have forgotten the name of our God,.... As antichrist, and the antichristian party did in those times, Dan 11:36;
or stretched out our hands to a strange god; as not to any of the Heathen deities under the Pagan persecutions, so not to any images of gold, silver, brass, and wood, under the Papal tyranny; not to the Virgin Mary, nor to angels and saints departed; nor to the breaden God in the mass, never heard of before; see Dan 11:38.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 44:20 Heb “and spread out your hands to another god.” Spreading out the hands was a prayer gesture (see Exod 9:29, 33; 1 Kgs 8:22, 38; 2 Chr 6:1...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 44:20
Geneva Bible: Psa 44:20 If we have forgotten the name of our God, or stretched out our hands to a ( p ) strange god;
( p ) They show that they honoured God correctly, becaus...

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 44:17-26
MHCC: Psa 44:17-26 - --In afflictions, we must not seek relief by any sinful compliance; but should continually meditate on the truth, purity, and knowledge of our heart-sea...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 44:17-26
Matthew Henry: Psa 44:17-26 - -- The people of God, being greatly afflicted and oppressed, here apply to him; whither else should they go? I. By way of appeal, concerning their inte...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 44:17-21
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 44:17-21 - --
(Heb.: 44:18-22) If Israel compares its conduct towards God with this its lot, it cannot possibly regard it as a punishment that it has justly incu...
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...
