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Text -- Psalms 44:7-26 (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 44:11 - -- Those who were not slain are carried into captivity, and dispersed in several places.
Those who were not slain are carried into captivity, and dispersed in several places.
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Who executeth both God's and his own vengeance upon me.
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Wesley: Psa 44:17 - -- Although we cannot excuse ourselves from many other sins, yet through thy grace we have kept ourselves from apostacy and idolatry, notwithstanding all...
Although we cannot excuse ourselves from many other sins, yet through thy grace we have kept ourselves from apostacy and idolatry, notwithstanding all examples and provocations.
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Wesley: Psa 44:19 - -- By inflicting upon us one breach after another, thou hast at last brought us to this pass.
By inflicting upon us one breach after another, thou hast at last brought us to this pass.
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Wesley: Psa 44:19 - -- A place extremely desolate, such as dragons love, Isa 13:21-22, and therefore full of horror, and danger.
A place extremely desolate, such as dragons love, Isa 13:21-22, and therefore full of horror, and danger.
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Because we are constant in thy worship, which they abhor.
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Wesley: Psa 44:25 - -- We are not only thrown down to the earth, but we lie there like dead carcases.
We are not only thrown down to the earth, but we lie there like dead carcases.
God is not only our sole help, but only worthy of praise.
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JFB: Psa 44:9 - -- Literally, "will not go" (2Sa 5:23). In several consecutive verses the leading verb is future, and the following one past (in Hebrew), thus denoting t...
Literally, "will not go" (2Sa 5:23). In several consecutive verses the leading verb is future, and the following one past (in Hebrew), thus denoting the causes and effects. Thus (Psa 44:10-12), when defeated, spoiling follows; when delivered as sheep, dispersion follows, &c.
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JFB: Psa 44:11 - -- The Babylonian captivity not necessarily meant. There were others (compare 1Ki 8:46).
The Babylonian captivity not necessarily meant. There were others (compare 1Ki 8:46).
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A solemn appeal to God to witness their constancy.
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JFB: Psa 44:22 - -- Their protracted sufferings as God's people attests the constancy. Paul (Rom 8:36) uses this to describe Christian steadfastness in persecution.
Their protracted sufferings as God's people attests the constancy. Paul (Rom 8:36) uses this to describe Christian steadfastness in persecution.
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JFB: Psa 44:23-26 - -- This style of addressing God, as indifferent, is frequent (Psa 3:7; Psa 9:19; Psa 13:1, &c.). However low their condition, God is appealed to, on the ...
Clarke: Psa 44:8 - -- In God we boast - We have told the heathen how great and powerful our God is. If thou do not deliver us by thy mighty power, they will not believe o...
In God we boast - We have told the heathen how great and powerful our God is. If thou do not deliver us by thy mighty power, they will not believe our report, but consider that we are held in bondage by the superior strength of their gods.
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But thou hast cast off - Our enemies have dominion over us
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Clarke: Psa 44:9 - -- And goest not forth with our armies - Were we to attempt to muster our several tribes, and form a host, like our fathers when they came out of Egypt...
And goest not forth with our armies - Were we to attempt to muster our several tribes, and form a host, like our fathers when they came out of Egypt, thou wouldst not accompany us as thou didst them: the horses and chariots of the Babylonians would soon overtake and destroy us.
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Clarke: Psa 44:10 - -- Thou makest us to turn back - This thou didst: and our enemies, profiting by the occasion, finding our strength was departed from us, made us an eas...
Thou makest us to turn back - This thou didst: and our enemies, profiting by the occasion, finding our strength was departed from us, made us an easy prey, captivated our persons, and spoiled us of our property.
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Clarke: Psa 44:11 - -- And hast scattered us among the heathen - This most evidently alludes to the captivity. From the successful wars of the kings of Assyria and Chaldea...
And hast scattered us among the heathen - This most evidently alludes to the captivity. From the successful wars of the kings of Assyria and Chaldea against the kings of Israel and Judah, and the dispersion of the tribes under Tiglath-pileser, Shalmaneser, and Nebuchadnezzar, Jews have been found in every province of the east; there they settled, and there their successors may be found to the present day.
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Clarke: Psa 44:12 - -- Thou sellest thy people for nought - An allusion to the mode of disposing of slaves by their proprietors or sovereigns. Instead of seeking profit, t...
Thou sellest thy people for nought - An allusion to the mode of disposing of slaves by their proprietors or sovereigns. Instead of seeking profit, thou hast made us a present to our enemies.
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Clarke: Psa 44:14 - -- Thou makest us a byword - We are evidently abandoned by thee, and are become so very miserable in consequence, that we are a proverb among the peopl...
Thou makest us a byword - We are evidently abandoned by thee, and are become so very miserable in consequence, that we are a proverb among the people: "See the Hebrews! see their misery and wretchedness! see how low the wrath of God has brought down an offending people!"And the worst curse that can be imprecated against a wicked nation is: "Mayest thou become as wretched as the Jews;"or as the old Psalter: Thou has seet us reprove til our neghburs: scornyng and hethyng til tha that er in our umgang. That es, gref, tourment that es of our neghburs, and that hethyng es noght sone gave or passand, that we suffer of tha, that er al aboute us. When men sais so byfal ye, als byfel him."
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Clarke: Psa 44:17 - -- Yet have we not forgotten thee - These are bold words; but they must be understood in a qualified sense. We have not apostatized from thee, we have ...
Yet have we not forgotten thee - These are bold words; but they must be understood in a qualified sense. We have not apostatized from thee, we have not fallen into idolatry. And this was strictly true: the charge of idolatry could never be brought against the Jewish nation from the time of the captivity, with sufficient evidence to support it.
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Clarke: Psa 44:19 - -- Thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons - Thou hast delivered us into the hands of a fierce, cruel, and murderous people. We, as a people, ...
Thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons - Thou hast delivered us into the hands of a fierce, cruel, and murderous people. We, as a people, are in a similar state to one who has strayed into a wilderness, where there are no human inhabitants; who hears nothing round about him but the hissing of serpents, the howling of beasts of prey, and the terrible roaring of the lion; and who expects every moment to be devoured.
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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,
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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.
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Clarke: Psa 44:21 - -- Shall not God search this out? - We confidently appeal to the true Good, the searcher of hearts, for the truth of this statement.
Shall not God search this out? - We confidently appeal to the true Good, the searcher of hearts, for the truth of this statement.
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Clarke: Psa 44:22 - -- For thy sake are we killed all the day long - Because of our attachment to thee and to thy religion, we are exposed to continual death; and some of ...
For thy sake are we killed all the day long - Because of our attachment to thee and to thy religion, we are exposed to continual death; and some of us fail a daily sacrifice to the persecuting spirit of our enemies, and we all carry our lives continually in our hands. In the same state were the primitive Christians; and St. Paul applies these words to their case, Rom 8:36.
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Clarke: Psa 44:23 - -- A wake, why steepest thou, O Lord? - That is, Why dost thou appear as one asleep, who is regardless of the safety of his friends. This is a freedom ...
A wake, why steepest thou, O Lord? - That is, Why dost thou appear as one asleep, who is regardless of the safety of his friends. This is a freedom of speech which can only be allowed to inspired men; and in their mouths it is always to be figuratively understood.
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Clarke: Psa 44:24 - -- Wherefore hidest thou thy face - Show us the cause why thou withdrawest from us the testimony of thy approbation.
Wherefore hidest thou thy face - Show us the cause why thou withdrawest from us the testimony of thy approbation.
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Clarke: Psa 44:25 - -- Our soul is bowed down - Our life is drawing near to the grave. If thou delay to help us, we shall become extinct.
Our soul is bowed down - Our life is drawing near to the grave. If thou delay to help us, we shall become extinct.
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Clarke: Psa 44:26 - -- Arise for our help - Show forth thy power in delivering us from the hands of our enemies
Arise for our help - Show forth thy power in delivering us from the hands of our enemies
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Redeem us - Ransom us from our thraldom
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Clarke: Psa 44:26 - -- For thy mercies’ sake - למען חסדך lemaan chasdecha , On account of thy mercy. That we may have that proper view of thy mercy which we...
For thy mercies’ sake -
Calvin: Psa 44:8 - -- 8.In God we will boast 136 all the day This is the conclusion of the first part of the psalm. To express the meaning in a few words, they acknowled...
8.In God we will boast 136 all the day This is the conclusion of the first part of the psalm. To express the meaning in a few words, they acknowledge, that in all ages the goodness of God had been so great towards the children of Abraham, that it furnished them with continual matter of thanksgiving. As if the thing were still present to their view, they acknowledge that, without ceasing, they ought to give praise to God, because they had flourished and triumphed, not merely for one age, or a short period of time, but because they had continued to do so successively from age to age, 137 for whatever prosperity had befallen them, they ascribe it to the grace of God. And, certainly, it is then that men experience from the prosperity which befalls them, a holy and a well-regulated joy, when it bursts forth in the praises of God. 138 Let us then, in the first place, bear in mind that this verse relates to the time of joy and prosperity in which God manifested his favor towards his people; secondly, that the faithful here manifest that they are not ungrateful, inasmuch as, having laid aside all vain boasting, they confess that all the victories by which they had become great and renowned proceeded from God, and that it was by his power alone that they had hitherto continued to exist, and had been preserved in safety; and, thirdly, that it was not only once or twice that matter of joy had been afforded them, but that this existed for a long time, inasmuch as God had manifested towards them, during a long and uninterrupted period, divers proofs and tokens of his paternal favor, so that the continuance, and, so to speak, the long experience they had had of it, ought to have been the means of confirming their hope.
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Calvin: Psa 44:9 - -- 9.Nevertheless thou hast abhorred us Here follows a complaint, in which they bewail their present miseries and extreme calamity. There is here descri...
9.Nevertheless thou hast abhorred us Here follows a complaint, in which they bewail their present miseries and extreme calamity. There is here described such a change as showed not only that God had ceased to exercise towards them his accustomed favor, but also, that he was openly adverse and hostile to his people. First, they complain that they have been rejected as through hatred, for such is the proper import of the word
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Calvin: Psa 44:10 - -- 10.Thou hast made us to turn back from the enemy Here the people of God still further complain, that he had made them to flee before their enemies, a...
10.Thou hast made us to turn back from the enemy Here the people of God still further complain, that he had made them to flee before their enemies, and had given them up as a prey to be devoured by them. As the saints firmly believe that men are strong and valiant only in so far as God upholds them by his secret power, they also conclude, that when men flee, and are seized with trembling, it is God who strikes them with terror, so that the poor wretched creatures are deprived of reason, and both their skill and courage fail them. The expression here used is taken from the Law, Deu 32:30, where Moses says,
“How should one chase a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight, except their Rock had sold them, and the Lord had shut them up?”
The faithful, fully persuaded of this truth, do not ascribe to fortune the change which had passed over them, that those who were wont vigorously and fearlessly to assail their enemies, were now terrified by their very appearance; but they feel assured that it was by the appointment of heaven that they were thus discomfited, and made to flee before their enemies. And as they formerly confessed that the strength which they had hitherto possessed was the gift of God, so, on the other hand, they also acknowledge that the fear by which they are now actuated was inflicted upon them as a punishment by God. And when God thus deprived them of courage, they say that they are exposed to the will of their enemies; for in this sense I interpret the word
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Calvin: Psa 44:11 - -- To the same purpose is that other comparison, (verse 11) in which they say that they were given as sheep for food 141 By this the prophet intimates...
To the same purpose is that other comparison, (verse 11) in which they say that they were given as sheep for food 141 By this the prophet intimates, that being already vanquished previous to the battle, they fell down, as it were, upon the earth before their enemies, ready to be devoured by them, 142 and not fit for any thing else than to gratify their insatiable cruelty. It ought to be observed, that when the faithful represent God as the author of their calamities, it is not in the way of murmuring against him, but that they may with greater confidence seek relief, as it were, from the same hand which smote and wounded them. It is certainly impossible that those who impute their miseries to fortune can sincerely have recourse to God, or look for help and salvation from him. If, therefore, we would expect a remedy from God for our miseries, we must believe that they befall us not by fortune or mere chance, but that they are inflicted upon us properly by his hand. Having stated that they were thus abandoned to the will of their enemies, they add, at the same time, that they were scattered among the heathen: a dispersion which was a hundred times more grievous to them than death. The whole glory and felicity of that people consisted in this, that, being united under one God and one King, they formed one body; and that such being the case, it was a sign that the curse of God lay heavy upon them to be mingled among the heathen, and scattered hither and thither like broken members.
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Calvin: Psa 44:12 - -- 12.Thou hast sold thy people, and not become rich In saying that they were sold without any gain, it is meant that they were exposed to sale as slave...
12.Thou hast sold thy people, and not become rich In saying that they were sold without any gain, it is meant that they were exposed to sale as slaves that are contemptible, and of no value. In the second clause, too, And hast not increased the price of them, there seems to be an allusion to the custom of exposing things to auction, and selling them to the highest bidder. We know that those slaves who were sold were not delivered to the buyers till the price of them had been increased by bidding. Thus the faithful mean, that they were cast out as being altogether worthless, so that their condition had been worse than that of any bond-slave. 143 And as they rather appeal to God than turn to their enemies, of whose pride and cruelty they had just cause to complain, let us learn from this, that there is nothing better, or more advantageous for us in our adversity, than to give ourselves to meditation upon the providence and judgment of God. When men trouble us, it is no doubt the devil who drives them to it, and it is with him we have to do; but we must, notwithstanding, raise our thoughts to God himself, that we may know that we are proved and tried by him, either to chastise us, or to exercise our patience, or to subdue the sinful desires of our flesh, or to humble us and train us to the practice of self-denial. And when we hear that the Fathers who lived under the Law were treated so ignominiously, there is no reason why we should lose courage by any outrage or ill treatment, if God should at any time see meet to subject us to it. It is not here said simply that God sold some people, but that he sold his own people, as if his own inheritance were of no estimation in his sight. Even at this day, we may in our prayers still make the same complaint, provided we, at the same time, make use of this example, for the purpose of supporting and establishing our faith, so that, however much afflicted we may be, our hearts may not fail us. In Isa 52:3, God, using the same form of speech, says that he sold his people without price; but there it is to be understood in a different sense, namely, to show that he will have no difficulty in redeeming them, because he is under no obligation to those that bought them, and had received nothing from them in return.
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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
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Calvin: Psa 44:15 - -- 15.My reproach is daily before me The Hebrew words כלהיום , col-hayom, mean all the day, and denote long continuance: but they may be unders...
15.My reproach is daily before me The Hebrew words
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Calvin: Psa 44:17 - -- 17.All this has come upon us, etc As they have already attributed to God all the afflictions which they endured, if they should now say that they wer...
17.All this has come upon us, etc As they have already attributed to God all the afflictions which they endured, if they should now say that they were undeservedly afflicted, it would be the same thing as to accuse God of injustice; and thus what is here spoken would no longer be a holy prayer, but rather an impious blasphemy. It is, however, to be observed, that the faithful, although in their adversities they do not perceive any obvious reason for being so dealt with, yet they rest assured of this, and regard it as a fixed principle, that God has some good reasons for treating them so severely. At the same time, it is proper to observe, that the godly do not speak in this place of the time past, but rather allege their patient endurance, which was no small token of their piety, since, in the most humble manner, they thus bowed their neck to the yoke of God. We see how the great majority of men murmur and obstinately fret against God, like refractory horses which rage furiously against their masters, and strike them with their feet. And, therefore, we know that the man who, in affliction, imposes a holy restraint upon himself, that he may not by any impatience be carried away from the path of duty, has made no inconsiderable attainments in the fear of God. It is an easy matter even for hypocrites to bless God in the time of their prosperity; but as soon as he begins to deal hardly with them, they break forth into a rage against him. Accordingly, the faithful declare that, although so many afflictions as they endured tended to turn them aside from the right path, they did not forget God, but always served him, even when he did not show himself favorable and merciful towards them. They do not, therefore, proclaim their virtues in a former and distant period of their history, but only allege, that even in the midst of afflictions they steadfastly kept the covenant of God It is well known, that long before the persecution of Antiochus, there were many abuses and corruptions which provoked the vengeance of God against them, so that, in respect of that period, they had no ground to boast of such integrity as is here described. True it is that, as we shall very soon see, God spared them, thus showing that they had been afflicted more for his name’s sake than for their own sins; but the forbearance which God exercised towards them in this respect was not sufficient to warrant them to plead exemption from guilt. We must, therefore, consider that in this place they do nothing more than allege their own patience, in that, amidst such grievous and hard temptations, they had not turned aside from the service of God. In the first place, they affirm, We have not forgotten thee: for, indeed, afflictions are, as it were, like so many clouds which conceal heaven from our view, so that God might then readily slip from our remembrance, as if we were far removed from him. They add, secondly, We have not dealt falsely in thy covenant: for, as I have said, the wickedness of men discovers itself more especially when they are tried more severely than they had anticipated. Thirdly, they declare that their heart had not turned back And, lastly, that their footsteps declined not from the paths of God. As God is daily inviting us, so our hearts must be always ready to proceed in the paths into which he calls us. Hence follows the direction of our ways; for by our outward works, and by our whole life, we testify that our heart is unfeignedly devoted to God. Instead of the translation, Nor have our steps declined, which I have given, some suggest another reading, which is not without some degree of plausibility, namely, Thou hast made our steps to decline; for, in the first place, the term
“O Lord, why hast thou made us to err from thy ways?”
The complaint which is here made amounts rather to this, That the faithful are like poor wretched creatures wandering in desert places, seeing God had withdrawn his hand from them. The expression, The paths of God, does not always refer to doctrine, but sometimes to prosperous and desirable events.
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Calvin: Psa 44:19 - -- 19.Although thou hast broken us in the place of dragons In the Hebrew it is, For thou hast broken us, etc.; but the causal particle, כי , ki, ...
19.Although thou hast broken us in the place of dragons In the Hebrew it is, For thou hast broken us, etc.; but the causal particle,
This they express still more clearly in the following clause, in which they say, We have not stretched out our hands 149 to a strange god. By these words they intimate, that, contented with God alone, they did not suffer their hopes to be divided on different objects, nor gazed around them in search of other means of assistance. Hence we learn, that those whose hearts are thus divided and distracted by various expectations are forgetful of the true God, to whom we fail to yield the honor which is due to him, if we do not repose with confidence in him alone. And certainly, in the true and rightful service of God, faith and supplication which proceeds from it hold the first place: for we are guilty of depriving him of the chief part of his glory, when we seek apart from him in the least degree our own welfare. Let us then bear in mind, that it is a true test of our piety, when, being plunged into the lowest depths of disasters, we lift up our eyes, our hopes, and our prayers, to God alone. And it only serves to demonstrate more convincingly and clearly the impiety of Popery, when, after having confessed their faith in the one true God with the mouth, its rotaries the next moment degrade his glory by ascribing it to created objects. They indeed excuse themselves by alleging, that in having recourse to Saint Christopher and other saints of their own making, they do not claim for them the rank of Deity, but only employ them as intercessors with God to obtain his favor. It is, however, well known to every one, that the form of the prayers which they address to the saints, 150 is in no respects different from those prayers which they present to God. Besides, although we should yield this point to them, it will still be a frivolous excuse to pretend that they are seeking advocates or intercessors for themselves. This is as much as to say, that Christ is not sufficient for them, or rather, that his office is wholly lost sight of among them. Moreover, we should carefully observe the scope of this passage. The faithful declare, that they did not stretch forth their hands to other gods, because it is an error too common among men to forsake God, and to seek for other means of relief when they find that their afflictions continue to oppress them. So long as we are gently and affectionately treated of God we resort to him, but as soon as any adversity befalls us we begin to doubt. And if we are pressed still further, or if there be no end to our afflictions, the very continuance of them tempts us to despair; and despair generates various kinds of false confidence. Hence arises a multitude of new gods framed after the fancy of men. Of the lifting up of the hands we have spoken elsewhere.
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Calvin: Psa 44:21 - -- 21.Shall not God search this out? We have here a solemn and emphatic protestation, in which the people of God dare to appeal to him as the judge of t...
21.Shall not God search this out? We have here a solemn and emphatic protestation, in which the people of God dare to appeal to him as the judge of their integrity and uprightness. From this it appears, that they did not plead their cause openly before men, but communed with themselves as if they had been before the judgment-seat of God; and moreover, as a token of still greater confidence, they add, that nothing is hidden from God. Why is it that hypocrites often call God to witness, if it is not because they imagine that, by concealing their wickedness under some specious disguise, they have escaped the judgment of God? and thus they would represent the character of God to be different from what it is, as if by their deceptions they could dazzle his eyes. Whenever, therefore, we come before God, let us at the same time remember, that there is nothing to be gained by any vain pretense in his presence, inasmuch as he knows the heart.
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Calvin: Psa 44:22 - -- 22.Surely for thy sake we are killed all the day Here the faithful urge another reason why God should show mercy to them, namely, that they are subje...
22.Surely for thy sake we are killed all the day Here the faithful urge another reason why God should show mercy to them, namely, that they are subjected to sufferings not on account of crimes committed by themselves, but simply because the ungodly, from hatred to the name of God, are opposed to them. “This,” it may be said, “seems at first sight a foolish complaint, for the answer which Socrates gave to his wife was apparently more to the purpose, when, upon her lamenting that he was about to die wrongfully, 153 he reproved her saying, That it was better for him to die innocently than from any fault of his own. And even the consolation which Christ sets forth
‘Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,’
Mat 5:10,
seems to differ widely from the language here expressed by the people of God. It seems also opposed to what Peter says,
‘Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed;
but let him glorify God on this behalf.’ —1Pe 4:16,
“To this I answer, That although it is the greatest alleviation of our sorrow that the cause for which we suffer is common to us with Christ himself, yet it is neither in vain nor out of place that the faithful here plead with God that they suffer wrongfully for his sake, in order that he may the more vigorously set himself for their defense. It is right that he should have respect to the maintenance of his glory, which the wicked endeavor to overthrow, when they insolently persecute those who serve him. And from this it appears the more clearly that this psalm was composed when the people languished in captivity, or else when Antiochus laid waste the Church, because religion was at that time the cause of suffering. The Babylonians were enraged by the constancy of the people, when they perceived that the whole body of the Jews, vanquished and routed as they were, ceased not on that account to condemn the superstitions of the country; and the rage of Antiochus was wholly bent upon extinguishing entirely the name of God. Moreover, what made the thing appear more strange and difficult to bear was, that God, so far from repressing the insolence and the wrongs inflicted by the wicked, left them, on the contrary, to continue in their cruelty, and gave them, as it were, loose reins. Accordingly, the godly declare that they are killed all the day long, and that they are counted of no more value than sheep for slaughter It is, however, proper always to bear in mind, what I have already remarked, that they were not so free from all blame as that God, in afflicting them, might not justly chastise them for their sins. But whilst in his incomparable goodness he fully pardons all our sins, he yet allows us to be exposed to unmerited persecutions, that we may with greater alacrity glory in bearing the cross with Christ, and thereby become partakers with him in his blessed resurrection. We have already said, that there was no other reason why the rage of the enemy was so inflamed against them, but that the people would not revolt from the law, and renounce the worship of the true God. It now remains for us to apply this doctrine to our own circumstances; and, first, let us consider that it becomes us, after the example of the fathers, patiently to submit to the afflictions by which it is necessary to seal the confession of our faith; and, secondly, that even in the deepest afflictions we must continue to call upon the name of God and abide in his fear. Paul, however, in his Epistle to the Romans, chapter 8:36, proceeds still farther; for he quotes this not only by way of example, but also affirms that the condition of the Church in all ages is here portrayed. Thus, then, we ought to regard it as a settled point, that a state of continual warfare in bearing the cross is enjoined upon us by divine appointment. Sometimes, it is true, a truce or respite may be granted us; for God, has compassion upon our infirmity: but although the sword of persecution is not always unsheathed against us, yet, as we are the members of Christ, it behoves us always to be ready to bear the cross with him. Lest, therefore, the severity of the cross should dismay us, let us always have present to our view this condition of the Church, that as we are adopted in Christ, we are appointed to the slaughter. If we neglect to do this, the same thing will befall us which happens to many apostates; for as it is in their judgment too severe and wretched a state, even while they live, to be continually dying, to be exposed to the mockery of others, and not to have one moment free from fear, — to rid themselves of that necessity they shamefully forsake and deny Christ. In order, therefore, that weariness, or dread of the cross, may not root up from our hearts true godliness, let us continually reflect upon this, that it behoves us to drink the cup which God puts into our hands, and that no one can be a Christian who does not dedicate himself to God.
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Calvin: Psa 44:23 - -- 23.Arise, O Lord! why sleepest thou? Here the saints desire that God, having pity upon them, would at length send them help and deliverance. Although...
23.Arise, O Lord! why sleepest thou? Here the saints desire that God, having pity upon them, would at length send them help and deliverance. Although God allows the saints to plead with him in this babbling manner, when in their prayers they desire him to rise up or awake; yet it is necessary that they should be fully persuaded that he keeps watch for their safety and defense. We must guard against the notion of Epicurus, who framed to himself a god who, having his abode in heaven, 154 delighted only in idleness and pleasure. But as the insensibility of our nature is so great, that we do not at once comprehend the care which God has of us, the godly here request that he would be pleased to give some evidence that he was neither forgetful of them nor slow to help them. We must, indeed, firmly believe that God ceases not to regard us, although he appears not to do so; yet as such an assurance is of faith, and not of the flesh, that is to say, is not natural to us, 155 the faithful familiarly give utterance before God to this contrary sentiment, which they conceive from the state of things as it is presented to their view; and in doing so, they discharge from their breasts those morbid affections which belong to the corruption of our nature, in consequence of which faith then shines forth in its pure and native character. If it is objected, that prayer, than which nothing is more holy, is defiled, when some froward imagination of the flesh is mingled with it, I confess that this is true; but in using this freedom, which the Lord vouchsafes to us, let us consider that, in his goodness and mercy, by which he sustains us, he wipes away this fault, that our prayers may not be defiled by it.
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Calvin: Psa 44:25 - -- 25.For our soul is humbled to the dust The people of God again deplore the greatness of their calamities, and in order that God may be the more dispo...
25.For our soul is humbled to the dust The people of God again deplore the greatness of their calamities, and in order that God may be the more disposed to help them, they declare to him that they are afflicted in no ordinary manner. By the metaphors which they here employ, they mean not only that they are cast down, but also that they are crushed and laid upon the earth, so that they are not able to rise again. Some take the word soul for the body, so that there would be in this verse a repetition of the same sentiment; but I would rather take it for the part in which the life of man consists; as if they had said, We are cast down to the earth, and lie prostrate upon our belly, without any hope of getting up again. After this complaint they subjoin a prayer, (verse 26,) that God would arise for their help By the word redeem they mean not ordinary kind of help, for there was no other means of securing their preservation but by redeeming them. And yet there can be no doubt, that they were diligently employed in meditating upon the great redemption from which all the deliverances which God is daily effecting in our behalf, when he defends us from dangers by various means, flow as streams from their source. In a previous part of the psalm, they had boasted of the steadfastness of their faith; but to show us that, in using this language, they boasted not in their own merits, they do not claim here some recompense for what they had done and suffered for God. They are contented to ascribe their salvation to the unmerited goodness of God as the alone cause of it.
Defender: Psa 44:14 - -- This prophecy was fulfilled in the age-long hatred and ridicule of the Israelites by the Gentiles as predicted by Moses (Deu 28:37)."
This prophecy was fulfilled in the age-long hatred and ridicule of the Israelites by the Gentiles as predicted by Moses (Deu 28:37)."
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Defender: Psa 44:22 - -- This has been fulfilled in the many persecutions of Jews through the ages, most recently in the Nazi holocaust. Paul indicated the same would apply to...
This has been fulfilled in the many persecutions of Jews through the ages, most recently in the Nazi holocaust. Paul indicated the same would apply to Gentile Christians when quoting this verse in Rom 8:36."
TSK: Psa 44:7 - -- But : Psa 140:7, Psa 144:10; Jos 1:5, Jos 10:8-10, Jos 10:42, Jos 11:6, Jos 23:9, Jos 23:10; Jdg 2:18, Jdg 7:4-7; 1Sa 7:8-12, 1Sa 14:6-10, 1Sa 17:47; ...
But : Psa 140:7, Psa 144:10; Jos 1:5, Jos 10:8-10, Jos 10:42, Jos 11:6, Jos 23:9, Jos 23:10; Jdg 2:18, Jdg 7:4-7; 1Sa 7:8-12, 1Sa 14:6-10, 1Sa 17:47; 2Sa 7:10
put them : Psa 40:14, 83:1-18, Psa 132:18
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TSK: Psa 44:8 - -- In God : Psa 34:2; Isa 45:25; Jer 9:24; Rom 2:17; 1Co 1:29-31
praise : Psa. 115:1-18
In God : Psa 34:2; Isa 45:25; Jer 9:24; Rom 2:17; 1Co 1:29-31
praise : Psa. 115:1-18
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TSK: Psa 44:9 - -- Psa 43:2, Psa 60:1, Psa 60:10, Psa 74:1, Psa 80:12, Psa 80:13, Psa 88:14, Psa 89:38-45, Psa 108:11; Jer 33:24-26; Lam 3:31, Lam 3:32; Rom 11:1-6
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TSK: Psa 44:10 - -- Thou : Lev 26:14, Lev 26:17, Lev 26:36, Lev 26:37; Deu 28:25; Jos 7:8, Jos 7:12; 1Sa 4:17, 1Sa 31:1-7
spoil : Psa 89:41; Isa 10:6, Isa 10:14; Jer 15:1...
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TSK: Psa 44:11 - -- given : Jer 12:3; Rom 8:36
like sheep appointed for meat : Heb. as sheep of meat, Psa 14:4
scattered : Psa 60:1; Deu 4:27, Deu 28:64; 2Ki 17:6; Isa 11...
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TSK: Psa 44:12 - -- sellest : Deu 32:30; Isa 50:1, Isa 52:3, Isa 52:4; Jer 15:13
for nought : Heb. without riches
increase : Neh 5:8-12; Rev 18:13
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TSK: Psa 44:13 - -- makest : Psa 79:4, Psa 80:6, Psa 89:51; Jer 24:9; Eze 36:19-23
scorn : Psa 123:3, Psa 123:4; Jer 48:27
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TSK: Psa 44:14 - -- byword : Deu 28:37; 1Ki 9:7; 2Ch 7:20; Jer 24:9
shaking : Psa 22:7; 2Ki 19:21; Job 16:4; Isa 37:22; Lam 2:15-17
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TSK: Psa 44:15 - -- confusion : Jos 7:7-9; Ezr 9:6; Jer 3:25
covered : Psa 69:7, Psa 71:13, Psa 89:45; Jer 51:51
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TSK: Psa 44:16 - -- For the : Psa 74:18, Psa 74:22, Psa 74:23, Psa 79:12; Isa 37:3, Isa 37:4, Isa 37:17, Isa 37:23, Isa 37:24
enemy : Psa 8:2
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TSK: Psa 44:17 - -- All this : Dan 9:13
yet : Psa 44:20, Psa 9:17; Deu 6:12, Deu 8:14; Isa 17:10; Jer 2:32
dealt : Jer 31:32; Eze 16:59, Eze 20:37
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TSK: Psa 44:18 - -- heart : Psa 78:57, Psa 125:5; 1Ki 15:5; Job 34:27; Jer 11:10; Zep 1:6; Luk 17:32
have : Psa 119:51, Psa 119:157; Job 23:11, Job 23:12; 1Co 15:58; 1Th ...
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TSK: Psa 44:19 - -- Though : Psa 38:8, Psa 60:1-3; Jer 14:17
in the : Psa 74:13, Psa 74:14; Isa 27:1, Isa 34:13, Isa 34:14, Isa 35:7; Eze 29:3; Rev 12:9, Rev 13:2, Rev 13...
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TSK: Psa 44:20 - -- If we : Psa 44:17, Psa 7:3-5; Job 31:5-40
stretched : Psa 68:31; Exo 9:29; 1Ki 8:22; Job 11:13
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TSK: Psa 44:21 - -- Shall : Psa. 139:1-24; Job 31:4, Job 31:14, Job 34:21, Job 34:22; Jer 17:10, Jer 23:24
knoweth : Jos 22:22, Jos 22:23; Ecc 12:14; Rom 2:16; 1Co 4:5; H...
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TSK: Psa 44:22 - -- Yea : Rom 8:36
killed : Psa 44:11, Psa 79:2, Psa 79:3; 1Sa 22:17-19; 1Ki 19:10; Mat 5:10-12; Joh 15:21; Joh 16:2, Joh 16:3; 1Co 4:9, 1Co 15:30, 1Co 15...
Yea : Rom 8:36
killed : Psa 44:11, Psa 79:2, Psa 79:3; 1Sa 22:17-19; 1Ki 19:10; Mat 5:10-12; Joh 15:21; Joh 16:2, Joh 16:3; 1Co 4:9, 1Co 15:30, 1Co 15:31; Rev 11:3-9, Rev 17:6
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TSK: Psa 44:23 - -- Awake : Psa 7:6, Psa 12:5, Psa 35:23, Psa 59:4, Psa 59:5, Psa 78:65; Isa 51:9; Mar 4:38
cast : Psa 44:9, Psa 74:1, Psa 88:14
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TSK: Psa 44:24 - -- Wherefore : Psa 10:1, Psa 10:11, Psa 13:1, Psa 43:1-4; Deu 32:20; Job 13:24
forgettest : Psa 74:19, Psa 74:23; Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24; Isa 40:27, Isa 40:2...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 44:7 - -- But thou hast saved us from our enemies - That is, Thou hast done it in times past. Thou hast interposed in behalf of our nation in periods of ...
But thou hast saved us from our enemies - That is, Thou hast done it in times past. Thou hast interposed in behalf of our nation in periods of danger and trial, and hast delivered us. This is stated as a reason for what is said by the psalmist in Psa 44:6 - that he would not trust in his sword and in iris bow - and for the earnest appeal which he now makes to God. He and his people did not rely on their own strength and prowess, but on that God who had often interposed to save the nation.
And hast put them to shame that hated us - In former times. That is, he had caused them to be discomfited. He had turned them back. He had covered them with confusion. On the meaning of the words "shame"and "ashamed,"see Job 6:20, note; Psa 34:5, note.
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Barnes: Psa 44:8 - -- In God we boast all the day long - That is, continually or constantly. It is not a momentary or temporary expression of our feelings, but it is...
In God we boast all the day long - That is, continually or constantly. It is not a momentary or temporary expression of our feelings, but it is our habitual and constant employment. We have no other ground of reliance, and we express that reliance constantly. The word rendered "boast"here rather more literally means praise: "In God we praise all the day long."The idea is, that he was their only ground of confidence. They ascribed all their former successes to him; they had no other reliance now.
And praise thy name for ever - We do it now; we shall never cease to do it.
Selah - On the meaning of this word, see the notes at Psa 3:2.
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Barnes: Psa 44:9 - -- But thou hast cast off - The author of the psalm now commences a description of the existing circumstances of the nation, so strongly in contra...
But thou hast cast off - The author of the psalm now commences a description of the existing circumstances of the nation, so strongly in contrast with what had existed in former times when God interposed in their behalf, and when he gave them success. This is properly the commencement of the second part of the psalm, and the description is continued to Psa 44:16. The Hebrew word here rendered "hast cast off"implies disgust and abhorrence, as the casting away of that which is loathsome. See the word explained in the notes at Psa 43:2. The reference is to what had occurred at the time when the psalm was written. See introduction to this psalm. The allusion is to the invasion of the land by foreigners; their own discomfiture in their wars; and the calamities consequent on these invasions and defeats.
And put us to shame - By defeat and disgrace. See the word explained above, Psa 44:7. For the defeat and discomfiture supposed to be referred to, see 2Ch 35:20-27; 2Ch 36:5-6.
And goest not forth with our armies - See the places referred to above. Thus Josiah was defeated and slain; and thus the land was conquered by the invaders.
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Barnes: Psa 44:10 - -- Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy - Instead of giving us the victory. That is, we are defeated. And they which hate us spoil for ...
Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy - Instead of giving us the victory. That is, we are defeated.
And they which hate us spoil for themselves - They plunder us; they take our property as spoil, and carry it away. That this was done at the time referred to in the introduction as the time of the composition of the psalm, is apparent from the narrative in the Book of Chronicles. 2Ch 36:7, "Nebuchadnezzar also carried of the vessels of the house of the Lord to Babylon, and put them in his temple at Babylon."Compare 2Ki 23:33; 2Ki 24:13-16; 2Ki 25:13-17.
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Barnes: Psa 44:11 - -- Thou hast given us like sheep appointed for meat - Margin, as in Hebrew, "as sheep of meat."That is, as sheep are killed for food, so thou hast...
Thou hast given us like sheep appointed for meat - Margin, as in Hebrew, "as sheep of meat."That is, as sheep are killed for food, so thou hast allowed us to be put to death.
And hast scattered us among the heathen - Among the surrounding nations. See the notes at Psa 44:2. That is, they had been discomfited in war; many had fled into surrounding countries; many had been carried away captive. All this undoubtedly occurred at the time at which I have supposed that the psalm was written - the time immediately preceding the Babylonian captivity.
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Barnes: Psa 44:12 - -- Thou sellest thy people for nought - Margin, without riches. Without gain, or advantage; that is, for no price that would be an equivalent. The...
Thou sellest thy people for nought - Margin, without riches. Without gain, or advantage; that is, for no price that would be an equivalent. The people were given up to their enemies, but there was nothing in return that would be of equal value. The loss was in no way made up. They were taken away from their country and their homes. They were withdrawn from useful labor in the land; there was a great diminution of the national strength and of the national wealth; but there was no return to the land, no advantage, no valuable result, that would be an equivalent for thus withdrawing them from their country and their homes. It was as though they had been given away. A case may be supposed where the exile of a part of a people might be an advantage to a land, or where there would be a full equivalent for the loss sustained, as when soldiers go forth to defend their country, and to repel a foe, rendering a higher service than they could by remaining at home; or as when colonists go forth and settle in a new region, producing valuable returns in commerce; or as when missionaries go forth among the pagan, often producing, by a reflex influence, effects on the piety and prosperity of the churches at home, more important, and more widely diffused, than would have been produced by their remaining to labor in their own country.
But no such valuable results occurred here. The idea is that they were lost to their homes; to their country; to the cause of religion. It is not necessary to suppose that the psalmist here means to say that the people had been literally sold into slavery, although it is not in itself improbable that this had occurred. All that the words necessarily imply would be that the effect was as if they were sold into bondage. In Deu 32:30; Jdg 2:14; Jdg 3:8; Jdg 4:2, Jdg 4:9; Jdg 10:7, the word used here is employed to express the fact that God delivered his people into the hand of their enemies. Any removal into the territories of the pagan would be a fact corresponding with all that is conveyed by the language used. There call be little doubt, however, that (at the time referred to) those who were made captives in war were literally sold as slaves. This was a common custom. Compare the notes at Isa 52:3.
And dost not increase thy wealth by their price - The words "thy wealth"are supplied by the translators; but the idea of the psalmist is undoubtedly expressed with accuracy. The meaning is, that no good result to the cause of religion, no corresponding returns had been the consequence of thus giving up the people into the hand of their enemies. This may however, be rendered, as DeWette translates it, "thou hast not enhanced their price;"that is, God had not set a high price on them, but had sold them for too little, or had given them away for nothing. But the former idea seems better to suit the connection and to convey more exactly the meaning of the original. So it is rendered in the Chaldee, and by Luther.
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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.
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Barnes: Psa 44:14 - -- Thou makest us a byword among heathen - The word rendered "by-word"- משׁל mâshâl - means properly a similitude or parable; then, ...
Thou makest us a byword among heathen - The word rendered "by-word"-
A shaking of the head among the people - An occasion for the shaking of the head, in derision and scorn. Compare the notes at Psa 22:7.
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Barnes: Psa 44:15 - -- My confusion is continually before me - My shame; the conviction and the evidence of my disgrace is constantly present with me. Literally, "all...
My confusion is continually before me - My shame; the conviction and the evidence of my disgrace is constantly present with me. Literally, "all the day my shame is before me."That is, the evidences of disgrace, defeat, and disaster; render everywhere around him, and he could not conceal them from himself. The psalmist here is represented as the head of the people, and expresses the sense of disgrace which the sovereign era people would feel in a time of national calamity; identifying himself with the people, he speaks of the national disgrace as his own.
And the shame of my face - The shame that is manifested on the countenance when we blush.
Hath covered me - That is, I am suffused with the evidence of my shame; or, as we sometimes say, "he blushed all over."The blush, however - that special rush of blood manifesting itself through the skin - which constitutes the evidence of shame, is confined to the face and the neck; an arrangement which none can explain, except on the supposition that there is a God; that he is a moral governor; and that, as it was designed that the body should be covered or clothed, he meant that the evidence of guilt should manifest itself on the parts of the person which are most exposed to view, or where others could see it. The idea here is, that he could not conceal the proofs of his shame and disgrace; he was compelled to exhibit them to all around.
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Barnes: Psa 44:16 - -- For the voice of him ... - That is, Because I hear the voice of him that reproaches and blasphemes. The word rendered blasphemeth, means proper...
For the voice of him ... - That is, Because I hear the voice of him that reproaches and blasphemes. The word rendered blasphemeth, means properly to use cutting words; then, to reproach or revile. It may be applied either to people or to God. In the former case, it means reproach or reviling; in the latter, blasphemy in the usual sense of that term, denoting reproachful words concerning God. The word may be used here in both these senses, as it is evident that not only were the people the subject of reproach, but that God was also.
By reason of the enemy - That is, the foreign enemies, or those who had invaded the land.
And avenger - Of him who had come to take vengeance. Here the word refers to the foreign enemies of the nation, and to the spirit by which they were actuated; their purposes to avenge themselves of what they regarded as wrongs, or take vengeance on a nation which they had long hated. Compare the notes at Psa 8:2.
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Barnes: Psa 44:17 - -- All this is come upon us - All these calamities. The connecting thought here is, that although all these things had come upon them, yet they co...
All this is come upon us - All these calamities. The connecting thought here is, that although all these things had come upon them, yet they could not be traced to their own infidelity or unfaithfulness to God. There was nothing in the national character, there were no circumstances at that time existing, there was no special unfaithfulness among the people, there was no such general forgetfulness of God, and no such general prevalence of idolatry as would account for what had occurred, or as would explain it. The nation was not then more deeply depraved than it had been at other times; but, on the contrary, there was among the people a prevalent regard for God and for his service. It was, therefore, a mystery to the author of the psalm, that these calamities had been suffered to come upon them at that time; it was an event the cause of which he desired to search out, Psa 44:21.
Yet have we not forgotten thee - As a nation. That is, there was nothing special in the circumstances of the nation at that time which would call down the divine displeasure. We cannot suppose that the psalmist means to claim for the nation entire perfection, but only to affirm that the nation at that time was not characterized by any special forgetfulness of God, or prevalence of wickedness. All that is here said was true at the time when, as I have supposed, the psalm was written - the closing part of the reign of Josiah, or the period immeditely following.
Neither have we dealt falsely in thy covenant - We have not been unfaithful to thy covenant; to the covenant which thou didst make with our fathers; to the commandments which thou hast given us. This can only mean that there was no such prevailing departure from the principles of that covenant as could account for this. The psalmist could not connect the existing state of things - the awful and unique discomfitures and calamities which had come upon the nation - with anything special in the character of the people, or in the religious condition of the nation.
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Barnes: Psa 44:18 - -- Our heart is not turned back - That is, We have not turned away from thy service; we have not apostatized from thee; we have not fallen into id...
Our heart is not turned back - That is, We have not turned away from thy service; we have not apostatized from thee; we have not fallen into idolatry. This must mean that such was not at that time the characteristic of the nation; it was not a prominent thing among the people; there was no such general and pervading iniquity as to explain the fact that these calamities had come upon them, or to be properly the cause of these troubles.
Neither have our steps declined from thy way - Margin, goings. The idea as expressed by our translators is, that the people had not departed from the path prescribed by God; that is, from what he required in his law. The Septuagint and the Vulgate render it, "Thou hast turned our steps from thy way;"that is, though our heart is not turned back, and we have not revolted from thee, yet thou hast turned our steps from thy way, or hast turned us from the way of thy favor and from prosperity. The rendering in the common version, however, is more in conformity with the idea in the original.
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Barnes: Psa 44:19 - -- Though thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons - Or rather, "That thou hast crushed us in the place of dragons."The connection is cont...
Though thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons - Or rather, "That thou hast crushed us in the place of dragons."The connection is continued from the previous verse: "Our heart is not so turned back, nor have our steps so declined from thy path, that thou shouldst crush us in the place of dragons."That is, we have been guilty of no such apostasy and infidelity as to account for the fact that thou hast dealt with us in this manner, or make it necessary and proper that we should thus be crushed and overthrown The word rendered "dragons"-
And covered us with the shadow of death - Our land has been covered with a dark and dismal shade, as if Death had cast his image or shadow over it. See Job 3:5, note; and Psa 23:4, note. There could be no more striking illustration of calamity and ruin.
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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.
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Barnes: Psa 44:21 - -- Shall not God search this out? - That is, If this had been the case, it would be known to God. If, as a nation, we had been given to idolatry, ...
Shall not God search this out? - That is, If this had been the case, it would be known to God. If, as a nation, we had been given to idolatry, or if our hearts had been secretly alienated from the true God, though there had been no open manifestation of apostasy, yet that could not have been concealed from him. The question here asked implies a solemn declaration on the part of the psalmist that this was not so; or that there was no such national apostasy from God, and no such prevalence of idolatry in the land as to account for what had occurred. The reason for the calamities which had come upon them, therefore, must be found in something else.
For he knoweth the secrets of the heart - What is in the heart: what is concealed from the world. If there were any such alienation from him in the hearts of the people, he would know it. The fact that God knows the heart, or that he understands all the secret thoughts, purposes, and motives of people, is one that is everywhere affirmed in the Scriptures. See 1Ch 28:9; Rom 8:27; compare the notes at Rev 2:23.
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Barnes: Psa 44:22 - -- Yea, for thy sake are we killed all the day long - That is, we are continually or constantly subjected to these calamities. It is not a single ...
Yea, for thy sake are we killed all the day long - That is, we are continually or constantly subjected to these calamities. It is not a single defeat, but it is a continued slaughter. This verse contains, in the apprehension of the psalmist, the true cause of the calamities which had come upon the nation. The emphasis in the passage lies in the phrase "for thy sake."The meaning is, It is on thy account; it is in thy cause; it is because we are thy friends, and because we worship thee. It is not on account of our national sins; it is not because there is any prevalent idolatry, but it is because we are the worshippers of the true God, and we are, therefore, martyrs. All these calamities have come upon us in consequence of our attachment to thee. There is no evidence that there was any self-glorying in this, or any intention to blame God as if he were unjust or severe, but it is the feeling of martyrs as suffering in the cause of religion. This passage is applied by the apostle Paul to Christians in his time, as fitly describing their sufferings, and the cause of the calamities which came upon them. See the notes at Rom 8:36.
We are counted as sheep for the slaughter - We are reckoned like sheep designed for the slaughter. That is, It is not because we are guilty, but we are regarded and treated as innocent sheep who are driven to be slaughtered. See the notes at Rom 8:36. Their attachment to the true religion - their devotion to Yahweh as the true God - was the secret cause of all the calamities which had come upon them. As a nation they were his friends, and as such they were opposed by the worshippers of other gods.
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Barnes: Psa 44:23 - -- Awake, why sleepest thou? - This is a solemn and earnest appeal to God to interpose in their behalf, as if he were "asleep,"or were regardless ...
Awake, why sleepest thou? - This is a solemn and earnest appeal to God to interpose in their behalf, as if he were "asleep,"or were regardless of their sufferings. Compare Psa 3:7, note; Psa 7:6, note; Psa 35:23, note.
Arise, cast us not off for ever - Do not forsake us always. Compare Psa 44:9. He had seemed to have cast them off; to have forgotten them; to have forsaken them utterly, and the psalmist, in the name of the people, calls on him not entirely to abandon them.
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Barnes: Psa 44:24 - -- Wherefore hidest thou thy face? - See the notes at Psa 13:1. Why dost thou turn away from us, and refuse to aid us, and leave us to these unpit...
Wherefore hidest thou thy face? - See the notes at Psa 13:1. Why dost thou turn away from us, and refuse to aid us, and leave us to these unpitied sufferings?
And forgettest our affliction and our oppression - Our trials, and the wrongs that are committed against us. These are earnest appeals. They are the pleadings of the oppressed and the wronged. The language is such as man would use in addressing his fellow-men; and, when applied to God, it must be understood as such language. As used in the Psalms, it denotes earnestness, but not irreverence; it is solemn petition, not dictation; it is affectionate pleading, not complaint. It indicates depth of suffering and distress, and is the strongest language which could be employed to denote entire helplessness and dependence. At the same time, it is language which implies that the cause for which they suffered was the cause of God, and that they might properly call on him to interfere in behalf of his own friends.
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Barnes: Psa 44:25 - -- For our soul is bowed down to the dust - That is, We are overborne with calamity, so that we sink to the earth. The expression is one that deno...
For our soul is bowed down to the dust - That is, We are overborne with calamity, so that we sink to the earth. The expression is one that denotes great affliction.
Our belly cleaveth unto the earth - We are like animals that are prone upon the earth, and that cannot rise. The allusion may be to reptiles that cannot stand erect. The figure is intended to denote great prostration and affliction.
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Barnes: Psa 44:26 - -- Arise for our help - Margin, as in Hebrew, "a help for us."That is, Deliver us from our present calamities and troubles. And redeem us - ...
Arise for our help - Margin, as in Hebrew, "a help for us."That is, Deliver us from our present calamities and troubles.
And redeem us - Save us; deliver us. See Psa 25:22, note; Psa 31:5, note; Isa 1:27, note; Isa 52:3, note.
For thy mercies’ sake - On account of thy mercies. That is, in order that thy mercy may be manifested; or that thy character, as a God of mercy, may be made known. It was not primarily or mainly on their own account that the psalmist urges this prayer; it was that the character of God might be made known, or that it might be seen that he was a merciful Being. The proper manifestation of the divine character, as showing what God is, is in itself of more importance than our personal salvation - for the welfare of the universe depends on that; and the highest ground of appeal and of hope which we can have, as sinners, when we come before him, is that he would glorify himself in his mercy. To that we may appeal, and on that we may rely. When that is urged as an argument for our salvation, and when that is the sole ground of our confidence, we may be assured that he is ready to hear and to save us. In the New Testament he has told us how that mercy has been manifested, and how it may be made available to us - to wit, through the Lord Jesus, the great Mediator; and hence, we are directed to come in his name, and to make mention of what he has done and suffered in order that the divine mercy may be consistently manifested to mankind. From the beginning of the world - from the time when man apostatized from God, - through all dispensations, and in all ages and lands, the only hope of men for salvation has been the fact that God is a merciful Being; the true ground of successful appeal to him has been, is, and ever will be, that his own name might be glorified and honored in the salvation of lost and ruined sinners - in the displays of his mercy.
In God we boast, as in a most sure rock, and our only refuge.
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Poole: Psa 44:9 - -- Thou hast cast us off but now thy countenance and course is quite changed to us.
Put us to shame made us ashamed of our boasting, and trust in thee...
Thou hast cast us off but now thy countenance and course is quite changed to us.
Put us to shame made us ashamed of our boasting, and trust in thee, which we have oft professed to the face of our enemies.
Goest not forth with our armies to lead them, and fight for them, as this phrase signifies, Jud 4:14 1Sa 8:20 . He seems to allude to God’ s marching with and before the Israelites in the wilderness, and afterwards, as occasion was offered. Compare Psa 68:7 .
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Poole: Psa 44:10 - -- Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy by withdrawing thy help and our courage, according to thy threatenings, Lev 26:36 .
Spoil for themselves ...
Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy by withdrawing thy help and our courage, according to thy threatenings, Lev 26:36 .
Spoil for themselves i.e. take away our estates to their own use, and for their only benefit, not in compliance with thy will, which was to punish us for our sins, nor for thy service and glory. They minded nothing but their own advantage.
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Poole: Psa 44:11 - -- Those of us who were not slain are carried into captivity, and dispersed in several places.
Those of us who were not slain are carried into captivity, and dispersed in several places.
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Poole: Psa 44:12 - -- For nought for a thing of nought. Or, without money , and without price , as it is said, Isa 55:1 ; for a very small, or for no price; for a pair o...
For nought for a thing of nought. Or, without money , and without price , as it is said, Isa 55:1 ; for a very small, or for no price; for a pair of shoes, as we read, Amo 2:6 .
Dost not increase thy wealth by their price thou hast not advanced thy honour and service thereby; for thy enemies do not serve thee more and better than thy people, nor yet so much.
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They contemn our persons, and sport themselves in our miseries.
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Poole: Psa 44:14 - -- A by-word or a proverb . They used to say proverbially, More despicable or miserable than an Israelite .
A shaking of the head a gesture of sco...
A by-word or a proverb . They used to say proverbially, More despicable or miserable than an Israelite .
A shaking of the head a gesture of scorn and insultation. See Poole "Psa 22:7" .
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Poole: Psa 44:15 - -- Before me before the eyes of my mind and body too. They vilify me, not only behind my back, but even before my face.
The shame of my face hath cover...
Before me before the eyes of my mind and body too. They vilify me, not only behind my back, but even before my face.
The shame of my face hath covered me i.e. I am filled with shame of my face on every side, being ashamed to show my face in any place or company.
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Poole: Psa 44:16 - -- That reproacheth and blasphemeth that doth not only reproach me, which I could better bear; but blaspheme God and our religion for our sakes, which i...
That reproacheth and blasphemeth that doth not only reproach me, which I could better bear; but blaspheme God and our religion for our sakes, which is intolerable to me.
The enemy and avenger who executeth both God’ s and his own vengeance upon me, persecuting me with a despiteful hatred, and with great cruelty.
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Poole: Psa 44:17 - -- Although we cannot excuse ourselves from many other sins for which thou hast justly punished us, yet this we must say for ourselves, that through th...
Although we cannot excuse ourselves from many other sins for which thou hast justly punished us, yet this we must say for ourselves, that through thy grace we have kept ourselves from apostacy and idolatry, notwithstanding all the examples and provocations, rewards proposed and promised, or punishments threatened to induce us thereunto; which we hope thou wilt graciously consider, and not suffer us to be tempted above what we are able to bear.
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Poole: Psa 44:18 - -- Is not turned back to wit, from thee, or thy worship and service, unto idols, as it follows, Psa 44:20 .
Neither have our steps declined from thy wa...
Is not turned back to wit, from thee, or thy worship and service, unto idols, as it follows, Psa 44:20 .
Neither have our steps declined from thy way: because it is easy and ordinary falsely to pretend sincerity of heart, which men cannot discern nor confute, they prove it from the unblamableness of their lives and actions.
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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 .
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Poole: Psa 44:21 - -- We appeal to the heart-searching God, concerning the sincerity of this profession of ours.
We appeal to the heart-searching God, concerning the sincerity of this profession of ours.
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Poole: Psa 44:22 - -- Yea or, but . We do not suffer for our apostacy, but because we will not apostatize from thee.
For thy sake because we are thy people, and continu...
Yea or, but . We do not suffer for our apostacy, but because we will not apostatize from thee.
For thy sake because we are thy people, and continue constantly and resolutely in the profession and practice of thy worship, which they abhor, and from which they seek to draw or drive us.
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Poole: Psa 44:24 - -- Hidest thou thy face i.e. dost not regard our miseries, nor affordest us any pity or help.
Forgettest our affliction and our oppression when we hav...
Hidest thou thy face i.e. dost not regard our miseries, nor affordest us any pity or help.
Forgettest our affliction and our oppression when we have not forgotten thee. This seems not well to become thy faithfulness and goodness.
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Poole: Psa 44:25 - -- Our soul i.e. either our lives or persons; or rather bodies, as it is explained in the next clause, and as the soul is oft taken by a synecdoche, as ...
Our soul i.e. either our lives or persons; or rather bodies, as it is explained in the next clause, and as the soul is oft taken by a synecdoche, as Num 11:6 Psa 16:10 106:15 , &c.
To the dust either to the ground, where we lie prostrate at our enemies’ feet, or to the grave.
Our belly cleaveth unto the earth we are not only thrown down to the earth, but we lie there like dead carcasses fixed to it, without any ability or hope of rising again.
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Poole: Psa 44:26 - -- We mentioned our sincerity and constancy in thy worship only as an argument to move thee to pity, and not as a ground of our trust and confidence, o...
We mentioned our sincerity and constancy in thy worship only as an argument to move thee to pity, and not as a ground of our trust and confidence, or as if we merited deliverance by it; but that we expect and implore only upon the account of thine own free and rich mercy.
Haydock: Psa 44:7 - -- O God, Greek: O Theos. The Septuagint thus mark the vocative case, (Psalm cxxxviii. 17.; Haydock) and it is clear, that the Messias is here style...
O God, Greek: O Theos. The Septuagint thus mark the vocative case, (Psalm cxxxviii. 17.; Haydock) and it is clear, that the Messias is here styled God, (Hebrews i. 8.) though some of the Jews would evade this proof by saying, "God is thy throne," 1 Paralipomenon xxix. 23. Even Munster translates, O Deus, and the Jew Agesila, Greek: o Thee. Elohim is never addressed to any one by the prophets, but to the true God, (Berthier) and this title alludes to the judicial character of Christ, (Acts x. 42.; Calmet) of whose kingdom there shall be no end, Luke i. 33. ---
Calvin is very bold in asserting, that David spoke properly of Solomon, as if the apostle had applied the text to our Saviour only in the mystical sense; whereas many things cannot belong to the former, and the Chaldean and Fathers expound this psalm of Christ and his Church. ---
Solomon did not persevere in wisdom, and his beauty was equalled by that of Absalom, &c. (Worthington) ---
Crellius and Grotius in vain attempted to weaken this proof of Christ's divinity, as a Jew, who disputed with Origen, did. (Origen, contra Cels. i.) (Du Hamel) (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 44:8 - -- God. Symmachus Greek: Thee. (Theophylactus) ---
Elohim is used in both places, (Haydock) with a singular verb, as being spoken of the Deity. (...
God. Symmachus Greek: Thee. (Theophylactus) ---
Elohim is used in both places, (Haydock) with a singular verb, as being spoken of the Deity. (St. Irenæus iii. 6.) (Bossuet) (Du Hamel) ---
"O Elohim, thy Elohim," (Haydock) which implies more than one person in God. (Berthier) ---
Many king might be preferred to Solomon; but Christ was raised above all. (Worthington) ---
Fellows. In consequence of the free gift of God, in uniting the human nature to the second person, the Messias advanced in glory; (Haydock) or rather the prophet speaks of his subsequent merits, which entitled him to the greatest felicity. ---
The oil of gladness, alludes to the reward of his labours. Greek: Dia touto seems to require this sense, though the Hebrew may be rendered, "because." (Berthier) ---
Either the cause or the effect may be meant. (Menochius) ---
Solomon was chosen before many of his elder brothers; but Christ was anointed by the Holy Ghost, Acts x. 38. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 44:9 - -- Perfume. Literally, "from thy garments, from the ivory houses, out of which they have delighted thee, ( 10. ) the daughters of kings, in thy honour....
Perfume. Literally, "from thy garments, from the ivory houses, out of which they have delighted thee, ( 10. ) the daughters of kings, in thy honour." They esteem it an honour to wait upon thee, and perfume thy robes, which are placed in chests of ivory, with odoriferous herbs. (Haydock) ---
The ancients admired such garments, Genesis xxvii. 27., and Amos iii. 15. ---
They had been given, together with the ivory boxes, as a present to Solomon at his marriage, and might give him delight, (Calmet) as it was then deemed unpolite to refuse a present. (Homer, Odyssey Greek: S. ) ---
Stacte. Literally, "the drop" gutta, (Haydock) distils from the myrrh, the wood of settim, (Numbers xxiv. 6.) and may denote aloes, but not the plant. (Calmet) ---
Mortification and humility (Worthington) raise the soul on high, 2 Corinthians ii. 16. (Haydock) ---
The blessed Virgin is here styled a house of ivory. The Church, and all who observe purity, may be considered as God's temples, 1 Corinthians iii. 17. (Calmet) ---
The virtues of Christ are this precious perfume. (St. Augustine, &c.) ---
Houses. Septuagint Bareis, a word which means "a tower." Some have not understood this, and have rendered it, gravibus, "heavy," (St. Jerome, ad Prin.) which others have improperly correct by gradibus, "steps." (Calmet) ---
Houbigant would change three words, and translate, "from ivory vessels, the vases of thy anointing."
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Haydock: Psa 44:10-11 - -- Clothing. Hebrew, "in gold of Ophir." (Haydock) ---
The Church is spotless, Ephesians v. 26. The attendants of this glorious queen, are the natio...
Clothing. Hebrew, "in gold of Ophir." (Haydock) ---
The Church is spotless, Ephesians v. 26. The attendants of this glorious queen, are the nations converted, or Christian virgins. They are not the maids of Pharao's daughter, whose marriage was never commended. (Berthier) ---
House. Paganism, and the observances of the old law. (Berthier) ---
The Church, and every faithful soul, may be styled the daughter, as well as the spouse of Christ.
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Haydock: Psa 44:12 - -- Lord. Hebrew adonaiic, "thy master," and worship him, (Haydock) like a dutiful wife, 1 Peter iii. 6., and 3 Kings i. 16. ---
God is not found in...
Lord. Hebrew adonaiic, "thy master," and worship him, (Haydock) like a dutiful wife, 1 Peter iii. 6., and 3 Kings i. 16. ---
God is not found in the Septuagint. The title belongs to Jesus Christ, the spouse, who has been twice called God before. (Calmet)
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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)
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Haydock: Psa 44:14 - -- Is within. Roman Septuagint, &c., have "of Hesebon," by mistake, for Esothen. (Calmet) ---
Queens in the East, could not appear much abroad. (K...
Is within. Roman Septuagint, &c., have "of Hesebon," by mistake, for Esothen. (Calmet) ---
Queens in the East, could not appear much abroad. (Kimchi) ---
When they go out, they cannot be seen. The beauty of the Church consists in virtue, and in the grace of God. (Calmet) ---
Borders. Charity influences the exterior works of piety, (Tirinus) and gives beauty to the ceremonies (St. Basil) and decorations used by the Church, with such magnificence. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 44:15 - -- Neighbours. The Jews, as well as the Gentiles, shall embrace the faith. (Calmet) ---
Virginity became honourable only after the coming of Christ...
Neighbours. The Jews, as well as the Gentiles, shall embrace the faith. (Calmet) ---
Virginity became honourable only after the coming of Christ. (St. Chrysostom)
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Haydock: Psa 44:16 - -- Temple. Even virgins (Haydock) out of the Church, cannot please the king. (St. Augustine) (Worthington)
Temple. Even virgins (Haydock) out of the Church, cannot please the king. (St. Augustine) (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 44:17 - -- Sons. Protestants, "shall be thy children." (Haydock) ---
This was the wish of those present. But it does not appear that the daughter of Pharao ...
Sons. Protestants, "shall be thy children." (Haydock) ---
This was the wish of those present. But it does not appear that the daughter of Pharao had any children, (Calmet) and thus it seems improbable, that she is here spoken of, as the psalmist foretells the establishment and glory (Berthier) of the Church, by means of the apostles, (St. Chrysostom) and their successors, who are made princes over all the world. Let those who are cut off acknowledge this, and come to the unity, that they may be introduced into the temple of the king. (St. Augustine) (Worthington) ---
Innumerable saints of all ranks, kings and emperors, acknowledge the Church for their mother, and submit to her. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 44:18 - -- They. Hebrew, Septuagint of Aldus and Complutensian, and the Greek Fathers, have "I will;" yet this is contrary to the Vatican and Alexandrian Septu...
They. Hebrew, Septuagint of Aldus and Complutensian, and the Greek Fathers, have "I will;" yet this is contrary to the Vatican and Alexandrian Septuagint, (Berthier) and seems less accurate. (Houbigant) ---
The prophet was not to life for ever, so that the fame of the Church was to be spread by others. (Berthier) ---
Ever. There shall be pastors and faithful people to the end. (Worthington)
Gill: Psa 44:7 - -- But thou hast saved us from our enemies,.... Spiritual ones, and not we ourselves; and therefore will not trust in ourselves, nor in anything of ours,...
But thou hast saved us from our enemies,.... Spiritual ones, and not we ourselves; and therefore will not trust in ourselves, nor in anything of ours, but in the Lord, and give him the glory of salvation;
and hast put them to shame that hated us; the men of the world, the seed of the serpent, and the serpent himself, when his works were destroyed, and his principalities and powers spoiled by Christ upon the cross; hence the following boasting of the Lord, and glorying in him.
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Gill: Psa 44:8 - -- In God we boast all the day long,.... Or, as the Targum, "in the word of the Lord", in Christ, who is God over all, and who of God is made to his chur...
In God we boast all the day long,.... Or, as the Targum, "in the word of the Lord", in Christ, who is God over all, and who of God is made to his church and people wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption; so that there is always matter of glorying and boasting in him;
and praise thy name for ever and ever; in this world, as long as life continues; and in the other world to all eternity; both for the works of providence and of grace; for deliverances commanded, and for salvation from all enemies wrought out.
Selah; of this word See Gill on Psa 3:2.
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Gill: Psa 44:9 - -- But thou hast cast off,.... This, with what follows to Psa 44:17, describe the desolate and afflicted state of the church, under the Gospel dispensati...
But thou hast cast off,.... This, with what follows to Psa 44:17, describe the desolate and afflicted state of the church, under the Gospel dispensation, in some parts and ages of it; and in the light in which it was viewed by the church, previous to the encouragement she took from the consideration of favours and benefits formerly bestowed, and of her covenant interest in God, related in the preceding verses. She looked upon herself as cast off, because afflicted and persecuted, and the Lord did not arise to her immediate help and deliverance; this may regard the ten persecutions under Rome Pagan; See Gill on Psa 43:2;
and put us to shame; before men, at the taking of the ark, as Arama; rather for their faith in God, and boasting of him, when he did not appear for them, but suffered them to continue in their afflictions and distresses; which occasioned their enemies to triumph over them, and say unto them, where is your God? and also before God, who being forsaken by him, could not come before him with that holy boldness and confidence they were wont to do; see Son 2:14;
and goest not forth with our armies; as the Generalissimo of them; see 1Sa 8:20; not leading them forth, and going before them; not teaching their hands to war and their fingers to fight; nor inspiring them with courage and valour; nor giving success and victory to them as formerly; but seeing that Christians, at least in the first ages of Christianity, had no armies in a literal sense, this may rather be understood of the lack of success of the Gospel in some period of it, and of the power and prevalence of antichrist, the man of sin. The Gospel ministry is a warfare; the preachers of it are good soldiers of Christ under him; their weapons are not carnal, but spiritual; great success attended the word in the first times of the Gospel; Christ went forth with his armies conquering and to conquer; and multitudes were subdued by him, and became subjects of him; but in some ages there has been but little success, few have believed the report of the Gospel, and been converted by it; Christ's ministers have laboured in vain, Satan's kingdom, though attacked, yet not weakened, nor Christ's kingdom enlarged, but rather all the reverse; antichrist has been suffered, as to make war with the saints, so to prevail and overcome, and will do so, Rev 13:4; but it will not be always the case, Christ will go forth with his armies, and make great conquests again, Rev 11:15; this may refer to the wars of the Papists with the Waldenses and Albigenses, who were vanquished by the former.
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Gill: Psa 44:10 - -- Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy,.... In the times of Eli, according to Arama; but may he understood of some of the visible members of the c...
Thou makest us to turn back from the enemy,.... In the times of Eli, according to Arama; but may he understood of some of the visible members of the church, and professors of religion, not being valiant for the truth, and deserting the cause of God and Christ, by reason of tribulation and persecution arising because of the word;
and they which hate us spoil for themselves; by seizing on the goods and substance of those they persecuted; enriching themselves by confiscating their estates and possessions to their own use; or by spoiling others of them, they deceived with their corrupt doctrines and soul destroying principles, whereby they became slaves to the antichristian party; this may respect the same wars as before.
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Gill: Psa 44:11 - -- Thou hast given us like sheep appointed for meat,.... To be butchered, and then eaten as sheep are; and therefore are called "the flock of slaughter"...
Thou hast given us like sheep appointed for meat,.... To be butchered, and then eaten as sheep are; and therefore are called "the flock of slaughter", Zec 11:4; as the church was, not only under the ten persecutions of Rome Pagan, but through the butcheries and massacres of Rome Papal; who have worried many of Christ's sheep, have eaten their flesh and drank their blood, and have become drunken with it; it has been their meat and drink to persecute the saints of the most High;
and hast scattered us among the Heathen: the Pagan world, as the first Christians were, who were scattered up and down in the Gentile world everywhere; see 1Pe 1:1; or the Papacy, who are sometimes called Gentiles, Rev 11:2; because much of the Gentile idolatry is introduced into the Popish religion; and among these many of the true members of Christ and of his church have been carried captive and scattered; and such will be found there a little before the destruction of Babylon, and will be called out from thence; see Rev 13:10.
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Gill: Psa 44:12 - -- Thou sellest thy people for nought,.... So God, when he is said to deliver up his people into the hands of their enemies, is said to sell them to them...
Thou sellest thy people for nought,.... So God, when he is said to deliver up his people into the hands of their enemies, is said to sell them to them; see Jdg 2:14; and selling them for nought suggests, that in their apprehensions he had no esteem of them and value for them; just as men, when they have any person or thing to dispose of they have no regard unto, but choose to be rid of, will part with it for nothing: and as it follows,
and dost not increase thy wealth by their price; get nothing by the bargain. This must be understood after the manner of men, and in the opinion of the church, and not as in reality; no otherwise than as it has been true, that God has suffered some of his people to be in the bondage and slavery of mystical Babylon, called Egypt, one part of whose wares and merchandises are slaves and souls of men, Rev 11:8.
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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.
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Gill: Psa 44:14 - -- Thou makest us a byword among the Heathen,.... Among the Papists, as the Jews were among the Gentiles, Deu 28:37; calling them schismatics, heretics, ...
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Gill: Psa 44:15 - -- My confusion is continually before me,.... Meaning that which is the occasion of it;
and the shame of my face hath covered me; not by reason of si...
My confusion is continually before me,.... Meaning that which is the occasion of it;
and the shame of my face hath covered me; not by reason of sin, which is often the cause of confusion and shame in God's people; see Jer 3:25; but on account of what follows.
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Gill: Psa 44:16 - -- For the voice, of him that reproacheth and blasphemeth,.... That is, antichrist, to whom a mouth speaking blasphemies has been given, and which he has...
For the voice, of him that reproacheth and blasphemeth,.... That is, antichrist, to whom a mouth speaking blasphemies has been given, and which he has opened in blasphemy against God, attributing that to himself which belongs to God; blaspheming his name, his tabernacle, and them that well in heaven; see Rev 13:5;
by reason of the enemy and avenger; which are very proper characters of antichrist, who is the enemy of Christ and of his people, and breathes out vengeance against them; as the same titles are also given to the Scribes and Pharisees, the implacable enemies of Christ, Psa 8:2.
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Gill: Psa 44:17 - -- All this is come upon us,.... Not by chance, but according to the purpose and counsel of God; not for sin, and as a punishment of it, but for Christ's...
All this is come upon us,.... Not by chance, but according to the purpose and counsel of God; not for sin, and as a punishment of it, but for Christ's sake and his Gospel; for a profession of faith in him, and for the trial of it;
yet have we not forgotten thee; not the being and perfections of God, on which they often meditated, especially as displayed in the affair of salvation by Jesus Christ; nor the works of God, which were remembered to encourage faith and hope in their present circumstances, Psa 44:1; nor the benefits and favours bestowed upon them by him; nor his word, worship, and ordinances; their reproach, afflictions, and persecutions, did not move them from the hope of the Gospel, and the service of God;
neither have we dealt falsely in thy covenant; by disbelieving their interest in God as their covenant God; by disregarding or not coming to and making use of Christ the Mediator of it; and by calling in question their interest in the blessings and promises of the covenant; for nothing can be more called dealing falsely in or with respect to the covenant of grace than unbelief about it; which remains firm and sure notwithstanding all the afflictions that may come on such who are interested in it: moreover, as this may respect the formal exhibition of the covenant under the Gospel dispensation, by the ministry of the word, and the administration of ordinances, the sense may be, that though the church and her members met with so much reproach and persecution from men, yet did not drop nor deny any of the truths of the Gospel, nor corrupt the ordinances of Christ, nor neglect an attendance on them; but were virgins, pure and incorrupt in doctrine and practice, and followed the Lamb whithersoever he went.
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Gill: Psa 44:18 - -- Our heart is not turned back,.... To its original hardness, blindness, and bondage, to its former sin and folly, to cherish, gratify, and fulfil its l...
Our heart is not turned back,.... To its original hardness, blindness, and bondage, to its former sin and folly, to cherish, gratify, and fulfil its lusts and desires; not from God, from love to him, faith in him, and desires after him; nor from his worship and service; their trials had no such influence upon them as to cause them to apostatize from God, neither in heart, nor in action;
neither have our steps declined from thy way; from the way of his commandments, from the paths of holiness, truth, and faith, being directed and guided therein by the counsel of the Lord, and kept and preserved by his power.
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Gill: Psa 44:19 - -- Though thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons,.... Where men, comparable to dragons or their poison and cruelty, dwell; particularly in Rome...
Though thou hast sore broken us in the place of dragons,.... Where men, comparable to dragons or their poison and cruelty, dwell; particularly in Rome, and the Roman jurisdiction, both Pagan and Papal, the seat of Satan the great red dragon, and of his wretched brood and offspring, the beast, to whom he has given his power; here the saints and followers of Christ have been sorely afflicted and persecuted, and yet have held fast the name of Christ, and not denied his faith; see Rev 2:13; the wilderness is the habitation of dragons; and this is the name of the place where the church is said to be in the times of the Papacy, and where she is fed and preserved for a time, and times, and half a time, Rev 12:6;
and covered us with the shadow of death; as the former phrase denotes the cruelty of the enemies of Christ's church and people, this their dismal afflictions and forlorn state and condition; see Psa 23:4, Isa 9:2; and may have some respect to the darkness of Popery, when it was at the height, and the church of Christ was covered with it, there being very little appearances and breakings forth of Gospel light any where. According to Arama, the "place of dragons" denotes the captivity of Egypt, which is the great dragon; and the "shadow of death", he says, was a name of Egypt in ancient times, as say the Rabbins; and observes that Psa 44:25 explains this; see Gen 3:14.
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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.
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Gill: Psa 44:21 - -- Shall not God search this out?.... Undoubtedly he would, was it so, and expose it, and punish for it; as he will the Balaamites and children of Jezebe...
Shall not God search this out?.... Undoubtedly he would, was it so, and expose it, and punish for it; as he will the Balaamites and children of Jezebel, Rev 2:18; this seems to be an appeal to God for the truth of all that the church had said concerning her steadfastness and integrity under the most trying exercises;
for he knoweth the secrets of the heart; whether the heart is turned back, or there is any inclination to apostatize from God, or his name is forgotten in it; as well as whether in fact the hand has been stretched out, or prayer made to a strange god, Jer 17:9.
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Gill: Psa 44:22 - -- Yea, for thy sake are we killed all the day long,.... These words are cited by the Apostle Paul in Rom 8:36; and are applied to his times, showing the...
Yea, for thy sake are we killed all the day long,.... These words are cited by the Apostle Paul in Rom 8:36; and are applied to his times, showing the then close attachment of the saints to Christ, and their strong love and affection for him; and they have the same sense here, being an instance and proof of the church's integrity and faithfulness in the cause of God, amidst the sorest afflictions and persecutions; for the truth of which she appeals to the searcher of hearts; and had their accomplishment in the ten persecutions under the Heathen emperors, and under the Papal tyranny; and may be understood of their being threatened with death, being in danger of it, and exposed unto it continually, 1Co 15:31; or of their being in such troubles and afflictions, which may be called death, 2Co 1:8; or of the actual slaying them: and what was done to many of the members of the church she attributes to herself, because of the union between them; and for the sake of the worship of the true God, because they would not worship the gods of the Heathens, nor the image of the beast, multitudes of them were put to death; and that all the day long, and every day, and that for a long series and course of time, or continually; and indeed, ever since the Gospel day or dispensation began, this killing work has been more or less; and it will continue during the reign of antichrist, until the measure of his iniquity is filled up, and the afflictions of the saints are accomplished;
we are counted as sheep for the slaughter; or "as sheep of slaughter" q; see Zec 11:4; that is, either as sheep to be slaughtered for food, their enemies delighting to eat their flesh and drink their blood; See Gill on Psa 44:11, or for sacrifice, they reckoning it doing God good service to take away their lives, as though they sacrificed a lamb or a sheep unto him; and which, like sheep, they have patiently endured: this is the account made of them, not by the Lord, in whose sight their death is precious; nor by the saints, with whom their memory is dear; but by their furious persecutors, among whom they are as sheep among wolves; see 1Co 4:13.
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Gill: Psa 44:23 - -- Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord?.... Not that sleep properly falls upon God: the Keeper of Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps; his eyes are always up...
Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord?.... Not that sleep properly falls upon God: the Keeper of Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps; his eyes are always upon his people; he never withdraws them from them, and he watches over them night and day: but sometimes he seems and is thought to be asleep; as when wicked men flourish and triumph over the righteous, and go on in sin with impunity; when their judgment seems to linger, and their damnation to slumber, though it does not; and when the saints are under sore afflictions, and the Lord seems to disregard them, and does not appear for their deliverance; and when things are as when the disciples were in a storm, and Christ was asleep, to whom they said, "carest thou not that we perish?" and the Lord may be said to awake, and it is what is here prayed for, when he stirs up himself and takes vengeance on his enemies, as he will before long on antichrist and his followers; and when he takes in hand the cause and judgment of his people, and pleads it thoroughly, and delivers them out of the hands of all their oppressors, and gives them the dominion and kingdom under the whole heaven; see Isa 2:9;
arise; to revenge the blood of his people, and to have mercy on his Zion;
cast us not off for ever; as he might seem to do, by suffering their enemies to triumph over them; but in reality he does not; much less with loathing and abhorrence, as the word r used signifies, since his church is his Hephzibah, in whom he delights, Isa 62:4; and still less for ever, since his love to them is from everlasting to everlasting, and they shall be for ever with him; See Gill on Psa 43:2.
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Gill: Psa 44:24 - -- Wherefore hidest thou thy face?.... See Psa 10:1;
and forgettest our affliction and our oppression. Not that the Lord does really forget either th...
Wherefore hidest thou thy face?.... See Psa 10:1;
and forgettest our affliction and our oppression. Not that the Lord does really forget either the persons of his people, which he cannot, since they are engraven on the palms of his hands, and a book of remembrance is written for them: nor the afflictions of his people; he knows their souls in adversity; he chooses them in the furnace of affliction; he makes all afflictions work together for good, and delivers out of them. But because deliverance is not immediately wrought, and they sometimes continue long under their afflictions and oppressions, they seem to be forgotten by him, as during the ten persecutions and the long reign of antichrist.
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Gill: Psa 44:25 - -- For our soul is bowed down to the dust,.... Which may signify great declension in spiritual things, much dejection of mind, and little exercise of gra...
For our soul is bowed down to the dust,.... Which may signify great declension in spiritual things, much dejection of mind, and little exercise of grace, Psa 119:25; or a very low estate in temporals; subjection to their enemies; they setting their feet upon their necks, and obliging them to lick the dust of them: and even it may signify nearness to death itself; see Jos 10:24;
our belly cleaveth to the earth; as persons that lie prostrate, being conquered and suppliants.
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Gill: Psa 44:26 - -- Arise for our help,.... Or, "arise our help" s. God is the help of his people, and he is a present help in time of trouble; and he is the only one; an...
Arise for our help,.... Or, "arise our help" s. God is the help of his people, and he is a present help in time of trouble; and he is the only one; and he can help and does, when none else can;
and redeem us for thy mercies' sake; not for the sake of her integrity and faithfulness; nor for her sufferings for Christ's sake; but for his grace and mercy's sake, which is the source and spring of redemption or deliverance, both temporal and spiritual; and to that the saints ascribe it, and not to any merit of theirs, or works of righteousness done by them.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 44:7; Psa 44:7; Psa 44:9; Psa 44:9; Psa 44:10; Psa 44:10; Psa 44:11; Psa 44:12; Psa 44:12; Psa 44:12; Psa 44:13; Psa 44:13; Psa 44:14; Psa 44:14; Psa 44:14; Psa 44:15; Psa 44:15; Psa 44:16; Psa 44:17; Psa 44:17; Psa 44:18; Psa 44:18; Psa 44:19; Psa 44:19; Psa 44:20; Psa 44:20; Psa 44:21; Psa 44:21; Psa 44:22; Psa 44:22; Psa 44:22; Psa 44:23; Psa 44:24; Psa 44:24; Psa 44:24; Psa 44:25; Psa 44:26
NET Notes: Psa 44:7 Or “have humiliated,” if past successes are in view. Another option is to take the perfect as rhetorical, emphasizing that victory is cert...
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NET Notes: Psa 44:9 Heb “you did not go out with our armies.” The prefixed verbal form is a preterite (without vav [ו] consecutive).
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NET Notes: Psa 44:10 Heb “plunder for themselves.” The prepositional phrase לָמוֹ (lamo, “for themselves”) here has t...
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NET Notes: Psa 44:14 Heb “a shaking of the head among the peoples.” Shaking the head was a derisive gesture (see Jer 18:16; Lam 2:15).
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NET Notes: Psa 44:16 Heb “from the voice of one who ridicules and insults, from the face of an enemy and an avenger.” See Ps 8:2.
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NET Notes: Psa 44:18 Heb “and our steps did [not] turn aside from your path.” The negative particle is understood by ellipsis (see the preceding line). GodR...
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NET Notes: Psa 44:19 The Hebrew term צַלְמָוֶת (tsalmavet) has traditionally been understood as a compound noun meani...
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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...
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NET Notes: Psa 44:21 Heb “would not God search out this, for he knows the hidden things of [the] heart?” The expression “search out” is used metony...
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NET Notes: Psa 44:25 Heb “for our being/life sinks down to the dirt, our belly clings to the earth.” The suffixed form of נֶפֶש...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:9 But thou hast cast off, and put us to ( i ) shame; and goest not forth with our armies.
( i ) As they confessed before that their strength came from ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:11 Thou hast given us ( k ) like sheep [appointed] for meat; and hast scattered us among the heathen.
( k ) Knowing God to be author of this calamity, t...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:12 Thou sellest thy people ( l ) for nought, and dost not increase [thy wealth] by their price.
( l ) As slaves who are sold for a low price, you do not...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:15 My ( m ) confusion [is] continually before me, and the shame of my face hath covered me,
( m ) I dare not lift up my head for shame.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:16 For the voice of him that reproacheth and blasphemeth; by reason of the enemy and ( n ) avenger.
( n ) Meaning, the proud and cruel tyrant.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:17 All this is come upon us; yet have we not ( o ) forgotten thee, neither have we dealt falsely in thy covenant.
( o ) They boast not of their virtues,...
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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...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:21 Shall not God ( q ) search this out? for he knoweth the secrets of the heart.
( q ) They take God to witness that they were upright toward him.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:22 Yea, for thy sake ( r ) are we killed all the day long; we are counted as sheep for the slaughter.
( r ) The faithful take comfort in this, that the ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:25 For our soul is ( s ) bowed down to the dust: our belly cleaveth unto the earth.
( s ) There is no hope of recovery, unless you raise us up with your...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 44:26 Arise for our help, and redeem us for thy ( t ) mercies' sake.
( t ) Which is the only sufficient ransom to deliver both body and souls from all kind...
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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 44:1-8 - --Former experiences of God's power and goodness are strong supports to faith, and powerful pleas in prayer under present calamities. The many victories...
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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...
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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 44:1-8 - -- Some observe that most of the psalms that are entitled Maschil - psalms of instruction, are sorrowful psalms; for afflictions give instructions,...
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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...
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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 44:4-8 - --
(Heb.: 44:5-9) Out of the retrospective glance at the past, so rich in mercy springs up (Psa 44:5) the confident prayer concerning the present, bas...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 44:9-12 - --
(Heb.: 44:10-13) Just as אף signifies imo vero (Psa 58:3) when it comes after an antecedent clause that is expressly or virtually a negative, i...
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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...
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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...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 44:22-26 - --
(Heb.: 44:23-27) The church is not conscious of any apostasy, for on the contrary it is suffering for the sake of its fidelity. Such is the meaning...
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...
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Constable: Psa 44:1-26 - --Psalm 44
The writer spoke for the nation of Israel in this psalm. He lamented a national disaster, namel...
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Constable: Psa 44:1-7 - --1. The reason for Israel's present trust in the Lord 44:1-8
The psalmist recalled God's past faithfulness to Israel's forefathers and affirmed the nat...
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Constable: Psa 44:8-15 - --2. Israel's present defeated condition 44:9-16
44:9-10 God had allowed His people to suffer defeat recently for some reason. The nation had retreated ...
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Constable: Psa 44:16-21 - --3. The nation's continuing trust in the Lord 44:17-22
44:17-19 Even though the Lord had abandoned His people temporarily, the psalmist claimed the nat...
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Constable: Psa 44:22-25 - --4. A prayer requesting divine intervention 44:23-26
The psalmist cried out to God to act for His...
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