
Text -- Psalms 49:1 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 49:1-3; Psa 49:1-3
JFB: Psa 49:1-3 - -- This Psalm instructs and consoles. It teaches that earthly advantages are not reliable for permanent happiness, and that, however prosperous worldly m...
This Psalm instructs and consoles. It teaches that earthly advantages are not reliable for permanent happiness, and that, however prosperous worldly men may be for a time, their ultimate destiny is ruin, while the pious are safe in God's care. (Psa. 49:1-20)
All are called to hear what interests all.

Literally, "duration of life," the present time.
Clarke -> Psa 49:1
Clarke: Psa 49:1 - -- Hear this, all ye people - The four first verses contain the author’ s exordium or introduction, delivered in a very pompous style and promisin...
Hear this, all ye people - The four first verses contain the author’ s exordium or introduction, delivered in a very pompous style and promising the deepest lessons of wisdom and instruction. But what was rare then is common-place now.
Calvin -> Psa 49:1
Calvin: Psa 49:1 - -- 1.Hear this, all ye people Whoever may have been the penman of this psalm, it discusses one of the most important principles in divine philosophy, an...
1.Hear this, all ye people Whoever may have been the penman of this psalm, it discusses one of the most important principles in divine philosophy, and there is a propriety in the elevated terms designed to awaken and secure attention, with which the Psalmist announces his purpose to discourse of things of a deep and momentous nature. To a superficial view, indeed, the subject might seem trite and common-place, treating, as he does, of the shortness of human life, and the vanity of those objects in which worldly men confide. But the real scope of the psalm is, to comfort the people of God under the sufferings to which they are exposed, by teaching them to expect a happy change in their condition, when God, in his own time, shall interpose to rectify the disorders of the present system. There is a higher lesson still inculcated by the Psalmist — that, as God’s providence of the world is not presently apparent, we must exercise patience, and rise superior to the suggestions of carnal sense in anticipating the favorable issue. That it is our duty to maintain a resolute struggle with our afflictions, however severe these may be, and that it were foolish to place happiness in the enjoyment of such fleeting possessions as the riches, honors, or pleasures of this world, may be precepts which even the heathen philosophers have enforced, but they have uniformly failed in setting before us the true source of consolation. However admirably they discourse of a happy life, they confine themselves entirely to commendations upon virtue, and do not bring prominently forward to our view that God, who governs the world, and to whom alone we can repair with confidence in the most desperate circumstances. But slender comfort can be derived upon this subject from the teaching of philosophy. If, therefore, the Holy Ghost in this psalm introduces to our notice truths which are sufficiently familiar to experience, it is that he may raise our minds from them to the higher truth of the divine government of the world, assuring us of the fact, that God sits supreme, even when the wicked are triumphing most in their success, or when the righteous are trampled under the foot of contumely, and that a day is coming when he will dash the cup of pleasure out of the hands of his enemies, and rejoice the hearts of his friends, by delivering them out of their severest distresses. This is the only consideration which can impart solid comfort under our afflictions. Formidable and terrible in themselves, they would overwhelm our souls, did not the Lord lift upon us the light of his countenance. Were we not assured that he watches over our safety, we could find no remedy from our evils, and no quarter to which we might resort under them.
The remarks which have been made may explain the manner in which the inspired writer introduces the psalm, soliciting our attention, as about to discourse on a theme unusually high and important. Two things are implied in this verse, that the subject upon which he proposes to enter is of universal application, and that we require to be admonished and aroused ere we are brought to a due measure of consideration. The words which I have translated, inhabitants of the world, are translated by others, inhabitants of time; but this is a harsh mode of expression, however much it may agree with the scope of the psalm. He calls upon all men indiscriminately, because all were equally concerned in the truths which he intended to announce. By sons of Adam, we may understand the meaner or lower class of mankind; and by sons of men, 212 the high, the noble, or such as sustain any pre-eminence in life. Thus, in the outset, he states it to be his purpose to instruct high and low without exception; his subject being one in which the whole human family was interested, and in which every individual belonging to it required to be instructed.
TSK -> Psa 49:1
TSK: Psa 49:1 - -- for : or, of, Psa 46:1, Psa 48:1 *titles
Hear : Psa 34:11, Psa 78:1; Pro 1:20-23; Mat 11:15, Mat 13:9; Rev 2:7, Rev 2:11, Rev 2:17, Rev 2:29
inhabitan...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 49:1
Barnes: Psa 49:1 - -- Hear this, all ye people - That is, What I am about; to utter is worthy of universal attention; it pertains equally to all mankind. The psalmis...
Hear this, all ye people - That is, What I am about; to utter is worthy of universal attention; it pertains equally to all mankind. The psalmist; therefore calls on all the nations to attend to what he is about to say. Compare the notes at Isa 1:2.
Give ear - Incline your ear; attend. Compare the notes at Psa 17:6. See also Isa 37:17; Isa 55:3; Dan 9:18; Pro 2:2.
All ye inhabitants of the world - The truth to be declared does not pertain exclusively to any one nation, or any one class of people. All are interested in it. The term here rendered "world"-
Haydock: Psa 49:1 - -- The coming of Christ: who prefers virtue and inward purity before the blood of victims.
Silent, and deferred punishment, (St. Augustine) waiting for...
The coming of Christ: who prefers virtue and inward purity before the blood of victims.
Silent, and deferred punishment, (St. Augustine) waiting for thy conversion, Romans ii. 4. ---
Unjustly, is not expressed in Hebrew. (Berthier) ---
Face, judgment and hell, (Chaldean) or all these things, (St. Jerome) and thy manifold transgressions. The sight will be most intolerable. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 49:1 - -- For Asaph. The preposition L is placed before his name, as it is before David's. (Haydock) ---
Yet whether he was the author of the psalm, (Calmet...
For Asaph. The preposition L is placed before his name, as it is before David's. (Haydock) ---
Yet whether he was the author of the psalm, (Calmet) or only set it to music, (Worthington) is uncertain. (Menochius) ---
The 72d, and ten following psalms, bear his name, and it is observed, that the style is not so flowing as those which are attributed to the royal prophet [David]. (Moller.) ---
It is certain, that Asaph was a prophet, and chief musician in the days of David, 1 Paralipomenon vi. 39., xxv. 2., and 2 Paralipomenon xxix. 30. (Berthier) ---
But the psalms that have this title relate to the captives, and may have been composed by some of his descendants. This and the following seem designed to shew, that something more than bloody victims is required by God; and thus the Israelites, who could not offer sacrifices at Babylon, were comforted; and the people taught by degrees, to look for something more excellent than the law of Moses. (Calmet) ---
The first and second coming of Christ are here described. (Du Hamel) ---
God's angels, just men, judges, (Calmet) idols, &c. (Worthington) ---
Hebrew El Elohim, Yehova, "the mighty God, the Lord." (Haydock) ---
From these three titles, some of the Fathers have proved the blessed Trinity. (Estius) ---
But this argument is not conclusive. (Berthier) ---
They ought, however, to fill us with awe, when he shall come to judge the earth, his chosen people, (ver. 4.; Calmet) or all mankind. (Berthier) (Menochius) ---
Christ will come, surrounded by many legions of angels. (Haydock)
Gill -> Psa 49:1
Gill: Psa 49:1 - -- Hear this,.... Not the law, as some Jewish writers l interpret it, which was not desirable to be heard by those that did hear it; it being a voice of ...
Hear this,.... Not the law, as some Jewish writers l interpret it, which was not desirable to be heard by those that did hear it; it being a voice of wrath and terror, a cursing law, and a ministration of condemnation and death; but rather
all ye people: not the people of Israel only, but all the people of the world, as appears from the following clause; whence it is evident that this psalm belongs to Gospel times; in which the middle wall of partition is broken down, and there is no difference of people; God is the God both of Jews and Gentiles; Christ is the Saviour and Redeemer of one as well as of the other; the Spirit of God has been poured out upon the latter; the Gospel has been sent into all the world, and all are called upon to hear it;
give ear, all ye inhabitants of the world, or "of time"; so the word is rendered "age", the age of a man, Psa 39:5. The inhabitants of this world are but for a time; wherefore Ben Melech interprets the phrase by

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 49:1 The rare noun חָלֶד (kheled, “world”) occurs in Ps 17:14 and perhaps also in Isa 38:11 (see the note on R...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 49:1
Geneva Bible: Psa 49:1 "To the chief Musician, A Psalm for the sons of Korah." Hear ( a ) this, all [ye] people; give ear, all [ye] inhabitants of the world:
( a ) He will ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 49:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Psa 49:1-20 - --1 An earnest persuasion to build the faith of resurrection, not on worldly power, but on God.16 Worldly prosperity is not to be admired.
MHCC -> Psa 49:1-5
MHCC: Psa 49:1-5 - --We seldom meet with a more solemn introduction: there is no truth of greater importance. Let all hear this with application to ourselves. The poor are...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 49:1-5
Matthew Henry: Psa 49:1-5 - -- This is the psalmist's preface to his discourse concerning the vanity of the world and its insufficiency to make us happy; and we seldom meet with a...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 49:1-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 49:1-4 - --
(Heb.: 49:2-5) Introduction. Very similarly do the elder (in the reign of Jehoshaphat) and the younger Micha (Micah) introduce their prophecies (1K...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...

Constable: Psa 49:1-20 - --Psalm 49
The writer reflected on the problem that the prosperity of the wicked poses in this wisdom psal...
