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Text -- Psalms 49:3-20 (NET)

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Context
49:3 I will declare a wise saying; I will share my profound thoughts. 49:4 I will learn a song that imparts wisdom; I will then sing my insightful song to the accompaniment of a harp. 49:5 Why should I be afraid in times of trouble, when the sinful deeds of deceptive men threaten to overwhelm me? 49:6 They trust in their wealth and boast in their great riches. 49:7 Certainly a man cannot rescue his brother; he cannot pay God an adequate ransom price 49:8 (the ransom price for a human life is too high, and people go to their final destiny), 49:9 so that he might continue to live forever and not experience death. 49:10 Surely one sees that even wise people die; fools and spiritually insensitive people all pass away and leave their wealth to others. 49:11 Their grave becomes their permanent residence, their eternal dwelling place. They name their lands after themselves, 49:12 but, despite their wealth, people do not last, they are like animals that perish. 49:13 This is the destiny of fools, and of those who approve of their philosophy. (Selah) 49:14 They will travel to Sheol like sheep, with death as their shepherd. The godly will rule over them when the day of vindication dawns; Sheol will consume their bodies and they will no longer live in impressive houses. 49:15 But God will rescue my life from the power of Sheol; certainly he will pull me to safety. (Selah) 49:16 Do not be afraid when a man becomes rich and his wealth multiplies! 49:17 For he will take nothing with him when he dies; his wealth will not follow him down into the grave. 49:18 He pronounces this blessing on himself while he is alive: “May men praise you, for you have done well!” 49:19 But he will join his ancestors; they will never again see the light of day. 49:20 Wealthy people do not understand; they are like animals that perish.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Pit the place of the dead
 · pit the place of the dead
 · Selah a musical notation for crescendo or emphasis by action (IBD)
 · Sheol the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wicked | SOUL | SHEOL | Proverb | PUNISHMENT, EVERLASTING | PSALMS, BOOK OF | PROVERBS, THE BOOK OF | PRAISE | Manaen | JOB, BOOK OF | Immortality | IMMORTAL; IMMORTALITY | HEZEKIAH (2) | GENERATION | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT | Death | DECEASE, IN THE OLD TESTAMENT AND APOCYPHRA | DARK SAYINGS | Bless | AFFLICTION | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 49:4 - -- I will hearken what God by his Spirit speaks to me, and that will I now speak to you.

I will hearken what God by his Spirit speaks to me, and that will I now speak to you.

Wesley: Psa 49:4 - -- Which properly is an allegorical speech, but is often taken for an important, and withal, dark doctrine or sentence.

Which properly is an allegorical speech, but is often taken for an important, and withal, dark doctrine or sentence.

Wesley: Psa 49:4 - -- I will not smother it in my own breast, but publish it to the world.

I will not smother it in my own breast, but publish it to the world.

Wesley: Psa 49:4 - -- So he calls the following discourse, because the thing in question ever hath been thought hard to be understood.

So he calls the following discourse, because the thing in question ever hath been thought hard to be understood.

Wesley: Psa 49:5 - -- In times of great distress and calamity, when wicked men flourish, and good men are oppressed.

In times of great distress and calamity, when wicked men flourish, and good men are oppressed.

Wesley: Psa 49:5 - -- This character fitly agrees to David's enemies, who were not only malicious, but deceitful and treacherous.

This character fitly agrees to David's enemies, who were not only malicious, but deceitful and treacherous.

Wesley: Psa 49:6 - -- As that which will secure them from calamities. Having said that good men had no cause of fear, from their present sufferings from ungodly men, now he...

As that which will secure them from calamities. Having said that good men had no cause of fear, from their present sufferings from ungodly men, now he proceeds to shew, that the ungodly had no reason to be secure because of their riches.

Wesley: Psa 49:7 - -- Neither from the first death, nor from the second.

Neither from the first death, nor from the second.

Wesley: Psa 49:7 - -- Whom he would do his utmost to preserve.

Whom he would do his utmost to preserve.

Wesley: Psa 49:8 - -- Of their life.

Of their life.

Wesley: Psa 49:8 - -- Hard to be obtained.

Hard to be obtained.

Wesley: Psa 49:8 - -- It is never to be accomplished, by any mere man, for himself or for his brother.

It is never to be accomplished, by any mere man, for himself or for his brother.

Wesley: Psa 49:10 - -- Every man sees that all men die, the wise and the foolish; the evil and the good.

Every man sees that all men die, the wise and the foolish; the evil and the good.

Wesley: Psa 49:10 - -- He saith not to sons or kindred; but to others, because he is wholly uncertain to whom he shall leave them, to friends, or strangers, or enemies; whic...

He saith not to sons or kindred; but to others, because he is wholly uncertain to whom he shall leave them, to friends, or strangers, or enemies; which he mentions as a great vanity in riches. They neither can save them from death, nor will accompany him in and after death; and after his death will be disposed, he knows not how, nor to whom.

Wesley: Psa 49:11 - -- Tho' they are ashamed to express, yet it is their secret hope.

Tho' they are ashamed to express, yet it is their secret hope.

Wesley: Psa 49:11 - -- Either their posterity, often called mens houses: or their mansion - houses, as it is explained in the next clause.

Either their posterity, often called mens houses: or their mansion - houses, as it is explained in the next clause.

Wesley: Psa 49:11 - -- To them and theirs in succeeding generations.

To them and theirs in succeeding generations.

Wesley: Psa 49:11 - -- Fondly dreaming by this means to immortalize their memories.

Fondly dreaming by this means to immortalize their memories.

Wesley: Psa 49:12 - -- Living in all splendor and glory.

Living in all splendor and glory.

Wesley: Psa 49:12 - -- All his dreams of perpetuating his name and estate, shall be confuted by experience.

All his dreams of perpetuating his name and estate, shall be confuted by experience.

Wesley: Psa 49:13 - -- Their contrivance to immortalize themselves.

Their contrivance to immortalize themselves.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- Which for a season are in sweet pastures, but at the owner's pleasure are led away to the slaughter.

Which for a season are in sweet pastures, but at the owner's pleasure are led away to the slaughter.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- The first death shall consume their bodies, and the second death shall devour their souls.

The first death shall consume their bodies, and the second death shall devour their souls.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- Good men whom they abused at their pleasure.

Good men whom they abused at their pleasure.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- In the day of the general judgment, and the resurrection of the dead.

In the day of the general judgment, and the resurrection of the dead.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- All their glory and felicity.

All their glory and felicity.

Wesley: Psa 49:14 - -- They shall be hurried from their large and stately mansions, into a close and dark grave.

They shall be hurried from their large and stately mansions, into a close and dark grave.

Wesley: Psa 49:15 - -- Tho' no man can find out a ransom to redeem himself, yet God can and will redeem me.

Tho' no man can find out a ransom to redeem himself, yet God can and will redeem me.

Wesley: Psa 49:15 - -- The grave shall not have power to retain me, but shall be forced to give me up into my father's hands.

The grave shall not have power to retain me, but shall be forced to give me up into my father's hands.

Wesley: Psa 49:15 - -- Into heaven.

Into heaven.

Wesley: Psa 49:16 - -- Discouraged.

Discouraged.

Wesley: Psa 49:18 - -- He applauded himself as an happy man.

He applauded himself as an happy man.

Wesley: Psa 49:18 - -- And as he flatters himself, so parasites flatter him for their own advantage.

And as he flatters himself, so parasites flatter him for their own advantage.

Wesley: Psa 49:18 - -- When thou dost indulge thyself, and advance thy worldly interest.

When thou dost indulge thyself, and advance thy worldly interest.

Wesley: Psa 49:19 - -- Now he returns to the third person: such changes are frequent in this book.

Now he returns to the third person: such changes are frequent in this book.

Wesley: Psa 49:19 - -- To the grave and hell, where he shall meet with his wicked parents, who by their counsel and example, led him into his evil courses.

To the grave and hell, where he shall meet with his wicked parents, who by their counsel and example, led him into his evil courses.

Wesley: Psa 49:19 - -- Neither the light of this life, to which they shall never return: nor of the next life, to which they shall never be admitted.

Neither the light of this life, to which they shall never return: nor of the next life, to which they shall never be admitted.

Wesley: Psa 49:20 - -- Hath not true wisdom.

Hath not true wisdom.

Wesley: Psa 49:20 - -- Though he hath the outward shape of a man, yet in truth he is a beast, a stupid, and unreasonable creature.

Though he hath the outward shape of a man, yet in truth he is a beast, a stupid, and unreasonable creature.

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.

JFB: Psa 49:1-3 - -- Literally, "duration of life," the present time.

Literally, "duration of life," the present time.

JFB: Psa 49:4 - -- To hear attentively (Psa 17:6; Psa 31:2).

To hear attentively (Psa 17:6; Psa 31:2).

JFB: Psa 49:4 - -- In Hebrew and Greek "parable" and "proverb" are translations of the same word. It denotes a comparison, or form of speech, which under one image inclu...

In Hebrew and Greek "parable" and "proverb" are translations of the same word. It denotes a comparison, or form of speech, which under one image includes many, and is expressive of a general truth capable of various illustrations. Hence it may be used for the illustration itself. For the former sense, "proverb" (that is, one word for several) is the usual English term, and for the latter, in which comparison is prominent, "parable" (that is, one thing laid by another). The distinction is not always observed, since here, and in Psa 78:2; "proverb" would better express the style of the composition (compare also Pro 26:7, Pro 26:9; Hab 2:6; Joh 16:25, Joh 16:29). Such forms of speech are often very figurative and also obscure (compare Mat 13:12-15). Hence the use of the parallel word--

JFB: Psa 49:4 - -- Or, "riddle" (compare Eze 17:2).

Or, "riddle" (compare Eze 17:2).

JFB: Psa 49:4 - -- Is to explain.

Is to explain.

JFB: Psa 49:4 - -- The accompaniment for a lyric.

The accompaniment for a lyric.

JFB: Psa 49:5 - -- Or, "calamity" (Psa 40:12).

Or, "calamity" (Psa 40:12).

JFB: Psa 49:5 - -- Literally "my supplanters" (Gen 27:36), or oppressors: "I am surrounded by the evils they inflict."

Literally "my supplanters" (Gen 27:36), or oppressors: "I am surrounded by the evils they inflict."

JFB: Psa 49:6 - -- They are vainglorious.

They are vainglorious.

JFB: Psa 49:7-9 - -- Yet unable to save themselves or others.

Yet unable to save themselves or others.

JFB: Psa 49:8 - -- That is, the ransom fails, the price is too precious, costly.

That is, the ransom fails, the price is too precious, costly.

JFB: Psa 49:9 - -- Literally, "pit," or, "grave," thus showing that "soul" is used for "life" [Psa 49:8].

Literally, "pit," or, "grave," thus showing that "soul" is used for "life" [Psa 49:8].

JFB: Psa 49:10 - -- That is, corruption; then follows the illustration.

That is, corruption; then follows the illustration.

JFB: Psa 49:10 - -- (Psa 14:1; Pro 1:32; Pro 10:1).

JFB: Psa 49:10 - -- Alike altogether-- (Psa 4:8) --die--all meet the same fate.

Alike altogether-- (Psa 4:8) --die--all meet the same fate.

JFB: Psa 49:11 - -- Still infatuated and flattered with hopes of perpetuity, they call their lands, or "celebrate their names on account of (their) lands."

Still infatuated and flattered with hopes of perpetuity, they call their lands, or "celebrate their names on account of (their) lands."

JFB: Psa 49:12 - -- Contrasted with this vanity is their frailty. However honored, man

Contrasted with this vanity is their frailty. However honored, man

JFB: Psa 49:12 - -- Literally, "lodgeth not," remains not till morning, but suddenly perishes as (wild) beasts, whose lives are taken without warning.

Literally, "lodgeth not," remains not till morning, but suddenly perishes as (wild) beasts, whose lives are taken without warning.

JFB: Psa 49:13 - -- Though their way is folly, others follow the same course of life.

Though their way is folly, others follow the same course of life.

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- (compare Psa 49:12) unwittingly, they

(compare Psa 49:12) unwittingly, they

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Or, "put," &c.

Or, "put," &c.

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Or, better, "shall rule"

Or, better, "shall rule"

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- As a shepherd (compare "feed," Psa 28:9, Margin).

As a shepherd (compare "feed," Psa 28:9, Margin).

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Or, "subdue"

Or, "subdue"

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Suddenly, or in their turn.

Suddenly, or in their turn.

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Literally, "form" or shape.

Literally, "form" or shape.

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Literally, "is for the consumption," that is, of the grave.

Literally, "is for the consumption," that is, of the grave.

JFB: Psa 49:14 - -- Literally, "from their home (they go) to it," that is, the grave.

Literally, "from their home (they go) to it," that is, the grave.

JFB: Psa 49:15 - -- The pious, delivered from "the power of the grave."

The pious, delivered from "the power of the grave."

JFB: Psa 49:15 - -- Literally, "the hand," of death, are taken under God's care.

Literally, "the hand," of death, are taken under God's care.

JFB: Psa 49:16-19 - -- Applies this instruction. Be not anxious (Psa 37:1, &c.), since death cuts off the prosperous wicked whom you dread.

Applies this instruction. Be not anxious (Psa 37:1, &c.), since death cuts off the prosperous wicked whom you dread.

JFB: Psa 49:18 - -- Literally, "For in his life he blessed his soul," or, "himself" (Luk 12:19, Luk 16:25); yet (Psa 49:19); he has had his portion.

Literally, "For in his life he blessed his soul," or, "himself" (Luk 12:19, Luk 16:25); yet (Psa 49:19); he has had his portion.

JFB: Psa 49:18 - -- Flatterers enhance the rich fool's self-complacency; the form of address to him strengthens the emphasis of the sentiment.

Flatterers enhance the rich fool's self-complacency; the form of address to him strengthens the emphasis of the sentiment.

JFB: Psa 49:20 - -- (Compare Psa 49:12). The folly is more distinctly expressed by "understandeth not," substituted for "abideth not."

(Compare Psa 49:12). The folly is more distinctly expressed by "understandeth not," substituted for "abideth not."

Clarke: Psa 49:4 - -- I will incline mine ear to a parable - This was the general method of conveying instruction among the Asiatics. They used much figure and metaphor t...

I will incline mine ear to a parable - This was the general method of conveying instruction among the Asiatics. They used much figure and metaphor to induce the reader to study deeply in order to find out the meaning. This had its use; it obliged men to think and reflect deeply; and thus in some measure taught them the use, government, and management of their minds

Clarke: Psa 49:4 - -- My dark saying upon the harp - Music was sometimes used to soothe the animal spirits, and thus prepare the mind for the prophetic influx.

My dark saying upon the harp - Music was sometimes used to soothe the animal spirits, and thus prepare the mind for the prophetic influx.

Clarke: Psa 49:5 - -- The iniquity of my heels - Perhaps עקבי akebai , which we translate my heels, should be considered the contracted plural of עקבים akebim ...

The iniquity of my heels - Perhaps עקבי akebai , which we translate my heels, should be considered the contracted plural of עקבים akebim , supplanters. The verse would then read thus: "Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil, though the iniquity of my supplanters should compass me about."The Syriac and Arabic have taken a similar view of the passage: "Why should I fear in the evil day, when the iniquity of my enemies compasses me about."And so Dr. Kennicott translates it.

Clarke: Psa 49:7 - -- Sone of them can by any means redeem his brother - Wealth cannot save from death; brother, however rich, cannot save his brother; nor will God accep...

Sone of them can by any means redeem his brother - Wealth cannot save from death; brother, however rich, cannot save his brother; nor will God accept riches as a ransom for the life or soul of any transgressor. To procure health of body, peace of mind, redemption from death, and eternal glory, riches are sought for and applied in vain.

Clarke: Psa 49:8 - -- For the redemption of their soul is precious - It is of too high a price to be redeemed with corruptible things, such as silver or gold, and has req...

For the redemption of their soul is precious - It is of too high a price to be redeemed with corruptible things, such as silver or gold, and has required the sacrificial death of Christ

Clarke: Psa 49:8 - -- And it ceaseth for ever - This is very obscure, and may apply to the ransom which riches could produce. That ransom must be for ever unavailable, be...

And it ceaseth for ever - This is very obscure, and may apply to the ransom which riches could produce. That ransom must be for ever unavailable, because of the value of the soul. Or this clause should be added to the following verse, and read thus: "And though he cease to be, ( וחדל vechadal ), during the hidden time, ( לעולם leolam ); yet he shall live on through eternity, ( ויחי עוד לנצח vichi od lanetsach ), and not see corruption."This is probably the dark saying which it was the design of the author to utter in a parable, and leave it to the ingenuity of posterity to find it out. The verb חדל chadal signifies a cessation of being or action, and עולם olam often signifies hidden time, that which is not defined, and the end of which is not ascertained, though it is frequently used to express endless duration. This translation requires no alteration of the original text, and conveys a precise and consistent meaning.

Clarke: Psa 49:10 - -- For he seeth that wise men die - Though they may be rich, and their wisdom teach them the best method of managing their riches so as to derive all t...

For he seeth that wise men die - Though they may be rich, and their wisdom teach them the best method of managing their riches so as to derive all the good from them they can possibly produce, yet they die as well as the fool and the poor ignorant man; and their wealth is left to others who will be equally disappointed in their expectation from it.

Clarke: Psa 49:11 - -- Their inward thought is, that their houses shall continue for ever - Thus, by interpolation, we have endeavored to patch up a sense to this clause. ...

Their inward thought is, that their houses shall continue for ever - Thus, by interpolation, we have endeavored to patch up a sense to this clause. Instead of קרבם kirbam , their inward part, the Septuagint appear to have used a copy in which the second and third letters have been transposed קברם kibram , their sepulchres; for they translate: Και οἱ ταφοι αυτων οικιαι αυτων εις τον αιωνα· "For their graves are their dwellings for ever."So six or seven feet long, and two or three wide, is sufficient to hold the greatest conqueror in the universe! What a small house for the quondam possessor of numerous palaces and potent kingdoms

Clarke: Psa 49:11 - -- They call their lands after their own names - There would have been no evil in this if it had not been done on an infidel principle. They expected n...

They call their lands after their own names - There would have been no evil in this if it had not been done on an infidel principle. They expected no state but the present; and if they could not continue themselves, yet they took as much pains as possible to perpetuate their memorial.

Clarke: Psa 49:12 - -- Man being in honor abideth not - However rich, wise, or honorable, they must die; and if they die not with a sure hope of eternal life, they die lik...

Man being in honor abideth not - However rich, wise, or honorable, they must die; and if they die not with a sure hope of eternal life, they die like beasts. See on Psa 49:20 (note).

Clarke: Psa 49:13 - -- Their posterity approve their sayinys - Go the same way; adopt their maxims.

Their posterity approve their sayinys - Go the same way; adopt their maxims.

Clarke: Psa 49:14 - -- Like sheep they are laid in the grave - לשאול lishol , into sheol, the place of separate spirits Death shall feed on them מות ירעם mav...

Like sheep they are laid in the grave - לשאול lishol , into sheol, the place of separate spirits

Death shall feed on them מות ירעם maveth yirem , "Death shall feed them!"What an astonishing change! All the good things of life were once their portion, and they lived only to eat and drink; and now they live in sheol, and Death himself feeds them? and with what? Damnation. Houbigant reads the verse thus: "Like sheep they shall be laid in the place of the dead; death shall feed on them; their morning shepherds rule over them; and their flesh is to be consumed. Destruction is to them in their folds."

Clarke: Psa 49:15 - -- But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave - מיד שאול miyad sheol , "from the hand of sheol."That is, by the plainest construct...

But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave - מיד שאול miyad sheol , "from the hand of sheol."That is, by the plainest construction, I shall have a resurrection from the dead, and an entrance into his glory; and death shall have no dominion over me.

Clarke: Psa 49:16 - -- Be not thou afraid when one is made rich - Do not be envious; do not grieve: it will do you no harm; it will do him no good. All he gets will be lef...

Be not thou afraid when one is made rich - Do not be envious; do not grieve: it will do you no harm; it will do him no good. All he gets will be left behind; he can carry nothing with him. Even his glory must stay behind; he shall mingle with the common earth.

Clarke: Psa 49:18 - -- He blessed his soul - He did all he could to procure himself animal gratifications, and he was applauded for it; for it is the custom of the world t...

He blessed his soul - He did all he could to procure himself animal gratifications, and he was applauded for it; for it is the custom of the world to praise them who pay most attention to their secular interest; and he who attends most to the concerns of his soul is deemed weak and foolish, and is often persecuted by an ungodly world.

Clarke: Psa 49:19 - -- They shall never see light - Rise again they shall; but they shall never see the light of glory, for there is prepared for them the blackness of dar...

They shall never see light - Rise again they shall; but they shall never see the light of glory, for there is prepared for them the blackness of darkness for ever.

Clarke: Psa 49:20 - -- Man that is in honor - The rich and honorable man who has no spiritual understanding, is a beast in the sight of God. The spirit of this maxim is, A...

Man that is in honor - The rich and honorable man who has no spiritual understanding, is a beast in the sight of God. The spirit of this maxim is, A man who is in a dignified official situation, but destitute of learning and sound sense, is like a beast. The important place which he occupies reflects no honor upon him, but is disgraced by him. Who has not read the fable of the beautifully carved head? It was every thing that it should be, but had no brains

This verse has been often quoted as a proof of the fall of man; and from ילין yalin , (in Psa 49:12), which signifies to lodge for a night, it has been inferred that Adam fell on the same day on which he was created, and that he did not spend a single night in the terrestrial paradise. Adam, who was in a state of glory, did not remain in it one night, but became stupid and ignorant as the beasts which perish. But we may rest assured this is no meaning of the text

Calvin: Psa 49:3 - -- 3.My mouth shall speak of wisdom The prophet was warranted in applying these commendatory terms to the doctrine which he was about to communicate. It...

3.My mouth shall speak of wisdom The prophet was warranted in applying these commendatory terms to the doctrine which he was about to communicate. It is, no doubt, by plain appeals to observation that we find him reproving human folly; but the general principle upon which his instruction proceeds is one by no means obvious to the common sense of mankind, not to say that his design in using such terms is less to assert the dignity of his subject than simply to awaken attention. This he does all the more effectually by speaking as one who would apply his own mind to instruction rather than assume the office of exhortation. He puts himself forward as an humble scholar, one who, in acting the part of teacher, has an eye at the same time to his own improvement. It were desirable that all the ministers of God should be actuated by a similar spirit, disposing them to regard God as at once their own teacher and that of the common people, and to embrace in the first place themselves that divine word which they preach to others. 213 The Psalmist had another object in view. He would secure the greater weight and deference to his doctrine by announcing that he had no intention to vend fancies of his own, but to advance what he had learned in the school of God. This is the true method of instruction to be followed in the Church. The man who holds the office of teacher must apply himself to the reception of truth before he attempt to communicate it, and in this manner become the means of conveying to the hands of others that which God has committed to his own. Wisdom is not the growth of human genius. It must be sought from above, and it is impossible that any should speak with the propriety and knowledge necessary for the edification of the Church, who has not, in the first place, been taught at the feet of the Lord. To condescend upon the words, some read in the third verse, And the meditation of my heart shall speak of understanding But as it were a harsh and improper expression to say that the meditation of the heart speaks, I have adopted the simpler reading.

Calvin: Psa 49:4 - -- 4.I will incline my ear 214 to a parable The Hebrew word משל , mashal, 215 which I have translated parable, properly denotes a similitude;...

4.I will incline my ear 214 to a parable The Hebrew word משל , mashal, 215 which I have translated parable, properly denotes a similitude; but it is often applied to any deep or weighty sayings, because these are generally embellished with figures and metaphors. The noun which follows, חידת , chidoth 216 and which I have rendered an enigma, or riddle, is to be understood in nearly the same sense. In Eze 17:2, we have both the nouns with their corresponding verbs joined together, חור חידה ומשל משל , chud chedah umshol mashal, the literal translation being, “Enigmatize an enigma, and parabolize a parable.” I am aware that the reference in this place is to an allegorical discourse, but I have already adverted to the reason why, in Hebrew, the name of enigmas or similitudes is given to any remarkable or important sayings. The Psalmist, when he adds that he will open his dark saying, shows that nothing was farther from his intention than to wrap the subject of his discourse in perplexing and intricate obscurity. The truths of revelation are so high as to exceed our comprehension; but, at the same time, the Holy Spirit has accommodated them so far to our capacity, as to render all Scripture profitable for instruction. None can plead ignorance: for the deepest and most difficult doctrines are made plain to the most simple and unlettered of mankind. I see little force in the idea suggested by several interpreters, of the Psalmist having employed his harp, that he might render a subject in itself harsh and disagreeable more engaging by the charms of music. He would merely follow the usual practice of accompanying the psalm with the harp.

Calvin: Psa 49:5 - -- 5.Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil? The Psalmist now enters upon the point on which he proposed to discourse, That the people of God must ...

5.Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil? The Psalmist now enters upon the point on which he proposed to discourse, That the people of God must not yield to despondency even in the most distressing circumstances, when their enemies may seem to have enclosed them on every side, but must rest assured that God, although he connives for a time, is awake to their condition, and only watches the best opportunity of executing his judgments. This manner of introducing the subject by interrogation is much more emphatic than if he had simply asserted his resolution to preserve his mind undisturbed in the midst of adversity. In the second clause of the verse he particularises the heaviest and most bitter of all afflictions, those which are experienced by the righteous when their enemies triumph in the unrestrained indulgence of their wickedness. When, the adverb of time, must therefore be understood — When the iniquity of my heel shall compass me about There is a different meaning which some interpreters have attached to the words, namely, If I should fear in the days of evil, and be guilty of the excessive anxieties of the unbeliever, — in that case, when the hour of my death came, my iniquity would compass me about. The heel they take to be the end of life. But this interpretation is to be dismissed at once as most unnatural. Nor do I see what reason others have for referring this word to the thoughts, for I believe that in no other part of Scripture can such a metaphor or similitude be found. Others, with more plausibility, have rendered the original word liers in wait, 217 because the Hebrew verb עקב , akab, signifies to deceive; and they consider the Psalmist as intimating, that he would not fear though crafty and treacherous men laid snares for him. In my opinion, there is no figure intended; and he means to say, that he would have no fear when his enemies surrounded him, and in pursuing him, trode, as it were, upon his heel. The French have a similar expression, “Poursuyvre jusques aux talons.” 218 I agree with them, that he speaks of enemies, but it is of their wicked persecution as they press upon him in the height of their power, and with design to destroy him, keep themselves near him, and tread, so to speak, upon his very heel.

Calvin: Psa 49:6 - -- 6.They trust in their wealth We are now furnished with the reason why the suffering children of God should dismiss their apprehensions, and keep them...

6.They trust in their wealth We are now furnished with the reason why the suffering children of God should dismiss their apprehensions, and keep themselves from despondency, even when reduced to extremity by the violence and treachery of their enemies. Any boasted power which they possess is fleeting and evanescent. The Psalmist would convince us that the fear of man is unwarrantable; that it argues ignorance of what man is even at his best; and that it were as reasonable to startle at a shadow or a spectre. They boast themselves, he adds, in the multitude of their riches, and this is an error into which we are disposed to fall, forgetting that the condition of man in this world is fluctuating and transitory. It is not merely from the intrinsic insufficiency of wealth, honors, or pleasures, to confer true happiness, that the Psalmist proves the misery of worldly men, but from their manifest and total incapacity of forming a correct judgment of such possessions. Happiness is connected with the state of mind of that man who enjoys it, and none would call those happy who are sunk in stupidity and security, and are destitute of understanding. The Psalmist satisfactorily proves the infatuation of the wicked from the confidence which they place in their power and wealth, and their disposition to boast of them. It is a convincing sign of folly when one cannot discern what is before his eyes. Not a day passes without forcing the plain fact upon their notice, that none can redeem the life of another; so that their conduct is nothing less than insanity. Some read, A man shall not be able to redeem his brother; which amounts to the same meaning, and the text admits of this translation. The Hebrew word אח , ach, which I have rendered brother, is by others translated one; but I do not approve, although I would not absolutely reject, this reading. The Psalmist adds, that none can give a price to God for the ransom of another, where he adverts to the truth that men’s lives are absolutely at the disposal of God, and that they never can be extended by any human arrangement one moment beyond the period which God has fixed.

He enforces the same lesson in the verse which follows, where he states that the redemption of their soul is precious, an expression not to be understood as implying merely that it is an event of rare occurrence, but that it never can take place, as 1Sa 3:1, where the word of the Lord is said to have been precious under the priesthood of Eli, when it is evidently meant that it had ceased altogether. The Psalmist would assert that no man can hope to purchase an immortality either for himself or others in this world. I have rendered the close of verse 8, And their continuance for ever; but others, who construe the Hebrew word חדל , chadal, as a verb, meaning to cease, read, And ceaseth for ever, as if the Psalmist meant that no price was sufficiently great to answer the purpose, and that it must therefore cease for ever, as what could never obtain the end desired. I consider that which I have given to be the real meaning of the word, having had occasion already to observe upon Psa 39:5, that it signifies the fixed term of human life. The words in verse 9, That he should still live for ever, more fully express the truth, that it is not merely impossible to redeem the life of men when they are dead, but impossible while they are yet living, to extend the term of their existence. A definite limit has been assigned to every man’s life. This he cannot pass over, and the Psalmist would impress the fact upon us as one which stamps folly upon the conduct of the wicked, who will cherish their unfounded confidence even at the moment when they are upon the brink of the grave. In all this, it may strike the reader that he has not announced any thing which merits being called a dark saying, and has rather been treating a popular subject in a very plain style of language; but if he consider that David here condemns, as by a voice issuing from the awful judgment-seat of God, the stupidity of such as forget that they are men, he will not be disposed to reckon the expression inapplicable. Again, we have seen that he has opened his dark saying, it being the divine will that instruction should be delivered in a form adapted to the meanest capacity.

Calvin: Psa 49:10 - -- 10.For he shall see that wise men die I consider the ninth and tenth verses to be connected, and that it is the intention of the Psalmist to censure ...

10.For he shall see that wise men die I consider the ninth and tenth verses to be connected, and that it is the intention of the Psalmist to censure the folly of those who dream of spending an eternity in this world, and set themselves seriously to establish a permanent settlement in it, though they cannot but see their fellow-creatures cut down daily before their eyes by the stroke of death. It is a common proverb, that experience teaches fools, and they may be looked upon as something worse who will not lay to heart their mortality, when surrounded by so many convincing illustrations of it. This seems obviously to be the connection. These infatuated enemies of God, as if he had said, cannot fail to perceive that death is the universal lot of mankind, that the wise are equally liable to it with the foolish; and yet they persist in the imagination that they will remain here always, and will live as if they were never to quit with this world! They see what happens to others, that all, without exception or discrimination, are involved in the common mortality; and they must observe how often it happens that wealth passes into the hands of strangers The word אחרים , acherim, I translate strangers, rather than others; for although it may be extended to successors of any kind, yet I think that the Psalmist here supposes the case of wealth passing into the hands of those who are not our natural and lawful heirs, and cannot be considered in any sense as representing us. Many not only die, but die childless, and their name becomes extinct, which is an additional ingredient of bitterness in the cup of the worldling. And yet all these affecting lessons of experience are entirely lost upon them, and they still in their secret thoughts fondly cherish the idea of living here for ever. The Hebrew word קרב , kereb, means the middle of anything; but it is taken metaphorically to signify the heart, or inward parts of the man. Here it denotes that their secret thoughts are occupied with an imaginary eternity which they hope to enjoy upon earth. Another and more ingenious interpretation has been suggested by some, that as the word occasionally means a tomb, the Psalmist may here be satirising those who think to perpetuate their memory after death by rearing expensive mausoleums. 220 This view of the words is strained and unnatural; and what immediately follows proves that the other is the most correct, when it is added, that worldly men call out their names upon the earth; that is, make every exertion in their power to win reputation amongst their fellow-creatures. Their desire should be to have their names written in the book of life, and to be blessed before God and his holy angels; but their ambition is of another kind — to be renowned and extolled upon earth. By the expression, calling out, it is insinuated that the fame of ungodly men is but an empty sound. Some interpreters prefer reading, They have called their lands by their own names, 221 that they might leave some monument of themselves to posterity. But what the Psalmist seems chiefly to insist upon is, that they are wholly bent upon earthly renown.

Calvin: Psa 49:12 - -- 12.And man shall not abide in honor Having exposed the vain and delusory nature of the fancies entertained by the ungodly, he next shows that however...

12.And man shall not abide in honor Having exposed the vain and delusory nature of the fancies entertained by the ungodly, he next shows that however fondly they may cherish them, they must experience the same fate with the beasts of the field. It is true that there is a great difference, so far as the soul is concerned, between man and the brute creation; but the Psalmist speaks of things as they appear in this world, and in this respect he was warranted to say of the ungodly that they die as the beasts. His subject does not lead him to speak of the world to come. He is reasoning with the children of this world, who have no respect to another, and no idea of a farther happiness than that which they enjoy here. He accordingly ridicules their folly in conceiving of themselves as privileged with exemption from the ordinary lot of humanity, and warns them that death will soon be near to humble their presumptuous thoughts, and put them on a level with the meanest of the lower creatures. This I prefer to the more ingenious interpretation which some would put upon the words, that they reduced themselves to the level of beasts by not recognising the true dignity of their nature, which consists in the possession of a never-dying soul. The Psalmist’s great aim is to show the vanity of the boasting of the wicked, from the nearness of death, which must join them in one common fate with the beasts of the field. The last word in the verse gives the reason why the ungodly may be compared to the beasts — they perish It matters little whether or not we consider the relative אשר , asher, as understood, and read, that perish

Calvin: Psa 49:13 - -- 13.This their way is foolishness As this verse has been variously rendered, I shall briefly, before giving my own sense of it, state the views which ...

13.This their way is foolishness As this verse has been variously rendered, I shall briefly, before giving my own sense of it, state the views which have been taken by others. As the Hebrew word כסל , kesel, which I have translated foolishness, occasionally means the kidneys, some refine upon the term, and consider it to be here taken for fat; as if this imagination of theirs were, so to speak, fat which stupified and rendered their senses obtuse. But this reading is too forced to bear examination. Others read, This their way is their folly; 226 that is, the reason why they pursue such a line of conduct is, that they are destitute of sound judgment; for, were they not utterly devoid of it, and did they possess one spark of intelligence, would they not reflect upon the end for which they were created, and direct their minds to higher objects? I rather conceive the Psalmist simply to mean, that the event proves them to be wholly destitute of wisdom, in placing their happiness upon earthly objects, and brands them, notwithstanding all the pretensions they make to foresight and shrewdness, with ridicule and contempt. And this he states, to show in a more aggravated light the madness of their posterity, who will not be instructed by the fate of their predecessors. The last clause of the verse has also been variously rendered, and I may state the views which have been taken of it by others. The Hebrew verb רצה , ratsah, which I have translated to acquiesce, they render, to walk, and the noun פי , phi, translated mouth or sayings, they take to mean a measure, thus understanding the Psalmist to say, that the children walked by the same rule with their fathers; and they change the letter ב , beth, into כ , caph, the mark of similitude which is sufficiently common in the Hebrew language. This view of the passage comes near to the proper meaning of it. Some conceive that there is an allusion to the beasts of the field; but this is improbable. It seems best to understand with others that the word mouth denotes principles or sayings; and the verb רצה , ratsah, may be taken in its more ordinary and most generally received sense, which implies consent or complacency. I have therefore translated it to acquiesce. The boasted confidence of the ungodly proving vain in the issue, and exposing them justly to ridicule, it argues a monstrous infatuation in their posterity, with this example before their eyes, to set their affections upon the same trifles, and to feel and express themselves exactly in the same manner as those who went before them. If men reflect at all upon the judgments which God executes in the world, we might expect that they would particularly consider his dealings with their immediate predecessors, and when, wholly insensible to the lessons which should be learned from their fate, they precipitate themselves into the same courses, this convincingly demonstrates their brutish folly.

Calvin: Psa 49:14 - -- 14.Like sheep they are laid in the grave; death shall feed them 227 The figure is striking. They go down into the grave as sheep are gathered into th...

14.Like sheep they are laid in the grave; death shall feed them 227 The figure is striking. They go down into the grave as sheep are gathered into the fold by the shepherd. The entire world might not seem vast enough for men of a haughty spirit. They are so swollen with their vain imaginations, that they would engross universal nature to themselves. But the Psalmist, finding the wicked spread as it were far and wide, in the boundless pride of their hearts, collects them together into the grave, and hands them over to death as their shepherd. He intimates, that whatever superiority they might affect over their fellow-creatures, they would feel, when too late, that their boasting was vain, and be forced to yield themselves up to the irresistible and humiliating stroke of death. In the second part of the verse, the Psalmist points out the very different fate which awaits the children of God, and thus anticipates an obvious objection. It might be said, “Thou tellest us that those who place their confidence in this world must die. But this is no new doctrine. And why convert into matter of reproach what must be considered as a law of nature, attaching to all mankind? Who gave thee a privilege to insult the children of mortality? Art thou not one of them thyself?” This objection he meets effectually, by granting that on the supposition of death being the destruction of the whole man, he would have advanced no new or important doctrine, but arguing that infidel worldlings reject a better life to come, and thus lay themselves justly open to this species of reprehension. For surely it is the height of folly in any man for a mere momentary happiness — a very dream — to abdicate the crown of heaven, and renounce his hopes for eternity. Here it must be apparent, as I already took occasion to observe, that the doctrine of this psalm is very different from that taught by the philosophers. I grant that they may have ridiculed worldly ambition with elegance and eloquence, exposed the other vices, and insisted upon the topics of our frailty and mortality; but they uniformly omitted to state the most important truth of all, that God governs the world by his providence, and that we may expect a happy issue out of our calamities, by coming to that everlasting inheritance which awaits us in heaven. It may be asked, what that dominion is which the upright shall eventually obtain? I would reply, that as the wicked must all be prostrated before the Lord Jesus Christ, and made his footstool, His members will share in the victory of their Head. It is indeed said, that he “will deliver up the kingdom to God, even the Father,” but he will not do this that he may put an end to his Church, but “that God may be all in all,” (1Co 15:24.) It is stated that this will be in the morning 228 — a beautiful and striking metaphor. Surrounded as we are by darkness, our life is here compared to the night, or to a sleep, an image which is specially applicable to the ungodly, who lie as it were in a deep slumber, but not inapplicable to the people of God, such being the dark mist which rests upon all things in this world, that even their minds (except in so far as they are illuminated from above) are partially enveloped in it. Here “we see only as through a glass darkly,” and the coining of the Lord will resemble the morning, when both the elect and reprobate will awake. The former will then cast aside their lethargy and sloth, and being freed from the darkness which rested upon them, will behold Christ the Sun of Righteousness face to face, and the full effulgence of life which resides in him. The others, who lie at present in a state of total darkness, will be aroused from their stupidity, and begin to discover a new life, of which they had previously no apprehension. We need to be reminded of this event, not only because corruption presses us downwards and obscures our faith, but because there are men who profanely argue against another life, from the continued course of things in the world, scoffing, as Peter foretold, (2Pe 3:4,) at the promise of a resurrection, and pointing, in derision, to the unvarying regularity of nature throughout the lapse of ages. We may arm ourselves against their arguments by what the Psalmist here declares, that, sunk as the world is in darkness, there will dawn ere long a new morning, which will introduce us to a better and an eternal existence. It follows, that their strength, or their form, 229 (for the Hebrew word צורה , tsurah, is susceptible of either meanings) shall wax old If we read strength, the words intimate, that though at present they are in possession of wealth and power, they shall speedily decline and fall; but I see no objection to the other meaning, which has more commonly been adopted. Paul tells us, (1Co 7:31,) that “ the fashion of this world passes away,” a term expressive of the evanescent nature of our earthly condition; and the Psalmist may be considered as comparing their vain and unsubstantial glory to a shadow. The words at the close of the verse are obscure. Some read, The grave is their dwelling; and then they make ם , mem, the formative letter of a noun. But the other interpretation agrees better both with the words and scope of the psalm, that the grave awaits them from his dwelling, which is put for their dwelling; such a change of number being common in the Hebrew language. They reside at present in splendid mansions, where they rest in apparent security, but we are reminded that they must soon come out of them, and be received into the tomb. There may be a covert allusion to their goings abroad to places of public resort with gaiety and pomp. These, the Psalmist intimates, must give place to the sad procession by which they must be carried down to the grave.

Calvin: Psa 49:15 - -- 15.But God will redeem my soul The Hebrew particle, אך , ach, may be also translated, surely, or certainly. The psalmist had made a general ...

15.But God will redeem my soul The Hebrew particle, אך , ach, may be also translated, surely, or certainly. The psalmist had made a general assertion of the great truth, that the righteous shall have dominion in the morning, and now he applies it to himself for the confirmation of his own faith. This verse may, therefore, be regarded as a kind of appendix to the former; in it he makes a personal application of what had been said of all the righteous. By the word, the hand, is to be understood the dominion and power, and not the stroke, of the grave, as some have rendered it. The prophet does not deny his liability to death; but he looks to God as He who would defend and redeem him from it. We have here a convincing proof of that faith in which the saints under the Law lived and died. It is evident that their views were directed to another and a higher life, to which the present was only preparatory. Had the prophet merely intended to intimate that he expected deliverance from some ordinary emergency, this would have been no more than what is frequently done by the children of the world, whom God often delivers from great dangers. But here it is evident that he hoped for a life beyond the grave, that he extended his glance beyond this sublunary sphere, and anticipated the morning which will introduce eternity. From this we may conclude, that the promises of the Law were spiritual, and that our fathers who embraced them were willing to confess themselves pilgrims upon earth, and sought an inheritance in heaven. It evinced gross stupidity in the Sadducees, educated as they were under the Law, to conceive of the soul as mortal. The man must be blind indeed who can find no mention of a future life in this passage. To what other interpretation can we wrest the preceding verse, when it speaks of a morning altogether new and peculiar? We are sufficiently accustomed to see the return of morning, but it points us to a day of an extraordinary kind, when God himself shall rise upon us as the sun, and surprise us with the discovery of his glory. When the Psalmist adds, Assuredly God will redeem my soul 230 from the power of the grave, does he not contemplate a special privilege, such as could not be shared by all other men? If deliverance from death, then, be a privilege peculiar to the children of God, it is evident that they are expectants of a better life. We must not overlook, (what I have already noticed,) that the sure method of profiting by the divine promises is, to apply to ourselves what God has offered generally to all without exception. This is done by the prophet, for how could he have arrived at an assured promise of the redemption of his soul, except by the general fact known to him of the future glory awaiting the children of God, and by concluding himself to be amongst their number? The last clause of the verse runs in the Hebrew literally, for he will take me up Some, however, resolve the causal particle כי , ki, which we render for, into the adverb of time when, and the verb לקח , lakach, which we translate to receive or to take up, they translate to cut off, or take away from this world, giving to the passage this sense, When God shall have called my soul out of this world to himself, he will rescue it from the power of the grave. I am afraid that this is rather too strained an interpretation. Those seem to take a juster view of the words who consider that the future tense has been substituted for the perfect, and who retain the proper signification of the causal particle, reading, for he has taken me up The prophet did not consider that the ground of his hope for a better resurrection was to be found in himself, but in the gratuitous adoption of God who had taken him into his favor. There is no need, however, why we should suppose a change of tense, and not understand the Psalmist as meaning that God would redeem his soul from death, by undertaking the guardianship of it when he came to die. The despairing fears which so many entertain when descending to the grave spring from the fact of their not commending their spirit to the preserving care of God. They do not consider it in the light of a precious deposit which will be safe in his protecting hands. Let our faith be established in the great truth, that our soul, though it appears to evanish upon its separation from the body, is in reality only gathered to the bosom of God, there to be kept until the day of the resurrection.

Calvin: Psa 49:16 - -- 16.Be not thou afraid The Psalmist repeats, in the form of an exhortation, the same sentiment which he had formerly expressed, that the children of G...

16.Be not thou afraid The Psalmist repeats, in the form of an exhortation, the same sentiment which he had formerly expressed, that the children of God have no reason to dread the wealth and power of their enemies, or to envy their evanescent prosperity; and as the best preservative against despondency, he would have them to direct their eyes habitually to the end of life. The effect of such a contemplation will be at once to check any impatience we might be apt to feel under our short-lived miseries, and to raise our minds in holy contempt above the boasted but delusory grandeur of the wicked. That this may not impose upon our minds, the prophet recalls us to the consideration of the subject of death — that event which is immediately at hand, and which no sooner arrives than it strips them of their false glory, and consigns them to the tomb. So much is implied in the words, He shall not carry away all these things when he dieth 232 Be their lives ever so illustrious in the eyes of their fellow-creatures, this glory is necessarily bounded by the present world. The same truth is further asserted in the succeeding clause of the verse, His glory shall not descend after him Infatuated men may strain every nerve, as if in defiance of the very laws of nature, to perpetuate their glory after death, but they never can escape the corruption and nakedness of the tomb; for, in the language of the poet Juvenal, -

“ Mots sola fatetur Quantula sint hominum corpuscula,” —

“It is death which forces us to confess how worthless the bodies of men are.”

Calvin: Psa 49:18 - -- 18.For he will bless his soul in his lifetime Various meanings have been attached to this verse. Some read, He ought to have blessed his soul during...

18.For he will bless his soul in his lifetime Various meanings have been attached to this verse. Some read, He ought to have blessed his soul during his life Others apply the first clause of the verse to the wicked, while they refer the second to believers, who are in the habit of praising God for all his benefits. Others understand the whole verse as descriptive of believers, but without sufficient ground. There can be little doubt that the reference is to the children of the world. In the first part of the verse it is said that they bless their own soul 233 so long as they live on earth, by which is meant, that they indulge and pamper themselves with earthly pleasures, giving way to the excesses of brutish intemperance, like the rich man, of whom Christ spoke in the parable, who said,

“Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years, take thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry,” — (Luk 12:19)

or that they seek their happiness entirely from this world, without cherishing a desire for the life that is to come. Some translate the Hebrew verb, he will do good, and read thus, He will do good to his own soul in his lifetime. But I conceive the phrase to be synonymous in its import with that which is employed by Moses,

“And it come to pass, that he bless himself in his heart;”
(Deu 29:19,)

that is, flatter himself as if he might despise God with impunity. The inspired penman here represents the stupidity of such as please themselves with a fallacious dream of happiness. In the latter part of the verse the person is changed, and the votary of pleasure is apostrophised; 234 the prophet insinuating, by the words he uses, that the preposterous pride with which the wicked are inflamed is in part the consequence of the delusive applause of the world, which pronounces them to be happy, and echoes their praises even when they gratify their most unlicensed passions.

Calvin: Psa 49:19 - -- 19.He shall come to the age of his fathers He proceeds to show how false are the flatteries by which the wicked deceive themselves, and are deceived ...

19.He shall come to the age of his fathers He proceeds to show how false are the flatteries by which the wicked deceive themselves, and are deceived by others. Be they ever so intoxicated with the praises of the world, or with their own vain imaginations, yet they cannot live beyond the age of their fathers; and, granting their life to be extended to the longest term, it can never stretch into eternity. Others understand the expression as synonymous with their being gathered to the tomb along with their fathers who have gone before them; as in Scripture death is usually called “The way of all the earth.” The Psalmist, a little above, had spoken of their being gathered together in the grave as sheep in a fold. According to this view, the meaning of the passage is, that having never aspired after heaven, but having been sunk in the low grovelling pursuits of this world, they would come at last to the same fate with their fathers. When it is added, They shall not see the light even for ever, we are to understand their consignment to everlasting darkness. 235 In my opinion, both clauses of the verse combine to express the same truth, That however they may flatter and deceive themselves, they cannot prolong their life beyond the common term of mortality. As either interpretation, however, agrees with the general scope of the psalm, the reader may choose for himself. Should the latter be adopted, the words in the close of the verse are to be considered as asserting that the ungodly can only enjoy the light of life for a short period, as they have no hope of another existence beyond the grave. We are taught by the Psalmist, in the words which have been under our consideration, to beware of flattering ourselves in the possessions of this world, and to be principally anxious for the attainment of that happiness which is reserved for us in heaven. We are also warned not to allow ourselves to be carried away by the erring influence of worldly applause. Even heathen authors have taught us the same lesson. Thus the poet Persius says, —

“ Non si quid turbida Roma
Elevet, accedas, examenve improbum in illa
Castiges trutina: nec te quaesiveris extra,” —

“If Rome, a city full of commotions, exalt or despise any thing, beware of being satisfied with its weight or balance; that is to say, of stopping at its judgment; and do not look to what others say of you, but enter into thyself, and examine what thou art.” 236 But the disposition to be deceived by flattery is one so strongly marked in our nature, as to require that we should attend to the weightier admonition of one who was inspired.

Calvin: Psa 49:20 - -- 20.Man is in honor, and will not understand 237 Here the prophet, that he may not be understood as having represented the present life, which in itse...

20.Man is in honor, and will not understand 237 Here the prophet, that he may not be understood as having represented the present life, which in itself is a singular blessing of God, as wholly contemptible, corrects himself as it were, or qualifies his former statements by a single word, importing that those whom he reprehends have reduced themselves to the level of the beasts that perish, by senselessly devouring the blessings which God has bestowed, and thus divesting themselves of that honor which God had put upon them. It is against the abuse of this world that the prophet has been directing his censures. They are aimed at those who riot in the bounties of God without any recognition of God himself, and who devote themselves in an infatuated manner to the passing glory of this world, instead of rising from it to the contemplation of the things which are above.

Defender: Psa 49:15 - -- "Grave" here is the Hebrew word sheol (also in Psa 49:14) but this psalm testifies to the certainty of redemption for the righteous from death and hel...

"Grave" here is the Hebrew word sheol (also in Psa 49:14) but this psalm testifies to the certainty of redemption for the righteous from death and hell."

TSK: Psa 49:3 - -- mouth : Deu 32:2; Job 33:3, Job 33:33; Pro 4:1, Pro 4:2, Pro 8:6-11, Pro 22:17, Pro 22:20, Pro 22:21; 2Ti 3:15-17 meditation : Psa 19:14, Psa 45:1, Ps...

TSK: Psa 49:4 - -- incline : Psa 78:2; Mat 13:35 parable : Num 23:7; Eze 20:49; Mat 13:11-15 dark : Pro 1:6; Dan 8:23; Luk 12:3; 2Co 3:12

TSK: Psa 49:5 - -- Wherefore : Psa 27:1, Psa 27:2, Psa 46:1, Psa 46:2; Isa 41:10, Isa 41:11; Act 27:24; Rom 8:33, Rom 8:34; Phi 1:28 days : Pro 24:10; Amo 5:13; Eph 5:16...

TSK: Psa 49:6 - -- trust : Psa 52:7, Psa 62:10; Job 31:24, Job 31:25; Pro 10:15, Pro 23:5; Mar 10:24; 1Ti 6:17 boast : Est 5:11; Jer 9:23; Eze 28:4, Eze 28:5; Hos 12:8; ...

TSK: Psa 49:7 - -- give : Mat 16:26, Mat 20:28; 1Ti 2:6; 1Pe 1:18

TSK: Psa 49:8 - -- Job 36:18, Job 36:19

TSK: Psa 49:9 - -- That he : Psa 89:48; Pro 10:2, Pro 11:4; Ecc 8:8; Zec 1:5; Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23 see : Psa 16:10; Joh 8:51, Joh 8:52; Act 2:27, Act 2:31, Act 13:33, Ac...

TSK: Psa 49:10 - -- wise : Ecc 2:16-21, Ecc 9:1, Ecc 9:2; Rom 5:12-14; Heb 9:27 fool : Psa 73:22, Psa 92:6, Psa 92:7, Psa 94:8; Pro 12:1, Pro 30:2; Jer 10:8 leave : Psa 4...

TSK: Psa 49:11 - -- Their inward : etc. Or, ""Their grave is their house forever, their dwelling place through all generations, though their names are celebrated over cou...

Their inward : etc. Or, ""Their grave is their house forever, their dwelling place through all generations, though their names are celebrated over countries.""Psa 5:9, Psa 64:6; Eze 38:10; Luk 11:39; Act 8:22

all generations : Heb. generation and generation

they call : Gen 4:17; 1Sa 15:12; 2Sa 18:18

TSK: Psa 49:12 - -- in honour : Psa 49:20, Psa 39:5, Psa 82:7; Jam 1:10, Jam 1:11; 1Pe 1:24 abideth : The word yalin , rendered abideth, signifies to lodge for a night....

in honour : Psa 49:20, Psa 39:5, Psa 82:7; Jam 1:10, Jam 1:11; 1Pe 1:24

abideth : The word yalin , rendered abideth, signifies to lodge for a night. Man’ s continuance in the world, or in honour or distinction, resembles a traveller’ s lodging at an inn, whence he removes in the morning; and is frequently far more transient and evanescent.

beasts : Ecc 3:18-21, Ecc 9:12

TSK: Psa 49:13 - -- folly : Luk 12:20; 1Co 3:19 approve their sayings : Heb. delight in their mouth, Jer 44:17; Luk 11:47, Luk 11:48, Luk 16:27, Luk 16:28

folly : Luk 12:20; 1Co 3:19

approve their sayings : Heb. delight in their mouth, Jer 44:17; Luk 11:47, Luk 11:48, Luk 16:27, Luk 16:28

TSK: Psa 49:14 - -- Like : Psa 44:11; Jer 12:3; Rom 8:36 they : Job 17:13, Job 17:14, Job 21:13, Job 21:26, Job 30:23; Ecc 12:7; Isa 38:10, Isa 38:11 death : Job 24:19, J...

Like : Psa 44:11; Jer 12:3; Rom 8:36

they : Job 17:13, Job 17:14, Job 21:13, Job 21:26, Job 30:23; Ecc 12:7; Isa 38:10, Isa 38:11

death : Job 24:19, Job 24:20

upright : Psa 47:3; Dan 7:22; Mal 4:3; Luk 22:30; 1Co 6:2; Rev 2:26, Rev 2:27, Rev 20:4, Rev 20:5

morning : Psa 30:5; Hos 6:3

their : Psa 39:11; Job 4:21

beauty : or, strength

in the grave : etc. or, the grave being an habitation to every one of them, Job 30:23

TSK: Psa 49:15 - -- God : Psa 31:5, Psa 56:13, Psa 73:24; Hos 13:14; Rev 5:9, Rev 14:13 power : Heb. hand the grave : or, hell, Psa 16:10, Psa 86:13, Psa 89:48 shall : Lu...

God : Psa 31:5, Psa 56:13, Psa 73:24; Hos 13:14; Rev 5:9, Rev 14:13

power : Heb. hand

the grave : or, hell, Psa 16:10, Psa 86:13, Psa 89:48

shall : Luk 23:46; Joh 14:3; Act 7:59

TSK: Psa 49:16 - -- Be not : Psa 49:5, Psa 37:1, Psa 37:7; Est 3:1-6; Pro 28:12 glory : Gen 31:1; Est 5:11; Rev 21:24, Rev 21:26

TSK: Psa 49:17 - -- he shall : Job 1:21, Job 27:19; Ecc 5:15; Luk 12:20, Luk 16:24; 1Ti 6:7 his : Isa 5:14, Isa 10:3; 1Co 15:43

TSK: Psa 49:18 - -- while he lived : Heb. in his life blessed : Deu 29:19; Hos 12:8; Luk 12:19 praise : 1Sa 25:6; Est 3:2; Act 12:20-22; Rev 13:3, Rev 13:4

while he lived : Heb. in his life

blessed : Deu 29:19; Hos 12:8; Luk 12:19

praise : 1Sa 25:6; Est 3:2; Act 12:20-22; Rev 13:3, Rev 13:4

TSK: Psa 49:19 - -- He : Heb. The soul, Ecc 3:21, Ecc 12:7; Luk 12:20, Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23 to the generation : Gen 15:15; 1Ki 16:6 never : Psa 56:13; Job 33:30; Mat 8:12...

He : Heb. The soul, Ecc 3:21, Ecc 12:7; Luk 12:20, Luk 16:22, Luk 16:23

to the generation : Gen 15:15; 1Ki 16:6

never : Psa 56:13; Job 33:30; Mat 8:12, Mat 22:13; Jud 1:13

TSK: Psa 49:20 - -- Man : Psa 49:12; Est 5:11-14, Est 7:10 understandeth : Job 4:21 is like : Psa 73:18, Psa 73:19; Ecc 3:18, Ecc 3:19

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 49:3 - -- My mouth shall speak of wisdom - That is, I will utter sentiments that are wise, or that are of importance to all; sentiments that will enable ...

My mouth shall speak of wisdom - That is, I will utter sentiments that are wise, or that are of importance to all; sentiments that will enable all to take a just view of the subject on which I speak. This indicates "confidence"in what he was about to utter, as being eminently deserving of attention.

And the meditation of my heart shall be of understanding - What I reflect on, and what I give utterance to, in the matter under consideration. The idea is, that he had meditated on the subject, as to what was real wisdom in the matter, and that he would now give utterance to the result of his meditations. It was not wisdom in general, or intelligence or understanding as such on which he designed to express the results of his thoughts, but it was only in respect to the proper value to be attached to wealth, and as to the fact of its causing fear Psa 49:5 in those who were not possessed of it, and who might be subjected to the oppressive acts of those who were rich.

Barnes: Psa 49:4 - -- I will incline mine ear to a parable - The phrase "I will incline mine ear"means that he would listen or attend to - as we incline our ear towa...

I will incline mine ear to a parable - The phrase "I will incline mine ear"means that he would listen or attend to - as we incline our ear toward those whom we are anxious to hear, or in the direction from which a sound seems to come. Compare Psa 5:1; Psa 17:1; Psa 39:12; Isa 1:2. On the word rendered "parable"here משׁל mâshâl - see the notes at Isa 14:4. Compare Job 13:12, note; Job 27:1, note. The word properly means similitude; then, a sentence, sententious saying, apophthegm; then, a proverb; then, a song or poem. There is usually found in the word some idea of "comparison,"and hence, usually something that is to be illustrated "by"a comparison or a story. The reference here would seem to be to some dark or obscure subject which needed to be illustrated; which it was not easy to understand; which had given the writer, as well as others, perplexity and difficulty. He proposed now, with a view to understand and explain it, to place his ear, as it were, "close to the matter,"that he might clearly comprehend it. The matter was difficult, but he felt assured he could explain it - as when one unfolds the meaning of an enigma. The "problem"- the "parable"- the difficult point - related to the right use, or the proper value, of wealth, or the estimate in which it should be held by those who possessed it, and by those who did not. It was very evident to the author of the psalm that the views of people were not right on the subject; he therefore proposed to examine the matter carefully, and to state the exact truth.

I will open - I will explain; I will communicate the result of my careful inquiries.

My dark saying - The word used here - חידה chı̂ydâh - is rendered "dark speeches"in Num 12:8; "riddle,"in Jdg 14:12-19; Eze 17:2; "hard questions"in 1Ki 10:1; 2Ch 9:1; "dark saying"(as here) in Psa 78:2; Pro 1:6; "dark sentences,"in Dan 8:23; and "proverb"in Hab 2:6. It does not elsewhere occur. It means properly "something entangled, intricate;"then, a trick or stratagem; then art intricate speech, a riddle; then, a sententious saying, a maxim; then a parable, a poem, a song, a proverb. The idea here is, that the point was intricate or obscure; it was not well understood, and he purposed "to lay it open,"and to make it plain.

Upon the harp - On the meaning of the word used here, see the notes at Isa 5:12. The idea here is, that he would accompany the explanation with music, or would so express it that it might be accompanied with music; that is, he would give it a poetic form - a form such that the sentiment might be used in public worship, and might be impressed upon the mind by all the force and power which music would impart. Sentiments of purity and truth, and sentiments of pollution and falsehood also, are always most deeply imbedded in the minds of people, and are made most enduring and effective, when they are connected with music. Thus the sentiments of patriotism are perpetuated and impressed in song; and thus sentiments of sensuality and pollution owe much of their permanence and power to the fact that they are expressed in corrupt verse, and that they are perpetuated in exquisite poetry, and are accompanied with song. Scenes of revelry, as well as acts of devotion, are kept up by song. Religion proposes to take advantage of this principle in our nature by connecting the sentiments of piety with the sweetness of verse, and by impressing and perpetuating those sentiments through associating them with all that is tender, pure, and inspiriting in music. Hence, music, both vocal and that which is produced by instruments, has always been found to be an invaluable auxiliary in securing the proper impression of truth on the minds of people, as well as in giving utterance to the sentiments of piety in devotion.

Barnes: Psa 49:5 - -- Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil - This verse is designed evidently to state the main subject of the psalm; the result of the reflec...

Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil - This verse is designed evidently to state the main subject of the psalm; the result of the reflections of the author on what had been to him a source of perplexity; on what had seemed to him to be a dark problem. He "had"evidently felt that there was occasion to dread the power of wicked rich men; but he now felt that he had no ground for that fear and alarm. He saw that their power was short-lived; that all the ability to injure, arising from their station and wealth, must soon cease; that his own highest interests could not be affected by anything which they could do. The "days of evil"here spoken of are the times which are referred to in the following phrase, "when the iniquity of my heels,"etc.

When the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about - It would be difficult to make any sense out of this expression, though it is substantially the same rendering which is found in the Vulgate and the Septuagint. Luther renders it "when the iniquity of my oppressors encompasses me."The Chaldee Paraphrase renders it, "why should I fear in the days of evil, unless it be when the guilt of my sin compasses me about?"The Syriac renders it, "the iniquity of "my enemies."The Arabic, "when my enemies surround me."DeWette renders it as Luther does. Rosenmuller, "when the iniquity of those who lay snares against me shall compass me around."Prof. Alexander, "when the iniquity of my oppressors (or supplanters) shall surround me."The word rendered "heels"here - עקב ‛âqêb - means properly "heel,"Gen 3:15; Job 18:9; Jdg 5:22; then, the rear of an army, Jos 8:13; then, in the plural, "footsteps,"prints of the heel or foot, Psa 77:19; and then, according to Gesenius (Lexicon) "a lier in wait, insidiator."

Perhaps there is in the word the idea of craft; of lying in wait; of taking the advantages - from the verb עקב ‛âqab , to be behind, to come from behind; and hence to supplant; to circumvent. So in Hos 12:3, "in the womb he held his brother by the heel"(compare Gen 25:26). Hence, the word is used as meaning to supplant; to circumvent, Gen 27:36; Jer 9:4 (Hebrew, Jer 9:3) This is, undoubtedly, the meaning here. The true idea is, when I am exposed to the crafts, the cunning, the tricks, of those who lie in wait for me; I am liable to be attacked suddenly, or to be taken unawares; but what have I to fear? The psalmist refers to the evil conduct of his enemies, as having given him alarm. They were rich and powerful. They endeavored in some way to supplant him - perhaps, as we should say, to "trip him up"- to overcome him by art, by power, by trick, or by fraud. He "had"been afraid of these powerful foes; but on a calm review of the whole matter, he came to the conclusion that he had really no cause for fear. The reasons for this he proceeds to state in the following part of the psalm.

Barnes: Psa 49:6 - -- They that trust in their wealth - The first reason why there was no cause of alarm is drawn Psa 49:6-10 from the "powerlessness"of wealth, as i...

They that trust in their wealth - The first reason why there was no cause of alarm is drawn Psa 49:6-10 from the "powerlessness"of wealth, as illustrated by the fact that it can do nothing to save life or to prevent death. He refers to those who possess it as "trusting"in their wealth, or "relying on"that as the source of their power.

And boast themselves - Pride themselves; or feel conscious of safety and strength because they are rich. It is the "power"which wealth is supposed to confer, that is alluded to here.

In the multitude of their riches - The abundance of their wealth.

Barnes: Psa 49:7 - -- None of them can bid any means redeem his brother - None of those who are rich. This verse might be literally rendered, "a brother cannot by re...

None of them can bid any means redeem his brother - None of those who are rich. This verse might be literally rendered, "a brother cannot by redeeming redeem; a man cannot give to God his own ransom."The passage, therefore, may mean either, as in our version, that no one, however rich, can redeem a brother - his own brother - by his wealth; or, that a brother - one who sustains the relation of a brother - cannot rescue another from death. On the word "redeem,"see Psa 25:22, note; Isa 43:3, note. It means here that he could not rescue him, or save him from the grave; he could not by his wealth preserve him in life. The whole expression is emphatic: "redeeming he cannot redeem;"that is - according to Hebrew usage - he cannot "possibly"do it; it "cannot"be done. There is here no particular reference to the "means"to be employed, but only an emphatic statement of the fact that "it cannot by any possibility be done."The object is to show how powerless and valueless is wealth in regard to the things that most pertain to a man’ s welfare. It can do literally "nothing"in that which most deeply affects man, and in which he most needs help. There is no allusion here to the redemption of the soul, or to the great work of redemption, as that term is commonly understood; but it "is"true, in the highest sense, that if wealth cannot "redeem"life, or keep our best and nearest friend from the grave, much less can it avail in that which is so much more important, and so much more difficult, the redemption of the soul from eternal ruin. Here, also, as in the matter of saving from the grave, it is absolutely true that wealth can do "nothing"- literally, "nothing"- in saving the soul of its possessor, or in enabling its possessor to save his best friend. Nothing but the blood of the cross can avail then; and the wealth of the richest can do no more here than the poverty of the poorest.

Nor give to God a ransom for him - This would be more literally rendered, "a man cannot give to God his ransom;"that is, he cannot, though in the possession of the most ample wealth, give to God that which would purchase his own release from the grave. On the word "ransom,"see as above, the notes at Isa 43:3. Compare Mat 16:26.

Barnes: Psa 49:8 - -- For the redemption of their soul is precious - The word "soul"here means "life,"and not the immortal part. The only question which the psalmist...

For the redemption of their soul is precious - The word "soul"here means "life,"and not the immortal part. The only question which the psalmist here considers is the value of wealth in preserving "life,"or in saving man from the grave. The phrase, ""their"soul,"refers doubtless to the man and his brother, as alluded to in the previous verse. The idea is that neither can the man of wealth ransom his own life from the grave, nor the life of his brother. Wealth can save neither of them. The word "precious"means "costly,""valuable."The word is applied 1Ki 10:2, 1Ki 10:10-11 to gems, and then to the costlier kinds of stones employed in building, as marble and hewn-stones, 2Ch 3:6. Compare the notes at Psa 36:7. The idea here is, that the rescue of the life, or the saving from the grave, would be too "costly;"it would be beyond the power of all wealth to purchase it; no amount of silver or gold, or raiment, or precious stones, could "constitute"a sufficient "price"to secure it.

And it ceaseth for ever - That is, Wealth forever comes short of the power necessary to accomplish this. It has always been insufficient; it always "will"be. There is no hope that it "ever"will be sufficient; that by any increase in the amount - or by any change in the conditions of the bargain - property or riches can avail for this. The whole matter is perfectly "hopeless"as to the power of wealth in saving one human being from the grave. It must always "fail"in saving a man from death. The word rendered "ceaseth"- חדל châdal - means "to leave off, to desist, to fail,"Gen 11:8; Exo 9:34; Isa 2:22. As there is no allusion here to the redemption of the "soul"- the immortal part - this passage affirms nothing in regard to the fact that the work of redemption by the Saviour is completed or finished, and that an atonement cannot be made again, which is true; nor to the fact that when salvation through that atonement is rejected, all hope of redemption is at an end, which is also true. But though there is, originally, no such reference here, the "language"is such as is "adapted"to express that idea. In a much higher and more important sense than any which pertains to the power of wealth in saving from the grave, it is true tint the work of the atonement ceased for ever when the Redeemer expired on the cross, and that all hope of salvation ceases forever when the atonement is rejected, and when man refuses to be saved by his blood; nothing then can save the soul. No other sacrifice will be made, and when a man has finally rejected the Saviour, it may be said in the highest sense of the term, that the redemption of the soul is too costly to be effected by any other means, and that all hope of its salvation "has ceased"forever.

Barnes: Psa 49:9 - -- That he should still live for ever - That his brother whom he could not redeem - or that he himself - should not die, Psa 49:8. The idea is, th...

That he should still live for ever - That his brother whom he could not redeem - or that he himself - should not die, Psa 49:8. The idea is, that the price of life is so great that no wealth can rescue it so that a man shall not die.

And not see corruption - Should not return to dust, or moulder away in the grave. See the notes at Psa 16:10.

Barnes: Psa 49:10 - -- For he seeth that wise men die - He must see this; he does see it. He perceives that no one can be saved from death. It comes on all alike - th...

For he seeth that wise men die - He must see this; he does see it. He perceives that no one can be saved from death. It comes on all alike - the wise and the unwise. Nothing saves from it. The allusion is here especially to the "rich,"whether "they"are wise or whether they are fools and "brutish."The simple fact, as stated, is that no matter what may be the character of the man of wealth, whether wise or foolish, he must certainly die His wealth cannot save him from the grave. The possessor of wealth himself "sees"this. It cannot be concealed from him.

Likewise the fool - The rich man who is a fool, or who is destitute of wisdom. He who is rich and who is wise - wise in the things of this life and wise unto salvation - (or who is gifted with a high degree of intelligence and who evinces wisdom in respect to the higher matters of existence) - and the rich man who is a fool - (who is regardless of his highest interests, and who evinces no special intelligence, though possessed of wealth) - all, all die alike.

And the brutish person - The rich man who is stupid and dull; who lives like a brute; who lives to eat and drink; who lives for gross sensuality - "he"dies as well as he who is wise. Wealth cannot in either case save from death. Whether connected with wisdom or folly - whether carefully husbanded or lavishly spent - whether a man employs it in the highest and noblest manner in which it can be devoted, or in the indulgence of the most low and debasing enjoyments - it is alike powerless in saving people from the grave.

And leave their wealth to others - It all passes into other hands. It "must"be so left. It cannot be carried away by its possessor when he goes into the eternal world. It not only cannot save him from the grave, but he cannot even take it with him. All his houses, his lands, his title-deeds, his silver, his gold, his parks, gardens, horses, hounds - all that he had accumulated with so much care, and worshipped with so idolatrous an affection, is not even his own in the sense that he can take it with him. The title passes absolutely into other hands, and even if he could come back to earth again, he could no longer claim it, for when he dies it ceases to be his forever. How powerless, then, is wealth in reference to the great purposes of human existence!

Barnes: Psa 49:11 - -- Their inward thought is - Their secret expectation and feeling is that they have secured permanency for their wealth in their own families, tho...

Their inward thought is - Their secret expectation and feeling is that they have secured permanency for their wealth in their own families, though they themselves may pass away. The essential thought in this verse is, that the rich people referred to in the foregoing verses imagine that their possessions will be perpetuated in their own families. The word rendered "inward thought"- קרב qereb - means properly "the midst, the middle, inner part;"and hence it comes to mean the heart, or the mind, as the seat of thought and affection: Psa 5:9; Psa 64:6. It means here, their hope, their calculation, their secret expectation; and the whole verse is designed to show the value or importance which they attach to wealth as being, in their apprehension, suited to build up their families forever.

That their houses shall continue "for ever - Either the dwellings which they rear, or - more probably - their families.

And their dwelling-places to all generations - Margin, as in Hebrew, "to generation and generation."That is, forever. They expect that their possessions will always remain in the family, and be transmitted from one generation to another.

They call their lands after their own names - They give their own names to the farms or grounds which they own, in the hope that, though they must themselves pass away, their "names"may be handed down to future times. This practice, which is not uncommon in the world, shows how intense is the desire of people not to be forgotten; and at the same time illustrates the main thought in the psalm - the importance attached to wealth by its possessor, as if it could carry his "name"down to future times, when he shall have passed away. In this respect, too, wealth is commonly as powerless as it is in saving its possessor from the grave. It is not very far into future times that mere wealth can carry the name of a man after he is dead. lands and tenements pass into other hands, and the future owner soon ceases to have any concern about the "name"of the former occupier, and the world cares nothing about it. A man must have some other claim to be remembered than the mere fact of his having been rich, or he will be soon forgotten. Compare the notes at Isa 22:15-19.

Barnes: Psa 49:12 - -- Nevertheless, man being in honor abideth not - No matter to what rank he may rise, no matter how much wealth he may accumulate, no matter how f...

Nevertheless, man being in honor abideth not - No matter to what rank he may rise, no matter how much wealth he may accumulate, no matter how fixed and secure he may seem to make his possessions, he cannot make them permanent and enduring. He must pass away and leave all this to others. The word rendered "abideth"- ילין yālı̂yn - means properly to pass the night; to remain over night; to lodge, as one does for a night; and the idea is, that he is not to lodge or remain permanently in that condition; or, more strictly, he will not lodge there even for a night; that is, he will soon pass away. It is possible that the Saviour had his eye on this passage in the parable of the rich fool, and especially in the declaration, "This night thy soul shall be required of thee,"Luk 12:20.

He is like the beasts that perish - He is like the beasts; they perish. This does not mean that in all respects he is like them, but only in this respect, that he must die as they do; that he cannot by his wealth make himself immortal. He must pass away just as if he were an animal of the inferior creation, and had no power of accumulating wealth, or of laying plans that stretch into the future. The squirrel and the beaver - animals that "lay up"something, or that, like people, have the power of "accumulating,"die just like other animals. So the rich "man."His intelligence, his high hopes, his far-reaching schemes, make no difference between him and his fellow-men and the brute in regard to death. They all die alike.

Barnes: Psa 49:13 - -- This their way is their folly - This might be rendered, "This is their way or course of life. It is their folly;"or, such is their folly. On th...

This their way is their folly - This might be rendered, "This is their way or course of life. It is their folly;"or, such is their folly. On the word "way,"see the notes at Psa 1:6. The idea is, that it is folly for a man to cherish these hopes; to feel that wealth is of so much importance; to imagine that it can deliver from the grave; to suppose that he can perpetuate his own name, and secure his possessions in his own family upon the earth. And yet the world is still full of people as foolish as were those in the time of the psalmist; people who will not be admonished by the suggestions of reason, or by the experience of 6,000 years in the past. This is one thing in which the world makes no progress - in which it learns nothing from the experience of the past; and as the beaver under the influence of instinct builds his house and his home now in the same way that the first beaver did his, and as the brutes all act in the same manner from generation to generation, accumulating no knowledge, and making no advances from the experience of the past, so it is with people in their desire to grow rich. On other points the world accumulates knowledge, and profits from experience, garnering up the lessons taught by past experiment and observation, and thus becoming wiser in all other respects; but in regard to the desire of wealth, it makes no progress, gains no knowledge, derives no advantage, from the generations of fools that have lived and died in past ages. They now engage in the pursuit of gold with the same zeal, and the same expectation and hope which were evinced in the first ages of the world, and "as if"their own superior skill and wisdom could set at nought all the lessons taught by the past.

Yet their posterity - The coming generation is as confident and as foolish as the one that went before.

Approve their sayings - Margin, "delight in their mouth."That is, they delight or take pleasure in what proceeds from their mouth; in what they say; in their views of things. They adopt "their"principles, and act on "their"maxims; and, attaching the same importance to wealth which "they"did, seek as "they"sought to perpetuate their names upon the earth.

Barnes: Psa 49:14 - -- Like sheep they are laid in the grave - The allusion here is to a flock as "driven"forward by the shepherd; and the meaning is that they are dr...

Like sheep they are laid in the grave - The allusion here is to a flock as "driven"forward by the shepherd; and the meaning is that they are driven forward to the grave, as it were, in flocks, or as a flock of sheep is driven by a shepherd. The word rendered "are laid"- שׁתוּ śatû - is probably not derived from the verb שׁות śûth , or שׁית śı̂yth , as our translators seem to have supposed, but from שׁתת śâthath , to set, or place; and the meaning is, "Like sheep they put them in Sheol, or the grave;"that is, they thrust or drive them down there. In other words, this is "done,"without intimating by whom it is done. They are urged forward; they are driven toward the tomb as a flock of sheep is driven forward to the slaughter. Some influence or power is pressing them in masses down to the grave. The word rendered "grave"is "Sheol."It is sometimes used in the sense of the grave, and sometimes as referring to the abode of departed spirits. See Job 10:21-22, note; Psa 6:5, note. It seems here to be used in the former sense.

Death shall feed on them - The word rendered "feed"here - רעה râ‛âh - means properly to feed a flock; to pasture; then, to perform the office of a shepherd. The idea here is not, as in our translation, "death shall feed on them;"but, death shall rule over them as the shepherd rules his flock. The allusion to the "flock"suggested this. They are driven down to the grave, or to Sheol. The shepherd, the ruler, he who does this, is "death;"and the idea is not that death is a hungry monster, devouring them "in"the grave, but that the shepherd over that "flock,"instead of being a kind and gentle friend and protector (as the word "shepherd"naturally suggests), is "death"- a fearful and grim Ruler of the departed. The idea, therefore, is not that of "feeding,"specifically, but it is that of ruling, controlling, guiding. So the Septuagint, θάνατος ποιμανεῖ αὐτούς thanatos poimanei autous . The Vulgate, however, renders it, "mors depascet eos;" and Luther, "der Tod naget sie ;"death gnaws or feeds on them.

And the upright - The just; the righteous. The meaning of this part of the verse undoubtedly is, that the just or pious would have some kind of ascendancy or superiority over them at the period here referred to as the "morning."

Shall have dominion over them - Or rather, as DeWette renders it, shall "triumph"over them. That is, will be exalted over them; or shall have a more favored lot. Though depressed now, and though crushed by the rich, yet they will soon have a more exalted rank, and a higher honor than those who, though once rich, are laid in the grave tinder the dominion of death.

In the morning - That is, very soon; tomorrow; when the morning dawns after the darkness of the present. See the notes at Psa 30:5. There is a time coming - a brighter time - when the relative condition of the two classes shall be changed, and when the upright - the pious - though poor and oppressed now, shall be exalted to higher honors than "they"will be. There is no certain evidence that this refers to the "morning"of the resurrection; but it is language which well expresses the idea when connected with that doctrine, and which can be best explained on the supposition that that doctrine was referred to, and that the hope of such a resurrection was cherished by the writer. Indeed, when we remember that the psalmist expressly refers to the "grave"in regard to the rich, it is difficult to explain the language on any other supposition than that he refers here to the resurrection - certainly not as well as on this supposition - and especially when it is remembered that death makes no distinction in cutting down people, whether they are righteous or wicked. Both are laid in the grave alike, and "any"prospect of distinction or triumph in the case must be derived from scenes beyond the grave. This verse, therefore, may belong to that class of passages in the Old Testament which are founded on the belief of the resurrection of the dead without always expressly affirming it, and which are best explained on the supposition that the writers of the Old Testament were acquainted with that doctrine, and drew their hopes as well as their illustrations from it. Compare Dan 12:2; Isa 26:19; Psa 16:9-10.

And their beauty - Margin, "strength."The Hebrew word means "form, shape, image;"and the idea here is, that their form or figure will be changed, or disappear, to wit, by consuming away. The idea of "beauty,"or "strength,"is not necessarily in the passage, but the meaning is, that the form or figure which was so familiar among people will be dissolved, and disappear in the grave.

Shall consume in the grave - Hebrew, "in Sheol."The word probably means here "the grave."The original word rendered "consume,"means literally to make old; to wear out; to waste away. The entire form of the man will disappear.

From their dwelling - Margin, "the grave being a habitation to every one of them."Septuagint, "and their help shall grow old in the grave from their glory."So the Latin Vulgate. The whole expression is obscure. The most probable meaning is, "they shall consume in the grave, "from its being a dwelling to him;""that is, to each of them. Sheol, or the grave, becomes a dwelling to the rich man, and in that gloomy abode - that which is now his dwelling - he consumes away. It pertains to that dwelling, or it is one of the conditions of residing there, that all consume away and disappear. Others render it, "so that there is no dwelling or habitation for them."Others, and this is the more common interpretation, "their form passes away, the underworld is their habitation."See DeWette in loc . This last rendering requires a slight change in the punctuation of the original. DeWette, Note, p. 339. The "general"idea in the passage is plain, that the possessors of wealth are soon to find their home in the grave, and that their forms, with all on which they valued themselves, are soon to disappear.

Barnes: Psa 49:15 - -- But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave - literally, "from the hand of Sheol;"that is, from the dominion of death. The hand is ...

But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave - literally, "from the hand of Sheol;"that is, from the dominion of death. The hand is an emblem of power, and it here means that death or Sheol holds the dominion over all those who are in the grave. The control is absolute and unlimited. The grave or Sheol is here personified as if reigning there, or setting up an empire there. Compare the notes at Isa 14:9. On the word "redeem,"see the references in the notes at Psa 49:7.

For he shall receive me - literally, "he shall take me."That is, either, He will take me from the grave; or, He will take me "to"himself. The general idea is, that God would take hold of him, and save him from the dominion of the grave; from that power which death exercises over the dead. This would either mean that he would be preserved from going down to the grave and returning to corruption there; or, that he would hereafter be rescued from the power of the grave in a sense which would not apply in respect to the rich man. The former evidently cannot be the idea, since the psalmist could not hope to escape death; yet there might be a hope that the dominion of death would not be permanent and enduring, or that there would be a future life, a resurrection from the grave. It seems to me, therefore, that this passage, like the expression in Psa 49:14, "in the morning,"and the passages referred to in the notes at that verse, is founded on the belief that death is not the end of a good man, but that he will rise again, and live in a higher and better state. It was this consideration which gave such comfort to the psalmist in contemplating the whole subject; and the idea, thus illustrated, is substantially the same as that stated by the Saviour in Mat 10:28, "Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul."

Barnes: Psa 49:16 - -- Be not thou afraid when one is made rich - Do not dread the power derived from wealth; do not fear anything which a man can do merely because h...

Be not thou afraid when one is made rich - Do not dread the power derived from wealth; do not fear anything which a man can do merely because he is rich. The original is, "when a "man"becomes rich."The allusion is not necessarily to a bad man, though that is implied in the whole passage, since there is no reason for fearing a "good"man, whether he is rich or poor. The only thing that seems to have been apprehended in the mind of the psalmist was that power of doing injury to others, or of employing means to injure others, which wealth confers on a bad man. The psalmist here changes the form of the expression, no longer referring to himself, and to his own feelings, as in the former part of the psalm, but making an application of the whole course of thought to others, showing them, as the result of his own reflection and observation, that no man had any real cause for dread and alarm when riches increased in the hands of the wicked. The reasons why this power should not be feared are stated in the following verses.

When the glory of his house is increased - Rich people often lavish much of their wealth on their dwellings; on the dwelling itself; on the furniture; on the grounds and appendages of their habitation. This is evidently referred to here as "the "glory"of their house;"as that which would be adapted to make an impression of the power and rank of its possessor.

Barnes: Psa 49:17 - -- For when he dieth - He must die. His wealth cannot save him from the grave. It is always to be "assumed"of rich people, as of all other men, th...

For when he dieth - He must die. His wealth cannot save him from the grave. It is always to be "assumed"of rich people, as of all other men, that they "will"have to die. The point is not one which is to be argued; not one about which there can be any doubt. Of all people, whatever else may be said of them, it may always be affirmed that they must die, and important inferences may be always drawn from that fact.

He shall carry nothing away - It is not improbable that the apostle Paul had this passage in his eye in what he says in 1Ti 6:7, "For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain that we can carry nothing out."See the notes at that passage. Compare Job 27:16-19.

His glory shall not descend after him - His wealth, and those things which have been procured by wealth, as indicating station and rank, cannot accompany him to the other world. This is said to show that he is not to be "feared"on account of his wealth. The argument is, that whatever there is in wealth that seems to give power, and to afford the means of doing injury, must soon be separated from him. In respect to wealth, and to all the power derived from wealth, he will be like the most poor and penniless of mortals. All that he possesses will pass into other hands, and whether for good or for evil, it will no longer be in his power to use it. As this "must"occur soon - as it "may"occur in a moment - there is no reason to "fear"such a man, or to suppose that he can do permanent injury by any power derived from wealth. Compare the notes at Isa 14:6-7, notes at Isa 14:10-11.

Barnes: Psa 49:18 - -- Though while he lived - Margin, as in Hebrew, "in his life."More literally, "in his lives."The idea is, as long as he lived. He blessed hi...

Though while he lived - Margin, as in Hebrew, "in his life."More literally, "in his lives."The idea is, as long as he lived.

He blessed his soul - That is, he blessed himself; he congratulated himself; he regarded his condition as desirable and enviable. He "took airs"upon himself; he felt that his was a happy lot; he expected and demanded respect and honor from others on account of his wealth. He commended himself as having evinced sagacity in the means by which he acquired wealth - thus imparting honor to himself; and he congratulated himself on the result, as placing him in a conditiOn above want, and in a condition that entitled him to honor. A striking illustration of this feeling is found in the parable of the rich fool, Luk 12:19, "And I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry."

And men will praise thee - Others will praise thee. He not only blessed or commended himself, but he might expect that others would praise and congratulate him also. They would regard him as a happy man; happy, because he had been thus successful; happy, because he had accumulated that which was the object of so universal desire among people. Success, though founded on that which is entitled to no praise, and which is even the result of unprincipled conduct, often secures the temporary praise of men, while a want of success, though connected with the strictest, sternest virtue, is often followed by neglect, or is even regarded as proof that he who fails has no claim to honor.

When thou doest well to thyself - Well, in reference to success in life, or in the sense that thou art prospered. Your industry, your sagacity, your prosperity will be the theme of commendation. To a certain extent, where this does not lead to self flattery and pride, it is proper and right. The virtues which ordinarily contribute to prosperity "are"worthy of commendation, and should be held up to the example of the young. But what is evil and wrong in the matter here referred to is that the man’ s commendation of himself, and the commendation by others, all tends to foster a spirit of pride and self-confidence; to make the soul easy and satisfied with the condition; to produce the feeling that all is gained which needs to be gained; to make the possessor of wealth arrogant and haughty; and to lead him to neglect the higher interests of the soul.

Barnes: Psa 49:19 - -- He shall go to the generation of his fathers - To be gathered to one’ s own people, or to his fathers, is a common expression in the Old T...

He shall go to the generation of his fathers - To be gathered to one’ s own people, or to his fathers, is a common expression in the Old Testament in speaking of death. See Gen 25:8, Gen 25:17; Gen 35:29; Gen 49:29, Gen 49:33, Num 20:24, Num 20:26; Num 27:13; Num 31:2; Deu 32:50; Jdg 2:10. It means that they were united again with those who had gone before them, in the regions of the dead. Death had indeed separated them, but by death they were again united.

They shall never see light - He and the "generation"to which he has gone to be united, would no more see the light of this world; no more walk among the living: Job 33:30. Compare the notes at Isa 38:11; notes at Psa 27:13. The meaning is, that the rich sinner will die as others have done before him, leaving all his earthly possessions, and will no more be permitted to revisit the world where his forsaken possessions are, and will not even be permitted to "look"on what before had been to him such a source of self-confidence, self-gratulation, and pride.

Barnes: Psa 49:20 - -- Man that is in honor - Man that is in possession of wealth, or that occupies an exalted rank. See the notes at Psa 49:12. And understandet...

Man that is in honor - Man that is in possession of wealth, or that occupies an exalted rank. See the notes at Psa 49:12.

And understandeth not - That is, who has no proper appreciation of what it is to be a man; of what is his true rank "as"a man; of his relations to God; of his condition as an immortal being - man that values himself only on the fact that he is rich; that lives for this world alone; that regards it as a sufficient distinction that he "is"rich; that degrades his nobler nature in the mere enjoyment of the pleasures of sense - is like the beasts - is in no way elevated above them.

Is like the beasts that perish - They live only for this life. They have no higher nature than that which pertains to the senses, and they live accordingly. The man who, though of exalted rank, lives for this life alone, herein resembles them. See the notes at Psa 49:12. Alas! what multitudes there are who thus live - whose only aim is to secure the wealth and the honors of this life - who have no more thought of a future state, and who form no more plans in regard to a future world, than do the brutes! For many there are in exalted stations, who are surrounded by all that wealth can give, yet who no more admit the thought of a future world into their hopes and plans than if they had no other endowment than the camel or the ox, and whose conduct in this respect would not be changed if all the higher endowments which constitute the nature of man were withdrawn, and they were at once reduced to the condition of a brute. While, therefore, the main purpose of this psalm is to show that wealth confers no "power"which is to be dreaded - that its possessor, though wicked, cannot permanently injure us, since he must soon pass away by death - the course of thought at the same time teaches us that we should not "desire"wealth as our portion; that we should not live for this, as the main object of life. The possessor of the most ample fortune must soon be laid in the grave. All that he has acquired will pass into other hands, and will be his no more. But he "has"a higher nature. He "may"live in a manner different from the brute that perishes. He "may"act with reference to a higher - an eternal - state of existence; and, when he dies, he "may"leave his earthly inheritance, whether great or small, only to enter on an inheritance that shall he permanent and eternal. "What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?"Mar 8:36.

Poole: Psa 49:3 - -- It concerns you diligently to attend to me, for I am about to speak not of vulgar and trivial things, or such as come suddenly into my mind, and rus...

It concerns you diligently to attend to me, for I am about to speak not of vulgar and trivial things, or such as come suddenly into my mind, and rush as hastily out of my mouth, but of such things as are the result of my most serious and considerate thoughts, and such as, if you observe them and lay them to heart, will make you truly wise, and keep you from those errors, and follies, and mischiefs, which the generality of mankind, for want of a right understanding, do run into.

Poole: Psa 49:4 - -- I will incline mine ear: this is another argument to persuade them to hearken to him: I will hearken what God by his Spirit speaks to me, and that an...

I will incline mine ear: this is another argument to persuade them to hearken to him: I will hearken what God by his Spirit speaks to me, and that and nothing else will I now speak to you; and therefore it is well worth your hearing. I also shall join with you in attending to it, that whilst I teach you, I myself may learn the same lesson. For as ministers now teach themselves whilst they teach others, so the holy prophets did ofttimes search into and study to find out the meaning of their own prophecies, as appears plainly from 1Pe 1:10,11 . The phrase is thought to be taken from the musicians, who lay their ear close to the instrument when they tune it, and by their ear try how the voice and instrument agree.

To a parable which properly is a figurative and allegorical speech, but is oft more largely taken for any excellent, and important, and withal dark or difficult, doctrine or sentence: see Num 23:7 24:3,15 Ps 78:2 , compared with Mat 13:35 .

I will open i.e. I will not smother it in my own breast, but publish it to the world.

My dark saying so he justly calls the following discourse, because the thing in question is and ever hath been thought difficult and hard to be understood.

Poole: Psa 49:5 - -- He speaks in his own person, because he had now said that he would incline his ear , Psa 49:4 , i.e. learn and practise what he was teaching others...

He speaks in his own person, because he had now said that he would incline his ear , Psa 49:4 , i.e. learn and practise what he was teaching others; but his meaning is more general, that there is no sufficient cause why he or any good man should fear ; which is to be understood of excessive or immoderate and prevailing fear, causing dejection or despondency, or distrust of God’ s providence and goodness, or discontent with his condition; in which sense men are bid not to fear, Gen 1:19 Mat 28:5 , compared with Mar 16:6 . Thus Gen 45:5 , Be not grieved , to wit, inordinately; for otherwise they ought, and he would have had them to grieve for their sin. Thus to lead a man into temptation , Mat 6:13 , is to suffer him to be overcome by it, by comparing 1Co 10:13 . And the object or cause of this forbidden fear is double; the one, the afflictions of good men, here following; the other, the prosperity of the ungodly, as it is declared Psa 49:16 , and of which he begins to treat in the very next verse, and continues the discourse of it to the end of the Psalm.

In the days of evil either,

1. Of sin; when iniquity of all sorts abounds; which is many ways grievous and vexatious to every good man. Or,

2. Of misery; in times of great distress and calamity, either public or private, when wicked men flourish, (of which he speaks in all the rest of the Psalm,) and good men are oppressed and persecuted.

The iniquity of my heels by which he understands either,

1. His afflictions; which he might justly call the punishment of his sinful actions; for iniquity is commonly put for the punishment of it, and the heels are put for a man’ s footsteps, and metaphorically for one’ s ways or actions, as Psa 56:6 89:51 . Or,

2.

The iniquity i.e. the violent and injurious designs and practices of his ungodly and malicious enemies, who, as he here saith,

did compass him about whereby he notes their prosperous success against him, and his being endangered and vexed by them, as this phrase implies, Job 16:13 Psa 17:9,11 22:12 140:9 Hab 1:4 ; and withal their intention and endeavour to vex and persecute and destroy him, as this phrase is used, Psa 17:9 22:12,16 , and in many other places. This sense is favoured both by the Syriac and Arabic interpreters; whereof the former renders the words thus, the iniquity of mine enemies hath compassed me , and the latter thus, when mine enemies shall compass me about ; and by the main scope of the Psalm, which is to comfort himself and other good men against that great scandal of the prosperity of the wicked, and the oppressions and miseries of the righteous. But all the difficulty is why or how he calls this the iniquity of his heels . For the clearing whereof, it is humbly proposed to consideration, that this genitive case, of my heels , seems to note not the efficient or meritorious cause of this iniquity, or punishment of it, but the object about which this iniquity is exercised; as nouns in the genitive case are frequently taken. Thus the spoil of the poor , Isa 3:14 , is not that spoil which was made by them, but upon them; and the violence of the children of Judah , as it is in the Hebrew text, Joe 3:19 , is that which was done against them, as we truly translate it. See also Dan 4:27 Mat 10:1 Act 4:9 . In like manner here,

the iniquity of my heels is the iniquity wherewith they compass and seek to trip up my heels; for we shall find David oft speaking of the malicious practices of his enemies, with respect to his heels , feet , or steps . So he tells us they pierced his hands and feet , Psa 22:16 , they compassed , and marked , and prepared a net for his steps , Psa 17:11 56:6 57:6 ; as Jeremiah also complains of his enemies, that they hid snare for his feet , Jer 18:22 . And therefore it is not strange that the iniquity of his enemies is here noted to be exercised about his heels or footsteps as this word signifies; either because they did malignantly observe all his steps or ways, that they might find occasion to load him with reproaches in order to his ruin; or because they purposed to trip up his heels, or to overthrow his goings , as he complains, Psa 140:4 . Besides, the words may be rendered, the iniquity of my supplanters ; for the Hebrew word rendered heels may be, and is by some learned interpreters taken for a particle of that verb, which signifies to supplant or trip up the heels, or circumvent, from whence Jacob had his name And this character fitly agrees to David’ s enemies, who were not only most malicious, but also very deceitful and treacherous, as he every where complains.

Poole: Psa 49:6 - -- As that which can and will secure them from God’ s judgments, and from the calamities of human life. The psalmist having said that he and other...

As that which can and will secure them from God’ s judgments, and from the calamities of human life. The psalmist having said that he and other good men had no sufficient cause of fear from their present sufferings from ungodly men, now he proceeds, on the contrary, to show that his ungodly enemies had no reason to be secure and confident because of their present riches and prosperous success.

Poole: Psa 49:7 - -- Redeem to wit, from death, as appears from Psa 49:9,10 &c.; neither from the first death, nor from the second, which he points at Psa 49:14,19 . Hi...

Redeem to wit, from death, as appears from Psa 49:9,10 &c.; neither from the first death, nor from the second, which he points at Psa 49:14,19 .

His brother whom he would do his utmost to preserve in life; and consequently not himself. But he seems to mention his brother rather than himself, because when his brother is sick, he being in health hath the full command and free use of all his wealth, and strength, and wit, and all other means of redeeming his brother; which he hath not, when he himself is dangerously or desperately sick.

Nor give to God the only Lord of life. and the Judge who hath passed upon him the sentence of death.

Poole: Psa 49:8 - -- Of their soul i.e. of their life, as soul is commonly used. Is precious i.e. rare, as the word is used, 1Sa 3:1 Dan 2:11 , hard to be obtained. But...

Of their soul i.e. of their life, as soul is commonly used.

Is precious i.e. rare, as the word is used, 1Sa 3:1 Dan 2:11 , hard to be obtained. But he doth not call it simply impossible, because Christ hath purchased this privilege for his true disciples, that in some sense they shall not see death, Joh 8:51 .

It ceaseth for ever i.e. it is never to be accomplished, to wit, by any mere man, for himself or for his brother.

Poole: Psa 49:9 - -- Or, the pit , or the grave , i.e. not die, as that phrase is oft used, as has been noted before.

Or, the pit , or the grave , i.e. not die, as that phrase is oft used, as has been noted before.

Poole: Psa 49:10 - -- He seeth an impersonal expression. Every man sees and knows it; it is visible and evident, both from reason and from universal experience, that all m...

He seeth an impersonal expression. Every man sees and knows it; it is visible and evident, both from reason and from universal experience, that all men die, without any difference between wise and fools, good and bad. To others ; he saith not, to sons or kindred; but indefinitely, to others because he is wholly uncertain to whom he shall leave him, to friends, or strangers, or enemies; which he mentions as a great vanity in riches. They neither can save him from death, nor will accompany him in and after death, and after his death will be disposed he knows not how nor to whom.

Poole: Psa 49:11 - -- Their inward thought is though they are ashamed to express it, yet it is their secret opinion, and hope, and wish. Their houses either, 1. Their p...

Their inward thought is though they are ashamed to express it, yet it is their secret opinion, and hope, and wish.

Their houses either,

1. Their posterity, oft called men’ s houses 2Sa 7:11 , &c.; Psa 113:9 115:12 . Or,

2. Their mansion houses, as it is explained in the next clause, which also serve for this purpose, to preserve a man name for ever.

Shall continue for ever not to them in their own persons, but to them and theirs in succeeding generations, as it follows.

They call their lands after their own names fondly dreaming by this means to immortalize their names and memories.

Poole: Psa 49:12 - -- Notwithstanding all these fine fancies and devices man being in honour living in all the splendour and glory above mentioned, abideth not The He...

Notwithstanding all these fine fancies and devices

man being in honour living in all the splendour and glory above mentioned,

abideth not The Hebrew word properly signifies to lodge for a night , as Gen 32:21 Jud 19:10 ; and thence to abide for a long or considerable time, as Psa 25:13 55:7 Pro 15:31 . All his dreams of perpetuating his name and estate shall vanish and be confuted by experience.

That perish i.e. that are utterly lost and extinct. So he is in reference to all his wealth and honour, of which he here speaks.

Poole: Psa 49:13 - -- This their way i.e. their counsel and contrivance to immortalize themselves. Is their folly though to themselves and some otters it seem to be wisd...

This their way i.e. their counsel and contrivance to immortalize themselves.

Is their folly though to themselves and some otters it seem to be wisdom, yet in truth it is apparent folly and madness. For they neither obtain that immortal name which they seek and hope for; nor, if they do, doth it yield them any comfort or benefit. Their sayings, Heb. their mouth , i.e. their counsels and suggestions, which they gave them concerning these matters. The mouth is oft put for the words which come out of it, as Num 35:30 Job 7:11 .

Poole: Psa 49:14 - -- Like sheep which for a season are fed in large and sweet pastures, but at the owner’ s pleasure are put together in close and comfortless folds,...

Like sheep which for a season are fed in large and sweet pastures, but at the owner’ s pleasure are put together in close and comfortless folds, and led away to the slaughter, not knowing nor considering whither they are going.

In the grave or, in hell ; for the Hebrew word signifies both.

Death shall feed on them the first death shall consume their bodies in the grave, and the second death shall devour their souls.

The upright good men, whom here they oppressed and abused at their pleasure.

In the morning either,

1. Suddenly, or within a very little time, as this phrase is oft used, as Psa 30:5 46:5 101:8 113:8 . Or,

2. In the day of general judgment, and the resurrection of the dead. For death being called the night, Joh 9:4 , and sleep in many places, that day is fitly compared to the morning, when men awake out of sleep, and enter upon that everlasting day. But whether this or the former be the true meaning of the phrase, it is sufficiently evident the thing here spoken of is not done in this life, but in the next; for,

1. This proposition and privilege being general, and common to all upright persons, is not verified here, it being the lot of many good men to be oppressed and killed by the wicked, as is manifest both from Scripture, as Psa 44:22 Ecc 8:14 9:2 , and from the experience of all ages of the church.

2. This dominion of the just over the wicked happens after the wicked are laid in their grave , as is here expressed, and consequently supposeth their future life and resurrection; for when one person rules over another, both are supposed to exist or have a being. Nor is there any argument against this sense, but from a vain and absurd conceit which some men have entertained, that the saints in the Old Testament had no firm belief nor expectation of the recompences of the life to come; which is against evident reason, and against many clear places of the Old Testament that cannot without force be wrested to any other sense, and against the express testimony of the New Testament concerning them, Heb 11 , and in many other places.

Their beauty or, their form or, their figure , or image ; all which come to one, and seems to intimate that all their glory and felicity had in this life was rather imaginary than real, and indeed but a shadow , as it is called, Ecc 6:12 8:13 .

Shall consume Heb. is to consume , or to be consumed , i.e. shall be consumed; the infinitive verb being here put for the future, as it is Psa 32:8 Zec 3:4 12:10 .

From their dwelling i.e. they shall be hurried from their large, and stately, and pleasant mansions, into a close and dark grave. But those words are by divers interpreters rendered otherwise, and that peradventure more truly and fitly to this purpose, word for word,

the grave (or rather hell , as before and this word sheol is confessedly oft used in the Old Testament, but no where more conveniently than here) shall be a dwelling , or for a dwelling, unto him , or them , or every one of them ; which in the prophet’ s phrase is called dwelling with everlasting burnings , Isa 33:14 , and in the phrase of the New Testament, to be cast into and abide in the lake of fire and brimstone , Rev 20:10 .

Poole: Psa 49:15 - -- Though no man can find out a ransom to redeem himself or his brother, yet God can and will redeem me. My soul either properly; or myself or life; ...

Though no man can find out a ransom to redeem himself or his brother, yet God can and will redeem me.

My soul either properly; or myself or life; for all comes to one.

Of the grave or, of hell ; for he speaks of that sheol in which the wicked are left. The grave shall not have power to retain me, but shall be forced to give me up into my Father’ s hands; and hell shall have no power to seize upon me.

He shall receive me or take me , out of this vain, mortal, and miserable life, unto himself, or into heaven, as this phrase is used, Gen 5:24 Psa 73:24 Act 7:59 .

Poole: Psa 49:16 - -- Afraid i.e. discouraged or dejected. The prosperity of the sinners is oft matter of fear and dread to good men; partly because it enables them to do ...

Afraid i.e. discouraged or dejected. The prosperity of the sinners is oft matter of fear and dread to good men; partly because it enables them to do more mischief; and partly because it shakes their faith in God’ s providence and promises, and is apt to engender suspicions in men’ s minds, as if God did not regard the actions and affairs of men, and made no difference between the good and the bad, and consequently all religion were vain and unprofitable. See Psa 73:12,13 .

Poole: Psa 49:17 - -- For as he will shortly die, so all his wealth, and power, and glory will die with him, and thou wilt have no cause either to envy or fear him.

For as he will shortly die, so all his wealth, and power, and glory will die with him, and thou wilt have no cause either to envy or fear him.

Poole: Psa 49:18 - -- He blessed his soul i.e. he applauded himself as a wise and happy man: compare Luk 12:19 . Men will praise thee: and as he pleaseth and flattereth ...

He blessed his soul i.e. he applauded himself as a wise and happy man: compare Luk 12:19 .

Men will praise thee: and as he pleaseth and flattereth himself, so he meets with parasites that applaud and flatter him for their own advantage. For he still speaks of the same man, as is manifest from the foregoing and following words, though there be a sudden change of the third into the second person; which is most frequent in these books.

When thou doest well to thyself when thou dost indulge and please thyself, and advance thy own worldly interest. For the name of good in Scripture is oft ascribed unto the pleasures and profits of this life, as Job 21:13 Psa 4:6 Ecc 2:24 4:8 11:9 .

Poole: Psa 49:19 - -- Now he returns again to the third person. Such sudden and repeated changes are frequent in this book. To the generation of his fathers i.e. to the...

Now he returns again to the third person. Such sudden and repeated changes are frequent in this book.

To the generation of his fathers i.e. to the grave and hell, where he shall meet with his wicked parents, who by their counsel and example led him into his evil courses; as the godly also are said to be gathered to their fathers , Gen 15:15 Deu 32:50 Jud 2:10 .

Never see i.e. never enjoy, as seeing is oft taken.

Light neither the light of the living , as it is called, Job 33:30 Psa 56:13 ; or of this life, to which they shall never return; nor of the next life to which they shall never be admitted, but they shall be cast into utter darkness, Mat 8:12 .

Poole: Psa 49:20 - -- Understandeth not i.e. hath not true wisdom, to know and consider what he is, and what his true business and interest in this world is, and what use ...

Understandeth not i.e. hath not true wisdom, to know and consider what he is, and what his true business and interest in this world is, and what use he should make of his life, and of all his riches, and honour, and power, and whither he is going, and what course to take for the attainmerit of true and lasting happiness.

Is like the beasts that perish though he hath the outward shape of a man, yet in truth he is a beast, or a brutish, stupid, and unreasonable creature, and he shall perish like a brute beast made to be destroyed , 2Pe 2:12 .

Haydock: Psa 49:3 - -- Silence. Christ displayed the light of truth from Sion, at his first coming. But he would not judge any till the second, John iii. 17., and viii. 1...

Silence. Christ displayed the light of truth from Sion, at his first coming. But he would not judge any till the second, John iii. 17., and viii. 15. (St. Jerome) (Calmet) ---

Before him, at the last day, (Haydock) or in hell. (St. Athanasius) ---

Our Saviour appeared formerly with great mildness: but he will come with majesty and terror, after fire shall have destroyed all transitory things. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 49:4 - -- Earth. As if they were animated, Deuteronomy iv. 26., and xxxii. 1., Isaias i. 2., and Jeremias ii. 12. --- Some understand the angels and apostles...

Earth. As if they were animated, Deuteronomy iv. 26., and xxxii. 1., Isaias i. 2., and Jeremias ii. 12. ---

Some understand the angels and apostles by heaven. (Calmet) ---

Judge. Literally, "to divide," discernere, (Haydock) the goats from the sheep, Matthew xxv. 32. (Calmet) (Menochius) ---

The whole earth, particularly the elect, will approve of God's decree, 1 Corinthians vi. 2.

Haydock: Psa 49:5 - -- His saints. Hebrew, "my merciful ones," (Haydock) the chosen people, (Calmet) particularly priests, (Theodoret) who might have too high an opinion o...

His saints. Hebrew, "my merciful ones," (Haydock) the chosen people, (Calmet) particularly priests, (Theodoret) who might have too high an opinion of the legal sacrifices, (St. Chrysostom) or all the elect are meant, Matthew xxiv. 30. (Eusebius) ---

The Hebrews were the only nation which then offered sacrifices to the true God, though some individuals might do it among the Gentiles. (Calmet) ---

Before, super, or, "who make a covenant with him respecting sacrifices." ---

Protestants, "those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice," Malachias i. 12. (Haydock) ---

The Septuagint seem to have read v for i, more accurately, as the prophet speaks till ver. 7. (Berthier) ---

Judgment should begin at the house of God. And if first at us, what shall be the end of them that believe not the gospel of God? (1 Peter iv. 17., and Romans ii. 9.) (Haydock) ---

Those who believe not, are already judged, John iii. ---

Sacrifice generally precedes a covenant, Genesis xv. 17. (Menochius)

Haydock: Psa 49:6 - -- Heavens. Apostles, (St. Jerome) or angels. (Chaldean) (St. Athanasius) --- God is judge. His sentence must therefore be just, (Menochius) and w...

Heavens. Apostles, (St. Jerome) or angels. (Chaldean) (St. Athanasius) ---

God is judge. His sentence must therefore be just, (Menochius) and we ought to tremble, 1 Corinthians iv. 4. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 49:7 - -- Testify. I will require thee to speak the truth, and attest the world, Psalm lxxx. 9. (Calmet)

Testify. I will require thee to speak the truth, and attest the world, Psalm lxxx. 9. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 49:8 - -- Sight. I complain of no neglect (Menochius) in these outward ceremonies. (Haydock) --- God required no victims during the captivity; but he always...

Sight. I complain of no neglect (Menochius) in these outward ceremonies. (Haydock) ---

God required no victims during the captivity; but he always demanded praise, (ver. 14.; Calmet) a contrite heart, Psalm l. 19., &c. (Haydock) ---

The prophets often admonished the people of this truth, (Isaias i. 2., and Jeremias vii. 20.; Calmet) that they might not set too high a value on sacrifices, (Haydock) which, though pleasing to God, are of no service to him; as all the world is his property. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 49:10 - -- Oxen. St. Jerome and Protestants, "the cattle upon a thousand hills." But our version is very good, and adopted by the Syriac, Ferrand, &c. (Calme...

Oxen. St. Jerome and Protestants, "the cattle upon a thousand hills." But our version is very good, and adopted by the Syriac, Ferrand, &c. (Calmet) ---

Aleph means an ox as well as a thousand; and i may have been added to the preceding word, instead of u, at the beginning of this. (Berthier) ---

We find u here improperly in either, "beast." (Houbigant) ---

No mention is made of fishes, because they were not used as victims. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 49:11 - -- I know your number, and have absolute dominion over all, Isaias xxxvii. 28. (Calmet) --- Field. Ripe fruits. (St. Cyril) (Alexandrian) --- With...

I know your number, and have absolute dominion over all, Isaias xxxvii. 28. (Calmet) ---

Field. Ripe fruits. (St. Cyril) (Alexandrian) ---

With God all things are present. (St. Augustine; Lombard, 1 dist. 35.; F.; Amama)

Haydock: Psa 49:13 - -- Goats? Can any of you be so stupid? (Menochius) --- Some of the pagans believed, that their idols delighted in the smell of victims. (Haydock)

Goats? Can any of you be so stupid? (Menochius) ---

Some of the pagans believed, that their idols delighted in the smell of victims. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 49:14 - -- Vows. A faithless promise is very displeasing, Ecclesiastes v. 3. True religion must be interior, (Calmet) also 1 Corinthians xiv. 15. (Haydock) -...

Vows. A faithless promise is very displeasing, Ecclesiastes v. 3. True religion must be interior, (Calmet) also 1 Corinthians xiv. 15. (Haydock) ---

We must discharge, not only our general, (Menochius) but also our particular vows, (Worthington) and obligations. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 49:15 - -- Call. Prayer is a perfect act of religion, and a confession of God's dominion. Qui fingit sacros auro vel marmore vultus, Non facit ille Deos: qui...

Call. Prayer is a perfect act of religion, and a confession of God's dominion. Qui fingit sacros auro vel marmore vultus,

Non facit ille Deos: qui rogat, ille facit. (Martial viii. v. 24.)

To neglect prayer is, in some sense, to deny God. (Calmet) ---

He is pleased to exercise our confidence, (Haydock) and will have us to call upon him in distress. (Menochius)

Haydock: Psa 49:16 - -- Sinner. He is not blamed for praying: but his hypocrisy is condemned. (Berthier) --- The world is full of such hypocrites, who have God in their m...

Sinner. He is not blamed for praying: but his hypocrisy is condemned. (Berthier) ---

The world is full of such hypocrites, who have God in their mouths, but not in their hearts, and whose voice alone is the voice of Jacob, Genesis xxvii. 22., Isaias xxix. 13., and Titus i. 16. ---

The wicked judges, who condemned Susanna, (Daniel xiii.) should have attended to these lessons. (Calmet) ---

Thou that teachest another, teachest not thyself, Romans ii. 21. ---

It is surely to be expected, (Haydock) that those who undertake to teach others, should shew good example, and serve God with sincerity, (Worthington) and not content themselves with the glory of their vocation. (Menochius)

Haydock: Psa 49:20 - -- Lay. Hebrew, "slanderest." (Protestants) But dophi occurs on where else. (Berthier) --- The sinner sits to detract, or with pleasure, (Menochi...

Lay. Hebrew, "slanderest." (Protestants) But dophi occurs on where else. (Berthier) ---

The sinner sits to detract, or with pleasure, (Menochius) habitually offends. (Haydock)

Gill: Psa 49:3 - -- My mouth shall speak of wisdom,.... Or "wisdoms" m; of Christ, who is so called, Pro 1:20. He being as a divine Person the wisdom of God, and the only...

My mouth shall speak of wisdom,.... Or "wisdoms" m; of Christ, who is so called, Pro 1:20. He being as a divine Person the wisdom of God, and the only wise God; and having all the treasures of wisdom in him, as man and Mediator: of him the prophet spake, and of him the apostles and all Gospel ministers speak; of the glories of his Person, of the fulness of his grace, and of his wonderful works; especially of that of redemption and salvation by him, in which there is an abounding of wisdom and prudence. Or the Gospel may be meant, and all the truths of it, in which there is a glorious display of divine wisdom; it is the wisdom of God in a mystery; hidden and ancient wisdom; and which, when truly understood, makes a man wise unto salvation; see 1Co 2:6;

and the meditation of my heart shall be of understanding; or "understandings" n; and this is in order to the former; what the heart meditates the mouth speaks. If the heart meditates on understanding, the mouth will speak of wisdom; and a man should think before he speaks, especially the ministers of the Gospel: they ought to meditate on the word of God, the Gospel, and the truths of it, that their profiling may appear to all; that they may understand divine things themselves, and deliver them out to the understanding of others: their concern should be, that through meditation they may have a good treasure of wisdom and knowledge in their hearts, that out of it they may bring forth things pleasant and profitable unto others.

Gill: Psa 49:4 - -- I will incline mine ear to a parable,.... In which way of speaking the doctrines of the Gospel were delivered out by Christ, Mat 13:3. Wherefore the p...

I will incline mine ear to a parable,.... In which way of speaking the doctrines of the Gospel were delivered out by Christ, Mat 13:3. Wherefore the prophet, representing his apostles and disciples, signifies that he would listen thereunto, that he might attain to the knowledge thereof, and communicate it to others;

I will open my dark saying upon the harp; the enigmas, riddles, and mysteries of the Gospel, being understood by the ministers of it, are opened and explained in a very pleasant and delightful manner; they are made clear and evident, and are as a lovely song upon a harp; see Eze 33:32.

Gill: Psa 49:5 - -- Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil,.... This is the principal thing that all are before called to hearken to. This is the wisdom and understa...

Wherefore should I fear in the days of evil,.... This is the principal thing that all are before called to hearken to. This is the wisdom and understanding the psalmist had been meditating upon, and was about to utter; this is the parable he inclined his ear to, and the dark saying he would open; namely, that a saint has nothing to fear in the worst of times; which is a riddle to a natural man. Aben Ezra interprets "the days of evil" of the days of old age, as they are called, Ecc 12:1, which bring on diseases, weakness, and death; in which a good man has no reason to fear; as that he should want the necessaries of life, since they that fear the Lord shall want no good thing; or that he should not hold out to the end, seeing God, who is the guide of youth, is the staff of old age, and carries to hoary hairs, and will never leave nor forsake; and though the wicked man in old age has reason to be afraid of death and eternity at hand, the saint has not; but may sing, on the borders of the grave, "O death! where is thy sting?" &c. 1Co 15:55. Also days in which iniquity abounds, and error and heresy prevail, are days of evil; and though the good man may fear he shall be led aside by the ill example of some, or by the craft of others; yet he need not, since the foundation of God stands sure, and he knows them that are his, and will take care of them and preserve them. Moreover, times of affliction and persecution are evil days; see Eph 5:16; and such will be the hour of temptation, that shall try the inhabitants of the earth, Rev 3:10. Yet the righteous man need not fear, since it is always well with him, let his case and circumstances be what they will. Yea, the day of death, and the day of judgment are days of evil to wicked men; and therefore they put them away far from them, Amo 6:3; but believers have reason to rejoice at them, the day of their death being better than the day of their birth; and the day of judgment will be the time of the glorious appearing of Christ to them. It is added,

when the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about; that is, the sins of life and conversation; "heels" denote "steps", and the word is sometimes so rendered, as in Psa 56:6; and "iniquity" intends sin committed in walking; and so designs not original sin, as some have thought, but actual sins and transgressions: and these may be said to "compass the saints about", when they are chastised for them, and so are brought to a sense and acknowledgment of them, and to be humbled for them; and then they have nothing to fear in a slavish way, since these chastisements are not in wrath, or in a way of vindictive justice, or punishment for sin; but the fruits of love and favour. Or the sense may be, when death, the fruit of iniquity, the wages of sin, surrounds and seizes upon me; בסופי, "in my end", as the Targum; in my last days, at the heel or close of them, I will not fear; the saint has no reason to fear, when he walks through death's dark valley; for death is abolished as a penal evil, its sting is took away, and its curse removed. Some render the words, "when the iniquity of my supplanters shall compass me about" o; meaning his enemies, who either lay in wait for him privately, and endeavoured to supplant him; or that pursued him closely, and pressed upon his heels, just ready to destroy him; yet even then he signifies he should not fear: and then the sense is the same with Psa 27:1; to which agree the Syriac and Arabic versions, which render it, "the iniquity of mine enemies"; or, "when my enemies surround me": and it may be literally rendered, when "iniquity surrounds me at my heels" p; that is, when men, who are iniquity itself, encompass me, are at my heels, ready to seize me, I will not fear.

Gill: Psa 49:6 - -- They that trust in their wealth,.... In their outward force, power, and strength; their horses, chariots, and armies; see Psa 33:16; or in their world...

They that trust in their wealth,.... In their outward force, power, and strength; their horses, chariots, and armies; see Psa 33:16; or in their worldly goods and substance; which seems to be the sense of the word here, as appears from Psa 49:10. To "trust" in them is to set the eye and heart upon them; or to take up rest in them, to depend on them, to the neglect of divine Providence, with respect to future living in this world; and to expect eternal happiness hereafter, because favoured with many earthly enjoyments here: so to do is evil. Therefore the Targum is, "woe to the wicked that trust in their substance". And it is also very weak and foolish to trust in riches, since they are uncertain, are here today, and gone tomorrow; and are unsatisfying, he that has much would still have more: nor can they deliver from evil, from present judgments, from the sword, the pestilence, and famine; nor from death, nor from the future judgment, and wrath to come; and are often injurious to the spiritual and eternal welfare of men; see 1Ti 6:9;

and boast themselves in the multitude of their riches; of their acquisition of them by their own diligence and industry; and of their having them because of some peculiar virtue and excellency in themselves; and of the abundance of them. Such rejoicing and boasting is evil; since riches are the gifts of God, the blessings of his Providence; and are often bestowed on persons neither wise nor diligent, and much less deserving; see Jer 9:23. The whole may be applied to the Romish antichrist and his followers, who trust in and boast of their temporal riches, which in one hour will come to nought, Rev 18:7; and of the treasure of the church, of merit; and works of supererogation; with all which they cannot redeem one soul from ruin and destruction, as follows:

Gill: Psa 49:7 - -- None of them can by any means redeem his brother,.... That is, "with their substance", or "riches", as the Targum and Jarchi supply. Some, according ...

None of them can by any means redeem his brother,.... That is, "with their substance", or "riches", as the Targum and Jarchi supply. Some, according to the order of the words in the original, render them, "a brother redeeming cannot redeem a man", or "anyone" q: but, as Aben Ezra observes, אח, "a brother", is the effect, and איש, "a man", is the cause. The Targum is, "his brother that is a captive, a man redeeming cannot redeem with his substance"; or by any means redeem. Indeed a rich man may redeem his brother from debt, or from a prison, into which he is cast for it, by paying his debts for him; or from thraldom and bondage, being taken captive and becoming a prisoner of war, by giving a ransom for him. This he may do with respect to man; but, with respect to God, he cannot, with all his riches, pay the debts he owes to the law and justice of God; nor free him from his bondage to sin, Satan, and the law, by whom he is held a captive. The sense here is, that he cannot redeem him from death; he cannot, with all his money, secure him from dying; nor, when dead, bring him back from the grave; and much less deliver him from eternal death, or wrath to come; this only God can do, see Psa 49:15;

nor give to God a ransom for him; a ransom to redeem from sin, and so from the curse of the law and eternal death, must be given to God, against whom sin is committed, the lawgiver that is able to save and destroy; whose law is transgressed by it, and must be fulfilled; and whose justice is affronted and injured, and must be satisfied; and who is the creditor to whom men are debtors, and therefore the payment must be made to him. Hence our Lord Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of his people, paid the ransom price to God, and offered himself a sacrifice to him; see Eph 5:2. But this ransom is not of man's giving, but of God's; it is of his finding out in his infinite wisdom: he set forth and sent forth Christ to be the ransom or "propitiation" r, as the word here used signifies; and Christ came to give his life and himself a ransom for many, and is the propitiation for their sins: and this is a sufficient one, a plenteous redemption, and there needs no other, not is there any other; there were typical atonements under the law, but there is no real atonement, propitiation, or ransom, but by the precious blood of Christ; not by corruptible things, as silver and gold; with these a man cannot give to God a ransom for himself, or for his brother.

Gill: Psa 49:8 - -- For the redemption of their soul is precious,.... Or "heavy" s; it is, as Jarchi observes, "heavier than their substance": it is too weighty a matter...

For the redemption of their soul is precious,.... Or "heavy" s; it is, as Jarchi observes, "heavier than their substance": it is too weighty a matter for the richest man in the world to engage in; he is not equal to it; his riches are not an equivalent to the redemption of a soul which has sinned, and which is of more worth than the whole world: "what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" or another for him? all the substance of his house would be utterly despised. It requires a greater price for the redemption of it than gold and silver, and therefore it is impossible to be obtained by any such means; and which may be the sense of the word here, as Jarchi and Kimchi interpret it; and so it is used for that which is "rare", "difficult", yea, "impossible", not to be found or come at, in 1Sa 3:1. The only price of redemption of the soul is the precious blood of Christ; his life is the ransom price, yea, he himself, 1Pe 1:18, 1Ti 2:6; nor is the redemption of the soul possible upon any other ground;

and it ceaseth for ever; that is, the redemption of the soul; it must have ceased, it could never have been accomplished, had not Christ undertook it and performed it; he has obtained eternal redemption, and in him we have it, and in no other. Or the words may be rendered, "and he ceaseth for ever"; the brother, whose soul or life is to be redeemed, he dies; see Psa 12:1; and dies the second and eternal death, for aught his brother can do for him, with all his riches: or he that attempts to redeem him, "he leaves off for ever" t; see Psa 36:3; whether he will or not, as Jarchi observes; he ceases from redeeming his brother; he finds he cannot do it; his endeavours are vain and fruitless. Some join and connect these words with the following, "and it ceaseth for ever, that he should still live for ever", &c. that is, it is impossible that such an one by such means should live for ever. Gussetius u renders and interprets the words quite to another sense, "but the redemption of their soul shall come": the true redemption price by Christ; and which, being once paid and perfectly done, "ceaseth for ever", and shall never be required more; so that he for whom it is made "shall live for ever", as in Psa 49:9, which is a truly evangelic sense.

Gill: Psa 49:9 - -- That he should still live for ever,.... Or "though he should live", &c. w. Though the rich man should live ever so long, a thousand years twice told, ...

That he should still live for ever,.... Or "though he should live", &c. w. Though the rich man should live ever so long, a thousand years twice told, as in Ecc 6:6; yet he could not in all this time, with all his riches, redeem his brother; and at last must die himself, and so must his brother too, as his own experience and observation may assure him, Psa 49:10. Or the meaning is, he cannot so redeem his brother, or give to God a ransom for him, that he should live a corporeal life for ever, and never die; since all men die, wise men and fools, rich and poor; and much less that he should live and enjoy an "eternal life", as the Targum; a life of happiness and bliss hereafter, which is not to be obtained by gold and silver, but is the pure gift of God;

and not see corruption; the grave, the pit of corruption, the house appointed for all living: or "the judgment of hell", according to the Chaldee paraphrase.

Gill: Psa 49:10 - -- For he seeth that wise men die,.... This is a reason convincing the rich man, that with all his riches he cannot redeem his brother from death; since...

For he seeth that wise men die,.... This is a reason convincing the rich man, that with all his riches he cannot redeem his brother from death; since he must see, by daily and constant experience, that none are exempted from dying, no, not even the wise man; and therefore, not the rich, since wisdom is better than riches, and is said to give life, Ecc 7:12; and yet wise men die, yea, Solomon, the wisest of men, died. Worldly wise men, such who are wiser in their generation than the children of light, know how, to get money and estates, and to provide for futurity, and yet cannot secure themselves from death: men that are wise in natural things, know the secrets of nature, the constitution of human bodies, what is proper to preserve health and life, as philosophers and physicians, and yet cannot deliver themselves from death: wise politicians, prudent magistrates, instructors of mankind in all the branches of useful knowledge, who are profitable to themselves and others, and are the most deserving to live because of usefulness, yet these die as well as others: such as are spiritually wise, wise unto salvation, who know themselves, and know Christ, whom to know is life eternal; and the wisest among them, such as are capable of teaching others the hidden and mysterious wisdom of God; even these wise men and prophets do not live for ever. The Targum interprets this of wicked wise men, condemned to hell; or as it is in the king's Bible,

"the wicked wise men, who die the second death;''

see Rev 2:11; and are condemned to hell;

likewise the fool and the brutish person perish; the worldly fool, who trusts in his riches, and boasts of them; his soul is at once required of him. The atheistical fool, who says there is no God, no judgment, no future state; has made a covenant with death, and with hell is at an agreement; this covenant does not stand, he dies, and finds himself dreadfully mistaken: the fool that is so immorally, who makes a mock at sin, a jest of religion, and puts away the evil day far from him; his great wickedness, to which he is given, shall not deliver him from death. Every man is become brutish in his knowledge; but there are some among the people more brutish than others, who are as natural brute beasts, and shall utterly perish in their own corruptions. The wise good man dies, but perishes not; he inherits eternal life; but the wicked fool and brute not only perish by death, but are punished with everlasting destruction in soul and body;

and leave their wealth to others; they cannot carry it with them, so that it will be of no service to them after death any more than at it: if the Judge could be bribed by gold, as he cannot, they will not have it with them to do it; they came into the world naked, and so they will go out, and carry nothing with them, but leave all behind them; either to their babes, their children, and heirs, Psa 17:14; or to strangers, they know not who; and if they do, they do not know whether they will be wise men or fools, or what use they will make of it, Psa 39:6, Ecc 2:18.

Gill: Psa 49:11 - -- Their inward thought is, that their houses shall continue for ever,.... This is the thought of their hearts, what they secretly imagine, and conclud...

Their inward thought is, that their houses shall continue for ever,.... This is the thought of their hearts, what they secretly imagine, and conclude within themselves; either that their families, which may be meant by their houses, see 2Sa 3:1; shall continue in succeeding ages, to the end of the world, to inherit their possessions, and perpetuate their name; though often so it is, that great families become extinct, and the seed of the wicked is cut off: or that their magnificent buildings, which they have erected to dwell in, and for their honour and glory, shall abide for ever; though in a little time, so it is by one means or another, like the buildings of the temple, not one stone is left upon another. Or the words may be rendered, "in the midst of them" (their heirs to whom they leave their wealth) "their houses shall remain for ever", so Aben Ezra; that is, so they fancy they will; but this is not always true, for fine houses and large estates belonging to them often pass into other hands and families. The word קרבם, rendered "their inward part", by a transposition of two letters in it may be read קברם, "their graves", as Aben Ezra, Kimchi, and Ben Melech observe; and to this sense the Targum, Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Arabic versions render the words: and then the meaning is, that of all the houses they have built or been possessed of, they have only one left, and that is the grave; in which they shall dwell until the resurrection, and therefore is called "a long home", Ecc 12:5; see Job 17:13;

and their dwelling places to all generations; which signify the same as before;

they call their lands after their own names; as Egypt was called Mizraim, Ethiopia was called Cush, and Palestine Canaan, from men who were the first possessors of them, Gen 10:6. Or "they proclaim their names throughout the land" x; they seek to get a name, and spread and continue it in all part of the world; being unconcerned about their names being written in heaven, or about having a house not made with hands eternal there.

Gill: Psa 49:12 - -- Nevertheless man being in honour abideth not,.... Or Adam: and some understand this of the first man Adam, who was created and crowned with glory and...

Nevertheless man being in honour abideth not,.... Or Adam: and some understand this of the first man Adam, who was created and crowned with glory and honour; but it did not abide with him, nor he in that: so some Jewish writers y interpret it. But whether the words will admit of this sense or not, the general view of the psalmist, which is to show the inconstancy and instability of worldly honour, may be exemplified in the case of the first man; he was in honour he was created after the image and likeness of God, and so was the glory of God, being his image; he was in friendship with God, as many instances show, and had dominion over all the creatures below; he had much knowledge of God, and communion with him, and was a pure, holy, and upright creature; but he continued not long in this state of honour and glory; "he lodged not a night" z, as the words may be rendered; see Gen 28:11; and as they are by some, who conclude from hence that Adam fell the same day in which he was created; and which is the sense of the above Jewish writers, who say, he was driven out of paradise the evening of that day; but though he might stand longer, and the word is sometimes used of a longer continuance; see Psa 25:13; yet by the account in Genesis it looks as if he continued in his state of honour but a short time;

he is like the beasts that perish; becoming mortal in his body, and brutish and stupid in his understanding. Or, "he is like the beasts", "they perish", or " are cut off" a; the word being in the plural number, which shows that not a single individual person is meant, but men in general; or, however, such of the sons of Adam that come to honour; these do not abide long in it, their honour is a very short lived one, sometimes it does not last their lives: they that are in high places are in slippery ones, and are often cast down from the pinnacle of honour in a moment; and if their glory does abide with them throughout the day of life, yet it shall not lodge with them in the night of the grave; thither their glory shall not descend after them, Psa 49:17; and when they die, they perish like the beasts; as they are like them in life, stupid, brutish, and ignorant, so in death; as the beast dies, so do they, Ecc 3:19; as the one dies without any thought of or preparation for death, so do the other; as the one carries nothing along with it, so neither do the other: as beasts that die of themselves, for such are here meant, as Junius well observes, are good for nothing but to be cast into the ditch; so are wicked men, notwithstanding all their riches and honours; yea, it is worse with them than with the beasts, since after death comes judgment, and after that the second death, the wrath of God.

Gill: Psa 49:13 - -- This their way is their folly,.... This their last end becoming like the beasts that perish, which is the issue and event of all their confidence, am...

This their way is their folly,.... This their last end becoming like the beasts that perish, which is the issue and event of all their confidence, ambition, and honour, shows the folly of their lives and conduct: or this their course of life, in trusting to their riches; boasting of their wealth; pleasing themselves with the thoughts of the continuance of their houses and dwelling places to all generations; and calling their lands after their own names; all proclaim their folly. Or, as some render the words, "this their way is their hope" or "confidence" b; they place all their hope and confidence in their riches and honour, which is but a vain hope and a foolish confidence;

yet their posterity approve their sayings; they are of the same sentiments with their fathers; they say the same things, and do the same actions; tread in their steps, and follow the same track; though there have been such innumerable instances of the vanity and inconstancy of all worldly riches and grandeur.

Selah; on this word; see Gill on Psa 3:2.

Gill: Psa 49:14 - -- Like sheep they are laid in the grave,.... They are not in life like sheep, harmless and innocent; nor reckoned as such for the slaughter, as the peop...

Like sheep they are laid in the grave,.... They are not in life like sheep, harmless and innocent; nor reckoned as such for the slaughter, as the people of God are; unless it be that they are like them, brutish and stupid, thoughtless of death, and unconcerned about their estate after it; and so die and go into the grave, like natural brute beasts, made to be taken and destroyed, 2Pe 2:12; or rather like sheep that have been grazing in good pasture in the daytime, at night are put into a dark and narrow pinfold or pound; so wicked rich men, having lived in great abundance and plenty in the day of life, when the night of death comes, they are put into the dark and narrow grave. And it is further to be observed, that the comparison is not to sheep prepared for slaughter, and killed for food; for these are not laid in a ditch, to which the grave may answer; but, as Junius observes, to those that die of themselves; to rotten sheep, and who are no other than carrion, and are good for nothing but to be cast into a ditch; so wicked men are laid in the grave; but as to be laid in the grave is common to good and bad after death, rather the words should be rendered, "like sheep they are laid in hell" c; as the word is in Psa 9:17; a place of utter darkness and misery, where the wicked rich man was put when he died, Luk 16:19;

death shall feed on them: or "rule them" d; as shepherds rule their flocks, in imitation of whom kings govern their subjects; the same word is used of both; and so death is represented as a king, or rather as a tyrant reigning over the sons of men; even over kings and princes, and the great men of the earth, who have reigned over others; see Rom 5:14; or "shall feed them" e, as the shepherd feeds the sheep; not by leading them into green pastures, into the Elysian fields; but where a drop of water cannot be obtained to cool the tongue; into utter darkness, where are weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth; into the apartments of hell, and habitations of devils, to be guests with them, and live as they do: or "shall feed on them"; as the wolf on the sheep, devouring their strength, and consuming their bodies, Job 18:13; but as this is no other than what it does to everyone, rather the second, or an eternal death, is here meant; the wrath of God, the worm that is always gnawing, eating, and consuming, and never dies;

and the upright shall have dominion over them in the morning; the upright are such to whom the uprightness or righteousness of Christ is shown or imputed, and who have right spirits renewed, and principles of grace and holiness formed in them, and walk uprightly in their lives and conversations; these, in the morning of the resurrection day, when Christ the sun of righteousness shall arise, when the light of joy and gladness, shall break forth upon his coming, at the beginning of the day of the Lord, which will last a thousand years; they, the dead in Christ, rising first, shall, during that time, reign with him as kings and priests; when the wicked, being destroyed in the general conflagration, shall become the footstool of Christ, and be like ashes under the soles of the feet of his people; and the kingdom, the dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the saints; see 1Th 4:16, Dan 7:27; and though this is a branch of the happiness and glory of the people of God, yet it is here mentioned as an aggravation of the misery of the wicked, who, in another state, will be subject to those they have tyrannized over here;

and their beauty shall consume in the grave from their dwelling; or "their form" f and figure; diseases often destroy the beauty of a man, death changes his countenance, and makes a greater alteration still; but the grave takes away the very form and figure of the man; or, as it is in the "Keri", or margin of the Hebrew text, "and their rock shall consume" g; that is, their riches, which are their rock, fortress, and strong city, and in which they place their trust and confidence; these shall fail them when they come to the grave, which is "their dwelling", and is the house appointed for all living: and seeming it is so, rather this should be understood of "hell" h, which will be the everlasting mansion of wicked men, and in which they will be punished in soul and body for ever; though rather the sense is, "when their rock", that is, Christ, shall come "to consume the grave", and destroy its power; when he, I say, shall come "out of his habitation", heaven, then shall the righteous have the dominion, 1Th 4:16.

Gill: Psa 49:15 - -- But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave,.... The psalmist expresses his faith, that though he should die, and for a while be under the...

But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave,.... The psalmist expresses his faith, that though he should die, and for a while be under the power of the grave, yet he should be redeemed from it in the resurrection; which to the saints will be "the day of redemption", Eph 4:30; their bodies then will be redeemed from mortality, weakness, corruption, and dishonour, which attend them now, and in the grave; and which will, be in consequence of the redemption both of their souls and bodies, through the blood of Christ; see Hos 13:14; or the words may be rendered, "but God will redeem my soul from the power of hell"; and so the Targum,

"David said by the spirit of prophecy, but God will redeem my soul from the judgment of hell;''

that is, will keep and preserve from the second death, from being hurt by it, or from its having any power over him; and Christ, who is the Redeemer of his people, and who, being God over, all, is an able and mighty one, has redeemed the souls of his from wrath to come, hell, or the second death, by destroying sin, the cause of it, by satisfying the law, the administration of it, and by abolishing death itself; all which he has done by giving himself a ransom price for them, whereby he has procured the redemption which rich men, with all their gold and silver, could never obtain for themselves or others. The reason why the psalmist believed Christ would do this for him, follows;

for he shall receive me. Or, "for he hath received me" i; into his arms of love, into his grace and favour; which he does openly at conversion, and in the effectual calling; men being drawn to Christ by the cords of love, come to him, and are received by him, who casts none out; and the argument from hence is very strong, that such whom Christ receives by his grace, he will redeem from the grave, or raise at the last day to the resurrection of life: or, "for he will receive me"; as he does the souls of his people to glory at death, when, during their separate state, they will be happy with him, and takes their bodies into his care and custody; from whence it may be strongly concluded he will raise them up again at the resurrection morn, and then will receive them soul and body to himself, and present them to his Father, and introduce them into his kingdom and glory; wherefore, as in Psa 49:5, the good man has no reason to fear anything in the day of evil; for when it goes ever so ill with others, it is well with him. The Targum in the king's Bible is,

"he will lead me into his part or portion in the world to come.''

Selah; on this word; see Gill on Psa 3:2.

Gill: Psa 49:16 - -- Be not thou afraid when one is made rich,.... Who before was poor, or not so rich; but now become so, either by inheritance, or by his own diligence a...

Be not thou afraid when one is made rich,.... Who before was poor, or not so rich; but now become so, either by inheritance, or by his own diligence and industry, through the permission of Providence. This is to be understood, not of a good man, from whom oppression is not to be feared; but it may be hoped he will do good with his riches, by relieving the poor, and ministering to the support of the interest of religion, and using what power and authority he may have in defence of it: but it is to be interpreted of a wicked man; of one who neither fears God, nor regards man; who makes an ill use of his riches, power, and authority, to the oppression of the poor, and the persecution of the saints, and who seeks to be feared when he is not loved; see Pro 28:12; but the people of God should not be afraid when this is the case, since God is their strength, their light, and their salvation; and since wicked men can go no further than permitted, and at most can do no more than kill the body; see Psa 27:1; these words are an apostrophe of the psalmist, either to his own soul, or to the saints, and every particular believer;

when the glory of his house is increased; either the same with riches, so called, Gen 31:1; because men are apt to glory in them, and for the most part obtain honour and glory from men by them; or children, and an increase of them, and especially when they come to honour; as also the advancement of themselves to high places of honour and trust; as well as additional buildings, large stately edifices, to make them look great, and perpetuate their names.

Gill: Psa 49:17 - -- For when he dieth he shall carry nothing away,.... Such men, with all their riches and honour, must die; therefore why should men be afraid of them? o...

For when he dieth he shall carry nothing away,.... Such men, with all their riches and honour, must die; therefore why should men be afraid of them? or wherein are they to be accounted of, whose breath is in their nostrils? nor can they carry either of them with them; their riches will be of no profit to them after death, when they will be upon a level with the poor, who will have nothing to fear from them; see 1Ti 6:7;

his glory shall not descend after him; either into the grave, the pit of corruption, the lower part of the earth, where kings, princes, counsellors, and peasants, are all alike, Job 3:14; or into hell, where are no titles of honour, nor respect of persons; no Pharaoh king of Egypt, or Sennacherib king of Assyria, there; but plain Pharaoh, &c. see Eze 32:31.

Gill: Psa 49:18 - -- Though while he lived he blessed his soul,.... Praised and extolled himself on account of his acquisitions and merit; or proclaimed himself a happy ma...

Though while he lived he blessed his soul,.... Praised and extolled himself on account of his acquisitions and merit; or proclaimed himself a happy man, because of his wealth and riches; or foolishly flattered himself with peace, prosperity, and length of days, and even with honour and glory after death;

and men will praise thee, when thou doest well to thyself; or "but k men will praise thee", &c. both rich and poor, all wise men; when, as the Jewish interpreters l generally explain the word, a man regards true wisdom and religion, and is concerned for the welfare of his soul more than that of his body; or "when thou thyself doest well": that is, to others, doing acts of beneficence, communicating to the necessities of the poor; or rather, "when thou doest well to thyself", by enjoying the good things of life, taking his portion, eating the fruit of his labour, which is good and comely; see Ecc 5:18.

Gill: Psa 49:19 - -- He shall go to the generation of his fathers,.... Be gathered to them at death; or "to the dwelling place of his fathers" m; either the grave, or hell...

He shall go to the generation of his fathers,.... Be gathered to them at death; or "to the dwelling place of his fathers" m; either the grave, or hell, or both; the habitation of his wicked ancestors: unless the words be rendered, as they are by some, though "he shall come to the age of his fathers" n; live as long as they have done; yet he must die at last, and leave all behind, as they have done;

they shall never see light; neither he nor his fathers; they shall never see light of the sun any more, nor return to the light of the living, but shall lie in the dark and silent grave until the resurrection; or rather, they shall never enjoy eternal light, glory, and happiness. The ultimate state of glory is sometimes expressed by "light"; Joh 8:12; this the people of God, such who are made light in the Lord, and are the children of the day, shall see; but wicked men shall not; they will be cast into outer darkness, where are weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth.

Gill: Psa 49:20 - -- Man that is in honour,.... A wicked man, as the Targum; See Gill on Psa 49:12; and understandeth not; from whence his riches and honour, come, and...

Man that is in honour,.... A wicked man, as the Targum; See Gill on Psa 49:12;

and understandeth not; from whence his riches and honour, come, and what use he should make of them, and for what end he has them; or that understandeth not spiritual things, which relate to the salvation of his soul; who does not know God in Christ, nor the way of salvation by Christ; nor has any experience of the work of the Spirit of God upon his soul; nor has any spiritual understanding of the doctrines of the Gospel; nor knows himself, his state and condition, and what true happiness is:

is like the beasts that perish; See Gill on Psa 49:12.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 49:3 Heb “and the meditation of my heart [i.e., mind] is understanding.” The Hebrew term הָגוּת (hagut, ...

NET Notes: Psa 49:4 Heb “I will turn my ear to a wise saying, I will open [i.e., “reveal; explain”] my insightful saying with a harp.” In the firs...

NET Notes: Psa 49:5 The MT has, “the iniquity of my heels surrounds me.” The clause is best understood as temporal and as elaborating on the preceding phrase ...

NET Notes: Psa 49:6 The imperfect verbal form emphasizes their characteristic behavior.

NET Notes: Psa 49:7 Heb “he cannot pay to God his ransom price.” Num 35:31 may supply the legal background for the metaphorical language used here. The psalmi...

NET Notes: Psa 49:8 Heb “and one ceases forever.” The translation assumes an indefinite subject which in turn is representative of the entire human race (R...

NET Notes: Psa 49:9 Heb “see the Pit.” The Hebrew term שַׁחַת (shakhat, “pit”) is often used as a title for Sh...

NET Notes: Psa 49:10 Death shows no respect for anyone. No matter how wise or foolish an individual happens to be, all pass away.

NET Notes: Psa 49:11 Naming their lands after themselves is a claim of possession.

NET Notes: Psa 49:12 The verb is derived from דָּמָה (damah, “cease; destroy”; BDB 198 s.v.). Another option is to derive t...

NET Notes: Psa 49:13 Heb “and after them, in their mouth they take delight.” The meaning of the MT is not entirely clear. “After them” is understoo...

NET Notes: Psa 49:14 Heb “their form [will become an object] for the consuming of Sheol, from a lofty residence, to him.” The meaning of this syntactically dif...

NET Notes: Psa 49:15 According to some, the psalmist here anticipates the resurrection (or at least an afterlife in God’s presence). But it is more likely that the p...

NET Notes: Psa 49:16 Heb “when the glory of his house grows great.”

NET Notes: Psa 49:17 Heb “his glory will not go down after him.”

NET Notes: Psa 49:19 Heb “light.” The words “of day” are supplied in the translation for clarification.

NET Notes: Psa 49:20 The Hebrew verb is derived from דָּמָה (damah, “cease, destroy”; BDB 198 s.v.). Another option is to d...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:5 Wherefore should I ( b ) fear in the days of evil, [when] the iniquity of my heels shall compass me about? ( b ) Though wickedness reigns and enemies...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:6 They that trust in their ( c ) wealth, and boast themselves in the multitude of their riches; ( c ) To trust in riches is madness, seeing they can ne...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:8 (For the redemption of their soul [is] ( d ) precious, ( e ) and it ceaseth for ever:) ( d ) That is, so rare or not to be found, as prophecy was pre...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:10 For he seeth [that] wise men ( f ) die, likewise the fool and the brutish person perish, and leave their wealth to ( g ) others. ( f ) In that that d...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:12 Nevertheless man [being] in honour abideth not: he is like the ( h ) beasts [that] perish. ( h ) Concerning the death of the body.

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:13 This their way [is] their folly: yet their posterity ( i ) approve their sayings. Selah. ( i ) They speak and do the same thing that their fathers di...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:14 ( k ) Like sheep they are laid in the grave; ( l ) death shall feed on them; and the upright shall have dominion over them in the ( m ) morning; and t...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:18 Though while he lived he blessed his soul: and ( n ) [men] will praise thee, when thou doest well to thyself. ( n ) The flatterers praise them who li...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:19 ( o ) He shall go to the generation of his fathers; ( p ) they shall never see light. ( o ) And not pass the term appointed for life. ( p ) Both the...

Geneva Bible: Psa 49:20 Man [that is] in honour, and ( q ) understandeth not, is like the beasts [that] perish. ( q ) He condemns man's ingratitude, who having received exce...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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.

Maclaren: Psa 49:13 - --Two Shepherds And Two Flocks Like sheep they are laid in the grave; Death shall feed on them.'--Psalm 49:14. The Lamb which is in the midst of the Th...

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...

MHCC: Psa 49:6-14 - --Here is a description of the spirit and way of worldly people. A man may have wealth, and may have his heart enlarged in love, thankfulness, and obedi...

MHCC: Psa 49:15-20 - --Believers should not fear death. The distinction of men's outward conditions, how great soever in life, makes none at death; but the difference of men...

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...

Matthew Henry: Psa 49:6-14 - -- In these verses we have, I. A description of the spirit and way of worldly people, whose portion is in this life, Psa 17:14. It is taken for granted...

Matthew Henry: Psa 49:15-20 - -- Good reason is here given to good people, I. Why they should not be afraid of death. There is no cause for that fear if they have such a comfortable...

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...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 49:5-12 - -- (Heb.: 49:6-13) First division of the sermon. Those who have to endure suffering from rich sinners have no need to fear, for the might and splendou...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 49:13-20 - -- (Heb.: 49:14-21) Second part of the discourse, of equal compass with the first. Those who are thought to be immortal are laid low in Hades; whilst,...

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...

Constable: Psa 49:1-3 - --1. Invitation to hear wisdom 49:1-4 49:1-2 The psalmist urged all people to listen to what he had to say in this poem. All kinds of people need to be ...

Constable: Psa 49:4-11 - --2. Observation of the prosperity of the wicked 49:5-12 49:5-6 This rhetorical question sets forth the folly of fearing when wicked people oppose the r...

Constable: Psa 49:12-19 - --3. Encouragement to trust in God 49:13-20 49:13-14 The writer marvelled at the folly of the proud wicked. How silly it is to live only for the present...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Psa 49:7-8 Grief for the lost . Many of us have felt sorrow and grief over loved ones who don’t know the salvation of God. If there was something we could do t...

Evidence: Psa 49:15 QUESTIONS & OBJECTIONS " When you’re dead, you’re dead." What if you are wrong? What if God, Jesus, the prophets, the Jews, and Christians are r...

Evidence: Psa 49:17 " When we die we leave behind all that we have, and take with us all that we are." Chapel of the Air

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 49 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 49:1, An earnest persuasion to build the faith of resurrection, not on worldly power, but on God; Psa 49:16, Worldly prosperity is no...

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

Poole: Psalms 49 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This Psalm is penned upon the same occasion with Ps 39 Ps 73 , to wit, upon the contemplation of the afflictions of God’ s people...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 49 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 49:1-5) A call for attention. (Psa 49:6-14) Folly of worldlings. (Psa 49:15-20) Against fear of death.

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 49 (Chapter Introduction) This psalm is a sermon, and so is the next. In most of the psalms we have the penman praying or praising; in these we have him preaching; and it is...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 49 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 49 To the chief Musician, A Psalm for the sons of Korah. Aben Ezra says this psalm is a very excellent one, since in it is ex...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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