
Text -- Psalms 50:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 50:15 - -- And make conscience of that great duty of fervent prayer, which is an acknowledgment of thy subjection to me, and of thy trust and dependance upon me.
And make conscience of that great duty of fervent prayer, which is an acknowledgment of thy subjection to me, and of thy trust and dependance upon me.

Thou shalt have occasion to glorify me for thy deliverance.
JFB -> Psa 50:8-15
JFB: Psa 50:8-15 - -- That is, to bring, with the external symbolical service, the homage of the heart, and faith, penitence, and love. To this is added an invitation to se...
That is, to bring, with the external symbolical service, the homage of the heart, and faith, penitence, and love. To this is added an invitation to seek, and a promise to afford, all needed help in trouble.
Calvin -> Psa 50:15
Calvin: Psa 50:15 - -- In the fifteenth verse we have first an injunction to prayer, then a promise of its being answered, and afterwards a call to thanksgiving. We are enj...
In the fifteenth verse we have first an injunction to prayer, then a promise of its being answered, and afterwards a call to thanksgiving. We are enjoined to pray in the day of trouble, but not with the understanding that we are to pray only then, for prayer is a duty incumbent upon us every day, and every moment of our lives. Be our situation ever so comfortable and exempt from disquietude, we must never cease to engage in the exercise of supplication, remembering that, if God should withdraw his favor for a moment, we would be undone. In affliction, however our faith is more severely tried, and there is a propriety in specifying it as the season of prayer; the prophet pointing us to God as the only resort and means of safety in the day of our urgent necessity. A promise is subjoined to animate us in the duty, disposed as we are to be overwhelmed by a sense of the majesty of God, or of our own unworthiness. Gratitude is next enjoined, in consideration of God’s answer to our prayers. Invocation of the name of God being represented in this passage as constituting a principal part of divine worship, all who make pretensions to piety will feel how necessary it is to preserve the pure and uncorrupted form of it. We are forcibly taught the detestable nature of the error upon this point entertained by the Papists, who transfer to angels and to men an honor which belongs exclusively to God. They may pretend to view these in no other light than as patrons, who pray for them to God. But it is evident that these patrons are impiously substituted by them in the room of Christ, whose mediation they reject. It is apparent, besides, from the form of their prayers, that they recognize no distinction between God and the very least of their saints. They ask the same things from Saint Claudius which they ask from the Almighty, and offer the prayer of our Lord to the image of Catherine. I am aware that the Papists justify their invocation of the dead, by denying that their prayers to them amount to divine worship. They talk so much about the kind of worship which they call latria, that is, the worship which they give to God alone, as to make it appear, that in the invocation of angels and saints they give none of it to them. 250 But it is impossible to read the words of the Psalmist, now under our consideration, without perceiving that all true religion is gone unless God alone is called upon. Were the Papists asked whether it were lawful to offer sacrifices to the dead, they would immediately reply in the negative. They grant to this day that sacrifice could not lawfully be offered to Peter or to Paul, for the common sense of mankind would dictate the profanity of such an act. And when we here see God preferring the invocation of his name to all sacrifices, is it not plain to demonstration, that those who call upon the dead are chargeable with the grossest impiety? From this it follows, that the Papists, let them abound as they may in their genuflections before God, rob him of the chief part of his glory when they direct their supplications to the saints. 251 The express mention which is made in these verses of affliction is fitted to comfort the weak and the fearful believer. When God has withdrawn the outward marks of his favor, a doubt is apt to steal into our minds whether he really cares for our salvation. So far is this from being well founded, that adversity is sent to us by God, just to stir us up to seek him and to call upon his name. Nor should we overlook the fact, that our prayers are only acceptable when we offer them in compliance with the commandment of God, and are animated to them by a consideration of the promise which he has extended. The argument which the Papists have drawn from the passage, in support of their multiplied vows, is idle and unwarrantable. The Psalmist, as we have already hinted, when he enjoins the payment of their vows, refers only to solemn thanksgiving, whereas they trust in their vows as meriting salvation. They contract vows, beside, which have no divine warrant, but, on the contrary, are explicitly condemned by the word of God.
TSK -> Psa 50:15
TSK: Psa 50:15 - -- call : Psa 77:2, Psa 91:15, Psa 107:6-13, Psa 107:19, Psa 107:28; 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13; Job 22:27; Zec 13:9; Luk 22:44; Act 16:25; Jam 5:13
deliver : ...
call : Psa 77:2, Psa 91:15, Psa 107:6-13, Psa 107:19, Psa 107:28; 2Ch 33:12, 2Ch 33:13; Job 22:27; Zec 13:9; Luk 22:44; Act 16:25; Jam 5:13
deliver : Psa 34:3, Psa 34:4, Psa 66:13-20; Luk 17:15-18
glorify : Psa 50:23, Psa 22:23; Mat 5:16; Joh 15:8; 1Pe 4:11, 1Pe 4:14

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 50:15
Barnes: Psa 50:15 - -- And call upon me in the day of trouble - This is a part of real religion as truly as praise is, Psa 50:14. This is also the duty and the privil...
And call upon me in the day of trouble - This is a part of real religion as truly as praise is, Psa 50:14. This is also the duty and the privilege of all the true worshippers of God. To do this shows where the heart is, as really as direct acts of praise and thanksgiving. The purpose of all that is said here is to show that true religion - the proper service of God - does not consist in the mere offering of sacrifice, but that it is of a spiritual nature, and that the offering of sacrifice is of no value unless it is accompanied by corresponding acts of spiritual religion, showing that the heart has a proper appreciation of the mercies of God, and that it truly confides in him. Such spirituality in religion is expressed by acts of praise Psa 50:14; but it is also as clearly expressed Psa 50:15 by going to God in times of trouble, and rolling the burdens of life on his arm, and seeking consolation in him.
I will deliver thee - I will deliver thee from trouble. This will occur
(a) either in this life, in accordance with the frequent promises of his word (compare the notes at Psa 46:1); or
(b) wholly in the future world, where all who love God will be completely and forever delivered from all forms of sorrow.
And thou shalt glorify me - That is, Thou wilt honor me, or do me honor, by thus coming to me with confidence in the day of calamity. There is no way in which we can honor God more, or show more clearly that we truly confide in him, than by going to him when everything seems to be dark; when his own ways and dealings are wholly incomprehensible to us, and committing all into his hands.
Poole -> Psa 50:15
Poole: Psa 50:15 - -- And make conscience of that great duty of constant and fervent prayer to me; which is an acknowledgment of thy subjection to me, and of thy trust an...
And make conscience of that great duty of constant and fervent prayer to me; which is an acknowledgment of thy subjection to me, and of thy trust and dependence upon me, and therefore is pleasing to me.
In the day of trouble when trouble comes, do not avoid it by sinful shifts, not’ trust to creatures for relief, as hypocrites generally do, but give glory to me, by relying upon my promises, and expect help from me by hearty and unfeigned prayer.
Thou shalt glorify me: this is mentioned, either,
1. As a privilege; thou shalt have occasion to praise and glorify me for thy deliverance. Or,
2. As a further duty; thou shalt give me the glory of thy deliverance by praising me for it, and improving it to my service and glory.
Haydock -> Psa 50:15
Haydock: Psa 50:15 - -- Thee. The sinner cannot testify his gratitude better, than by promoting the conversion of others. (Worthington) ---
This is a sort of satisfaction...
Thee. The sinner cannot testify his gratitude better, than by promoting the conversion of others. (Worthington) ---
This is a sort of satisfaction. (Menochius) ---
While engaged in sin, David could not well exhort his subjects to repentance. His example was rather an inducement for them to transgress. (Berthier)--- But when they saw his grief, and knew that God had pardoned him, they were no longer tempted to despair. He also watched more carefully over their conduct.
Gill -> Psa 50:15
Gill: Psa 50:15 - -- And call upon me in the day of trouble,.... This is another part of spiritual sacrifice or worship, which is much more acceptable to God than legal sa...
And call upon me in the day of trouble,.... This is another part of spiritual sacrifice or worship, which is much more acceptable to God than legal sacrifices. Invocation of God includes all parts of religious worship, and particularly designs prayer, as it does here, of which God, and he only, is the object; and which should be performed in faith, in sincerity, and with fervency; and though it should be made at all times, in private and in public, yet more especially should be attended to in a time of affliction, whether of soul or body, whether of a personal, family, or public kind, Jam 5:13; and the encouragement to it is,
I will deliver thee: that is, out of trouble: as he is able, so faithful is he that hath promised, and will do it. The obligation follows,
and thou shall glorify me; by offering praise, Psa 50:23; ascribing the glory of the deliverance to God, and serving him in righteousness and true holiness continually.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 50:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Psa 50:1-23 - --1 The majesty of God in the church.5 His order to gather his saints.7 The pleasure of God is not in ceremonies,14 but in sincerity of obedience.
MHCC -> Psa 50:7-15
MHCC: Psa 50:7-15 - --To obey is better than sacrifice, and to love God and our neighbour better than all burnt-offerings. We are here warned not to rest in these performan...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 50:7-15
Matthew Henry: Psa 50:7-15 - -- God is here dealing with those that placed all their religion in the observances of the ceremonial law, and thought those sufficient. I. He lays dow...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 50:7-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 50:7-15 - --
Exposition of the sacrificial Tôra for the good of those whose holiness consists in outward works. The forms strengthened by ah , in Psa 50:7, des...
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 50:1-23 - --Psalm 50
This psalm pictures God seated in His heavenly throne room. He has two indictments against His ...
