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Text -- Psalms 59:9-17 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Thou wilt help me sooner than I expect.
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Over whom thou hast appointed me to be governor in due time.
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Their former danger, and thy glorious mercy in delivering them.
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Wesley: Psa 59:11 - -- Let them wander from place to place, that they may carry the tokens of thy justice, and their own shame to all places.
Let them wander from place to place, that they may carry the tokens of thy justice, and their own shame to all places.
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For their proud and insolent speeches against thee.
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Wesley: Psa 59:12 - -- For their execrations and lying reports, which they have spread concerning me.
For their execrations and lying reports, which they have spread concerning me.
JFB -> Psa 59:9; Psa 59:9; Psa 59:10; Psa 59:10; Psa 59:10; Psa 59:11; Psa 59:12; Psa 59:13; Psa 59:14-15; Psa 59:15; Psa 59:16-17; Psa 59:16-17
JFB: Psa 59:9 - -- By judicious expositors, and on good grounds, this is better rendered, "O my strength, on Thee will I wait" (Psa 59:17).
By judicious expositors, and on good grounds, this is better rendered, "O my strength, on Thee will I wait" (Psa 59:17).
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JFB: Psa 59:11 - -- At once (Jdg 2:21-23); but perpetuate their punishment (Gen 4:12; Num 32:13), by scattering or making them wander, and humble them.
At once (Jdg 2:21-23); but perpetuate their punishment (Gen 4:12; Num 32:13), by scattering or making them wander, and humble them.
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While evincing it--that is, to be punished for their lies, &c.
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JFB: Psa 59:13 - -- Though delayed for wise reasons, the utter destruction of the wicked must come at last, and God's presence and power in and for His Church will be kno...
Though delayed for wise reasons, the utter destruction of the wicked must come at last, and God's presence and power in and for His Church will be known abroad (1Sa 17:46; Psa 46:10-11).
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JFB: Psa 59:14-15 - -- Meanwhile let the rapacious dogs prowl, they cannot hurt the pious; yea, they shall wander famished and sleepless.
Meanwhile let the rapacious dogs prowl, they cannot hurt the pious; yea, they shall wander famished and sleepless.
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Literally, "they shall stay all night," that is, obtain nothing.
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Contrast the lot of God's servant, who employs his time in God's praise.
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JFB: Psa 59:16-17 - -- When they retire famishing and disappointed, or it may denote delightful diligence in praise, as in Psa 30:5.
When they retire famishing and disappointed, or it may denote delightful diligence in praise, as in Psa 30:5.
Clarke: Psa 59:9 - -- Because of his strength will I wait upon thee - With this reading, I can make no sense of the passage. But instead of עזו uzzo , "his strength,"...
Because of his strength will I wait upon thee - With this reading, I can make no sense of the passage. But instead of
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Clarke: Psa 59:10 - -- The God of my mercy shall prevent me - The mercy of God shall go before me, and thus help me in all my doings
The God of my mercy shall prevent me - The mercy of God shall go before me, and thus help me in all my doings
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Clarke: Psa 59:10 - -- God shall let me see my desire - The sentence is short. God will let me see concerning my enemies, i.e., how he will treat them.
God shall let me see my desire - The sentence is short. God will let me see concerning my enemies, i.e., how he will treat them.
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Clarke: Psa 59:11 - -- Slay them not, lest my people forget - I believe the Chaldee gives the true sense of this verse: "Do not slay them suddenly, lest my people should f...
Slay them not, lest my people forget - I believe the Chaldee gives the true sense of this verse: "Do not slay them suddenly, lest my people should forget. Drive them from their habitations by thy power, and reduce them to poverty by the loss of their property."Preserve them long in a state of chastisement that Israel may see thou hast undertaken for them: that thy hand is on the wicked for evil and on them for good. The Canaanites were not suddenly destroyed; they were left to be pricks in the eyes and thorns in the sides of the Israelites. It is in a sense somewhat similar that the words are used here.
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Clarke: Psa 59:12 - -- For the sin of their mouth - This verse has puzzled all the commentators. If we take חטאת chattath for sin-offering instead of sin, we shall ...
For the sin of their mouth - This verse has puzzled all the commentators. If we take
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Clarke: Psa 59:14 - -- At evening let them return - He had mentioned before, Psa 59:6 that these persons came like beasts of prey round the city striving to get in, that t...
At evening let them return - He had mentioned before, Psa 59:6 that these persons came like beasts of prey round the city striving to get in, that they might take possession. Now, being fully assured of God’ s protection and that they shall soon be made a public example, he says, Let them return and make a noise like a dog, etc., like dogs, jackals, and other famished creatures, who come howling about the city-walls for something to eat, and wander up and down for meat, grumbling because they are not satisfied, Psa 59:15. Nehemiah had made up all the breaches; and had the city guarded so well day and night, by watches who continually relieved each other, that there was no longer any fear of being taken by surprise: and now they must feel like the hungry beasts who were disappointed of their prey.
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Clarke: Psa 59:16 - -- I will sing of thy power - For it was because thy hand was upon me for good, that I have thus succeeded in my enterprises
I will sing of thy power - For it was because thy hand was upon me for good, that I have thus succeeded in my enterprises
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Clarke: Psa 59:16 - -- Yea, I will sing aloud of thy mercy - I shall publish abroad what thou hast done; and done not for my worthiness, nor for the worthiness of the peop...
Yea, I will sing aloud of thy mercy - I shall publish abroad what thou hast done; and done not for my worthiness, nor for the worthiness of the people; but for thy own mercy’ s sake
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Clarke: Psa 59:16 - -- In the day of my trouble - When I came with small means and feeble help, and had the force and fraud of many enemies to contend with, besides the co...
In the day of my trouble - When I came with small means and feeble help, and had the force and fraud of many enemies to contend with, besides the corruption and unfaithfulness of my own people; thou wast then my defense; and in all attacks, whether open or covered, my sure refuge. I will, therefore, sing of thy mercy in the morning - I will hasten to acquit myself of a duty I owe to thee for such singular interpositions of mercy and power.
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Clarke: Psa 59:17 - -- Unto thee, O my strength - A similar sentiment to that expressed, Psa 59:9. But the words are very emphatic: God is my strength; God is my elevation...
Unto thee, O my strength - A similar sentiment to that expressed, Psa 59:9. But the words are very emphatic: God is my strength; God is my elevation. My God is my mercy. I have nothing good but what I have from God. And all springs from his dwelling in me. God, therefore, shall have all the glory, both now and for ever
As many persons may still think that the inscription to this Psalm is correct, the following analysis may be applied in that way; or considered as containing a general resolution of the Psalm, without referring it to any particular occasion
Calvin: Psa 59:9 - -- 9.I will intrust his strength to thee The obscurity of this passage has led to a variety of opinions amongst commentators. The most forced interpreta...
9.I will intrust his strength to thee The obscurity of this passage has led to a variety of opinions amongst commentators. The most forced interpretation which has been proposed is that which supposes a change of person in the relative his, as if David, in speaking of himself, employed the third person instead of the first, I will intrust my strength to thee The Septuagint, and those who adopt this interpretation, have probably been led to it by the insufficient reason, that in the last verse of the psalm it is said, I will ascribe with praises my strength to thee, or, my strength is with thee, I will sing, etc. But on coming to that part of the psalm, we will have occasion to see that David there, with propriety, asserts of himself what he here in another sense asserts of Saul. There can be no doubt, therefore, that the relative is to be here understood of Saul. Some consider that the first words of the sentence should be read apart from the others — strength is his — meaning that Saul had the evident superiority in strength, so as at the present to be triumphant. Others join the two parts of the sentence, and give this explanation: Although thou art for the present moment his strength, in so far as thou dost sustain and preserve him on the throne, yet I will continue to hope, until thou hast raised me to the kingdom, according to thy promise. But those seem to come nearest the meaning of the Psalmist who construe the words as one continuous sentence — I will put in trust his strength with thee; meaning that, however intemperately Saul might boast of his strength, he would rest satisfied in the assurance that there was a secret divine providence restraining his actions. We must learn to view all men as subordinated in this manner, and to conceive of their strength and their enterprises as depending upon the sovereign will of God. In my opinion, the following version is the best — His strength is with thee, 365 I will wait. The words are parallel with those in the end of the psalm, where there can be no doubt that the nominative case is employed, My strength is with thee; I will sing. So far as the sense of the passage is concerned, however, it does not signify which of the latter interpretations be followed. It is evident that David is here enabled, from the eminence of faith, to despise the violent opposition of his enemy, convinced that he could do nothing without the divine permission. But by taking the two parts of the sentence separately, in the way I have suggested, — His strength is with thee, I will wait, — the meaning is more distinctly brought out. First, David, in vindication of that power by which God governs the whole world, declares that his enemy was under a secret divine restraint, and so entirely dependent for any strength which he possessed upon God, that he could not move a finger without his consent. He then adds, that he would wait the event, whatsoever it might be, with composure and tranquillity. For the word which we have translated, I will intrust, may here be taken as signifying I will keep myself, or quietly wait the pleasure of the Lord. In this sense we find the word used in the conjugation Niphal, Isa 7:4. Here it is put in the conjugation Kal, but that is no reason why we may not render it, “I will silently wait the issue which God may send.” It has been well suggested, that David may allude to the guards which had been sent to besiege his house, and be considered as opposing to this a watch of a very different description, which he himself maintained, as he looked out for the divine issue with quietness and composure. 366
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Calvin: Psa 59:10 - -- 10.The God of my mercy will prevent me In the Hebrew, there is the affix of the third person, but we have the point which denotes the first. 367 The ...
10.The God of my mercy will prevent me In the Hebrew, there is the affix of the third person, but we have the point which denotes the first. 367 The Septuagint has adopted the third person, and Augustine too ingeniously, though with a good design, has repeatedly quoted the passage against the Pelagians, in proof that the grace of God is antecedent to all human merit. In the same manner, he has again and again cited the preceding verse, to refute the arrogancy of those who boast of the power of free-will. “I will put in trust my strength with thee,” he says; “that is, men must subject themselves with all modesty and humility to God, as having no strength but that with which he supplies them.” Now, it may be said with great plausibility, that the man puts his strength in trust with God, who declares that he has no strength but what comes from him, and who depends entirely upon his help. The sentiment inculcated is also, without all doubt, a pious and instructive one; but we must be ever on our guard against wresting Scripture from its natural meaning. The Hebrew word
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Calvin: Psa 59:11 - -- 11.Slay them not, lest my people forget David very properly suggests this to his own mind, as a consideration which should produce patience. We are a...
11.Slay them not, lest my people forget David very properly suggests this to his own mind, as a consideration which should produce patience. We are apt to think, when God has not annihilated our enemies at once, that they have escaped out of his hands altogether; and we look upon it as properly no punishment, that they should be gradually and slowly destroyed. Such being the extravagant desire which almost all, without exception, have, to see their enemies at once exterminated, David checks himself, and dwells upon the judgment of God to be seen in the lesser calamities which overtake the wicked. It is true, that were not our eyes blinded, we would behold a more evident display of divine retribution in cases where the destruction of the ungodly is sudden; but these are so apt to fade away from our remembrance, that he had good reason to express his desire that the spectacle might be one constantly renewed, and thus our knowledge of the judgments of God be more deeply graven upon our hearts. He arms and fortifies himself against impatience under delays in the execution of divine judgment, by the consideration that God has an express design in them, as, were the wicked exterminated in a moment, the remembrance of the event might speedily be effaced. There is an indirect censure conveyed to the people of Israel for failing to improve the more striking judgments of God. But the sin is one too prevalent in the world even at this day. Those judgments which are so evident that none can miss to observe them without shutting his eyes, we sinfully allow to pass into oblivion; so that we need to be brought daily into that theater where we are compelled to perceive the divine hand. This we must never forget when we see God subjecting his enemies to a gradual process of destruction, instead of launching his thunders instantly upon their head. He prays that God would make them to wander, as men under poverty and misery, who seek in every direction, but in vain, for a remedy to their misfortunes. The idea is still more forcibly described in the word which follows, make them descend, or, cast them down. He wished that they might be dragged from that position of honor which they had hitherto occupied, and thrown to the ground, so as to present, in their wretchedness and degradation, a constant illustration of the wrath of God. The word
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Calvin: Psa 59:12 - -- 12.The sin of their mouth, the words of their lips Some interpreters read, for, or, on account of the sin of their mouth, 369 supplying the causa...
12.The sin of their mouth, the words of their lips Some interpreters read, for, or, on account of the sin of their mouth, 369 supplying the causal particle, that the words may be the better connected with the preceding verse. And there can be no doubt that the reason is stated here why they deserved to be subjected to constant wanderings and disquietude. The words as they stand, however, although abrupt and elliptical, well express the meaning which David would convey; as if he had said, that no lengthened proof was necessary to convict them of sin, which plainly showed itself in the mischievous tendency of their discourse. Wickedness, he tells us, proceeded from their mouth., They vomited out their pride and cruelty. That this is the sense in which we are to understand the words, is confirmed by what immediately follows — Let them be taken in their pride. He here points to the source of that insolence which led them with such proud and contumelious language, and in such a shameless manner, to oppress the innocent. He then specifies the sin of their lips, adding, that they spoke words of cursing and falsehood By this he means that their mouth was continually filled with horrid imprecations, and that they were wholly addicted to deceit and to calumniating. 370 Those have mistaken the meaning of David who give a passive signification to the word which I have translated to speak, and understand him as saying that the wicked would be accounted examples of divine vengeance, the plain and notorious marks of which were written upon them.
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Calvin: Psa 59:13 - -- 13.Consume, consume them in wrath, that they may not be David may seem to contradict himself in praying for the utter destruction of his enemies, whe...
13.Consume, consume them in wrath, that they may not be David may seem to contradict himself in praying for the utter destruction of his enemies, when immediately before he had expressed his desire that they might not be exterminated at once. 374 What else could he mean when he asks that God would consume them in wrath, but that he would cut them off suddenly, and not by a gradual and slower process of punishment? But he evidently refers in what he says here to a different point of time, and this removes any apparent inconsistency, for he prays that when they had been set up for a sufficient period as an example, they might eventually be devoted to destruction. It was customary with the victorious Roman generals, first to lead the captives which had been kept for the day of triumph through the city, and afterwards, upon reaching the capital, to give them over to the lictors for execution. Now David prays that when God had, in a similar manner, reserved his enemies for an interval sufficient to illustrate his triumph, he would upon this consign them to summary punishment. The two things are not at all inconsistent; first, that the divine judgments should be lengthened out through a considerable period, to secure their being remembered better, and that then, upon sufficient evidence being given to the world of the certainty with which the wicked are subjected in the displeasure of God to the slower process of destruction, he should in due time bring them forth to final execution, the better to awake, by such a demonstration of his power, the minds of those who may be more secure than others, or less affected by witnessing moderate inflictions of punishment. He adds, accordingly, that they may know, even to the ends of the earth, that God ruleth in Jacob Some would insert the copulative particle, reading, that they may know that God rules in Jacob, and in all the nations of the world, an interpretation which I do not approve, and which does violence to the sense. The allusion is to the condign nature of the judgment, which would be such that the report of it would reach the remotest regions, and strike salutary terror into the minds even of their benighted and godless inhabitants. He was more especially anxious that God should be recognised as ruling in the Church, it being preposterous that the place where his throne was erected should present such an aspect of confusion as converted his temple into a den of thieves.
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Calvin: Psa 59:14 - -- 14.And at evening they shall return It is of no consequence whether we read the words in the future tense or in the subjunctive, understanding it to ...
14.And at evening they shall return It is of no consequence whether we read the words in the future tense or in the subjunctive, understanding it to be a continuance of the preceding prayer. But it seems more probable that David, after having brought his requests to a close, anticipates the happy issue which he desired. And he makes an apt allusion to what he had already said of their insatiable hunger. The words which he had formerly used he repeats, but with a different application, ironically declaring that they would be ravenous in another sense, and that matters would issue otherwise than they had looked for. Above he had complained that they made a noise like dogs, adverting to the eagerness and fierceness with which they were bent upon mischief; now he derides their malicious efforts, and says, that after wearying themselves with their endless pursuit all day, they would go disappointed of their purpose. He uses no longer the language of complaint, but congratulates himself upon the abortive issue of their activity. The Hebrew word which I have translated, if not, in the close of the fifteenth verse, is by some considered to be the form of an oath. But this is an over-refined interpretation. Others would have the negation repeated, reading, if they shall not have been satisfied, neither shall they lodge for the night But this also is far-fetched. The simple and true meaning suggests itself at once, that, although they might not be satisfied, they would be forced to lay themselves down, and the misery of their hunger would be aggravated, by the circumstance that they had passed the whole day in fruitless application, and must lie down for the night empty, wearied, and unsatisfied. 375
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Calvin: Psa 59:16 - -- 16.But I will sing of thy power By this he does not mean merely that he would have occasion to sing at some future period, but prepares himself prese...
16.But I will sing of thy power By this he does not mean merely that he would have occasion to sing at some future period, but prepares himself presently for the exercise of thanksgiving; and he proceeds to acknowledge that his deliverance would be at once an illustrious effect of Divine power, and conferred of mere grace. It may be true, that David escaped at this time from the hands of his enemies without stir, and with secrecy, through the dexterity of his wife; still, by means of this artifice, God disappointed the preparations and forces of Saul, and may, therefore, with propriety be said to have exerted his power. We may suppose, however, that David takes occasion, from this particular instance, to look further back, and embrace, in his view, the various Divine interpositions which he had experienced.
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Calvin: Psa 59:17 - -- 17.My strength is with thee, I will sing psalms He expresses still more explicitly the truth, that he owed his safety entirely to God. Formerly he ha...
17.My strength is with thee, I will sing psalms He expresses still more explicitly the truth, that he owed his safety entirely to God. Formerly he had said that the strength of his enemy was with God, and now he asserts the same thing of his own. The expression, however, which admits of two meanings, he elegantly applies to himself in a different sense. 376 God has the strength of the wicked in his hands, to curb and to restrain it, and to show that any power of which they boast is vain and fallacious. His own people, on the other hand, he supports and secures, against the possibility of falling, by supplies of strength from himself. In the preceding part of the psalm, David had congratulated himself upon his safety, by reflecting that Saul was so completely under the secret restraint of God’s providence as to be unable to move a finger without his permission. Now, weak as he was in himself, he maintains that he had strength sufficient in the Lord; and accordingly adds, that he had good reason to engage in praise, as James the inspired apostle exhorts those who are merry to sing psalms, (Jas 5:13.) As to the reading which some have adopted, I will ascribe my strength with praises unto thee, the reader cannot fail to see that it is forced. It is clear that the two clauses must be taken separately, as I have already observed.
TSK: Psa 59:9 - -- his strength : Instead of uzzo , ""his strength,""fourteen manuscripts, read uzzee , ""my strength.""""O my strength, I will wait upon thee.""Psa ...
his strength : Instead of
defence : Heb. high place, Psa 9:9, Psa 20:1, Psa 46:7 *marg. Isa 58:14; Hab 3:19
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TSK: Psa 59:10 - -- The God : Psa 59:17; 2Co 1:3; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; 1Pe 5:10
prevent : Psa 21:3, Psa 79:8; Isa 65:24; 1Th 4:15
let : Psa 54:7, Psa 91:8, Psa 92:11, Psa 11...
The God : Psa 59:17; 2Co 1:3; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; 1Pe 5:10
prevent : Psa 21:3, Psa 79:8; Isa 65:24; 1Th 4:15
let : Psa 54:7, Psa 91:8, Psa 92:11, Psa 112:8; 1Sa 26:10; 2Sa 1:11, 2Sa 1:12, 2Sa 1:17; Jer 17:16; Luk 19:41-44; Rom 10:2, Rom 10:3
enemies : Heb. observers, Psa 5:8, Psa 54:5 *marg. Psa 56:2, Psa 56:6
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TSK: Psa 59:11 - -- Slay : Gen 4:12-15; Jdg 1:6, Jdg 1:7; Ecc 9:5; Eze 12:15, Eze 12:16, Eze 14:22, Eze 14:23; Rev 9:6
scatter : Psa 44:11, Psa 52:5; Lev 26:33; Deu 4:27,...
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TSK: Psa 59:12 - -- For the : Psa 64:7, Psa 64:8, Psa 79:12, Psa 120:3, Psa 120:4, Psa 140:9, Psa 140:10; Pro 12:13, Pro 18:7; Mat 12:36, Mat 12:37; Mat 27:25, Mat 27:63
...
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TSK: Psa 59:13 - -- Consume : Psa 59:11, Psa 7:9; Num 14:34, Num 14:35, Num 32:13; Deu 2:14-16, Deu 7:22, Deu 7:23
and let : Psa 46:10, Psa 46:11, Psa 83:18, Psa 135:5, P...
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TSK: Psa 59:15 - -- wander : Psa 109:10; Job 15:23, Job 30:1-7; Isa 8:21
for meat : Heb. to eat, Deu 28:48, Deu 28:53-58; 2Ki 6:25-29; Lam 4:4, Lam 4:5, Lam 4:9, Lam 4:10...
wander : Psa 109:10; Job 15:23, Job 30:1-7; Isa 8:21
for meat : Heb. to eat, Deu 28:48, Deu 28:53-58; 2Ki 6:25-29; Lam 4:4, Lam 4:5, Lam 4:9, Lam 4:10, Lam 5:9; Mat 24:7, Mat 24:8
grudge : etc. or, if they be not satisfied, then they will stay all night
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TSK: Psa 59:16 - -- But : Psa 59:9, Psa 59:10, Psa 21:13, Psa 106:8, Psa 145:11; Exo 15:6; Job 37:23
sing aloud : Psa 31:7, Psa 36:5, Psa 86:13, Psa 89:1, Psa 101:1; Rom ...
But : Psa 59:9, Psa 59:10, Psa 21:13, Psa 106:8, Psa 145:11; Exo 15:6; Job 37:23
sing aloud : Psa 31:7, Psa 36:5, Psa 86:13, Psa 89:1, Psa 101:1; Rom 15:9; Eph 1:6, Eph 1:7
morning : Psa 5:3, Psa 30:5, Psa 143:8; 1Sa 19:11, 1Sa 19:12
for thou : Psa 4:1, Psa 61:2, Psa 61:3; 1Sa 17:37; 2Co 1:10; Eph 3:20
day : Psa 77:2, Psa 116:1-5, Psa 138:7; Jer 30:7; Heb 5:7
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 59:9 - -- Because of his strength will I wait upon thee - literally, "His strength - I will wait upon thee."The reference here is not to the strength or ...
Because of his strength will I wait upon thee - literally, "His strength - I will wait upon thee."The reference here is not to the strength or power of God, as if the fact that "He"was powerful was a reason why the psalmist should look to him - but it is to the strength or power of the enemy - of Saul and his followers. There is much abruptness in the expression. The psalmist looks at the power of his enemy. "‘ His strength,’ he cries. It is great. It is beyond my power to resist it. It is so great that I have no other refuge but God; and because it is so great, I will fix my eyes on him alone."The word rendered "wait upon"means rather to look to; to observe; to fix the eyes upon.
For God is my defense - Margin, "My high place."That is, God was to him "as"a high place, or a place of refuge; a place where he would be safe. See the notes at Psa 18:2.
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Barnes: Psa 59:10 - -- The God of my mercy shall prevent me - Or rather, "My God - his mercy shall prevent me."This is in accordance with the present reading of the H...
The God of my mercy shall prevent me - Or rather, "My God - his mercy shall prevent me."This is in accordance with the present reading of the Hebrew text, and is probably correct. The psalmist looks to God as his God, and then the feeling at once springs up that his mercy - favor - his loving-kindness - "would""prevent"him. On the word "prevent"see the notes at Psa 21:3; compare Psa 17:13; Psa 18:5. The meaning here is, that God would "go before him,"or would "anticipate"his necessities.
God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies - That is, He will let me see them discomfited, and disappointed in their plans. This is equivalent to saying that God would give him the victory, or would not suffer them to triumph over him. See the notes at Psa 54:7.
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Barnes: Psa 59:11 - -- Slay them not, lest my people forget - The meaning of this seems to be, Do not destroy them at once, lest, being removed out of the way, the pe...
Slay them not, lest my people forget - The meaning of this seems to be, Do not destroy them at once, lest, being removed out of the way, the people should forget what was done, or should lose the impression which it is desirable should be produced by their punishment. Let them live, and let them wander about, as exiles under the divine displeasure, that they may be permanent and enduring proofs of the justice of God; of the evil of sin; of the danger of violating the divine law. So Cain wandered on the earth Gen 4:12-14, a living proof of that justice which avenges murder; and so the Jews still wander, a lasting illustration of the justice which followed their rejection of the Messiah. The prayer of the psalmist, therefore, is that the fullest expression might be given to the divine sense of the wrong which his enemies had done, that the salutary lesson might not be soon forgotten, but might be permanent and enduring.
Scatter them by thy, power - Break up their combinations, and let them go abroad as separate wanderers, proclaiming everywhere, by being thus vagabonds on the earth, the justice of God.
And bring them down - Humble them. Show them their weakness. Show them that they have not power to contend against God.
O Lord our shield - See Psa 5:12, note; Psa 33:20, note. The words "our"here, and "my"in the former part of the verse, are designed to show that the author of the psalm regarded God as "his"God, and the people of the land as "his,"in the sense that he was identified with them, and felt that his cause was really that of the people.
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Barnes: Psa 59:12 - -- For the sin of their mouth ... - That is, in belching out words of reproach and malice, Psa 59:7. Let them even be taken in their pride - ...
For the sin of their mouth ... - That is, in belching out words of reproach and malice, Psa 59:7.
Let them even be taken in their pride - In the very midst of their schemes, or while confidently relying on the success of their plans. Even while their hearts are elated, and they are sure of success, let them be arrested, and let their plans be foiled.
And for cursing and lying which they speak - That is, on account of the false charges which they have brought against me, and of their bitter imprecations on me. The allusion is to the accusations brought against David, and which were believed by Saul, and which were the foundation of the efforts made by Saul to take his life.
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Barnes: Psa 59:13 - -- Consume them in wrath - Or, in thy justice. The idea in the word "consume"here is to finish; to complete; to bring to an end. It does not mean ...
Consume them in wrath - Or, in thy justice. The idea in the word "consume"here is to finish; to complete; to bring to an end. It does not mean to "burn"them as our word might seem to imply, nor is there any reference to the "mode"or "manner"in which their power was to be brought to an end. It is merely a prayer that all their plans might be frustrated; that there might be an entire completion of their attempts; or that they might be in no sense successful.
Consume them - The expression is repeated for the sake of emphasis, implying a desire that the work might be "complete."
That they may not be - That things might be as if they were not in the land of the living.
And let them know - Those who are now plotting my death.
That God ruleth in Jacob - That God rules among his people, protecting them and guarding them from the attacks of their enemies; that he is their friend, and that he is the enemy of all those who seek to injure and destroy them.
Unto the ends of the earth - Everywhere. All over the world. Let it be shown that the same principles of government prevail wherever man abides or wanders - that God manifests himself everywhere as the friend of right, and the enemy of wrong. The phrase "the ends of the earth,"is in accordance with the prevailing conception that the earth was an extended plane, and that it had limits or boundaries. Compare the notes at Isa 40:22, notes at Isa 40:28.
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Barnes: Psa 59:14 - -- And at evening let them return - See the notes at Psa 59:6. The original here is the same as in Psa 59:6, with the exception of the word "and"a...
And at evening let them return - See the notes at Psa 59:6. The original here is the same as in Psa 59:6, with the exception of the word "and"at the beginning. This qualifies the sentence, and makes the construction in our version proper. The language is that of confident triumph. They came around the city to take David; they shouted and shrieked as dogs bark and howl when they come upon their prey. David asked God to interpose and save him; and then, says he, let them come if they will, and howl around the city; they will find no prey; they will be like hungry dogs from whom their anticipated victim has escaped. Let them come, and howl and rage. They can do no harm. They will meet with disappointment; and such disappointment will be a proper punishment for their sins.
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Barnes: Psa 59:15 - -- Let them wander up and down for meat - Let them be like dogs that wander about for food, and find none. The idea is, that they would not find h...
Let them wander up and down for meat - Let them be like dogs that wander about for food, and find none. The idea is, that they would not find him, and would be then as dogs that had sought in vain for food.
And grudge if they be not satisfied - Margin, If they be not satisfied, then they will stay all night. The marginal reading is most in accordance with the Hebrew. The sentence is obscure, but the idea seems to be that they would not be satisfied - that is, they would not obtain that which they had sought; and, like hungry and disappointed dogs, they would be compelled to pass the night in this miserable and wretched condition. The word which our translators have rendered "grudge"- from
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Barnes: Psa 59:16 - -- But I will sing of thy power - That is, I will praise thee for the manifestation of thy power in rescuing me from danger. Yea, I will sing...
But I will sing of thy power - That is, I will praise thee for the manifestation of thy power in rescuing me from danger.
Yea, I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning - When the light dawns; when these troubles are over; when the night of calamity shall have passed by. There is an allusion here, probably, to the fact that they encompassed the place of his abode at night Psa 59:6, Psa 59:14; but there is also the implied idea that that night was emblematic of sorrow and distress. The morning would come; morning after such a night of sorrow and trouble; a morning of joy and gladness, when he would feel that he had complete deliverance. Then would he praise God aloud. Compare the notes at Isa 21:12.
For thou hast been my defense and refuge in the day of my trouble - That is, he looked to the time when he would feel this; when looking back he could say this; when in view of it he would praise God.
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Barnes: Psa 59:17 - -- Unto thee, O my strength, will I sing - The source of strength to me; the real strength by which I have obtained deliverance is in thee. See th...
Unto thee, O my strength, will I sing - The source of strength to me; the real strength by which I have obtained deliverance is in thee. See the notes at Psa 18:1.
For God is my defense - See the notes at Psa 59:9.
And the God of my mercy - The God who has showed mercy to me; he from whom all these favors have sprung. Whatever means might be used to secure his own safety (compare 1Sa 19:12 ff) still he felt that his deliverance was to be traced wholly to God. He had interposed and had saved him; and it was proper, therefore, that praise should be ascribed to him. The experience of David in the case referred to in this psalm should be an inducement to all who are in danger to put their trust in God; his anticipated feelings of gratitude, and his purpose to praise God when he should be delivered, should awaken in us the resolution to ascribe to God all the praise when we are delivered from impending troubles, and when our lives are lengthened out where we have been in imminent danger. Whatever may have been the means of our rescue, it is to be traced to the interposition of God.
Poole: Psa 59:9 - -- His strength i.e. Saul’ s strength; because he is too strong for me. Or rather, O my strength , as it is Psa 59:17 . And all those ancient and ...
His strength i.e. Saul’ s strength; because he is too strong for me. Or rather, O my strength , as it is Psa 59:17 . And all those ancient and venerable translators, the LXX., and Chaldee, and vulgar Latin, render it my strength . In the Hebrew it is his strength, i.e. David’ s. For David speaks of himself in the third person, as he oft doth. And such sudden changes of persons are usual, both in these poetical books (as hath been noted before) and elsewhere, as Dan 9:4 Mic 1:2 .
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Poole: Psa 59:10 - -- The God of my mercy i.e. the giver of all that mercy and comfort which I either have, or hope for. Heb. of his mercy . But here also there is (as ap...
The God of my mercy i.e. the giver of all that mercy and comfort which I either have, or hope for. Heb. of his mercy . But here also there is (as appears by comparing this with Psa 59:17 ) a change of the person, as there was in the foregoing verse.
Shall prevent me to wit, with the blessings of goodness, as it is more fully expressed, Psa 21:3 . Thou shalt help me , and that seasonably, before it be too late, and sooner than I expect.
My desire in their disappointment and overthrow, as it follows; which was very desirable to David, no less for the public good, than for his own safety and happiness.
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Poole: Psa 59:11 - -- Slay them not to wit, suddenly, or at once.
My people my countrymen; or those over whom thou hast appointed me to be governor in due time. Forget t...
Slay them not to wit, suddenly, or at once.
My people my countrymen; or those over whom thou hast appointed me to be governor in due time. Forget their former danger, and thy glorious mercy in delivering them, and their own duty to thee for it. Hereby it most plainly appears that David, in these and the like imprecations against his enemies, was not moved thereunto by his private malice, or desire of revenge, but by the respect which he had to God’ s honour and the general good of his people.
Scatter them Heb. make them to wander . As they wandered about the city and country to do me mischief, Psa 59:6 , so let their punishment be agreeable to their sin; let them wander from place to place, to wit, for meat, as it is expressed, Psa 59:15 , that they may carry the tokens of thy justice and their own shame to all places where they come.
Bring them down from that power and dignity in which thou hast set them, which they do so wickedly abuse; and from the height of their carnal hopes and confidences of success against me.
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Poole: Psa 59:12 - -- For the sin of their mouth and the words of their lip for their ungodly, and injurious, and pernicious speeches, of which he speaks Psa 59:7 , and in...
For the sin of their mouth and the words of their lip for their ungodly, and injurious, and pernicious speeches, of which he speaks Psa 59:7 , and in many other places.
Let them be taken, as in a snare, in order to their ruin. Let thy judgments overtake them. In their pride for their proud and insolent speeches against thee, Psa 59:7 . For cursing and lying ; for their execrations and lying reports, which they have raised or spread abroad concerning me. Which they speak ; which they are ready to utter upon all occasions.
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Poole: Psa 59:13 - -- Consume them by degrees, and after thou hast made them to wander about, Psa 59:11 .
That they may not be to wit, in the land of the living, any mor...
Consume them by degrees, and after thou hast made them to wander about, Psa 59:11 .
That they may not be to wit, in the land of the living, any more; as this phrase is frequently understood, whereof divers instances have been given.
Let them know experimentally, and to their cost, that God ruleth over and above them; that though Saul be king, yet God is his superior in power and authority, and all things among us shall be disposed, not as it pleaseth Saul, which his parasites are always suggesting to him, but as God will; and therefore I shall be preserved, and in fit time crowned, in spite of all that Saul or his forces can do against me.
In Jacob in the land and over the people of Israel, whose king and governor he is in a peculiar manner.
Unto or, and into ; the contraction and being oft understood, as hath been noted before. These words may be referred, either,
1. To God’ s ruling; let them know that God ruleth, not only in Jacob, but also to the ends of the earth. Or,
2. To men’ s knowing; let them , or let men, know, even to the ends of the earth, that God ruleth in Jacob ; let thy judgments be so manifest and dreadful in the destruction of thy wicked enemies, that not only Israelites, but even the remote nations of the world, may see it, and acknowledge thy power and providence in it.
The ends of the earth either of this land; or rather, of the world. The sense is, That by those eminent and extraordinary discoveries of thy power, and wisdom, and justice it may be evident, both to them and to all that hear of it, that thou art no puny, or inferior, or topical god, like the gods of heathens, whose government is confined to a narrow compass; but the high and mighty God, and the great Ruler of the whole world.
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Poole: Psa 59:14 - -- What was their sin and their choice to do with evil design, let it be their punishment to do it by constraint, and for meat, as it follows, Psa 59:1...
What was their sin and their choice to do with evil design, let it be their punishment to do it by constraint, and for meat, as it follows, Psa 59:15 .
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Poole: Psa 59:15 - -- Wander up and down for meat to get a livelihood. And grudge if they be not satisfied : when their bodies are hungry, let their minds be discontented...
Wander up and down for meat to get a livelihood. And grudge if they be not satisfied : when their bodies are hungry, let their minds be discontented. Or, as others render the words, and lodge , or be forced to lodge, all night, when they are not satisfied . Let them go to their rest with an empty stomach.
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Poole: Psa 59:17 - -- Unto thee i.e. to thy honour; or rather, of or concerning thee , as that particle is sometimes used.
Unto thee i.e. to thy honour; or rather, of or concerning thee , as that particle is sometimes used.
Haydock: Psa 59:9 - -- Head. This tribe was at the head of the kingdom of Israel, but submitted to David, (Haydock) and afforded excellent soldiers and captains. (Calmet)...
Head. This tribe was at the head of the kingdom of Israel, but submitted to David, (Haydock) and afforded excellent soldiers and captains. (Calmet) ---
His temporal kingdom was extended by God, who will crown his elect. (Worthington) ---
King. Hebrew, "law-giver," alluding to Genesis xlix. 10. Symmachus, "my general." (Calmet) ---
The word king implies all this. (Haydock) ---
Juda always swayed the sceptre. (Berthier) ---
After the captivity, Zorobabel was at the head of the people. Jesus Christ sprung from this tribe, and is the true king of the people, whom he has redeemed, and put in possession of the land of promise. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 59:10 - -- The pot of my hope; or my watering pot. That is, a vessel for meaner uses, by being reduced to serve me, even i nthe meanest employments. (Challone...
The pot of my hope; or my watering pot. That is, a vessel for meaner uses, by being reduced to serve me, even i nthe meanest employments. (Challoner) (Worthington) ---
Plautus (Mort. ii. scen. 1. 40) says, Ego vos pro matula habeo, &c. Symmachus adopts the sense of the Septuagint Greek: amerimnias, as rets, in Syriac means "to trust," (Daniel iii. 28.) and "to wash" in Hebrew. It was customary to throw lots into a pot full of water, and that which came out last was most esteemed. To this custom the psalmist may allude, (Calmet) or he hoped that the fruitful region of Moab would supply him with food. It was subject to David, (2 Kings viii. 2.; Haydock) and to the Machabees, 1 Machabees v. 6. ---
Shoe, to be untied, or carried, as by the meanest slaves, (Matthew iii. 11.) or to take possession, Deuteronomy xi. 24. Thus "Alexander threw a javelin, and danced on the shore of Asia, begging that those lands would not receive him unwillingly for king." (Diodorus Arrian. Justin.) ---
David conquered Idumea, (2 Kings viii. 14.; Haydock) as Hyrcanus did afterwards. (Josephus, [Antiquities?] xiii. 17.) (Calmet) ---
Foreigners, alienigenæ, or, "Allophyli." (St. Augustine) ---
"Of another tribe." (Haydock) ---
So the Philistines were called, who had no kindred with the Israelites; whereas the Edomites, Moabites, &c., were originally of the same family. (Challoner) ---
Subject, or "friends," Psalm cvii. 10. (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "Philistia, triumph thou, because of me." Marginal note insinuates this is spoken "by irony;" but (Haydock) Hebrew properly means, "make an alliance with me;" or, Syriac, "I will shout for joy over Palestine." This country was subdued by the Machabees, (1 Machabees iv. 15.; Calmet) as it had been tributary to David, 2 Kings viii. 2. (Berthier) ---
"I will make a league against the Philistines." (Houbigant)
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Haydock: Psa 59:11 - -- city. The capital of the aforesaid counties, or Jerusalem; (Calmet) but more particularly Petra, (Haydock) the strongest place in Idumea. (Menochiu...
city. The capital of the aforesaid counties, or Jerusalem; (Calmet) but more particularly Petra, (Haydock) the strongest place in Idumea. (Menochius) (Abdias, 3.) (Berthier) ---
The Fathers understand the Church. (Eusebius)
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Haydock: Psa 59:12 - -- Off? God punishes and rewards. (Worthington) ---
And wilt; or, "yet thou wilt not," &c. (Haydock) ---
Thou wilt not depend on our efforts for v...
Off? God punishes and rewards. (Worthington) ---
And wilt; or, "yet thou wilt not," &c. (Haydock) ---
Thou wilt not depend on our efforts for victory. (Bellarmine) (Menochius) ---
How can we expect to make such conquests, being in so forlorn a condition, when thou dost not lead forth our armies, as formerly? All that man can do is vain, but thou wilt look down upon us, and through God we shall do mightily, ver. 14. (Calmet)
Gill: Psa 59:9 - -- Because of his strength will I wait upon thee,.... Either because of the strength of Saul, who was stronger than David, he determined to wait upon th...
Because of his strength will I wait upon thee,.... Either because of the strength of Saul, who was stronger than David, he determined to wait upon the Lord for salvation and deliverance from him; or because of the strength of the Lord, which he expected from him, and therefore would wait upon him for it. The Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, and also the Chaldee paraphrase, render the words, "my strength will I keep for thee"; or "with thee". I ascribe all my strength unto thee; I expect every supply of it from thee, and put my trust and confidence in thee for it: so did Christ as man, and had strength from the Lord, according to his promise, Isa 50:7; and so every believer, Isa 14:24;
for God is my defence; or "my high refuge"; or "high tower" w; see Psa 9:9; where he was defended and exalted, as is petitioned Psa 59:1; and was safe and secure from every enemy.
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Gill: Psa 59:10 - -- The God of my mercy shall prevent me,.... Or "of my grace", or "goodness", as the Targum; see 1Pe 5:10. God is gracious in himself, and he has treasur...
The God of my mercy shall prevent me,.... Or "of my grace", or "goodness", as the Targum; see 1Pe 5:10. God is gracious in himself, and he has treasured up a fulness of grace in Christ: he is the donor of all the blessings of grace in the covenant; and the author of all internal grace in the hearts of his people; and who supplies them with more grace as they want it; and he is the Father of all temporal and spiritual mercies. The "Cetib", or writing, is
God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies; expressed in the following verses, Psa 59:11; or "vengeance upon them"; as the Targum paraphrases it; see Psa 58:10.
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Gill: Psa 59:11 - -- Slay thou not,.... Though they deserved to be slain, and the Lord seemed as if he was about to slay them, who was able to do it; he seemed to be whett...
Slay thou not,.... Though they deserved to be slain, and the Lord seemed as if he was about to slay them, who was able to do it; he seemed to be whetting his glittering sword, and his hand to take hold of vengeance ready to execute it; wherefore intercession is made to spare them, which agrees with Christ's petition on the cross, Luk 23:34. The Targum adds, "immediately": slay them not directly, and at once; give them space for repentance; and so the Jews had: for it was forty years after the death of Christ before their destruction was: or the meaning may be, slay them not utterly; destroy them not totally: and so it was; for though multitudes were slain during the siege of Jerusalem, and at the taking of it, yet they were not all slain: there were many carried captive, and sent into different parts of the world, whose posterity continue to this day. The reason of this petition is,
lest my people forget: the Syriac version renders it, "lest they should forget my people"; or my people should be forgotten. David's people, the Jews by birth and religion, though not as yet his subjects, unless in designation and appointment, and Christ's people according to the flesh: now if these had all been slain at once, they had been forgotten, like dead men out of mind: or Christ's special and peculiar people; his chosen, redeemed, and called ones, who truly believe in him, and are real Christians; and then the sense is, if full vengeance had been taken of the Jews at once, and they had been cut off root and branch, so that none of them remained, Christ's people would have forgot them, and the vengeance inflicted on them for their rejection of the Messiah; but now they are a continued and lasting instance of God's wrath and displeasure on that account, and they and their case cannot be forgotten. The Arabic version renders it, "lest my people forget the law"; its precepts and sanction, its rewards and punishments;
scatter them by thy power; or let them wander up and down like fugitives and vagabonds in the earth, as Cain did, and as the Jews now do, being dispersed in the several parts of the world; and which was done by the power of God, or through the kingdom of God coming with power upon that people, Mar 9:1; or "by thine army" x; the Roman army, which was the Lord's, being permitted by him to come against them, and being made use of as an instrument to destroy and scatter them, Mat 22:7;
and bring them down; from their excellency, greatness, riches, and honour, into a low, base, mean, and poor estate and condition, in which the Jews now are;
O Lord, our shield; the protector and defender of his people, while he is the destroyer and scatterer of their enemies.
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Gill: Psa 59:12 - -- For the sin of their mouth, and the words of their lips,.... The words may be read as one proposition, "the words of their lips are the sin of thei...
For the sin of their mouth, and the words of their lips,.... The words may be read as one proposition, "the words of their lips are the sin of their mouth" y; they speak nothing but evil; whatever they say is sin; out of the abundance of their evil hearts their mouths speak: or "for the sin of their mouth" and lips; because of the calumnies cast by them on the Messiah, traducing him as a sinful man, a blasphemer, a seditious person, and even as one that had familiarity with the devil;
let them even be taken in their pride; in their city and temple, of which they boasted, and prided themselves in; and so they were: or for their pride in rejecting the Messiah, because of his mean descent and parentage, and because his kingdom was not with outward pomp and observation; and being vain boasters of their carnal privileges, and works of righteousness, they refused to submit to the righteousness of God, and were neither subject to the law of God, nor to the Gospel of Christ;
and for cursing and lying which they speak; for cursing the Messiah, pronouncing him accursed, and treating him as such, by hanging him on a tree; and for lying against him, saying that he was a Samaritan, and had a devil, and cast out devils by Beelzebub; and that he was a deceiver of the people, and a wicked man: for these things they were taken in their besieged city, as is here imprecated.
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Gill: Psa 59:13 - -- Consume them in wrath, consume them,.... The repetition of the request shows the ardour and vehemency of the mind of the petitioner, and the importu...
Consume them in wrath, consume them,.... The repetition of the request shows the ardour and vehemency of the mind of the petitioner, and the importunity in which he put up the petition; and suggests that the persons designed were guilty of very great sins, deserving of the wrath of God, and which came upon them to the uttermost, 1Th 2:16;
that they may not be; either any more in the land of the living; be utterly extinct, having no being in this world, Jer 31:15; or that they might not be in the glory and grandeur, in the honour, dignity, and felicity, they once were in; which best suits the present state of the Jews; and this sense better agrees with what follows;
and let them know that God ruleth in Jacob, unto the ends of the earth; this is to be understood of the Messiah, who is God over all, blessed for ever, and is the ruler in Israel, King of saints; reigns over the house of Jacob, in his church, and among his people, wherever they are; even to the ends of the earth, where he has had, or will have, some that are subject to him: for his dominion will be from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth, Psa 72:8; and this his government is known to men good and bad, by the judgments which he executeth; and particularly it is apparent that he is made Lord and Christ, and that he is come in his kingdom, and with power, by the vengeance taken on the Jewish nation.
Selah; on this word; see Gill on Psa 3:2.
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Gill: Psa 59:14 - -- And at evening let them return; and let them make a noise like a dog, and go round about the city. What in Psa 59:6 is related as matter of fact, is ...
And at evening let them return; and let them make a noise like a dog, and go round about the city. What in Psa 59:6 is related as matter of fact, is here expressed by way of imprecation; and what is there taken notice of as their sin, is here wished for at their punishment; unless it can be thought that this should refer to the conversion and return of the Jews in the evening of the world, and to their humiliation and mourning for piercing Christ, and to their very distressed and uncomfortable condition they will be in, until they have satisfaction that their sins are forgiven them; See Gill on Psa 59:6.
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Gill: Psa 59:15 - -- Let them wander up and down for meat,.... Like hungry dogs;
and grudge if they be not satisfied; or murmur and howl as dogs when hungry, and can fi...
Let them wander up and down for meat,.... Like hungry dogs;
and grudge if they be not satisfied; or murmur and howl as dogs when hungry, and can find nothing to eat; or "when they shall not be satisfied, and shall lodge" z; when they shall get nothing to satisfy their hungry appetite, and shall go to bed without a supper, and lie all night without food. The Targum is,
"they shall wander about to seize the prey to eat, and will not rest till the are satisfied, and will lie all night;''
that is, in quest of prey.
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Gill: Psa 59:16 - -- But I will sing of thy power,.... In creating all things out of nothing; in upholding all things in being; in the redemption of his people; in their c...
But I will sing of thy power,.... In creating all things out of nothing; in upholding all things in being; in the redemption of his people; in their conversion and calling; in the preservation of them to eternal happiness; in the performance of his promises to them; in the destruction of their enemies; and in their protection:
yea, I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning; of providential mercies, which are new every morning; and of special mercy in the heart of God, in the covenant of his grace, in redemption, in regeneration, in the pardon of sin, and in eternal life and salvation;
for thou hast been my defence; See Gill on Psa 59:9;
and refuge in the day of my trouble; whither he fled, and found protection and safety; See Gill on Psa 9:9.
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Gill: Psa 59:17 - -- Unto thee, O my strength, will I sing,.... That is, to God, whom he made his strength, and put his trust in for strength, and from whom he received it...
Unto thee, O my strength, will I sing,.... That is, to God, whom he made his strength, and put his trust in for strength, and from whom he received it; and he therefore determined to sing praise to him for it, and give him the glory of it;
for God is my defence: as before in Psa 59:9;
and the God of my mercy; See Gill on Psa 59:10.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 59:10 Heb “those who watch me [with evil intent].” See also Pss 5:8; 27:11; 54:5; 56:2.
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NET Notes: Psa 59:11 Heb “make them roam around by your strength and bring them down, O our shield, the Lord.”
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:9 ( g ) [Because of] his strength will I wait upon thee: for God [is] my defence.
( g ) Though Saul has great power, yet I know that you bridle him: th...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:10 The God of my mercy shall ( h ) prevent me: God shall let me see [my desire] upon mine enemies.
( h ) He will not fail to help me when need requires....
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:11 Slay them ( i ) not, lest my people forget: scatter them by thy power; and bring them down, O Lord our shield.
( i ) Altogether, but little by little...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:12 [For] the sin of their mouth [and] the words of their lips let them even be ( k ) taken in their pride: and for cursing and lying [which] they speak. ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:13 ( l ) Consume [them] in wrath, consume [them], that they [may] not [be]: and let them know that God ruleth in Jacob unto the ends of the earth. Selah....
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:14 And at evening let them ( m ) return; [and] let them make a noise like a dog, and go round about the city.
( m ) He mocks their vain enterprises, bei...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:16 But I will sing of thy ( n ) power; yea, I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning: for thou hast been my defence and refuge in the day of my trou...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 59:17 Unto thee, O my ( o ) strength, will I sing: for God [is] my defence, [and] the God of my mercy.
( o ) Confessing himself to be void of all virtue an...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 59:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Psa 59:1-17 - --1 David prays to be delivered from his enemies.6 He complains of their cruelty.8 He trusts in God.11 He prays against them.16 He praises God.
MHCC -> Psa 59:8-17
MHCC: Psa 59:8-17 - --It is our wisdom and duty, in times of danger and difficulty, to wait upon God; for he is our defence, in whom we shall be safe. It is very comfortabl...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 59:8-17
Matthew Henry: Psa 59:8-17 - -- David here encourages himself, in reference to the threatening power of his enemies, with a pious resolution to wait upon God and a believing expect...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 59:1-9; Psa 59:10-17
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 59:1-9 - --
First part. As far as Psa 59:4 we recognise strains familiar in the Psalms. The enemies are called מתקוממי as in Job 27:7, cf. Psa 17:7; ע...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 59:10-17 - --
In this second half of the Psalm the cry of fear is hushed. Hope reigns, and anger burns more fiercely. The Kerî says that Psa 59:11 is to be rea...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...
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Constable: Psa 59:1-17 - --Psalm 59
The occasion for this psalm was evidently the event the writer of 1 Samuel recorded in 19:8-14,...
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Constable: Psa 59:5-9 - --2. David's triumph over his enemies 59:6-10
59:6-7 The psalmist compared his enemies to wild dogs that gain courage with the cover of night to threate...
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Constable: Psa 59:10-12 - --3. David's desire for God's glory 59:11-13
David did not just want God to frustrate the attacks ...
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