
Text -- Psalms 63:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 63:3
Clarke: Psa 63:3 - -- Thy loving-kindness is better than life - This is the language of every regenerate soul. But O how few prefer the approbation of God to the blessing...
Thy loving-kindness is better than life - This is the language of every regenerate soul. But O how few prefer the approbation of God to the blessings of life, or even to life itself in any circumstances! But the psalmist says, Thy loving-kindness,

Clarke: Psa 63:3 - -- My lips shall praise thee - Men praise, or speak well, of power, glory, honor, riches, worldly prospects and pleasures; but the truly religious spea...
My lips shall praise thee - Men praise, or speak well, of power, glory, honor, riches, worldly prospects and pleasures; but the truly religious speak well of God, in whom they find infinitely more satisfaction and happiness than worldly men can find in the possession of all earthly good.
Calvin -> Psa 63:3
Calvin: Psa 63:3 - -- 3.Because thy mercy is better than life, etc I have no objections to read the verse in this connected form, though I think that the first clause woul...
3.Because thy mercy is better than life, etc I have no objections to read the verse in this connected form, though I think that the first clause would be better separated, and taken in with the verse preceding. David would appear to be giving the reason of his earnestness in desiring God. By life is to be understood, in general, everything which men use for their own maintenance and defense. When we think ourselves well provided otherwise, we feel no disposition to have recourse to the mercy of God. That being (to speak so) which we have of our own, prevents us from seeing that we live through the mere grace of God. 428 As we are too much disposed to trust in aids of a carnal kind, and to forget God, the Psalmist here affirms that we should have more reliance upon the divine mercy in the midst of death, than upon what we are disposed to call, or what may appear to be, life. Another interpretation has been given of the words of this verse, but a very meagre and feeble one, — That the mercy of God is better than life itself; or, in other words, that the divine favor is preferable to every other possession. But the opposition is evidently between that state of secure prosperity, in which men are so apt to rest with complacency, and the mercy of God, which is the stay of such as are ready to sink and perish, and which is the one effectual remedy for supplying (if one might use that expression) all defects.
The word which I have rendered life, being in the plural number in the Hebrew, has led Augustine to assign a meaning to the sentence which is philosophical and ingenious, but without foundation, as the plural of the word is quite commonly used in the singular signification. He considered that the term lives was here used in reference to the truth, That different men affect different modes of life, some seeking riches, and others pleasure; some desiring the luxuries, and some the honors of this world, while others are given to their sensual appetites. He conceived that there was an opposition stated in the verse between these various kinds of life and eternal life, here by a common figure of speech called mercy, because it is of grace, and not of merit. But it is much more natural to understand the Psalmist as meaning, that it was of no consequence how large a share men possess of prosperity, and of the means which are generally thought to make life secure, the divine mercy being a better foundation of trust than any life fashioned out to ourselves, and than all other supports taken together. 429 On this account the Lord’s people, however severely they may suffer from poverty, or the violence of human wrongs, or the languor of desire, or hunger and thirst, or the many troubles and anxieties of life, may be happy notwithstanding; for it is well with them, in the best sense of the term, when God is their friend. Unbelievers, on the other hand, must be miserable, even when all the world smiles upon them; for God is their enemy, and a curse necessarily attaches to their lot.
TSK -> Psa 63:3
TSK: Psa 63:3 - -- Because : Psa 4:6, Psa 21:6, Psa 30:5; Phi 1:23; 1Jo 3:2
lips : Psa 30:12, Psa 51:15, Psa 66:17; Hos 14:2; Rom 6:19, Rom 12:1; 1Co 6:20; Heb 13:15; Ja...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 63:3
Barnes: Psa 63:3 - -- Because thy loving-kindness is better than life - Thy favor; thy mercy. This is of more value than life; more to be desired than life. Life is ...
Because thy loving-kindness is better than life - Thy favor; thy mercy. This is of more value than life; more to be desired than life. Life is the most valued and valuable thing pertaining to this world which we can possess. See the notes at Job 2:4. But, above this, David valued the favor and friendship of God. If one or the other was to be sacrificed, he preferred that it should be his life; he would be willing to exchange that for the favor of God. Life was not desirable, life furnished no comforts - no joys - without the divine favor.
"My life itself, without Thy love,
No taste of pleasure could afford;
‘ Twould but a tiresome burden prove,
If I were banished from the Lord."
My lips shall praise thee - That is either
(a) because of this loving-kindness; because I have this trust in thy character; or
(b) because thou wilt restore me to the place of public worship, and I shall be permitted again to praise thee.
Probably the latter is the true idea.
Poole -> Psa 63:3
Poole: Psa 63:3 - -- This is the reason of the foregoing thirst after God.
Thy loving-kindness i.e. the discoveries and influences of thy grace and favour, which thou ...
This is the reason of the foregoing thirst after God.
Thy loving-kindness i.e. the discoveries and influences of thy grace and favour, which thou usually impartest to thy people in the sanctuary.
Is better than life is more durable, and comfortable, and satisfactory than the present life, with all imaginable advantages belonging to it.
My lips shall praise thee both for my former taste and experiences of this truth, and for the assurance of my restitution to the same blessed enjoyments.
Haydock -> Psa 63:3
Malignant. I am encouraged to hope by past experience. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 63:3
Gill: Psa 63:3 - -- Because thy lovingkindness is better than life,.... For life without the love of God is nothing else than death: a man that has no share in the love ...
Because thy lovingkindness is better than life,.... For life without the love of God is nothing else than death: a man that has no share in the love of God is dead while he lives; all the enjoyments of life, health, riches, honour, friends, &c. are nothing without the love of God; the meanest temporal blessings with it are preferable to the greatest without it, Pro 15:17; it lasts longer than life, and therefore must be better than that; death cannot separate from it; it continues to all eternity. And that the saints prefer it to this natural life appears by their readiness to lay it down for the sake of Christ and his Gospel, in which the lovingkindness of God is so richly manifested unto them; to which may be added, that it is the love of God which gives to his people spiritual life, and which issues in eternal life, and therefore must be better than a temporal one. The Targum is,
"for better is thy kindness, which thou wilt do for the righteous in the world to come, than the life which thou givest the wicked in this world;''
my lips shall praise thee; that is, for thy lovingkindness, and because it is better than life, and any enjoyment of it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 63:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 63:1-11 - --1 David's thirst for God.4 His manner of blessing God.9 His confidence of his enemies' destruction, and his own safety.
MHCC -> Psa 63:3-6
MHCC: Psa 63:3-6 - --Even in affliction we need not want matter for praise. When this is the regular frame of a believer's mind, he values the loving-kindness of God more ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 63:3-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 63:3-6 - -- How soon are David's complaints and prayers turned into praises and thanksgivings! After two verses that express his desire in seeking God, here are...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 63:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 63:1-3 - --
If the words in Psa 63:2 were אלהים אתּה אשׁחרך , then we would render it, with Böttcher, after Gen 49:8 : Elohim, Thee do I seek, ev...
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 63:1-11 - --Psalm 63
King David wrote this psalm when he was in the wilderness of Judah away from the ark and the pl...
