
Text -- Psalms 64:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 64:8
Through fear of being involved in their destruction.

Their partners in evil shall be terrified.
Clarke -> Psa 64:8
Clarke: Psa 64:8 - -- Their own tongue to fall upon them-selves - All the plottings, counsels, and curses, they have formed against me, shall come upon themselves.
Their own tongue to fall upon them-selves - All the plottings, counsels, and curses, they have formed against me, shall come upon themselves.
Calvin -> Psa 64:8
Calvin: Psa 64:8 - -- 8.And they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves Pursuing the same subject, he remarks, that the poison concocted in their secret couns...
8.And they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves Pursuing the same subject, he remarks, that the poison concocted in their secret counsels, and which they revealed with their tongues, would prove to have a deadly effect upon themselves. The sentiment is the same with that expressed elsewhere by another figure, when they are said to be caught in their own snares, and to fall into the pit which they have digged themselves, (Psa 57:6.) It is just that Heaven should make the mischiefs which they had devised against innocent and upright men to recoil upon their own heads. The judgment is one which we see repeatedly and daily exemplified before our eyes, and yet we find much difficulty in believing that it can take place. We should feel ourselves bound the more to impress the truth upon our hearts, that God is ever watching, as it were, his opportunity of converting the stratagems of the wicked into means just as completely effective of their destruction, as if they had intentionally employed them for that end. In the close of the verse, to point out the striking severity of their punishment, it is said that all who saw them should flee away The judgments of God are lifted above out of the sight of an ignorant world, and ere it can be roused to fear and dismay, these must be such as to bear signal marks indeed of a divine hand.
TSK -> Psa 64:8
TSK: Psa 64:8 - -- tongue : Psa 59:12, Psa 140:9; Job 15:6; Pro 12:13, Pro 18:7; Mat 21:41; Luk 19:22
all that : Psa 31:11, Psa 52:6; Num 16:34; 1Sa 31:3-7; Nah 3:7; Rev...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 64:8
Barnes: Psa 64:8 - -- So they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves - In Psa 64:3, their tongue is represented as a sword; and here, keeping up the fig...
So they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves - In Psa 64:3, their tongue is represented as a sword; and here, keeping up the figure, the tongue, as a sword, is represented as falling on them, or as inflicting the wound on themselves which they had intended to inflict on others. This might be rendered, "And they have cast him down; upon them is their own tongue;"or, "Upon them their own tongue has come."That is, someone would cast them down, and they would fall as if smitten by their own tongue like a sword. It is not said who would do this, but the most natural interpretation is that it would be done by God. The idea is, that the instrument which they had employed to injure others would be the means of their own ruin.
All that see them shall flee away - Compare Psa 31:11. That is, they shall flee in consternation from those who are so fearfully overthrown. They shall see that God is just, and that He will punish the wicked; and they will desire to escape from a ruin so dreadful as that which comes upon the ungodly. The idea is, that when God punishes sinners, the effect on others is, and should be, to lead them to wish not to be associated with such people, but to escape from a doom so fearful.
Poole -> Psa 64:8
Poole: Psa 64:8 - -- The mischief of their hard speeches, and threats, and crafty counsels against me shall be turned against themselves.
Shall flee away partly throug...
The mischief of their hard speeches, and threats, and crafty counsels against me shall be turned against themselves.
Shall flee away partly through abhorrency of them, and partly through fear of being involved in their destruction.
Haydock -> Psa 64:8
Haydock: Psa 64:8 - -- Troublest. Protestants, "stillest the noise." (Haydock) ---
Troubled. The most obdurate are converted from all countries. (Worthington)
Troublest. Protestants, "stillest the noise." (Haydock) ---
Troubled. The most obdurate are converted from all countries. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 64:8
Gill: Psa 64:8 - -- So shall they make their own tongue to fall upon themselves,.... The evil things they have wished for, threatened unto, and imprecated on others, shal...
So shall they make their own tongue to fall upon themselves,.... The evil things they have wished for, threatened unto, and imprecated on others, shall come upon themselves; the curses they have cursed others with shall come upon themselves; the pit they have dug for others, they fall into. So Haman, to whom some apply the psalm, was hanged on the gallows he made for Mordecai; and the accusers of Daniel, to whom others apply it, were cast into the same den of lions they procured for him; and Babylon, who has been drunk with the blood of the saints, shall have blood given her to drink.
all that see them shall flee away; not being able to help them, nor to bear the horrible sight, and fearing the same judgments should fall on themselves; see Num 16:34. Or, "they shall move themselves" d; shake their heads in a way of derision, as Jarchi interprets it; or skip for joy, as the word is rendered in Jer 48:27; and then it must be understood of the righteous; who, seeing the vengeance on the wicked, rejoice, as in Psa 52:6; though, as they are afterwards particularly mentioned, others seem to be designed. The word is used for lamenting and bemoaning one's self, in Jer 31:18; and so may be applied to the friends of the wicked lamenting and bemoaning their ruin, and their being bereaved of them, Rev 18:9.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 64:8 The Hitpolel verbal form is probably from the root נוּד (nud; see HALOT 678 s.v. נוד), which is attested els...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 64:8
Geneva Bible: Psa 64:8 So they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves: all that see them shall ( h ) flee away.
( h ) To see God's heavy judgments against them...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 64:1-10
TSK Synopsis: Psa 64:1-10 - --1 David prays for deliverance, complaining of his enemies.7 He promises himself to see such an evident destruction of his enemies, as the righteous sh...
MHCC -> Psa 64:7-10
MHCC: Psa 64:7-10 - --When God brings upon men the mischiefs they have desired on others, it is weight enough to sink a man to the lowest hell. Those who love cursing, it s...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 64:7-10
Matthew Henry: Psa 64:7-10 - -- We may observe here, I. The judgments of God which should certainly come upon these malicious persecutors of David. Though they encouraged themselve...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 64:7-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 64:7-10 - --
Deep is man's heart and inward part, but not too deep for God, who knoweth the heart (Jer 17:9.). And He will just as suddenly surprise the enemies ...
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 64:1-10 - --Psalm 64
In this psalm David asked God to judge the enemies of the righteous. He requested divine protec...
