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Text -- Psalms 65:11 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 65:6-13; Psa 65:11
JFB: Psa 65:6-13 - -- God's great power and goodness are the grounds of this confidence. These are illustrated in His control of the mightiest agencies of nature and nation...
God's great power and goodness are the grounds of this confidence. These are illustrated in His control of the mightiest agencies of nature and nations affecting men with awe and dread (Psa 26:7; Psa 98:1, &c.), and in His fertilizing showers, causing the earth to produce abundantly for man and beast.
Clarke: Psa 65:11 - -- Thou crownest the year - A full and plentiful harvest is the crown of the year; and this springs from the unmerited goodness of God. This is the dia...
Thou crownest the year - A full and plentiful harvest is the crown of the year; and this springs from the unmerited goodness of God. This is the diadem of the earth;
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Clarke: Psa 65:11 - -- Thy paths drop fatness - מעגליך magaleycha , "thy orbits."The various planets, which all have their revolutions within the zodiacal space, ar...
Thy paths drop fatness -
Calvin -> Psa 65:11
Calvin: Psa 65:11 - -- 11.Thou crownest the year with thy goodness 461 Some read — Thou crownest the year of thy goodness; as if the Psalmist meant that the fertile y...
11.Thou crownest the year with thy goodness 461 Some read — Thou crownest the year of thy goodness; as if the Psalmist meant that the fertile year had a peculiar glory attached to it, and were crowned, so to speak, by God. Thus, if there was a more abundant crop or vintage than usual, this would be the crown of the year. And it must be granted that God does not bless every year alike. Still there is none but what is crowned with some measure of excellency; and for that reason it would seem best to retain the simpler rendering of the words, and view them as meaning that the Divine goodness is apparent in the annual returns of the season. The Psalmist further explains what he intended, when he adds, that the paths of God dropped fatness, — using this as a metaphorical term for the clouds, upon which God rideth, as upon chariots, as we read in Psa 104:3 462 The earth derives its fruitfulness from the sap or moisture; this comes from the rain, and the rain from the clouds. With a singular gracefulness of expression, these are therefore represented as dropping fatness, and this because they are the paths or vehicles of God; as if he had said, that, wherever the Deity walked there flowed down from his feet fruits in endless variety and abundance. He amplifies this goodness of God, by adding, that his fatness drops even upon the wilder and more uncultivated districts. The wilderness is not to be taken here for the absolute waste where nothing grows, but for such places as are not so well cultivated, where there are few inhabitants, and where, notwithstanding, the Divine goodness is even more illustrated than elsewhere in dropping down fatness upon the tops of the mountains. 463 Notice is next taken of the valleys and level grounds, to show that there is no part of the earth overlooked by God, and that the riches of his liberality extend over all the world. The variety of its manifestation is commended when it is added, that the valleys and lower grounds are clothed with flocks, 464 as well as with corn. He represents inanimate things as rejoicing, which may be said of them in a certain sense, as when we speak of the fields smiling, when they refresh our eye with their beauty. It may seem strange, that he should first tell us, that they shout for joy, and then add the feebler expression, that they sing; interposing, too, the intensative particle,
TSK -> Psa 65:11
TSK: Psa 65:11 - -- crownest : Psa 5:12 *marg. Psa 103:4; Pro 14:18; Heb 2:7-9
with thy : Heb. of thy
thy paths : Psa 25:10, Psa 104:3; Joe 2:14, Joe 2:21-26; Hag 2:19; M...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 65:11
Barnes: Psa 65:11 - -- Thou crownest the year with thy goodness - Margin, the year of thy goodness. The Hebrew is literally the year of thy goodness - meaning a year ...
Thou crownest the year with thy goodness - Margin, the year of thy goodness. The Hebrew is literally the year of thy goodness - meaning a year remarkable for the manifestation of kindness; or a year of abundant productions. But the Hebrew will admit of the other construction, meaning that God crowns or adorns the year, as it revolves, with his goodness; or that the harvests, the fruits, the flowers of the year are, as it were, a crown set on the head of the year. The Septuagint renders it, "Thou wilt bless the crown of the year of thy goodness."DeWette renders it, "Thou crownest the year with thy blessing."Luther, "Thou crownest the year with good."On the whole, the most probable meaning is that expressed in our common version, referring to the beauty and the abundant productions of the year as if they were a crown on its head. The seasons are often personified, and the year is here represented as a beautiful female, perhaps, walking forward with a diadem on her brow.
And thy paths drop fatness - That is, fertility; or, Fertility attends thy goings. The word rendered "drop,"means properly to distil; to let fall gently, as the rain or the dew falls to the earth; and the idea is, that whereever God goes, marching through the earth, fertility, beauty, abundance seems to distil or to fall gently along his path. God, in the advancing seasons, passes along through the earth, and rich abundance springs up wherever he goes.
Poole -> Psa 65:11
Poole: Psa 65:11 - -- Thou, by thy powerful goodness, dost enrich and adorn all the seasons of the year with their proper fruits and blessings.
Thy paths the clouds, up...
Thou, by thy powerful goodness, dost enrich and adorn all the seasons of the year with their proper fruits and blessings.
Thy paths the clouds, upon which God is frequently said to walk or ride, as Job 36:28 38:26,27 Ps 104:3 Nah 1:3 ; which sense is favoured by the next verse, where these paths are said to drop , &c.
Drop fatness make the earth fat and fruitful.
Haydock -> Psa 65:11
Haydock: Psa 65:11 - -- Back. Hebrew, "loins." The Captives had experienced the greatest miseries, as the martyrs of Christ have done since. (Calmet) ---
The Church is p...
Back. Hebrew, "loins." The Captives had experienced the greatest miseries, as the martyrs of Christ have done since. (Calmet) ---
The Church is put to the most severe trials. (Worthington) ---
Yet God brings no one into the net of sin. This is solely the effect of man's corruption. (Haydock)
Gill -> Psa 65:11
Gill: Psa 65:11 - -- Thou crownest the year with thy goodness,.... The whole circling year, from one end of it to the other; particularly that season of it when the harves...
Thou crownest the year with thy goodness,.... The whole circling year, from one end of it to the other; particularly that season of it when the harvest is gathered in; the seed being sown, the earth watered, the springing of it blessed, and the corn brought to perfection, the year is crowned with a plentiful harvest: this may denote the acceptable year of the Lord, the year of the redeemed, the whole Gospel dispensation, Isa 61:2; in certain seasons and periods of which there have been great gatherings of souls to Christ; at the first of it multitudes were converted in Judea, and in the Gentile world, which were the first fruits of the Spirit; and in all ages there have been more or less instances of this kind; and in the latter day there will be a large harvest, when the Jews will be converted, and the fulness of the Gentiles brought in;
and thy paths drop fatness; the heavens, as Jarchi interprets it; or the clouds, as Kimchi; which are the chariots and horses of God, in which he rides, and are the dust of his feet, Psa 104:3, Nah 1:3; and these drop down rain upon the earth, and make it fat and flourishing; and may mystically design the administration of the Gospel, and the administration of ordinances; which are the paths in which the Lord goes forth to his people, and directs them to walk in, and in which he meets them with a fulness of blessings, and satisfies them as with marrow and fatness.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 65:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Psa 65:1-13 - --1 David praises God for his grace.4 The blessedness of God's chosen by reason of benefits.
MHCC -> Psa 65:6-13
MHCC: Psa 65:6-13 - --That Almighty strength which sets fast the mountains, upholds the believer. That word which stills the stormy ocean, and speaks it into a calm, can si...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 65:6-13
Matthew Henry: Psa 65:6-13 - -- That we may be the more affected with the wonderful condescensions of the God of grace, it is of use to observe his power and sovereignty as the God...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 65:9-13
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 65:9-13 - --
The praise of God on account of the present year's rich blessing, which He has bestowed upon the land of His people. In Psa 65:10, Psa 65:11 God is ...
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 65:1-13 - --Psalm 65
This song celebrates God's blessing His people with a bountiful land. David explained that God ...
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