
Text -- Psalms 72:18 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 72:18-19
JFB: Psa 72:18-19 - -- These words close the Psalm in terms consistent with the style of the context, while Psa 72:20 is evidently, from its prosaic style, an addition for t...
Clarke: Psa 72:18 - -- Blessed be the Lord God - David foresaw all Solomon’ s grandeur; his justice equity, and the happiness of the subjects under his government; an...
Blessed be the Lord God - David foresaw all Solomon’ s grandeur; his justice equity, and the happiness of the subjects under his government; and his soul has, in consequence, sensations of pleasure and gratitude to God, which even his own wondrous pen cannot describe. But it is worthy of remark, that God did not reveal to him the apostasy of this beloved son. He did not foresee that this once holy, happy, wise, and prosperous man would be the means of debasing the Divine worship, and establishing the grossest idolatry in Israel. God hid this from his eyes, that his heart might not be grieved, and that he might die in peace. Besides, there was still much contingency in the business. God would not predict a thing as absolutely certain, which was still poised between a possibility of being and not being; the scale of which he had left, as he does all contingencies, to the free-will of his creature to turn

Clarke: Psa 72:18 - -- Who only doeth wondrous things - God alone works miracles: wherever there is a miracle there is God. No creature can invert or suspend the course an...
Who only doeth wondrous things - God alone works miracles: wherever there is a miracle there is God. No creature can invert or suspend the course and laws of nature; this is properly the work of God. Jesus Christ, most incontrovertibly, wrought such miracles; therefore, most demonstrably, Jesus Christ is God.
Calvin -> Psa 72:18
Calvin: Psa 72:18 - -- 18.Blessed be Jehovah God! the God of Israel 147 David, after having prayed for prosperity to his successors, breaks forth in praising God, because h...
18.Blessed be Jehovah God! the God of Israel 147 David, after having prayed for prosperity to his successors, breaks forth in praising God, because he was assured by the divine oracle that his prayers would not be in vain. Had he not with the eyes of faith beheld those things which we have seen above, his rejoicing would have been less free and lively. When he says that God alone doeth wonderful things, this, no doubt, is spoken in reference to the subject of which he is presently treating, with the view not only of commending the excellence of the kingdom, but also to admonish himself and others of the need which there is that God should display his wonderful and stupendous power for its preservation. And certainly it was not owing to any of David’s successors, a few excepted, that the royal throne did not fall a hundred times, yea, was not even completely ruined. To go no farther, was not Solomon’s most disgraceful apostasy deserving of utter destruction? And as to the rest of his successors, with the exception of Josias, Hezekiah, Jehoshaphat, and a few others, did they not fall from evil to worse, as if each strove to outstrip his predecessor, and thus so provoked the wrath of God, as it were deliberately, that it is wonderful that he did not immediately launch the thunderbolts of his vengeance upon the whole race utterly to destroy them? Moreover, as David, being endued with the Spirit of prophecy, was not ignorant that Satan would always continue to be a cruel enemy of the Church’s welfare, he doubtless knew that the grace of God, of which he presently speaks, would have great and arduous difficulties to overcome in order to continue for ever in his own nation. And the event afterwards unquestionably showed by how many miracles God accomplished his promises, whether we consider the return of his people from the captivity of Babylon, or the astonishing deliverances which followed until Christ as a tender branch sprung out of a dead tree. David, therefore, with good reason prays that the glory of the divine name may fill the whole earth, since that kingdom was to be extended even to the uttermost boundaries of the globe, And that all the godly, with earnest and ardent affection of heart, may unite with him in the same prayers, there is added a confirmation in the words, Amen, and Amen
TSK -> Psa 72:18
TSK: Psa 72:18 - -- Blessed : Psa 41:13, Psa 68:35, Psa 106:48; 1Ch 29:10, 1Ch 29:20
who only : Psa 77:14, Psa 86:10, Psa 136:4; Exo 15:11; Job 9:10; Dan 4:2, Dan 4:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 72:18
Barnes: Psa 72:18 - -- Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel - The God who rules over Israel; the God who is worshipped by the Hebrew people, and who is recogniz...
Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel - The God who rules over Israel; the God who is worshipped by the Hebrew people, and who is recognized as their God. They adore him as the true God; and he "is"their God, their Protector, their Friend.
Who only doeth wondrous things - Things that can properly be regarded as "wonders;"things suited to excite admiration by their vastness and power. Compare Exo 15:11.
Poole -> Psa 72:18
Poole: Psa 72:18 - -- Who hath given to his people such a glorious and excellent king and governor, and such wonderful blessings as they do and shall enjoy under his gove...
Who hath given to his people such a glorious and excellent king and governor, and such wonderful blessings as they do and shall enjoy under his government.
Haydock -> Psa 72:18
Haydock: Psa 72:18 - -- Thou hast put it to them. In punishment of their deceits, or for deceiving them, thou hast brought evils upon them in their last end, which in their...
Thou hast put it to them. In punishment of their deceits, or for deceiving them, thou hast brought evils upon them in their last end, which in their prosperity they never apprehended. (Challoner) ---
Septuagint, &c., add, "thou hast placed evils." St. Ambrose reads, "goods." (Calmet) ---
Dolos, seems to form part of both sentences, " for deceits thou hast put deceits. " (Berthier) ---
With the perverse, thou wilt be perverted, Psalm xvii. 27. Protestants, "surely thou didst set them in slippery places, thou callest them down into destruction;" (Haydock) or, "when they were lifted up." Do the rich think, that their prosperity may be an effect of God's indignation? (Calmet) ---
We are here informed, in general, that evils are prepared to punish sins. (Worthington) ---
The wicked have risen by their crimes to such a slippery situation. (Menochius)
Gill -> Psa 72:18
Gill: Psa 72:18 - -- Blessed be the Lord God,.... The Messiah, who is truly and properly God, Jehovah, Lord of all, and the Lord our righteousness; to whom such a doxolog...
Blessed be the Lord God,.... The Messiah, who is truly and properly God, Jehovah, Lord of all, and the Lord our righteousness; to whom such a doxology or ascription of glory and blessing properly belongs, since all good things are from him, and by him;
the God of Israel; that brought Israel out of Egypt; went before them in the wilderness; redeemed and saved them, and bore and carried them all the days of old; and in whom all the true Israel of God are justified, and shall be saved with an everlasting salvation;
who only doeth wondrous things; in the creation of all things out of nothing; in the government of the world; and in the redemption and salvation of his people; which is a very marvellous thing: as that God should become man, suffer and die in the room of men, and save them from sin and ruin; this wondrous thing. Christ has done alone, and there was none with him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 72:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Psa 72:1-20 - --1 David, praying for Solomon, shews the goodness and glory of his kingdom, and in type of Christ's kingdom18 He blesses God.
MHCC -> Psa 72:18-20
MHCC: Psa 72:18-20 - --We are taught to bless God in Christ, for all he has done for us by him. David is earnest in prayer for the fulfilment of this prophecy and promise. I...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 72:18-20
Matthew Henry: Psa 72:18-20 - -- Such an illustrious prophecy as is in the foregoing verses of the Messiah and his kingdom may fitly be concluded, as it is here, with hearty prayers...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 72:18-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 72:18-19 - --
Closing Beracha of the Second Book of the Psalter. It is more full-toned than that of the First Book, and God is intentionally here called Jahve ...
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 72:1-20 - --Psalm 72
This is one of two psalms that attribute authorship to Solomon in the superscription (cf. Ps. 1...
