
Text -- Psalms 77:1-4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Which to others was a time of rest and quietness.

Wesley: Psa 77:3 - -- Yea, the thoughts of God were now a matter of trouble, because he was angry with me.
Yea, the thoughts of God were now a matter of trouble, because he was angry with me.
JFB -> Psa 77:1; Psa 77:2; Psa 77:2; Psa 77:2; Psa 77:2; Psa 77:3-9; Psa 77:3-9; Psa 77:3-9; Psa 77:4
JFB: Psa 77:1 - -- To Jeduthun--(See on Psa 39:1, title). In a time of great affliction, when ready to despair, the Psalmist derives relief from calling to mind God's fo...
To Jeduthun--(See on Psa 39:1, title). In a time of great affliction, when ready to despair, the Psalmist derives relief from calling to mind God's former and wonderful works of delivering power and grace. (Psa. 77:1-20)
expresses the purport of the Psalm.


His sad state contrasted with former joys.


JFB: Psa 77:4 - -- Or, "fast," that I cannot sleep. Thus he is led to express his anxious feelings in several earnest questions indicative of impatient sorrow.
Or, "fast," that I cannot sleep. Thus he is led to express his anxious feelings in several earnest questions indicative of impatient sorrow.
Clarke: Psa 77:1 - -- I cried unto God - The repetition here marks the earnestness of the psalmist’ s soul; and the word voice shows that the Psalm was not the issue...
I cried unto God - The repetition here marks the earnestness of the psalmist’ s soul; and the word voice shows that the Psalm was not the issue of private meditation, but of deep mental trouble, which forced him to speak his griefs aloud.

Clarke: Psa 77:2 - -- My sore ran in the night, and ceased not - This is a most unaccountable translation; the literal meaning of ידי נגרה yadi niggerah , which w...
My sore ran in the night, and ceased not - This is a most unaccountable translation; the literal meaning of

Clarke: Psa 77:3 - -- My spirit was overwhelmed - As the verb is in the hithpaeI conjugation, the word must mean my spirit was overpowered in itself. It purposed to invol...
My spirit was overwhelmed - As the verb is in the hithpaeI conjugation, the word must mean my spirit was overpowered in itself. It purposed to involve itself in this calamity. I felt exquisitely for my poor suffering countrymen
"The generous mind is not confined at home
It spreads itself abroad through all the public
And feels for every member of the land."

Clarke: Psa 77:4 - -- Thou holdest mine eyes waking - Literally, thou keepest the watches of mine eyes - my grief is so great that I cannot sleep
Thou holdest mine eyes waking - Literally, thou keepest the watches of mine eyes - my grief is so great that I cannot sleep

Clarke: Psa 77:4 - -- I am so troubled that I cannot speak - This shows an increase of sorrow and anguish. At first he felt his misery, and called aloud. He receives more...
I am so troubled that I cannot speak - This shows an increase of sorrow and anguish. At first he felt his misery, and called aloud. He receives more light, sees and feels his deep wretchedness, and then his words are swallowed by excessive distress. His woes are too big for utterance. "Small troubles are loquacious; the great are dumb." Curae leves loquuntur; ingentes stupent .
Calvin: Psa 77:1 - -- 1.My voice came to God, and I cried This is not a mere complaint, as some interpreters explain it, denoting the surprise which the people of God felt...
1.My voice came to God, and I cried This is not a mere complaint, as some interpreters explain it, denoting the surprise which the people of God felt in finding that he who hitherto had been accustomed to grant their requests shut his ears to them, and was called upon in vain. It appears more probable that the prophet either speaks of the present feeling of his mind, or else calls to remembrance how he had experienced that God was inclined and ready to hear his prayers. There can be no doubt that he describes the greatness of the sorrow with which he was afflicted; and, in nay opinion, he denotes a continued act both by the past and the future tenses of the verbs. In the first place, he declares that he did not foolishly rend the air with his cries, like many who pour forth bitter cries without measure and at random under their sorrows; but that he addressed his speech to God when necessity constrained him to cry. The copula and, which is joined to the verb cried, should be resolved into the adverb of time when, in this way, When I cried my voice came to God At the same time, he also shows, that although he had been constrained often to reiterate his cries, he had not given over persevering in prayer. What is added immediately after is intended for the confirmation of his faith: And he heard me. The copula and, as in many other places, is here put instead of the causal adverb for. The meaning is, that he encouraged himself to cry to God, from the consideration that it was God’s usual manner to show his favor and mercy towards him.

Calvin: Psa 77:2 - -- 2.I sought the Lord in the day of my trouble In this verse he expresses more distinctly the grievous and hard oppression to which the Church was at t...
2.I sought the Lord in the day of my trouble In this verse he expresses more distinctly the grievous and hard oppression to which the Church was at that time subjected. There is, however, some ambiguity in the words. The Hebrew word

Calvin: Psa 77:3 - -- 3.I will remember God, and will be troubled The Psalmist here employs a variety of expressions to set forth the vehemence of his grief, and, at the s...
3.I will remember God, and will be troubled The Psalmist here employs a variety of expressions to set forth the vehemence of his grief, and, at the same time, the greatness of his affliction. He complains that what constituted the only remedy for allaying his sorrow became to him a source of disquietude. It may, indeed, seem strange that the minds of true believers should be troubled by remembering God. But the meaning of the inspired writer simply is, that although he thought upon God his distress of mind was not removed. It no doubt often happens that the remembrance of God in the time of adversity aggravates the anguish and trouble of the godly, as, for example, when they entertain the thought that he is angry with them. The prophet, however, does not mean that his heart was thrown into new distress and disquietude whenever God was brought to his recollection: he only laments that no consolation proceeded from God to afford him relief; and this is a trial which it is very hard to bear. It is not surprising to see the wicked racked with dreadful mental agony; for, since their great object and endeavor is to depart from God, they must suffer the punishment which they deserve, on account of their rebellion against him. But when the remembrance of God, from which we seek to draw consolation for mitigating our calamities, does not afford repose or tranquillity to our minds, we are ready to think that he is sporting with us. We are nevertheless taught from this passage, that however much we may experience of fretting, sorrow, and disquietude, we must persevere in calling upon God even in the midst of all these impediments.

Calvin: Psa 77:4 - -- 4.Thou hast held the watches of my eyes 288 This verse is to the same effect with the preceding. The Psalmist affirms that he spent whole nights in w...
4.Thou hast held the watches of my eyes 288 This verse is to the same effect with the preceding. The Psalmist affirms that he spent whole nights in watching, because God granted him no relief. The night in ancient times was usually divided into many watches; and, accordingly, he describes his continued grief, which pre. vented him from sleeping, by the metaphorical term watches. When he stated a little before that he prayed to God with a loud voice, and when he now affirms that he will remain silent, there seems to be some appearance of discrepancy. This difficulty has already been solved in our exposition of Psa 32:3, where we have shown that true believers, when overwhelmed with sorrow, do not continue in a state of unvarying uniformity, but sometimes give vent to sighs and complaints, while, at other times, they are silent as if their mouths were stopped. It is, therefore, not wonderful to find the prophet frankly confessing that he was so overwhelmed, and, as it were, choked, with calamities, as to be unable to open his mouth to utter even a single word.
TSK: Psa 77:1 - -- A Psalm : This Psalm is allowed by the best judges to have been written during the Babylonian captivity.
of Asaph : or, for Asaph, Psa 50:1 *title
I c...

TSK: Psa 77:2 - -- In the : Psa 18:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 88:1-3, Psa 102:1, Psa 102:2, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2; Gen 32:7-12, Gen 32:28; 2Ki 19:3, 2Ki 19:4, 2Ki 19:15-20; Isa 26...
In the : Psa 18:6, Psa 50:15, Psa 88:1-3, Psa 102:1, Psa 102:2, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2; Gen 32:7-12, Gen 32:28; 2Ki 19:3, 2Ki 19:4, 2Ki 19:15-20; Isa 26:9, Isa 26:16; Jon 2:1, Jon 2:2; 2Co 12:7, 2Co 12:8; Heb 5:7
my : Psa 6:2, Psa 6:3, Psa 38:3-8; 2Ch 6:28; Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6; Hos 5:13, Hos 6:1
sore : Heb. hand
my soul : Gen 37:35; Est 4:1-4; Pro 18:14; Jer 31:15; Joh 11:31

TSK: Psa 77:3 - -- I remembered : Job 6:4, Job 23:15, Job 23:16, Job 31:23; Jer 17:17
I complained : Psa. 88:3-18, 102:3-28; Job 7:11; Lam 3:17, Lam 3:39
spirit : Psa 55...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 77:1 - -- I cried unto God with my voice - That is, he cried or prayed audibly. It was not mere mental prayer. See the notes at Psa 3:4. Even unto G...
I cried unto God with my voice - That is, he cried or prayed audibly. It was not mere mental prayer. See the notes at Psa 3:4.
Even unto God with my voice - The repetition here is emphatic. The idea is that it was an earnest or fervent cry. Compare the notes at 2Co 12:8.
And he gave ear unto me - See Psa 5:1, note; Psa 17:6, note.

Barnes: Psa 77:2 - -- In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord - Compare the notes at Psa 50:15. This trouble may have been either mental or bodily; that is, it ma...
In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord - Compare the notes at Psa 50:15. This trouble may have been either mental or bodily; that is, it may have arisen from some form of disease, or it may have been that which sprang from difficulties in regard to the divine character, government, and dealings. That it "assumed"the latter form, even if it had its beginning in the former, is apparent from the following verses. Whether it was connected with any form of bodily disease must be determined by the proper interpretation of the next clause in this verse.
My sore ran in the night - Margin, "My hand."It is evident that our translators sup. posed that there was some bodily disease - some running sore - which was the cause of his trouble. Hence, they so rendered the Hebrew word. But it is now generally agreed that this is without authority. The Hebrew word is "hand"-
And ceased not - The word used here -
My soul refused to be comforted - I resisted all the suggestions that came to my own mind, that might have comforted me. My heart was so melancholy and downcast; my spirits were so crushed; my mind was so dark; I had become so morbid, that I loved to cherish these thoughts. I chose to dwell on them. They had obtained possession of me, and I could not let them go. There was nothing that my own mind could suggest, there was nothing that occurred to me, that would relieve the difficulty or restore peace to my soul. These sad and gloomy thoughts filled all my soul, and left no room for thoughts of consolation and peace. A truly pious man may, therefore, get into a state of mind - a sad, dispirited, melancholy, morbid state - in which nothing that can be said to him, nothing that will occur to himself, will give him comfort and peace. Compare Jer 31:15.

Barnes: Psa 77:3 - -- I remembered God - That is, I thought on God; I thought on his character, his government, and his dealings; I thought on the mysteries - the in...
I remembered God - That is, I thought on God; I thought on his character, his government, and his dealings; I thought on the mysteries - the incomprehensible things - the apparently unequal, unjust, and partial doings - of his administration. It is evident from the whole tenor of the psalm that these were the things which occupied his attention. He dwelt on them until his whole soul became sad; until his spirit became so overwhelmed that he could not find words in which to utter his thoughts.
And was troubled - The Septuagint renders this,
(a) what often occurs in the case of even a good man - that by dwelling on the dark and incomprehensible things of the divine administration, the soul becomes sad and troubled to an extent bordering on murmuring, complaint, and rebellion; and may also serve to illustrate
(b) what often happens in the mind of a sinner - that he delights to dwell on these things in the divine administration:
(1) as most in accordance with what he desires to think about God, or with the views which he wishes to cherish of him; and
(2) as justifying himself in his rebellion against God, and his refusal to submit to him - for if God is unjust, partial, and severe, the sinner is right; such a Being would be unworthy of trust and confidence; he ought to be opposed, and his claims ought to be resisted.
I complained - Or rather, I "mused"or "meditated."The word used here does not necessarily mean to complain. It is sometimes used in that sense, but its proper and common signification is to meditate. See Psa 119:15, Psa 119:23, Psa 119:27, Psa 119:48, Psa 119:78,Psa 119:148.
And my spirit was overwhelmed - With the result of my own reflections. That is, I was amazed or confounded by the thoughts that came in upon me.

Barnes: Psa 77:4 - -- Thou holdest mine eyes waking - literally, "Thou holdest the watchings of my eyes."Gesenius (Lexicon) translates the Hebrew word rendered "waki...
Thou holdest mine eyes waking - literally, "Thou holdest the watchings of my eyes."Gesenius (Lexicon) translates the Hebrew word rendered "waking,""eyelids."Probably that is the true idea. The eyelids are the watchers or guardians of the eyes. In danger, and in sleep, they close. Here the idea is, that God held them so that they did not close. He overcame the natural tendency of the eye to shut. In other words, the psalmist was kept awake; he could not sleep. This he traces to God. The idea is, that God so kept himself before his mind - that such ideas occurred to him in regard to God - that he could not sleep.
I am so troubled - With sad and dark views of God; so troubled in endeavoring to understand his character and doings; in explaining his acts; in painful ideas that suggest themselves in regard to his justice, his goodness, his mercy.
That I cannot speak - I am struck dumb. I know not what to say. I cannot find "anything"to say. He must have a heart singularly and happily free by nature from scepticism, or must have reflected little on the divine administration, who has not had thoughts pass through his mind like these. As the psalmist was a good man, a pious man, it is of importance to remark, in view of his experience, that such reflections occur not only to the minds of bad people - of the profane - of sceptics - of infidel philosophers, but they come unbidden into the minds of good people, and often in a form which they cannot calm down. He who has never had such thoughts, happy as he may and should deem himself that he has not had them, has never known some of the deepest stirrings and workings of the human soul on the subject of religion, and is little qualified to sympathize with a spirit torn, crushed, agitated, as was that of the psalmist on these questions, or as Augustine and thousands of others have been in after-times. But let not a man conclude, because he has these thoughts, that therefore he cannot be a friend of God - a converted man. The wicked man invites them, cherishes them, and rejoices that he can find what seem to him to be reasons for indulging in such thoughts against God; the good man is pained; struggles against them: endearours to banish them from his soul.
Poole: Psa 77:2 - -- My sore ran : the hand in the Hebrew tongue, and Scripture use, is oft put for a blow or stroke given by the hand. Heb. My hand , or hands , (the ...
My sore ran : the hand in the Hebrew tongue, and Scripture use, is oft put for a blow or stroke given by the hand. Heb. My hand , or hands , (the singular number being frequently put for the plural,)
flowed or poured forth i.e. spread abroad to God in prayer. This phrase he useth rather than were stretched out, which is frequent in like cases, to imply that his case was low and almost desperate, his spirits and strength quite gone, so that he was not able to stretch them out, as he had done.
In the night which to others was a time of rest and quietness, but to me of torment.
My soul refused to be comforted I rejected all those consolations which either my friends or my own mind suggested to me.

Poole: Psa 77:3 - -- Yea, the thoughts of God, and of his infinite power, and truth, and goodness, which used to be very sweet and comfortable to me, were now matter of ...
Yea, the thoughts of God, and of his infinite power, and truth, and goodness, which used to be very sweet and comfortable to me, were now matter of terror and trouble, because they were all engaged against me, and God himself, my only friend, was now very angry with me, and become mine enemy.
I complained unto God in prayer.
My spirit was overwhelmed so far was I from finding relief by my complaints, that they increased my misery.

Poole: Psa 77:4 - -- Thou holdest mine eyes waking by those sharp and continual griefs, and those perplexing and tormenting thoughts and cares, which from time to time th...
Thou holdest mine eyes waking by those sharp and continual griefs, and those perplexing and tormenting thoughts and cares, which from time to time thou stirrest up in me.
I am so troubled that I cannot speak the greatness of my sorrows stupifies my mind, and makes me both lifeless and unable to speak; nor can any words sufficiently express the extremity of my misery.
PBC -> Psa 77:1
PBC: Psa 77:1 - -- 3. This infallible assurance doth not so belong to the essence of faith, but that a true believer may wait long, and conflict with many difficulties, ...
3. This infallible assurance doth not so belong to the essence of faith, but that a true believer may wait long, and conflict with many difficulties, before he be Ps 88:1-18; 77:1-12 partaker of it; yet being enabled by the Spirit, to know the things which are freely given him of God, he may without extraordinary revelation in the right use of means 1Jo 4:13; Heb 6:11-12 attain thereunto; and therefore it is the duty of everyone to give all diligence to make his calling and election sure, that thereby his heart may be enlarged in peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, in love and thankfulness to God, and in strength and cheerfulness in the duties of obedience, the proper Ro 5:1-2,14,17; Ps 119:32 fruits of this assurance; so far is it Ro 6:1-2; Tit 2:11-12,14 from inclining men to looseness. (From London Confession of 1689)
See PBtop: PERSEVERANCE AND PRESERVATION
Haydock: Psa 77:1 - -- God's great benefits to the people of Israel, notwithstanding their ingratitude.
Angry. This is the sense of the Hebrew. Distulit means, "he def...
God's great benefits to the people of Israel, notwithstanding their ingratitude.
Angry. This is the sense of the Hebrew. Distulit means, "he deferred" (Haydock) to put his threats, (Berthier) or promises, in execution. (Menochius) ---
The destroyer punished those who gave way to murmuring, 1 Corinthians x., and Numbers xi. 1. (Calmet) ---
Their incredulity was punished (Worthington) for nearly forty years, and all the guilty who were twenty years old at the first numbering, were cut off in the desert. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 77:1 - -- Asaph. David composed this, to declare the rights of Juda to the throne, in preference to the tribe of Ephraim, (Lyranus) which had kept possession ...
Asaph. David composed this, to declare the rights of Juda to the throne, in preference to the tribe of Ephraim, (Lyranus) which had kept possession of the ark a long time; which was henceforth to be on Mount Sion. (Haydock) ---
It seems to relate to the times of Asa, who reunited several of the other tribes to his dominion, (2 Paralipomenon xv. 8.; Calmet) and contains a moral instruction, delivered in the person of Christ, (ver. 2.; Eusebius; Berthier) and submitted to the attentive consideration of the faithful. (Worthington) ---
Law. Given to Moses, (Berthier) and sanctioned by the divine authority. (Haydock) ---
The law, and the people were not David's, but God's, in whose name he speaks. (St. Gregory in Job ii.) (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 77:2 - -- Propositions. Deep and mysterious sayings. By this it appears, that the historical facts of ancient times, commemorated in this psalm, were deep an...
Propositions. Deep and mysterious sayings. By this it appears, that the historical facts of ancient times, commemorated in this psalm, were deep and mysterious; as being figures of great truths appertaining to the time of the New Testament. (Challoner) ---
St. Matthew (xiii. 35.) has, things hidden from the foundation of the world. Hebrew minni kedem, "from of old." St. Jerome, "ancient riddles." (Haydock) ---
Mashal and chidoth, "parables and enigmas." frequently denote things very plain, but spoken in a sententious poetic style, Numbers xxiii. 7. (Calmet) ---
The facts, &c., of the Old Testament, prefigured the mysteries of the New. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 77:3 - -- Fathers. Christ might thus speak as man, and he enforces tradition in the strongest terms. (Berthier) ---
Only some things were written. (Worthi...
Fathers. Christ might thus speak as man, and he enforces tradition in the strongest terms. (Berthier) ---
Only some things were written. (Worthington) ---
The most ancient and universal mode of instruction, was by word of mouth. (Haydock)
Gill: Psa 77:1 - -- I cried unto God with my voice,.... Which is to be understood of prayer, and that vocal, and which is importunate and fervent, being made in distress;...
I cried unto God with my voice,.... Which is to be understood of prayer, and that vocal, and which is importunate and fervent, being made in distress; see Psa 3:4, or "my voice was unto God" h, "and I cried"; it was directed to him, and expressed in a very loud and clamorous way:
even unto God with my voice; or "my voice was unto God"; which is repeated to show that he prayed again and again, with great eagerness and earnestness, his case being a very afflicted one:
and he gave ear unto me; his prayer was not without success; God is a God hearing and answering prayer, according to his promise, Psa 50:15.

Gill: Psa 77:2 - -- In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord,.... Not the creature, for help, and creature amusements to drive away trouble, but the Lord, in private, b...
In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord,.... Not the creature, for help, and creature amusements to drive away trouble, but the Lord, in private, by prayer and supplication; a time of trouble is a time for prayer, Jam 5:13, all men have their trouble, but the people of God more especially; and there are some particular times in which they have more than usual, and then it may be said to be "a day of trouble" with them; which sometimes arises from themselves, the strength of their corruptions, the weakness of their graces, their backwardness to duties, or poor performance of them; sometimes from others, from the profaneness or persecutions of the men of the world, from the heretical notions or wicked lives of professors; sometimes from the temptations of Satan, and at other times from the Lord himself more immediately, by his withdrawing his presence from them, or by laying his afflicting hand upon them; but, let the trouble come from what quarter it may, it is always right to seek the Lord. Some think reference is had to the time of trouble mentioned in Dan 12:1,
my sore ran in the night; my "stroke", or "wound" i; so Kimchi interprets it; the wound that was made in his soul, and the pain and anguish, grief and trouble, which flowed from it; see Jer 6:7 though the word may be literally rendered "my hand" k; and the sense is, either that his hand flowed or was wet with wiping his eyes, or with the tears that flowed from his eyes, which ran down to his fingers' ends; so the Targum,
"in the night my eye dropped with tears;''
or rather that his hand was stretched out, as waters, that are poured out and run, are spread, that is, in prayer; the stretching out of the hand being a prayer gesture:
and ceased not; was not remiss and feeble, or was not let down, as Moses's, Exo 17:11, it denotes the constancy of prayer, and his continuance in it; he prayed without ceasing:
my soul refused to be comforted: such was the greatness of his distress, like that of Jacob's and Rachel's, Gen 37:35, it is right to refuse comfort and peace, which men speak to themselves upon the false foundation of their own merit and works; or any but what comes from the God of all comfort, and through Christ, in whom is all solid consolation, and by his Spirit, who is the Comforter; but it is wrong to refuse any that comes from hence, and by means of the promises, the word and ordinances and ministries of the Gospel, or Christian friends; this shows the strength of unbelief.

Gill: Psa 77:3 - -- I remembered God, and was troubled,.... Either the mercy, grace, and goodness of God, as Jarchi; how ungrateful he had been to him, how sadly he had r...
I remembered God, and was troubled,.... Either the mercy, grace, and goodness of God, as Jarchi; how ungrateful he had been to him, how sadly he had requited him, how unthankful and unholy he was, notwithstanding so much kindness; and when he called this to mind it troubled him; or when he remembered the grace and goodness of God to him in time past, and how it was with him now, that it was not with him as then; this gave him uneasiness, and set him a praying and crying, that it might be with him as heretofore, Job 29:2, or rather he remembered the greatness and majesty of God, his power and his justice, his purity and holiness, and himself as a worm, a poor weak creature, sinful dust and ashes, not able to stand before him; he considered him not as his father and friend, but as an angry Judge, incensed against him, and demanding satisfaction of him:
I complained; of sin and sorrow, of affliction and distress: or "I prayed", or "meditated" l; he thought on his case, and prayed over it, and poured out his complaint unto God, yet found no relief:
and my spirit was overwhelmed; covered with grief and sorrow, pressed down with affliction, ready to sink and faint under it:
Selah: See Gill on Psa 3:2.

Gill: Psa 77:4 - -- Thou holdest mine eyes waking,.... Or, "the watches", or rather "keepers of the eyes" m; the eyebrows, which protect the eyes; these were held, so tha...
Thou holdest mine eyes waking,.... Or, "the watches", or rather "keepers of the eyes" m; the eyebrows, which protect the eyes; these were held, so that he could not shut them, and get any sleep; so R. Moses Haccohen interprets the words, as Jarchi observes; and so the Targum,
"thou holdest the brows of my eyes;''
a person in trouble, when he can get some sleep, it interrupts his sorrow, weakens it at least, if it does not put a stop to it; wherefore it is a great mercy to have sleep, and that refreshing, Psa 127:1, but to have this denied, and to have wearisome nights, and be in continual tossing to and fro, is very distressing:
I am so troubled that I cannot speak; his spirits were so sunk with weariness, and want of sleep in the night, that he could not speak in the morning; or his heart was so full with sorrow, that he could not utter himself; or it was so great that he could not express it; or his thoughts were such that he dared not declare them; or he was so straitened and shut up in himself that he could not go on speaking unto God in prayer.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 77:1 The perfect with vav (ו) consecutive is best taken as future here (although some translations render this as a past tense; cf. NEB, NIV). The ps...

NET Notes: Psa 77:2 Or “my soul.” The Hebrew term נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh) with a pronominal suffix is often equivalent to a pronou...

NET Notes: Psa 77:3 Heb “I will remember God and I will groan, I will reflect and my spirit will grow faint.” The first three verbs are cohortatives, the last...

NET Notes: Psa 77:4 The imperfect is used in the second clause to emphasize that this was an ongoing condition in the past.
Geneva Bible: Psa 77:1 "To the chief Musician, to Jeduthun, A Psalm of Asaph." I cried unto God with my ( a ) voice, [even] unto God with my voice; and he gave ear unto me. ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 77:3 I remembered God, and was ( b ) troubled: I complained, and my spirit was overwhelmed. Selah.
( b ) He shows that we must patiently abide though God ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 77:4 Thou holdest mine eyes ( c ) waking: I am so troubled that I cannot speak.
( c ) Meaning that his sorrows were as watchmen that kept his eyes from sl...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 77:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Psa 77:1-20 - --1 The psalmist shews what fierce combat he had with diffidence.10 The victory which he had by consideration of God's great and gracious works.
MHCC -> Psa 77:1-10
MHCC: Psa 77:1-10 - --Days of trouble must be days of prayer; when God seems to have withdrawn from us, we must seek him till we find him. In the day of his trouble the psa...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 77:1-10
Matthew Henry: Psa 77:1-10 - -- We have here the lively portraiture of a good man under prevailing melancholy, fallen into and sinking in that horrible pit and that miry clay, but ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 77:1-3; Psa 77:4-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 77:1-3 - --
The poet is resolved to pray without intermission, and he prays; fore his soul is comfortless and sorely tempted by the vast distance between the fo...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 77:4-9 - --
He calls his eyelids the "guards of my eyes."He who holds these so that they remain open when they want to shut together for sleep, is God; for his ...
Constable: Psa 73:1--89:52 - --I. Book 3: chs 73--89
A man or men named Asaph wrote 17 of the psalms in this book (Pss. 73-83). Other writers w...

Constable: Psa 77:1-20 - --Psalm 77
Asaph described himself as tossing and turning on his bed unable to sleep. He found that medita...
