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Text -- Psalms 80:12-19 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Taken away thy protection.
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Wesley: Psa 80:16 - -- Thy people, signified by the vine. So now he passes from the metaphor to the thing designed by it.
Thy people, signified by the vine. So now he passes from the metaphor to the thing designed by it.
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Wesley: Psa 80:17 - -- hand - Benjamin signifies the son of the right hand, a dearly beloved son, as Benjamin was to Jacob.
hand - Benjamin signifies the son of the right hand, a dearly beloved son, as Benjamin was to Jacob.
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Wesley: Psa 80:17 - -- The people of Israel, who are often spoken of as one person, as God's son and first-born.
The people of Israel, who are often spoken of as one person, as God's son and first-born.
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Revolt from thee to idolatry or wickedness.
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Revive and restore us to our tranquility.
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Or, "And protect or guard what thy right hand," &c.
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JFB: Psa 80:15 - -- Literally, "over the Son of man," preceding this phrase, with "protect" or "watch."
Literally, "over the Son of man," preceding this phrase, with "protect" or "watch."
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A tacit allusion to the plea for help; for
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The "people" are suffering from Thy displeasure.
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JFB: Psa 80:17 - -- May allude to Benjamin (Gen 35:18). The terms in the latter clause correspond with those of Psa 80:15, from "and the branch," &c., literally, and conf...
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JFB: Psa 80:18 - -- We need quickening grace (Psa 71:20; Psa 119:25) to persevere in Thy right worship (Gen 4:26; Rom 10:11).
We need quickening grace (Psa 71:20; Psa 119:25) to persevere in Thy right worship (Gen 4:26; Rom 10:11).
Clarke: Psa 80:12 - -- Why hast thou broken down -
7. When a vineyard is planted, it is properly fenced to preserve it from being trodden down, or otherwise injured by bea...
Why hast thou broken down -
7. When a vineyard is planted, it is properly fenced to preserve it from being trodden down, or otherwise injured by beasts, and to protect the fruit from being taken by the unprincipled passenger. So God protected Jerusalem and his temple by his own almighty arm; and none of their enemies could molest them as long as they had that protection. As it was now spoiled, it was a proof that that protection had been withdrawn; therefore the psalmist addresses the Lord with, "Why hast thou broken down her hedges?"Had God continued his protection, Jerusalem would not have been destroyed.
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Clarke: Psa 80:13 - -- The boar out of the wood - Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, who was a fierce and cruel sovereign. The allusion is plain. The wild hops and buffaloes...
The boar out of the wood - Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, who was a fierce and cruel sovereign. The allusion is plain. The wild hops and buffaloes make sad havoc in the fields of the Hindoos, and in their orchards: to keep them out, men are placed at night on covered stages in the fields.
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Clarke: Psa 80:14 - -- Return - O God of hosts - Thou hast abandoned us, and therefore our enemies have us in captivity. Come back to us, and we shall again be restored
Return - O God of hosts - Thou hast abandoned us, and therefore our enemies have us in captivity. Come back to us, and we shall again be restored
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Clarke: Psa 80:14 - -- Behold, and visit this vine - Consider the state of thy own people, thy own worship, thy own temple. Look down! Let thine eye affect thy heart.
Behold, and visit this vine - Consider the state of thy own people, thy own worship, thy own temple. Look down! Let thine eye affect thy heart.
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Clarke: Psa 80:15 - -- The vineyard which thy right hand hath planted - Thy holy and pure worship which thy Almighty power had established in this city
The vineyard which thy right hand hath planted - Thy holy and pure worship which thy Almighty power had established in this city
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Clarke: Psa 80:15 - -- And the branch - thou madest strong for thy self - The original ועל בן veal ben , "and upon the Son whom thou hast strengthened for thyself."M...
And the branch - thou madest strong for thy self - The original
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Clarke: Psa 80:17 - -- The man of thy right hand - The only person who can be said to be at the right hand of God as intercessor, is Jesus the Messiah. Let him become our ...
The man of thy right hand - The only person who can be said to be at the right hand of God as intercessor, is Jesus the Messiah. Let him become our Deliverer: appoint him for this purpose, and let his strength be manifested In our weakness! By whom are the Jews to be restored, if indeed they ever be restored to their own land, but by Jesus Christ? By Him alone can they find mercy; through Him alone can they ever be reconciled to God.
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Clarke: Psa 80:18 - -- So wilt not we go back from thee - We shall no more become idolaters: and it is allowed on all hands that the Jews were never guilty of idolatry aft...
So wilt not we go back from thee - We shall no more become idolaters: and it is allowed on all hands that the Jews were never guilty of idolatry after their return from the Babylonish captivity
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Quicken us - Make us alive, for we are nearly as good as dead
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Clarke: Psa 80:18 - -- We will call upon they name - We will invoke thee. Thou shalt be for ever the object of our adoration, and the center of all our hopes.
We will call upon they name - We will invoke thee. Thou shalt be for ever the object of our adoration, and the center of all our hopes.
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Turn as again - Redeem us from this captivity
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Clarke: Psa 80:19 - -- O Lord God of hosts - Thou who hast all power in heaven and earth, the innumerable hosts of both worlds being at thy command
O Lord God of hosts - Thou who hast all power in heaven and earth, the innumerable hosts of both worlds being at thy command
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Clarke: Psa 80:19 - -- Cause thy face to shine - Let us know that thou art reconciled to us. Let us once more enjoy thy approbation. Smile upon thy poor rebels, weary of t...
Cause thy face to shine - Let us know that thou art reconciled to us. Let us once more enjoy thy approbation. Smile upon thy poor rebels, weary of their sins, and prostrate at thy feet, imploring mercy
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Clarke: Psa 80:19 - -- And we shall be saved - From the power and oppression of the Chaldeans, from the guilt and condemnation of our sins, and from thy wrath and everlast...
And we shall be saved - From the power and oppression of the Chaldeans, from the guilt and condemnation of our sins, and from thy wrath and everlasting displeasure. Thus, O God, save Us
Calvin: Psa 80:12 - -- 12.Why then hast thou broken down its hedges? This is the application of the similitude; for nothing seems more inconsistent than that God should aba...
12.Why then hast thou broken down its hedges? This is the application of the similitude; for nothing seems more inconsistent than that God should abandon the vine which he had planted with his own hand, to be rooted up by wild beasts. It is true that he often threatened and forewarned the people by his prophets that he would do this; but what constrained him to inflict upon them so strange and dreadful a species of punishment was, that he might render their ingratitude the more detestable. At the same time, it is not without reason that true believers are enjoined to take encouragement from such distinguished liberality on the part of God; that, even in the midst of this rooting up, they might at least hope that He, who never forsakes the work of his own hands, would graciously extend his care towards them, (Psa 138:8.) The people were brought to desolation, on account of their own incurable obstinacy; but God did not fail to save a small number of shoots, by means of which he afterwards restored his vine. This form of supplicating pardon was, indeed, set forth for the use of the whole people, with the view of preventing a horrible destruction. But as very few sought to appease the wrath of God by truly humbling themselves before him, it was enough that these few were delivered from destruction, that from them a new vine might afterwards spring up and flourish. The indignity which was done to the Church is aggravated from the contrast contained in the words, when God, on the one hand, is exhibited to us as a vine-keeper, and when the destroyers of this vine, on the other, are represented to be not only all that pass by, but also the wild boars and other savage beasts. The word
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Calvin: Psa 80:14 - -- 14.Return, I beseech thee, O God of Hosts! In these words it is intended to teach, that we ought not to yield to temptation although God should hide ...
14.Return, I beseech thee, O God of Hosts! In these words it is intended to teach, that we ought not to yield to temptation although God should hide his face from us for a time, yea even although to the eye of sense and reason he should seem to be alienated from us. For, provided he is sought in the confident expectation of his showing mercy, he will become reconciled, and receive into his favor those whom he seemed to have cast off. It was a distinguished honor for the seed of Abraham to be accounted the vineyard of God; but while the faithful adduce this consideration as an argument for obtaining the favor of God, instead of bringing forward any claims of their own, they only beseech him not to cease to exercise his accustomed liberality towards them. The words, from heaven, have, no doubt, been introduced, that the faithful might find no difficulty in extending their faith to a distance, although God, from whom they had departed, was far from them; and, farther that if they saw no prospect of deliverance upon earth, they might lift up their eyes to heaven.
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Calvin: Psa 80:15 - -- As to the word כנה , cannah, 398 in the beginning of the 15th verse, I readily acquiesce in the sense given of it by some who translate it, a ...
As to the word
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Calvin: Psa 80:16 - -- 16.It is burnt with fire The calamities of the people are now more clearly expressed. 399 It had been said that the Lord’s vine was abandoned to th...
16.It is burnt with fire The calamities of the people are now more clearly expressed. 399 It had been said that the Lord’s vine was abandoned to the wild beasts, that they might lay it waste. But it was a greater calamity for it to be consumed with fire, rooted up and utterly destroyed. The Israelites had perfidiously apostatised from the true religion; but, as has been previously observed, they were still a part of the Church. We are accordingly warned by this melancholy example, of the severity of the punishment due to our ingratitude, especially when it is joined with obstinacy, which prevents the threatenings and rebukes of God, however sharp and severe they may be, from being of any benefit to us. Let us also learn from the same example, when the Divine anger is blazing all around, and even when we are in the midst of its burning flames, to cast all our sorrows into the bosom of God, who, in a wonderful manner, raises up his Church from the gulf of destruction. He would assuredly be ready not only to exercise without interruption his favor towards us, but also to enrich us with his blessings more and more, did not our wickedness hinder him. As it is impossible for him not to be angry at the many offenses which we have committed, it is an evidence of unparalleled mercy for him to extinguish the fire which we ourselves have kindled, and which has spread far and wide, and to save some portion or remnant of the Church, or, to speak more properly, to raise up even from the very ashes a people to call upon his name. It is again repeated that the Church perished not by the strength and arms of her enemies, but at the rebuke of God’s countenance. Never can we expect any alleviation of our punishment, unless we are fully persuaded that we are justly chastised by the hand of God. It was a good sign of the repentance of these Israelites that, as is observed in Isa 9:12, “they looked to the hand of him who smote them.”
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Calvin: Psa 80:17 - -- 17.Let that hand be upon the Man of thy right hand Here the Psalmist repeats in plain words the prayer which he had expressed under the figure of a v...
17.Let that hand be upon the Man of thy right hand Here the Psalmist repeats in plain words the prayer which he had expressed under the figure of a vineyard, pleading that God would defend, under his hand, the Man of his right hand, and the Son of man whom he hath strengthened for himself It is uncertain whether he speaks of the king alone, or whether the people also are included. Although Jeroboam was anointed to be king, yet he did not come to the possession of the royal dignity in a lawful way; and God never so approved of any of his successors, as to divest the posterity of David of the right and power of dominion. God, as we have seen in Psa 78:67, did not choose the tribe of Ephraim. on the contrary, the scepter, by his immutable decree, was given to the house of Judah, as is plainly taught in the prophecy of Jacob, (Gen 49:10.) It was therefore a base and wicked dismembering of the body, when the majority of the people revolted from the house of David, and submitted themselves to Jeroboam as their king. Such being the ease, why then, it may be said, is the king of Israel prayed for in this manner? For removing this difficulty, let it be observed, that although that kingdom had an untoward commencement, and God, as is stated in Hos 13:11, gave them a king in his anger, yet he was afterwards pleased to tolerate its continuance; and the anointing of Jeroboam testified that he had ratified what had been unadvisedly and wickedly done by the tumult and rebellion of the people. The nation of Israel might therefore say that their king was created and established by God, who, with the view of remedying the rupture which had been made, added him as a sharer in the royal dignity to the children of David. By that rent the state of the people was greatly impaired; but, to prevent an entire overthrow, the erection of the ten tribes into a separate kingdom, under the sovereignty of Jeroboam, was, as it were, a pillar put under it by the secret counsel of God to uphold it.
I have, however, no hesitation in considering the whole body of the Church as comprehended under the expressions, the Man of God’s right hand, and the Son of man The similar number is very properly made use of, it having been the Divine will that the chosen people should be as one man. For the same reason, the Apostle Paul also, in Gal 3:16, lays great stress upon the words, one seed; for Ishmael, Esau, and others, were separated and scattered when God redeemed arm gathered together the seed of Abraham. Thus, by the Son of man is to be understood the people whom God had adopted to himself, that they might be as one man. 400 But as this oneness depended upon the head, I readily admit that the phrase has a particular reference to the king, who preserved the greater part of the people from being involved in utter destruction. Here again the Prophet, in seeking to obtain the Divine favor, founds his argument and hope only upon the benefits which God had formerly conferred upon them. “Lord,” as if he had said, “since it belongs to thee to perfect that which thou hast begun, preserve the king whom thou hast given us!”
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Calvin: Psa 80:18 - -- In the 18th verse, the faithful engage, upon God’s hearing them, gratefully to acknowledge his goodness, not only by rendering to him the sacrifice...
In the 18th verse, the faithful engage, upon God’s hearing them, gratefully to acknowledge his goodness, not only by rendering to him the sacrifice of praise, but also by their whole life. Calling upon God’s name, is here to be understood of “the calves of the lips,” (Hos 45:3;) but when it is said, We will not go back from thee, this means the uniform and continued course of the whole life. The verse, however, may be interpreted thus: O Lord! we will continue in our obedience to thee, even when our circumstances, so far as we can perceive, are hopeless; never shall the sharpness of our calamities have the effect of driving us to apostasy from thee: and when we are restored by thy grace and power, we will magnify thy name. It would be superfluous to make any farther observations on the last verse, which is repeated for the third time.
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TSK: Psa 80:13 - -- The boar : This wild boar, chazir , is the parent stock of our domestic hog. He is much smaller, but stronger, and more undaunted, colour, an iron ...
The boar : This wild boar,
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TSK: Psa 80:14 - -- Return : Psa 7:7, Psa 90:13; Isa 63:15, Isa 63:17; Joe 2:14; Mal 3:7; Act 15:16
look down : Psa 33:13; Isa 63:15; Lam 3:50; Dan 9:16-19
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TSK: Psa 80:15 - -- vineyard : Psa 80:8; Isa 5:1, Isa 5:2; Jer 2:21; Mar 12:1; Joh 15:1
the branch : Or, ""the Son,""ben , or as 18 manuscripts, LXX, Vulgate, Syriac, A...
vineyard : Psa 80:8; Isa 5:1, Isa 5:2; Jer 2:21; Mar 12:1; Joh 15:1
the branch : Or, ""the Son,""
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TSK: Psa 80:16 - -- burned : Psa 79:5; Isa 27:11; Eze 20:47, Eze 20:48; Joh 15:6
perish : Psa 39:11, Psa 76:6, Psa 76:7, Psa 90:7; 2Th 1:9
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TSK: Psa 80:18 - -- So will : Psa 79:13; Joh 6:66-69; Heb 10:38, Heb 10:39
quicken : Psa 85:6, Psa 119:25, Psa 119:37, Psa 119:40, Psa 119:107, Psa 119:154, Psa 119:156; ...
So will : Psa 79:13; Joh 6:66-69; Heb 10:38, Heb 10:39
quicken : Psa 85:6, Psa 119:25, Psa 119:37, Psa 119:40, Psa 119:107, Psa 119:154, Psa 119:156; Son 1:4; Phi 2:12, Phi 2:13; Eph 2:1-5
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 80:12 - -- Why hast thou then broken down her hedges? - Why hast thou dealt with thy people as one would with a vineyard who should break down all its enc...
Why hast thou then broken down her hedges? - Why hast thou dealt with thy people as one would with a vineyard who should break down all its enclosures, and leave it open to wild beasts? The word rendered hedges means wall or enclosure. Compare the notes at Isa 5:2.
So that all they which pass by the way - All travelers; or, wild beasts. So that there is nothing to prevent their coming up to the vine and plucking the grapes.
Do pluck her - Pluck, or pick off the grapes; or, if the phrase "all which pass by the way"denotes wild beasts, then the meaning is, that they eat off the leaves and branches of the vine.
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Barnes: Psa 80:13 - -- The boar out of the wood - Men come in and ravage the land, whose character may be compared with the wild boar. The word rendered boar means si...
The boar out of the wood - Men come in and ravage the land, whose character may be compared with the wild boar. The word rendered boar means simply swine. The addition of the phrase "out of the wood"determines its meaning here, and shows that the reference is to wild or untamed swine; swine that roam the woods - an animal always extremely fierce and savage.
Doth waste it - The word used here occurs nowhere else. It means to cut down or cut off; to devour; to lay waste.
And the wild beast of the field - Of the unenclosed field; or, that roams at large - such as lions, panthers, tigers, wolves. The word here used -
Doth devour it - So the people from abroad consumed all that the land produced, or thus they laid it waste.
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Barnes: Psa 80:14 - -- Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts - Again come and visit thy people; come back again to thy forsaken land. This is language founded on th...
Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts - Again come and visit thy people; come back again to thy forsaken land. This is language founded on the idea that God had withdrawn from the land, or had forsaken it; that he had left his people without a protector, and had left them exposed to the ravages of fierce foreign enemies. It is language which will describe what seems often to occur when the church is apparently forsaken; when there are no cheering tokens of the divine presence; and when the people of God, discouraged, seem themselves to be forsaken by him. Compare Jer 14:8.
Look down from heaven - The habitation of God. As if he did not now see his desolate vineyard, or regard it. The idea is, that if he would look upon it, he would pity it, and would come to its relief.
And behold, and visit this vine - It is a visitation of mercy and not of wrath that is asked; the coming of one who is able to save, and without whose coming there could be no deliverance.
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Barnes: Psa 80:15 - -- And the vineyard ... - Gesenius renders this as a verb: "Protect;"that is, "Protect or defend what thy right hand hath planted."So the Septuagi...
And the vineyard ... - Gesenius renders this as a verb: "Protect;"that is, "Protect or defend what thy right hand hath planted."So the Septuagint renders it
And the branch - literally, the son; that is, the offspring or shoots of the vine. Not merely the original plant - the parent stock - but all the branches which had sprung from it and which had spread themselves over the land.
That thou madest strong for thyself - Thou didst cause it to grow so vigorously for thine own use or honor. On that account, we now call on thee to defend what is thine own.
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Barnes: Psa 80:16 - -- It is burned with fire - That is, the vineyard. This is a description of the desolations that had come upon the nation, such as would come upon...
It is burned with fire - That is, the vineyard. This is a description of the desolations that had come upon the nation, such as would come upon a vineyard if it were consumed by fire.
It is cut down - It has been made desolate by fire and by the axe.
They perish at the rebuke of thy countenance - At the frown on thy face, as if God has only to look upon people in anger, and they perish. The word they refers to those who were represented by the vine which had been brought out of Egypt - the people of the land.
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Barnes: Psa 80:17 - -- Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand - Luther renders this, "Let thy hand guard the folks of thy right hand, and the people whom thou...
Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand - Luther renders this, "Let thy hand guard the folks of thy right hand, and the people whom thou hast powerfully chosen."The right hand is the place of honor; and the phrase "the man of thy right hand"means one who occupies such a position of honor. The phrase "Let thy hand be upon"is ambiguous. It may denote either favor or wrath; let it be upon him either to protect him, or to punish him. The connection, however, evidently demands the former interpretation, for it is in reference to the "man whom God had made strong for himself."The allusion is either
(a) to some individual man whom God had raised up to honor, as a prince or ruler of the people; or
(b) to the people as such - as Luther understands it.
Most probably the former is the correct interpretation; and the prayer is, that God would interpose in behalf of the ruler of the people - the king of the nation - whom he had exalted to so high honor, and whom he had placed in such a position of responsibility; that he would now endow him properly for his work; that he would give him wisdom in counsel, and valor in battle, in order that the nation might be delivered from its foes. It is, therefore, a prayer for the civil and military ruler of the land, that God would give him grace, firmness, and wisdom, in a time of great emergency. Prof. Alexander strangely supposes that this refers to the Messiah.
Upon the son of man - This means simply man, the language being varied for the sake of poetry. Compare the notes at Psa 8:4. It is true that the appellation "the Son of man"was a favorite designation which the Lord Jesus applied to himself to denote that he was truly a man, and to indicate his connection with human nature; but the phrase is often used merely to denote a man. Here it refers to the king or civil ruler.
Whom thou madest strong for thyself - The man whom thou hast raised up to that exalted station, and whom thou hast endowed to do a work for thee in that station. A magistrate is a servant and a representative of God, appointed to do a work for him - not for himself. See Rom 13:1-6.
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Barnes: Psa 80:18 - -- So will not we go back from thee - That is, if thou wilt thus interpose; if thou wilt deliver the nation; if thou wilt help him whom thou hast ...
So will not we go back from thee - That is, if thou wilt thus interpose; if thou wilt deliver the nation; if thou wilt help him whom thou hast placed over it, giving him wisdom and valor, we will hereafter be obedient to thy law; we will not apostatize from thee. It is a solemn promise or pledge of future obedience made by the psalmist as expressing the purpose of the people if God would be merciful and would withdraw his judgments; a pledge proper in itself, and often made by the Hebrew people only to be disregarded; a pledge proper for all who are in affliction, and often made in such circumstances, but, as in the case of the Hebrews, often made only to be forgotten.
Quicken us - literally, Give us life. See the notes at Eph 2:1. Restore life to us as a people; save us from ruin, and reanimate us with thy presence.
And we will call upon thy name - We will worship thee; we will be faithful in serving thee.
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Barnes: Psa 80:19 - -- Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts ... - See Psa 80:3, note; Psa 80:7, note; Psa 80:14, note. This is the sum and the burden of the psalm. The ...
Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts ... - See Psa 80:3, note; Psa 80:7, note; Psa 80:14, note. This is the sum and the burden of the psalm. The repetition of the prayer shows the earnestness of the people, and their conviction that their only hope in their troubles was that God would interpose and bring them back again; that he would be favorable to them, and lift upon them the light of his countenance. So with all. In our backslidings, our afflictions, and our troubles, our only hope is that God will bring us back to himself; our proper place is at the throne of mercy; our pleadings should be urgent, earnest, and constant, that he will interpose and have mercy on us; our solemn purpose - our expressed and recorded pledge - should be that if we are restored to God, we will wander no more. But, alas! how much easier it is to say this than to do it; how much easier to promise than to perform; how much easier to pledge ourselves when we are in affliction that if the troubles are removed we will be faithful, than it is to carry out such a purpose when the days of prosperity return, and we are again surrounded by the blessings of health and of peace. If all people - even good people - kept the vows which they make, the world would be comparatively a pure and happy world; if the church itself would only carry out its own solemn pledges, it would indeed arise and shine, and the world would soon be filled with light and salvation.
Poole: Psa 80:12 - -- Broken down her hedges taken away thy protection, which was to them for walls and bulwarks.
Pluck her pluck up her grapes and boughs, and strike at...
Broken down her hedges taken away thy protection, which was to them for walls and bulwarks.
Pluck her pluck up her grapes and boughs, and strike at her very root.
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Poole: Psa 80:13 - -- The wood where boars use to lodge, as it is noted by many authors; by which he understands their fierce and furious enemies.
The wood where boars use to lodge, as it is noted by many authors; by which he understands their fierce and furious enemies.
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Poole: Psa 80:15 - -- The vineyard or, the root , or stock , or plant , as others render it. Thy right hand hath planted; which thou hast planted or fixed with thy migh...
The vineyard or, the root , or stock , or plant , as others render it. Thy right hand hath planted; which thou hast planted or fixed with thy might and power; whereof the right hand is both a sign or symbol and an instrument. The branch , Heb. the son , i.e. either,
1. The son of man, as it is more fully expressed, Psa 80:17 . Or rather,
2. The branch; for as yet he continues the metaphor; which is called the son, to wit, of the root or stock mentioned in the former clause, as the branches are called daughters in the Hebrew text, Gen 49:22 .
Thou madest strong either,
1. By supporting it with stakes or walls, upon which the vine groweth up or rather,
2. By causing it to grow in bulk and thickness, and consequently in strength. For thyself ; for thy own especial delight, and service, and honor.
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Poole: Psa 80:16 - -- It is burned with fire to wit, thy vineyard or branch.
They perish thy people of Israel, signified by the vine. So now he passeth from the metaphor...
It is burned with fire to wit, thy vineyard or branch.
They perish thy people of Israel, signified by the vine. So now he passeth from the metaphor to the thing designed by it.
At the rebuke of thy countenance through the effects of thine anger, without which their enemies could do them no hurt.
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Poole: Psa 80:17 - -- Upon the man to protect and strengthen him.
Of thy right hand whom thy right hand planted, Psa 80:15 ; whom thou hast loved and respected even as t...
Upon the man to protect and strengthen him.
Of thy right hand whom thy right hand planted, Psa 80:15 ; whom thou hast loved and respected even as thy right hand, which is very dear to us, Mat 5:30 18:8 ; compare Zec 13:7 ; thy Benjamin, whom he mentioned
Psa 80:2 , to whose name he seems to allude, which signifies
the son of the right hand i.e. a dearly beloved son, as Benjamin was to Jacob. Son of man : by man, or son of man, he understands either,
1. The Messias, oft called in Scripture the Son of man : let him come, and let his kingdom be established, and so thine Israel shall be saved and delivered out of all its troubles. Or,
2. The royal family, the house of David, in whose safety and welfare. the happiness of the whole nation was wrapt up. Or rather,
3. The people of Israel, who are oft spoken of as one person, as God’ s son and first-born , Exo 4:22 , and here as one vine. And seeing all the foregoing complaints have been concerning the calamities of the people of Israel, it seems most reasonable to understand this prayer to be made for them; the rather, because the following clause here applied to the man and son of man,
who thou madest strong for thyself is used of the root or branch of the vine, Psa 80:15 .
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Poole: Psa 80:18 - -- This glorious favour of thine shall oblige us to love and serve thee, and trust in thee so long as we have a being, and no more to revolt from thee ...
This glorious favour of thine shall oblige us to love and serve thee, and trust in thee so long as we have a being, and no more to revolt from thee to idolatry or wickedness, as we have too oft done.
Quicken us revive and restore us to our former tranquillity and happiness.
Haydock: Psa 80:13 - -- Inventions. Ancient psalters read, "wills." This is the greatest (Calmet) of God's judgments, Romans i. 24. (Menochius) ---
He sometimes permits ...
Inventions. Ancient psalters read, "wills." This is the greatest (Calmet) of God's judgments, Romans i. 24. (Menochius) ---
He sometimes permits a person to go on, that he may be disgusted with sin. Ut saturati vitiis vel sic agant pœnitentiam. (St. Jerome) ---
We ought all to dread this root of bitterness, (Hebrews xii. 15.) which may cause us to resist God's grace, and to be abandoned by him, as the Israelites seemed to be, before their ruin came on. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 80:15 - -- Soon. Forsitan, "perhaps," (Haydock) does not here imply a doubt, (Menochius) but rather the ease and liberty (Worthington) with which God could hav...
Soon. Forsitan, "perhaps," (Haydock) does not here imply a doubt, (Menochius) but rather the ease and liberty (Worthington) with which God could have rescued his people (Hebrew) "in a moment." (Calmet) (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 80:16 - -- Enemies. The faithless Israelites, (Calmet) or infidel nations. (Bossuet, &c.) ---
Ever. Impenitent sinners shall suffer for ever. (Challoner) ...
Enemies. The faithless Israelites, (Calmet) or infidel nations. (Bossuet, &c.) ---
Ever. Impenitent sinners shall suffer for ever. (Challoner) ---
The Jews will scarcely be converted at last. (Menochius) ---
For a long time God bore with their infidelities, and heaped favours upon them. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 80:17 - -- And. Or "though." This increases their ingratitude. ---
Filled. Hebrew, "I will fill thee;" which reading few admit. St. Jerome agrees with us....
And. Or "though." This increases their ingratitude. ---
Filled. Hebrew, "I will fill thee;" which reading few admit. St. Jerome agrees with us. (Berthier) ---
Protestants, ( 16 ) "the haters of the Lord should have submitted (marginal note, lied ) to him; but their time should have endured for ever. ( 17 ) He should have fed them, ( v rather signifies "him;" Haydock) also with the finest of wheat, and with honey out of the rock, should I have satisfied thee." This sudden change seems rather abrupt, though God may have spoken either in the first or third person, from ver. 6. (Haydock) ---
Rock. He fed them in the desert with manna, and the water seemed most delicious, as they were thirsty; unless he speaks of real honey. (Menochius) ---
The promised land was very fruitful; but all this prefigured the favours which God bestows upon his servants, in the blessed Eucharist, 1 Corinthians x. 4. (Calmet) ---
How many, like Judas, partake of them, and prove faithless! (St. Augustine)
Gill: Psa 80:12 - -- Why hast thou then broken down her hedges,.... After having done all this for her; which signifies the Lord's removing his presence, power, and protec...
Why hast thou then broken down her hedges,.... After having done all this for her; which signifies the Lord's removing his presence, power, and protection, from Israel; which were the hedge he set about them, and by which they were secured and defended from their enemies; but these being gone, they became an easy prey to them; see Job 1:10, the hedge about the church and people of God are the angels that encamp about them; salvation, which is as walls and bulwarks to them; and the Lord himself, who is a wall of fire around them; which may be said to be broken down when he withdraws his presence, and does not exert his power in the protection of them; but suffers them to be exposed to the persecutions of men:
so that all they which pass by the way do pluck her? the hedge being broken down, all passengers and travellers plucked the fruit of the vine as they passed along, there being noticing to keep them off from it: this may denote the plunder of the Israelites by their enemies, when left of God, they fell into their hands; and the havoc persecutors make of the church of Christ, and their spoiling them of their goods and substance, when they are permitted to do it.
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Gill: Psa 80:13 - -- The boar out of the wood doth waste it,.... As Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, who carried the ten tribes captive; the title of this psalm in the Septua...
The boar out of the wood doth waste it,.... As Shalmaneser, king of Assyria, who carried the ten tribes captive; the title of this psalm in the Septuagint version is, a psalm for the Assyrian. Vitringa, on Isa 24:2 interprets this of Antiochus Epiphanes, to whose times he thinks the psalm refers; but the Jews r of the fourth beast in Dan 7:7, which designs the Roman empire: the wild boar is alluded to, which lives in woods and forests s, and wastes, fields, and vineyards:
and the wild beast of the field doth devour it; as Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, who carried the two tribes captive, and who for a while lived among and lived as the beasts of the field; both these, in their turns, wasted and devoured the people of Israel; see Jer 50:17. Jarchi interprets this of Esau or Edom, that is, Rome; and says the whole of the paragraph respects the Roman captivity; that is, their present one; but rather the words describe the persecutors of the Christian church in general, comparable to wild boars and wild beasts for their fierceness and cruelty; and perhaps, in particular, Rome Pagan may be pointed at by the one, and Rome Papal by the other; though the latter is signified by two beasts, one that rose out of the sea, and the other out of the earth; which have made dreadful havoc of the church of Christ, his vine, and have shed the blood of the saints in great abundance; see Rev 12:3, unless we should rather by the one understand the pope, and by the other the Turk, as the Jews interpret them of Esau and of Ishmael.
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Gill: Psa 80:14 - -- Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts,.... The Lord had been with his vine, the people of Israel, when he brought them out of Egypt, and planted and...
Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts,.... The Lord had been with his vine, the people of Israel, when he brought them out of Egypt, and planted and settled them in the land of Canaan, and made them a flourishing people; but had departed from them when he suffered the hedges about them to be broken down, and the boar and wild beast to enter and devour them; and here he is entreated to return and restore them to their former prosperity. So the Lord sometimes departs from his church and people, and hides his face from them; and may be said to return, when he manifests himself, shows his face and his favour again, and grants his gracious presence, than which nothing is more desirable; and if he, the Lord of hosts and armies, above and below, is with his people, none can be against them to their hurt; they have nothing to fear from any enemy:
look down from heaven: the habitation of his holiness, the high and holy place where he dwells, and his throne is, from whence he takes a survey of men and things; where he now was at a distance from his people, being returned to his place in resentment, and covered himself with a cloud from their sight; and from whence it would be a condescension in him to look on them on earth, so very undeserving of a look of love and mercy from him:
and behold; the affliction and distress his people were in, as he formerly beheld the affliction of Israel in Egypt, and sympathized with them, and brought them out of it:
and visit this vine; before described, for whom he had done such great things, and now was in such a ruinous condition; the visit desired is in a way of mercy and kind providence; so the Targum,
"and remember in mercies this vine;''
so the Lord visits his chosen people by the mission and incarnation of his Son, and by the redemption of them by him, and by the effectual calling of them by his Spirit and grace through the ministration of the Gospel; and which perhaps may, in the mystical sense, be respected here; see Luk 1:68.
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Gill: Psa 80:15 - -- And the vineyard which thy right hand hath planted,.... The word "Cannah" is only used in this place, and the first letter of it is larger than usual,...
And the vineyard which thy right hand hath planted,.... The word "Cannah" is only used in this place, and the first letter of it is larger than usual, to keep in perpetual remembrance, as is thought by some t, the bringing of this vine out of Egypt, and the great things done for it in the land of Israel; and the letter, being crooked, may denote the oppression of this vine by various calamities. The Targum renders the word, a branch or shoot; and Kimchi, according to the scope of the place, a plant; and observes, that others interpret it an habitation or dwelling place; and so may be understood of Jerusalem, or the temple. Aben Ezra takes it to be an adjective, and to signify "prepared" or "established", which is said of this vine, Psa 80:9. It is an Egyptian word used by the psalmist, treating of the vine brought out of Egypt, and signifies a plant; hence the ivy is by the Greeks called
and the branch that thou madest strong for thyself: meaning the same thing, and the same people whom he confirmed in the land of Canaan, and made strong for his service and glory. The word w translated "branch" signifies a son, as Israel was, to the Lord, son and firstborn. The Targum understands it of Christ, and paraphrases it thus,
"and for the King Messiah, whom thou hast strengthened for thyself;''
that is, for the sake of Christ, whom thou hast appointed to work out the salvation of thy people by his great strength, and who was to come from this vine, or descend from Israel; for the sake of him destroy it not, nor suffer it to be destroyed; and is the same with the Son of man, Psa 80:17, and so it is read in a manuscript.
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Gill: Psa 80:16 - -- It is burnt with fire, it is cut down,.... That is, the vine of Israel, and the branch before spoken of, alluding to a vine, and its branches; which, ...
It is burnt with fire, it is cut down,.... That is, the vine of Israel, and the branch before spoken of, alluding to a vine, and its branches; which, when become unprofitable, are cut down or cut off, and cast into the fire; see Joh 15:6, so Jerusalem and the temple were burnt with fire by Nebuchadnezzar, and afterwards by Vespasian:
they perish at the rebuke of thy countenance; that is, the Israelites, signified by the vine, whose destruction was owing to the wrath of God upon them for their sins; he frowned upon them, and rebuked them in his hot displeasure, and to that their ruin was owing; others were only instruments in his hands. Some understand this as a wish or imprecation, let them that cut down the vine, and burn it with fire, perish at the rebuke of thy countenance; see Psa 68:1, so the Targum.
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Gill: Psa 80:17 - -- Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand,.... Which some understand of the people of Israel in general, beloved, supported, and strengthened, by...
Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand,.... Which some understand of the people of Israel in general, beloved, supported, and strengthened, by the Lord: and others of the then king of Israel, or Judah, the vinedresser, or keeper of the vineyard under God; praying that he might be directed, supported, and protected, by the Lord; but it seems better to understand it with R. Obadiah on the place, and Abarbinel x of the Messiah; and so Aben Ezra interprets it either of Israel, or of Messiah the son of Ephraim. Christ is called the "man", though as yet he was not really man, because it was purposed and promised that he should; and he had agreed to become man, and had appeared often in an human form; and it was certain that he would be incarnate: and also the man of God's "right hand", which is expressive of the power of God, because by him, who, in time, became man, even the Son of God, the world, and all things in it, were made; and by him all things are upheld in their being; by him his people were to be redeemed, and have been redeemed from all their enemies; and by him they are upheld, kept, and preserved from a final and total falling away, and will be raised at the last day: and the phrase may design the support and strength the human nature of Christ, which was weak in itself, was to have, and had, not only from its union in the Son of God, but from God the Father; who promised and gave support and strength to it, under all the sufferings endured in it: to which may be added, that this phrase is expressive of love and affection; so Benjamin had his name, which signifies the son of the right hand, from the great affection of his father; so Christ is the Son of God's love, his dear and well beloved Son; as appears by hiding nothing from him, by putting all things into his hands, and appointing him the Head and Saviour of his people, and the Judge of the world; and his love to him is a love of complacency and delight, is everlasting and unchangeable: moreover, he may be so called, because he was to be, and now is, exalted at the right hand of God, in human nature, as a Prince and Saviour, above angels, authorities, and powers, and above every name whatever: and the prayer is either that the hand of vindictive justice might not be upon the vine, or the church of God, but upon Christ their surety, who was able to bear it, and had engaged to do it; or the hand of divine power and support might be upon him, to strengthen him for the work of redemption and salvation, that so that might prosper in his hand; and the hand of love, grace, and mercy, might be turned upon his people: it is added,
upon the son of man, whom thou madest strong for thyself; for the accomplishment of his purposes, promises, and covenant, for the bringing about the salvation of his own people, and for ends of his own glory: the same person is here meant as before; and his being called "the Son of Man", which is a very usual phrase for Christ in the New Testament, and which seems to be taken from hence, and from Dan 7:13, shows that he could not be really from eternity, since he was to be the Son of Man, as he was, of Abraham, David, &c.
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Gill: Psa 80:18 - -- So will not we go back from thee,.... From thy fear, as the Targum; or from thy service, as Kimchi; doing as above would encourage them to stand befor...
So will not we go back from thee,.... From thy fear, as the Targum; or from thy service, as Kimchi; doing as above would encourage them to stand before the Lord, and worship him; which they could not do, if he marked their sins, and demanded satisfaction from them for them; but if he looked to his Son and their surety, and took it from him, this would encourage their faith and hope, and give them boldness in his presence, and attach them to his service:
quicken us, and we will call upon thy name; the people of God are sometimes dead and lifeless in their frames, and in the exercise of grace and discharge of duty, and have need of the quickening influences of the Spirit and grace of God; and which are necessary to a fervent calling upon the name of the Lord in prayer, and without which none will stir up themselves so to do. Kimchi interprets this of quickening, or of raising to life, from the death of the captivity; and so Abarbinel, who thinks also that it respects the resurrection of the dead in the times of the Messiah.
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Gill: Psa 80:19 - -- Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts,.... This is a repetition of Psa 80:3, in which may be observed an increase of the names or titles of the Divine Be...
Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts,.... This is a repetition of Psa 80:3, in which may be observed an increase of the names or titles of the Divine Being: in Psa 80:3, it is only "O God"; in Psa 80:7 "O God of hosts"; and here, "Lord God of hosts"; some have thought that the doctrine of the Trinity is here suggested; which is a better thought than that of Jarchi's, who supposes that three captivities of Israel are pointed at: but as it follows,
cause thy face to shine, and we shall be saved; it appears that this was the burden of their song, being in darkness and distress, that they might have the light of God's countenance, and therefore repeat it again and again.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 80:13 The precise referent of the Hebrew word translated “insects,” which occurs only here and in Ps 50:11, is uncertain. Aramaic, Arabic, and A...
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NET Notes: Psa 80:15 Heb “and upon a son you strengthened for yourself.” In this context, where the extended metaphor of the vine dominates, בּ...
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NET Notes: Psa 80:17 Heb “upon the son of man you strengthened for yourself.” In its only other use in the Book of Psalms, the phrase “son of man” ...
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NET Notes: Psa 80:19 Heb “cause your face to shine in order that we may be delivered.” After the imperative, the cohortative with prefixed vav (ו) indica...
Geneva Bible: Psa 80:13 The ( i ) boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
( i ) That is, they who hate our religion, as well as t...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 80:14 Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts: look down ( k ) from heaven, and behold, and visit this vine;
( k ) They gave no place to temptation, knowin...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 80:15 And the vineyard which thy right hand hath planted, and the branch [that] thou madest ( l ) strong for thyself.
( l ) So that no power can prevail ag...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 80:16 [It is] burned with fire, [it is] cut down: they perish at the ( m ) rebuke of thy countenance.
( m ) Only when you are angry and not of the sword of...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 80:17 Let thy hand be upon the ( n ) man of thy right hand, upon the son of man [whom] thou madest strong for thyself.
( n ) That is, on this vine or peopl...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 80:18 So will not we go back from thee: ( o ) quicken us, and we will call upon thy name.
( o ) For no one can call on God but such as are raised up as it ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 80:1-19
TSK Synopsis: Psa 80:1-19 - --1 The psalmist in his prayer complains of the miseries of the church.8 God's former favours are turned into judgments.14 He prays for deliverance.
MHCC -> Psa 80:8-16; Psa 80:17-19
MHCC: Psa 80:8-16 - --The church is represented as a vine and a vineyard. The root of this vine is Christ, the branches are believers. The church is like a vine, needing su...
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MHCC: Psa 80:17-19 - --The Messiah, the Protector and Saviour of the church, is the Man of God's right hand; he is the Arm of the Lord, for all power is given to him. In him...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 80:8-19
Matthew Henry: Psa 80:8-19 - -- The psalmist is here presenting his suit for the Israel of God, and pressing it home at the throne of grace, pleading with God for mercy and grace f...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 80:8-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 80:8-19 - --
The complaint now assumes a detailing character in this strophe, inasmuch as it contrasts the former days with the present; and the ever more and mo...
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...
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Constable: Psa 80:1-19 - --Psalm 80
Again Asaph called on God to deliver and restore Israel. The nation was downtrodden and needed ...
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Constable: Psa 80:7-13 - --3. Israel's downtrodden condition 80:8-14a
The psalmist now changed his figure and pictured Isra...
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