
Text -- Psalms 80:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 80:5
Still an Eastern figure for affliction.
Clarke: Psa 80:5 - -- Thou feedest them with the bread of tears - They have no peace, no comfort, nothing but continual sorrow
Thou feedest them with the bread of tears - They have no peace, no comfort, nothing but continual sorrow

Clarke: Psa 80:5 - -- In great measure - שליש shalish , threefold. Some think it was a certain measure used by the Chaldeans, the real capacity of which is not known...
In great measure -
Calvin -> Psa 80:5
Calvin: Psa 80:5 - -- 5.Thou hast fed us with bread of tears, etc By these forms of expression, they depict the greatness of their grief, and the long continuance of their...
5.Thou hast fed us with bread of tears, etc By these forms of expression, they depict the greatness of their grief, and the long continuance of their calamities; as if they had said, We are so filled with sorrow, that we can contain no more. 388 They add, in the following verse that they were made a strife to their neighbors This admits of being explained in two ways. It means either that their neighbors had taken up a quarrel against them; or that, having obtained the victory over them, they were contending about the spoil, as is usually the case in such circumstances, each being eager to drag it to himself. The former interpretation, however seems to be the more suitable. The people complain that, whereas neighborhood ought to be a bond of mutual goodwill, they had as many enemies as neighbors. To the same purpose is their language in the second clause, They laugh at us among themselves; that is to say, They talk among themselves by way of sport and mockery at our adversities. To encourage and stir themselves up to repentance, they ascribe all this to the judgment of God, in whose power it is to bend the hearts of men. Since we are all at this day chargeable with the same sins, it is not surprising that our condition is in no degree better than was theirs. But the Holy Spirit having inspired the prophet to write this form of prayer for a people who felt their condition to be almost desperate, it serves to inspire us with hope and boldness, and to prevent us from giving up the exercise of prayer, under a consciousness of the greatness of our guilt. The seventh verse is a repetition of the third; and this repetition is undoubtedly intended as a means of surmounting every obstacle. God did not here intend to endite for his people a vain repetition of words: his object was to encourage them, when bowed down under the load of their calamities, boldly to rise up, heavy though the load might be. This ground of support was often presented to them; and it is repeated the third time in the concluding verse of the psalm.
TSK -> Psa 80:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 80:5
Barnes: Psa 80:5 - -- Thou feedest them with the bread of tears - literally, "Thou causest them to eat the bread of tears,"or of weeping. That is, their food was acc...
Thou feedest them with the bread of tears - literally, "Thou causest them to eat the bread of tears,"or of weeping. That is, their food was accompanied with tears; even when they ate, they wept. Their tears seemed to moisten their bread, they flowed so copiously. See the notes at Psa 42:3.
And givest them tears to drink - So abundant were their tears that they might constitute their very drink.
In great measure - Or rather by measure; that is, abundantly. The word here rendered "great measure"-
Poole -> Psa 80:5
Poole: Psa 80:5 - -- With the bread of tears either with tears instead of bread, which they either want, or cannot eat because their grief hath taken away their appetites...
With the bread of tears either with tears instead of bread, which they either want, or cannot eat because their grief hath taken away their appetites; or with tears as frequent and constant as their eating it. See the like phrase Psa 42:3 .
Haydock -> Psa 80:5
Haydock: Psa 80:5 - -- Jacob. It is a duty which we owe to God, in obedience to his command. Hebrew may be, (Haydock) "a decree for the princes ( gods ) of Jacob." (Calm...
Jacob. It is a duty which we owe to God, in obedience to his command. Hebrew may be, (Haydock) "a decree for the princes ( gods ) of Jacob." (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "a law of," &c.
Gill -> Psa 80:5
Gill: Psa 80:5 - -- Thou feedest them with the bread of tears,.... With tears instead of bread, having none to eat; or their bread is mingled with their tears, "dipped" t...
Thou feedest them with the bread of tears,.... With tears instead of bread, having none to eat; or their bread is mingled with their tears, "dipped" therein, as the Targum; such was their constant grief, and the occasion of it, that they could not cease from tears while they were eating their meals, and so ate them with them n:
and givest them tears to drink in great measure; or the wine of tears "three fold", as the Targum. Jarchi interprets it of the captivity of Babylon, which was the third part of the two hundred and ten years of Israel's being in Egypt; which exposition, he says, he learned from R. Moses Hadarsan; but he observes, that some interpret it of the kingdom of Grecia, which was the third distress: and so Kimchi and Arama explain it of the third captivity; but Menachem, as Jarchi says, takes "shalish" to be the name of a drinking vessel, and so does Aben Ezra; the same it may be which the Latins call a "triental", the third part of a pint; unless the Hebrew measure, the "seah", which was the third part of an "ephah", is meant; it is translated a "measure" in Isa 40:12 and seems to design a large one, and so our version interprets it; compare with this Isa 30:20.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 80:1-7
MHCC: Psa 80:1-7 - --He that dwelleth upon the mercy-seat, is the good Shepherd of his people. But we can neither expect the comfort of his love, nor the protection of his...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 80:1-7
Matthew Henry: Psa 80:1-7 - -- The psalmist here, in the name of the church, applies to God by prayer, with reference to the present afflicted state of Israel. I. He entreats God'...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 80:4-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 80:4-7 - --
In the second strophe there issues forth bitter complaint concerning the form of wrath which the present assumes, and, thus confirmed, the petition ...
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 80:1-19 - --Psalm 80
Again Asaph called on God to deliver and restore Israel. The nation was downtrodden and needed ...
