
Text -- Psalms 81:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Clarke -> Psa 81:4
Calvin -> Psa 81:4
Calvin: Psa 81:4 - -- 4.For this is a statute to Israel To give the more effect to the preceding exhortation, it is here taught that this law or ordinance had been prescri...
4.For this is a statute to Israel To give the more effect to the preceding exhortation, it is here taught that this law or ordinance had been prescribed to God’s ancient people, for the purpose of ratifying the everlasting covenant. And as in covenants there is a mutual agreement between the parties, it is declared that this statute was given to Israel, and that God, in contracting, reserved this for himself, as a right to which he was justly entitled.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 81:4
Barnes: Psa 81:4 - -- For this was a statute for Israel ... - See Exo 12:3. That is, it was a law for the whole Jewish people, for all who had the name Israel, for a...
For this was a statute for Israel ... - See Exo 12:3. That is, it was a law for the whole Jewish people, for all who had the name Israel, for all the descendants of Jacob. The word was is not in the original, as if this had been an old commandment which might now be obsolete, but the idea is one of perpetuity: it is a perpetual law for the Hebrew people.
A law of the God of Jacob - Hebrew, a judgment; or, right. The idea is, that it was what was due to God; what was his right. It was a solemn claim that he should be thus acknowledged. It was not a matter of conventional arrangement, or a matter of convenience to them; nor was it to be observed merely because it was found to be expedient and conducive to the welfare of the nation. It was a matter of right and of claim on the part of God, and was so to be regarded by the nation. The same is true now of the Sabbath, and of all the appointments which God has made for keeping up religion in the world. All these arrangements are indeed expedient and proper; they conduce to the public welfare and to the happiness of man; but there is a higher reason for their observance than this. It is that God demands their observance; that he claims as his own the time so appropriated. Thus he claims the Sabbath, the entire Sabbath, as his own; he requires that it shall be employed in his service, that it shall be regarded as his day; that it shall be made instrumental in keeping up the knowledge of himself in the world, and in promoting his glory. Exo 20:10. People, therefore, "rob God"(compare Mal 3:8) when they take this time for needless secular purposes, or devote it to other ends and uses. Nor can this be sinless. The highest guilt which man can commit is to "rob"his Maker of what belongs to Him, and of what He claims.
Poole -> Psa 81:4
Poole: Psa 81:4 - -- For this is no human device, but an appointment and command of the great God, and your Lord.
For this is no human device, but an appointment and command of the great God, and your Lord.
Gill -> Psa 81:4
Gill: Psa 81:4 - -- For this was a statute for Israel,.... It was not a piece of will worship, or device of the children of Israel, but was of divine institution; that th...
For this was a statute for Israel,.... It was not a piece of will worship, or device of the children of Israel, but was of divine institution; that the passover should be kept at the time it was; and that the trumpets should be blown on the new moon, or first of Tisri; and that the feast of tabernacles should be kept on the fifteenth of the same month:
and a law of the God of Jacob; and therefore to be observed by Jacob's posterity: the law for the one is in Exo 12:18 and for the other is in Lev 23:24 and so all the ordinances of Christ, and of the Gospel dispensation, are to be regarded on the same account, because they are the statutes and appointments of God; and the feast of tabernacles is particularly put for them all, Zec 14:16.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 81:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Psa 81:1-16 - --1 An exhortation to a solemn praising of God.4 God challenges that duty by reason of his benefits.8 God, exhorting to obedience, complains of their di...
MHCC -> Psa 81:1-7
MHCC: Psa 81:1-7 - --All the worship we can render to the Lord is beneath his excellences, and our obligations to him, especially in our redemption from sin and wrath. Wha...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 81:1-7
Matthew Henry: Psa 81:1-7 - -- When the people of God were gathered together in the solemn day, the day of the feast of the Lord, they must be told that they had business to do,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 81:1-5; Psa 81:4-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 81:1-5 - --
The summons in Psa 81:2 is addressed to the whole congregation, inasmuch as הריעוּ is not intended of the clanging of the trumpets, but as in ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 81:4-5 - --
Psa 81:4-5 now tell whence the feast which is to be met with singing and music has acquired such a high significance: it is a divine institution com...
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 81:1-16 - --Psalm 81
This psalm is a joyful celebration of God's delivering His people. The Israelites probably sang...
