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Text -- Psalms 91:1-14 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
He that makes God his habitation and refuge.
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Wesley: Psa 91:3 - -- From the pestilence, which like a fowler's snare takes men suddenly and unexpectedly.
From the pestilence, which like a fowler's snare takes men suddenly and unexpectedly.
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When evil accidents are most terrible and least avoidable.
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Wesley: Psa 91:5 - -- The pestilence, or any such destructive calamity; such are frequently called God's arrows.
The pestilence, or any such destructive calamity; such are frequently called God's arrows.
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Thou shalt be kept from secret and open mischiefs.
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Invisibly, so that we can neither foresee nor prevent it.
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Sustain or uphold thee in thy goings, as we do a child.
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Wesley: Psa 91:13 - -- Shall lie prostrate at thy feet, and thou shalt securely put thy feet upon his neck.
Shall lie prostrate at thy feet, and thou shalt securely put thy feet upon his neck.
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Wesley: Psa 91:13 - -- By which he understands all pernicious creatures, though never so strong, and all sorts of enemies.
By which he understands all pernicious creatures, though never so strong, and all sorts of enemies.
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This and the two following verses are the words of God.
JFB -> Psa 91:1; Psa 91:1; Psa 91:3; Psa 91:4; Psa 91:4; Psa 91:5; Psa 91:5; Psa 91:5; Psa 91:7-8; Psa 91:9-12; Psa 91:13; Psa 91:14-16; Psa 91:14-16
JFB: Psa 91:1 - -- David is the most probable author; and the pestilence, mentioned in 2Sa 24:13-15, the most probable of any special occasion to which the Psalm may ref...
David is the most probable author; and the pestilence, mentioned in 2Sa 24:13-15, the most probable of any special occasion to which the Psalm may refer. The changes of person allowable in poetry are here frequently made. (Psa. 91:1-16)
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JFB: Psa 91:1 - -- (Psa 27:5; Psa 31:20) denotes nearness to God. Such as do so abide or lodge secure from assaults, and can well use the terms of trust in Psa 91:2.
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JFB: Psa 91:3 - -- Literally, "plagues of mischiefs" (Psa 5:9; Psa 52:7), are expressive figures for various evils.
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Literally, "surrounding"--that is, a kind of shield covering all over.
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JFB: Psa 91:7-8 - -- The security is more valuable, as being special, and, therefore, evidently of God; and while ten thousands of the wicked fall, the righteous are in su...
The security is more valuable, as being special, and, therefore, evidently of God; and while ten thousands of the wicked fall, the righteous are in such safety that they only see the calamity.
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JFB: Psa 91:9-12 - -- This exemption from evil is the result of trust in God, who employs angels as ministering spirits (Heb 1:14).
This exemption from evil is the result of trust in God, who employs angels as ministering spirits (Heb 1:14).
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JFB: Psa 91:13 - -- Even the fiercest, strongest, and most insidious animals may be trampled on with impunity.
Even the fiercest, strongest, and most insidious animals may be trampled on with impunity.
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JFB: Psa 91:14-16 - -- God Himself speaks (compare Psa 46:10; Psa 75:2-3). All the terms to express safety and peace indicate the most undoubting confidence (compare Psa 18:...
God Himself speaks (compare Psa 46:10; Psa 75:2-3). All the terms to express safety and peace indicate the most undoubting confidence (compare Psa 18:2; Psa 20:1; Psa 22:5).
Clarke: Psa 91:1 - -- He that dwelleth in the secret place - The Targum intimates that this is a dialogue between David, Solomon, and Jehovah. Suppose we admit this, - th...
He that dwelleth in the secret place - The Targum intimates that this is a dialogue between David, Solomon, and Jehovah. Suppose we admit this, - the
David asserts: "He who dwelleth in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty,"Psa 91:1
Solomon answers: "I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress; my God, in him will I trust,"Psa 91:2
David replies, and tells him what blessings he shall receive from God if he abide faithful, Psa 91:3-13
Then the Supreme Being is introduced, and confirms all that David had spoken concerning Solomon, Psa 91:14-16 : and thus this sacred and instructive dialogue ends
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Clarke: Psa 91:1 - -- In the secret place of the Most High - Spoken probably in reference to the Holy of holies. He who enters legitimately there shall be covered with th...
In the secret place of the Most High - Spoken probably in reference to the Holy of holies. He who enters legitimately there shall be covered with the cloud of God’ s glory - the protection of the all-sufflcient God. This was the privilege of the high priest only, under the law: but under the new covenant all believers in Christ have boldness to enter tnto the holiest by the blood of Jesus; and those who thus enter are safe from every evil.
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Clarke: Psa 91:2 - -- I will say of the Lord - This is my experience: "He is my fortress, and in him will I continually trust."
I will say of the Lord - This is my experience: "He is my fortress, and in him will I continually trust."
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Clarke: Psa 91:3 - -- Surely he shall deliver thee - If thou wilt act thus, then the God in whom thou trustest will deliver thee from the snare of the fowler, from all th...
Surely he shall deliver thee - If thou wilt act thus, then the God in whom thou trustest will deliver thee from the snare of the fowler, from all the devices of Satan, and from all dangerous maladies. As the original word,
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Clarke: Psa 91:4 - -- He shall cover thee with his feathers - He shall act towards thee as the hen does to her brood, - take thee under his wings when birds of prey appea...
He shall cover thee with his feathers - He shall act towards thee as the hen does to her brood, - take thee under his wings when birds of prey appear, and also shelter thee from chilling blasts. This is a frequent metaphor in the sacred writings; see Psa 17:8 (note), Psa 57:1 (note), Psa 61:4 (note), and the notes on them. The Septuagint has
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Clarke: Psa 91:4 - -- His truth shall be thy shield and buckler - His revelation; his Bible. That truth contains promises for all times and circumstances; and these will ...
His truth shall be thy shield and buckler - His revelation; his Bible. That truth contains promises for all times and circumstances; and these will be invariably fulfilled to him that trusts in the Lord. The fulfillment of a promise relative to defense and support is to the soul what the best shield is to the body.
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Clarke: Psa 91:5 - -- The terror by night - Night is a time of terrors, because it is a time of treasons, plunder, robbery, and murder. The godly man lies down in peace, ...
The terror by night - Night is a time of terrors, because it is a time of treasons, plunder, robbery, and murder. The godly man lies down in peace, and sleeps quietly, for he trusts his body, soul, and substance, in the hand of God; and he knows that he who keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps. It may also mean all spiritual foes, - the rulers of the darkness of this world. I have heard the following petition in an evening family prayer: "Blessed Lord, take us into thy protection this night; and preserve us from disease, from sudden death, from the violence of fire, from the edge of the sword, from the designs of wicked men, and from the influence of malicious spirits!
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Clarke: Psa 91:5 - -- Nor for the arrow - The Chaldee translates this verse, "Thou shalt not fear the demons that walk by night; nor the arrow of the angel of death which...
Nor for the arrow - The Chaldee translates this verse, "Thou shalt not fear the demons that walk by night; nor the arrow of the angel of death which is shot in the day time."Thou needest not to fear a sudden and unprovided-for death.
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Clarke: Psa 91:6 - -- Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness; nor for the destruction that wasteth at noonday - The rabbins supposed that the empire of death was...
Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness; nor for the destruction that wasteth at noonday - The rabbins supposed that the empire of death was under two demons, one of which ruled by day, the other by night. The Vulgate and Septuagint have - the noonday devil. The ancients thought that there were some demons who had the power to injure particularly at noonday. To this Theocritus refers, Id. 1: ver. 15: -
"It is not lawful, it is not lawful, O shepherd, to play on the flute at noonday: we fear Pan, who at that hour goes to sleep in order to rest himself after the fatigues of the chase; then he is dangerous, and his wrath easily kindled.
Lucan, in the horrible account he gives us of a grove sacred to some barbarous power, worshipped with the most horrid rites, refers to the same superstition: -
Lucus erat longo nunquam violatus ab aevo
Non illum cultu populi propiore frequentant
Sed cessere deis: medio cum Phoebus in axe est
Aut coelum nox atra tenet, pavet ipse sacerdo
Accessus, dominumque timet deprendere luci
Lucan, lib. iii., ver. 399
"Not far away, for ages past, had stoo
An old inviolated sacred wood
The pious worshippers approach not near
But shun their gods, and kneel with distant fear
The priest himself, when, or the day or nigh
Rolling have reached their full meridian height
Refrains the gloomy paths with wary feet
Dreading the demon of the grove to meet
Who, terrible to sight, at that fixed hou
Still treads the round about this dreary bower.
Rowe
It has been stated among the heathens that the gods should be worshipped at all times, but the demons should be worshipped at midday: probably because these demons, having been employed during the night, required rest at noonday and that was the most proper time to appease them. See Calmet on this place. Both the Vulgate and Septuagint seem to have reference to this superstition
The Syriac understands the passage of a pestilential wind, that blows at noonday. Aquila translates, of the bite of the noonday demon.
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Clarke: Psa 91:7 - -- A thousand shall fall at thy side - Calmet thinks this place should be translated thus: "A thousand enemies may fall upon thee on one side, and ten ...
A thousand shall fall at thy side - Calmet thinks this place should be translated thus: "A thousand enemies may fall upon thee on one side, and ten thousand may fall upon thee on thy right hand: but they shall not come nigh thee to take away thy life."It is a promise of perfect protection, and the utmost safety.
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Clarke: Psa 91:8 - -- The reward of the wicked - Thou shalt not only be safe thyself, but thou shalt see all thy enemies discomfited and cast down.
The reward of the wicked - Thou shalt not only be safe thyself, but thou shalt see all thy enemies discomfited and cast down.
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Clarke: Psa 91:9 - -- Because thou hast made the Lord - Seeing thou hast taken Jehovah, the Most High, for thy portion and thy refuge, no evil shall come nigh thy dwellin...
Because thou hast made the Lord - Seeing thou hast taken Jehovah, the Most High, for thy portion and thy refuge, no evil shall come nigh thy dwelling; thou shalt be safe in thy soul, body, household, and property, Psa 91:10. Every pious man may expect such protection from his God and Father.
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Clarke: Psa 91:11 - -- He shall give his angels charge over thee - Evil spirits may attempt to injure thee; but they shall not be able. The angels of God shall have an esp...
He shall give his angels charge over thee - Evil spirits may attempt to injure thee; but they shall not be able. The angels of God shall have an especial charge to accompany, defend, and preserve thee; and against their power, the influence of evil spirits cannot prevail. These will, when necessary, turn thy steps out of the wag of danger; ward it off when it comes in thy ordinary path; suggest to thy mind prudent counsels, profitable designs, and pious purposes; and thus minister to thee as a child of God, and an heir of salvation
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Clarke: Psa 91:11 - -- To keep thee in all thy ways - The path of duty is the way of safety
Thou canst not reasonably expect protection if thou walk not in the way of obed...
To keep thee in all thy ways - The path of duty is the way of safety
Thou canst not reasonably expect protection if thou walk not in the way of obedience. Thy ways are the paths of duty, which God’ s word and providence have marked out for thee. The way of sin is not thy way - thy duty, thy interest. Keep in thy own ways, not in those of sin, Satan, the world, and the flesh; and God will take care of thee.
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Clarke: Psa 91:12 - -- They shall bear thee up in their hands - Take the same care of thee as a nurse does of a weak and tender child; lead thee, - teach thee to walk, - l...
They shall bear thee up in their hands - Take the same care of thee as a nurse does of a weak and tender child; lead thee, - teach thee to walk, - lift thee up out of the way of danger, "lest thou shouldst dash thy foot against a stone,"receive any kind of injury, or be prevented from pursuing thy path with safety and comfort
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Clarke: Psa 91:12 - -- Let us remember that it is God, whose these angels are; He gives them charge from Him they receive their commission, - to Him they are responsible f...
Let us remember that it is God, whose these angels are; He gives them charge from Him they receive their commission, - to Him they are responsible for their charge. From God thou art to expect them; and for their help he alone is to receive the praise. It is expressly said, He shall give his angels charge; to show that they are not to be prayed to nor praised but God alone, whose servants they are. See the note on Mat 4:6.
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Clarke: Psa 91:13 - -- Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder - Even the king of the forest shall not be able to injure thee; should one of these attack thee, the angels...
Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder - Even the king of the forest shall not be able to injure thee; should one of these attack thee, the angels whom God sends will give thee an easy victory over him. And even the asp, (
The asp is a very small serpent, and peculiar to Egypt and Libya. Its poison kills without the possibility of a remedy. Those who are bitten by it die in about from three to eight hours; and it is said they die by sleep, without any kind of pain. Lord Bacon says the asp is less painful than all the other instruments of death. He supposes it to have an affinity to opium, but to be less disagreeable in its operation. It was probably an this account that Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, chose to die by the asp, as she was determined to prevent the designs of Augustus, who intended to have carried her captive to Rome to grace his triumph
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Clarke: Psa 91:13 - -- The dragon shalt thou trample - The תנין tannin , which we translate dragon, means often any large aquatic animal; and perhaps here the crocodi...
The dragon shalt thou trample - The
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Clarke: Psa 91:14 - -- Because he hath set his love upon me - Here the Most High is introduced as confirming the word of his servant. He has fixed his love - his heart and...
Because he hath set his love upon me - Here the Most High is introduced as confirming the word of his servant. He has fixed his love - his heart and soul, on me
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Clarke: Psa 91:14 - -- Therefore will I deliver him - I will save him in all troubles, temptations, and evils of every kind
Therefore will I deliver him - I will save him in all troubles, temptations, and evils of every kind
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Clarke: Psa 91:14 - -- I will set him on high - I will place him out of the reach of all his enemies. I will honor and ennoble him, because he hath known my name - because...
I will set him on high - I will place him out of the reach of all his enemies. I will honor and ennoble him, because he hath known my name - because he has loved, honored, and served me, and rendered me that worship which is my due. He has known me to be the God of infinite mercy and love.
Calvin: Psa 91:1 - -- 1.He that dwelleth in the secret place of the High One Some Hebrew interpreters read the three first verses as one continuous sentence, down to the w...
1.He that dwelleth in the secret place of the High One Some Hebrew interpreters read the three first verses as one continuous sentence, down to the words, he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler The whole would then run thus — “He who dwells in the covert of the Most High, and abides under his shadow, to him will I say of Jehovah, that he is his hope and defense, and the God in whom he may safely rest, for he shall deliver him from the snare,” etc. This is evidently a forced construction to put upon the verses, and the reason which has led some to adopt it is weak and insufficient. They consider that the first verse repeats the same thing twice, and therefore conveys no proper meaning. But this is a great mistake; for the inspired penman of the psalm, whoever he may have been, states two ideas quite distinct, That he who is hid under the Divine protection occupies a safe and secure position, where no hostile weapon can reach him. Or should the verse be read — He who has God to be the guardian of his safety shall rest under the shadow of God; still the second clause would retain an emphatic meaning, for the power of God would be contrasted with that weak defense which man is able to extend. Those, too, who dwell in the secret place of God are here said by the Psalmist to dwell under his shadow, in the sense that they experience to what a rich extent his protection reaches. Men generally seek out a great-variety of hiding-places, having recourse to one or another, according as the calamities are different which threaten to overtake them; but here we are taught that the only safe and impregnable fortress to which we can betake ourselves is the protection of God. He contrasts the security of those who trust in God with the vanity of all other confidences by which we are apt to delude ourselves.
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Calvin: Psa 91:2 - -- In the second verse he repeats the truth which he had already inculcated, showing at the same time that he speaks from his personal feeling and exper...
In the second verse he repeats the truth which he had already inculcated, showing at the same time that he speaks from his personal feeling and experience as a believer. This is very necessary in one who would be a teacher; for we cannot communicate true knowledge unless we deliver it not merely with the lips, but as something which God has revealed to our own hearts. 576 The Psalmist accordingly gives evidence, that what he had taught in the preceding verse accorded with his own inward experience. Some read, I will say concerning the Lord, and the Hebrew prefix,
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Calvin: Psa 91:3 - -- In verse third the Psalmist expresses his assurance that the trust of which he had spoken would not be vain and delusory, but that God would prove at...
In verse third the Psalmist expresses his assurance that the trust of which he had spoken would not be vain and delusory, but that God would prove at all times the deliverer of his people. He is evidently to be considered as addressing himself, and in this way encouraging his own heart to hope in the Lord. Some think that by the snare of the fowler, spoken of here in connection with the pestilence, is to be understood hidden mischief as distinguished from open aggression, and that the Psalmist declares the Divine protection to be sufficient for him, whether Satan should attack him openly and violently or by more secret and subtle methods. I would not reject this interpretation; for though some may think that the words should be taken in their simpler acceptation, the Psalmist most probably intended under these terms to denote all different kinds of evil, and to teach us that God was willing and able to deliver us from any of them.
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Calvin: Psa 91:4 - -- 4.He shall protect thee with his wings This figure, which is employed in other parts of Scripture, is one which beautifully expresses the singularly ...
4.He shall protect thee with his wings This figure, which is employed in other parts of Scripture, is one which beautifully expresses the singularly tender care with which God watches over our safety. When we consider the majesty of God, there is nothing which would suggest a likeness such as is here drawn between him and the hen or other birds, who spread their wings over their young ones to cherish and protect them. But, in accommodation to our infirmity, he does not scruple to descend, as it were, from the heavenly glory which belongs to him, and to encourage us to approach him under so humble a similitude. Since he condescends in such a gracious manner to our weakness, surely there is nothing to prevent us from coming to him with the greatest freedom. By the truth of God, which, the Psalmist says, would be his shield and buckler, we must understand God’s faithfulness, as never deserting his people in the time of their need; still we cannot doubt that he had in his eye the Divine promises, for it is only by looking to these that any can venture to cast themselves upon the protection of God. As, without the word, we cannot come to the enjoyment of that Divine mercy of which the Psalmist had already spoken, he now comes forward himself to bear witness in behalf of it. Formerly, under the comparison of a fortress, he had taught that by trusting in God we shall enjoy safety and security; now he compares God to a shield, intimating that he will come between us and all our enemies to preserve us from their attacks.
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Calvin: Psa 91:5 - -- 5.Thou shalt not fear for the terror of the night The Psalmist continues to insist upon the truth which I have just adverted to, that, if we confide ...
5.Thou shalt not fear for the terror of the night The Psalmist continues to insist upon the truth which I have just adverted to, that, if we confide with implicit reliance upon the protection of God, we will be secure from every temptation and assault of Satan. It is of importance to remember, that those whom God has taken under his care are in a state of the most absolute safety. Even those who have reached the most advanced experience find nothing more difficult than to rely upon Divine deliverance; and more especially when, overtaken by some of the many forms in which danger and death await us in this world, doubts will insinuate themselves into our hearts, giving rise to fear and disquietude. There was reason, therefore, why the Psalmist should enter upon a specification of different evils, encouraging the Lord’s people to look for more than one mode of deliverance, and to bear up under various and accumulated calamities. Mention is made of the fear of the night, because men are naturally apprehensive in the dark, or because the night exposes us to dangers of different kinds, and our fears are apt at such a season to magnify any sound or disturbance. The arrow, rather than another weapon, is instanced as flying by day, for the reason apparently that it shoots to a greater distance, and with such swiftness, that we can with difficulty escape it. The verse which follows states, though in different words, the same truth, that there is no kind of calamity which the shield of the Almighty cannot ward off and repel.
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Calvin: Psa 91:7 - -- 7.A thousand shall fall at thy side 579 He proceeds to show that, though the state of all men may to appearance be alike, the believer has the specia...
7.A thousand shall fall at thy side 579 He proceeds to show that, though the state of all men may to appearance be alike, the believer has the special privilege of being exempted from evils of an imminent and impending nature; for it might be objected that he was but man, and, as such, exposed with others to death in its thousand different forms. To correct this mistake, the Psalmist does not hesitate to assert that, when universal ruin prevails around, the Lord’s children are the objects of his distinguishing care, and are preserved amidst the general destruction. The lesson is one which is needed by us all, that, though naturally subject to the common evils which are spread around, we are privileged with a special exemption which secures our safety in the midst of dangers. In the verse succeeding more is meant than merely that the believer will have personal experience of the truth which the Psalmist had stated, actually feeling and seeing with his own eyes that God manages his defense; a new argument is brought forward in support of the truth, which is this, that God, as the righteous judge of the world, cannot but punish the wicked according to their sins, and extend protection to his own children. There is much that is dark in the aspect of things in this world, yet the Psalmist hints that, amidst all the confusion which reigns, we may collect from what we see of God’s judgments, that he does not disappoint the expectations of his believing people. He must be considered, however, as addressing those who have eyes to see, who are privileged with the true light of faith, who are fully awake to the consideration of the Divine judgments, and who wait patiently and quietly till the proper time arrive; for most men stagger and confuse their minds upon this subject, by starting to precipitate conclusions, and are prevented from discovering the providence of God by judging according to sense. It becomes us too to be satisfied with apprehending the judgments of God only in some imperfect measure while we remain upon earth, and leaving him to defer the fuller discovery of them to the day of complete revelation.
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Calvin: Psa 91:9 - -- 9.Because thou, Jehovah, art my protection He dwells at this length in commendation of the providence of God, as knowing how slow men naturally are t...
9.Because thou, Jehovah, art my protection He dwells at this length in commendation of the providence of God, as knowing how slow men naturally are to resort to God in a right manner; and how much they need to be stimulated to this duty, and to be driven from those false and worldly refuges in which they confide. There is a change of person frequently throughout this psalm: thus, in the first verse, he addresses God, and afterwards addresses himself. God he styles his protection, — in this manner, by his own example, recommending others to have recourse to God as their help. So, afterwards, he addresses himself, that he may be the better persuaded of the sincerity of his inward affection. The true method of testing our faith is to turn our thoughts inward upon ourselves, and, when no human eye sees us, to search our own spirits. If, not content with having to do with God only, we turn our eyes to men, it is almost impossible to prevent pride from insinuating itself into the room of faith. He speaks of accounting God to be his house or refuge, because he defends us from every evil, as in Psa 90:1. This verse may be considered as connected with that which follows, and as stating the cause or reason of what is there asserted; for it is added, There shall no evil befall thee. And how are coming evils averted, but just by our resting with confidence in the protection of God? Troubles, it is true, of various kinds assail the believer as well as others, but the Psalmist means that God stands between him and the violence of every assault, so as to preserve him from being overwhelmed. The Divine guardianship is represented as extending to the whole household of the righteous; and we know that God comprehends under his love the children of such as he has adopted into his fatherly favor. Or, perhaps, the term may be taken in its simpler sense, and nothing more be intended than that those who choose God for their refuge will dwell safely in their houses.
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Calvin: Psa 91:11 - -- 11.For he has given his angels charge concerning thee This is added by the Psalmist expressly with the view of obviating any fears which might arise ...
11.For he has given his angels charge concerning thee This is added by the Psalmist expressly with the view of obviating any fears which might arise from our infirmity; so that we cannot fail to be struck with the benignant condescension of God in thus not only forgiving our diffidence, but proposing the means by which it may be best removed. Does he exhibit himself to us as a fortress and shield, proffer the shadow of his protection, make himself known to us as a habitation in which we may abide, and stretch out his wings for our defense — surely we are chargeable with the worst ingratitude if we are not satisfied with promises so abundantly full and satisfactory? If we tremble to think of his majesty, he presents himself to us under the lowly figure of the hen: if we are terrified at the power of our enemies, and the multitude of dangers by which we are beset, he reminds us of his own invincible power, which extinguishes every opposing force. When even all these attempts to encourage us have been tried, and he finds that we still linger and hesitate to approach him, or cast ourselves upon his sole and exclusive protection, he next makes mention of the angels, and proffers them as guardians of our safety. As an additional illustration of his indulgent mercy, and compassion for our weakness, he represents those whom he has ready for our defense as being a numerous host; he does not assign one solitary angel to each saint, but commissions the whole armies of heaven to keep watch over every individual believer. It is the individual believer whom the Psalmist addresses, as we read also Psa 34:7 — that “angels encamp round about them that fear him.” We may learn from this that there is no truth in the idea that each saint has his own peculiar guardian angel; and it is of no little consequence to consider, that as our enemies are numerous, so also are the friends to whom our defense is intrusted. It were something, no doubt, to know that even one angel was set over us with this commission, but it adds weight to the promise when we are informed that the charge of our safety is committed to a numerous host, as Elisha was enabled, by a like consideration, to despise the great army of adversaries which was arrayed against him, (2Kg 6:16.) Nor is this inconsistent with passages of Scripture, which seem to speak as if a distinct angel were assigned to each individual. It is evident that God employs his angels in different ways, setting one angel over several whole nations, and again several angels over one man. There is no necessity that we should be nice and scrupulous in inquiring into the exact manner in which they minister together for our safety; it is enough that, knowing from the authority of an apostle the fact of their being appointed ministers to us, we should rest satisfied of their being always intent upon their commission. We read elsewhere of their readiness to obey and execute the commands of God; and this must go to strengthen our faith, since their exertions are made use of by God for our defense.
The Psalmist, in the passage now before us, speaks of members of the Church generally; and yet the devil did not wrest the words when, in his temptation in the wilderness, he applied them particularly to Christ. It is true that he is constantly seeking to pervert and corrupt the truth of God; but, so far as general principles are concerned, he can put a specious gloss upon things, and is a sufficiently acute theologian. It is to be considered that when our whole human family were banished from the Divine favor, we ceased to have anything in common with the angels, and they to have any communication with us. It was Christ, and he only, who, by removing the ground of separation, reconciled the angels to us; this being his proper office, as the apostle observes, (Eph 1:10,) to gather together in one what had been dispersed both in heaven and on earth. This was represented to the holy patriarch Jacob under the figure of a ladder, (Gen 28:12;) and, in allusion to our being united into one collective body with the angels, Christ said,
“Afterwards ye shall see the heavens opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending,” (Joh 1:51.)
The Psalmist adds, all your ways in the plural number, to convey to us more distinctly that wherever we go we may expect that the angels shall always extend their guardianship to us. The course of our life is subject to many windings and changes, and who can tell all the storms by which we are liable to be tossed? It was necessary, therefore, to know that the angels preside over all our particular actions and purposes, and thus to be assured of their safe-conduct in whatever quarter we might be called to move. This expression, however, your ways, was, in all likelihood, intended to enjoin upon us a due consideration and modesty, to warn us against tempting God by any rash step, and admonish us to confine ourselves within the bounds of our proper calling. For should we commit ourselves recklessly, and attempt things which the promise of God does not warrant us to undertake, aspiring at what is presumptuous, and opposed to the Divine will, we are not to expect that the angels will become ministers and helps to our temerity. Satan would appear to have craftily omitted this clause when he tempted Christ rashly to throw himself down from the temple.
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Calvin: Psa 91:12 - -- 12.They shall bear thee upon their hands He gives us a still higher idea of the guardianship of the angels, informing us, that they not only watch le...
12.They shall bear thee upon their hands He gives us a still higher idea of the guardianship of the angels, informing us, that they not only watch lest any evil should befall us, and are on the alert to extend assistance, but bear up our steps with their hands, so as to prevent us from stumbling in our course. Were we to judge indeed by mere appearances, the children of God are far from being thus borne up aloft in their career; often they labor and pant with exertion, occasionally they stagger and fall, and it is with a struggle that they advance in their course; but as in the midst of all this weakness it is only by the singular help of God that they are preserved every moment from falling and from being destroyed, we need not wonder that the Psalmist should speak in such exalted terms of the assistance which they receive through the ministrations of angels. Never, besides, could we surmount the serious obstacles which Satan opposes to our prayers, unless God should bear us up in the manner here described. Let any one combine together the two considerations which have been mentioned, — our own utter weakness on the one hand, and on the other the roughness, the difficulties, the thorns which beset our way, the stupidity besides which characterises our hearts, and the subtlety of the evil one in laying snares for our destruction, — and he will see that the language of the Psalmist is not that of hyperbole, that we could not proceed one step did not the angels bear us up in their hands in a manner beyond the ordinary course of nature. That we frequently stumble is owing to our own fault in departing from him who is our head and leader. And though God suffers us to stumble and fall in this manner that he may convince us how weak we are in ourselves, yet, inasmuch as he does not permit us to be crushed or altogether overwhelmed, it is virtually even then as if he put his hand under us and bore us up.
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Calvin: Psa 91:13 - -- 13.Thou shalt walk over the lion and asp The same truth is here expressed in different words. He had already spoken of the obstacles which Satan thro...
13.Thou shalt walk over the lion and asp The same truth is here expressed in different words. He had already spoken of the obstacles which Satan throws in our course under the figure of a stone. Now he speaks of the formidable troubles to which we are exposed in the world under the figures of the asp, lion, young lion, and dragon So long as we are here we may be truly said to walk amongst wild beasts, and such as threaten us with destruction. And in this case what would become of us did not God promise to make us victorious over the manifold evils which everywhere impend us? None who seriously considers the temptations to which he is liable will wonder that the Psalmist, with the view of removing apprehension from the minds of the Lord’s people, should have adopted the language of hyperbole; nor indeed will he say that it is the language of hyperbole, but a true and exact representation of their case. We boast much of our courage so long as we remain at a distance from the scene of danger; but no sooner are we brought into action, than in the smallest matters we conjure up to ourselves lions, and dragons, and a host of frightful dangers. The Psalmist accommodates his language to this infirmity of our carnal apprehension. The Hebrew word
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Calvin: Psa 91:14 - -- 14.Because he hath trusted in me, I will deliver him It may prevent any feeling of disgust or weariness under the repetition and enlargement of the P...
14.Because he hath trusted in me, I will deliver him It may prevent any feeling of disgust or weariness under the repetition and enlargement of the Psalmist upon his present subject, to remember, that, as I have already observed, he is influenced in this by a due consideration of our weakness, ever indisposed, as we are upon the approach of danger, to exercise a due reliance upon the providence of God. With this view he now introduces God himself as speaking, and confirming by his own voice what had already been asserted. And here it is noticeable that God, in declaring from heaven that we shall be safe under the wings of his protection, speaks of nothing as necessary on the part of his people but hope or trust. For the Hebrew verb
Defender: Psa 91:1 - -- Although the 91st psalm does not have a specific named author, it is possible that it was written by Moses as a supplement to his previous psalm, Psal...
Although the 91st psalm does not have a specific named author, it is possible that it was written by Moses as a supplement to his previous psalm, Psalm 90. Both begin with the theme of God as the dwelling place of the believer and have various other points of commonality. Both Psalms are understood in terms of the wanderings, hardships and enemies of the Israelites during their forty years in the wilderness."
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Defender: Psa 91:11 - -- The key significance of this psalm is pointed out by the fact that Satan recognized it as a Messianic psalm and quoted from it when seeking to tempt J...
The key significance of this psalm is pointed out by the fact that Satan recognized it as a Messianic psalm and quoted from it when seeking to tempt Jesus to bypass the cross (Mat 4:6). He misquoted the Scripture in omitting the qualifier "in all thy ways.""
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Defender: Psa 91:12 - -- Although this promise applied specifically to Jesus, it is also a marvelous representation of the ministry of angels on behalf of the "heirs of salvat...
Although this promise applied specifically to Jesus, it is also a marvelous representation of the ministry of angels on behalf of the "heirs of salvation" (Heb 1:14) when so directed by God."
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Defender: Psa 91:13 - -- In using this passage Satan recognized it as a reference to the accomplishment by Christ of the primeval promise of Gen 3:15, that the Seed of the Wom...
In using this passage Satan recognized it as a reference to the accomplishment by Christ of the primeval promise of Gen 3:15, that the Seed of the Woman would eventually crush the Serpent's head.
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Defender: Psa 91:13 - -- Both the lion and the dragon are symbolic of Satan (1Pe 5:8; Rev 12:9). Here is proof that dragons were animals as real as adders and lions. It appear...
Both the lion and the dragon are symbolic of Satan (1Pe 5:8; Rev 12:9). Here is proof that dragons were animals as real as adders and lions. It appears that dragons were animals similar to dinosaurs (see notes on Job 40:15-19)."
TSK: Psa 91:1 - -- (Title), This Psalm is supposed by some to have been composed by Moses on the same occasion as the preceding; but others think it was written by David...
(Title), This Psalm is supposed by some to have been composed by Moses on the same occasion as the preceding; but others think it was written by David, after his advice to his son Solomon. 1Chr. 28:1-21
dwelleth : Psa 27:5, Psa 31:20, Psa 32:7, Psa 52:8, Psa 61:3, Psa 61:4, Psa 90:1; Isa 8:14; Eze 11:16; Hos 14:5, Hos 14:6; 1Jo 4:15, 1Jo 4:16
abide : Heb. lodge, Psa 25:13 *marg.
under : Psa 17:8, Psa 36:7, Psa 57:1; Jdg 9:15; Son 2:3; Isa 4:5, Isa 4:6; Lam 4:20
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TSK: Psa 91:2 - -- I will : Psa 91:9, Psa 18:2, Psa 46:1, Psa 71:3, Psa 142:5; Deu 32:30, Deu 32:31, Deu 33:27-29; Pro 18:10
my God : Psa 43:4, Psa 48:14, Psa 67:6, Psa ...
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TSK: Psa 91:3 - -- snare : Psa 124:7, Psa 141:9; Pro 7:23; Ecc 9:12; Hos 9:8; Amo 3:5; 1Ti 6:9; 2Ti 2:26
and from : Psa 91:6; Num 14:37, Num 14:38, Num 16:46-48; 2Sa 24:...
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TSK: Psa 91:4 - -- cover : Psa 17:8, Psa 57:1, Psa 61:4; Deu 32:11; Rth 2:12; Mat 23:37
his truth : Psa 89:23, Psa 89:24, Psa 138:2; Gen 15:1; Isa 43:1, Isa 43:2; Mar 13...
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TSK: Psa 91:5 - -- Thou : Psa 3:6, Psa 27:1-3, Psa 46:2, Psa 112:7; Job 5:19-27; Pro 28:1; Isa 43:2; Mat 8:26; Heb 13:6
terror : Psa 3:5; 2Ki 7:6; Job 4:13-15, Job 24:14...
Thou : Psa 3:6, Psa 27:1-3, Psa 46:2, Psa 112:7; Job 5:19-27; Pro 28:1; Isa 43:2; Mat 8:26; Heb 13:6
terror : Psa 3:5; 2Ki 7:6; Job 4:13-15, Job 24:14-16; Pro 3:23-25; Isa 21:4; Luk 12:20, Luk 12:39
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TSK: Psa 91:6 - -- pestilence : Psa 121:5, Psa 121:6; Exo 12:29, Exo 12:30; 2Ki 19:35
destruction : Num 16:48; 2Sa 24:15; Mat 24:6, Mat 24:7; 1Co 10:3-10
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TSK: Psa 91:8 - -- Only : Psa 37:34, Psa 58:10, Psa 58:11, Psa 92:11; Pro 3:25, Pro 3:26; Mal 1:5
reward : Isa 3:11; Heb 2:2
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TSK: Psa 91:9 - -- Because : Psa 91:2, Psa 142:4, Psa 142:5, Psa 146:5, Psa 146:6
most high : Psa 91:1, Psa 71:3, Psa 90:1
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TSK: Psa 91:11 - -- For : Psa 34:7, Psa 71:3; 2Ki 6:16, 2Ki 6:17; Mat 4:6; Luk 4:10, Luk 4:11; Heb 1:14
in all : Pro 3:6; Isa 31:1; Jer 2:18
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TSK: Psa 91:13 - -- tread : Jdg 14:5, Jdg 14:6; Job 5:23; 1Sa 17:37; Dan 6:22; 2Ti 4:17
adder : or, asp, Psa 58:4; Mar 16:18; Act 28:3-6; Rom 3:13, Rom 16:20
the dragon :...
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TSK: Psa 91:14 - -- set : Psa 91:9; 1Ch 29:3; Joh 14:23, Joh 16:27; Rom 8:28; Jam 1:12, Jam 2:5
I will set : Psa 59:1 *marg. Psa 89:16, Psa 89:17; Isa 33:16; Phi 2:9-11
k...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 91:1 - -- He that dwelleth - Everyone that so dwells. The proposition is universal, and is designed to embrace all who are in this condition. It is true ...
He that dwelleth - Everyone that so dwells. The proposition is universal, and is designed to embrace all who are in this condition. It is true of one; it is true of all. The word rendered "dwelleth"here is a participle from the verb to "sit,"and here means "sitting:"literally, "sitting in the secret place,"etc. The idea is that of calm repose; of resting; of sitting down - as one does in his dwelling.
In the secret place - On the meaning of this see the notes at Psa 27:5. Compare Psa 31:20; Psa 32:7. Abiding where God abides. The idea is that of having one’ s home or residence in the most holy place in the tabernacle or the temple, and of sitting with him in that sacred place.
Of the Most High - Of God, represented as exalted above all; over all the universe.
Shall abide - Margin, as in Hebrew, "lodge."That is his home - his resting place - where he lodges, or passes the night. He takes up his lodging there; he makes it his home.
Under the shadow of the Almighty - Under his protection, as if under his wings. Compare the notes at Psa 17:8. This is a general statement, and is designed as an introduction to the whole psalm, or as expressing what the psalm is intended to illustrate, "the blessedness"of the man who thus dwells with God; who makes him his friend; who makes the home of God his home.
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Barnes: Psa 91:2 - -- I will say of the Lord - I, the psalmist; I will take this to myself; I will endeavor to secure this blessedness; I will thus abide with God. I...
I will say of the Lord - I, the psalmist; I will take this to myself; I will endeavor to secure this blessedness; I will thus abide with God. In view of the blessedness of this condition, and with the hope of securing it to myself; I will adopt this resolution as the purpose of my life. It is what I need; it is what my soul desires.
My refuge and my fortress - " I will say of Jehovah, My refuge and my fortress!"I will address him as such; I will regard him as such. On the meaning of these terms, see the notes at Psa 18:2.
My God - I will address him as my God; as the God whom alone I worship; as the only being to whom the name "God"can properly be applied; as being to me all that is implied in the word God.
In him will I trust - I will repose that confidence in him which is evinced by making my home with him, and seeking permanently to dwell with him.
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Barnes: Psa 91:3 - -- Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler - The snare or gin set for catching birds; meaning, here, that God would save him fro...
Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler - The snare or gin set for catching birds; meaning, here, that God would save him from the purposes of wicked people; such purposes as might be compared with the devices employed to catch birds. On the meaning of the figure used here, see the notes at Psa 18:5.
And from the noisome pestilence - The "fatal"pestilence; the pestilence that spreads death in its march. That is, he can prevent its coming upon you; or, he can save you from its ravages, while others are dying around you. This promise is not to be understood as absolute, or as meaning that no one who fears God will ever fall by the pestilence - for good people "do"die at such times as well as bad people; but the idea is, that God "can"preserve us at such a time and that, as a great law, he will be thus the protector of those who trust him. It is to be remembered that in times of pestilence (as was the case during the prevalence of the Asiatic cholera in 1832 and 1848), very many of the victims are the intemperate, the sensual, the debased, and that a life of this kind is a predisposing cause of death in such visitations of judgment. A large part of those who die are of that number. From the danger arising from this cause, of course the virtuous, the temperate, the pious are exempt; and this is one of the methods by which God saves those who trust in him from the "noisome pestilence."Religion, therefore, to a considerable extent, constitutes a ground of security at such times; nor is there any reason to doubt that, in many cases also, there may be a special interposition protecting the friends of God from danger, and sparing them for future usefulness. The promise here is substantially that general promise which we have in the Scriptures everywhere, that God is the Protector of his people, and that they may put their trust in him.
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Barnes: Psa 91:4 - -- He shall cover thee with his feathers ... - As the parent bird protects its young. See the notes at Psa 17:8. Compare Deu 32:11. "His truth."Hi...
He shall cover thee with his feathers ... - As the parent bird protects its young. See the notes at Psa 17:8. Compare Deu 32:11. "His truth."His unfailing promise; the certainty that what he has promised to do he will perform.
Shall be thy shield and buckler - literally, "Shield and buckler is his truth."The meaning is, that his pledge or promise would be unto them as the shield of the soldier is to him in battle. Compare Psa 35:2. The word rendered "buckler"is derived from the verb "to surround,"and is given to the defensive armor here referred to, because it "surrounds,"and thus "protects"a person. It may apply to a coat of mail.
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Barnes: Psa 91:5 - -- Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night - That which usually causes alarm at night - a sudden attack; an unexpected incursion of enemi...
Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night - That which usually causes alarm at night - a sudden attack; an unexpected incursion of enemies; sudden disease coming on by night; or the pestilence which seems to love night, and to "walk in darkness."Any one of these things seems to be aggravated by night and darkness; and hence, we most dread them then. We cannot see their approach; we cannot measure their outlines; we know not the extent of the danger, or what may be the calamity.
Nor for the arrow that flieth by day - Whether shot from the bow of God - as pestilence and disease; or from the hand of man in battle. The idea is, that he that trusts in God will be calm. Compare the notes at Psa 56:3.
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Barnes: Psa 91:6 - -- Nor for the pestilence - The plague or pestilence was common in Oriental countries. That walketh in darkness - Not that it particularly c...
Nor for the pestilence - The plague or pestilence was common in Oriental countries.
That walketh in darkness - Not that it particularly comes in the night, but that it seems to creep along as if in the night; that is, where one cannot mark its progress, or anticipate when or whom it will strike. The laws of its movements are unknown, and it comes upon people as an enemy that suddenly attacks us in the night.
Nor for the destruction - The word used here -
That wasteth at noonday - It lays waste, or produces desolation, at noon; that is, visibly, openly. The meaning is, that whenever, or in whatever form, calamity comes which sweeps away the race - whether at midnight or at noon - whether in the form of pestilence, war, or famine - he who trusts in God need not - will not - be afraid. He will feel either that he will be preserved from its ravages, or that if he is cut off he has nothing to fear. He is a friend of God, and he has a hope of a better life. In death, and in the future world, there is nothing of which he should be afraid. The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render this, strangely enough, "Nor of mischance and the demon of noonday."
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Barnes: Psa 91:7 - -- A thousand shall fall at thy side - Though a thousand should fall at thy side, or close to thee. This alludes to the manner in which the pestil...
A thousand shall fall at thy side - Though a thousand should fall at thy side, or close to thee. This alludes to the manner in which the pestilence often moves among people.
And ten thousand at thy right hand - Compare Psa 3:6. The word "myriad"would better represent the exact idea in the original, as the Hebrew word is different from that which is translated "a thousand."It is put here for any large number. No matter how many fall around thee, on the right hand and the left, you will have nothing to fear.
But it shall not come nigh thee - You will be safe. You may feel assured of the divine protection. Your mind may be calm through a sense of such guardianship, and your very calmness will conduce to your safety. This refers, as remarked above, to a "general"law in regard to the judgments of God. It is true that others, beside the dissipated, vicious, and debased, may be the victims; but the great law is that temperance, soberness, virtue, cleanliness, and that regard to comfort and health to which religion and virtue prompt, constitute a marked security - so marked as to illustrate the "general"law referred to in the psalm before us.
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Barnes: Psa 91:8 - -- Only - That is, This is "all"that will occur to you. The only thing which you have to anticipate is, that you will see how God punishes sinners...
Only - That is, This is "all"that will occur to you. The only thing which you have to anticipate is, that you will see how God punishes sinners.
With thine eyes shalt thou behold and see the reward of the wicked - Your own eyes shall see it. See the notes at Psa 37:34. You will see the just punishment of the ungodly, the vicious, the profane, the sensual. You will see what is the proper fruit of their conduct; what is the just expression of the views which God takes of their character. This undoubtedly refers to the general principle that there is a moral government on earth; that vice is often punished as such; that the general course of the divine dealings is such as to show that God is favorable to virtue, and is opposed to vice. The system is not complete here, and there are many things which could not be reconciled with this, if the present world were all, and if there were no future state: but the course of events indicates the general character of the divine administration, and what is the tendency of things. The completion - the actual and perfect adjustment - is reserved for a future state. The facts as they occur on earth prove that there is an attribute of justice in God; the fact that his dealings here are not wholly and fully in accordance with what justice demands, proves that there will be a state where full justice will be done, and where the whole system will be adjusted.
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Barnes: Psa 91:9 - -- Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge - literally, "For thou, O Jehovah, (art) my refuge."The Chaldee Paraphrase regards this as ...
Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge - literally, "For thou, O Jehovah, (art) my refuge."The Chaldee Paraphrase regards this as the language of Solomon, who, according to that version, is one of the speakers in the psalm: "Solomon answered and said, ‘ Since thou, O Lord, art my refuge,’ "etc. Tholuck regards this as the response of the choir. But this is unnecessary. The idea is, that the psalmist "himself"had made Yahweh his refuge, or his defense. The language is an expression of his own feeling - of his own experience - in having made God his refuge, and is designed here to be a ground of exhortation to others to do the same thing. He could say that he had made God his refuge; he could say that God was now his refuge; and he could appeal to this - to his own experience - when he exhorted others to do the same, and gave them assurance of safety in doing it.
Even the Most High thy habitation - literally, "The Most High hast thou made thy habitation;"or, thy home. On the word habitation, see the notes at Psa 90:1. The idea is, that he had, as it were, chosen to abide with God, or to dwell with him - to find his home with him as in a father’ s house. The consequence of this, or the security which would follow, he states in the following verses.
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Barnes: Psa 91:10 - -- There shall no evil befall thee - The Chaldee Paraphrase has, "The Lord of the world answered and said, ‘ There shall no evil befall thee,...
There shall no evil befall thee - The Chaldee Paraphrase has, "The Lord of the world answered and said, ‘ There shall no evil befall thee,’ "etc. The sentiment, however, is that the psalmist could assure such an one, from his own personal experience, that he would be safe. He had himself made Yahweh his refuge, and he could speak with confidence of the safety of doing so. This, of course, is to be understood as a general truth, in accordance with what has been said above.
Neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling - On the word rendered "plague"here
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Barnes: Psa 91:11 - -- For he shall give his angels charge over thee - literally, "He will give ‘ command’ to his angels."That is, he would instruct them, ...
For he shall give his angels charge over thee - literally, "He will give ‘ command’ to his angels."That is, he would instruct them, or appoint them for this purpose. This passage Psa 91:11-12 was applied to the Saviour by the tempter. Mat 4:6. See the notes at that passage. This, however, does not prove that it had an original reference to the Messiah, for even if we should suppose that Satan was a correct and reliable expounder of the Scriptures, all that the passage would prove as used by him would be, that the righteous, or those who were the friends of God, might rely confidently on his protection, and that Jesus, if he was of God, might do this as others might. On the sentiment in the passage, to wit, that God employs his angels to protect his people, see the notes at Psa 34:7; compare the notes at Heb 1:14.
To keep thee in all thy ways - To preserve thee wheresoever thou goest.
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Barnes: Psa 91:12 - -- They shall bear thee up ... - As if they took hold of thee, and held thee up, when about to fall. Lest thou dash thy foot ... - Lest you ...
They shall bear thee up ... - As if they took hold of thee, and held thee up, when about to fall.
Lest thou dash thy foot ... - Lest you should stumble and fall. They will protect you so that you may walk safely.
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Barnes: Psa 91:13 - -- Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder - Thou shalt be safe among dangers, as if the rage of the lion were restrained, and he became like a l...
Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder - Thou shalt be safe among dangers, as if the rage of the lion were restrained, and he became like a lamb, and as if the poisonous tooth of the serpent were extracted. Compare Mar 16:18. The word used here to denote the "lion"is a poetic term, not employed in prose. The word rendered "adder"is, in the margin, asp. The Hebrew word -
The young lion - The "young"lion is mentioned as particularly fierce and violent. See Psa 17:12.
And the dragon ... - Hebrew,
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Barnes: Psa 91:14 - -- Because he hath set his love upon me - Has become attached to me; has united himself with me; is my friend. The Hebrew word expresses the stron...
Because he hath set his love upon me - Has become attached to me; has united himself with me; is my friend. The Hebrew word expresses the strongest attachment, and is equivalent to our expression - "to fall in love."It refers here to the fact that God is the object of supreme affection on the part of his people; and it also here implies, that this springs from their hearts; that they have seen such beauty in his character, and have such strong desire for him, that their hearts go out in warm affection toward him.
Therefore will I deliver him - I will save him from trouble and from danger.
I will set him on high - By acknowledging him as my own, and treating him accordingly.
Because he hath known my name - He has known me; that is, he understands my true character, and has learned to love me.
Upon that ground I will confidently commit myself and all my affairs to God.
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Poole: Psa 91:3 - -- O thou believing, pious soul, who after my example shalt make God thy refuge, thou shalt partake of the same privilege which I enjoy.
He shall deli...
O thou believing, pious soul, who after my example shalt make God thy refuge, thou shalt partake of the same privilege which I enjoy.
He shall deliver thee from the pestilence which like a fowler’ s snare taketh men suddenly and unexpectedly, and holdeth them fast, and commonly delivers them up to death.
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Poole: Psa 91:4 - -- His truth whereby he is obliged to fulfil all his gracious promises, and, amongst the rest, that of protection in dangers.
His truth whereby he is obliged to fulfil all his gracious promises, and, amongst the rest, that of protection in dangers.
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Poole: Psa 91:5 - -- By night when evil accidents are most terrible and least avoidable.
The arrow the pestilence, or any such common and destructive calamity; for such...
By night when evil accidents are most terrible and least avoidable.
The arrow the pestilence, or any such common and destructive calamity; for such are frequently called God’ s arrows, as Dent. Deu 32:23,42 La 3:12,13 , &c.
By day which is the time for shooting of arrows. The sense of the verse is, He shall be kept from secret and open mischiefs at all times.
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Poole: Psa 91:6 - -- This verse explains the former, and showeth what that terror and arrow signifies.
That walketh that spreadeth, or maketh progress.
In darkness e...
This verse explains the former, and showeth what that terror and arrow signifies.
That walketh that spreadeth, or maketh progress.
In darkness either invisibly, so as we can neither foresee nor prevent it; or rather, by night, as Psa 91:5 .
That wasteth at noon-day that like a bold enemy assaults us openly, and though discovered cannot be resisted.
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Poole: Psa 91:7 - -- At thy side at thy left side , because this is opposed to the right side here following. See the like ellipsis Num 9:16 Psa 84:11 .
It shall not c...
At thy side at thy left side , because this is opposed to the right side here following. See the like ellipsis Num 9:16 Psa 84:11 .
It shall not come nigh thee: this and such-like promises are not to be understood absolutely and universally, as if no truly good man could be cut off by the plague or other common calamities, which is confitted both by other plain texts of Scripture, and by unquestionable experience; but with due limitations and conditions, either on man’ s part, as if there be a defect in his faith or obedience; or on God’ s part, when God sees that death is more for his good than life, as it apparently is when righteous men axe taken away from the evil to come, as is said, Isa 57:1 ; in which case, though God doth not give the thing promised, yet he giveth a far greater mercy instead of it, and so fulfils his promise in the best sense, and with most advantage. As, if one man should solemnly promise to another to give him his daily food every day, he not only might, but ought, notwithstanding this promise, to deny and withdraw this food, when his body is so distempered, that in the judgment of the wisest physicians the taking of his food would evidently endanger his life.
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Poole: Psa 91:8 - -- Thou shalt behold without any terror or danger to thyself, and with a delightful and thankful reflection upon God’ s goodness to thee. The rewar...
Thou shalt behold without any terror or danger to thyself, and with a delightful and thankful reflection upon God’ s goodness to thee. The reward of the wicked; the just recompence of their sins, or the vengeance of God upon them.
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Poole: Psa 91:9 - -- Or, as the words lie in the Hebrew, and others render them, Because thou, O Lord, are my refuge, thou , O my soul, (which is easily understood out ...
Or, as the words lie in the Hebrew, and others render them, Because thou, O Lord, are my refuge, thou , O my soul, (which is easily understood out of the foregoing words, and to which David oft suddenly turneth his speech,) hast made the Most High thine habitation ; which is the only ground and reason of that safety last mentioned. As for the variation of persons, that he sometimes speaketh to and of others, and sometimes to and of himself, nothing is more frequent in this book; nor doth it make any alteration in the sense.
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Poole: Psa 91:10 - -- To wit, so as to destroy thee, as the next verse limits and expounds it. For surely this promise is not made to all that dwell nigh to his children ...
To wit, so as to destroy thee, as the next verse limits and expounds it. For surely this promise is not made to all that dwell nigh to his children and servants, who may possibly be wicked men, and so strangers from God’ s covenant and promises. How far this secures his own person, See Poole "Psa 91:7" .
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Poole: Psa 91:11 - -- His angels those blessed, and powerful, and watchful spirits whom God hath appointed to mind the affairs of this lower world, and to take care of the...
His angels those blessed, and powerful, and watchful spirits whom God hath appointed to mind the affairs of this lower world, and to take care of the heirs of salvation, Heb 1:14 .
In all thy ways in the whole course of thy life, and in all thy lawful undertakings.
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Poole: Psa 91:12 - -- Shall bear thee up in their hands sustain or uphold thee in thy goings, as we do a child or a weakly man, especially in uneven or dangerous paths. Or...
Shall bear thee up in their hands sustain or uphold thee in thy goings, as we do a child or a weakly man, especially in uneven or dangerous paths. Or, shall carry thee aloft, as upon eagles’ wings, when it shall be needful for thee.
Lest thou dash thy foot against a stone so as to hurt thy foot, or to cause thee to fall.
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Poole: Psa 91:13 - -- The lion shall lie prostrate at thy feet, and thou shalt securely put thy feet upon his neck, as the Israelites did upon the necks of the Canaanitis...
The lion shall lie prostrate at thy feet, and thou shalt securely put thy feet upon his neck, as the Israelites did upon the necks of the Canaanitish kings, Jos 10:24 .
The dragon by which he synecdochically understands all pernicious creatures, though never so strong, and fierce, and subtle, and all sorts of enemies.
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Poole: Psa 91:14 - -- This and the two following verses are the words of God, whom the psalmist here, as oft elsewhere, introduceth as giving an account of the reasons of...
This and the two following verses are the words of God, whom the psalmist here, as oft elsewhere, introduceth as giving an account of the reasons of God’ s singular care of all believing or pious persons.
I will deliver him I will abundantly recompense his love with my favour and blessing.
On high in a high and safe place, where no evil can reach him.
Hath known my name with a true and saving knowledge, so as to love me and put his trust in me. God’ s name is here put for God himself, as it is also Deu 28:58 Psa 20:1 105:1 .
Haydock: Psa 91:1 - -- God is to be praised for his wondrous works.
In him. The general judgment will set this in the clearest light. At present, the ways of Providence ...
God is to be praised for his wondrous works.
In him. The general judgment will set this in the clearest light. At present, the ways of Providence may be mysterious, ver. 6. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 91:1 - -- Day. The Jews say, that Adam sung this at his creation, (Chaldean) or that it refers to the reign of the Messias, which shall lost one thousand year...
Day. The Jews say, that Adam sung this at his creation, (Chaldean) or that it refers to the reign of the Messias, which shall lost one thousand years after this world is ended. (Kimchi) ---
Others think it is a thanksgiving after the defeat of Sennacherib, (Ven. Bede) or Absalom. (Ferrand) ---
It might be sung by the sons of Moses, who expected to be shortly delivered from Babylon, (Calmet) or by the people on the sabbath, (Berthier) though many of the Fathers think, that this word denotes "the repose of the life to come." The occasion or author of this psalm cannot be clearly ascertained. (Calmet) ---
When we enjoy rest from labour, we ought particularly to praise God's works. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 91:2 - -- Praise. Literally, "to confess," (Haydock) as we must be free from sin before we can worthily proclaim God's praises. (Eusebius) (St. Jerome) ---
...
Praise. Literally, "to confess," (Haydock) as we must be free from sin before we can worthily proclaim God's praises. (Eusebius) (St. Jerome) ---
But here to confess means to praise, (Calmet) or give thanks. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 91:3 - -- Night. Of adversity, and at all times, (Berthier) as well as in prosperity. (Worthington) ---
Morning and evening prayer must not be neglected. (...
Night. Of adversity, and at all times, (Berthier) as well as in prosperity. (Worthington) ---
Morning and evening prayer must not be neglected. (Haydock) ---
These times were particularly pointed out, Psalm liv. 18.
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Haydock: Psa 91:4 - -- Strings, upon. Hebrew, "on the hasor, and on the nabel, on the higaion with the cinnor." Yet the ten stringed instrument seems to have been the sa...
Strings, upon. Hebrew, "on the hasor, and on the nabel, on the higaion with the cinnor." Yet the ten stringed instrument seems to have been the same with the psaltery, or nobol. (Haydock) ---
Bellarmine thinks and is redundant, and was not in the copies of the Septuagint, or it is only explanatory, as we know that the psaltery had ten strings, Psalm xxxii. 2., and cxliii. 9. (Menochius) ---
The matter is of small consequence. (Berthier) ---
Eusebius seems to insinuate, that instruments were not used in the Church of his time. (Calmet) ---
The observance of the commandments, and mortification, signified by the harp are requisite. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 91:5 - -- Rejoice. Admiring thy providence, (Calmet) or the Messias. "What are all things compared with thee, O Lord!" (St. Augustine; Conf. x. 4.)
Rejoice. Admiring thy providence, (Calmet) or the Messias. "What are all things compared with thee, O Lord!" (St. Augustine; Conf. x. 4.)
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Haydock: Psa 91:6 - -- Deep. We cannot easily explain thy ways, (Menochius) in exalting some, and depressing thy people. (Calmet) (Romans xi. 33.)
Deep. We cannot easily explain thy ways, (Menochius) in exalting some, and depressing thy people. (Calmet) (Romans xi. 33.)
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Haydock: Psa 91:7 - -- Things. Pretended sages hence take occasion to blaspheme whatsoever things they know not, Jude 10. The wise adore God in silence, (Haydock) and ...
Things. Pretended sages hence take occasion to blaspheme whatsoever things they know not, Jude 10. The wise adore God in silence, (Haydock) and confess, that the misery of the just here proves a future life, while the wicked prosper, to be more tormented. (Eusebius) ---
Carnal men, who think only of present things, see not this. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 91:8 - -- Appear. Hebrew, "flourish." Still they are but as grass, (Haydock) short-lived, and of small utility. The just resembles the palm-tree, ver. 13....
Appear. Hebrew, "flourish." Still they are but as grass, (Haydock) short-lived, and of small utility. The just resembles the palm-tree, ver. 13. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 91:10 - -- Enemies. The Babylonians, (Calmet) or all the wicked at the last day. (Berthier) ---
This shews God's power, and insures the exaltation of the jus...
Enemies. The Babylonians, (Calmet) or all the wicked at the last day. (Berthier) ---
This shews God's power, and insures the exaltation of the just. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 91:11 - -- Mercy. Hebrew and some copies of the Septuagint have "oil," an emblem of mercy, Proverbs xxi. 20. (Berthier) ---
"I shall be anointed with fresh ...
Mercy. Hebrew and some copies of the Septuagint have "oil," an emblem of mercy, Proverbs xxi. 20. (Berthier) ---
"I shall be anointed with fresh oil." (Protestants) ---
"My old age shall be like a verdant olive." (Houbigant) (Symmachus) ---
Those who have a good conscience, expect final happiness. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 91:12 - -- Me. I shall live to hear of the vengeance which God will take, Psalm cxi. 9. (Calmet) ---
The just pray for sinners here; but must approve of God'...
Me. I shall live to hear of the vengeance which God will take, Psalm cxi. 9. (Calmet) ---
The just pray for sinners here; but must approve of God's judgment. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 91:13 - -- Palm-tree. Septuagint Greek: phoinix, means also a "Phœnician, or the Phœnix" bird, of which the ancients have said so much, Job xxix. 18., (Cal...
Palm-tree. Septuagint Greek: phoinix, means also a "Phœnician, or the Phœnix" bird, of which the ancients have said so much, Job xxix. 18., (Calmet) and of which Tertullian, (de Res. xiii.) and St. Ambrose, (de fid. Res.) seem to understand this passage. (Amama) ---
But it must be explained in the sense of the Vulgate, as the Hebrew Tamar evinceth. This tree, and the cedar, were the most famous in those countries; the former for its fruit, and the latter for buildings and duration. The palm-tree will shoot forth again, after it has been cut down or burnt, (Pliny, [Natural History?] xiii. 14.) so the just will rise up from oppression. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 91:14 - -- Courts. In the Church triumphant, as well as in the militant. (Worthington) ---
The piety of the faithful induces strangers to embrace the truth. ...
Courts. In the Church triumphant, as well as in the militant. (Worthington) ---
The piety of the faithful induces strangers to embrace the truth. (Berthier)
Gill: Psa 91:1 - -- He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High,.... Or the Supreme; a title of God, who is superior to all beings, the Creator and Preserver of...
He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High,.... Or the Supreme; a title of God, who is superior to all beings, the Creator and Preserver of them, God over all, higher than the highest of angels or men; see Gen 14:22, "his secret place" is his heart, his bosom, where his only begotten Son lies; and into which he takes his people, where they are set as a seal, and who enjoy intimate communion with him; which is no other than his gracious presence, called "the secret of his presence", Psa 31:20, which none but saints are admitted to, when his everlasting love, which was a secret in his heart, is made known unto them, and in which they also dwell, 1Jo 4:16, as they likewise do in the eternal decree of election; which perhaps is meant by "the clefts of the rock, and secret places of the stairs", where the church is said to dwell, Son 2:14, unless rather Christ the Rock, and who may be signified by the cleft of that Moses was put into, when the goodness of the Lord passed before him, is intended; and who is the hiding place from the wind: mention is made of "the secret" of God's "tabernacle", Psa 27:5, in which he hides his people; alluding to the tabernacle, or temple, and the most holy place in it, called his secret place, Eze 7:22, and may refer to the ministry of the word and ordinances, where saints dwell, and enjoy much communion with God; and who are particularly under his special providence, protection, and power; which may here be designed:
shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty: who is able to do all things for his people, and is "Shaddai", all sufficient, as this word is thought to signify; has a sufficiency of happiness in and for himself, and of provisions for all his creatures, and of power and grace for his own children: his "shadow" may be the same with his secret place, his power and protection, often in this book of Psalms called "the shadow of his wings", Psa 17:8, in allusion to birds that overshadow and protect their young with their wings; though perhaps the allusion here may be to the shadow of a tree, and design the word and ordinances of the Lord's house, which are a delightful, refreshing, reviving, and fruitful shadow, Son 2:3, where gracious souls dwell, and abide with great delight and pleasure. Christ, the Son of God, is sometimes compared to the shadow of a rock, or tree, which screens and shelters from heat; as he preserves his people from the heat of a fiery law, the flaming sword of justice, the wrath of God, the fiery darts of Satan, and the fury of persecutors: under this shadow do they abide or lodge all night, safe and secure, as the word o signifies: the Targum calls this shadow the shadow of the clouds of glory; the Arabic version, "the shadow of the God of heaven."
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Gill: Psa 91:2 - -- I will say of the Lord,.... Or to the Lord p: these are the words of the psalmist, expressing his faith in the Lord in the following words, taking enc...
I will say of the Lord,.... Or to the Lord p: these are the words of the psalmist, expressing his faith in the Lord in the following words, taking encouragement from the safety of the godly man above described: the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and all the Oriental versions, read, he shall say to the Lord; that is, the man that dwells in the secret place, and under the shadow of the Lord: the Targum is,
"David said, I will say to the Lord,''
as follows:
he is my refuge: a refuge in every time of trouble, outward or toward; a refuge when all others fail; and is himself a never failing one, a strong refuge, which none can break through and into, and in which all that have fled thither and dwell are safe:
and my fortress; what fortifications, natural or artificial, are to a city and its inhabitants, that is God to his people, and much more; he is round about them, as the mountains were about Jerusalem; his salvation are walls and bulwarks to them; yea, he is a wall of fire about them, Psa 125:2, they are kept by his power, as in a garrison, 1Pe 1:5,
my God, in him will I trust; his covenant God, his God in Christ, and who would ever continue so; and was a proper object of his trust and confidence, both as the God of nature, and the God of grace; who is to be trusted in, both for temporal and spiritual blessings, and at all times; to which his lovingkindness, power, and faithfulness, greatly encourage and engage: the Targum is,
"in his Word will I trust.''
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Gill: Psa 91:3 - -- Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler,.... These are the words of the psalmist, either speaking to himself, for the encouragement ...
Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler,.... These are the words of the psalmist, either speaking to himself, for the encouragement of his own faith and trust in the Lord; or to the man that dwells in the secret place, and under the shadow of the most High; which latter seems most agreeable; though Cocceius thinks they are the words of God in one of his Persons, speaking of another divine Person that should deliver such that trust in him: the Targum makes them to be the words of David to Solomon his son. By the "fowler" and his "snare" may be meant either Saul, who laid wait for David, spread snares for him, and hunted him as a partridge on the mountains, from whom he was delivered; or rather any tyrannical enemy and persecutor of the saints, who lay snares for them; and these are broken by the Lord, and so they escape, as a bird out of the hands of the fowler, Psa 124:6 or it may, best of all, be understood of Satan and his temptations, which are as snares that he lays to catch the people of God in, and from which they are delivered by the power and grace of God; see 1Ti 3:7.
and from the noisome pestilence; the most pernicious and destructive one; which may be literally understood of any pestilential distemper; from which the Lord, by his powerful providence, sometimes protects his people, when in danger of it: or, spiritually, of the pestilential disease of sin, that noisome and deadly one, the plague of the heart, which is the worst of all plagues; and from the ruinous and destructive effects and consequences of which the Lord saves his saints.
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Gill: Psa 91:4 - -- He shall cover thee with his feathers,.... As birds do their young, who cannot cover themselves: this they do from a tender regard to them, whereby th...
He shall cover thee with his feathers,.... As birds do their young, who cannot cover themselves: this they do from a tender regard to them, whereby they both keep them warm, and protect them from those that would hurt them: this represents the helpless state of the children of God, who are, like to young birds, weak and unable to defend themselves: the tender regard of God unto them, as the eagle and other birds have to their young; see Deu 32:11 and the warmth and comforts souls have, as well as protection, under his powerful and gracious presence; he comforts them under their tribulations, as well as defends them from their enemies:
and under his wings shalt thou trust; See Gill on Psa 91:1 and the passages there referred to; the same metaphor is continued:
his truth shall be thy shield and buckler; his faithfulness, which is engaged to keep and preserve his saints safe to his kingdom and glory, 1Co 1:8, his Son, who is "truth" itself, Joh 14:6, and whose person, blood, righteousness, and salvation, are as a shield and buckler all around the saints, to secure them from ruin and destruction; and are the shield which faith lays hold on, and makes use of, against the temptation, of Satan; see Psa 84:11, the word of God also, which is truth, Joh 17:19, every promise in it, and doctrine of it, is as a shield and buckler to strengthen, support, and secure the faith of his people, Pro 30:5.
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Gill: Psa 91:5 - -- Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night,.... The terrible things that happen in the night; as fire, storms and tempests, invasion of enemies,...
Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night,.... The terrible things that happen in the night; as fire, storms and tempests, invasion of enemies, murders, thefts, and, robberies: a good man, when he has committed himself and his family to the care and protection of God by prayer, has no reason to be anxiously careful of these things, or to indulge a slavish fear about them; see Psa 3:5, the Targum is,
"thou shall not be afraid for the fear of devils that walk in the night:''
so Jarchi interprets this, and the next verse, of such; as do others of the Jewish writers: a man that trusts in the Lord need not be afraid of men or devils: a fear of evil spirits is natural to men, and very early appeared; perhaps it took its rise from the fatal affair of the fall of our first parents, through an intercourse with an evil spirit; and ever since has been imprinted on human nature an aversion to evil spirits, and a dread of them, and even of all spirits in general; see Job 4:13,
nor for the arrow that flieth by day; the judgments of God, such as the sword, famine, and pestilence; these are called the arrows of God, Deu 32:23 q, because they move swiftly, come suddenly, and strike surely, and are open and visible; they are sent by the Lord, and are ordered and directed by him, and hit and hurt whom he pleases, and none else; and therefore such who dwell in the secret of the Lord, and under his shadow, need not be distressed about them: the Targum interprets it of the arrow of the angel of death, which he sends out in the day; see Heb 2:14, so Jarchi understands it of a demon that flies like an arrow.
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Gill: Psa 91:6 - -- Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness,.... Some think, and not without cause, that what is figuratively expressed in the preceding verse is ...
Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness,.... Some think, and not without cause, that what is figuratively expressed in the preceding verse is here explained; and, indeed, the "pestilence" may well be called the "terror by night": the name of the plague, at a distance, is terrible; the near approach of it is more so; when it enters a country, city, or town, what fleeing is there from it? and in the night season it is more dreadful than in the day; not only to think of it in the gloomy watches of the night, but to see the vast numbers carried out to be interred, and to hear the dismal cry, Bring out your dead: and so it is here said to "walk in darkness"; in the darkness of the night, or to arise from dark and unknown causes; when it moves and walks through cities, towns, and villages, and there is no stopping it: and this also may be the "arrow that flieth by day"; which flies as swift as an arrow, and that flies as swift as a bird r; this is taken out of the Lord's quiver, has its commission and direction from him, and does execution by night and by day: the plague that smote the firstborn in Egypt was in the night; and that which was in David's time, and might be the occasion of penning this psalm, began in the day, Exo 12:29,
nor for the destruction that wasteth at noon day; as the pestilence, which may be increased, and rage the more, through the heat of the day; and which destroys great numbers wherever it comes: seventy thousand were taken off in three days by the plague occasioned by David's numbering of the people: the Targum is,
"of a company of devils that destroy at noon day;''
that is, thou shall not be afraid: some think respect is had to a pestilential hot wind, common in the eastern countries, which begins to blow about eight o'clock in a morning, and is hottest at noon; which instantly suffocates persons, burns them, and reduces them to ashes presently, which the Arabs call "sammiel", or a poison wind s.
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Gill: Psa 91:7 - -- A thousand shall fall at thy side,.... The left side, as the Targum; so the Arabic version, and Jarchi and Kimchi; which sense the opposition and dist...
A thousand shall fall at thy side,.... The left side, as the Targum; so the Arabic version, and Jarchi and Kimchi; which sense the opposition and distinction in the next clause direct unto: this is not to be understood of falling in battle, as some interpret it, but by the pestilence before spoken of:
and ten thousand at thy right hand; which shows both the great devastation made by the plague where it comes, and the special care and providence of God in preserving his people from it; of which David had an experience, when vast numbers of his people were destroyed by it on the right and left:
but it shall not come nigh thee; it may come near the place where good men are, or else it could not be said that a thousand should fall on their side, and ten thousand at their right hand: the plague that killed the firstborn in Egypt was near the dwellings of the Israelites, though it entered not into them; and that in David's time was near him, though he was not infected with it: but the meaning is, that it should not come so near such as to seize their bodies and they fall by the distemper; there being a particular providence oftentimes concerned for their safety, which guards them from it; see Eze 9:4, not but that good men may fall in a common calamity, and by an epidemical distemper; but then it is for their good, and not their hurt; they are taken away from the evil to come, and are delivered from a worse plague than that by which they fall, the plague of their own hearts, the evil of sin; and so the Targum adds, "shall not come near to hurt", though it understands it of devils.
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Gill: Psa 91:8 - -- Only with thine eyes shall thou behold,.... The flying arrow, the walking pestilence, and wasting destruction, and the great devastations made by it:
...
Only with thine eyes shall thou behold,.... The flying arrow, the walking pestilence, and wasting destruction, and the great devastations made by it:
and see the reward of the wicked; the vengeance of God upon them, and this as a just punishment for their sins; not looking upon it with delight and pleasure, rejoicing in the misery of their fellow creatures, any otherwise than as the glory of divine justice is displayed in it; see Psa 52:6, the pestilence is always threatened, and it always comes, as a Judgment upon a wicked generation of men; and so it is ever to be considered, and is considered by good men, Lev 26:5.
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Gill: Psa 91:9 - -- Because thou hast made the Lord which is my refuge,.... So the words, according to Kimchi, also are directed to the good man; giving the reason of his...
Because thou hast made the Lord which is my refuge,.... So the words, according to Kimchi, also are directed to the good man; giving the reason of his safety, because he trusts in the Lord, and puts himself under his protection: but they should rather be rendered, and the accents require such a reading, "because thou, Lord, art my refuge" t; and so are either the words of the good man that trusts in the Lord; or rather of the psalmist himself, seeing his safety in the midst of danger, and ascribing it to the Lord; whose providence was in a peculiar manner over him, whose power protected him, and he was as an asylum or city of refuge to him; so that nothing could hurt him:
even the most High, thy habitation; it should be rendered, "thou hast made the most High thy habitation"; being an apostrophe of the psalmist to his own soul, observing the ground of his security; the most high God being made and used by him as his habitation, or dwelling place, where he dwelt, as every good man does, safely, quietly, comfortably, pleasantly, and continually: the Targum makes them to be the words of Solomon, paraphrasing them thus,
"Solomon answered, and thus he said, thou thyself, O Lord, art my confidence; in an high habitation thou hast put the house of thy majesty.''
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Gill: Psa 91:10 - -- There shall no evil befall thee,.... The evil of sin cleaves to the best of saints, the evil of temptations besets them, and the evil of afflictions c...
There shall no evil befall thee,.... The evil of sin cleaves to the best of saints, the evil of temptations besets them, and the evil of afflictions comes upon them, as chastisements from the Lord; for they must expect to receive evil, in this sense, as well as good, from his hands; but the evil of punishment never touches them; and therefore, when any public calamity befalls them in common with others, yet not as an evil of punishment; it is not an evil to them, it is for their good:
neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling; how should it, when they dwell in God, and have made him, the most High, their habitation u; Psa 91:1 otherwise it may come nigh their temporal dwellings; See Gill on Psa 91:7 though it may not enter into them; and, should it, yet not as an evil, or by way of punishment; see Pro 3:33.
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Gill: Psa 91:11 - -- For he shall give his angels charge over thee,.... Created spirits, so called, made by the Lord, and are at his command; who are ministering spirits t...
For he shall give his angels charge over thee,.... Created spirits, so called, made by the Lord, and are at his command; who are ministering spirits to his people, who encamp about them, and are concerned in the preservation of them; they being committed to their care and charge by him who is Lord of heaven and earth: Satan applied this passage to Christ, Mat 4:6, nor did our Lord object to the application of it; and it can hardly be thought that he would have ventured to have done it, had he been aware that a misapplication might be objected; or that it was not the received sense of the place: what he is to be blamed for, in quoting it, was the wrong purpose for which he produced it, and for leaving out the next clause, which he saw was against his design;
to keep thee in all thy ways; in walking and travelling from place to place, as Providence calls and directs; and in all civil ways, in all lawful business and employment of life; in all spiritual ones, as the ways of God and religion: what Satan tempted Christ to was neither of these ways; it was not a natural way of going, nor the duty of his office, nor any of the ways of God.
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Gill: Psa 91:12 - -- They shall bear thee up in their hands,.... Which denotes the strength and power of angels to carry the saints in their hands; their tender care of th...
They shall bear thee up in their hands,.... Which denotes the strength and power of angels to carry the saints in their hands; their tender care of them, such as a parent or nurse have of children; the helpless condition of the people of God, who are like infants, and need to be dealt with after this manner; the condescension of angels to take such an office on them, in submission to the will of God; the constant view they have of the saints, being always in their hands, and so in sight: thus they bear them, up in life, and at death carry their souls to Abraham's bosom:
lest thou dash thy foot against a stone; lest they fall into sin, or into any calamity and distress; lest the least hurt or mischief befall them, or the least injury be done them; see Pro 3:23. The Targum interprets it of the evil concupiscence, or corruption of nature, which is like a stone; see Eze 36:26.
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Gill: Psa 91:13 - -- Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder,.... Or be unhurt by such savage and poisonous creatures; as the Israelites, when they travelled through the ...
Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder,.... Or be unhurt by such savage and poisonous creatures; as the Israelites, when they travelled through the wilderness, in which were serpents and scorpions; and many of the servants of God have been delivered from them, or have slain them, as Samson, David, and Daniel; and so Christ was among the wild beasts in the wilderness, and yet not touched or hurt by them; and his disciples had power given them by him to tread on serpents and scorpions, and to take up serpents, without receiving any damage from them; and when a viper fastened on the hand of the Apostle Paul, he shook it off, without being hurt by it; see Mar 1:13, Act 28:5, it may be understood figuratively of Satan, who, for his voraciousness and cruelty, is compared to a lion; and, for his craft and subtlety, to a serpent, 1Pe 5:8,
the young lion and the dragon shalt thou trample underfoot; which also may be understood of the great dragon, the old serpent, called the devil and Satan; whom Christ trampled under his feet when he hung on the cross, and spoiled him and his principalities and powers; and who, in a short time, will be bruised under the feet of his people, as he has been already by the seed of the woman, Gen 3:15.
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Gill: Psa 91:14 - -- Because he hath set his love upon me,.... These are the words of God himself; and, according to Aben Ezra, are directed to the angels, describing the ...
Because he hath set his love upon me,.... These are the words of God himself; and, according to Aben Ezra, are directed to the angels, describing the good man, and making promises to him; and in this clause he is represented as one that had "set his love" upon the Lord, being first loved by the Lord, and having the grace of love wrought in his heart by him: the phrase denotes the strength of his affection to God, and the sincerity of it; its singularity, being placed alone on him, and the settlement and fixedness of it, so as nothing could separate from it: this the Lord takes great notice of, and is highly well pleased with: hence it follows,
therefore will I deliver him: from noisome diseases before mentioned, from all afflictions into which he comes, and from all the temptations of the evil one, so as that he shall not be hurt or destroyed by them:
I will set him on high; on the Rock Christ Jesus, that is higher than he, higher than the angels, higher than the heavens, and where he is now out of the reach of all his enemies, and will be set hereafter on high in heaven, among princes, inheriting the throne of glory; yea, even set upon the same throne with Christ himself:
because he hath known my name; himself, his being, and perfections; his Son, the Angel of his presence, in whom his name, nature, and perfections are; and his name as proclaimed in him, a God gracious and merciful; and this not merely notionally, but experimentally, and affectionately and fiducially; for such, that truly know him, love him, and trust in him; and these exalt him, and so are exalted and set on high by him.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 91:1 The divine name used here is “Shaddai” (שַׁדַּי, shadday; see also Ps 68:14). Shaddai (or El Sha...
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NET Notes: Psa 91:4 Traditionally the Hebrew term סֹחֵרָה (sokherah), which occurs only here in the OT, has been understood to r...
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NET Notes: Psa 91:5 This probably alludes to a sneak attack by enemies in the darkness of night (see Song 3:8).
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NET Notes: Psa 91:6 As in Deut 32:23-24, vv. 5-6 closely associate military attack and deadly disease. Perhaps the latter alludes to one of the effects of siege warfare o...
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NET Notes: Psa 91:7 Apparently the deadly disease mentioned in v. 6b is the understood subject here.
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NET Notes: Psa 91:9 Heb “for you, the Lord, my shelter, the Most High, you have made your dwelling place.”
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:1 He that dwelleth in the ( a ) secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.
( a ) He who makes God his defence and trus...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:2 ( b ) I will say of the LORD, [He is] my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust.
( b ) Being assured of this protection, he prays to the...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:3 Surely he shall deliver thee from the ( c ) snare of the fowler, [and] from the noisome pestilence.
( c ) That is, God's help is most ready for us, w...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:4 He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings shalt thou trust: his ( d ) truth [shall be thy] shield and buckler.
( d ) That is, his fa...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:5 ( e ) Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night; [nor] for the arrow [that] flieth by day;
( e ) The care that God has over his is sufficient ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:8 Only with thine ( f ) eyes shalt thou behold and see the reward of the wicked.
( f ) The godly will have some experience of God's judgements against ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:11 ( g ) For he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.
( g ) God has not appointed one angel to every man, but many to be...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:13 Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder: the ( h ) young lion and the dragon shalt thou trample under feet.
( h ) You will not only be preserved fro...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 91:14 ( i ) Because he hath set his love upon me, therefore will I deliver him: I will set him on high, because he hath known my name.
( i ) To assure the ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 91:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Psa 91:1-16 - --1 The state of the godly.3 Their safety.9 Their habitation.11 Their servants.14 Their friend; with the effects of them all.
Maclaren: Psa 91:4 - --The Sheltering Wing
He shall cover thee with His feathers, and under His wings shalt thou trust: His truth shall be thy shield and buckler.'--Psalm 9...
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Maclaren: Psa 91:9-10 - --The Habitation Of The Soul
Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the most High, thy habitation; there shall no evil befall thee, ...
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Maclaren: Psa 91:14 - --The Answer To Trust
Because he hath set his love upon Me, therefore will I deliver him: I will set him on high, because he hath known My name.'--Psal...
MHCC -> Psa 91:1-8; Psa 91:9-16
MHCC: Psa 91:1-8 - --He that by faith chooses God for his protector, shall find all in him that he needs or can desire. And those who have found the comfort of making the ...
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MHCC: Psa 91:9-16 - --Whatever happens, nothing shall hurt the believer; though trouble and affliction befall, it shall come, not for his hurt, but for good, though for the...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 91:1-8; Psa 91:9-16
Matthew Henry: Psa 91:1-8 - -- In these verses we have, I. A great truth laid down in general, That all those who live a life of communion with God are constantly safe under his p...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 91:9-16 - -- Here are more promises to the same purport with those in the foregoing verses, and they are exceedingly great and precious, and sure to all the seed...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 91:1-2 - --
As the concealing One, God is called עליון , the inaccessibly high One; and as the shadowing One שׁדּי , the invincibly almighty One. Fait...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 91:3-9 - --
יקושׁ , as in Pro 6:5; Jer 5:26, is the dullest toned from for יקושׁ or יוקשׁ , Psa 124:7. What is meant is death, or "he who has the...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 91:9-16 - --
The first voice continues this ratification, and goes on weaving these promises still further: thou hast made the Most High thy dwelling-place ( מ...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...
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Constable: Psa 91:1-16 - --Psalm 91
This psalm focuses on security in life, an idea present in Psalm 90. The writer knew that God p...
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Constable: Psa 91:1-2 - --1. The security God provides 91:1-2
God Himself is the One who is the believer's security. The u...
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Constable: Psa 91:3-13 - --2. The deliverance God provides 91:3-13
91:3-8 God saves us from those who insidiously try to trap us and from deadly diseases. He does this as a moth...
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