
Text -- Psalms 94:13 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 94:12-13
JFB: Psa 94:12-13 - -- On the other hand He favors though He chastens, the pious, and will teach and preserve them till the prosperous wicked are overthrown.
On the other hand He favors though He chastens, the pious, and will teach and preserve them till the prosperous wicked are overthrown.
Clarke -> Psa 94:13
Clarke: Psa 94:13 - -- That thou mayest give him rest - He whom God instructs is made wise unto salvation; and he who is thus taught has rest in his soul, and peace and co...
That thou mayest give him rest - He whom God instructs is made wise unto salvation; and he who is thus taught has rest in his soul, and peace and confidence in adversity.
Calvin -> Psa 94:13
Calvin: Psa 94:13 - -- By evil days, or days of evil, the Psalmist might thus mean the everlasting destruction which awaits the ungodly, whom God has spared for a certai...
By evil days, or days of evil, the Psalmist might thus mean the everlasting destruction which awaits the ungodly, whom God has spared for a certain interval. Or his words may be expounded as signifying, that the man is blessed who has learned to be composed and tranquil under trials. The rest intended would then be that of an inward kind, enjoyed by the believer even during the storms of adversity; and the scope of the passage would be, that the truly happy man is he who has so far profited, by the word of God, as to sustain the assault of evils from without, with peace and composure. But as it is added, whilst 28 the pit is digged for the wicked, it would seem necessary, in order to bring out the opposition contained in the two members of the sentence, to suppose that the Psalmist rather commends the wisdom of those who reckon that God afflicts them with a view to saving them from destruction, and bringing them eventually to a happy issue. It was necessary to state this second ground of comfort, because our hearts cannot fail to be affected with the most intense grief when we see the wicked triumph, and no Divine restraint put upon them. The Psalmist meets the temptation by appropriately reminding us that the wicked are left upon earth, just as a dead body which is stretched out upon a bed, till its grave be dug. Here believers are warned that, if they would preserve their constancy, they must mount their watchtower, as Habakkuk says, (Hab 2:1) and take a view in the distance of God’s judgments. They shall see worldly men rioting in worldly delights, and, if they extend their view no farther, they will give way to impatience. But it would moderate their grief, would they only remember that those houses which are nominally appropriated to the living, are, in fact, only granted to the dead, until their grave be digged; and that, though they remain upon earth, they are already devoted to destruction. 29
TSK -> Psa 94:13
TSK: Psa 94:13 - -- mayest : Isa 26:20, Isa 26:21; Hab 3:16; 2Co 4:17, 2Co 4:18; 2Th 1:7, 2Th 1:8; Heb 4:9; Rev 14:13
until the pit : Psa 9:15, Psa 55:23; Jer 18:20, Jer ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 94:13
Barnes: Psa 94:13 - -- That thou mayest give him rest - Mayest make his mind quiet and calm; mayest save him from murmuring, from despondency, from impatience, by jus...
That thou mayest give him rest - Mayest make his mind quiet and calm; mayest save him from murmuring, from despondency, from impatience, by just confidence in thee, and in thy government.
From the days of adversity - Or, in the days of evil; the time of calamity and trouble. That his mind may then be composed and calm.
Until the pit be digged for the wicked - Until the wicked be punished; that is, while the preparations are going on, or while God seems to delay punishment, and the wicked are suffered to live as if God did not notice them, or would not punish them. The idea is, that the mind should not be impatient as if their punishment would not come, or as if God were unconcerned; and that just views of the divine administration would tend to make the mind calm even when the wicked "seemed"to prosper and triumph. See the notes at Psa 73:16-22. The phrase "until the pit be digged"is derived from the method of hunting wild beasts by digging a pit into which they might fall and be taken. See the notes at Psa 7:15.
Poole -> Psa 94:13
Poole: Psa 94:13 - -- For their present and short troubles prepare them for, and lead them to, true rest and blessedness, whilst the seeming felicities of the wicked make...
For their present and short troubles prepare them for, and lead them to, true rest and blessedness, whilst the seeming felicities of the wicked make way for those tremendous judgments which God hath prepared for them.
Gill -> Psa 94:13
Gill: Psa 94:13 - -- That thou mayest give him rest from the days of adversity,.... Or "evil" c; or "in the evil days", as the Arabic version; for through teaching men und...
That thou mayest give him rest from the days of adversity,.... Or "evil" c; or "in the evil days", as the Arabic version; for through teaching men under afflictions, they become tranquil and quiet in them; they yield the peaceable fruits of righteousness to them; such men patiently bear them; and quietly submit to the will of God in them, and are still, and know that he is God, that does all things well and wisely: moreover, the Lord does not always chasten his people; when he has taught them by his rod, and the affliction has answered its end, he gives them rest or intermission from those days of affliction: God does not always suffer the rod of the wicked, or persecution, to be upon the lot of the righteous; he gives his churches rest at times: in all ages there have been some intervals of respite; and after the slaying of the witnesses, and their rising, there will be no more of those days of adversity; but the
times of refreshing, or rest, will come, which will make up the spiritual reign of Christ; and there remains a "rest", or "sabbatism", for the people of God, which will last a thousand years; and, after that, an eternal rest in heaven, which the light afflictions of the saints here are working, and are the means of making them meet for it: "until the pit be digged for the wicked"; hell, the pit of destruction, the lake which burns with fire and brimstone, the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels: this pit and lake is dug and prepared by the sovereign will and unchangeable purpose and decree of God, for all wicked and Christless sinners; particularly for the beast and false prophet, and his followers, who shall be cast into it, and be tormented in it day and night, and have no rest; while the saints they here persecuted will be in the greatest repose, and utmost felicity; and when it will appear who are the blessed and happy persons, and who not.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 94:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Psa 94:1-23 - --1 The prophet, calling for justice, complains of tyranny and impiety.8 He teaches God's providence.12 He shews the blessedness of affliction.16 God is...
MHCC -> Psa 94:12-23
MHCC: Psa 94:12-23 - --That man is blessed, who, under the chastening of the Lord, is taught his will and his truths, from his holy word, and by the Holy Spirit. He should s...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 94:12-23
Matthew Henry: Psa 94:12-23 - -- The psalmist, having denounced tribulation to those that trouble God's people, here assures those that are troubled of rest. See 2Th 1:6, 2Th 1:7. H...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 94:12-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 94:12-15 - --
The fourth strophe praises the pious sufferer, whose good cause God will at length aid in obtaining its right. The "blessed"reminds one of Psa 34:9;...
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...

Constable: Psa 94:1-23 - --Psalm 94
This psalm calls on God to avenge the righteous whom the wicked oppress unjustly. It manifests ...
