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Text -- Psalms 107:35 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 107:35
Into a well - watered and fruitful land.
JFB -> Psa 107:33-41
JFB: Psa 107:33-41 - -- God's providence is illustriously displayed in His influence on two great elements of human prosperity, the earth's productiveness and the powers of g...
God's providence is illustriously displayed in His influence on two great elements of human prosperity, the earth's productiveness and the powers of government. He punishes the wicked by destroying the sources of fertility, or, in mercy, gives fruitfulness to deserts, which become the homes of a busy and successful agricultural population. By a permitted misrule and tyranny, this scene of prosperity is changed to one of adversity. He rules rulers, setting up one and putting down another.
Calvin -> Psa 107:35
Calvin: Psa 107:35 - -- 35.He turneth the desert into a pool of water This change, in contrast with the former, places the miraculous power of God in a more luminous positio...
35.He turneth the desert into a pool of water This change, in contrast with the former, places the miraculous power of God in a more luminous position. Because, were the fields ceasing to be so productive as in former times, men of the world, as was common of old, would attribute this to the frequent crops which exhausted their productive power. But whence is it that parched grounds become so fruitful, that one would almost say that the atmosphere, as well as the nature of the soil, had undergone a change, unless it be that God hath there put forth a wonderful display of his power and goodness? Wherefore, the prophet very justly says, that the deserts were turned into pools of water, so that populous cities may rise up in waste and uncultivated places, where once there was not a single cottage. For it is as improbable that the nature of the soil is changed, as that the course of the sun and stars is changed. The clause, the hungry are filled, may mean, either that they themselves, after considerable privations, have got what may supply their need, or that those poor persons, living in a country where they cannot longer find daily bread, being constrained to leave it, and to seek a new place of abode, are there bountifully supplied by God. I am rather disposed to think, that this clause refers to what frequently occurs, namely, that the famishing, whose wants the world refuses to supply, and who are expatriated, are comfortably accommodated in these desert places, where God blesses them with abundance. The passage which I have translated, fruit of the increase, is, by not a few Hebrew expositors, considered as a repetition of two synonymous terms, and are for supplying a copulative conjunction, making it, fruit and increase But it was rather the intention of the prophet to refer to fruit yielded annually; as if he said, the fertility of these regions is not temporary, or only for a few years, it is perennial. For
TSK -> Psa 107:35
TSK: Psa 107:35 - -- turneth : Psa 114:8; Num 21:16-18; 2Ki 3:16-20; Isa 35:6, Isa 35:7, Isa 41:17-19, Isa 44:3-5; Eze 47:6-12
turneth : Psa 114:8; Num 21:16-18; 2Ki 3:16-20; Isa 35:6, Isa 35:7, Isa 41:17-19, Isa 44:3-5; Eze 47:6-12
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 107:35
Barnes: Psa 107:35 - -- He turneth the wilderness into a standing water - A pool; a lake. See the notes at Isa 35:6-7. And dry ground into water-springs - Not me...
He turneth the wilderness into a standing water - A pool; a lake. See the notes at Isa 35:6-7.
And dry ground into water-springs - Not merely watering it with rain from heaven, but causing gushing fountains to break forth, and to flow continually, diffusing fertility and beauty everywhere.
Poole -> Psa 107:35
Into a standing water into a well-watered and fruitful land.
Gill -> Psa 107:35
Gill: Psa 107:35 - -- He turneth the wilderness into a standing water,.... On the other hand, when it is the pleasure of God, a country uncultivated and like a desert, he m...
He turneth the wilderness into a standing water,.... On the other hand, when it is the pleasure of God, a country uncultivated and like a desert, he makes it fruitful as one that is well watered and tilled; as this country of ours, and the land in America, once waste places, now fruitful ones.
And dry ground into water springs: which is expressive of the same thing, and may he figuratively understood of the Gentile world; which, before the coming of Christ, and the preaching of the Gospel, and the pouring down of the Spirit, was like a wilderness and dry ground; but now watered with the word and ordinances, and the grace of God, and in many places has become fruitful in grace and good works. The Targum prefaces this verse thus,
"when they return unto the law, he turneth, &c.''
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 107:35; Psa 107:35
NET Notes: Psa 107:35 The verbal form appears to be a preterite, which is most naturally taken as narrational. See the note on the word “turned” in v. 33.
Geneva Bible -> Psa 107:35
Geneva Bible: Psa 107:35 He ( q ) turneth the wilderness into a standing water, and dry ground into watersprings.
( q ) For the love that he bears to his Church, he changes t...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 107:1-43
TSK Synopsis: Psa 107:1-43 - --1 The psalmist exhorts the redeemed, in praising God, to observe his manifold providence,4 over travellers;10 over captives;17 over sick men;23 over s...
MHCC -> Psa 107:33-43
MHCC: Psa 107:33-43 - --What surprising changes are often made in the affairs of men! Let the present desolate state of Judea, and of other countries, explain this. If we loo...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 107:33-43
Matthew Henry: Psa 107:33-43 - -- The psalmist, having given God the glory of the providential reliefs granted to persons in distress, here gives him the glory of the revolutions of ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 107:33-38
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 107:33-38 - --
Since in Psa 107:36 the historical narration is still continued, a meaning relating to the contemporaneous past is also retrospectively given to the...
Constable: Psa 107:1--150:6 - --V. Book 5: chs. 107--150
There are 44 psalms in this section of the Psalter. David composed 15 of these (108-110...
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Constable: Psa 107:1-43 - --Psalm 107
An unknown writer sought to motivate the Lord's redeemed people to praise Him by reviewing som...
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