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Text -- Psalms 14:3 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
From God, and from the rule which he hath given them.
JFB -> Psa 14:3
Clarke: Psa 14:3 - -- They are all gone aside - They will not walk in the straight path. They seek crooked ways; and they have departed from truth, and the God of truth
They are all gone aside - They will not walk in the straight path. They seek crooked ways; and they have departed from truth, and the God of truth
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Clarke: Psa 14:3 - -- They are all together become filthy - נאלחו neelachu . They are become sour and rancid; a metaphor taken from milk that has fermented and tur...
They are all together become filthy -
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Clarke: Psa 14:3 - -- There is none that doeth good, no, not one - This is not only the state of heathen Babylon! but the state of the whole inhabitants of the earth, til...
There is none that doeth good, no, not one - This is not only the state of heathen Babylon! but the state of the whole inhabitants of the earth, till the grace of God changes their heart. By nature, and from nature, by practice, every man is sinful and corrupt. He feels no good; he is disposed to no good; he does no good. And even God himself, who cannot be deceived, cannot find a single exception to this! Lord, what is man
The Vulgate, the Roman copy of the Septuagint, the Athtopic, and the Arabic, add those six verses here which are quoted by St. Paul, Rom 3:13-18 (note). See the observations at the end of this Psalm.
Calvin -> Psa 14:3
Calvin: Psa 14:3 - -- Every one of them has gone aside Some translate the word סר , sar, which is here used, to stink, 282 as if the reading were, Every one of them ...
Every one of them has gone aside Some translate the word
But it might be asked, how David makes no exception, how he declares that not a righteous person remains, not even one, when, nevertheless, he informs us, a little after, that the poor and afflicted put their trust in God? Again, it might be asked, if all were wicked, who was that Israel whose future redemption he celebrates in the end of the psalm? Nay, as he himself was one of the body of that people, why does he not at least except himself? I answer: It is against the carnal and degenerate body of the Israelitish nation that he here inveighs, and the small number constituting the seed which God had set apart for himself is not included among them. This is the reason why Paul, in his Epistle to the Rom 3:10, extends this sentence to all mankind. David, it is true, deplores the disordered and desolate state of matters under the reign of Saul. At the same time, however, he doubtless makes a comparison between the children of God and all who have not been regenerated by the Spirit, but are carried away according to the inclinations of their flesh. 283 Some give a different explanation, maintaining that Paul, by quoting the testimony of David, did not understand him as meaning that men are naturally depraved and corrupt; and that the truth which David intended to teach is, that the rulers and the more distinguished of the people were wicked, and that, therefore, it was not surprising to behold unrighteousness and wickedness prevailing so generally in the world. This answer is far from being satisfactory. The subject which Paul there reasons upon is not, what is the character of the greater part of men, but what is the character of all who are led and governed by their own corrupt nature. It is, therefore, to be observed, that when David places himself and the small remnant of the godly on one side, and puts on the other the body of the people, in general, this implies that there is a manifest difference between the children of God who are created anew by his Spirit, and all the posterity of Adam, in whom corruption and depravity exercise dominion. Whence it follows, that all of us, when we are born, bring with us from our mother’s womb this folly and filthiness manifested in the whole life, which David here describes, and that we continue such until God make us new creatures by his mysterious grace.
TSK -> Psa 14:3
TSK: Psa 14:3 - -- all gone : Psa 119:176; Ecc 7:29; Isa 53:6, Isa 59:7, Isa 59:8, Isa 59:13-15; Jer 2:13; Rom 3:10-12, Rom 3:23; Eph 2:3; 2Pe 2:13-15
filthy : Heb. stin...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 14:3
Barnes: Psa 14:3 - -- They are all gone aside - This verse states the result of the divine investigation referred to in the previous verse. The result, as seen by Go...
They are all gone aside - This verse states the result of the divine investigation referred to in the previous verse. The result, as seen by God himself, was, that "all"were seen to have gone aside, and to have become filthy. The word rendered "gone aside"means properly to go off, to turn aside or away, to depart; as, for example, to turn out of the right way or path, Exo 32:8. Then it means to turn away from God; to fall away from his worship; to apostatize, 1Sa 12:20; 2Ki 18:6; 2Ch 25:27. This is the idea here - that they had all apostatized from the living God. The word "all"in the circumstances makes the statement as universal as it can be made; and no term could be used more clearly affirming the doctrine of universal depravity.
They are all together become filthy - The word "all"here is supplied by the translators. It was not necessary, however, to introduce it in order that the idea of universal depravity might be expressed, for that is implied in the word rendered "together,"
There is none that doeth good, no, not one - Nothing could more clearly express the idea of universal depravity than this expression. It is not merely that no one could be found who did good, but the expression is repeated to give emphasis to the statement. This entire passage is quoted in Rom 3:10-12, in proof of the doctrine of universal depravity. See the note at that passage.
Poole -> Psa 14:3
Poole: Psa 14:3 - -- Gone aside to wit, from God, whom they should have sought, Psa 14:2 , and from the rule which he hath given them, and by which they sometimes profess...
Gone aside to wit, from God, whom they should have sought, Psa 14:2 , and from the rule which he hath given them, and by which they sometimes professed and seemed to govern themselves. Or, are grown sour , as this word signifies, Hos 4:18 . And so this is a metaphor from corrupted drinks, as the next is taken from rotten meat.
Filthy Heb. stinking i.e. loathsome and abominable to God, and to all wise and sober men.
Haydock -> Psa 14:3
Haydock: Psa 14:3 - -- Heart, as he thinks. (Haydock) ---
Those who sincerely love truth, will not deceive others. (Calmet) ---
We must be attached to all revealed trut...
Heart, as he thinks. (Haydock) ---
Those who sincerely love truth, will not deceive others. (Calmet) ---
We must be attached to all revealed truths, and avoid all the disorders of the tongue. ---
Up, which would otherwise have fallen to the ground, &c. (Berthier) ---
Reproach. Rashly giving credit to injurious reports, (Calmet; St. Augustine; Exodus xxiii. 1.) or speaking with insult, (Theodoret) even in giving correction, (St. Hilary) or listening to detraction. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 14:3
Gill: Psa 14:3 - -- They are all gone aside,.... As bankrupts, having run out their whole stock, and into debt, and have nothing to pay, nor make composition with, and ar...
They are all gone aside,.... As bankrupts, having run out their whole stock, and into debt, and have nothing to pay, nor make composition with, and are obliged to abscond, as Adam, Gen 3:8. The words in Psa 53:3 are, "everyone of them is gone back"; from God; have revolted from him, and turned their backs upon him, and have gone back from his commandment, despised his law, and cast away his word. The Apostle Paul interprets it, "they are all gone out of the way"; out of God's way, into their own way; out of the path of truth, righteousness, and holiness, into the way of sin, error, darkness, and death; and with this agrees the interpretation of Aben Ezra, who adds, "out of the right way"; and of Kimchi and Ben Melech, whose gloss is, "out of the good way"; which is God's way, or the way of his commandments;
they are all together become filthy, or "stinking" a, like putrid and corrupt flesh; see Psa 38:5; and so "unprofitable", useless, and good for nothing, as the apostle renders it, Rom 3:12. Mankind are universally filthy and unclean; they are all of them defiled with sin, both in soul and body, in all the faculties of their souls and members of their bodies; and they are originally and naturally so; nor can anything cleanse them from their pollution but the blood of Christ;
there is none that doeth good, no, not one: this is repeated partly to asseverate more strongly the depravity of mankind, and partly to express the universality of it; that there is no exception to it in any that descend from Adam by ordinary generation. Here follows in the Septuagint version, according to the Vatican copy, all those passages quoted by the apostle, Rom 3:13; which have been generally supposed to have been taken from different parts of Scripture; so the Syriac scholiast says, in some ancient Greek copies are found eight more verses, and these are they, "Their throat", &c.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 14:1-7
TSK Synopsis: Psa 14:1-7 - --1 David describes a natural man.4 He convinces the wicked by the light of their conscience.7 He glories in the salvation of God.
MHCC -> Psa 14:1-7
MHCC: Psa 14:1-7 - --The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. The sinner here described is an atheist, one that saith there is no Judge or Governor of the world, ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 14:1-3
Matthew Henry: Psa 14:1-3 - -- If we apply our hearts as Solomon did (Ecc 7:25) to search out the wickedness of folly, even of foolishness and madness, these verses will assist ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 14:3
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 14:3 - --
The third tristich bewails the condition in which He finds humanity. The universality of corruption is expressed in as strong terms as possible. ה...
Constable -> Psa 14:1-7; Psa 14:1-3
Constable: Psa 14:1-7 - --Psalm 14
This psalm and Psalm 53 are almost identical.
The failures of human bei...
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