
Text -- Psalms 27:7 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Still pressing need extorts prayer for help.

JFB: Psa 27:7 - -- Denotes earnestness. Other things equal, Christians in earnest pray audibly, even in secret.
Denotes earnestness. Other things equal, Christians in earnest pray audibly, even in secret.
Clarke -> Psa 27:7
Clarke: Psa 27:7 - -- Hear, O Lord, when I cry - This is the utmost that any man of common sense can expect - to be heard when he cries. But there are multitudes who supp...
Hear, O Lord, when I cry - This is the utmost that any man of common sense can expect - to be heard when he cries. But there are multitudes who suppose God will bless them whether they cry or not; and there are others and not a few, who although they listlessly pray and cry not, yet imagine God must and will hear them! God will answer them that pray and cry; those who do not are most likely to be without the blessings which they so much need.
Calvin -> Psa 27:7
Calvin: Psa 27:7 - -- 7.Hear, O Jehovah! my voice The Psalmist returns again to prayer, and in doing so, he declares with what armor he was furnished to break through his ...
7.Hear, O Jehovah! my voice The Psalmist returns again to prayer, and in doing so, he declares with what armor he was furnished to break through his temptations. By the word cry, he expresses his vehemence, as I have elsewhere said, that he may thereby move God the sooner to help him. For the same purpose, also, he a little after mentions his misery, because the more the faithful are oppressed, the more does their very need induce God to extend his favor towards them.
TSK -> Psa 27:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 27:7
Barnes: Psa 27:7 - -- Hear, O Lord, when I cry with my voice - This earnest prayer seems to have been prompted by a returning sense of danger. He had had assurance o...
Hear, O Lord, when I cry with my voice - This earnest prayer seems to have been prompted by a returning sense of danger. He had had assurance of the divine favor. He had found God ready to help him. He did not doubt but that He would aid him; yet all this did not prevent his calling upon Him for the aid which he needed, but rather stimulated him to do it. With all the deep-felt conviction of his heart that God was ready and willing to assist him, he still felt that he had no reason to hope for His aid unless he called upon Him. The phrase "when I cry with my voice"refers to the fact that he prayed audibly or aloud. It was not mental prayer, but that which found expression in the language of earnest entreaty.
Haydock -> Psa 27:7
Haydock: Psa 27:7 - -- Protector. Hebrew, "buckler," to defend me from external enemies, as his grace enables me to do good. ---
Flesh. Hebrew, "heart." But joy would ...
Protector. Hebrew, "buckler," to defend me from external enemies, as his grace enables me to do good. ---
Flesh. Hebrew, "heart." But joy would manifest itself over the whole body: (Proverbs xvii. 22.; Berthier) and the Syriac agrees with the Septuagint, "My flesh shall bud forth, and I shall sing his praises in glory." (Calmet) ---
Will. Hebrew, "canticle," which was dictated by the will. It is suspected that the Septuagint read differently. Only the saints taste true joys, so that they alone might be styled sensual. But this worldlings cannot understand, 1 Corinthians ii. 14. (Berthier) ---
The Fathers explain this text of Christ's or of our resurrection, (St. Jerome, &c.) which was prefigured by the return from captivity. (Calmet) ---
Interior comfort causes the body to be refreshed; and the psalmist gladly (Worthington) expresses his gratitude. (Haydock)
Gill -> Psa 27:7
Gill: Psa 27:7 - -- Hear, O Lord, when I cry with my voice,.... Which is to be understood of prayer, and that in the time of distress; and of vocal prayer, as distinguis...
Hear, O Lord, when I cry with my voice,.... Which is to be understood of prayer, and that in the time of distress; and of vocal prayer, as distinguished from mental prayer; and the phrase denotes the vehemency and intenseness of it: and the request is, that the Lord would hear it; not only as he is omniscient and omnipresent, and so hears the prayers of all, good and bad; but as a God gracious and merciful, who sometimes very quickly hears, and answers in a gracious way, and sometimes seems to turn a deaf car, to shut out the prayers of his people, and cover himself with a cloud, that they should not pass through, or, however, defers an answer to it for a little while; yet, sooner or later, he always shows himself a God hearing prayer;
have mercy also upon me; by delivering him out of his temporal distresses, and by forgiving his iniquities;
and answer me; by speaking a word in season; commanding off the affliction he lay under, and by saying to him that his sins were forgiven him.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 27:1-14
MHCC -> Psa 27:7-14
MHCC: Psa 27:7-14 - --Wherever the believer is, he can find a way to the throne of grace by prayer. God calls us by his Spirit, by his word, by his worship, and by special ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 27:7-14
Matthew Henry: Psa 27:7-14 - -- David in these verses expresses, I. His desire towards God, in many petitions. If he cannot now go up to the house of the Lord, yet, wherever he is,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 27:7-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 27:7-8 - --
Vows of thanksgiving on the assumption of the answering of the prayer and the fulfilment of the thing supplicated, are very common at the close of P...
Constable -> Psa 27:1-14; Psa 27:7-14
Constable: Psa 27:1-14 - --Psalm 27
Many of the psalms begin with a lament and end in trust. This one begins with trust, then sinks...
