
Text -- Psalms 62:9 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Vain, and helpless creatures.

They promise much, but generally deceive those who trust in them.
Clarke: Psa 62:9 - -- Men of low degree are vanity - בני אדם beney Adam , which we here translate men of low degree, literally, sons of Adam, are put in opposition...
Men of low degree are vanity -
Common men can give no help. They are vanity, and it is folly to trust in them; for although they may be willing, yet they have no ability to help you: "Rich men are a lie."They promise much, but perform nothing; they cause you to hope, but mock your expectation

Clarke: Psa 62:9 - -- To be laid to the balance - במאזנים לעלות bemozenayim laaloth , In the balances they ascend: exactly answerable to our phrase, they kic...
To be laid to the balance -

Clarke: Psa 62:9 - -- They are altogether lighter than vanity - Literally, Both of them united are vanity, המה מהבל יחד hemmah mehebel yachad . Put both toget...
They are altogether lighter than vanity - Literally, Both of them united are vanity,
Calvin -> Psa 62:9
Calvin: Psa 62:9 - -- 9.Nevertheless, the sons of Adam are vanity If we take the particle אך , ach, affirmatively, as meaning surely or certainly, then this verse...
9.Nevertheless, the sons of Adam are vanity If we take the particle
TSK -> Psa 62:9
TSK: Psa 62:9 - -- Surely : Psa 39:5, Psa 39:11; 1Sa 18:5, 1Sa 18:7, 1Sa 23:12, 1Sa 23:19, 1Sa 23:20; 2Sa 15:6; Mat 21:9; Joh 19:15
of high : Psa 55:13, Psa 55:14, Psa 1...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 62:9
Barnes: Psa 62:9 - -- Surely men of low degree are vanity - literally, "vanity are the sons of Adam,"but the word Adam here is used evidently to represent men, or th...
Surely men of low degree are vanity - literally, "vanity are the sons of Adam,"but the word Adam here is used evidently to represent men, or the race. The same word is also employed particularly to represent common men, or men of the humbler rank, in contradistinction to the word
Men of high degree are a lie - Men of exalted rank, kings, princes, nobles. This does not refer to their personal character, as if they were always false, deceitful, treacherous; but the idea is, that any prospect of protection or aid from men of rank and station - front any power which they wield - is unworthy to be relied on. It is not that which we need; it is not that on which we can depend.
To be laid in the balance - literally, "In the scales to go up;"that is, they are seen to go up, or to show how light they are. They have no real weight; no real value. On the scales or balance, see the notes at Dan 5:27.
They are altogether lighter than vanity - They are all vain; single or combined, they have no power to save us. The meaning is not that if these two ranks of persons were weighed against each other they would both be found to be vanity; but that it is true of each and every rank of men - high and low - whether single or combined - that, as weighed against our interests and needs, they are nothing. All the kings of the earth with all their hosts of war, all princes and nobles with all that they can summon from the lower ranks of their people, cannot save one soul from death - cannot deliver us from the consequences of our transgressions. God, and God alone, can do this.
Poole -> Psa 62:9
Poole: Psa 62:9 - -- Vanity i.e. most vain, impotent, and helpless creatures in themselves. This he delivers as a reason or argument to enforce his foregoing exhortation;...
Vanity i.e. most vain, impotent, and helpless creatures in themselves. This he delivers as a reason or argument to enforce his foregoing exhortation; trust in God , because there is no other person or thing to which you can safely trust.
A lie because they promise much, and raise men’ s expectations upon consideration of their great power and dignity, but are not able to perform, and generally deceive those who trust in them; in which respect lying is ascribed to a fountain , Jer 15:18 , to wine , Hos 9:2 , to the olive , Hab 3:17 , when they do not give what they promise.
Gill -> Psa 62:9
Gill: Psa 62:9 - -- Surely men of low degree are vanity,.... Or "sons of Adam" i; of the earthly man; of fallen Adam; one of his immediate sons was called Hebel, "vanity...
Surely men of low degree are vanity,.... Or "sons of Adam" i; of the earthly man; of fallen Adam; one of his immediate sons was called Hebel, "vanity"; and it is true of all his sons; but here it designs only one sort of them; such as are poor and low in the world; mean men, as the phrase is rendered in Isa 2:9; See Gill on Psa 49:2; these are subject to sinful vanity; their thoughts are vain, their affections vain, their minds vain, their conversation vain, sinful, foolish, fallacious, and inconstant. The wicked poor are, generally speaking, of all persons, the most wicked; and therefore, though they are the multitude, they are not to be trusted in. The Arabic version is, they are as a "shadow", fleeting and unstable, no solidity in them; the Syriac version, "as a vapour", that soon passeth away, like the breath of the mouth, and so not to be accounted of;
and men of high degree are a lie; or "sons of men"; of
to be laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity; take a pair of balances, and put men both of high and low degree together in one scale, and vanity in the other, vanity will weigh heaviest; the scale in which men are will go up, as the word l here used signifies: they are "in the balances to ascend"; or being put in the balances, they will ascend, and the scale in which vanity is will go down; for, take them altogether, they are "lighter" than that: the word "lighter" is not in the text, but is rightly supplied, as it is by Aben Ezra, Kimchi, and Ben Melech. This last clause, according to the accents, may be best rendered thus; being put "in the balance, they must ascend; they are lighter than vanity together". The Targum is,
"if they should take the sons of men in a balance, and weigh their fates, they themselves would be "lighter" than nothing, as one;''
or than vanity together.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 62:1-12
TSK Synopsis: Psa 62:1-12 - --1 David, professing his confidence in God, discourages his enemies.5 In the same confidence he encourages the godly.9 No trust is to be put in worldly...
MHCC -> Psa 62:8-12
MHCC: Psa 62:8-12 - --Those who have found the comfort of the ways of God themselves, will invite others into those ways; we shall never have the less for others sharing wi...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 62:8-12
Matthew Henry: Psa 62:8-12 - -- Here we have David's exhortation to others to trust in God and wait upon him, as he had done. Those that have found the comfort of the ways of God t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 62:9-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 62:9-12 - --
Just as all men with everything earthly upon which they rely are perishable, so also the purely earthly form which the new kingship has assumed carr...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...

Constable: Psa 62:1-12 - --Psalm 62
David expressed confident trust in the Lord in spite of opposition in this psalm. He contrasted...
