
Text -- Psalms 85:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 85:4
Wesley: Psa 85:4 - -- Restore us to our former tranquillity, and free us from the troubles which we yet groan under.
Restore us to our former tranquillity, and free us from the troubles which we yet groan under.
JFB -> Psa 85:4-7
Having still occasion for the anger which is deprecated.
Clarke -> Psa 85:4
Clarke: Psa 85:4 - -- Turn us, O God of our salvation - Thou hast turned our captivity; now convert our souls. And they find a reason for their prayer in an attribute of ...
Turn us, O God of our salvation - Thou hast turned our captivity; now convert our souls. And they find a reason for their prayer in an attribute of their God; the God of their salvation. And as his work was to save, they beg that his anger towards them might cease. The Israelites were not restored from their captivity all at once. A few returned with Zerubbabel; some more with Ezra and Nehemiah; but a great number still remained in Babylonia, Media, Assyria, Egypt, and other parts. The request of the psalmist is, to have a complete restoration of all the Israelites from all places of their dispersion.
Calvin -> Psa 85:4
Calvin: Psa 85:4 - -- 4.Turn us, O God of our salvation! The faithful now make a practical application to themselves, in their present circumstances, of what they had rehe...
4.Turn us, O God of our salvation! The faithful now make a practical application to themselves, in their present circumstances, of what they had rehearsed before concerning God’s paternal tenderness towards his people whom he had redeemed. And they attribute to him, by whom they desire to be restored to their former state, the appellation, O God of our salvation! to encourage themselves, even in the most desperate circumstances, in the hope of being delivered by the power of God. Although to the eye of sense and reason there may be no apparent ground to hope favourably as to our condition, it becomes us to believe that our salvation rests secure in his hand, and that, whenever he pleases, he can easily and readily find the means of bringing salvation to us. God’s anger being the cause and origin of all calamities, the faithful beseech him to remove it. This order demands our special attention; for so effeminate and faint-hearted in bearing adversity are we, that no sooner does God begin to smite us with his little finger, than we entreat him, with groaning and lamentable cries, to spare us. But we forget to plead, what should chiefly engage our thoughts, that he would deliver us from guilt and condemnation; and we forget this because we are reluctant to descend into our own hearts and to examine ourselves.
TSK -> Psa 85:4
TSK: Psa 85:4 - -- turn us : The Israelites were not restored from their captivity all at oncecaps1 . acaps0 few returned with Zerubbabel, some more with Ezra and Nehe...
turn us : The Israelites were not restored from their captivity all at oncecaps1 . acaps0 few returned with Zerubbabel, some more with Ezra and Nehemiah; but a great number still remained in Babylonia, Media, Assyria, etc.; and therefore the Psalmist prays for a complete restoration. Psa 80:3, Psa 80:7, Psa 80:19; Jer 31:18; Lam 5:21; Mal 4:6
O God : Psa 25:2, Psa 27:1; Mic 7:7, Mic 7:18-20; Joh 4:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 85:4
Barnes: Psa 85:4 - -- Turn us, O God of our salvation - The God from whom salvation must come, and on whom we are dependent for it. The prayer here is, "turn us;"tur...
Turn us, O God of our salvation - The God from whom salvation must come, and on whom we are dependent for it. The prayer here is, "turn us;"turn us from our sins; bring us to repentance; make us willing to forsake every evil way; and enable us to do it. This is the proper spirit always in prayer. The first thing is not that he would take away his wrath, but that he would dispose us to forsake our sins, and to turn to himself; that we may be led to abandon that which has brought his displeasure upon us, and then that he will cause his anger toward us to cease. We have no authority for asking God to turn away his judgments unless we are willing to forsake our sins; and in all cases we can hope for the divine interposition and mercy, when the judgments of God are upon us, only as we are willing to turn from our iniquities.
And cause thine anger toward us to cease - The word used here, and rendered "cause to cease"-
Poole -> Psa 85:4
Poole: Psa 85:4 - -- Turn us either,
1. Convert us. As thou hast brought back our bodies to thy land, so bring back our hearts to thyself, from whom many of them to this...
Turn us either,
1. Convert us. As thou hast brought back our bodies to thy land, so bring back our hearts to thyself, from whom many of them to this day are alienated. Or rather,
2. Restore us to our former tranquillity, and free us from the troubles which we yet groan under from our malicious neighbours and enemies; for this best suits with the following clause of the verse, which commonly explains the former.
Cause thine anger toward us to cease he prudently endeavours to take away the root and cause of their continued miseries, to wit, God’ s anger procured by their sins.
Haydock -> Psa 85:4
Haydock: Psa 85:4 - -- Soul. I ardently desire to serve in thy temple, Jeremias xxii. 27. A holy importunity, (Luke xviii. 2.; Tertullian, Apol. 39.; Calmet) and fervour ...
Soul. I ardently desire to serve in thy temple, Jeremias xxii. 27. A holy importunity, (Luke xviii. 2.; Tertullian, Apol. 39.; Calmet) and fervour in prayer, (Haydock) with perseverance, attention, and a sense of God's infinite perfections, are requisite. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 85:4
Gill: Psa 85:4 - -- Turn us, O God of our salvation,.... Who appointed it in his purposes, contrived it in council, secured it in covenant, and sent his Son to effect it;...
Turn us, O God of our salvation,.... Who appointed it in his purposes, contrived it in council, secured it in covenant, and sent his Son to effect it; the prayer to him is for converting grace, either at first, for first conversion is his work, and his only; or after backslidings, for he it is that restores the souls of his people; and perhaps it is a prayer of the Jews, for their conversion in the latter day; when sensible of sin, and seeking after the Messiah they have rejected, when the Lord will turn them to himself, and turn away iniquity from them, and they shall be saved, Hos 3:5,
and cause thine anger towards us to cease: the manifest tokens of which are now upon them, being scattered up and down in the world, and made a proverb, a taunt, and a jeer; but will be removed, and cease, when they shall be converted.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 85:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Psa 85:1-13 - --1 The Psalmist, out of the experience of former mercies, prays for the continuance thereof.8 He promises to wait thereon, out of confidence of God's g...
MHCC -> Psa 85:1-7
MHCC: Psa 85:1-7 - --The sense of present afflictions should not do away the remembrance of former mercies. The favour of God is the fountain of happiness to nations, as w...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 85:1-7
Matthew Henry: Psa 85:1-7 - -- The church, in affliction and distress, is here, by direction from God, making her application to God. So ready is God to hear and answer the prayer...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 85:4-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 85:4-7 - --
The poet now prays God to manifest anew the loving-kindness He has shown formerly. In the sense of "restore us again," שׁוּבנוּ does not form a...
Constable: Psa 73:1--89:52 - --I. Book 3: chs 73--89
A man or men named Asaph wrote 17 of the psalms in this book (Pss. 73-83). Other writers w...

Constable: Psa 85:1-13 - --Psalm 85
An anonymous psalmist thanked God for forgiving and restoring His sinning people. He prayed tha...
