collapse all
Text -- Psalms 90:6 (NET)

Parallel
Cross Reference (TSK)
ITL
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 90:5-6
JFB: Psa 90:5-6 - -- Life is like grass, which, though changing under the influence of the night's dew, and flourishing in the morning, is soon cut down and withereth (Psa...
Life is like grass, which, though changing under the influence of the night's dew, and flourishing in the morning, is soon cut down and withereth (Psa 103:15; 1Pe 1:24).
TSK -> Psa 90:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 90:6
Barnes: Psa 90:6 - -- In the morning it flourisheth - This does not mean that it grows with any special vigor or rapidity in the morning, as if that were illustrativ...
In the morning it flourisheth - This does not mean that it grows with any special vigor or rapidity in the morning, as if that were illustrative of the rapid growth of the young; but merely that, in fact, in the morning it is green and vigorous, and is cut down in the short course of a day, or before evening. The reference here is to grass as an emblem of man.
And groweth up - The same word in the Hebrew which is used in the close of the previous verse.
In the evening it is cut down, and withereth - In the short period of a day. What was so green and flourishing in the morning, is, at the close of the day, dried up. Life has been arrested, and death, with its consequences, has ensued. So with man. How often is this literally true, that those who are strong, healthy, vigorous, hopeful, in the morning, are at night pale, cold, and speechless in death! How striking is this as an emblem of man in general: so soon cut down; so soon numbered with the dead. Compare the notes at Isa 40:6-8; notes at 1Pe 1:24-25.
Poole -> Psa 90:6
Poole: Psa 90:6 - -- The whole space of man’ s life is compared to one day, and his prosperity is confined to a part of that day, and ended in the close of it.
The whole space of man’ s life is compared to one day, and his prosperity is confined to a part of that day, and ended in the close of it.
Haydock -> Psa 90:6
Haydock: Psa 90:6 - -- Day. Neither open attacks, nor unforeseen accidents prevail. (Calmet) ---
Business. Hebrew dabar, "thing," ver. 3., "the pestilence." (St. Je...
Day. Neither open attacks, nor unforeseen accidents prevail. (Calmet) ---
Business. Hebrew dabar, "thing," ver. 3., "the pestilence." (St. Jerome) (Haydock) ---
The Hebrews suppose, that one angel presides over death in the daytime, and another during the night; or that various demons send maladies at these different times. ---
Invasion. Septuagint and old Italic, have, "ruin." ---
St. Jerome, after Aquila, "from the bite of him who rageth, Greek: damonizontos, at noon. Keteb, (Haydock) according to the ancient tradition of the Jews, denotes one of the bolder devils, who attacks in open day, and seeks no aid from nocturnal craft. (Genebrard) The psalmist may allude to those popular notions, (Theodoret; St. Jerome) which were prevalent among the pagans. (Theocrit. Idyl. i.; Lucan iii.) (Calmet) ---
Thou shalt fear no danger of the day or night, (Bellarmine) nor any which disturbs the life of man. (Scaligers, ep. i. p. 95.) ---
This author mistakes, when he supposes that Keteb is rendered devil. (Amama) ---
He might also ask how the Chaldean, Aquila, and Symmachus came to discover, that the devil is here mentioned, as well as the Septuagint? (Berthier) ---
These seem to have read ussod, "and the devil," instead of issud, "from destruction which ravages," (Amama) vastabit. (Montanus) (Haydock) ---
But allowing that the Septuagint, &c., are accurate what is meant by this devil? St. Peter seems to explain the idea, when he exhorts us to sobriety, 1 Peter v. 8. (Berthier) ---
Violent temptations of sloth, (St. Athanasius) or impurity, (Theodoret) or the persecutions against the faithful, may be meant. Four different sorts of attacks seem to be designated. 1. Such as assult the ignorant with the fears of the night, tempting them to secure their temporal estates, while they think not of eternal woe impending. 2. Others are attacked with the arrows in the day, and threatened with death, which they know they ought rather to endure, than abandon their faith. 3. The business, &c., imitates some grievous but latent temptation, as when the faithful are persuaded to take some unlawful oath. 4. But the greatest and most manifest attack, is styled, invasion, &c., when persecutors assail those who adhere to the true faith with a succession of torments, and subtle arguments, which have been the occasion of the fall of many, who had resisted the former attacks. Yet none of these yield, but by their own fault, trusting in themselves, and not in God. (St. Augustine) (Worthington) ---
Noon day. Grotius explains this of the heat of the sun, which is very dangerous to travellers in Palestine. (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 90:6
Gill: Psa 90:6 - -- In the morning it flourisheth and groweth up,.... That is, the grass, through the dew that lay all night on it, and by the clear shining of the sun af...
In the morning it flourisheth and groweth up,.... That is, the grass, through the dew that lay all night on it, and by the clear shining of the sun after rain, when it appears in great beauty and verdure; so man in the morning of his youth looks gay and beautiful, grows in the stature and strength of his body, and in the endowments of his mind; and it may be also in riches and wealth; it is well if he grows in grace, and in the knowledge of Christ:
in the evening it is cut down, and withereth; the Targum adds, "through heat"; but it cannot be by the heat of the sun, when it is cut down at evening; but it withers in course, being cut down. This respects the latter part of life, the evening of old age; and the whole expresses the shortness of life, which is compared to grass, that now is in all its beauty and glory, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, Mat 6:30. This metaphor of grass, to set forth the frailty of man, and his short continuance, is frequently used; see Psa 37:2, 1Pe 1:24. It may be observed, that man's life is represented but as one day, consisting of a morning and an evening, which signifies the bloom and decline of life.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 90:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Psa 90:1-17 - --1 Moses, setting forth God's providence.3 complains of human fragility,7 divine chastisements,10 and brevity of life.12 He prays for the knowledge and...
MHCC -> Psa 90:1-6
MHCC: Psa 90:1-6 - --It is supposed that this psalm refers to the sentence passed on Israel in the wilderness, Numbers 14. The favour and protection of God are the only su...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 90:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 90:1-6 - -- This psalm is entitled a prayer of Moses. Where, and in what volume, it was preserved from Moses's time till the collection of psalms was begun to...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 90:5-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 90:5-8 - --
Psa 90:5-6 tell us how great is the distance between men and this eternal selfsameness of God. The suffix of זרמתּם , referred to the thousand...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...

Constable: Psa 90:1-17 - --Psalm 90
The psalmist asked God to bless His people in view of life's brevity.
T...




