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WILT NOT THOU, O GOD ... - This is taken from Psalms 60:10, with no
change in the Hebrew, except that the word “thou” (in the first
member of the verse) is omitted....
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Psalms 108
Israel's Praise for Salvation
_ 1. Israel's praise (Psalms 108:1)_
2. The inheritance (Psalms 108:5)
3. Through God alone ...
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CVIII. A composition from parts of Psalms 57, 60. Thus Psalms 108:1 =
Psalms 57:7; Psalms 57:6 = Psalms 60:5.
That Psalms 108 is a composi
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THOU. Some codices, with Septuagint, Syriac, and Vulgate, read "Thou"
(emphatic) in the text....
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PSALMS 108
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
Two Fragments of Earlier Psalms.
ANALYSIS
Psalms 108:1-6 are taken from Psalms 57:7-11: and...
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Who will bring me into the strong city? who will lead me into Edom?
-There follows Israel's confident hope of God's help as alone
trustworthy, on the ground of His promises and her prayer.
Verse 1...
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Wilt not thou, O God, who hast cast us off? and wilt not thou, O God,
go forth with our hosts?
Prayer for God's interposition, grounded on the enemy's wickedness
(Psalms 109:1); let condemnation fa...
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This is a composite Psalms 1-5 is practically Psalms 57:7; Psalms 57:6
is the same as Psalms 60:5. For notes on individual vv. the reader is
referred to these two Pss. Probably the two fragments were...
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Psalms 107:150
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
THE END OF THE *EXILE
PSALMS 108
JESUS SAID, "THE *TRUTH WILL MAKE YOU FREE" (JOHN 8:32)....
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_[Psalms 108:12]_ הֲ לֹֽא ־אֱלֹהִ֥ים
זְנַחְתָּ֑נוּ וְֽ...
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Psalms 108:1
Two fragments of Davidic psalms are here tacked together with slight
variations. Psalms 108:1 are from Psalms 57:7; Psalms 108:6
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VICTORIOUS THROUGH GOD
Psalms 108:1
Two fragments of Davidic psalms are here joined together with very
slight alterations. In Psalms 108:1 are from Psalms 57:7, and...
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This psalm is composed of two quotations from former song. The first
part (vv. Psa 108:1-5) is taken from Psalms 57:1, of which the theme
is “God the Refuge in calamity” (vv. Psa 108:7-11). The second...
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(f) [Wilt] not [thou], O God, [who] hast cast us off? and wilt not
thou, O God, go forth with our hosts?
(f) From the sixth verse of this psalm to the last, read also (Psalms
60:5)....
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_Usurer. The Romans forced the miserable Jews to pay taxes, and
Domitian banished them from Rome, to live in a wood, where their
furniture was only a basket and some hay, and their wives came to beg....
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Psalms 108 is a psalm of a peculiar character, being composed of the
ends of two others, the earlier and the latter parts of which, the cry
of deep distress, and the answer to the cry in faith and hop...
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AND WILT NOT THOU, O GOD, GO FORTH WITH OUR HOSTS?.... In
Psalms 60:10, it is, "and thou, O God, which didst not go out with our
armies". Psalms 60:10....
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_A.M. 2962. B.C. 1042._
This Psalm is, almost word for word, taken out of two of the
foregoing Psalms; the first five verses out of the fifty-seventh, from
Psalms 108:7, and the rest out of Psalm six...
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Wilt not Thou, O God, who hast cast us off? And wilt not Thou, O God,
go forth with our hosts?...
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DAVID'S THANKSGIVING AND PRAYER.
In this psalm David has used the material of former hymns of praise,
the Holy Spirit making use of this new combination to bring out very
strongly the features of pra...
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6-20 The Lord Jesus may speak here as a Judge, denouncing sentence on
some of his enemies, to warn others. When men reject the salvation of
Christ, even their prayers are numbered among their sins. S...
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Psalms 108:11 God H430 off H2186 (H8804) God H430 out H3318 (H8799)
armies H6635
who hast -...
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Psalms 108:1. _O God, my heart is fixed; I will sing and give praise,
even with my glory. Awake, psaltery and harp: I myself will awake
early. I will praise thee, O LORD, among the people: and I will...
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CONTENTS: Thanks to God for His mercies and His promises pleaded.
CHARACTERS: God, David.
CONCLUSION: We should praise God publicly as those who are not ashamed
of our obligations to Him and our tha...
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The _five_ first verses of this psalm are taken from Psalms 57., and
the remaining _eight_ verses from Psalms 60., with scarcely any
variation. By some it is thought to have been thus compounded by Da...
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_O God, my heart is fixed._
A THREEFOLD MORAL STATE OF MIND
I. Moral fixation of soul (Psalms 108:1). This concentration of soul
is unknown to unregenerate men. They are unsettled, divided,
distract...
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PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 108:1. It seems that David composed this
community lament using material from two other psalms. Verses Psalms
108:1 are from...
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PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 108:10 This comes from Psalms 60:9. Part of the
background of Psalms 60:1 is a campaign agains
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INTRODUCTION
“This Psalm consists of portions of two others, the first half of it
being taken from the 57th Psalm, Psalms 108:7, and the latter half
from the 60th, Psalms 108:5. It bears the name of D...
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EXPOSITION
THIS is a composite psalm, made up of portions of two Davidical
psalms, viz. Psalms 57:7, and Psalms 60:5, but not (probably) put into
its present shape by David. It is difficult to imagine...
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Psa 108:1-13 the psalmist declares:
O God, my heart is fixed; I will sing and give praise, even with my
glory (Psalms 108:1).
And then he calls for praise unto the Lord with the psaltery and the
har...
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1 Samuel 17:26; 1 Samuel 17:36; 1 Samuel 31:13; 2 Chronicles 13:12;...