-
Verse Psalms 44:23. _AWAKE, WHY SLEEPEST THOU, O LORD?_] That is, Why
dost thou appear as one asleep, who is regardless of the safety of his
friends. This is a _freedom of speech_ which can only be al...
-
AWAKE, WHY SLEEPEST THOU? - This is a solemn and earnest appeal to God
to interpose in their behalf, as if he were “asleep,” or were
regardless of their sufferings. Compare Psalms 3:7, note; Psalms 7:...
-
Psalms 44
The Increased Cry for Deliverance
_ 1. My King, O God! Command deliverances (Psalms 44:1)_
2. Trouble upon trouble and confusion (Psalms 44:9)
3. Awake! Arise for our help! ...
-
XLIV. A NATIONAL PRAYER IN UNMERITED DISTRESS. The Ps. evidently
depicts the situation of Israel under Antiochus Epiphanes [but see
OTJC 2, pp. 207f., 437- 440. A. S. P.] So much was plain long ago to...
-
_Awake … arise_ Bestir thyself … awake. Cp. Psalms 7:6, and many
similar invocations. But nowhere else do we find so bold an
expostulation as _why sleepest thou_? The nearest parallel is in
Psalms 78:...
-
An urgent appeal for immediate help....
-
PSALMS 44
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
Israel Suffers for God.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 44:1-8, The Psalmist, Encouraging himself by
Jehovah's Past Favour in Giving Israel their Land, Emboldens himself
to E...
-
_AWAKE, WHY SLEEPEST THOU, O LORD? ARISE, CAST US NOT OFF FOR EVER._
Fifth strophe. Psalms 44:23.-Prayer that God would arise for His
people's help.
AWAKE, WHY SLEEPEST THOU, O LORD? The answer is g...
-
WHY SLEEPEST THOU?] an expression of startling boldness, yet the
prayer of Psalms 44:26 shows that its daring springs not from unbelief
but from faith....
-
This is a prayer for deliverance from national trouble which has not
been deserved by any apostasy or idolatry. The strong assertions of
national faithfulness are akin to the spirit of the Maccabean a...
-
PSALMS 42:72
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
Words in boxes are from the Bible.
Words marked with a *star are described in the word list at the end.
The translated Bible text has yet to go through Advanced Che...
-
_(_23_)_ WHY SLEEPEST. — Comp. Psalms 7:6, and see refs....
-
_[Psalms 44:24]_ ע֤וּרָה ׀ לָ֖מָּה תִישַׁ֥ן ׀
אֲדֹנָ֑י הָ֝קִ֗יצָה
-
Psalms 44:1
CALVIN says that the authorship of this psalm is uncertain, but that
it is abundantly clear that it was composed by anyone rather than
David, and that its plaintive contents suit best the...
-
A PLEA FOR PRESENT HELP
Psalms 44:9
In Psalms 44:11 God's people are compared to sheep appointed for meat,
which are sold by the shepherd for naught, so worthless are they.
Before their savage foes s...
-
The final meaning of this psalm is discovered in its last four verses.
It is a prayer for deliverance from defeat. Its strength of appeal
lies in its recognition of the government of God. He is the Au...
-
These are the strong cries of faith: not that the Lord sleepeth, or is
an inattentive spectator to the exercises of his redeemed: He seeth
and knoweth all. The great Shepherd of Israel neither slumber...
-
23_Arise, O Lord! why sleepest thou? _Here the saints desire that God,
having pity upon them, would at length send them help and deliverance.
Although God allows the saints to plead with him in this b...
-
Psalms 44 gives a full and vivid picture of the state of the nation,
as in the conscience of the remnant. They had heard with their ears.
Faith rested in the memorial of all the old mighty deliverance...
-
AWAKE, WHY SLEEPEST THOU, O LORD?.... Not that sleep properly falls
upon God: the Keeper of Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps; his eyes
are always upon his people; he never withdraws them from them,...
-
Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord? arise, cast [us] not off for ever.
Ver. 23. _Awake, why sleepest thou?_] Considering all the premises,
stir up thyself, and come and save us? carest thou not that we...
-
A PRAYER IN TIMES OF NATIONAL DISTRESS.
To the chief. musician for the sons of Korah, another hymn composed by
a member of this family, Maschil, a didactic poem evidently written at
a time when the na...
-
Awake! Why sleepest Thou, O Lord? this being the conclusion reached
because of His failure to bring speedy deliverance to His children.
ARISE, CAST US NOT OFF FOREVER!...
-
17-26 In afflictions, we must not seek relief by any sinful
compliance; but should continually meditate on the truth, purity, and
knowledge of our heart-searching God. Hearts sins and secret sins are...
-
Psalms 44:23 Awake H5782 (H8798) sleep H3462 (H8799) Lord H136 Arise
H6974 (H8685) off H2186 ...
-
AWOKEN HIMSELF TO THE TRUE SITUATION HE NOW CALLS ON THEIR SOVEREIGN
LORD TO AWAKEN AND RISE UP AND HELP THEM (PSALMS 44:23).
Psalms 44:23
‘Awake, why do you sleep, O Lord?
Arise, do not cast us of...
-
CONTENTS: Complaint of the Lord's apparent forgetfulness and entreaty
for His help.
CHARACTERS: God, Psalmist.
CONCLUSION: The tokens of God's displeasure are more grievous to those
who have been lo...
-
Psalms 44:1. _Our fathers have told us._ All ancient patriarchs
instructed their children, and all ancient nations instructed
posterity by oral traditions, as in this psalm, by reciting how Joshua
dro...
-
_We have heard with our ears, O God; our fathers have told us what
work Thou didst._
ASPECTS OF NATIONAL PIETY
There is such a thing as national piety. I mean the aggregation of
genuine godly though...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 44:1. This is a hymn for times when
God’s people as a whole have suffered some great calamity at the
hands of their enemies. When the worshiping congregation sings this,
the...
-
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 44:23 Remembering God’s history with his
people strengthens the community to pray for his aid in the present.
The last word is a request for God to REDEEM (see note on 25:22),...
-
INTRODUCTION
_Superscription_.—“To the Chief Musician for the sons of Korah,
Maschil.” See introduction to Psalms 42.
We have no means of determining who was the author of the psalm. Nor
are we able...
-
EXPOSITION
THE date and occasion of this psalm are greatly disputed. Most
critics, from Calvin to Hitzig, refer it to the times of the
Maccabees. Others suggest the fourth or fifth century B.C. One
(T...
-
We have heard with our ears, O God, our fathers have told us, what
work you did in their days, in times of old. How you did drive out the
heathen with thy hand, and you planted them; and how you did a...
-
Isaiah 51:9; Mark 4:38; Psalms 12:5; Psalms 35:23; Psalms 59:4;...
-
Does God sleep?
PROBLEM: According to Psalms 121:4, God shall “neither slumber nor
sleep.” Yet, in this verse the psalmist calls on God, “Awake! Why
do You sleep, O Lord?”
SOLUTION: The psalmist uses...