-
THEY DID NOT DESTROY THE NATIONS - The Canaanites, Hivites, Jebusites,
etc.; the nations that inhabited the land of Canaan.
CONCERNING WHOM THE LORD COMMANDED THEM - The command on this subject
was po...
-
Psalms 105 AND 106
The Memories of the Past
The last two Psalms of this fourth section review the entire history
of Israel up to the time of the judges. It is the story of God's
faithfulness and merc...
-
CVI. ISRAEL'S SIN.
Psalms 106:1. Introduction. Praise to Yahweh for His power and
greatness. The writer's desire to share in Israel's joy.
PSALMS 106:3. HE THAT DOETH: read they that do.
Psalms 106...
-
DID NOT DESTROY. Compare Judges 1:21, &c.
NATIONS. peoples: i.e. the Canaanite nations. See App-23 and App-25.
COMMANDED. Compare Exodus 23:32; Exodus 23:33: and often repeated. For
the reason, see A...
-
PSALMS 106
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
Humbled Israel Confessing Her Sins as a Nation.
ANALYSIS
Enclosed within an Introduction of Praise and Prayer, Psalms 106:1-5,
and a Conclusion of Prayer and Doxology,...
-
They did not destroy the nations, concerning whom the LORD commanded
them:
-From the fathers in the wilderness the Psalmist turns to the sons in
Canaan. In the former half of the decade their sins...
-
106:34 as (c-7) Or 'concerning whom.'...
-
NATIONS] RV 'peoples.' CONCERNING WHOM] RV 'as.'...
-
As Psalms 105 gives thanks for God's goodness, so Psalms 106 confesses
Israel's sin and acknowledges God's mercy, both being illustrated in
an historical retrospect from the deliverance from Egypt dow...
-
Psalms 90:106
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
THE *LORD IS GOOD!
PSALMS 106
Jesus said, "Father, *forgive them. Because they do not know what
they are doing". ...
-
(34-39) The national sin after the settlement in Canaan....
-
לֹֽא ־הִ֭שְׁמִידוּ אֶת ־הָֽ עַמִּ֑ים
אֲשֶׁ֤ר...
-
Psalms 106:1
THE history of God's past is a record of continuous mercies, the
history of man's, one of as continuous sin. The memory of the former
quickened the psalmist into his sunny song of thankfu...
-
REGARDED WHEN THEY CRIED
Psalms 106:34
Israel's conquest of Canaan did not fulfill the divine mandate. The
inhabitants, whose sins had become a menace to mankind, were allowed
to exist side by side w...
-
The previous psalm called the people to talk of the “marvellous
works” of Jehovah. This one calls to praise, and the reason is that
“His mercy endureth for ever.” This fact is then illustrated by a
de...
-
_Barrenness. Or "saltness." (Haydock) --- He alludes to the environs
of Sodom, Genesis xiii. 10., and xix. 24. (Worthington)_...
-
For the same reason as before, I include the whole of what is here
rehearsed in one reading. But let not the Reader be as brief upon the
interesting things here recorded. Let him consult the several p...
-
34._They did not destroy the nations _It appears to me that those
persons are mistaken who think that the prophet is here simply giving
a relation of the punishment which was inflicted upon the Jews,...
-
Psalms 106. "Hallelujah. Give thanks to Jehovah, for it is good (or He
is good). His mercy endureth for ever." This last we have often
seenthe expression of this unfailing faithful mercy of Jehovah, w...
-
THEY DID NOT DESTROY THE NATIONS,.... Here begins an account of their
sins and provocations, after they were settled in the land of Canaan.
They did not destroy the inhabitants of the land, of the sev...
-
_They did not destroy the nations, concerning whom_ Concerning whose
destruction, _the Lord commanded them_ For when the iniquity of the
Canaanites was full, it was God's will to extirpate their race,...
-
GOD'S BLESSINGS IN SPITE OF ISRAEL'S UNFAITHFULNESS.
This psalm, whose author is not known, gives a detailed confession of
the sins of Israel, as contrasted with the wonders of God's mercy, the
concl...
-
They did not destroy the nations, concerning whom the Lord commanded
them, Deuteronomy 7:2; Exodus 23:32,...
-
34-48 The conduct of the Israelites in Canaan, and God's dealings
with them, show that the way of sin is down-hill; omissions make way
for commissions: when they neglected to destroy the heathen, the...
-
CONCERNING WHOM, i.e. concerning whose destruction or rather, _which
thing_ to wit, to destroy those Canaanitish nations; for in the Hebrew
there is nothing but _asher_, which signifies only either _w...
-
Psalms 106:34 destroy H8045 (H8689) peoples H5971 LORD H3068 commanded
H559 (H8804)
did not -...
-
Psalms 106:1. _Praise ye the LORD. O give thanks unto the LORD; for he
is good: for his mercy endureth for ever._
In this Psalm we have the history of God's people turned to practical
account. I have...
-
In this Psalm we have the story of God's ancient covenant people, and
as we read it, we may read our own history in it if we also are his
people. It is a looking-glass, in which the beholder may see h...
-
This Psalm relates the story of God's mercy to Israel, of the people's
provocation of Jehovah, and of his great patience with them. It
commences with an exhortation to praise the Lord.
Psalms 106:1....
-
CONTENTS: The badness of Israel made heinous by the great goodness of
God.
CHARACTERS: God, Psalmist, Moses, Aaron, Dathan, Abiram, Phinehas.
CONCLUSION: Man's perverseness arises continually from hi...
-
This also is a Psalm of David, and is cited in 1 Chronicles 16.,
although the first and the two last verses only are there given. The
subject is similar to that of the preseding psalm; and it was prob...
-
_They angered Him also at the waters of strife, so that it went ill
with Moses for their sakes._
A GOOD MAN SUFFERING FOR A COMMUNITY, AND A COMMUNITY PURSUING ITS WAY
TO DESTRUCTION
I. A good man su...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 106:1. This historical psalm (see notes
on Psalms 78 and 105) retells a series of events from Israel’s
history to illustrate God’s steadfas
-
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 106:6 This is a list of incidents that begins
at the shore of the Red Sea (vv. Psalms 106:7) and ends during the
time of the judges (vv....
-
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 106:34 The psalmist refers to the recurring
pattern in Judges 2:11, in which the people of Israel DID NOT DESTROY
THE PEOPLES in Canaan (disobe
-
INTRODUCTION
“This it the first of a series of Hallelujah Psalms: Psalms of which
the word Hallelujah is, as it were, the inscription (106, 111–113,
117, 135, 146–150.). As in the last Psalm, so here...
-
EXPOSITION
This is the first of the strictly "Hallelujah psalms"—_i.e._ of the
psalms beginning with the phrase "hallelujah"—which are Psalms
106:1, Psalms 111:1, Psalms 112:1,...
-
Praise ye the LORD. O give thanks unto the LORD; for he is good: for
his mercy endureth for ever. Who can utter the mighty acts of the
LORD? Who can show forth all his praise? Blessed are they that ke...
-
1 Samuel 15:22; 1 Samuel 15:23; 1 Samuel 15:3; Deuteronomy 20:16;...