-
Verse Psalms 59:7. _THEY BELCH OUT WITH THEIR MOUTH_] They use the
lowest insult, the basest abuse. They deal in sarcasm, ridicule,
slander, and lies....
-
BEHOLD, THEY BELCH OUT WITH THEIR MOUTH - The word rendered “belch
out” means properly to boil forth; to gush out, to flow; and then,
to pour forth copiously, or in a running stream, as a fountain doe...
-
Psalms 59
Gentile Enmity Against Israel
_ 1. Surrounded by nations (Psalms 59:1)_
2. Their judgment anticipated (Psalms 59:9)
Another Michtam of David when he was persecuted by Saul. While in
prev...
-
LIX. The Ps. seems to be directed against Jewish and not foreign
enemies. It might well be a prayer for the downfall of the
aristocratic Sadducees. On the other hand in Psalms 59:5 and Psalms
59:8 the...
-
Be his enemies never so threatening and insolent, he can trust in God....
-
The figure of Psalms 59:6 is dropped. A flood of cursing and falsehood
(Psalms 59:12) pours from their mouth (Proverbs 15:2; Proverbs 15:28);
they mena
-
THEY BELCH OUT— The original verb בעה _bangah,_ properly
signifies the bubbling noise of water rising out of a spring. Hence it
is used in a good and bad sense of what is uttered by the mouth,
accordi...
-
PSALMS 59
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
The Beleaguered Psalmist Prays for Rescue and Avenging.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 59:1-5, In Praying for Rescue, the Psalmist
Describes the Character and Conduct of his...
-
_BEHOLD, THEY BELCH OUT WITH THEIR MOUTH: SWORDS ARE IN THEIR LIPS:
FOR WHO, SAY THEY, DOTH HEAR?_
Behold, they belch out with their mouth - a torrent of false charges
and calumnies (Psalms 94:4)....
-
SWORDS _are_ IN THEIR LIPS] Their speech is cutting and injurious.
WHO, _say they_, DOTH hear?] They question whether there is a God....
-
Title.—(RV) 'For the Chief Musician; _set_ to Al-tashheth. _A Psalm_
of David: Michtam: when Saul sent, and they watched the house to kill
him.' For the first part of the title see on Psalms 57. The s...
-
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...
-
BEHOLD. — Without question this word should, as Mr. Burgess
suggests, be emended to “spears” (_chanîth_ instead of
_hinneh_)_,_ to give —
“Spears they pour out with their mouths,
Swords with their li...
-
Psalms 59:1
THE superscription makes this the earliest of David's psalms, dating
from the Sauline persecution. It has many points of connection with
the others of that group, but its closest affinitie...
-
“GOD IS MY HIGH TOWER”
Psalms 59:1
This is the fifth of the _Michtams,_ or “Golden Psalms.” Compare
Psalms 16:1; Psalms 56:1; Psalms
-
Again we have a song from the midst of peril. The singer is the object
of determined, stealthy, and malignant opposition. It is divided into
two parts, both ending with the same declaration, "God is m...
-
Behold, they (f) belch out with their mouth: swords [are] in their
lips: for who, [say they], doth hear?
(f) They boast openly in their wicked devises, and every word is as a
sword: for they neither...
-
_Save me. The king praying for all. (Menochius) --- St. Augustine
reads, me, (Calmet) though the Vulgate does not here express it.
(Haydock) --- Hebrew, "save thy right hand," the people, or man of
th...
-
All these expressions, if considered as referring to Christ, carry a
correspondence with his complaints in other scriptures. Bulls of
Bashan, and dogs from the assembly, beset him around. Psalms 22:11...
-
In the verse which follows, he describes their fierceness. The
expression, _prating, _or belching out with their mouth, denotes that
they proclaimed their infamous counsels openly, and without affecti...
-
Psalms 59 gives more the external enemies. The same wickedness is
found there, but the might of human power with it. But they also must
be judged, that wickedness may be set aside. Nor was it the sin...
-
BEHOLD, THEY BELCH OUT WITH THEIR MOUTH,.... Bark like dogs, so Aben
Ezra; or "bubble out" u, as a fountain bubbles out with water; so they
cast out their wickedness in great abundance; see Jeremiah 6...
-
Behold, they belch out with their mouth: swords [are] in their lips:
for who, [say they], doth hear?
Ver. 7. _Behold, they belch out with their mouth_] Calling me traitor
wherever they come, and seek...
-
_They return at evening_ Saul sent once to destroy him, and the
messengers went back to inform him that he was ill; but they returned
in the evening to bring him even in his bed. _They make a noise li...
-
PRAYER OF AN INNOCENT PERSON AGAINST THOSE WHO SEEK HIS SOUL.
To the chief musician, Al-taschith, again according to the melody
"Destroy not," Michtam, a poem in epigrammatic form, of David; when
Sau...
-
Behold, they belch out with their mouth, as the dogs do with their
growling and barking; SWORDS ARE IN THEIR LIPS, Psalms 57:4; FOR WHO,
SAY THEY, DOTH HEAR? It is an impertinent challenge, for they b...
-
1-7 In these words we hear the voice of David when a prisoner in his
own house; the voice of Christ when surrounded by his merciless
enemies; the voice of the church when under bondage in the world;...
-
THEY BELCH OUT; or, _they pour forth_, (to wit, words, for what else
should come out of the mouth? even sharp and bitter words, as the next
clause explains it,) abundantly and vehemently, as a fountai...
-
Psalms 59:7 belch H5042 (H8686) mouth H6310 Swords H2719 lips H8193
hears H8085 (H8802)
belch -...
-
DAVID EXPRESSES HIS CONFIDENCE THAT YHWH WILL PROTECT HIM (PSALMS
59:6).
Describing his enemies as like a pack of stray dogs on the prowl
(compare also Psalms 59:14) David is confident that YHWH will...
-
CONTENTS: Complaint of the malice of enemies and comfort and
confidence in God.
CHARACTERS: God, David.
CONCLUSION: Those who are for Christ's sake, harmless and innocent may
expect to be hated of w...
-
Psalms 59:6. _They make a noise like a dog._ Mr. Jowett, in his
christian researches, states, that many dogs in eastern towns have no
owners; that they lie in the shade during the heat of the day, and...
-
DELIVER ME FROM MINE ENEMIES, O MY GOD.
REVELATIONS OF THE GOOD AND BAD IN HUMAN NATURE
I. The enmity of man towards man.
1. From the description that David here gives of his enemies, we learn
that...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 59:1. This is an individual lament,
seeking God’s protection from enemies who threaten the faithful
person’s life. The title connects the psalm to...
-
INTRODUCTION
_Superscription.—_“_To the Chief Musician, Al-taschith_.” See
Introduction to Psalms 57. “_Michtam of David_.” See Introduction
to Psalms 56. “_When Saul sent, and they watched the house...
-
EXPOSITION
LIKE Psalms 56:1 and Psalms 57:1, this is a cry for deliverance out of
great peril, with a final expression of confidence (verses 16, 17)
that the deliverance will be granted. From the psal...
-
Psa 59:1-17 is another one of those "destroy not" prayers of David,
when Saul sent and they watched the house to kill him. His wife,
Michael, let him out of the window in a basket and David escaped. B...
-
Jeremiah 33:24; Job 22:12; Job 22:13; Matthew 12:34; Proverbs 12:18;
-
Pour out — Sharp and bitter word's, abundantly and vehemently, as a
fountain doth waters, as this word signifies. Swords — Words as keen
and mischievous as swords. For who — David doth not hear us, an...