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SAYING, GOD HATH FORSAKEN HIM - That is, God has given him over; he no
longer protects him; he regards him as a wicked man, and we shall
therefore, not only be “safe” in our attempts upon his life, bu...
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Psalms 71
Israel's Song of Hope
_ 1. Declaration of trust (Psalms 71:1)_
2. Anticipations of faith (Psalms 71:12)
3. Revival and victory ...
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LXXI. A PSALM OF GRATITUDE FOR GOD'S CONSTANT CARE OF HIS SERVANT FROM
YOUTH TO OLD AGE. The Psalmist expresses himself in language borrowed
from older sources.
PSALMS 71:1. Quoted from Psalms 31. Us...
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Repeated deprecations and prayers....
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_God hath forsaken him_ Cp. Psalms 22:1; Psalms 38:21 _b_.
_persecute_ R.V. pursue. But cp. Psalms 69:26; Jeremiah 15:15;...
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Psalms 70, 71
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
Prayer Not to be Forsaken in Old Age.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 70:1-3 (70), Prayer against Enemies. Stanza II.,
Psalms 70:4-5 (70), Prayer in behalf of Friends. Sta...
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_FOR MINE ENEMIES SPEAK AGAINST ME; AND THEY THAT LAY WAIT FOR MY SOUL
TAKE COUNSEL TOGETHER,_
For mine enemies speak against me ... God hath forsaken him:
persecute and take him. The ungodly persecu...
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This Ps. of prayer (Psalms 71:1) and praise (Psalms 71:14) was
apparently written by an old man (Psalms 71:9; Psalms 71:18) and in
the time of the exile.
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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...
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(9-11) This piece may be compared with Psalms 41:6. The formal
“saying” (Psalms 71:11), introducing a quotation, is an indication
of a late date, the early literature employing no signs of quotation....
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לֵ֭ אמֹר אֱלֹהִ֣ים עֲזָבֹ֑ו רִֽדְפ֥וּ
וְ֝ תִפ
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Psalms 71:1
ECHOES of former psalms make the staple of this one, and even those
parts of it which are not quotations have little individuality. The
themes are familiar, and the expression of them is s...
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“MY TRUST FROM MY YOUTH&RDQUO
Psalms 71:1
Some commentators ascribe this psalm to Jeremiah. His pensive,
plaintive tone is certainly present in it. But whoever the author, he
must have written in his...
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This is pre-eminently a song of the aged, and, like old age, it is
reminiscent. The singer passes from memory to hope, and from
experience to praise. No very definite division is possible. Generally
s...
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Saying, (h) God hath forsaken him: persecute and take him; for [there
is] none to deliver [him].
(h) Thus the wicked both blaspheme God and triumph against his saints,
as though he had forsaken them...
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_Earth, is omitted in Hebrew, Roman Septuagint, &c., so that this
cannot regard Solomon, (Berthier) though he was reverenced by all the
neighbouring kings, 3 Kings x. 23. Christ alone is the universal...
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I think it would be wrong to break the thread of this most beautiful
address, and therefore I have preserved it entire. In any, and in
every sense, whether we behold it as the words of Christ, or of D...
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Psalms 71, founded, I suppose, as much of this book, upon the flight
of David on the rebellion of Absalom, presents, I apprehend, the sum
of all God's ways with Israel from the commencement of their h...
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SAYING, GOD HATH FORSAKEN HIM,.... Good men may seem to others to be
forsaken of God; and they themselves may sometimes think they are; and
they may be forsaken for a small moment, when God withdraws...
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Saying, God hath forsaken him: persecute and take him; for [there is]
none to deliver [him].
Ver. 11. _God hath forsaken him_] For his late sin against Uriah; and
as may appear by his present distres...
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_Let my mouth be filled with thy praise_ Give me occasion to multiply
praises to thee for delivering me out of my present distress. _Cast me
not off in my old age_ When I am most feeble, and most need...
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saying, God hath forsaken him; persecute and take him, for there is
none to deliver him. The enemies of both body and soul make new
efforts at the time when old age lays its hand upon the believer,
th...
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PRAYER OF AN AGED BELIEVER FOR GOD'S ASSISTANCE.
Prayer for Deliverance...
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1-13 David prays that he might never be made ashamed of dependence
upon God. With this petition every true believer may come boldly to
the throne of grace. The gracious care of Divine providence in o...
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GOD HATH FORSAKEN HIM, for his adultery, and murder, and other
wickednesses, and therefore we shall certainly prevail against him....
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Psalms 71:11 Saying H559 (H8800) God H430 forsaken H5800 (H8804)
Pursue H7291 (H8798) take H8610 ...
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Psalms 71:1. In thee, O LORD, do I put my trust: let me never be put
to confusion. Deliver me in thy righteous, and cause me to escape:
incline thine ear unto me, and save me. Be thou my strong habita...
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This Psalm, written by an old man, is specially suitable for an old
man. It is numbered seventy-one, and it may suit those who have
reached that age; but it is also appropriate to us all in prospect o...
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Psalms 71:1. _In thee, O LORD, do I put my trust: let me never be put
to confusion._
There is his trust, and there is his fear; his trust he dares to avow,
his fear he turns into a prayer.
Psalms 71...
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CONTENTS: Prayer that enemies might be put to shame. Joyful praise of
God's goodness.
CHARACTERS: God, Psalmist.
CONCLUSION: Those who live a life of confidence in God and continually
resort to Him...
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This psalm, though destitute of title, has passed down to us as
composed by David, during the rebellion of Absalom. He uses the same
words in his present troubles, as when Saul pursued him.
Psalms 71...
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_In Thee, O Lord, do I put my trust: let me never be put to
confusion._
A PICTURE OF A PIOUS OLD MAN
I. The entreaties of a pious old man.
1. Against evil.
(1) Moral failure (Psalms 70:1).
(2) Gen...
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PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 71:1. This is another individual lament,
suited to a faithful person in danger from enemies who take advantage
of any weakness or distress (vv. Psa
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INTRODUCTION
“This Psalm,” says Barnes, “is without a title. It is impossible
to determine on what occasion it was composed. There is some
plausibility in the supposition that Psalms 70 might have bee...
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EXPOSITION
Psalms 71:1 is, like so many others, a psalm divided between complaint
and praise. It is comparatively wanting in originality, being, to a
very great extent, an echo of other psalms, especi...
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Shall we turn now in our Bibles to Psalms 71:1-24.
Psalms 71:1-24 is the psalm of the aged man. Probably David as he was
getting up into years, and his reddish colored hair had turned gray.
David's li...
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2 Chronicles 32:13; 2 Chronicles 32:14; Daniel 3:15; Matthew 27:42;...