-
Verse Psalms 81:12. _UNTO THEIR OWN HEARTS' LUST_] To the _obstinate_
_wickedness_ of their heart.
_IN THEIR OWN COUNSELS._] God withdrew his restraining grace, which
they had abused; and then they f...
-
SO I GAVE THEM UP UNTO THEIR OWN HEARTS’ LUST - Margin, as in
Hebrew, to the hardness of their own hearts. Literally, “I sent
them, or I dismissed them, to the hardness of their hearts.” I
suffered th...
-
Psalms 81
Hope Revived: His Gracious Return to Israel
_ 1. The blowing of the trumpet (Psalms 81:1)_
2. His loving call to His people (Psalms 81:6)
3. Gracious results promised (Psalms 81:13)
Hop...
-
LXXXI. This Ps. is probably composite.
A. PSALMS 81:1. A FESTAL HYMN, specially adapted for the old New
Year's Day or Feast of Trumpets (p. 104), which was held on the new
moon of Tishri, the sevent...
-
GAVE THEM UP. let him (Israel) go on. The greatest judgment God could
have given them; or give us.
LUST. stubbornness....
-
Israel's disobedience and its punishment....
-
DISCOURSE: 638
GOD GIVING UP OBSTINATE TRANSGRESSORS
Psalms 81:11. _My people would not hearken to my voice, and Israel
would none of me: so I gave them up._
THE history of the Jews is not a mere rec...
-
PSALMS 81
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
A Mission-Song, to be Sung to the Northern Tribes.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 81:1-5, A Festive Celebration Invoked; in which
People, Levites, and Priests can Recall th...
-
But my people would not hearken to my voice; and Israel would none of
me.
BUT MY PEOPLE WOULD NOT HEARKEN TO MY VOICE; AND ISRAEL WOULD NONE OF
ME. SO I GAVE THEM UP UNTO BUT MY PEOPLE WOULD NOT HE...
-
After a summons to celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles (Psalms 81:1)
this Ps. recalls the meaning of Israel's national festivals as
memorials of their deliverance from Egypt (Psalms 81:4). From Psalms...
-
Psalms 73:89
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
START THE MUSIC!
PSALMS 81
JESUS SAID, "CAN THE BRIDEGROOM’S FRIENDS BE SAD WHEN THE BRIDEGROOM
IS WITH THEM?" (MATTHEW 9: 15). (A bridegroom is a man getting
marr...
-
LUST. — Rather, _stubbornness,_ or _perversity,_ from root meaning
“to twist.”...
-
_[Psalms 81:13]_ וָֽ֭ אֲשַׁלְּחֵהוּ בִּ
שְׁרִיר֣וּת לִבָּ֑ם יֵ֝לְכ֗וּ בְּֽ
מֹועֲצֹותֵיהֶֽם׃...
-
Psalms 81:1
THE psalmist summons priests and people to a solemn festival,
commemorative of Israel's deliverance from Egypt, and sets forth the
lessons which that deliverance teaches, the learning of w...
-
“IF THOU WOULDEST HEARKEN UNTO ME”
Psalms 81:8
God wants our emptiness, which seems to Him like the gaping beak of
the young fledgling, Psalms 81:10. _Give me room_! is his incessant
appeal. It must...
-
This is a psalm for the Feast of Trumpets. In the calendar of the
Hebrews this feast prepared the way for the Day of Atonement and the
Feast of Tabernacles. The first day of the seventh month was the...
-
Reader! what saith thy heart to these charges? What saith thy
experience to this awful giving up? Oh! Lord! do thou still keep,
still preserve, and abide in thy love, for thou hatest putting away.
Rea...
-
_ABANDONED OF GOD_
‘So I gave them up unto their own hearts’ lust: and they walked in
their own counsels,’ etc.
Psalms 81:12
I. GOD SHOWED HIS LOVE TO THE ISRAELITES BY GIVING THEM A LAW MORE
STRI...
-
Psalms 81, while celebrating in figure the restoration of Israel,
again returns to historical ground, specially introducing Joseph, who
represents the ten tribes (see Ezekiel 37:16). Otherwise Judah,...
-
SO I GAVE THEM UP UNTO THEIR OWN HEARTS' LUST,.... Sometimes God gave
them up, when they sinned, into the hands of the Moabites, or
Ammonites, or Philistines, or other neighbouring nations, for their...
-
So I gave them up unto their own hearts' lust: [and] they walked in
their own counsels.
Ver. 12. _So I gave them up_] I left them as a ship without a rudder;
as a horse without reins, to go whither t...
-
_So I gave them up_, &c. Upon their obstinate and oft-repeated acts of
disobedience, and their rejection of my grace and mercy offered to
them, I withdrew all the restraints of my providence, and my H...
-
A JOYFUL SALUTATION AND GOD'S RESPONSE.
To the chief musician upon Gittith, to be sung to the accompaniment of
the zitherlike instrument which David brought along from the
Philistine city of Gath, a...
-
UNTO THEIR OWN HEARTS LUST:
Or, to the hardness of their hearts, or imagination...
-
8-16 We cannot look for too little from the creature, nor too much
from the Creator. We may have enough from God, if we pray for it in
faith. All the wickedness of the world is owing to man's wilfulne...
-
Upon their obstinate and oft-repeated rebellions and rejections of my
grace and mercy offered to them, I withdrew all the restraints of my
providence, and my Holy Spirit, and grace from them, and whol...
-
Psalms 81:12 over H7971 (H8762) stubborn H8307 heart H3820 walk H3212
(H8799) counsels H4156
I gave - Genesis 6:3; Acts 7:42, Acts 14:16; Romans 1:24, Romans
1:26-27;...
-
SO I GAVE
See (Acts 7:42); (Acts 14:16); (Romans 1:24); (Romans 1:26)....
-
Psalms 81:11
It cannot be doubted that very often when people get into wrong
courses they think they shall be able to stop when they please. And
this notion tends very much to quiet their consciences...
-
We have here an exhortation to praise God; and this is always in
season. Perhaps we need more stirring up to praise than to prayer, yet
it ought to be as natural for us to praise God as it is for the...
-
CONTENTS: God chides His people for their ingratitude and pictures
their happy state had they but obeyed Him.
CHARACTERS: God, Asaph, Joseph, Jacob.
CONCLUSION: God gives those up to their own heart...
-
This psalm was composed for the festival of tabernacles, when the
people celebrated the deliverance from Egypt. It was a statute in
Israel on the first day of the Hebrew month of _Tisri,_ or the new
m...
-
_Sing aloud unto God our strength: make a joyful noise unto the God of
Jacob._
A REVELATION OF THREE GREAT SUBJECTS
I. True worship (verses1-5)
1. True worship is the highest happiness, which consi...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 81:1. This psalm resembles the OT
prophets’ oracles, so perhaps it is best to think of it as a
prophetic hymn. The primary function of the OT prophets is to
challenge God’s...
-
INTRODUCTION
_Superscription_.—“_To the chief Musician upon Gittith_.”
Gittith is explained in several ways. One interpretation is that it
was a musical instrument invented in Gath, or common among t...
-
EXPOSITION
PROFESSOR CHEYNE regards this psalm as composed of "two distinct
lyrical passages," accidentally thrown together (compare his theory of
Psalms 19:1, Psalms 24:1, Psalms 36:1, Psalms 55:1, P...
-
Let's turn to Psalms 81:1-16.
On the first day of the seventh month in the Jewish calendar, which,
because their calendar begins, the religious calendar begins the first
of April, it usually coincides...
-
2 Thessalonians 2:9; Acts 14:16; Acts 7:42; Exodus 11:9; Genesis 6:3;
Isaiah 30:1; Jeremiah 44:16; Jeremiah 44:17; Jeremiah 7:24; Romans
1:24