Adam Clarke Bible Commentary
Psalms 10:11
Verse Psalms 10:11. God hath forgotten] He hath cast off this people, and he will never more re-establish them. So Sanballat thought.
Verse Psalms 10:11. God hath forgotten] He hath cast off this people, and he will never more re-establish them. So Sanballat thought.
HE HATH SAID IN HIS HEART, GOD HATH FORGOTTEN - That is, this is his practical, habitual feeling. He acts as if God had forgotten, or as if God takes no knowledge of what is occurring in the earth. Co...
Psalms 10 _ 1. The cry of Jehovah and what causeth it (Psalms 10:1)_ 2. That wicked one (Psalms 10:3) 3. Prayer for divine Intervention: Faith's Vision ...
9 AND 10. YAHWEH THE REFUGE OF HIS PEOPLE. These two Pss., divided in MT, were originally one, This is proved by the fact that they are one in LXX. and Vulg., by the absence of title over Psalms 10, a...
FORGOTTEN. Compare Psalms 10:12, and Psalms 9:12; Psalms 9:17; Psalms 9:18. NEVER SEE IT. Compare...
PSALMS 9:10 DESCRIPTIVE TITLE The Kingship of Jehovah in Zion Finally Triumphant over a League between the Nations and the Lawless One. ANALYSIS These two psalms are bound together as originally on...
_HE HATH SAID IN HIS HEART, GOD HATH FORGOTTEN: HE HIDETH HIS FACE; HE WILL NEVER SEE IT._ He hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten - God (saith he in his heart, if not with his lips) forgets al...
This Ps. has no title. Its relationship to Psalms 9 has been discussed in intro. to that Ps. It reflects a time of great social disorder, in which wickedness and violence are rampant, and the righteou...
Cp. Psalms 10:1; Psalms 10:4. The blindness of God, which the Psalmist knows is only apparent, is what the wicked man really believes in....
Psalms 1:41 _GORDON CHURCHYARD_ Words in boxes are from the Bible. The notes explain some of the words with a *star by them. Tap the * before a word to show an explanation. The translated Bible tex...
HIDETH. — Better, _hath hidden. _...
אָמַ֣ר בְּ֭ לִבֹּו שָׁ֣כַֽח אֵ֑ל הִסְתִּ֥יר פ
Psalms 10:1 Psalms 9:1; Psalms 10:1 are alike in their imperfectly acrostic structure, the occurrence of certain phrases- _ e.g._, the very uncommon expression for "times of trouble,...
GOD WILL NOT FORGET THE LOWLY Psalms 10:1 The malice of our foes, and especially of Satan, is powerfully described, Psalms 10:1. Now it is the venom beneath the serpent's tongue, Psalms 10:7; now the...
In the Septuagint and other versions, probably the ancient Hebrew, Psalms 9:1; Psa 10:1-18 appear as one. There is a clear connection between them, but it is that of contrast. In the former the singer...
Here the picture of the ungodly is finished, and an awful finishing it is. Hatred to God, despising his laws, his ways, his judgments; and, more especially, a bitterness towards that plan of salvation...
11._He hath said in his heart. _The Psalmist again points out the source from which the presumption of the ungodly proceeds. Because God seems to take no notice of their wicked practices, they flatter...
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS PSALMS 9 AND 10. In Psalms 9 and 10 we enter historically on the circumstances of the remnant in the last days in the land. The great principles having been laid down ...
HE HATH SAID IN HIS HEART, GOD HATH FORGOTTEN,.... Meaning either his own sins, because they are not immediately punished; wherefore he hopes to go on for ever with impunity, but will be mistaken, for...
He hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten: he hideth his face; he will never see [it]. Ver. 11. _He hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten_] That is, he knoweth it not, regardeth it not. To l...
_He hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten_ Namely, _the poor_, (Psalms 10:10,) or, _the humble._ He forgets or neglects their oppressions and prayers, and doth not avenge their cause, as he hath...
He hath said in his heart, God hath forgotten; He hideth His face; He will never see it. This blasphemous thought is the consolation of the wicked; by it they lull themselves into a false security, st...
PRAYER AGAINST THE ENEMY OF THE CHURCH. Luther writes in his summary of this psalm: "This is a psalm of prayer which complains about the arch-enemy of the kingdom of Christ, that is, Antichrist, who...
1-11 God's withdrawings are very grievous to his people, especially in times of trouble. We stand afar off from God by our unbelief, and then complain that God stands afar off from us. Passionate wor...
GOD HATH FORGOTTEN, to wit, _the poor_, PSALMS 10:10; or the humble, which we are taught to supply out of PSALMS 10:12, where he saith, forget not the humble. He forgets and neglects all their oppress...
Psalms 10:11 said H559 (H8804) heart H3820 God H410 forgotten H7911 (H8804) hides H5641 (H8689) face...
‘His mouth is full of cursing and deceit and oppressiveness, Under his tongue are mischief and iniquity. He sits in the hiding places of the villages, In the secret places he murders the innocent....
CONTENTS: The psalmist meditates on the wicked and desires to see them humbled under God's hand. CHARACTERS: Psalmist, God. CONCLUSION: The Christian cannot but lay to heart that which is offensive...
Psalms 10:1. _Why standest thou afar off, oh Lord?_ This is the prayer of David against some very wicked and neighbouring prince, who through pride and thirst for gold, was lurking like a lion, and mu...
_His mouth is full of cursing._ BLACK ARTS A missionary from Polynesia brought home a “soul trap.” It was a series of rings twisted in cocoanut fibre. If a native should commit a great offence, or of...
_Why standest Thou afar off, O Lord?_ A THEOLOGICAL DIFFICULTY, A HAUGHTY IMPIETY, AN EARNEST PRAYER I. A theological difficulty. “Why standest Thou afar off, O Lord?” Some great enormity was now un...
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 10:1. See note on Psalm 9. Psalms 10:1 is a lament, relating to cases in which “the wicked hotly pursu
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 10:11 As the wicked person oppresses the faithful, he assumes that GOD HAS FORGOTTEN them—that God is indifferent to their suffering. The faithful mention this to God, asking him...
INTRODUCTION “This psalm seems to belong to the time of the Captivity, or the return of the captives. It was probably made in reference to Sanballat, and the other enemies of the Jews. There is a gre...
EXPOSITION This psalm is to some extent connected with the preceding one, but not very closely. It has turns of expression which are identical, and not common elsewhere; _e.g. _"in times of trouble" ...
Why do you stand a far off, O LORD? Why hidest thou thyself in times of trouble? (Psalms 10:1) Have you ever prayed that? "Lord, why aren't You doing something about it? Why do You seem to hide Yours...
Ecclesiastes 8:11; Ezekiel 8:12; Ezekiel 9:9; Job 22:13; Job 22:14;...