Psalms 119:36
What meaning of the psalms 119:36 in the Bible?
What does Psalms 119:36 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to covetousness."
What does Psalms 119:36 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to covetousness."
Verse Psalms 119:36. _NOT TO COVETOUSNESS._] Let me have no inordinate love for gain of any kind, nor for any thing that may grieve thy Spirit, or induce me to seek my happiness here _below_....
INCLINE MY HEART UNTO THY TESTIMONIES - Cause my heart to be inclined to them, or to be disposed to keep them. This, too, is a recognition of dependence, and a prayer for guidance. AND NOT TO COVETOUS...
Psalms 119 The Law Written on Their Hearts and the Praise of the Word This is the longest and most perfect Psalm in the whole collection. It is an alphabetical acrostic. It is composed of 22 section...
CXIX. PRAISE OF THE LAW. This is the longest and most artificial Ps. in the whole collection. It is divided into twenty-two strophes, each beginning with one of the twenty-two letters of the Heb. alph...
NOT TO COVETOUSNESS— That is, an immoderate desire of worldly goods....
PSALMS 119 DESCRIPTIVE TITLE Jehovah's Will in Relation to Human Character and Conduct, celebrated in Twenty-two Alphabetical Stanzas, and by the aid of Eight Comprehensive Synonyms. ANALYSIS (The...
Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to covetousness. INCLINE MY HEART UNTO THY TESTIMONIES, AND NOT TO COVETOUSNESS. Love to God and love to gain cannot dwell together in the same heart....
The longest Ps. and the best example of an alphabetical Ps. There are in it twenty-two stanzas; each of the 8 vv. of each stanza commences with the same Hebrew letter. The subject is practically the s...
Psalms 107:150 _GORDON CHURCHYARD_ THE WORD OF GOD PSALMS 119 JESUS SAID, "IF YOU LOVE ME YOU WILL OBEY ME" (JOHN 14:15). THE STORY OF PSALMS 119 Solomon was king of Israel nearly 1000 years Be...
COVETOUSNESS. — Literally, _rapine, prey._ In Psalms 30:9 simply, “gain.”...
הַט ־לִ֭בִּי אֶל ־עֵדְוֹתֶ֗יךָ וְ אַ֣ל אֶל ־בָּֽצַע׃...
Psalms 119:1 IT is lost labour to seek for close continuity or progress in this psalm. One thought pervades it-the surpassing excellence of the Law; and the beauty and power of the psalm lie in the un...
LOVE FOR GOD'S COMMANDS Psalms 119:33 Twice over the psalmist says, “thy commandments which I have loved,” and then proceeds to give the key to perfect love of them in the words, “I will _meditate_ i...
Any dealing with this psalm must necessarily be general and not particular. It has been called the psalm of the Law, not inaccurately; but the term, "The Law," should be understood in its widest signi...
Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to (c) covetousness. (c) By this, meaning all other vices, because covetousness is the root of all evil....
HE. How very beautiful is this portion of the psalm, considered as descriptive of the work of the Holy Ghost. It is his blessed province, and from his great love to the persons of Christ's people, he...
36._Incline my heart _In this verse he confesses the human heart to be so far from yielding to the justice of God, that it is more inclined to follow an opposite course. Were we naturally and spontane...
Psalms 119 is in general the law written in the heart. This gives it an important place in the series of psalms. It is found distinctly connected too with Israel's sorrows in the last days and their p...
INCLINE MY HEART UNTO THY TESTIMONIES,.... To read the word of God, to hear it opened and explained, to observe and keep the things contained in it; to which there is a disinclination in men naturally...
Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to covetousness. Ver. 36. _Incline my heart_] Through the exercises of thy word, and the working of thy Spirit. _ And not to covetousness_] Which drawe...
_Incline my heart_, &c. As the wisdom of man may conceive, and his tongue utter, great things of God and holiness, while his heart is averse from both; therefore David saith, not only, _Give me unders...
_ He._ The Constancy of the Believer Upheld and Nourished by God's Word....
33-40 Teach me thy statutes, not the mere words, but the way of applying them to myself. God, by his Spirit, gives a right understanding. But the Spirit of revelation in the word will not suffice, un...
UNTO THY TESTIMONIES; to the love and practice of them. NOT TO COVETOUSNESS; not to the inordinate love and desire of riches: which particular lust he mentions, partly, be cause this lust is most spre...
Psalms 119:36 Incline H5186 (H8685) heart H3820 testimonies H5715 covetousness H1215 Incline - Psalms 51:10, Psalms 141:4; 1 Kings 8:58; Jeremiah 32:39; Ezekiel 11:19-20 and not to -...
By the help of God's Holy Spirit, this psalm may serve for the purposes of self-examination, for we may ask ourselves as we read, «Do I feel in that way? Are my prayers like those of this good man? Is...
CONTENTS: The excellency and usefulness of the divine revelation set forth and exhortation to all to make it their meditation and to be governed by it. CHARACTERS: God, Psalmist. CONCLUSION: Great b...
That David was the author of this psalm, no one ever doubted. It is divided into twenty two octo-distichs, having a letter of the Hebrew alphabet at the head of each distich; and the couplets are most...
_Teach me, O Lord, the way of Thy statutes; and I shall keep it unto the end._ ETHICAL INSTRUCTION I. Ethical instruction is instruction in duty. There is no knowledge so important as the knowledge...
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 119:1. This psalm celebrates the gift of God’s law as the perfect guide for life. Its theme is echoed in Psalms 19:1 and in such wisdom psalms as 1 and 112. It is the longes...
INTRODUCTION 1. Date and authorship. Some ascribe the authorship to “David, before his accession to the kingdom, in exile and peril (Psalms 119:9; Psalms 119:23; Psalms 119:46; Psalms 119:141; Psalms...
EXPOSITION This is an "alphabetic psalm" of a more stringent character than any other. It consists of twenty-two stanzas, each of eight verses, every verse in each stanza beginning with its own prope...
Now as we get to Psalms 119:1-176, it is an extremely difficult psalm for exposition, because each section seems to be more or less independent of in itself, and each verse, many times, almost indepen...
1 Kings 8:58; 1 Timothy 6:10; 1 Timothy 6:17; 1 Timothy 6:9; 2 Peter 2:14; 2 Peter 2:3; Colossians 3:5; Ephesians 5:3; Exodus 18:21; Ezeki
Covetousness — He mentions this in particular, because it is most opposite to God's testimonies, and does most commonly hinder men from receiving his word, and from profiting by it: and because it is...