Psalms 77:9
What meaning of the psalms 77:9 in the Bible?
What does Psalms 77:9 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Hath God forgotten to be gracious? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? Selah."
What does Psalms 77:9 mean? Commentary, explanation and study verse by verse.
"Hath God forgotten to be gracious? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? Selah."
Verse Psalms 77:9. _HATH GOD - IN ANGER SHUT UP HIS TENDER MERCIES?_] The _tender mercies_ of God are the _source_ whence all his kindness to the children of men flows. The metaphor here is taken from...
HATH GOD FORGOTTEN TO BE GRACIOUS? - Has he passed over mercy in administering his government? Has he ceased to remember that man needs mercy? Has he forgotten that this is an attribute of his own nat...
Psalms 77 The Distressed Saint and His Comfort _ 1. The distress (Psalms 77:1)_ 2. The comfort (Psalms 77:11) This Psalm shows the distress of the saint in deepest exercise of soul. He earnestly s...
LXXVII. ISRAEL'S PRESENT DISTRESS AND PAST GLORY. Psalms 77:1. The present distress. PSALMS 77:1. WITH MY VOICE: _i.e._ with a loud voice. PSALMS 77:4. Past glory. PSALMS 77:4. Perhaps we shoul...
GOD. Hebrew El. App-4. SELAH. Connecting all this misery with the only sure remedy occupation with God: and passing from "I" and "my" to "Thou" and "Thy". (App-66.)...
In the vigils of the night he pondered on the history of the past, and asked himself with earnest questionings whether it were possible that God could have utterly cast off His people, and changed His...
DISCOURSE: 630 DESPONDENCY DEPICTED AND REPROVED Psalms 77:7. _Will the Lord cast off for ever? and will he be favourable no more? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? doth his promise fail for evermore...
HATH GOD FORGOTTEN TO BE GRACIOUS— It is worth our while to observe the train of thoughts which this afflicted good man pursued, and what were the reflections in which he rested at last, as his best a...
PSALMS 77 DESCRIPTIVE TITLE Comfort in Distress Obtained by the Study of a Song, ANALYSIS Stanza I., Psalms 77:1-3, Introductoryshewing, by quotation of Language and Statement of Fact, that the Psa...
Will the Lord cast off for ever? and will he be favourable no more? -The contrast of the past with the sad present suggests the question, Has God, as appearances would imply, completely cast off Hi...
BOOK 3 There are two groups of Pss. in this book, Psalms 73-83 being Psalms of Asaph, and Psalms 84-88 (except 86) Psalms of the Sons of Korah. The likeness of the title of Psalms 89 to that of Psalm...
Psalms 73:89 _GORDON CHURCHYARD_ QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS PSALMS 77 JOHN SENT PEOPLE TO ASK JESUS, "ARE YOU THE ONE THAT WILL COME, OR MUST WE LOOK FOR SOMEONE ELSE?" JESUS ANSWERED AND SAID TO THEM,...
(7-9) The self-questionings here follow as they rise sigh after sigh in the poet’s heart. God’s silences have always been more appalling to the human spirit than even the most terrible of His manifest...
_[Psalms 77:10]_ הֲ שָׁכַ֣ח חַנֹּ֣ות אֵ֑ל אִם ־קָפַ֥ץ בְּ֝ אַ֗ף רַחֲמָ֥יו סֶֽלָה׃...
Psalms 77:1 THE occasion of the profound sadness of the first part of this psalm may be inferred from the thoughts which brighten it into hope in the second. These were the memories of past national d...
“DOTH HIS PROMISE FAIL?” Psalms 77:1 There is a strong resemblance between this psalm and Habakkuk 3:1. It may be divided at the Selahs. _The psalmist's anguish_, Psalms 77:1. It is well to give exp...
This is a song of the healing of sorrow. It opens with the declaration of determination to cry to God, and then proceeds to explain the reason of this determination. Verse Psa 77:10 is the pivot on wh...
_Battle. Many of this tribe were cut off by the men of Geth, (1 Paralipomenon vii. 21.; Chaldean; Geier.) as they fought without God's command, Numbers xiv. (Worthington) --- They did not defend the a...
These are blessed inquiries, and all tend to lead the soul to God, and to induce the happy issue in which the questions end. No, God hath not cast off his people whom he foreknew. God hath not, God wi...
9._Hath God forgotten to be merciful? _The prophet still continues debating with himself the same subject. His object, however, is not to overthrow his faith, but rather to raise it up. He does not pu...
In Psalms 77 we have spiritual deliverance and restored confidence. He cried with his voice to God, and God gave ear to him. To cry with the voice is more than to have a wish. A cry is the expression...
HATH GOD FORGOTTEN TO BE GRACIOUS,.... He has not, is it possible that he should? as the Targum; it is not; he cannot forget the purposes of his grace and mercy, nor the covenant and promises of it, n...
Hath God forgotten to be gracious? hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? Selah. Ver. 9. _Hath God forgotten to be gracious?_] So it seemeth sometimes to those that are long afflicted and short...
_Will the Lord cast off for ever?_ “The psalmist now relates the process of his meditations, and of that controversy which arose in his heart between faith and distrust.” Most commentators suppose tha...
THE TRIBULATION AND COMFORT OF THE RIGHTEOUS. To the chief musician, to Jeduthun, at that time in charge of the Temple music, a psalm of Asaph, the psalm picturing the relief experienced by believers...
1-10 Days of trouble must be days of prayer; when God seems to have withdrawn from us, we must seek him till we find him. In the day of his trouble the psalmist did not seek for the diversion of busi...
HATH GOD FORGOTTEN TO BE GRACIOUS, because he hath so long disused it? HATH HE IN ANGER SHUT UP HIS TENDER MERCIES, so as they can never flow forth, no, not to his own people?...
Psalms 77:9 God H410 forgotten H7911 (H8804) gracious H2589 (H8800) anger H639 up H7092 (H8804) mercies H7356 Selah H5542 God - Isaiah 40:27, Isaiah 49:14-15, Isaiah 63:15 shut up -...
Psalms 77:7 The moral to be drawn from this Psalm is that in all troubles and adversities it is our own fault if we have not a light to guide and cheer us, and that the true remedy against despondenc...
This Psalm is headed «To the chief Musician, to Jeduthun,» He was one of the great singers; there is opportunity given in the Psalms for each of the sinners to take his turn.; it does not do for any o...
CONTENTS: Sorrowful complaints followed by encouragement by remembrance of God's former mighty deliverances. CHARACTERS: God, Asaph. CONCLUSION: The thoughts of unbelief can always be argued down if...
Title. _To the chief musician, to Jeduthun. A psalm of Asaph._ There is an uncertainty, whether Jeduthun were a master of music, or whether the name designate an instrument, or some air or term of mus...
_I cried unto God with my voice, even unto God with my voice; and He gave ear unto me._ THE FACULTY OF HUMAN THOUGHT The whole psalm may be used to illustrate the faculty of human thought. Throughou...
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 77:1. This is a community lament. By referring to God’s “anger” (v. Psalms 77:9) the psalm acknowledges that the reason for the trouble may be some fault in the people (see...
INTRODUCTION _Superscription.—“To the chief Musician, to Jeduthun, a Psalm of Asaph_.” Jeduthun was one of the leaders of sacred music in David’s time (1 Chronicles 16:41; 2 Chronicles 5:12). One of...
EXPOSITION THIS psalm is the lament and expostulation with God of some afflicted person, perhaps Asaph, who speaks as the mouthpiece of his countrymen, complaining of Israel's apparent desertion by G...
I cried unto God with my voice, even unto God with my voice; and he gave ear unto me (Psalms 77:1). Now notice in the seventy-seventh psalm how the first part of it is centered around I. You might fi...
1 John 3:17; Isaiah 40:27; Isaiah 49:14; Isaiah 49:15; Isaiah 63:15; Luke 13:25; Romans 11:32...