“ With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. ”
With my lips have I declared - That is, I have openly and publicly made thy words known to others; I have defended and vindicated them. All the judgments - The word judgments here means the s...
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. a...
lips... declared. Figure of speech Paronomasia. App-6: bispatay sipparti.
13. With my lips In this verse he declares that the law of God was not only deeply engraven on his own heart, but that it was his earnest and strenuous endeavor to gain over many of his fell...
With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. With my lips have I declared - 10. He should declare to his own heart, and to all his companions in iniquity, God's judgments against hi...
With my lips, &c.— With my lips do I recount, &c. This means, that he repeats over and learns by heart all God's laws. Mudge. GIMEL.
With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth - ( Deuteronomy 6:6-7 .) Though I have "hid thy Word in mine 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...
With my lips. — He has not kept his hidden treasure to himself, but, like the good householder of the Gospels, has brought out things new and old.
Psalms 119:1-176 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 i...
God's Word an Inner Power Psalms 119:1-16 This long and noble psalm is devoted to the praise of God's Word, which is mentioned in every verse but one, Psalms 119:122 . Probably if we were to s...
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 sign...
After the explanation which I endeavored very humbly to offer in the first part, concerning the several words there made use of and which we meet with again here: it will only be necessary to examine...
With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. Not the judgments of his hand, what he executes on an ungodly world; nor the intricate dispensations of his providence; those judgments...
With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. Ver. 13. With my lips have I declared ] Heb. have I ciphered up; these have been the matter of my discourse; and out of the good treasu...
With my lips have I declared , &c. If thou wilt teach me, I will teach others, as I have already done. I have rejoiced in thy testimonies In the study and practice of them. I will meditate ,...
13 With my lips have I declared all the judgments of thy mouth. 14 I have rejoiced in the way of thy testimonies, as much as in all riches. 15 I will meditate in thy precepts, and have...
If thou wilt teach me, I will teach others, as I have already done; and so thou shalt have glory, and others benefit by it.
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...
The first eight verses of this Psalm, in the Hebrew, begin with the letter A, and the second eight begin with the letter B. The whole Psalm is the good man's alphabet; the Holy Spirit condescended to...
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 mos...
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...
Beth. Of the Distinguishing Signs of an Irreproachable Life.
Acts 4:20 ; Matthew 10:27 ; Matthew 12:34 ; Psalms 118:17 ; Psalms 119:172 ; Psalms 119:46 ; Psalms 34:11 ; Psalms 37:30 ; Psalms 40:10 ; Psalms 40:9 ; Psalms 71:15-18
The Wonderful Word Psalms 119:1-24 INTRODUCTORY WORDS When we hold the Bible in our hands we are holding a Book that is distinct from any and every other book the world has ever known. 1. It...