“ Who can understand his errors? cleanse thou me from secret faults. ”
Who can understand his errors? - The word rendered errors is derived from a verb which means to wander, to go astray; then, to do wrong, to transgress. It refers here to wanderings, or departures...
Who can understand [his] (l) errors? cleanse thou me from secret [faults]. (l) Then there is no reward of duty, but of grace: for where sin is, there death is the reward.
XIX. A. Psalms 19:1-6 . The Revelation of God in Nature. A fragment of a longer poem. Day and night are pictured as living beings who hand on the tradition of God's creative act from age to age (s...
understand . discern. his. Not in Hebrew text. errors . wanderings. Like those of the "planets" (= wanderers). Cleanse . clear, or acquit. Hebrew. nakah. secret . hidden things; things th...
12. Who can understand his errors? This exclamation shows us what use we should make of the promises of the law, which have a condition annexed to them. It is this: As soon as they come fort...
DISCOURSE: 522 PRAYER AGAINST SINS OF INFIRMITY AND PRESUMPTION Psalms 19:12-13 . Who can understand his errors? Cleanse thou me from secret faults. Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous...
Who can understand his errors? cleanse thou me from secret faults . Who can understand his errors? - It is not possible, without much of the Divine light, to understand all our deviations from, no...
Who can understand his errors?— While we praise and adore God for his mercies, it seems impossible to forget one great circumstance which affects both them and ourselves; I mean, how undeserved the...
Who can understand his errors? cleanse thou me from secret faults. His errors, х shªgiy'owt ( H7691 ), from shaagah ( H7686 ), to wander] - all failings and infirmities of the believ...
This Ps. falls into two well-marked divisions. Psalms 19:1-6 describe the glory of God ( El ) as seen in the heavenly bodies, especially the sun, and are thus parallel to Psalms 8 ; Psalms 19:7-1...
His eulogium on the Law was not Pharisaic or formal, for the poet instantly gives expression to his sense of his own inability to keep it. If before we were reminded of St. Paul’s, “The law is holy,...
Psalms 19:1-14 Is this originally one psalm or bits of two, pieced together to suggest a comparison between the two sources of knowledge of God, which the authors did not dream of? The affirmative...
the Works and the Word of God Psalms 19:1-14 This is the “Psalm of the Two Books”-Nature and Scripture. If Psalms 8:1-9 were written at night, Psalms 19:1-14 was surely written by day. In...
The burden of this psalm is the twofold revelation of Jehovah. He is revealed in Nature and in law. Yet in Nature Jehovah is revealed as God and not by those especial qualities suggested by the great...
This forms a most beautiful break and interruption to the Psalmist's devout contemplation. It comes in with a striking demand upon the heart, as if under a consciousness that having such discoveries...
Psalms 19 Proper Psalm for Christmas Day ( Morning ). Psalms 19-21 = Day 4 ( Morning ).
Who can understand [his] errors ?.... Sin is an error, a wandering out of the way of God, swerving from the rule of his word; and many mistakes are made by the people of God themselves; even so many...
Who can understand [his] errors? cleanse thou me from secret [faults]. Ver. 12. Who can understand his errors? ] This David speaketh doubtless out of a deep sense of his own imperfections and defe...
Who can understand his errors? Upon the consideration of the perfect purity of God's law, and the comparing of his spirit and conduct with it, he is led to make a penitent reflection upon his sins....
The Excellency of the Scriptures. 7 The law of the L ORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the L ORD...
Who can understand? this may be here added, either, 1. As a further proof of the excellency and necessity of God's law, because men's errors are so many and hard to be discovered and prevented, t...
‘Who can discern his errors? Clear me from hidden faults.' But the Psalmist admits that although he delights in Yahweh's Instruction there are still errors and sins in his life that he is not easil...
INTRODUCTION “This psalm instructs its readers in the glory and goodness of God; first, by directing their contemplation to the structure of the heavens, to the course of the sun, and to the kindly...
Psalms 19:12 I. How is it that sin possesses the power of deceiving; that, being foul, it can often look so fair, or where it cannot conceal altogether, can yet conceal to so large an extent, its...
This Psalm has the same subject as Psalms 119:1 . Both of them are full of praise of God's Word. God has written two books for us to read,-the volume of the Creation and the volume of the Sacred Scr...
Psalms 19:4 . Their line is gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world. The LXX, φθογγος, phthoggos. Vulgate, sonus, their sound; the music of their voice. The...
Who can understand his errors? Cleanse Thou me from secret faults. The tenacity and sophistry of sin The vulgar vices reappear subtly disguised in cultured circles. The grossness of the vices...
EXPOSITION THE nineteenth psalm is one of meditative praise. The psalmist, looking abroad over the whole world, finds two main subjects for his eulogy—first, the glorious fabric of the materia...
A Prophecy of the Gospel. Luther says of this psalm that it is a prophecy of the Gospel as it was intended to go forth into all the world, as wide as the heavens extend, and to be proclaimed and t...
1 Corinthians 4:4 ; 1 John 1:7 ; Hebrews 9:7 ; Isaiah 64:6 ; Jeremiah 17:9 ; Job 6:24 ; Leviticus 4:2-35 ; Psalms 40:12 ; Psalms 51:5-10 ; Psalms 65:3 ; Psalms 1:1 ; Psalms 90:8
Who — Thy law, O Lord, is holy and just and good. But I fall infinitely short of it. Cleanse — Both by justification, through the blood of thy son; and by sanctification thro' thy holy spirit. Thou...