Psalms 119:49-56

Zayin.

49 Remember the word to Your servant, In which You have made me hope.
50 This is my 1comfort in my affliction, That Your word has revived me.
51 The arrogant 2utterly * deride me, Yet I do not 3turn aside from Your law.
52 I have 4remembered Your ordinances from of old, O LORD, And comfort myself.
53 Burning 5indignation has seized me because of the wicked, Who 6forsake Your law.
54 Your statutes are my songs In the house of my 7pilgrimage.
55 O LORD, I 8remember Your name 9in the night, And keep Your law.
56 This has become mine, That I 10observe Your precepts. Heth.

Psalms 119:49-56 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 119

This psalm is generally thought to be written by David, but when is uncertain; very probably towards the decline of life; and, as some think, for the sake or his son Solomon. It seems to be a collection of observations on the word of God and its precepts, the usefulness and excellency of it, he had made in the course of his life; interspersed with various petitions for the grace of God, to enable him to observe it. The psalm is a very extraordinary one; partly on account of the unusual length of it, it being more than double the length of the longest psalm in the whole book; and partly on account of its curious composition. It consists of twenty two parts, according to the number of the letters in the Hebrew alphabet; the names of which letters stand between each part; and every part consists of eight verses, all of which begin with the same letter: thus, for instance, the first eight verses begin with the letter a, "aleph", and the second eight verses begin with the letter b, "beth", and so on throughout; hence the Masorah calls this psalm the Great Alphabet. This the psalmist did, perhaps to excite attention to what he said, and also to help the memory. And it is observable that there are very few verses in the whole, not more than one or two, but what has something in it concerning the word of God, and its precepts and ordinances; there are nine or ten different words used relative to it, which signify much one and the same thing; as laws, statutes, judgments, testimonies Luther {m} observes, that neither Cicero, nor Virgil, nor Demosthenes, are to be compared with David for eloquence, as we see in the hundred nineteenth Psalm, where he divideth one sense and meaning into twenty two sorts. And it may also be remarked, that there is nothing in it concerning the tabernacle worship, or the rites and ceremonies of the legal dispensation; so that it seems to be calculated for, and is suited to, the word of God, and the ordinances of it, as we now have them in their full perfection: and the design of the whole is to show the fervent affection the psalmist had for the word of God, and to stir up the same in others.

{m} Mensal. Colloqu. c. 32. p. 365.

a, \\ALEPH.--The First Part\\.

Cross References 10

  • 1. Job 6:10; Romans 15:4
  • 2. Job 30:1; Jeremiah 20:7
  • 3. Job 23:11; Psalms 44:18; Psalms 119:157
  • 4. Psalms 103:18
  • 5. Exodus 32:19; Ezra 9:3; Nehemiah 13:25; Psalms 119:158
  • 6. Psalms 89:30
  • 7. Genesis 47:9; Psalms 119:19
  • 8. Psalms 63:6
  • 9. Psalms 42:8; Psalms 92:2; Psalms 119:62; Isaiah 26:9; Acts 16:25
  • 10. Ps 119:22, 69, 100

Footnotes 4

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