the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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Psalms 25:6
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Remember, O Lord , your compassion and unfailing love, which you have shown from long ages past.
Remember, O LORD, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses; for they have been ever of old.
Remember, O Yahweh, your tender mercies and your loving-kindness; For they have been ever of old.
Lord , remember your mercy and love that you have shown since long ago.
Remember your compassionate and faithful deeds, O Lord , for you have always acted in this manner.
Remember, O LORD, thy tender mercies and thy loving kindnesses; for they [have been] ever of old.
Yahweh, remember your tender mercies and your lovingkindness, For they are from old times.
Remember your mercy, O Lord , and your steadfast love, for they have been from of old.
Lord, haue thou mynde of thi merciful doyngis; and of thi mercies that ben fro the world.
Remember, O LORD, Your compassion and loving devotion, for they are from age to age.
Please, Lord , remember, you have always been patient and kind.
Remember, O Jehovah, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindness; For they have been ever of old.
O Lord, keep in mind your pity and your mercies; for they have been from the earliest times.
Remember your compassion and grace, Adonai ; for these are ages old.
Remember, Jehovah, thy tender mercies and thy loving-kindnesses; for they are from everlasting.
Remember to be kind to me, Lord . Show me the tender love that you have always had.
Remember, O LORD, Thy compassions and Thy mercies; for they have been from of old.
Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies, and thy louing kindnesses: for they haue beene euer of old.
Remember Your loving-pity and Your loving-kindness, O Lord. For they have been from old.
Be mindful of your mercy, O Lord , and of your steadfast love, for they have been from of old.
Remember, O Lorde, thy tender mercies, and thy louing kindnesse: for they haue beene for euer.
Remember, O LORD, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses; for they are from the beginning of the world.
Remember, O Lord , your kindness and constant love which you have shown from long ago.
Remember thy compassions, O Yahweh, and thy lovingkindnesses, For, from age-past times, have they been.
(24-6) Remember, O Lord, thy bowels of compassion; and thy mercies that are from the beginning of the world.
Be mindful of thy mercy, O LORD, and of thy steadfast love, for they have been from of old.
Call to remembraunce O God thy tender mercies & thy louyng kindnesse: for they haue ben for euer.
Remember thy compassions, O Lord, and thy mercies, for they are from everlasting.
Remember, Lord, your compassionand your faithful love,for they have existed from antiquity.
LORD, remember your tender mercies and your lovingkindness, For they are from old times.
Remember, O Lord , thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses; for they have been ever of old.
Remember your compassion, O Yahweh, and your acts of loyal love, because they are from of old.
Remember, O Jehovah, Your compassions and Your mercies; for they are from eternity.
Remember Thy mercies, O Jehovah, And Thy kindnesses, for from the age [are] they.
Call to remembraunce, O LORDE, thy tender mercyes & thy louinge kyndnesses, which haue bene euer of olde.
Mark the milestones of your mercy and love, God ; Rebuild the ancient landmarks!
Remember, LORD, Your compassion and Your faithfulness, For they have been from of old.
Remember, O LORD, Your tender mercies and Your lovingkindnesses, For they are from of old.
Remember, O Lord , Your compassion and Your lovingkindnesses, For they have been from of old.
Remember, O Yahweh, Your compassion and Your lovingkindnesses,For they have been from of old.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Remember: Psalms 98:3, Psalms 106:45, Psalms 136:23, 2 Chronicles 6:42, Luke 1:54, Luke 1:71, Luke 1:72
thy tender mercies: Heb. bowels, Psalms 40:11, Psalms 69:13, Psalms 69:16, Psalms 103:4, Psalms 119:77, Isaiah 55:7, Isaiah 63:15, Jeremiah 31:20, Luke 1:78, *marg. 2 Corinthians 1:3, Philippians 1:8, Philippians 2:1, Colossians 3:12, 1 John 3:17
for they: Psalms 77:7-12, Psalms 103:17, Psalms 106:1, Psalms 107:1, Psalms 136:11-26, Genesis 24:27, Genesis 32:9, Exodus 15:13, Exodus 34:6, Nehemiah 9:19, Jeremiah 33:11, Micah 7:18-20, Luke 1:50
Reciprocal: Genesis 49:18 - General Nehemiah 5:19 - Think Nehemiah 13:22 - spare me Job 10:9 - Remember Psalms 51:1 - O God Psalms 132:1 - remember Isaiah 63:11 - he remembered James 5:11 - the Lord is
Cross-References
After Abram had lived in the land of Canaan ten years, Abram's wife Sarai took Hagar the Egyptian [maid], and gave her to her husband Abram to be his [secondary] wife.
So Abraham got up early in the morning and took bread and a skin of water and gave them to Hagar, putting them on her shoulder, and gave her the boy, and sent her away. And she left [but lost her way] and wandered [aimlessly] in the Wilderness of Beersheba.
Abraham took another wife, whose name was Keturah.
She gave birth to Zimran, Jokshan, Medan, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah.
Now after the death of Abraham, God blessed his son Isaac; and Isaac lived at Beer-lahai-roi.
and these are the names of the [twelve] sons of Ishmael, named in the order of their births: Nebaioth, the firstborn of Ishmael, and Kedar, Adbeel, Mibsam,
Mishma, Dumah, Massa,
Hadad, Tema, Jetur, Naphish, and Kedemah.
So she gave him Bilhah her maid as a [secondary] wife, and Jacob went in to her.
When Leah saw that she had stopped bearing [children], she took Zilpah her maid and gave her to Jacob as a [secondary] wife.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies and thy loving kindnesses,.... Not the providential mercy and kindness of God, in the care of him in his mother's womb, at the time of his birth, in his nurture and education, and in the preservation of him to the present time; but the special mercy, grace, and love of God in Christ: the sense of the petition is the same with that of Psalms 106:4; which are expressed in the plural number, because of the largeness and abundance of it, and because of the various acts and instances of it; the Lord is rich and plenteous in mercy, abundant in goodness; his love is exceeding great, and numerous are the ways and methods in which it is declared, both in eternity and in time; and though he can never forget his love, nor the people whom he loves, for they are engraven on his hand, and set as a seal on his heart; yet he sometimes seems, by the conduct of his providence, as if he did not remember it, and had no tender affection for them; and their unbelief is ready to say, the Lord has forgotten to be gracious; and the design of such a petition as this is to entreat a fresh discovery and application of the grace, mercy, and loving kindness of God, and which he allows his people to put him in remembrance of;
for they [have been] ever of old: meaning not only from the time of his birth, and in after appearances of God for him, nor the favours shown to the people of Israel in former times at the Red sea, and in the wilderness and elsewhere, and to the patriarchs from the beginning of the world; but the love of God from everlasting, which appears in the choice of his people in Christ, before the foundation of the world, in the everlasting covenant of grace made with him, and in the setting of him up as the Mediator of it, and in putting his people into his hands, with all grace and spiritual blessings for them before the world began; and which love as it is from everlasting it is to everlasting, and remains invariably the same.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Remember, O Lord - That is, In thy future treatment of me, bring to remembrance what thou hast done, and treat me in the same manner still. The language is that of one who felt that God had always been kind and gracious, and who asked for the future a continuance of the favors of the past. If we would recall, the goodness of God in the past, we should find enough to lay the foundation of prayer in reference to that which is to come. If we saw and fully understood all that has happened to us, we would need to offer no other prayer than that God might deal with us in the future as He has done in the past.
Thy tender mercies - Margin, as in Hebrew: “thy bowels.” The Hebrew word means the “inner parts” regarded by the Hebrews as the seat of the affections. See the notes at Isaiah 16:11.
And thy loving-kindnesses - Thy tokens of favor; thy acts of mercy and compassion.
For they have been ever of old - “For from eternity are they.” The language is that of a heart deeply impressed with a sense of the goodness God. In looking over his own life, the author of the psalm saw that the mercies of God had been unceasing and constant toward him from his earliest years. In words expressive of warm love and gratitude, therefore, he says that those acts of mercy had never failed - had been from eternity. His thoughts rise from the acts of God toward himself to the character of God, and to His attributes of mercy and love; and his heart is full of the idea that God is “always” good; that it belongs to His very nature to do good.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Psalms 25:6. Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies, and thy loving-kindness — The word רחמים rachamim, means the commiseration that a man feels in his bowels at the sight of distress. The second word, חסדים chasadim, signifies those kindnesses which are the offspring of a profusion of benevolence.
They have been ever of old. — Thou wert ever wont to display thyself as a ceaseless fountain of good to all thy creatures.