the Second Week after Easter
Click here to learn more!
Read the Bible
Hebrew Modern Translation
תהלים 102:10
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- Hastings'Parallel Translations
[102:11] וקצפך כי נשאתני ותשליכני
[102:11] מִפְּנֵֽי־זַֽעַמְךָ֥ וְקִצְפֶּ֑ךָ כִּ֥י נְ֝שָׂאתַ֗נִי וַתַּשְׁלִיכֵֽנִי ׃
[102:11] מִפְּנֵֽי־זַֽעַמְךָ וְקִצְפֶּךָ כִּי נְשָׂאתַנִי וַתַּשְׁלִיכֵֽנִי ׃
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Because: Psalms 38:3, Psalms 38:18, Psalms 39:11, Psalms 90:7-9, Lamentations 1:18, Lamentations 3:39-42, Lamentations 5:16, Daniel 9:8-14, Romans 3:19
thou hast: Psalms 30:6, Psalms 30:7, Psalms 73:18-20, Psalms 147:6, 1 Samuel 2:7, 1 Samuel 2:8, 2 Chronicles 25:8, 2 Corinthians 4:9
Reciprocal: Psalms 55:2 - I mourn Psalms 88:7 - Thy wrath Psalms 88:16 - fierce Psalms 109:23 - I am tossed Jonah 4:7 - prepared
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Because of thine indignation and thy wrath,.... This was the burden of his complaint, what gave him the greatest uneasiness; not so much the reproach of his enemies, and his other outward afflictions, as the sense he had of God's wrath and indignation. The people of God are as deserving of his wrath as others; and when they are awakened to a sense of sin and danger, or the law enters into their consciences, it works wrath there, and leaves nothing but a fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, till comfort is given; and under afflictive providences they are very ready to conclude, that the wrath of God is upon them; but this is only their apprehension of things; it is not in reality: for God has not appointed them to wrath, and has swore he will not be wroth with them; Christ has bore it for them, in their room and stead; and being justified by his blood and righteousness, they are saved from it; but then the sense they have of it is very terrible, and there is no rest, peace, and comfort in their souls, while under the apprehensions of it:
for thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down; as a man that, in wrestling, has the advantage of his antagonist, lifts him up as high as he can, that he may throw him with the greater force upon the ground; in like manner the psalmist thought the Lord was dealing with him: or this may express his changeable state and condition, sometimes lifted up, and sometimes cast down, and which is the case of every believer, more or less; all have their liftings up, and their castings down: when God first calls them by his grace, he raises them from a low estate, lifts them up out of an horrible pit, takes them from the dunghill, sets them among princes to inherit the throne of glory: when he comforts them with the consolations of his Spirit, he is the lifter up of their heads; when he grants his presence, and lifts up the light of his countenance: when he discovers his love, and makes their mountain to stand strong; when he shows them their interest in himself, as their covenant God, in Christ, as their Redeemer and Saviour, and grants them the communion of the Holy Ghost; and when their graces are in lively exercise, then is it a time of lifting up: and they are cast down when corruptions prevail, when grace is weak, when God hides his face, and when afflictions lie heavy on them: this was now the case of the psalmist, and perhaps the remembrance of his liftings up in former times was an aggravation of it.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Because of thine indignation and thy wrath - Hebrew, âFrom the face of thine indignation,â etc. That is - he regarded all his sufferings as proof of the indignation and wrath of God against him. See Psalms 90:7-9.
For thou hast lifted me up - In former times. Thou hadst given me prosperity; thou hadst given me an elevated and honorable place among men.
And cast me down - Thou hast brought me into a low condition, and I feel it all the more from the fact that I had enjoyed prosperity. Compare the notes at Psalms 30:7. The passage, however, is susceptible of another interpretation: âThou hast lifted me up, and cast me away.â That is, Thou hast lifted me from the ground as a storm or tempest takes up a light thing, and hast whirled me away. This idea occurs in Isaiah 22:18. See the notes at that passage. The former, however, seems to me to be the more correct interpretation.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Psalms 102:10. For thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down. — Thou hast lifted me on high, that thou Lightest dash me down with the greater force. We were exalted in thy favour beyond any people, and now thou hast made us the lowest and most abject of the children of men.