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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 40:5

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 40:5

Many, O LORD my God, [are] thy wonderful works [which] thou hast done, and thy thoughts [which are] to usward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee: [if] I would declare and speak [of them], they are more than can be numbered.

5. Abundantly hast Thou wrought, even Thou, O Jehovah my God,

Thy marvellous works and Thy thoughts to us-ward:

There is none to be compared unto Thee.

Multa fecisti tu Domine Deus meus mirabilia tua et cogitationes tuas pro nobis. Jerome. Thou is emphatic. Jehovah is contrasted with all such objects of reliance as those mentioned in the preceding verse. His ‘marvellous works’ (Psa 9:1 note) are the embodiment of His ‘thoughts’ or purposes of love toward His people. Cp. Psa 92:5; Isa 55:8-9; Jer 29:11. The rendering of R.V. marg., there is none to be compared unto thee, an exclamation of reverent wonder (cp. Psa 89:6; Psa 71:9), is decidedly preferable to that of the A.V., and that of R.V. text, they cannot be set in order unto thee. The P.B.V. and yet there is no man that ordereth them unto thee (cp. Isa 40:14) is improbable.

they are moe than can be numbered ] Or, than I can tell of (Psa 26:7). Moe as the comparative of many is an archaism which has disappeared from modern editions of the Bible. The word for they are more may mean they are mightier. Their number and their greatness alike baffle human powers to celebrate. Cp. Joh 21:25.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Many, O Lord my God, are thy wonderful works which thou hast done – literally, Many (things), O Lord my God, hast thou done; thy wonderful things and thy thoughts toward us, it is not (possible) to state unto thee. The recollection of the particular kindness shown to the speaker, as referred to in the previous verses, suggests the recollection of the great number of wonders that God had done for his people – the acts of his kindness which it would be hopeless to attempt to recount before him. And who could enumerate and record all the acts of Gods benevolence toward men in the works of creation, providence, and redemption; all that he has done in the history of the Church, and for the individual members of the Church in past times; all that he has done to save his people in the days of persecution; all that has been accomplished in our own individual lives? Obviously these things are beyond all power of enumeration by man. They can be admired now only in the gross; eternity alone will be sufficient for us to look at them and to recount them in detail. The phrase wonderful works means here remarkable interventions; things fitted to excite astonishment; things that surpass what man could have anticipated; things that could have been done only by God.

And thy thoughts which are to us-ward – Toward us; or which pertain to us. The word thoughts here refers to the plans, purposes, arrangements of God designed for our welfare; the things that are the result of his thinking of our wants – of what we need – of what would do us good. See Psa 40:17.

They cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee – Margin, None can order them unto thee. Literally, There is no putting them in order before thee; that is, there is no such arranging of them, or disposing of them in order, that they can all be brought into their proper place, so as to be perceived or numbered. The Hebrew word – arak – means properly, to place in a row; to put in order; to arrange; as, to put an army in battle array, or to draw it up for battle, Jdg 20:20, Jdg 20:22; to put words in order for an argument, or to arrange thoughts so as to present an argument, Job 32:14; to set a cause in order before a judge, or to lay it before him, Job 13:18. The word also means to place together with anything, or by the side of anything – that is, to make a comparison. Gesenius (Lexicon) supposes that this is the idea here, and that the proper interpretation is, Nothing can be compared unto thee. But the other interpretation seems best to accord with the connection, as referring to the wonderful works of God, and to his thoughts of mercy and goodness as being beyond the power of computation, or as too numerous to be brought into order and arrangement before the mind.

If I would declare and speak of them – If I should attempt to speak of them; or to recount them.

They are more than can be numbered – More than man can enumerate. They go beyond the power of language to express them. This is literally true. No language of man can describe what God has done and has purposed in fitting up this world as an abode for people, and in his mercy toward them.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 40:5

Many, O Lord my God, are Thy wonderful works which Thou hast done, and Thy thoughts which are to us-ward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto Thee.

Gods wonderful works and thoughts to us-ward


I.
Let us recall some of the wondrous works and thoughts of God to usward during the year.

1. The first wondrous mercy is life itself, How wonderful is life! We lavish upon it our choicest and fondest expressions. With what jealous care we guard it. What are all our daily toil and efforts but a battle for life! When the last stroke seems about to fall, how, do we quiver and weep! When that stroke is suspended, what joy thrills through our frame! Life with its five mysterious senses–life, with its powers of knowing–life, with its susceptibilities of loving and aspiring–life, with its sublime sense of duty, and with its affections and hopes that soar towards God and heaven–is a treasure that makes the weakest man the possessor of boundless wealth. But life is not more sweet and precious than it is frail. At any moment the small dust of the balance may turn the scale against us. A slight pressure of the brain, a pause of the breath, and all is over. Life is a frail ship that ploughs the great ocean amidst hurricanes and lightnings, by quicksands and rocks. How wonderful is it that this frail ship should sail for twenty, forty, seventy years–that this breath should flow on–this flower bloom, not for one, but for many years!

2. We have another illustration of the wonderful works and thoughts of God to us-ward, in the means of life and the comforts of life. Life hangs on the power of God, and no means can give life one moment longer beyond Gods will; but life cannot be maintained without means, and those means of life are truly wonderful. The head of a family knows best how much work and thought must go to the getting of food and raiment and other needful things for the children. But what are his work and thought to the work and thought of the great Father of all for each of His children? Think of what is needed for each harvest; what exact adjustment of natural laws so as to suit the different stages of the plant. And these wondrous works of God are not mere works without soul in them. They are His thoughts also. We do not praise the earth, or the clouds, or the sun, but we thank God. But I would notice as the crowning example of Gods many and wonderful works and thoughts to us-ward.

3. His works and thoughts in regard to the supreme purpose and aim of life. Life and the means of life are not the end, they are only the means of a greater end. They only give us a basis. We still want a structure to be built upon them. And our Father in heaven knows that the gift of health and life and all temporal blessings Will be no blessing, but only a curse to us, unless we rear upon these the structure of right principles, and holy affections, and Christian usefulness–in a word, all the work of faith, and hope, and charity. He has destined us for these as our chief end.


II.
The good effects which should follow such a review of Gods works.

1. There should be grateful acknowledgment of His mercies. Gratitude ploughs up the field which is to others only a barren waste, and plants it, and keeps it fresh and green with its tears of joy. The whole past life is the field which it ploughs up, and out of which it makes to spring all that can refresh and strengthen us.

2. The grateful review of the Divine works of mercy will inspire us likewise to be workers of good–to be good, like Him, that we may be His children–to be merciful as our Father is merciful.

3. Lastly, let the grateful review of the wondrous works of God to us-ward produce in us, not only the works of mercy, but the thoughts also of mercy, the spirit of mercy and charity. (J. Riddell.)

Two innumerable things

(with Psa 40:12):–So, then, there are two series of things which cannot be numbered. Gods mercies; mans sin. We always should begin with grateful remembrance of Gods mercy. His wondrous dealings seem to the psalmists thankful heart as numberless as the blades of grass which carpet the fields. They come pouring out continuously, like the innumerable undulations of the ether which make upon the eyeballs the single sensation of light. He thinks not only of Gods wonderful works, His realized purposes of mercy, but of His thoughts which are to us-ward, the purposes, still more wonderful, of a yet greater mercy which wait to be realized. As he thinks of all this multitude of His tender mercies, his lips break into this rapturous exclamation of my text. But there is a wonderful change in tone in the two halves of the psalm. The deliverance that seems so complete in the earlier part is but partial. The psalmist sees himself ringed about by numberless evils, as a man tied to a stake might be by a circle of fire. Innumerable evils have compassed me about. His conscience tells him that the evils are deserved; they are his iniquities transformed, which have come back to him in another shape, and have laid their hands upon him as a constable does upon a thief. Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me. They hem him in so that his vision is interrupted, the smoke from the circle of flame blinds his eyes. I cannot see. His roused conscience and his quivering heart conceive of them as more than the hairs of his head. And so courage and confidence have ebbed away from him. My heart faileth me, and there is nothing left for him but to fling himself in his misery out of himself and on to God. Draw some of the lessons from the very remarkable juxtaposition of these two innumerable things–Gods tender mercies, and mans iniquity and evil.


I.
To begin with, if we keep these two things both together in our contemplations, they suggest for us very forcibly the greatest mystery in the universe, and throw a little light upon it. The difficulty of difficulties, the one insoluble problem is, given a good and perfect God, where does sorrow come from? And why is there any paid? And men have fumbled at that knot for all the years that there have been men in the world, and they have not untied it yet. Is it true that Gods mercies are innumerable? If it be, what is the meaning of all this that makes me writhe and weep? Well, when such moments come to us, do not let the black mass hide the light one from you, but copy this psalmist, and in the energy of your faith, even though it be the extremity of your pain, grasp and grip them both; and though you have to say and to wail, Innumerable evils have compassed me about, be sure that you do not let that prevent you from saying, Many, O Lord my God, are Thy wonderful works, etc. Remember, the one does not contradict the other; and let us ask ourselves if the one does not explain the other. If it be that these mercies are so innumerable as my first text says, may it not be that they go deep down beneath, and include in their number the thing that seems most opposite to them, even the sorrow that afflicts our lives? Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, makes a bridge across the gulf which seems to part the opposing cliffs these two sets effect, and turn the darker into a form in which the brighter reveals itself. Gods innumerable mercies include the whole sum total of my sorrows.


II.
The blending of these two thoughts together heightens the impression of each. All artists, and all other people know the power of contrast. White never looks so white as when it is relieved against black; black never so intense as when it is relieved against white. Only observe that, whilst the psalmist starts from the innumerable evils that have compassed him about, he passes from these to the earlier evils which he had done. It is pains that says, Innumerable evils have compassed me about. It is conscience that says, Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me. His wrongdoing has come back to him like the boomerang that the Australian savage throws, which may strike its aim but returns to the hand that flung it. It has come back in the shape of a sorrow. And so Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me is the deepening of the earliest word of my text. Gods mercies never seem so fair, so wonderful, as when they are looked at in conjunction with mans sin. Mans sin never seems so foul and hideous as when it is looked at close against Gods mercies. You cannot estimate the conduct of one or two parties to a transaction unless you have the conduct of the other before you. You cannot understand a fathers love unless you take into account the prodigal sons sullen unthankfulness, or his unthankfulness without remembering his fathers love. So we do not see the radiant brightness of Gods lovingkindness to us until we look at it from the depth of the darkness of our own sin. The stars are seen from the bottom of the well. Mans sin has heightened Gods love to this climax and consummation of all tenderness, that He has sent us His Son. Mans darkest sin is the rejection of Christ. The clearest light makes the blackest shadow; the tenderer the love, the more criminal the apathy and selfishness which opposes it.


III.
The keeping of these two thoughts together should lead us all to conscious penitence. The psalmists words are not the mere complaint of a soul in affliction, but they are also the acknowledgment of a conscience repenting. In like manner the contemplation of these two numberless series should affect us all. It is a very defective kind of religion that says, Many, O Lord my God, are Thy thoughts which are to us-ward; but has never been down on its knees with the confession, Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me. But defective as it is, it is all the religion which many people have. I would press on you all this truth, that there is no deep personal religion without a deep consciousness of personal transgression. Have you ever known what, it is so to look at Gods love that it smites you into tears of repentance when you think of the way you have requited Him? I, therefore, urge this upon you that, for the vigour of your own personal religion, you must keep these two things well together.


IV.
Looking at these two numberless series together will bring into the deepest penitence a joyful confidence. There are regions of experience the very opposite of that error of which I have just been speaking. There are some of us, perhaps, who have so profound a sense of their own shortcomings and sins that the mists rising from these have blurred the sky to them and shut out the sun. Some of you, perhaps, may be saying to yourselves that you cannot get hold of Gods love because your sin seems to you to be so great, or may be saying to yourselves that it is impossible that you should ever get the victory over this evil of yours because it has laid hold upon you with so tight a grasp. If there be any inclination to doubt the infinite love of God, or the infinite possibility of cleansing from all sin, bind these two texts together, and never so look at your own evil as to lose sight of the infinite mercy of God. It is safe to say–aye! it is blessed to say Mine iniquities are more than the hairs of mine head, when we can also say, Thy thoughts to me are more than can be numbered. There are not two innumerable series, there is only one. There is a limit and a number to my sins and to yours, but Gods mercies are properly numberless. My sins may be as the sand which is by the sea-shore, innumerable, the love of God in Jesus Christ is like the great sea which rolls over the sands and buries them. My sins may rise mountains high, but:His mercies are a great deep which will cover the mountains to their very summit. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)

The marvel of Gods thoughts

Phillips Brooks thus seizes and emphasizes the message of the spring. When the spring comes, the oak-tree with its thousands upon thousands of leaves blossoms all over. The great heart of the oak-tree remembers every remotest tip of every farthest branch, and sends to each the message and the power of new life. And yet we do not think of the heart of the oak-tree as if it were burdened with such multitudinous remembrance, or as if it were any harder work for it to make a million leaves than it would be to make one. It is simply the thrill of the common life translated into these million forms. The great heart beats, and wherever the channels of a common life are standing open the rich blood flows, and out on every tip the green leaf springs. Somewhat in that way it seems to me that we may think of Gods remembrance of His million children.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 5. Many – are thy wonderful works] The psalmist seems here astonished and confounded at the counsels, loving-kindnesses, and marvellous works of the Lord, not in nature, but in grace; for it was the mercy of God towards himself that he had now particularly in view.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Thy wonderful works; for which I and the rest of thy people, included in the pronoun plural us, have abundant cause to praise thee, and to trust in thee, as was said, Psa 40:3; and by which it will appear that he that trusteth in thee is in a most blessed and safe condition, as he said, Psa 40:4. And this verse, wherein he passeth from the singular number to the plural, may seem to be interposed as a wall of partition, between that which David speaks in his own person, and that which he speaks in the person of the Messias, in the following verses.

Thy thoughts, i.e. thy gracious counsels or contrivances.

To us-ward, i.e. to me and to the rest of thy people, with whom David oft joins himself in this book. But these words may be, and are by some, joined to the following words, and the place thus rendered: It is not with us, or in our power, i.e. it passeth our skill, (and reach,) to order or to reckon them up in order unto thee, because indeed they are innumerable, and therefore cannot be digested into any order.

If I would declare; so the particle if or when is wanting, and to be supplied here, as it is Psa 39:11, and in many other places. Heb. yet I will declare and speak, to wit, some part of them; which accordingly he doth in the following verses.

They are more than can be numbered; although I am not able to express or reckon them all.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

5. be reckoned up in order(comparePsa 5:3; Psa 33:14;Isa 44:7), too many to be setforth regularly. This is but one instance of many. The use of theplural accords with the union of Christ and His people. In sufferingand triumph, they are one with Him.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Many, O Lord my God, [are] thy wonderful works [which] thou hast done,…. This is the “new song”, as Aben Ezra rightly observes, which is said in Ps 40:3, to be put in the mouth of the Messiah; who sometimes speaks in the plural number, being the representative of his people, and sometimes in the singular; for it is the same person that speaks here who is continued speaking in Ps 40:6, and following; and which are applied to Christ, Heb 10:5; the “works” here said to be done, and to be “many” and “wonderful”, are not the creation of the world, the dividing of the sea, and feeding the people of Israel forty years in the wilderness, as Jarchi interprets them; but the incarnation of Christ, redemption by him, the resurrection of him from the dead; regeneration and conversion, and the preservation of the saints from the evil of the world, safe to the kingdom and glory of God; all which, as they are many and various, and display the manifold wisdom and grace of God, so they are marvellous, and will be the subject of the wonder of saints to all eternity;

and thy thoughts [which are] to us-ward; that is, the decrees of God, as Aben Ezra truly explains them; the purposes, counsels, and intentions of God; which, though mentioned last, are before his works, and are the spring of them: these were in the mind of God from everlasting, were unknown till revealed, were thoughts of peace, and not of evil, and are unfrustrable, and ever fulfilled, and are manifold, precious, and amazing, Ps 139:17; and these were concerning all the elect of God as considered in Christ, and members of his; and therefore he says to us-ward; and all the works before mentioned were done to them, or for them, and on their account; and so Jarchi and Aben Ezra interpret the phrase, “because of us”, or “for our sakes”; even the incarnation, sufferings, death, and resurrection of Christ, and the thoughts of them, were for them;

they cannot be reckoned up in order to thee; or “there is none can order them unto thee” l; there is no power in man to do it, as Aben Ezra observes; or “there is none like unto thee”, as Jarchi and the Oriental versions; see Ex 15:11; though this sense seems to break in upon the account of the wonderful works and thoughts of God, which are still designed in the following clause;

[if] I could declare and speak [of them], they are more than can be numbered; that is, by men: from this general account of, the many and wonderful works and thoughts of God, the Messiah passes on to take notice of one particular design and work of the Lord, the redemption of his people by the sacrifice of himself.

l “non est qui ordinet apud te”, Pagninus; “none can count them in order to thee”, Ainsworth.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

He esteems him happy who puts his trust ( , with a latent Dagesh, as, according to Kimchi, also in Psa 71:5; Job 31:24; Jer 17:7) in Jahve, the God who has already made Himself glorious in Israel by innumerable wonderful works. Jer 17:7 is an echo of this . Psa 52:9 (cf. Psa 91:9) shows how Davidic is the language. The expression is designedly not , but , which is better adapted to designate the man as being tempted to put trust in himself. from (not from ) are the impetuous or violent, who in their arrogance cast down everything. , “turners aside of falsehood” ( = , cf. Psa 101:3), is the expression for apostates who yield to falsehood instead of to the truth: to take as accusative of the aim is forbidden by the status construct.; to take it as the genitive in the sense of the accusative of the object (like , Pro 2:7) is impracticable, because ( ) does not admit of a transitive sense; is, therefore, genit. qualit. like in Psa 59:6. This second strophe contains two practical applications of that which the writer himself has experienced. From this point of view, he who trusts in God appears to the poet to be supremely happy, and a distant view of God’s gracious rule over His own people opens up before him. are the thoughts of God realized, and those that are being realized, as in Jer 51:29; Isa 55:8. is an accusative of the predicate: in great number, in rich abundance; , “for us,” as e.g., in Jer 15:1 (Ew. 217, c). His doings towards Israel were from of old a fulness of wondrous deeds and plans of deliverance, which was ever realizing and revealing itself. There is not , a possibility of comparison with Thee, (Ew. 321, c) – as in Psa 89:7; Isa 40:18 – they are too powerful ( of a powerful sum, as in Psa 69:5; Psa 139:17, cf. Jer 5:6) for one to enumerate. According to Rosenmller, Stier, and Hupfeld, even affirms the same thing in other words: it is not possible to lay them forth to Thee (before Thee); but that man should “lay forth” (Symmachus ) before God His marvellous works and His thoughts of salvation, is an unbecoming conception. The cohortative forms, which follow, ,wollof h , admit of being taken as a protasis to what follows, after the analogy of Job 19:18; Job 16:6; Job 30:26; Psa 139:8: if I wish to declare them and speak them forth, they are too powerful (numerous) to be enumerated (Ges. 128, 1, d). The accentuation, however, renders it as a parenthetical clause: I would (as in Psa 51:18; Psa 55:13; Psa 6:10) declare them and speak them forth. He would do this, but because God, in the fulness of His wondrous works and thoughts of salvation, is absolutely without an equal, he is obliged to leave it undone – they are so powerful (numerous) that the enumeration of them falls far short of their powerful fulness. The words alioqui pronunciarem et eloquerer have the character of a parenthesis, and, as Psa 40:7 shows, this accords with the style of this Psalm.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

5. Many are thy wonderful works which thou hast done, O Jehovah! Interpreters are not entirely agreed as to these words; but it is generally admitted that David here contemplates with admiration the providence of God in the government of mankind. And first of all, he exclaims that the wonders of God’s works are great or many; (85) meaning by this, that God in his inscrutable wisdom so governs human affairs, that his works, which come to be little thought of by men, from their constant familiarity with them, far surpass the comprehension of the human understanding. Thus we find, that from one particular species he ascends to the whole class; as if he had said, God has proved not only by this particular act the paternal care which he exercises towards men, but that, in general, his wonderful providence shines forth in the several parts of creation. Then he adds, that the counsels of God concerning us are so high and so hidden, that it is impossible to reckon them up in order distinctly and agreeably to their nature. Some think that the word אלינו, elenu, towards us, is employed by way of comparison, in this sense, The counsels of God are far beyond the reach of our understanding, (but David rather commends the care which God vouchsafes to take of us;) and as, in this way, the connection of the words is broken, they are constrained to render the word ערוד, aroch, which I have rendered to count in order, differently, namely, that none is equal to God, or can be compared with him. (86) But that I may not enter upon any lengthened refutation, the intelligent reader will agree with me in considering that the true meaning is this: That God, by his incomprehensible wisdom, governs the world in such a manner that we cannot reckon up his works in their proper order, seeing our minds, through their very dulness, fail us before we can reach to so great a height. It follows, to thee, for although we should in so far reflect how wonderfully the Lord can make provision for our wants, yet this consideration is limited by the imperfection of our understanding: and hence it falls far short of the infinite glory of God. Those who give this explanation, that the counsels of God are not referred to him, because the greatest part of men imagine that every thing is subject to chance and fortune, as if David meant in passing to censure the ingratitude of those who defraud God of his praise, are no doubt mistaken as to the meaning. In stating, as David does, immediately after, that however much he might set himself to rehearse the works of God, he yet would fail ere he could declare the half of them; — in stating this he shows with sufficient plainness that the godly and devout meditation, in which the children of God are often engaged, gives them only, as it were, a slight taste of them and nothing more. We have now arrived then at the Psalmist’s meaning. Having spoken before of the deliverance which God had vouchsafed to him, he takes occasion from it to set forth the general providence of God in nourishing and sustaining men. It is also his design in this to exhort the faithful to a consideration of God’s providence, that they may not hesitate to cast all their cares upon it. Whilst some are in constant pain by reason of their own anxiety and discontent, or quake at the slightest breeze that blows, and others labor hard to fortify and preserve their life by means of earthly succours, — all this proceeds from ignorance of the doctrine, that God governs the affairs of this world according to his own good pleasure. And as the great majority of men, measuring the providence of God by their own understanding, wickedly obscure or degrade it, David, placing it on its proper footing, wisely removes this impediment. The meaning of the sentence, therefore, amounts to this, that in the works of God men should reverently admire what they cannot comprehend by their reason; and whenever the flesh moves them to contradiction or murmuring, they should raise themselves above the world. If God cease to work, he seems to be asleep, because, binding up his hands to the use of outward means, we do not consider that he works by means which are secret. We may therefore learn from this place, that although the reason of his works may be hidden or unknown to us, he is nevertheless wonderful in his counsels.

This verse is closely connected with the preceding. No man places, as he ought, entire trust in God, but he who, shutting his eyes upon external circumstances, suffers himself to be governed by him according to his good pleasure. Moreover, having spoken hitherto in the third person, David now suddenly addresses his discourse, not, however, unadvisedly, to God, that he might lead us the more effectually to this sobriety and discretion. When, however, he affirms that the works of God cannot be distinctly known by us, it is not for the purpose of deterring us from seeking the knowledge of them, or from the examination of them, but only to lay a restraint upon our rashness, which would otherwise go beyond the proper boundaries in this respect. To this end, the words to thee, or before thee, are expressly employed, by which we are admonished that however diligently a man may set himself to meditate upon the works of God, he can only attain to the extremities or borders of them. Although then so great a height be far above our reach, we must, notwithstanding, endeavor, as much as in us lies, to approach it more and more by continual advances; as we see also the hand of God stretched forth to disclose to us, so far as it is expedient, those wonders, which we are unable of ourselves to discover. There is nothing so preposterous as to affect, of one’s own accord, a gross ignorance of the providence of God, because as yet we cannot comprehend it perfectly, but only discern it in part; even as at this day we find some who employ all their endeavors to bury it in oblivion, for no other pretense than that it surpasses our understanding, as if it were unreasonable to allow to God anything more than what appears right and proper, according to our carnal reason. David acts very differently regarding it. Feeling all his senses absorbed by an inconceivable majesty and brightness, which he could not bear to look upon, (87) he confesses frankly that these are wonderful things of which he could not comprehend the reason; but still he does not abstain wholly and everywhere from making mention of them, but, according to the measure of his capacity, sets himself devoutly to meditate upon them. From this we learn how foolish and vain a thing it is to say, by way of caution, that none should speak of the counsels or purposes of God, because they are high and incomprehensible. David, on the contrary, though he was ready to sink under the weight, ceased not to contemplate them, and abstained not from speaking of them, because he felt unequal to the task of rehearsing them, but was content, after having declared his faith on this subject, to finish his discourse in admiration.

(85) “ Sont grandes ou infinies.” — Fr. “Are great or innumerable.”

(86) “This verb,” says Ainsworth, “is sometimes used for matching or comparing.” In this sense the word occurs in Psa 89:7; and this is the sense in which the Septuagint understands it here: “ Καὶ τοῖς διαλογισμοῖς σου οὐχ ἔστι τις ὁμοιωθήσεται σοι;” — “and in thy thoughts there is none who shall be likened to thee.” Street reads, “There is none to be compared to thee;” and observes, that “above sixty copies of Dr Kennicott’s collection have ערוך, the passive participle here, instead of ערך.”

(87) “ Sentant tous ses sens engloutis d’une majeste et resplendeur infinie, que sa veue pouvoit porter.” — Fr.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(5) Many, O Lord.Better,

In numbers hast Thou made, Thou Jehovah my God,
Wonderful deeds and purposes for us.
There is nothing comparable to Thee. . . .

Would I declare, would I speak,
They are too many to number.

For the third clause, There is nothing comparable with Thee, which is the rendering of the LXX., Vulg. and Syriac, comp. Isa. 40:17.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

5. Thy wonderful works Both in nature and providence. Works are his developed thoughts, or plans; while thoughts are his devices, which are reserved for accomplishment in their time, and which we know only in their fulfilment.

To us-ward In modern phrase, toward us. A beautiful acknowledgment of a special providence. The end of all divine dispensation in nature and in grace is for man.

They are more than can be numbered The word “more” means strong, and hence, great, numerous. Both the magnitude and multitude of the “works” of God towards man are beyond the human power to compute.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Psa 40:5. Many, &c. Many things hast thou done, O Lord, my God: thy wonders and thy thoughts towards us, I am not able to set in order before thee.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Psa 40:5 Many, O LORD my God, [are] thy wonderful works [which] thou hast done, and thy thoughts [which are] to us-ward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee: [if] I would declare and speak [of them], they are more than can be numbered.

Ver. 5. Many, O Lord my God, are thy works which thou hast done ] Many and great, and all for them that trust in thee; who therefore must needs be blessed, as Psa 40:4 .

And thy thoughts which are to us-ward ] Thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give us an expected end, Jer 29:11 .

They cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee ] No, nor yet out of order; and yet we must be reckoning and relating them as we are able, to God, and men, by speaking good of his name; and at this David was old excellent, as we say.

If I should declare and speak of them ] By wholesale we must do it, though we cannot so well by retail; particulars also must be instanced, as Moses doth to Jethro, Exo 18:7-8 , and for that end catalogues must be kept. See one Jdg 10:11-12 .

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

hast done = didst.

thoughts. Figure of speech Anthropopatheia. App-6.

If I would = Fain would I.

numbered: or rehearsed.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Many: Psa 136:4, Exo 11:8, Exo 15:11, Job 5:9, Job 9:10, Job 26:14

thoughts: Psa 71:15, Psa 92:5, Psa 139:6, Psa 139:17, Psa 139:18, Isa 55:8, Isa 55:9, Jer 29:11

they cannot: etc. or, none can order them unto thee, Job 37:19, Job 37:20

Reciprocal: 2Sa 7:23 – great things Job 6:3 – my words are swallowed up Job 42:3 – things Psa 40:17 – I am poor Psa 89:6 – For who Psa 104:24 – how Psa 106:2 – utter Psa 107:8 – his wonderful Psa 118:17 – declare Psa 147:5 – his understanding is infinite Ecc 8:17 – that a man Ecc 11:5 – even Isa 12:4 – declare Isa 25:1 – thou hast Isa 28:29 – cometh Isa 30:33 – the breath Eze 1:16 – a wheel Luk 1:3 – in Joh 21:25 – there Act 2:11 – wonderful Rom 11:33 – how 1Co 13:9 – General

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Psa 40:5. Many are thy wonderful works For which I and the rest of thy people, included in the plural pronoun us, have abundant cause to praise and to trust in thee, as was said Psa 40:3. And by which it will appear that he that trusteth in thee is in a most blessed and safe condition, as expressed Psa 40:4. And this verse, wherein he passes from the singular to the plural number, may seem to be interposed as a wall of partition between that which David speaks in his own person, and that which he speaks in the person of the Messiah. And thy thoughts Thy gracious counsels or contrivances; which are to us-ward To me and the rest of thy people; to whom David often joins himself in this book. They cannot be reckoned up, &c. It passes our skill to order or reckon them up in order unto thee, because, indeed, they are innumerable.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

40:5 Many, {e} O LORD my God, [are] thy wonderful works [which] thou hast done, and thy thoughts [which are] to us-ward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee: [if] I would declare and speak [of them], they are more than can be numbered.

(e) David goes from one king of God’s favour to the contemplation of his providence over all, and confesses that his counsels toward us are far above our capacities, we cannot so much as tell them in order.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

The Lord’s wonderful acts for the righteous are too numerous to recount fully, much less His beneficent thoughts. No one can compare with Yahweh regarding His gracious plans to bless.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)