Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 104:29
Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled: thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
29. All creatures depend upon God for life as well as food. The breath or spirit of God is the source of the life-breath of His creatures. The Psalmist probably had Job 34:14-15 in his mind. Cp. Act 17:25; Col 1:17. The ‘hiding’ of God’s face is usually the symbol of His wrath; but here it denotes rather the withdrawal of His sustaining power. Cp. Psa 30:7.
thou takest away their breath ] Or, thou gatherest in, withdrawing the spirit lent for a time (Ecc 12:7), so that they expire, and their bodies return to the dust whence they were taken (Gen 3:19).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Thou hidest thy face – As if God turned away from them; as if he was displeased with them; as if he withdrew from them the tokens of his friendship and favor.
They are troubled – They are confounded; they are overwhelmed with terror and amazement. The word troubled by no means conveys the sense of the original word – bahal – which means properly to tremble; to be in trepidation; to be filled with terror; to be amazed; to be confounded. It is that kind of consternation which one has when all support and protection are withdrawn, and when inevitable ruin stares one in the face. So when God turns away, all their support is gone; all their resources fail, and they must die. They are represented as conscious of this; or, this is what would occur if they were conscious.
Thou takest away their breath – Withdrawing that which thou gavest to them.
They die, and return to their dust – Life ends when thou dost leave them, and they return again to earth. So it is also with man. When God withdraws from him, nothing remains for him but to die.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 104:29-30
Thou hidest Thy face, they are troubled: Thou takest away their breath, they die.
Views of death
I. Death disorganizes and destroys our corporeal frame. The words of the text merely announce the execution of the original sentence, Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.
II. Death puts an end to all worldly distinctions. Sometimes, indeed, they may appear to remain. One man is honoured with a splendid and imposing burial. Another has a blazoned monument erected over him. A third may have historians to record his name, and poets to sing his praise. And in contrast to all these, a fourth may be laid in the base earth, and have not even a stone to tell where he lies, and fade from the remembrance, almost as soon as he passes from the sight of that world, in which he did little more than toil, and weep, and suffer. But let your eye penetrate through those showy forms which custom, or affection, or vanity has thrown over the graves of departed mortals, and behold how the mightiest and the meanest lie side by side in one common undistinguished ruin. Receive, then, and practise the lesson which all this inculcates. It speaks to you who occupy distinguished situations in the world; and it says, Behold the nothingness of earthly grandeur, and power, and riches. Though elevated in station, be humble in spirit. The same fact speaks to you who are moving in the humble walks of life; to you it says, Why repine that you are not invested with the insignia of worldly greatness?
III. Death terminates all labour and all pleasure under the sun. There is no work, nor wisdom, nor device, in the grave; and as the tree falleth, so must it lie. Let no good action be unnecessarily delayed, or carelessly performed.
IV. Death dissolves the dearest and tenderest ties.
V. Death blasts the fairest prospects of individuals, of families, and of nations. He teaches us to put no confidence in our own life, or in that of any of the sons or daughters of men. He teaches us to recollect how feeble are all our efforts, and how short-sighted are all our best-laid schemes, and how perishable are all our most sanguine hopes.
VI. Death introduces us to judgment and to eternity. This is the most important view which we can take of it. (A. Thomson, D.D.)
The death of animals
Pain, suffering, and death, we know, may be of use to human beings. It may make them happier and better in this life, or in the life to come; if they are the Christians which they ought to be. But it seems, in the case of animals, to be only so much superfluous misery thrown away. Of the millions on millions of living creatures in the earth, the air, the sea, full one-half live by eating each other. In the sea, indeed, almost every kind of creature feeds on some other creature: and what an amount of pain, of terror, of violent death that means, or seems to mean! The Book of Genesis does not say that the animals began to devour each other at Adams fall. It does not even say that the ground is cursed for mans sake now, much less the animals. For we read (Gen 9:21). Neither do the psalmists and prophets give the least hint of any such doctrine. Surely, if we found it anywhere, we should find it in this psalm. But so far from saying that God has cursed His own works, or looks on them as cursed it says, The Lord shall rejoice in His works. Consider, with respect and admiration, the manful, cheerful view of pain and death, and indeed of the whole creation, which the psalmist has, because he has faith. There is in him no sentimentalism, no complaining of God, no impious, or at least weak and peevish, cry of Why hast Thou made things thus? He sees the mystery of pain and death. He does not attempt to explain it: but he faces it; faces it cheerfully and manfully, in the strength of his faith, saying–This too, mysterious, painful, terrible as it may seem, is as it should be; for it is of the law and will of God, from whom come all good things; of the God in whom is light, and in Him is no darkness at all. Therefore to the psalmist the earth is a noble sight; filled, to his eyes, with the fruit of Gods works. And so is the great and wide sea likewise. He looks upon it; full of things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts, for ever dying, for ever devouring each other. And yet it does not seem to him a dreadful and a shocking place. What impresses his mind is just what would impress the mind of a modern poet, a modern man of science; namely, the wonderful variety, richness, and strangeness of its living things. Their natures and their names he knows not. It was not given to his race to know. It is enough for him that known unto God are all His works from the foundation of the world. But one thing more important than their natures and their names he does know; for he perceives it with the instinct of a true poet and a true philosopher–These all wait upon Thee, etc. (C. Kingsley, M.A.)
Life by respiration
It has always been supposed that mans power to breathe lay primarily in the united action of heart, lungs and blood. But a recent scientist of recognized authority declares that this is not altogether the case. He asserts, and apparently proves it to the satisfaction of many scientific minds, that although heart, lungs and blood assist the act of breathing, and constitutes mans physical safeguard against suffocation, the actual breathing–i.e., the taking in of the oxygen and hydrogen of the atmosphere, is done by the living substance of the human body. Practically we breathe, so to speak, at every pore, and not simply by the elaborate parts hitherto looked upon as the only human agents of respiration. Plants and animals as well as men thus breathe through the living substances which severally compose them. And what is equally wonderful, perhaps, is that, as this authority declares, the mutual action of plants, animals and men upon the atmosphere in respiration is one of the most beautiful harmonies in nature. What one gives off as waste product is taken up and utilized by the other. Truly we are fearfully and wonderfully made! (Homiletic Review.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 29. Thou hidest thy face] If thou bring dearth or famine on the land, contagion in the air, or any destruction on the provision made by the waters, then beasts, fowl, and fish die, and are dissolved.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Thou hidest thy face, when thou withdrawest or suspendest the favour and care of thy providence.
Troubled; dejected and distressed.
Takest away; so this word is used, Hos 4:3; Zep 1:2, and elsewhere.
To their dust; to the earth, from whence they had their first original.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled,…. God may be said to hide his face from the creatures when he withholds their food from them, when there is a scarcity of provisions, a famine in the land; when there is no pasture for them to feed on, nor brooks of water to drink of; then are they troubled or perplexed, as in Joe 1:18 and know not what to do, nor where to go for help, but faint, and sink, and die. So in a spiritual sense when God hides his face from his people, removes his Shechinah, or divine Majesty and Presence, as the Targum here; and withdraws the influences of his grace and Spirit; or when they have no food for their souls, or what they have is not blessed, then are they troubled, Ps 30:7.
Thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust; their original dust, from whence they sprung, as man himself does; the breath of all is from the Lord; he gives it to his creatures, and when he pleases he takes it away; and when he does, they die and become dust again.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
29 Thou shalt hide thy face, and they shall be afraid In these words, the Psalmist declares, that we stand or fall according to the will of God. We continue to live, so long as he sustains us by his power; but no sooner does he withdraw his life-giving spirit than we die. Even Plato knew this, who so often teaches that, properly speaking, there is but one God, and that all things subsist, or have their being only in him. Nor do I doubt, that it was the will of God, by means of that heathen writer, to awaken all men to the knowledge, that they derive their life from another source than from themselves. In the first place, the Psalmist asserts, that if God hide his face they are afraid; and, secondly, that if he take away their spirit they die, and return to their dust; by which words he points out, that when God vouchsafes to look upon us, that look gives us life, and that as long as his serene countenance shines, it inspires all the creatures with life. Our blindness then is doubly inexcusable, if we do not on our part cast our eyes upon that goodness which gives life to the whole world. The prophet describes step by step the destruction of living creatures, upon God’s withdrawing from them his secret energy, that from the contrast he may the better commend that continued inspiration, by which all things are maintained in life and rigor. He could have gone farther, and have asserted, that all things, unless upheld in being by God, would return to nothing; but he was content with affirming in general and popular language, that whatever is not cherished by Him falls into corruption. He again declares, that the world is daily renewed, because God sends forth his spirit In the propagation of living creatures, we doubtless see continually a new creation of the world. In now calling that God’s spirit, which he before represented as the spirit of living creatures, there is no contradiction. God sendeth forth that spirit which remains with him whither he pleases; and as soon as he has sent it forth, all things are created. In this way, what was his own he makes to be ours. But this gives no countenance to the old dream of the Manicheeans, which that filthy dog Servetus has made still worse in our own day. The Manicheeans said that the soul of man is a particle of the Divine Spirit, and is propagated from it as the shoot of a tree; but this base man has had the audacity to assert, that oxen, asses, and dogs, are parts of the divine essence. The Manichees at least had this pretext for their error, that the soul was created after the image of God; but to maintain this with respect to swine and cattle, is in the highest degree monstrous and detestable. Nothing was farther from the prophet’s intention, than to divide the spirit of God into parts, so that a portion of it should dwell essentially in every living creature. But he termed that the spirit of God which proceeds from him. By the way, he instructs us, that it is ours, because it is given us, that it may quicken us. The amount of what is stated is, that when we see the world daily decaying, and daily renewed, the life-giving power of God is reflected to us herein as in a mirror. All the deaths which take place among living creatures, are just so many examples of our nothingness, so to speak; and when others are produced and grow up in their room, we have in that presented to us a renewal of the world. Since then the world daily dies, and is daily renewed in its various parts, the manifest conclusion is, that it subsists only by a secret virtue derived from God.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(29) Thou hidest Thy face.Elsewhere an image of displeasure, here only of withdrawal of providential care. (See Psa. 30:7, where the expression troubled also occurs.)
Thou takest away their breath.Not only is the food which sustains animal life dependent on the ceaseless providence of God, but even the very breath of life is His, to be sent forth or withdrawn at His will. But to this thought, derived of course from Genesis (comp. Psa. 90:3, Note), the poet adds another. The existence of death is not a sorrow to him any more than it is a mystery. To the psalmist it is only the individual that dies; the race lives. One generation fades as Gods breath is withdrawn, but another succeeds as it is sent forth.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
29. Thou takest away their breath Compare Job 34:14; Psa 146:4. Death is by a natural law of the Creator, by which he taketh back, or gathers to himself, as the word means, the “breath” which he gave.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Psa 104:29 Thou hidest thy face, they are troubled: thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
Ver. 29. Thou hidest thy face ] i.e. Thou withdrawest thy favour, thy concurrence, thine influence, they are troubled, or terrified, a cold sweat sitteth upon their limbs, animam agunt, they shortly expire; for in God we live, move, and have our being, Act 17:28 A frown of Augustus Caesar proved to be the death of Cornelius Gallus. Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord Chancellor of England, died Sept. 20, 1591, of a flux of his urine and grief of mind conceived upon some angry words given him by Queen Elizabeth (Camden).
Thou takest away their breath
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
troubled = dismayed.
breath = spirit. Hebrew. ruach. App-9.
return. Compare Gen 3:19. Ecc 12:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
hidest: Psa 30:7, Job 13:24, Job 34:29, Rom 8:20-22
thou takest: Psa 146:4, Job 34:14, Job 34:15, Ecc 12:7, Act 17:25
return: Psa 90:3, Gen 3:19
Reciprocal: Deu 31:17 – hide my face 2Sa 12:15 – struck the child 1Ki 17:17 – that there was Job 12:10 – the breath Job 14:5 – thou hast Psa 22:15 – into the Psa 102:2 – Hide Ecc 3:19 – as the Ecc 3:20 – all are Eze 37:5 – I will Dan 5:23 – in whose Jam 2:26 – as
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
104:29 Thou {p} hidest thy face, they are troubled: thou takest away their breath, they die, and return to their dust.
(p) As by your presence all things have life; so if you withdraw your blessings they all perish.