Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 116:7

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 116:7

Return unto thy rest, O my soul; for the LORD hath dealt bountifully with thee.

7. Return unto thy rest, O my soul ] Abandon anxiety and resume the perfect tranquility that springs from trust in God. The plural form of the word for rest denotes full and complete rest. For the address to the soul cp. Psa 42:5, and Psa 103:1 ff., a Psalm further connected with this Psalm by its use of Aramaic forms of pronominal suffix.

dealt bountifully ] Cp. Psa 13:6.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

7 9. The Psalmist encourages himself with the recollection of God’s mercy.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Return unto thy rest, O my soul – Luther, Be thou again joyful, O my soul. The meaning seems to be, Return to thy former tranquility and calmness; thy former freedom from fear and anxiety. He had passed through a season of great danger. His soul had been agitated and terrified. That danger was now over, and he calls upon his soul to resume its former tranquility, calmness, peace, and freedom from alarm. The word does not refer to God considered as the rest of the soul, but to what the mind of the psalmist had been, and might now be again.

For the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee – See the notes at Psa 13:6.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 116:7

Return unto thy rest, O my soul, for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee.

The gate to rest

The psalmist exhorts his soul to return unto its rest; not because it has heard of God, or has seen His power in nature; not because He recognizes Divine order in the universe, not because his poetical feeling is kindled by the thought of Divine majesty and glory, but because he has had personal dealings with God. Return unto thy rest, O my soul, for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee. I supplicated Him, He heard my supplication, I was brought low, He helped me: He delivered my soul from death. He wiped the tears from my eyes and gave His angels charge to keep my feet from falling. Therefore, on my side, I too, will deal with Him. I will call upon Him: I will rest in Him: I will walk before Him: I will believe in Him: I will pay my vows to Him. We really need get back to the old Hebrew conception of Gods relation to man. But we never can do so through any conception of God which makes Him less than a personal Father in heaven. Now, let us look at three questions in the light of this thought of the souls rest, all of them practical questions which every thoughtful man asks. Whence do I come? How shall my life be ordered? Whither am I going? No soul is at rest until it can answer these three questions; and no soul will ever find rest until it shall have found its answer in God.

1. As to the first of these questions–Whence did I come? Modern thought is seeking rest for itself, not in God, but in scientific theories of the origin of man. We have no fault to find with such researches. All I say now is that the scientist does not give you anything restful, even if he succeeds in proving that God had no hand in your creation. You go on craving a leather in heaven just the same. You are restless as ever, no less restless than the child who knows his mother is in her grave, but who, nevertheless, cries for her unceasingly. You want the truth, but may not your filial instinct be truthful? May not your sense of sonship be a sense of a stupendous truth?

2. How shall I live? How make the most and best of life? What guides shall I follow? Here again we find a point of rest only in a personal God, a God of providence, who interferes (I am not afraid of the term) in our affairs. You may prove, if you can, that your life moves on under the guidance of mere, settled, mechanical order. That conclusion will not give you rest. If this world of men which we see and of which we are a part, with all its clashing and contradiction, its triumph of evil and its struggle of good, is uncontrolled by a Supreme Will, if men like grains of sand, merely fly before the wind that drives them against the rocks and against each other, if change, and sickness, and ruin, and death come just as the water shoots the precipice, just as two and two make four,–it is but mockery to point our souls to such a conception of life and say, Return unto thy rest, O my soul. We can obtain a calm, restful outlook upon life, a tranquil, cheerful participation in life only as we get back to God. We find these only when Christ leads us as He led the disciples of old to the market, and points to the little dead sparrow, and says Your Father marked its fall; fear not, ye are of more value than many sparrows. We shall not be frightened at a mystery, provided we know God is behind it.

3. And, once more, the soul finds no rest as regards the question of destiny, until it finds it in God. Whatever restful thought of heaven we have, whatever knowledge of its conditions we have, comes entirely from the moral quality of heaven, and therefore from the thought of God; for, take out God from the universe, and no determinate moral quality is left anywhere, in heaven or in earth. Heaven is heaven to us because God is there; because Gods law rules there absolutely; because its happiness is the happiness of perfect moral order. (M. R. Vincent, D.D.)

The souls rest

There would seem, says James Martineau, to be an incurable variance between the life which men covet for themselves and that which they admire in others; nay, between the lot which they would choose beforehand and that in which they glory afterwards. In prospect, nothing appears so attractive as ease and licensed comfort; in retrospect, nothing so delightful as toil and strenuous service. The truth of this remark is being repeatedly impressed upon us both by public and private circumstance. It does seem as if Providence had conditioned us to a lot of labour and struggle,–nay, forced it upon us,–while our first aim is to smooth our path and prepare the way for an after happiness which consists in rest and passive pleasure. Born for contest, we ask for repose. We would skip, if possible, the drill and the discipline, and clutch at once the prizes of victory. How many of us go through life like complaining school-children,–doing our tasks, it may be, but longing for the time when books shall be put aside and all lessons come to an end! But, notwithstanding the prevailing extent of this desire for repose and the fallacious arguments with which we attempt to cover our own delinquencies in the matter, human nature, in its inmost heart, is sound, and honours no repose which is not honourably achieved by contest and victory. Human nature is to be judged, not by the standard which individual men live by, or even set for themselves, but by that which they most admire in others; and that must be regarded as the aim of humanity at large, which, though exhibited in the attainment of but a single individual, gathers about it the greatest number who applaud and revere it. Who but the brave, who but those who against all obstacles have contended manfully and unflinchingly and kept their integrity to the bitter end, have ever been adopted as the models or worshipped as the heroes of mankind? How immeasurably more has the world admired the character of Socrates for refusing to avail himself of the plan of his jailer, who had been bribed to aid his escape! These two points, then, seem to be clearly established: first, in the midst of the toil, trials, and struggles of our lot there is an instinctive craving within us for rest; and yet, secondly, the standard of life which we also instinctively place the highest, and which, at the bottom of our hearts, we do most really admire, is that in which there is the least of rest. Solve this seeming paradox, and we shall answer the question of what the souls rest is. We crave for rest, it is true; and the desire is so universal that it must be regarded as instinctive. But, like all our instincts, the desire is blind. Instinct does not see and consciously choose its end, but gives only direction toward a certain satisfaction which human nature requires in order to fulfil its destiny. What is the extent and character of that satisfaction, not any one instinct or desire, but the whole nature, must determine. What, then, is the kind of rest which the human soul demands, and which alone can satisfy its desires? The rest that our natures crave is not the repose of passivity, of listlessness, of sleep, but the rest of healthy spiritual life,–of life in accordance with the laws of our being, which are laws of progressive activity, and, if obeyed, put us into harmony with the spirit and peace of God. The rest that we want is like the rest of the heavenly bodies, which, though all may be in rapid and varied movement, are yet at peace with regard to each other, because moving according to the harmony of a Divine law. And such rest as this we can have, though in the midst of labour and trial and conflict. It is the rest to which Jesus invited the weary and heavy-laden; the rest, not of those who have thrown their burdens off or would impose them upon others, but of those who would have taken upon them the yoke of Gods law, and find the yoke easy and the burden light, because, through obedience to this law, a mighty strength and a mighty peace have come into their being. (W. J. Potter.)

The Christians disposition under a sense of mercies received


I.
The state of those with whom the Lord hath dealt bountifully.

1. The Lord hath dealt bountifully with those from whom He hath removed any affliction under which they groaned, and for deliverance from which they prayed.

2. The Lord hath dealt bountifully with you, if you can observe a particular mark and signature of His providence in your mercies.

(1) When the means by which any mercy is brought about are extraordinary, and far beyond the reach of human wisdom, it serves to show that God Himself hath been their help.

(2) Sometimes the providence of God is seen in the season of the mercy. It is bestowed when it is most needed, or when it may be of greatest use.

(3) The signature of providence is sometimes seen in the nature of the mercy, when it is exactly suited to the state and character of the person concerned.

3. The Lord deals bountifully with His people, when He gives them a clear and satisfying view of the salutary end, and enables them to make a sanctified use both of their trials and mercies.

4. The Lord hath dealt bountifully with those whom He hath admitted to the most intimate and spiritual communion with Himself; those whom He hath carried above the sphere of temptation, filled them with sensible joy in the Holy Ghost here, and earnest desires after the complete and perpetual enjoyment of His presence in heaven.


II.
The import of the psalmists resolution.

1. Return and give the praise where it is due; and humbly acknowledge God as the author of thy mercies.

2. This expression may imply returning to God, and delighting in Him as our reconciled God, and supreme portion and happiness.

3. This expression implies a confidence and reliance on God for protection and security against future dangers.


III.
Practical improvement.

1. Observe one great branch of the sinfulness of the world in general–forgetfulness of God, and unthankfulness for His mercies.

2. Let me beseech every serious person to consider how far he hath sinned against God and his own comfort by forgetting the goodness of God, both in common and special mercies.

3. Directions to those who are truly sensible of the goodness of God.

(1) Be circumspect and watchful; though a thankful frame of spirit is of great advantage, both for your sanctification and peace, yet it is not out of the reach of temptation; let it not produce pride, security, or self-sufficiency.

(2) Be public-spirited and useful; if the Lord hath dealt bountifully with you, commend His service, and speak to His praise.

(3) Be frequent and diligent in secret prayer. This is the way to preserve your watchfulness, and to increase your usefulness. (J. Witherspoon, D.D.)

Soul rest


I.
As an original inheritance. Return unto thy rest. There is no rest for souls in places, however fair, beautiful, or grand; not in any externalisms, however calm and sunny. It is nowhere but in their own moral states. But what are the moral states that constitute soul rest?

1. Unquestioning trust.

2. Satisfying love.

3. Conscious rightness.

4. Congenial pursuits.


II.
As a lost inheritance. The whole world is in disquiet. Men are trusting, but their trust is not unquestioning. The foundations of their hopes prove to be sand. The staff they grasp for support proves to be a reed that breaks beneath their weight. Everything they rest on fails them. Men are loving, but their love is unsatisfying. They are loving the imperfect, and the discovery of their imperfections distress them. They are loving the unreciprocating, and their indifference fills them with painful solicitude. They are loving the inconstant, and their inconstancy tosses them as timbers on the billows. They love the unhappy, and the sorrows they discern bring a shivering shadow over themselves. Men want righteousness; their deep cry is, Oh! wretched man that I am. They see the right, they reach after it, but it eludes their grasp. Men are active, but the pursuits they follow are uncongenial wish their nature, and felt to be unworthy of their lofty powers and destiny.


III.
As a recoverable inheritance. The text implies the possibility of regaining the rest. How can this soul-rest be recovered? The Gospel and the Gospel alone returns the satisfactory answer. Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest. How does He give rest? By supplying man with the necessary conditions. He presents the only object for unquestioning trust. One that is all-wise, all-kind, all-powerful, the unchangeable and eternal God. And He bids man to trust in Him that liveth for ever. He presents to man the only object for a satisfying-love. One who is all perfect, who is light, in whom is no darkness at all. One who returns in an infinite degree all the love that is given. One who is constant, who will never leave and never forsake. One who is happy–the ever blessed God. He supplies man with the means of becoming consciously right. He presents congenial pursuits–pursuits connected with the advancement of holiness, the promotion of human happiness, and the glory of God. (Homilist.)

The souls rest

1. From vain endeavours to relieve a burdened conscience, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in the perfected redemption and pardoning grace of Jesus.

2. From the distress and disquiet of inconsistent conduct, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in unreserved obedience to Christ. Cease that opposition; forsake that evil path: cast from thee the accursed thing; cease to do evil; and thus return unto thy rest.

3. From the fretting anxieties and disappointments of pride, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in the humility of Christ.

4. Disappointed in thy search for happiness elsewhere, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in the love of Jesus, and the peace the world cannot give. As the dove flew to and fro, finding no rest for the sole of her foot till she returned to the ark, so the believer cannot repose away from Christ, our true and only refuge.

5. From vain speculations and sceptical doubts, return unto thy rest, O my soul, by childlike faith in Christ.

6. From the sorrow caused by afflictions, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in the sure mercies of a God of Love. Rest in His wisdom; He knows what is most needful for thee. Rest in His love; He will not withhold what is good. Rest in His power; He is able to do what His love prompts and His wisdom plans. Rest in His tenderness; for as a father pitieth his children, so He pitieth thee. Rest in His faithfulness; He cannot deny Himself. Gratefully remember past deliverances, and thus Return unto thy rest, etc.

7. From all the trials of the present life, return unto thy rest, O my soul, in the home which is preparing for thee above. Every step of the journey brings us nearer. Every care, every conflict, every grief helps us onward. There is rest yonder. Let us even now enjoy it by anticipation. (Newman Hall, LL.B.)

The rest of the soul


I.
God is the rest of the soul.

1. As the light of the intellect.

2. As the refuge from the charges of our consciences.

3. As our chief good.

4. As our almighty protector.

5. As our great and ultimate end.


II.
The circumstances under which we are more especially called to return to God our rest.

1. When we are too much affected by the cares of ordinary life.

2. When we are pressed with uneasy fears as to our spiritual safety.

3. When we have vainly perplexed ourselves with difficulties.

4. When we have experienced special deliverance.

Having obtained from God pardon, a revival of piety, restoration from affliction, deliverance from temptation and sorrow; then we ought to summon the spirit to cleave with purpose of heart to the Lord, and to rest more fully in Him, who is the strength of our heart, our portion, our exceeding great reward. (R. Watson.)

Return unto thy rest


I.
The believer has his rest. While trying to think how I should describe it, nothing seemed to strike me as a more full and accurate description of the believers rest than the apostolic benediction with which we are accustomed to dismiss our assemblies. If you have these three things,–the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost,–I am sure I need not stay to prove to you that, in your experience, you have realized what it is to enjoy rest for your soul.


II.
Sometimes the believer leaves that rest.

1. Through affliction.

2. Through a want of submission to the Divine will.

3. Through want of contentment.

4. Through the worlds joys.

5. Through allowing some conscious sin.


III.
The believer, when he has gone away from his rest, should return to it; and the sooner he does so, the better. As Noahs dove came back to him, so fly back to Christ, who is your Noah, your rest, for that is the meaning of the name.

1. It is quite certain that you can never rest anywhere else.

2. This unrest puts you out of order for everything.

3. Your want of rest is putting you into a state in which you are very liable to be tempted and overcome.

4. This unrest can do no possible good.


IV.
The believer has one excellent encouragement to return: Return unto thy rest, O my soul; for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee. The psalmist tells us in detail what the Lord had done for him; or, rather, he tells the Lord. Thou hast delivered my soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from falling. Now, believer, you ought to come back, and rest in God, because you hays received from Him these three marks of His Divine favour. (C. H. Spurgeon.)

Spiritual rest

In reconciliation to God through Christ Jesus the soul regains its lost equilibrium, finds again the centre of repose for which it had been sighing in vain. What sensual pleasure, wealth, ease, honour, power, the applause of men–what even intellectual pursuits, and the domestic and social charities of life, fail to bestow, or bestow for the moment only to stimulate the thirst they seem to quench, in the ineffable sense of union with God the soul finds at lasts–rest, satisfaction, perfect peace.

1. This rest not bodily or physical, but mental or spiritual rest. When doubt and disbelief are gone, when the object of life is found in Christ, when God becomes the sure portion and sweetest joy of the heart, and the spirit within us, hitherto, it may be, groping bewildered amidst earthly hopes and pleasures, like one in the dark for the friendly hand, feels itself at last embraced in the sure grasp of strong and changeless love–then is the true rest of man, the stillness of the weary spirit in the everlasting arms. This is the only repose which is independent of outward circumstances. Even amidst the outer toil and distraction of the world, it is the peace of God which keepeth the heart and mind. Nor does death, which disunites and disturbs all else, for a moment interrupt its continuity: for the rest of the soul in Christ is identical with the rest of heaven–the rest which remaineth for the people of God.

2. It is the rest, not of immobility, but of equipoise. The rise of religion in the heart may be indicated by the bitter pangs of an awakened conscience, and by the painful struggle of spirit with sense, of the reviving element of moral freedom with the old and inveterate tyranny of sin in the soul. And it may only be by a long-protracted process of holy discipline that the soul attains at last to the complete mastery over self, the perfect inward harmony of a spirit in which every thought and feeling and desire are brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ. But when that glorious end is gained, then the weary strife of frail humanity is at an end, and a repose–oh how deep, how tranquil, how sublime!–diffuses itself throughout the spirit–a repose in which there is at once calmness and power, the sweet serenity of an infants slumbers, yet the strength of an angel of God.

3. The true rest of the soul is that, not of inactivity, but of congenial exertion. As love to Christ deepens in the soul that is truly given to Him, the work which it prompts us to do for Him loses the feeling of effort, and passes into pleasure. Less and less of set purpose do we need to constrain the mind to think of Him, or to approach Him in the formal attitude of devotion. The idea of Christ in the holy mind becomes gradually blended with all the actions of its daily life; thought goes out to Him as by a divine instinct; an ever-acting attraction draws the heart upwards to its great and first object, and life becomes an unconscious yet continuous prayer. The transition from motive to act, from holy intention and design to holy doing, becomes less and less marked, until at last the will acquires an almost mechanical certainty, an almost unconscious smoothness and rapidity of action. And so, with the unfettered ease of one who playeth well upon an instrument, from the many-stringed harp of life the soul renders up to God the sweet melody of holy deeds. Then indeed has it returned into its rest. (J. Caird, D.D.)

The souls resting-place

It seemed scarcely a stones throw from the busy streets, almost in the centre of the citys crowding and rushing, that we found the quaint little park with its grass and trees, its flowers, its quiet resting-places and playing children. How strange it seems to find such a garden spot in the heart of all the citys din and traffic, its restless comings and goings! we said, dropping down upon one of the rustic seats. Yet how hard it would be to endure all the strain and turmoil if there were no such places! It is like life, said a friend thoughtfully. Our days are full of care and toil, of eager pursuit and feverish ambition. The demands of business, of civic duty, and of social life crowd and press upon each other; but deep in the heart of each of us, if life is what it should be, lies some quiet little garden spot, fenced about and protected. Our religious life has its roots there; it holds our holiest ties and friendships, and something from out our childhood which never grows old or dies. The world may fill our outward lives with the citys roar and tumult, but the soul holds ever amid it all its garden of flowers and rest. (W. L. Watkinson.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 7. Return unto thy rest, O my soul] God is the centre to which all immortal spirits tend, and in connexion with which alone they can find rest. Every thing separated from its centre is in a state of violence; and, if intelligent, cannot be happy. All human souls, while separated from God by sin, are in a state of violence, agitation, and misery. From God all spirits come; to him all must return, in order to be finally happy. This is true in the general case; though, probably, the rest spoken of here means the promised land, into which they were now returning.

A proof of the late origin of this Psalm is exhibited in this verse, in the words limenuchaichi, “to thy rest,” and alaichi, “to thee,” which are both Chaldaisms.

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

Unto thy rest; unto that tranquillity of mind and cheerful confidence in Gods promises and providence which thou didst once enjoy.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

Return unto thy rest, O my soul,…. To a quiet and tranquil state after much distress k; a soliloquy, an address to his own soul to return to God his resting place, as Kimchi; or to Christ, whose rest is glorious, and which lies in a cessation from a man’s own works; not from doing them, but from depending on them, or from labouring for life by them; in a deliverance from the bondage of the law, its curse and condemnation, and from the dominion and tyranny of sin, and from the distressing guilt of it on the conscience; in spiritual peace and joy, arising from the application of the blood of Christ, and from a view of his righteousness and justification by it, and of his sacrifice, and of the expiation of sin by that; which is enjoyed in the ways and ordinances of Christ, and oftentimes amidst afflictions and tribulations: this is sometimes broke in upon and interrupted, through the prevalence of sin, the temptations of Satan, and divine desertions; but may be returned to again, as Noah’s dove returned to the ark when it could find rest nowhere else; as the believer can find none but in Christ, and therefore after he has wandered from him he returns to him again, encouraged by the following reason.

For the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee; in times past, even in an eternity past, having loved him with an everlasting love, chosen him in Christ, made a covenant with him in him, blessed him with all spiritual blessings in him, and made unto him exceeding great and precious promises; provided a Redeemer and Saviour for him, whom he had made known unto him, having enlightened, quickened, and converted him; and had laid up good things for him to come, and had done many great things for him already; all which might serve to encourage his faith and hope in him. The Targum is,

“because the Word of the Lord hath rendered good unto me.”

k “Remigrat animus nunc denuo mihi”, Plauti Epidicus, Act. 4. Sc. 1. v. 42.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

7 Return, O my soul! unto thy rest. He now exhorts himself to be of good courage; or rather, addressing his soul, tells it to be tranquil, because God was propitious towards him. By the term rest, some commentators understand God himself, but this is an unnatural interpretation. It is rather to be regarded as expressive of a calm and composed state of mind. For it is to be noticed, that David confesses himself to have been sorely agitated and perplexed amid an accumulation of ills, in the same way as each of us is conscious of his own inquietude, when the terrors of death encompass us. Although, therefore, David possessed unusual fortitude, he was yet distressed by reason of the conflict of grief, and an inward tremor so distracted his mind, that he justly complains of being deprived of his peace. He declares, however, that the grace of God was adequate to quiet all these troubles.

It may be asked, whether the experience of the grace of God alone can allay the fear and trepidation of our minds; since David declares, that, having experienced relief from Divine aid, he would, for the future, be at rest? If the faithful regain their peace of mind only when God manifests himself as their deliverer, what room is there for the exercise of faith, and what power will the promises possess? For, assuredly, to wait calmly and silently for those indications of God’s favor, which he conceals from us, is the undoubted evidence of faith. And strong faith quiets the conscience, and composes the spirit; so that, according to Paul, “the peace of God, which passeth all understandings” reigns supremely there, Phi 4:7. And hence the godly remain unmoved, though the whole world were about to go to ruin. What is the import of this returning unto rest? I answer, that however much the children of God may be driven hither and thither, yet they constantly derive support from the word of God, so that they cannot totally and finally fall away. Confiding in his promises, they throw themselves upon his providence; and still they are sorely distressed by disquieting fears, and sadly buffeted by the storms of temptation. No sooner does God come to their assistance, than not only inward peace takes possession of their minds, but, from the manifestation of his grace, they are supplied with grounds for joy and gladness. Of this latter kind of quietness David here treats — declaring that, notwithstanding of all the prevalence of agitation of mind, it was now time for him to delight himself calmly in God. The term גמל , gamal, is improperly rendered to reward; because, in Hebrew, it usually signifies to confer a favor, as well as to give a recompense; which is confirmed by him in the following verse, in which he says that his soul was delivered from death. This, then, properly speaking, is the recompense; namely, that God, in delivering him from death, had wiped away the tears from his eyes. The arrangement of the words is transposed; for, according to our idiom, we would rather have said, he hath delivered my feet from falling; and mine eyes from tears, and then he hath delivered my soul from death; for we are wont to follow that arrangement, by which the most important circumstance comes to be mentioned last. Among the Hebrews such a collocation of the words, as in this passage, is by no means improper. This is their import: God has not only rescued me from present death, but also treated me with farther kindness, in chasing away sorrow, and stretching out his hand to prevent me from stumbling. The grace of God is enhanced, in that he restored to life one who had been almost dead.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(7) Return . . .In a very different spirit from the fools address to his soul in the parable. The psalmists repose is not the worldlings serenity nor the sensualists security, but the repose of the quiet conscience and the trusting heart.

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

7. Thy rest A soliloquy not unfrequent. Psa 43:5; Psa 103:1-5. “The rest for the soul is the land of the Lord, the temple, the building of which was just begun, the delightful home, with everything it affords for refreshment for the weary wanderer.” Hengstenberg. This is in accordance with the use of the word, Deu 12:9; that is, a resting place, but the spiritual idea is always included. The “rest” stands opposed to Massah and Meribah Temptation and Strife, (Psa 95:8; Psa 95:11,) but here, it is in contrast with “trouble and sorrow.” Psa 116:3.

Hath dealt bountifully If the verb be taken in the retributive sense, it should be rendered the Lord hath rewarded thee, or requited upon thee; namely, with good, and so it is rendered 1Sa 24:17; Psa 18:20. But the radical sense should rather come out here, namely, to finish. perfect; and render, The Lord hath perfected toward me, that is, all his good pleasure. Comp. Psa 138:8. God’s work in his salvation was complete.

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

In every point of view, these are sweet words indeed! Jesus is the rest wherewith he will cause the weary to rest; he is their refreshing; and all the invitations of Jesus are to this effect, that coming to him, we shall find rest to our souls. Isa 28:12 ; Mat 11:28 . But I must not dismiss these verses, without first observing that there seems to be an allusion to the circumstance of the dove in the ark of Noah. She found no place for the sole of her foot, until she returned to the ark. Now as the ark was a type of Christ, and the name of Noah signifies rest; it cannot be a violence to the phrase to consider the soul of the believer returning to Jesus from all the waves and waters of tribulation in the world, as not unaptly represented by that event. Gen 8:8-9 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Psa 116:7 Return unto thy rest, O my soul; for the LORD hath dealt bountifully with thee.

Ver. 7. Return unto thy rest, O my soul ] The psalmist had been at a great deal of unrest, and much off the hooks, as we say; now, having prayed (for prayer hath vim pacativum, a pacifying property), he calleth his soul to rest, and rocketh it asleep in a spiritual security. Oh, learn this holy art; acquaint thyself with God, acquiesce in him, and be at peace; so shall good be done unto thee, Job 22:21 Sis Sabbathum Christi (Luther).

For the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee ] Of Sertorius it is said, that he performed his promises with words only. And of the Emperor Pertinax, that he was magis blandus quam beneticus, rather kind spoken than beneficial to any; not so the Almighty, Hinc dictus est .

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

rest. Plural for emphasis.

For = Because.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Psa 116:7-9

Psa 116:7-9

THANKFUL FOR REST; HE PLEDGES TO WALK WITH GOD

“Return unto thy rest, O my soul;

For Jehovah hath dealt bountifully with thee.

For thou hast delivered my soul from death,

Mine eyes from tears,

And my feet from falling.

I will walk before Jehovah in the land of the living.”

These lines concern the thoughts and feelings of the psalmist following his deliverance from death through God’s merciful answer of his prayers.

“Return unto thy rest” (Psa 116:7). Gone is the burning anxiety, gone is the distressing fear, gone are the tears and the pains of agony. A great restfulness has healed all of his troubles; and he recognizes the source of it all in the words of the second clause, “Jehovah had dealt bountifully” with him.

“I will walk before Jehovah in the land of the living” (Psa 116:9). This is a pledge to walk “uprightly” before God out of gratitude for his gracious healing and deliverance from death. This being appropriate indeed for such a deliverance, how much more is it true of one who has been redeemed from “eternal death” in the forgiveness of his sins through Jesus Christ our Lord! There is not a Christian on earth who should fail to make this pledge his very own.

E.M. Zerr:

Psa 116:6. Simple is from PATHAIY and Strong defines it, “silly (i.e. seducible).” Preserveth is from SHAMAR, which Strong defines as follows: “properly to hedge about (as with thorns), i.e. guard; generally to protect, attend to, etc.” David cited himself as an example of the Lord’s protection, which indicates that he regarded the word with a more liberal meaning than is generally attached to the word “silly.” The main thought is that God will not suffer the unsuspecting and innocent characters to be taken advantage of by the better informed ones.

Psa 116:7. Return unto thy rest means about the same as bidding one’s self to “take it easy,” or to feel reassured. The basis for such a feeling is the bountiful dealing that the Lord had shown.

Psa 116:8. This verse is largely general and figurative, although some of the favors indicated had literally been bestowed upon David.

Psa 116:9. This verse is an indirect expression of David’s to the effect that he would not be destroyed by his enemies. He fully expected to survive all attempts to destroy him and take him from the association of living beings.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

thy rest: Psa 95:11, Jer 6:16, Jer 30:10, Mat 11:28, Mat 11:29, Heb 4:8-10

dealt: Psa 13:6, Psa 119:17, Hos 2:7

Reciprocal: Gen 8:9 – and she 1Ki 3:6 – mercy Psa 73:28 – But Psa 84:3 – sparrow Psa 119:65 – dealt well Psa 142:7 – thou shalt Isa 11:10 – his rest Jer 4:19 – O my Jer 50:6 – have forgotten Joe 2:26 – that Col 1:12 – Giving

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Psa 116:7-8. Return unto thy rest, O my soul Unto that tranquillity of mind, and cheerful confidence in Gods providence and promises, which thou didst once enjoy. Repose thyself in God; seek not for that rest in the creature which is to be found only in the Creator. God is thy rest; in him only canst thou dwell at ease; to him therefore thou must retire. For the Lord hath dealt bountifully, &c. Hath many ways expressed his bounty most liberally to thee, and provided sufficiently for thy comfort and refreshment. Thou hast delivered my soul Myself; from death From threatening and approaching death; or from spiritual death, the death of sin, and from eternal death, the death of hell. Thou hast caused me to pass from death unto life. Mine eyes from tears That is, my heart, from inordinate grief. When God comforts those that are cast down, when he looses the mourners sackcloth, and girds them with gladness, then he delivers their eyes from tears; which yet will not be perfectly done till we come to that world where God shall wipe away all tears from our eyes, And my feet from failing Namely, from falling into sin, and so into misery.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

116:7 Return unto thy rest, O {d} my soul; for the LORD hath dealt bountifully with thee.

(d) Which was disturbed before, now rest on the Lord, for he has been beneficial towards you.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

There are lessons people should learn from this deliverance. First, believers can rest because God delivers from death (Psa 116:7-8). Second, people to whom God extends His grace should obey him the rest of their lives (Psa 116:9). Third, only God is completely trustworthy (Psa 116:10-11). The writer said he believed he would live, having requested deliverance of God (cf. Psa 116:9). This was his confidence, even though other people told him he would die. They were lying to him.

Read Psa 116:8-9 again from the viewpoint of the Savior in the Upper Room. He not only knew He was facing death, but He also knew He would live again. The Apostle Paul quoted Psa 116:10 in 2Co 4:13-15. He used it to assure believers that we will live again too.

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