Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 104:27
These wait all upon thee; that thou mayest give [them] their meat in due season.
27. These wait all &c.] All of them wait upon thee. Not marine animals only, but all living creatures are meant, as in Gen 1:29-30. God is the great householder, dispensing to all His family their portions. Cp. Psa 145:15-16; Psa 147:9.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
These wait all upon thee – That is, These are all dependent on thee. It does not, of course, mean that they wait in the sense that they are conscious of their dependence on God, but that they are actually dependent. The original word implies the idea of expecting or hoping, and is so rendered in the Septuagint and Vulgate. They have no other ground of expectation or hope but in thee.
That thou mayest give them their meat in due season – Their food at the proper time. That is, They are constantly dependent on thee, that thou mayest give them food from day to day. Perhaps there is also the idea that they do not lay up or hoard anything; or that they cannot anticipate their own needs, but must receive from one day to another all that they want directly from God.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 104:27-28
These wait all upon Thee; that Thou mayest give them their meat in due season.
The waiting world supplied
Often the poet, rather than the scientist, is the true interpreter of nature. Mystic links which the scientist kens not, bind the universe to God. The devout poet hears God in the thunder; sees His touch on the smoking volcano; beholds His glory in sun and stars; hears the trees clapping their hands before Him: and, listening to the sounds of want and woe rising from a travailing creation, catches the accents of a universal prayer; while, in the provision made for every living thing he sees the bountiful answer from the opened hand of Deity.
I. Universal dependence. These all wait upon Thee, etc. We are dependent for life and all the good of life upon circumstances beyond our control. Earth, air, water, warmth, light, all so necessary, may all become destructive. They are all under law; but God Himself made and enforces their laws. The universe is an embodied thought of Deity, the product of His will: it runs its course sustained by the power which called it into being. The Creator is the Sustainer; the Alpha is the Omega of existence.
II. Universal prayer. The eyes of all wait upon Thee, etc. Want looks up into the face of fulness. The sight of want and woe is a prayer to the bountiful. A drooping plant, a pining cat, or a crying babe, appeals to us all the more powerfully, because the appeal is inarticulate. Now, God is intimately connected with all forms of life, and perfectly understands the language of all His creatures. He sees the thirsty earth pining for rain; He hears the cry of the young ravens and roar of the lions (Jon 3:7-8; Jon 4:11). But it is reserved to man as the high priest of Nature, to understand both his own wants and those of the lower creation; and to voice those needs in the heaven-taught prayer, Our Father, give us this day our daily bread.
III. Universal supply. Thou openest Thy hand–the hand of infinite power, wisdom, benevolence, love–and the rain falls, the sun shines, the earth yields her fruit, the pastures are clothed with flocks; the valleys also are covered over with corn, and the desire of every living thing is satisfied. How pleasantly He prepares the table in our sight. He spreads His cloth of green: He decks it with the bloom of innumerable flowers: He permits us to watch, while His servants, the Laws of Nature, gather out of the dewdrop, the sunbeam, the atmosphere and the earth, the raw material which they compound into living food. Gradually earth is laden with the bounty of heaven. Food and decoration are here in rich profusion and golden glory. Man and beast alike are satisfied with the hospitality dispensed by the great Father of all. So also has He spread and richly furnished the Gospel table in our sight; so that we may in His Word trace the whole process of preparation: and now, for our souls needs it is our privilege to gather what He has given. (C. O. EIdridge, B.A.)
The bountifulness of God in His providence
I. His munificence to His creatures is general. Consider–
1. How large a family He provides for.
2. The variety of the provisions which He makes.
3. The regularity with which all is provided.
4. The abundance which He provides for all.
5. The ease with which tie distributes the provisions.
6. He does all this gratuitously.
II. His special generosity to man. This is seen–
1. In His preparing the earth to bring forth fruit to the service of man.
2. In His unremitting supervision of the earth.
3. In that all the gifts bestowed upon others are intended for mans benefit.
4. In that He makes provision for mans soul. (D. Roberts, D.D.)
How the lower creatures are fed
On the pampas, whenever grasshoppers, mice, frogs, or crickets become excessively abundant, we confidently look for the appearance of multitudes of the birds that prey on them . . . It is plain that these birds have been drawn from over an immense area to one spot; and the question is how have they been drawn? Many large birds possessing great powers of flight are, when not occupied with the business of propagation, incessantly wandering from place to place in search of food. They are not, as a rule, regular migrants, for their wanderings begin and end irrespective of seasons, and where they find abundance they remain the whole year. They fly at a very great height, and traverse immense distances. When the favourite food of any one of these species is plentiful in any particular region all the individuals that discover it remain, and attract to them all of their kind passing overhead. This happens on the pampas with the stork, the short-eared owl, the hooded gull, and the dominican or black-backed gull–the leading species among the feathered nomads: a few first appear like harbingers; these are presently joined by newcomers in considerable numbers, and before long they are in myriads. (Hudson.)
Divine sufficiency
After a world of hungry men have fed upon Christ, He remains inexhaustible as at the beginning; like the bread in His own miracles, of which the pieces that were broken and ready to be given to the eaters were more than the original stock as it appeared when the meal began. Or like the fabled meal in the Norse Walhalla, which the gods sat down to to-day, and to-morrow there it is, all on the board, as abundant and full as ever. (A. Maclaren, D.D.)
Sufficiency for all varieties of experience
So manifold are the aspects of Gods infinite sufficiency, that every soul, in every possible variety of circumstance, will find there just what will suit it. That deep fountain is like some of those fabled springs which gave forth whatsoever precious draught any thirsty lips asked. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 27. These wait all upon thee] The innumerable fry of the smaller aquatic animals, as well as whales, dolphins, porpoises, and sharks, all have their meat from God. He has in his gracious providence furnished that sort of food which is suitable to all. And this provision is various; not only for every kind of fish does God provide food, but a different kind of aliment for each in its different periods of growth. Here are displayed the goodness and infinitely varied providence of God: “He giveth them their meat in due season.”
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
These all, both beasts and fishes,
wait upon thee, expect supplies only from thy providence; which is said of them figuratively, and with an allusion to the manner of tame beasts and fowls, which commonly look after and wait upon those persons who bring their food to them.
In due season; when it is necessary or convenient for them; by which expression he intimates the moderation of the beasts in their desires of food, and tacitly reproves the intemperance of men who feed themselves in season and out of season.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
27-30. The entire dependence ofthis immense family on God is set forth. With Him, to kill or makealive is equally easy. To hide His face is to withdraw favor (Ps13:1). By His spirit, or breath, or mere word, He gives life. Itis His constant providence which repairs the wastes of time anddisease.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
These wait all upon thee,…. Or “hope in thee” s; not only the fishes of the sea, but the beasts of the field; for to them the psalmist returns, as Aben Ezra observes; to whom hope and expectation of their food and waiting for it at the hands of God, are ascribed; the allusion seems to be to tame creatures, who come at their certain times and wait on them that have been used to give them their food; and it may instruct us to wait on the Lord, as for our daily bread, so for our spiritual food, in prayer, and in public ordinances, where and from whom we may hope and expect to have it.
That thou mayest give them their meat in due season; or “in his time” t; everyone in its own time, which is natural to them, and they have been used to; at which time the Lord gives it to them and they take it; it would be well if men would do so likewise, eat and drink in proper and due time, Ec 10:17. Christ speaks a word in season to weary souls; his ministers give to everyone their portion of meat in due season; and a word spoken in due season, how good and sweet is it? Isa 1:4
s “sperant”, Pagninus, Cocceius, Michaelis; “sperabunt”, Montanus. t “in tempore suo”, Pagninus, Montanus, Tigurine version, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, &c.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
27. All these wait upon thee The prophet here again describes God as acting the part of the master of a household, and a foster-father towards all sorts of living creatures, by providing liberally for them. He had said before, that God made food to grow on the mountains for the support of cattle, and that sustenance is ministered to the very lions by the hand of the same God, although they live upon prey. Now he amplifies this wonder of the divine beneficence by an additional circumstance. While the different species of living creatures are almost innumerable, and the number in each species is so great, there is yet not one of them which does not stand in need of daily food. The meaning then of the expression, All things wait upon thee, is, that they could not continue in existence even for a few days, unless God were to supply their daily need, and to nourish each of them in particular. We thus see why there is so great a diversity of fruits; for God assigns and appoints to each species of living creatures the food suitable and proper for them. The brute beasts are not indeed endued with reason and judgment to seek the supply of their wants from God, but stooping towards the earth, they seek to fill themselves with food; still the prophet speaks with propriety, when he represents them as waiting upon God; for their hunger must be relieved by his bounty, else they would soon die. Nor is the specification of the season when God furnishes them with food superfluous, since God lays up in store for them, that they may have the means of sustenance during the whole course of the year. As the earth in winter shuts up her bowels, what would become of them if he did not provide them with food for a long time? The miracle, then, is the greater from the circumstance, that God, by making the earth fruitful at stated seasons, extends in this way his blessing to the rest of the year which threatens us with hunger and famine. How wretched would we be when the earth in winter shuts up her riches, were not our hearts cheered with the hope of a new increase? In this sense, the Psalmist appropriately affirms, that God opens his hand If wheat should grow up daily, God’s providence would not be so manifest. But when the earth becomes barren, it is as if God shut his hand. Whence it follows, that when he makes it fruitful, he, so to speak, stretches out his hand from heaven to give us food. Now if he supply wild and brute beasts with sustenance in due season, by which they are fed to the full, his blessing will doubtless be to us as an inexhaustible source of plenty, provided we ourselves do not hinder it from flowing to us by our unbelief.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
27. These wait all upon thee Here is the moral of all these beautiful allusions to living creatures. God feeds them. They wait on God as if their eyes were fixed on him in expectation of being fed, as the Hebrew denotes. See Job 38:41; Psa 145:15; Psa 147:9.
In due season Literally, In his time. The idea is that they, having no stores laid up, but seeking food only when impelled by hunger, are yet so supplied with means of sustentation, and endowed with instincts and prehensive appliances for discovering and securing their appropriate food, that to the eye of reason they discover and declare the wisdom and beneficence of the Creator, in thus providing for them. Compare Mat 6:26
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Psa 104:27 These wait all upon thee; that thou mayest give [them] their meat in due season.
Ver. 27. These wait all upon thee ] The great housekeeper of the world, who carvest them out their meet measures of meat, and at fit seasons. Of thee they have it, per causarum concatenationem.
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Psa 104:27-30
27They all wait for You
To give them their food in due season.
28You give to them, they gather it up;
You open Your hand, they are satisfied with good.
29You hide Your face, they are dismayed;
You take away their spirit, they expire
And return to their dust.
30You send forth Your Spirit, they are created;
And You renew the face of the ground.
Psa 104:27-28 They wait for You This shows God’s care and providence for all creatures with breath (cf. Gen 1:29-30; Col 1:17).
Psa 104:29-30 This is simply the fact that the old die (cf. Gen 3:19; Job 10:9; Psa 90:3) and young are born to replace them. This is an obvious allusion to mankind being created out of the dust of the earth and God breathing into him the breath of life (cf. Gen 2:7).
However, it is interesting that a human becomes a nephesh (BDB 659) in Gen 2:7, which means soul life. This term nephesh is also used to refer to the animals in Genesis (cf. Gen 1:24; Gen 2:19). See note online at Gen 35:18.
Notice the double use of spirit (i.e., breath, BDB 924, see SPECIAL TOPIC: SPIRIT IN THE BIBLE ).
1. the human spirit or life force
2. God’s Spirit (or breath of Gen 2:7)
In the OT the Spirit is a force from God who accomplishes His purposes (i.e., Gen 1:2), but in the NT the concept becomes personal (see Special Topic: Personhood of the Spirit).
Psa 36:6, Psa 136:25, Psa 145:15, Psa 145:16, Psa 147:9, Job 38:41, Luk 12:24-28
Reciprocal: Gen 1:29 – to you Gen 6:21 – General Deu 8:3 – doth Job 36:31 – he giveth Job 39:8 – General Psa 145:9 – good Joe 2:22 – afraid Jon 4:11 – and also Mat 6:26 – the fowls Mat 10:29 – and one Act 17:25 – seeing 1Co 9:9 – Doth Gal 6:9 – for
Psa 104:27-30. These all Both beasts and fishes, wait upon thee Expect supplies from thy providence: which is spoken of them figuratively, and with an allusion to the manner of tame beasts and fowls, which commonly look after and wait upon those persons who bring their food to them. That thou mayest give them their meat, &c. When it is necessary or convenient for them. That thou givest them they gather Whatsoever they receive is from the bounty of thy gift, and they do their part for the obtaining of it: what thou placest within their reach they gather, and expect not that thy providence should put it into their mouths; and with what they gather they are satisfied. For when thou openest thy hand To supply their wants, they are filled with good And desire no more than what thou seest fit to give them. Thou hidest thy face Withdrawest, or suspendest the favour and care of thy providence; they are troubled Dejected and distressed through want and misery. Thou takest away their breath Which is in thy hand, and then, and not till then, they die and return to their dust To the earth, from whence they had their original. Thou sendest forth thy spirit That spirit by which they live, which may be called Gods spirit, because given and preserved by him. Or rather, that quickening power of God, by which he produces and preserves life in the creatures from time to time. For he speaks not here of the first creation, but of the continued production and preservation of living creatures. They are created That is, either, 1st, The same living creatures, which were languishing and dying, are strangely revived and restored. Or, 2d, Other living creatures are produced or generated; the word created being taken in its largest sense, for the production of things by second causes. And thou renewest the face of the earth And thus, by thy wise and powerful providence, thou preservest the succession of living creatures upon the earth, which otherwise would be desolate and without inhabitants. It is justly observed here, by Dr. Dodd, that the ideas in these verses can be excelled by nothing, but by the concise elegance of the expressions; which convey to the human mind the most sublime and awful conceptions of that Almighty Being who does but open his hand, and the creatures are filled with good; does but hide his face, and they are troubled and die; does but send forth his Spirit, and they are created.
104:27 {o} These wait all upon thee; that thou mayest give [them] their meat in due season.
(o) God is a nourishing father, who provides for all creatures their daily foods.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes