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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 78:42

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 78:42

They remembered not his hand, [nor] the day when he delivered them from the enemy.

42. his hand ] His power exerted on their behalf. See Exo 3:19, and often. nor the day &c.] Nor the day when he redeemed them from the adversary (R.V.).

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

They remembered not his hand – His gracious interpositions; the manifestations of his power. They forgot that power had been exercised which showed that he was omnipotent – that there was no limit to his ability to aid them.

Nor the day when he delivered them from the enemy – The time when he rescued them. The power then manifested was sufficient to defend and deliver them in any new dangers that could befall them. The margin is, from affliction. The Hebrew will admit of either interpretation. The sense is not materially changed.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

His hand; the great and glorious works of his hand on their behalf.

Nor the day; nor that remarkable and never to be forgotten day, that self-same day, as it is called, Exo 12:41, which God had fixed four hundred years before, Gen 15:13, in which God delivered them from their greatest enemy, the tyrant Pharaoh.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

They remembered not his hand,…. Which brought them out of Egypt, and dashed their enemies in pieces, and which had been so often opened to supply their wants in the wilderness; the Targum renders it, the miracles of his hand:

nor the day when he delivered them from the enemy; Pharaoh king of Egypt; that very memorable day in which they were delivered out of his hands, that selfsame day which had been fixed, by promise and prophecy many hundreds of years before, in which the hosts of the Lord went out of Egypt, Ex 12:41, times when as well as places where deliverances and salvation have been wrought should not be forgotten; and forgetfulness of the goodness of God in times past is often the cause and occasion of sinning against him, which, by a remembrance of his kind appearances, might be prevented.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

42. They remembered not his hand. The sacred writer still continues to upbraid the Israelites; for the simple remembrance of God’s benefits might have restrained them, had they not wilfully and perversely forgotten whatever they had experienced. From this impious forgetfulness proceed waywardness and all rebellion. The hand of God, as is well known, is by the figure metonomy taken for his power. In the deliverance of the chosen tribes from Egypt here celebrated, the hand of God was stretched forth in a new and an unusual manner. And their impiety, against which the prophet now inveighs, was rendered the more detestable, from the fact that they accounted as nothing, or soon forgat, that which no length of time ought to have effaced from their memory. Farther, he recounts certain examples of the power of God, which he calls first signs, and then miracles, (verse 43,) that, by the recital of these, he may again rebuke the shameful stupidity of the people. By both these words he expresses the same thing; but in the second clause of the verse, the word miracles gives additional emphasis, implying that, by such strange and unheard-of events, the Egyptians had at that time been stricken with such terror as ought not to have vanished so speedily from the minds of the Israelites.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(42) The reminiscence of the plagues that follows is not a complete enumeration, and does not proceed in the order of the historic narrative.

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

Psa 78:42 They remembered not his hand, [nor] the day when he delivered them from the enemy.

Ver. 42. They remembered not his hand ] Forgetfulness is the root of rebellion and of all vice, as the Genevists well note here. Eaten bread is soon forgotten, Nihil citius senescit quam gratia (Seneca).

Nor the day when he delivered them ] viz. From Pharaoh, but so soon as they had sucked the honey they despised the flower.

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

They remembered not. Contrast Psa 78:39, “He remembered”.

delivered. Hebrew. padah, as in Exo 13:13.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

remembered: Psa 78:11, Psa 78:21, Psa 78:22, Psa 136:10-15, Exo 13:9, Isa 11:11, Jer 32:21

the day: Psa 106:7-10, Exo 14:12, Exo 14:30, Exo 14:31

the enemy: or, affliction

Reciprocal: Exo 18:8 – how the Lord Num 14:11 – believe me Deu 7:18 – remember Jdg 8:34 – remembered Neh 9:17 – mindful Psa 78:12 – Marvellous Psa 78:35 – remembered Psa 106:21 – forgat Eze 16:43 – thou hast Act 7:36 – after Act 13:17 – and with

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

78:42 They {a} remembered not his hand, [nor] the day when he delivered them from the enemy.

(a) The forgetfulness of God’s benefits is the root of rebellion and all vice.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes