John Gill Commentary


John Gill Commentary
"I will cry unto God with my voice, Even unto God with my voice; and he will give ear unto me." — Psalms 77:1 (ASV)
I cried unto God with my voice
Which is to be understood of prayer, and that vocal, and which is importunate and fervent, being made in distress; see (Psalms 3:4) , or "my voice was unto God" F8 , "and I cried"; it was directed to him, and expressed in a very loud and clamorous way:
even unto God with my voice ;
or "my voice was unto God"; which is repeated to show that he prayed again and again, with great eagerness and earnestness, his case being a very afflicted one:
and he gave ear unto me ;
his prayer was not without success; God is a God hearing and answering prayer, according to his promise, (Psalms 50:15) .
"In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord: My hand was stretched out in the night, and slacked not; My soul refused to be comforted." — Psalms 77:2 (ASV)
In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord
Not the creature, for help, and creature amusements to drive away trouble, but the Lord, in private, by prayer and supplication; a time of trouble is a time for prayer, (James 5:13) , all men have their trouble, but the people of God more especially; and there are some particular times in which they have more than usual, and then it may be said to be "a day of trouble" with them; which sometimes arises from themselves, the strength of their corruptions, the weakness of their graces, their backwardness to duties, or poor performance of them; sometimes from others, from the profaneness or persecutions of the men of the world, from the heretical notions or wicked lives of professors; sometimes from the temptations of Satan, and at other times from the Lord himself more immediately, by his withdrawing his presence from them, or by laying his afflicting hand upon them; but, let the trouble come from what quarter it may, it is always right to seek the Lord.
Some think reference is had to the time of trouble mentioned in (Daniel 12:1) ,
my sore ran in the night ;
my "stroke", or "wound" F9 ; so Kimchi interprets it; the wound that was made in his soul, and the pain and anguish, grief and trouble, which flowed from it; see (Jeremiah 6:7) though the word may be literally rendered "my hand" F11 ; and the sense is, either that his hand flowed or was wet with wiping his eyes, or with the tears that flowed from his eyes, which ran down to his fingers' ends; so the Targum,
and ceased not ;
was not remiss and feeble, or was not let down, as Moses's, (Exodus 17:11Exodus 17:12) , it denotes the constancy of prayer, and his continuance in it; he prayed without ceasing:
my soul refused to be comforted :
such was the greatness of his distress, like that of Jacob's and Rachel's, (Genesis 37:35) (Jeremiah 31:15) , it is right to refuse comfort and peace, which men speak to themselves upon the false foundation of their own merit and works; or any but what comes from the God of all comfort, and through Christ, in whom is all solid consolation, and by his Spirit, who is the Comforter; but it is wrong to refuse any that comes from hence, and by means of the promises, the word and ordinances and ministries of the Gospel, or Christian friends; this shows the strength of unbelief.
"I remember God, and am disquieted: I complain, and my spirit is overwhelmed. Selah" — Psalms 77:3 (ASV)
I remembered God, and was troubled
Either the mercy, grace, and goodness of God, as Jarchi; how ungrateful he had been to him, how sadly he had requited him, how unthankful and unholy he was, notwithstanding so much kindness; and when he called this to mind it troubled him; or when he remembered the grace and goodness of God to him in time past, and how it was with him now, that it was not with him as then; this gave him uneasiness, and set him a praying and crying, that it might be with him as heretofore, (Job 29:2–4) , or rather he remembered the greatness and majesty of God, his power and his justice, his purity and holiness, and himself as a worm, a poor weak creature, sinful dust and ashes, not able to stand before him; he considered him not as his father and friend, but as an angry Judge, incensed against him, and demanding satisfaction of him:
I complained ;
of sin and sorrow, of affliction and distress: or "I prayed", or "meditated" F12 ; he thought on his case, and prayed over it, and poured out his complaint unto God, yet found no relief:
and my spirit was overwhelmed ;
covered with grief and sorrow, pressed down with affliction, ready to sink and faint under it:
Selah: (See Gill on Psalms 3:2).
"Thou holdest mine eyes watching: I am so troubled that I cannot speak." — Psalms 77:4 (ASV)
You hold my eyes waking
Or, "the watches", or rather "keepers of the eyes" F13 ; the eyebrows, which protect the eyes; these were held, so that he could not shut them, and get any sleep; so R. Moses Haccohen interprets the words, as Jarchi observes; and so the Targum, ``you hold the brows of my eyes;''
A person in trouble, when he can get some sleep, it interrupts his sorrow, weakens it at least, if it does not put a stop to it; wherefore it is a great mercy to have sleep, and that refreshing, (Psalms 127:1) , but to have this denied, and to have wearisome nights, and be in continual tossing to and fro, is very distressing:
I am so troubled that I cannot speak ;
his spirits were so sunk with weariness, and want of sleep in the night, that he could not speak in the morning; or his heart was so full with sorrow, that he could not utter himself; or it was so great that he could not express it; or his thoughts were such that he dared not declare them; or he was so straitened and shut up in himself that he could not go on speaking unto God in prayer.
"I have considered the days of old, The years of ancient times." — Psalms 77:5 (ASV)
I have considered the days of old
Either the former part of his life, the various occurrences of it, how it had been with him in time past, what experience he had had of the divine goodness; so the Syriac version renders it, "I have considered my days of old"; or the preceding age, and what has happened in that, which his ancestors had acquainted him with.
Or rather many ages past, from the days of Adam to the then present time; at least it may include the Israelites coming out of Egypt, their passage through the Red sea and wilderness, the times of the judges, and what befell them in their days, and how they were delivered out of their troubles; as appears from the latter part of the psalm, and with which agrees the following clause:
the years of ancient times ;
or, "of ages" F14 ; of times long ago past; it is very useful to read the history of the Bible, with respect to ancient times, and so the ecclesiastical history of ages past, and observe the faith and dependence of the Lord's people upon him, and their deliverance out of trouble by him; which may be a means of strengthening faith in him, and of relief under present trials;
But frequently the goodness of former times is only observed as an aggravation of the badness of the present ones, and of trouble in them; see (Ecclesiastes 7:10) , the Targum interprets the whole of happy days and times, paraphrasing it thus,``I have mentioned the good days which were of old, the good years which were of ages past.''
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