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He spoke, and the locusts came, And the grasshoppers, without number,
Verse Takeaways
1
The Power of God's Word
Commentators like Spurgeon and Calvin emphasize the immense power in the phrase "He spake." God did not need to struggle or conjure; His mere word was enough to summon an overwhelming army of locusts. This demonstrates the absolute and immediate authority of God's command over all of creation.
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Book Overview
Psalms
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6
18th Century
Theologian
See an account of these plagues in Exodus 6–11. Compare Psalms 78:43-51. This is mostly a mere enumeration of the plagues in the order in which the…
19th Century
Bishop
Caterpillars.—To the locust, ‘aarbeh, exclusively mentioned in Exodus, the psalmist adds, as a poetical synonym to suit h…
Preacher
There is great sublimity in this expression. God had only to speak, and whole battalions of devouring locusts and caterpillars seemed to leap out o…
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16th Century
He spake, and the grasshopper came. This calamity, which was brought upon the fields, could not be attributed to Fortune, for the grasshop…
17th Century
Pastor
He spoke, and the locusts came A great army of them, and covered the land, that it was even darkened by them; and we…
Minister
As the believer commonly thrives best in his soul when under the cross; so the church also flourishes most in true holiness, and increases in numbe…
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