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Ensure your servant`s well-being. Don`t let the proud oppress me.
Verse Takeaways
1
God as Your Guarantor
The psalmist asks God to "be surety," a term commentators explain is like co-signing a loan or guaranteeing a debt. He is asking God to take personal responsibility for his well-being and to stand between him and his oppressors. John Calvin notes this is a plea from someone in extreme danger, showing that in our most desperate moments, we can ask God to make our cause His own and act as our personal defender.
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Psalms
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7
18th Century
Presbyterian
Be surety for your servant for good — regarding the meaning of the word rendered here as “be surety,” see the notes on Job 17:3 and…
19th Century
Anglican
AIN.
Be surety. — Just as Judah became security for the safety of Benjamin (Genesis 43:9), so …
Baptist
Be surety for thy servant for good: let not the proud oppress me.
As far as I remember, this is the only verse which does not menti…
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16th Century
Protestant
Become surety for your servant for good. This prayer is almost similar to that of the preceding verse, for I prefer translating the Hebrew…
17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Be surety for your servant for good The psalmist was, in a like case with Hezekiah, oppressed; and therefore desires…
Happy is the man who, acting on gospel principles, does justice to all around. Christ our Surety, having paid our debt and ransom, secures all the …
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