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Take away my disgrace that I dread, For your ordinances are good.
Verse Takeaways
1
Fearing God's Dishonor
The psalmist's primary fear isn't persecution, but the 'reproach' that his own sin could bring upon God's name. Commentators like Spurgeon and Gill explain this is a prayer to be kept from personal failure, so that God's enemies have no valid reason to blaspheme. The believer's greatest dread is causing the good laws of God ('your judgments are good') to be spoken of evil because of their actions.
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Psalms
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9
18th Century
Theologian
Turn away my reproach - The reproach which is likely to come upon me from being a professed worshipper of God. In all ages good men have b…
19th Century
Bishop
My reproach which I fear. —The word for fear is an unusual one, used in Deuteronomy 9:19; Deuteronomy 28:60, for very strong dr…
Preacher
Turn away my reproach which I fear: for your judgments are good.
I fear that I might bring reproach upon you, and then upon myself.…
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16th Century
Take away my reproach. It is not certain to what reproach he alludes. Knowing that many slanderers were watching for an opportunity to rev…
17th Century
Pastor
Turn away my reproach which I fear Either for the sake of religion, which was disagreeable to him; and he might be a…
Minister
Teach me your statutes, not the mere words, but the way of applying them to myself. God, by his Spirit, gives a right understanding. But the Spirit…
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