Scripture Spot Logo

Verse of the Day

WEB

Author Spotlight

Loading featured author...

Report Issue

See a formatting issue or error?

Let us know →

My flesh and my heart fails, But God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.

Verse Takeaways

1

The Inevitable Failure of Self

Commentators explain that "my flesh and my heart faileth" describes the total exhaustion of our human resources—physical strength, emotional stability, and mental fortitude. This failure is most acute in sickness, deep sorrow, or at the moment of death. The verse forces us to confront our own limitations and our "nothingness" apart from God, setting the stage for a profound truth about divine sufficiency.

See 3 Verse Takeaways

Book Overview

Psalms

Author

Audience

Composition

Teaching Highlights

Outline

+ 5 more

See Overview

Commentaries

9

Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes

On Psalms 73:26

18th Century

Theologian

My flesh and my heart faileth - Flesh and heart here seem to refer to the whole man, body and soul; and the idea is, that his power…

Charles Spurgeon

Charles Spurgeon

On Psalm 73:26

19th Century

Preacher

My flesh and my heart faileth:

I see what a poor thing I am. I allowed my flesh and my heart to gain mastery over me, and I got caug…

John Calvin

John Calvin

On Psalms 73:26

16th Century

Theologian

My flesh and my heart have failed. Some understand the first part of the verse as meaning that David’s heart and flesh failed him through …

Premium

Go Ad-Free

Go ad-free and create your own bookmark library

John Gill

John Gill

On Psalms 73:26

17th Century

Pastor

My flesh and my heart fails
Either through vehement desires of communion with God deferred, see ([Reference Psalms 8…

Matthew Henry

Matthew Henry

On Psalms 73:21–28

17th Century

Minister

God would not allow His people to be tempted if His grace were not sufficient, not only to save them from harm but also to make them gain from it. …