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												Verses 1-4Psalms 105:1-4. Call upon his 
												name — Or, proclaim his name, as 
												קראו בשׁמו, kiru bishmo, may be 
												properly rendered: that is, 
												proclaim the fame and glory of 
												his works, as it follows. Make 
												known his deeds, &c. — Let each 
												of you among his people, and 
												even among the heathen, declare 
												God’s mighty acts as he has 
												opportunity; glory ye in his 
												holy name — Glory in the God 
												whom you serve as the only true 
												God, and a Being possessed of 
												infinite power and goodness. For 
												nothing can be so great an 
												honour to you as that you are 
												the servants of such a mighty 
												Lord, who infinitely transcends 
												all other beings. Let them 
												rejoice that seek the Lord — 
												That seek an acquaintance and 
												friendship with him; that seek 
												to know, love, and serve him 
												here, and to enjoy him hereafter 
												above all the things of the 
												world; seek the Lord and his 
												strength — That is, either, 1st, 
												Seek him in his strength, 
												namely, in his sanctuary, as 
												some interpret the expression, 
												or before the ark, which is 
												called God’s strength: or, 2d, 
												Seek his strength, that is, his 
												grace or Spirit, to strengthen 
												you against your enemies, to 
												enable you to do and suffer his 
												will, and to work in you that 
												which is well pleasing in his 
												sight. Many ancient versions 
												read the clause, Seek the Lord, 
												and be strengthened; and, 
												certain it is, they who would be 
												strengthened in the inward man, 
												must derive strength from God by 
												faith and prayer. Seek his face 
												evermore — That is, his favour, 
												or the light of his countenance; 
												seek to enjoy this to eternity, 
												and therefore continue seeking 
												it to the end of the time of 
												your probation. Seek it while 
												you live in this world, and you 
												shall have it while you live in 
												the other world: and even then 
												you shall be for ever seeking it 
												in an infinite progression, and 
												yet be for ever satisfied with 
												it.
 
 Verses 5-7
 Psalms 105:5-7. Remember the 
												judgments of his mouth — Either, 
												1st, The laws delivered from his 
												mouth: Or rather, 2d, The 
												plagues, or punishments, which 
												he brought upon Egypt by his 
												mere word or command. O ye seed 
												of Abraham his servant — Born in 
												his house, his church, and being 
												thereby entitled to the 
												privileges of his servants, you 
												are also bound to do the duty of 
												servants, to consult your 
												master’s honour, obey his 
												commands, and do all that is in 
												your power to advance his 
												interest. Ye children of Jacob 
												his chosen — To whom he 
												restrains the former more 
												general expression, because the 
												posterity of Jacob were the only 
												branch of Abraham’s seed 
												included in the covenant, and 
												entitled to the blessings here 
												mentioned. He is the Lord — 
												Hebrew, Jehovah, our God — A 
												Being self-existent and self- 
												sufficient, having an 
												incontestable sovereignty over 
												us, and unquestionable power to 
												protect and save us. We depend 
												upon him; our expectation is 
												from him; and we ought to be 
												devoted to his service. His 
												judgments are in all the earth — 
												Either, 1st, The fame of his 
												judgments upon the Egyptians is 
												spread over the face of the 
												whole earth: Or, 2d, He executes 
												his judgments upon all nations 
												and people.
 
 Verses 8-11
 Psalms 105:8-11. He hath 
												remembered his covenant for ever 
												— Or, will remember it; that is, 
												practically, so as to perform 
												and make it good. The word — The 
												promise; which he commanded — 
												Established, or appointed, to a 
												thousand generations — To all 
												generations; a certain number 
												being put for an uncertain. And 
												his oath unto Isaac — Wherewith 
												he ratified the covenant with 
												him, Genesis 26:3. And confirmed 
												the same unto Jacob for a law — 
												That it might be as firm and 
												irrevocable as a law; saying, 
												Unto thee will I give the land 
												of Canaan — The patriarchs had 
												no right to it, save by promise, 
												and their seed were to be put in 
												possession of it, not by the 
												common ways of settling nations, 
												but by miracles; God would give 
												it them himself, and, as it 
												were, with his own hand; and so 
												that it should be, as their lot, 
												assigned and measured out to 
												them by God, even the lot of 
												their inheritance — To which 
												they should have a sure title by 
												virtue of their birth: it should 
												come to them by descent, not by 
												purchase; by the favour of God, 
												and not by any merit of their 
												own.
 
 Verses 12-15
 Psalms 105:12-15. When they were 
												but few in number — Hebrew, מתי 
												מספר, methee mispar, men of 
												number, so few as easily to be 
												numbered, in opposition to what 
												their posterity afterward were, 
												as the sand of the sea without 
												number: yea, very few — The word 
												כמעשׂ, chimgnat, thus rendered, 
												signifies either small as to 
												number, or as to regard and 
												esteem. The meaning probably is, 
												that they were insignificant and 
												inconsiderable as to power, the 
												fewness of their number being 
												mentioned just before. And 
												strangers in it — Such were the 
												patriarchs in the land of 
												Canaan. They went from one 
												nation to another — Both in 
												Canaan, where there were seven 
												nations, and in Egypt. He 
												reproved kings for their sakes — 
												Both verbally, and by his 
												judgments. Saying, Touch not — 
												Hurt not, as the word נגע, 
												nagang, is often used; mine 
												anointed — My prophets, Abraham, 
												Isaac, and Jacob, who are called 
												God’s anointed, because they 
												were eminently blessed of God, 
												replenished with the gifts and 
												graces of the Holy Spirit, in 
												respect of which many persons 
												are said, in the Scriptures, to 
												be anointed, who never had any 
												material oil applied to them; 
												and because they were thus 
												consecrated to be his peculiar 
												people, and to be kings and 
												priests in their families. And 
												they are called prophets, 
												because God familiarly conversed 
												with them, and revealed his will 
												to them, and by them to others.
 
 Verses 16-18
 Psalms 105:16-18. He called for 
												a famine — That is, he brought a 
												famine upon the land. He brake 
												the whole staff of bread — 
												Bread, which is the staff or 
												support of men’s lives. He sent 
												a man before them — Who was to 
												nourish them in the famine: sent 
												him, by the direction of his 
												secret providence, many years 
												before the famine began. Such 
												are the foresight and timely 
												care of Divine Providence. Whose 
												feet they hurt with fetters — 
												Being unjustly charged with a 
												most heinous crime. He was laid 
												in iron — Hebrew, נפשׁו ברזל 
												באה, the iron entered his soul, 
												which seems to be added 
												emphatically, to aggravate the 
												misery of his imprisonment, and 
												to show how grievous it was to 
												his very soul. Undoubtedly the 
												false accusation, which was the 
												cause of his imprisonment, the 
												injury which was done him, and 
												the foul and public scandal 
												which lay upon him, must have 
												pained him extremely.
 
 Verses 19-22
 Psalms 105:19-22. Until the time 
												that his word came — Dr. 
												Waterland renders the verse, 
												Until the time that his saying 
												came to pass, the word of the 
												Lord purged him: and Green 
												translates it, Until the time 
												that his prediction had come to 
												pass, and the word of the Lord 
												cleared him. The meaning seems 
												evidently to be, that 
												notwithstanding his eminent 
												prudence, innocence, and piety, 
												he was detained in prison until 
												the time that his word, or 
												cause, came before the king, and 
												was known; (so it is in our old 
												translation;) or, until his 
												word, or prediction, concerning 
												the chief butler’s promotion, 
												came to pass; for this was the 
												means of Joseph’s enlargement 
												and justification; since a 
												person, guilty of the crime with 
												which he stood charged, would 
												not have been inspired to 
												foretel future events. Can we 
												find, said Pharaoh, such a man 
												as this, a man in whom the 
												Spirit of God is? Genesis 41:38. 
												The word of the Lord tried him — 
												Either, 1st, Discovered him unto 
												Pharaoh and his courtiers, and 
												showed how innocent, holy, and 
												wise a person he was, and 
												thereby cleared him from those 
												calumnies which had been cast 
												upon him, and so prepared the 
												way for his release, as it 
												follows Psalms 105:20. Or, 2d, 
												Tried his sincerity and 
												constancy, (the word of the Lord 
												being put for his commandment or 
												decree,) tried him in the 
												furnace of affliction, there 
												refining and preparing him for 
												his approaching exaltation to 
												glory and honour. He made him 
												ruler of all his substance — 
												Hebrew, בכל קנינו, of all his 
												possession; that is, of his 
												whole kingdom. To bind his 
												princes — By his commands; and, 
												if they were refractory, to 
												punish them. And teach his 
												senators wisdom — His wisest 
												counsellors, whom he commanded 
												to receive instruction from 
												Joseph on all occasions.
 
 Verse 23-24
 Psalms 105:23-24. Israel also — 
												Jacob in person, with his 
												children; came into Egypt — 
												Where he and all his were very 
												comfortably and honourably 
												provided for many years. Thus 
												the New Testament church has a 
												place provided for her, even in 
												the wilderness, where she is 
												nourished for a time, times, and 
												half a time, Revelation 12:14. 
												Jacob sojourned in the land of 
												Ham — Ham was the father of 
												Mizraim, or the Egyptians, 
												Genesis 10:6. And he, God, 
												increased the people greatly — 
												According to the promise made to 
												Abraham, that his seed should be 
												as the sand of the sea for 
												multitude; and made them 
												stronger than their enemies — 
												More and mightier, according to 
												Pharaoh’s confession, Exodus 
												1:9, than the Egyptians, who, of 
												friends, were now become their 
												enemies.
 
 Verse 25
 Psalms 105:25. He turned their 
												heart to hate his people — Not 
												by putting hatred to his people 
												into their hearts, which would 
												not have been consistent, either 
												with the holiness of his nature, 
												or with the truth of his word; 
												and which was altogether 
												unnecessary, because they, like 
												the rest of mankind, were 
												corrupt by nature, and had the 
												seeds of that, and all other 
												evils, in their hearts; but by 
												withdrawing the influences of 
												that Holy Spirit, which they had 
												long grieved, and done despite 
												unto, and leaving them to their 
												own mistakes, passions, and 
												corrupt inclinations, which, of 
												their own accord, were to take 
												that course. Through this their 
												innate depravity and wickedness 
												it was, that God’s goodness to 
												his people, in increasing their 
												numbers and prospering their 
												affairs, exasperated the 
												Egyptians more and more against 
												them; and though their old 
												antipathy to the Hebrews (of 
												which we read Genesis 43:32; 
												Genesis 46:34) had been laid 
												asleep for a while, yet now it 
												revived and broke out with more 
												violence than ever. Formerly, 
												they hated them because they 
												despised them, now, because they 
												feared them. They dealt subtly 
												with them — Used crafty 
												counsels, and set their wits to 
												work to find out ways and means 
												to weaken and waste them, and 
												prevent their increase. They 
												made their burdens heavy, and 
												their lives bitter; and slew 
												their male children as soon as 
												they were born, and took every 
												method they could think of 
												entirely to destroy them.
 
 Verse 26-27
 Psalms 105:26-27. He sent Moses, 
												&c. — “When the tyranny and 
												oppression of Pharaoh were at 
												the highest, and Israel cried 
												unto Jehovah because of the 
												bondage, he remembered his 
												promise to Abraham, and sent 
												Moses, with Aaron, to effect 
												that mighty deliverance, which 
												was to be the grand pledge and 
												figure of our redemption by 
												Jesus Christ.” They showed his 
												signs among them — Hebrew, דברי 
												אתותיו, dibree othothaiv, the 
												words of his signs; an 
												emphatical expression. First 
												they boldly declared the word 
												and will of God concerning the 
												several plagues, and then they 
												actually inflicted them.
 
 Verses 28-31
 Psalms 105:28-31. He sent 
												darkness, &c. — This was one of 
												the last plagues, though here 
												mentioned first: God sent 
												darkness, and, coming with 
												commission from him, it came 
												with efficacy; his command made 
												it dark. And they rebelled not 
												against his word — That is, the 
												people of Israel were not 
												disobedient to God’s commands by 
												Moses and Aaron, respecting 
												killing the passover, and making 
												preparation, in other respects, 
												to leave Egypt. The old 
												translation follows the LXX., 
												and reads, They were not 
												obedient to his word; which may 
												be applied to Pharaoh and the 
												Egyptians, who, notwithstanding 
												the terror of this plague, would 
												not let the people go; but there 
												is no ground for this 
												interpretation in the Hebrew, 
												the reading of which, however, 
												לא מרו את דברוו, Houbigant 
												translates, His words were not 
												changed, that is, “What God had 
												commanded to be done was done.” 
												Their land brought forth frogs — 
												That is, their country brought 
												them forth; for they were 
												produced by their rivers, Exodus 
												8:3. In the chambers of their 
												kings — Which entered into the 
												chambers of Pharaoh, and his 
												sons, and his chief nobles, and 
												governors of provinces under 
												him; such persons being often 
												called kings in Scripture. And 
												lice in all their coasts — Or 
												borders, that is, in all their 
												land, even to the remotest parts 
												or borders of it. For a further 
												elucidation of the particulars 
												contained in these and the 
												following verses, to Psalms 
												105:37, see notes on Psalms 
												78:43-51.
 
 Verses 37-39
 Psalms 105:37-39. He brought 
												them forth also with silver and 
												gold — Laden with the spoils of 
												their enemies, which God, who is 
												the absolute lord of all 
												property, empowered them to ask 
												and receive of them, and 
												thereby, as a righteous judge, 
												awarded them “the wages due to 
												their great labours, the 
												Egyptians being now willing and 
												ready to furnish them with any 
												thing required in order to 
												dismiss them,” Exodus 12:33. 
												There was not one feeble person 
												among them — Diseased or unable 
												for his journey, although it was 
												to be performed on foot; which, 
												in so vast a body, and in a time 
												of such mortality as it had been 
												in Egypt, and among a people 
												which had been so long and so 
												dreadfully oppressed as the 
												Israelites had been, was 
												wonderful. Egypt was glad when 
												they departed — For God had so 
												wonderfully owned them, and 
												pleaded their cause, that the 
												fear of Israel fell upon them, 
												and they owned themselves 
												baffled and overcome. He spread 
												a cloud for a covering — To 
												protect them from the heat of 
												the sun, which, in that hot and 
												open country, would otherwise 
												have been intolerable to them, 
												especially in so long a journey: 
												see on Psalms 88:14.
 
 Verse 40-41
 Psalms 105:40-41. The people 
												asked, and he brought quails — 
												He speaks of the first instance 
												of his giving quails, mentioned 
												Exodus 16:13, which God sent 
												them as a refreshment, 
												graciously pardoning their sin 
												in desiring them; and not of 
												that second instance, recorded 
												Numbers 11:31, when God gave 
												them quails in judgment, which 
												would not have been mentioned 
												here among God’s favours 
												vouchsafed to them. And 
												satisfied them with the bread of 
												heaven — With manna, which came 
												down from the air, commonly 
												called heaven: see on Psalms 
												78:24-29. He opened the rock — 
												God, in his common providence, 
												fetches water from heaven, and 
												bread out of the earth; but for 
												Israel, the divine power brought 
												bread from the clouds and water 
												from the rocks: so far is the 
												God of nature from being tied to 
												the laws and course of nature! 
												And the waters gushed out — And 
												that not only once, but ran like 
												a river, plentifully and 
												constantly; and, it is thought 
												by many, attended their camp in 
												all their removes, as seems to 
												be implied 1 Corinthians 10:4, 
												where they are said to have 
												drunk of the rock that followed 
												them. Hence they complained no 
												more of want of water till they 
												came to Kadesh, Numbers 20:2, 
												&c. To this instance of the 
												divine goodness that promise 
												alludes, I will give rivers in 
												the desert, to give drink to my 
												people, my chosen, Isaiah 
												43:19-20 : see on Psalms 78:15.
 
 Verses 42-45
 Psalms 105:42-45. For he 
												remembered his holy promise — 
												They were unworthy and 
												unthankful, yet he did these 
												great things in their favour 
												because he remembered his 
												covenant, Psalms 105:8, and his 
												holy promise, and would not 
												suffer one iota or tittle of it 
												to fall to the ground. Therefore 
												he brought forth his people with 
												joy — Rejoicing greatly that God 
												had so wonderfully appeared for 
												them, and delivered them from 
												that state of cruel and 
												intolerable bondage, under which 
												they had so long groaned; and 
												his chosen with gladness — 
												Hebrew, ברנה, berinnah, with 
												shouting, or singing, to see the 
												difference he made between them 
												and the Egyptians; who were 
												drowned in the Red sea, while 
												they were conducted safe through 
												it on dry land. And he gave them 
												the lands of the heathen — Put 
												them in possession of the 
												country which he had promised 
												them, many centuries before they 
												existed, casting out seven 
												nations to make room for them in 
												that land. And they inherited 
												the labour of the people — The 
												fruits of their labour; the 
												towns and cities which they had 
												builded, and the vineyards and 
												oliveyards which they had 
												planted. That they might observe 
												his statutes, &c. — He put them 
												in possession of Canaan, not 
												that they might live in luxury 
												and pleasure, in ease and 
												honour, and be conspicuous and 
												glorious among the nations; not 
												that they should regard Canaan 
												as their paradise, and look no 
												further; but that, being rescued 
												from their enemies, formed into 
												a people, placed under God’s 
												immediate government and 
												protection, and settled in peace 
												and plenty, they might improve 
												the opportunity thus afforded 
												them of serving the Lord their 
												God, in a due attendance upon 
												all his ordinances, and a 
												diligent keeping of all his 
												commandments; and of securing to 
												themselves, through the 
												obedience of faith, an 
												inheritance in an other country, 
												that is to say, a heavenly. “And 
												let all the children of the 
												faithful Abraham,” says Dr. 
												Horne, “whose lot hath fallen in 
												a land flowing with milk and 
												honey upon earth, reflect that 
												God hath given them riches, and 
												the leisure which riches 
												procure, not for the purpose of 
												indulging and corrupting 
												themselves and others, but that 
												they may glorify him, benefit 
												their neighbours, and save their 
												own souls; that they may observe 
												his statutes, and keep his laws. 
												Israel was delivered by Moses, 
												and the church redeemed by 
												Christ, that God might purify to 
												himself a peculiar people, 
												zealous of good works, Titus 
												2:14.”
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