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Psalms 77:13 Darby English Bible (DARBY)

13 O God, thy way is in the sanctuary: who is so great a ùgod as God?

Cross Reference

Exodus 15:11 DARBY

Who is like unto thee, Jehovah, among the gods? Who is like unto thee, glorifying thyself in holiness, Fearful [in] praises, doing wonders?

Psalms 73:17 DARBY

Until I went into the sanctuaries of ùGod; [then] understood I their end.

Deuteronomy 32:31 DARBY

For their rock is not as our Rock: Let our enemies themselves be judges.

Psalms 63:2 DARBY

To see thy power and thy glory, as I have beheld thee in the sanctuary;

Psalms 27:4 DARBY

One [thing] have I asked of Jehovah, that will I seek after: that I may dwell in the house of Jehovah all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of Jehovah, and to inquire [of him] in his temple.

Psalms 68:25 DARBY

The singers went before, the players on stringed instruments after, in the midst of maidens playing on tabrets.

Psalms 71:19 DARBY

And thy righteousness, O God, reacheth on high, thou who hast done great things: O God, who is like unto thee?

Psalms 86:8 DARBY

Among the gods there is none like unto thee, Lord, and there is nothing like unto thy works.

Psalms 89:6-8 DARBY

For who in the heaven can be compared to Jehovah? [who] among the sons of the mighty shall be likened to Jehovah? ùGod is greatly to be feared in the council of the saints, and terrible for all that are round about him. Jehovah, God of hosts, who is like unto thee, the strong Jah? And thy faithfulness is round about thee.

Isaiah 40:18 DARBY

To whom then will ye liken ùGod? and what likeness will ye compare unto him?

Isaiah 40:25 DARBY

To whom then will ye liken me, or shall I be equal? saith the Holy One.

Isaiah 46:5 DARBY

To whom will ye liken me and make me equal, or compare me, that we may be like?

Commentary on Psalms 77 Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible


PSALM 77

Ps 77:1-20. To Jeduthun—(See on Ps 39:1, title). In a time of great affliction, when ready to despair, the Psalmist derives relief from calling to mind God's former and wonderful works of delivering power and grace.

1. expresses the purport of the Psalm.

2. his importunacy.

my sore ran … night—literally, "my hand was spread," or, "stretched out" (compare Ps 44:20).

ceased not—literally, "grew not numb," or, "feeble" (Ge 45:26; Ps 38:8).

my soul … comforted—(compare Ge 37:35; Jer 31:15).

3-9. His sad state contrasted with former joys.

was troubled—literally, "violently agitated," or disquieted (Ps 39:6; 41:5).

my spirit was overwhelmed—or, "fainted" (Ps 107:5; Jon 2:7).

4. holdest … waking—or, "fast," that I cannot sleep. Thus he is led to express his anxious feelings in several earnest questions indicative of impatient sorrow.

10. Omitting the supplied words, we may read, "This is my affliction—the years of," &c., "years" being taken as parallel to affliction (compare Ps 90:15), as of God's ordering.

11, 12. He finds relief in contrasting God's former deliverances. Shall we receive good at His hands, and not evil? Both are orderings of unerring mercy and unfailing love.

13. Thy way … in the sanctuary—God's ways of grace and providence (Ps 22:3; 67:2), ordered on holy principles, as developed in His worship; or implied in His perfections, if "holiness" be used for "sanctuary," as some prefer translating (compare Ex 15:11).

14-20. Illustrations of God's power in His special interventions for His people (Ex 14:1-31), and, in the more common, but sublime, control of nature (Ps 22:11-14; Hab 3:14) which may have attended those miraculous events (Ex 14:24).

15. Jacob and Joseph—representing all.

19. waters … , footsteps—may refer to His actual leading the people through the sea, though also expressing the mysteries of providence.