Asaph
Psalm 73:16BSB·superscription

When I tried to understand all this, it was troublesome in my sight

John Calvin Reformed

The psalmist battles carnal reason itself, contending against what the eye sees: the wicked gorged in wealth and pleasure while mocking God, and the righteous crushed under troubles. He nearly cast off all care for religion at this sight. But he reproves his own rashness in judging from the present state alone, and learns that when God's providence runs its course as He has determined in secret counsel, the righteous will not be cheated of their reward, nor the wicked escape the judge.

AI summary

Commenting on Psalm 73:1-28

C.H. Spurgeon Reformed Baptist

Keeping silent about such thoughts does not heal them; it only drives the wound deeper. Asaph's conscience forbade him to scandalize God's family by speaking his doubts aloud, but suppressed fire in the bones rages more fiercely than if it could find a vent. A smothered grief grows worse and worse until it threatens to overwhelm him entirely.

AI summary

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

He kept his mouth by remembering God's children; though his heart reasoned that he had cleansed it in vain, he would not speak the thought aloud. To utter evil is worse than to think it, it gives the poison an imprimatur and infects others. Better to lay your hand upon your mouth and let the error die with yourself than to publish your doubts and destroy the faith of those whom God owns as His own.

AI summary

Commenting on Psalm 73:15-20