New American Standard Bible
(©1995)
Behold, He who keeps Israel Will neither slumber nor
sleep.
GOD'S WORD® Translation
(©1995)
Indeed, the Guardian of Israel never rests or
sleeps.
King
James Bible
Behold, he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber
nor sleep.
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Matthew Henry's Whole Bible Commentary
PSALM 121
Some call this the soldier's psalm, and think it
was penned in the camp, when David was hazarding his
life in the high places of the field, and thus
trusted God to cover his head in the day of battle.
Others call it the traveller's psalm (for there is
nothing in it of military dangers) and think David
penned it when he was going abroad, and designed it
pro vehiculo-for the carriage, for a good man's
convoy and companion in a journey or voyage. But we
need not thus appropriate it; wherever we are, at
home or abroad, we are exposed to danger more than
we are aware of; and this psalm directs and
encourages us to repose ourselves and our confidence
in God, and by faith to put ourselves under his
protection and commit ourselves to his care, which
we must do, with an entire resignation and
satisfaction, in singing this psalm. I. David here
assures himself of help from God (v. 1, 2). II. He
assures others of it (v. 3-8).
A song of degrees.
Verses 1-8
This psalm teaches us,
I. To stay ourselves upon God as a God of power
and a God all-sufficient for us. David did so and
found the benefit of it. 1. We must not rely upon
creatures, upon men and means, instruments and
second causes, nor make flesh our arm: "Shall I lift
up my eyes to the hills?"-so some read it. "Does my
help come thence? Shall I depend upon the powers of
the earth, upon the strength of the hills, upon
princes and great men, who, like hills, fill the
earth, and hold up their heads towards heaven? No;
in vain is salvation hoped for from hills and
mountains, Jer. 3:23. I never expect help to come
from them; my confidence is in God only." We must
lift up our eyes above the hills (so some read it);
we must look beyond instruments to God, who makes
them that to us which they are. 2. We must see all
our help laid up in God, in his power and goodness,
his providence and grace; and from him we must
expect it to come: "My help comes from the Lord; the
help I desire is what he sends, and from him I
expect it in his own way and time. If he do not
help, no creature can help; if he do, no creature
can hinder, can hurt." 3. We must fetch in help from
God, by faith in his promises, and a due regard to
all his institutions: "I will lift up my eyes to the
hills" (probably he meant the hills on which the
temple was built, Mount Moriah, and the holy hill of
Zion, where the ark of the covenant, the oracle, and
the altars were); "I will have an eye to the special
presence of God in his church, and with his people
(his presence by promise) and not only to his common
presence." When he was at a distance he would look
towards the sanctuary (Ps. 28:2; 42:6); thence comes
our help, from the word and prayer, from the secret
of his tabernacle. My help cometh from the Lord (so
the word is, v. 2), from before the Lord, or from
the sight and presence of the Lord. "This (says Dr.
Hammond) may refer to Christ incarnate, with whose
humanity the Deity being inseparably united, God is
always present with him, and, through him, with us,
for whom, sitting at God's right hand, he constantly
maketh intercession." Christ is called the angel of
his presence, that saved his people, Isa. 63:9. 4.
We must encourage our confidence in God with this
that he made heaven and earth, and he who did that
can do any thing. He made the world out of nothing,
himself alone, by a word's speaking, in a little
time, and all very good, very excellent and
beautiful; and therefore, how great soever our
straits and difficulties are, he has power
sufficient for our succour and relief. He that made
heaven and earth is sovereign Lord of all the hosts
of both, and can make use of them as he pleases for
the help of his people, and restrain them when he
pleases from hurting his people.
II. To comfort ourselves in God when our
difficulties and dangers are greatest. It is here
promised that if we put our trust in God, and keep
in the way of our duty, we shall be safe under his
protection, so that no real evil, no mere evil,
shall happen to us, nor any affliction but what God
sees good for us and will do us good by. 1. God
himself has undertaken to be our protector: The Lord
is thy keeper, v. 5. Whatever charge he gives his
angels to keep his people, he has not thereby
discharged himself, so that, whether every
particular saint has an angel for his guardian or
no, we are sure he has God himself for his guardian.
It is infinite wisdom that contrives, and infinite
power that works, the safety of those that have put
themselves under God's protection. Those must needs
be well kept that have the Lord for their keeper.
If, by affliction, they be made his prisoners, yet
still he is their keeper. 2. The same that is the
protector of the church in general is engaged for
the preservation of every particular believer, the
same wisdom, the same power, the same promises. He
that keepeth Israel (v. 4) is thy keeper, v. 5. The
shepherd of the flock is the shepherd of every
sheep, and will take care that not one, even of the
little ones, shall perish. 3. He is a wakeful
watchful keeper: "He that keepeth Israel, that
keepeth thee, O Israelite! shall neither slumber nor
sleep; he never did, nor ever will, for he is never
weary; he not only does not sleep, but he does not
so much as slumber; he has not the least inclination
to sleep." 4. He not only protects those whom he is
the keeper of, but he refreshes them: He is their
shade. The comparison has a great deal of gracious
condescension in it; the eternal Being who is
infinite substance is what he is in order that he
may speak sensible comfort to his people, promises
to be their umbra-their shadow, to keep as close to
them as the shadow does to the body, and to shelter
them from the scorching heat, as the shadow of a
great rock in a weary land, Isa. 32:2. Under this
shadow they may sit with delight and assurance,
Cant. 2:3. 5. He is always near to his people for
their protection and refreshment, and never at a
distance; he is their keeper and shade on their
right hand; so that he is never far to seek. The
right hand is the working hand; let them but turn
themselves dexterously to their duty, and they shall
find God ready to them, to assist them and give them
success, Ps. 16:8. 6. He is not only at their right
hand, but he will also keep the feet of his saints,
1 Sa. 2:9. He will have an eye upon them in their
motions: He will not suffer thy foot to be moved.
God will provide that his people shall not be
tempted above what they are able, shall not fall
into sin, though they may be very near it (Ps. 73:2,
23), shall not fall into trouble, though there be
many endeavouring to undermine them by fraud or over
throw them by force. He will keep them from being
frightened, as we are when we slip or stumble and
are ready to fall. 7. He will protect them from all
the malignant influences of the heavenly bodies (v.
6): The sun shall not smite thee with his heat by
day nor the moon with her cold and moisture by
night. The sun and moon are great blessings to
mankind, and yet (such a sad change has sin made in
the creation) even the sun and moon, though
worshipped by a great part of mankind, are often
instruments of hurt and distemper to human bodies;
God by them often smites us; but his favour shall
interpose so that they shall not damage his people.
He will keep them night and day (Isa. 27:3), as he
kept Israel in the wilderness by a pillar of cloud
by day, which screened them from the heat of the
sun, and of fire by night, which probably diffused a
genial warmth over the whole camp, that they might
not be prejudiced by the cold and damp of the night,
their father Jacob having complained (Gen. 31:40)
that by day the drought consumed him and the frost
by night. It may be understood figuratively: "Thou
shalt not be hurt either by the open assaults of thy
enemies, which are as visible as the scorching beams
of the sun, or by their secret treacherous attempts,
which are like the insensible insinuations of the
cold by night." 8. His protection will make them
safe in every respect: "The Lord shall preserve thee
from all evil, the evil of sin and the evil of
trouble. He shall prevent the evil thou fearest, and
shall sanctify, remove, or lighten, the evil thou
feelest. He will keep thee from doing evil (2 Co.
13:7), and so far from suffering evil that whatever
affliction happens to thee there shall be no evil in
it. Even that which kills shall not hurt." 9. It is
the spiritual life, especially, that God will take
under his protection: He shall preserve thy soul.
All souls are his; and the soul is the man, and
therefore he will with a peculiar care preserve
them, that they be not defiled by sin and disturbed
by affliction. He will keep them by keeping us in
the possession of them; and he will preserve them
from perishing eternally. 10. He will keep us in all
our ways: "He shall preserve thy going out and thy
coming in. Thou shalt be under his protection in all
thy journeys and voyages, outward-bound or
homeward-bound, as he kept Israel in the wilderness,
in their removes and rests. He will prosper thee in
all thy affairs at home and abroad, in the beginning
and in the conclusion of them. He will keep thee in
life and death, thy going out and going on while
thou livest and thy coming in when thou diest, going
out to thy labour in the morning of thy days and
coming home to thy rest when the evening of old age
calls thee in," Ps. 104:23. 11. He will continue his
care over us from this time forth and even for
evermore. It is a protection for life, never out of
date. "He will be thy guide even unto death, and
will then hide thee in the grave, hide thee in
heaven. He will preserve thee in his heavenly
kingdom." God will protect his church and his saints
always, even to the end of the world. The Spirit,
who is their preserver and comforter, shall abide
with them for ever.
New American Standard Bible Copyright © 1960,
1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995
by The Lockman Foundation, La Habra, Calif. All
rights reserved. For Permission to Quote Information
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GOD'S WORD® is a copyrighted work of
God's Word to the Nations. Quotations are used
by permission. Copyright 1995 by God's Word to the
Nations. All rights reserved.
Alphabetical: Behold he indeed Israel keeps
neither nor over sleep slumber watches who will
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