Psalms 94:11

 

EXPOSITION

Verse 11. Whether men admit or deny that God knows, one thing is here declared, namely, that

The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man, that they are vanity. Not their words alone are heard, and their works seen, but he reads the secret motions of their minds, for men themselves are not hard to be discerned of him, before his glance they themselves are but vanity. It is in the Lord's esteem no great matter to know the thoughts of such transparent pieces of vanity as mankind are, he sums them up in a moment as poor vain things. This is the sense of the original, but that given in the authorised version is also true -- the thoughts, the best part, the most spiritual portion of man's nature, even these are vanity itself, and nothing better. Poor man! And yet such a creature as this boasts, plays at monarch, tyrannises over his fellow worms, and defies his God! Madness is mingled with human vanity, like smoke with the fog, to make it fouler but not more substantial than it would have been alone.

How foolish are those who think that God does not know their actions, when the truth is that their vain thoughts are all perceived by him! How absurd to make nothing of God when in fact we ourselves are as nothing in his sight.

 

EXPLANATORY NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS

Verse 11. The LORD knoweth the thoughts. The thoughts of man's heart -- what millions are there of them in a day! The twinkling of the eye is not so sudden a thing as the twinkling of a thought; yet those thousands and thousands of thoughts which pass from thee, that thou canst not reckon, they are all known to God. Anthony Burgess.

Verse 11. The Lord knoweth the thoughts of man, that they are vanity. What a humbling thought is here suggested to us! Let us examine it.

Verse 11. They are vanity. The Syriac version is, For they are a vapour. Compare James 4:14. John Gill.

 

HINTS FOR PASTORS AND LAYPERSONS

Verse 11.

Verse 11. God's intimate knowledge of man. A startling truth. A humiliating truth.
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