Psalms101
English Standard Version
1A of . I will of and ; to you, O Lord, I will .
2I will the that is . Oh will you to me? I will with of my ;
3I will my that is . I the of those who ; it shall to me.
4A shall be me; I will of .
5Whoever his I will . Whoever has a and an I will .
6 will look with favor on the in the , that they may me; he who in the that is shall to me.
7No who shall my ; no who shall my .
8Morning by I will the in the , the the of the Lord.
Cross References
Psalms 101Calvin cites this to show the throne of a king is established and secured by righteousness.
Supported by John Calvin
David's historic model of behaving himself wisely in all his ways before arriving at the throne.
Supported by Matthew Poole
Parallels the character of the godly citizen who does not backbite or slander his neighbor.
Supported by Matthew Henry
A king sitting on the throne of judgment scatters away all evil with his eyes.
Supported by Matthew Henry, Matthew Poole
God's charge to Solomon to walk before Him in integrity of heart and uprightness as David did.
Supported by Matthew Henry, Matthew Poole
Removing the wicked from the king's presence so his throne may be established in righteousness.
Supported by Matthew Henry
Identifies the 'city of the Lord' as the holy place where wicked doers cannot tolerate staying.
Supported by JFB
David returning to bless his own household, demonstrating his vow to walk within his house uprightly.
Supported by Matthew Henry
Contrast between God's dealing with the upright and the froward (perverse) heart.
Supported by JFB
David's personal practice of being a companion only of those who fear God and keep His precepts.
Supported by Matthew Henry
Want this kind of study for every chapter you read?
Grammatical-historical hermeneutics. Sola Scriptura. Refuses to allegorize. Free Bible reading + 5 AI questions a day, no sign-in required.