Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary on the Bible

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bondage of Satan; who pass through the world as a dangerous and dreary wilderness, often ready
to faint through troubles, fears, and temptations. Those who hunger and thirst after righteousness,
after God, and communion with him, shall be filled with the goodness of his house, both in grace
and glory.


Verses 10–16


This description of prisoners and captives intimates that they are desolate and sorrowful. In the
eastern prisons the captives were and are treated with much severity. Afflicting providences must
be improved as humbling providences; and we lose the benefit, if our hearts are unhumbled and
unbroken under them. This is a shadow of the sinner's deliverance from a far worse confinement.
The awakened sinner discovers his guilt and misery. Having struggled in vain for deliverance, he
finds there is no help for him but in the mercy and grace of God. His sin is forgiven by a merciful
God, and his pardon is accompanied by deliverance from the power of sin and Satan, and by the
sanctifying and comforting influences of God the Holy Spirit.


Verses 17–22


If we knew no sin, we should know no sickness. Sinners are fools. They hurt their bodily health
by intemperance, and endanger their lives by indulging their appetites. This their way is their folly.
The weakness of the body is the effect of sickness. It is by the power and mercy of God that we
are recovered from sickness, and it is our duty to be thankful. All Christ's miraculous cures were
emblems of his healing diseases of the soul. It is also to be applied to the spiritual cures which the
Spirit of grace works. He sends his word, and heals souls; convinces, converts them, makes them
holy, and all by the word. Even in common cases of recovery from sickness, God in his providence
speaks, and it is done; by his word and Spirit the soul is restored to health and holiness.


Verses 23–32


Let those who go to sea, consider and adore the Lord. Mariners have their business upon the
tempestuous ocean, and there witness deliverances of which others cannot form an idea. How
seasonable it is at such a time to pray! This may remind us of the terrors and distress of conscience
many experience, and of those deep scenes of trouble which many pass through, in their Christian
course. Yet, in answer to their cries, the Lord turns their storm into a calm, and causes their trials
to end in gladness.


Verses 33–43


What surprising changes are often made in the affairs of men! Let the present desolate state of
Judea, and of other countries, explain this. If we look abroad in the world, we see many greatly
increase, whose beginning was small. We see many who have thus suddenly risen, as suddenly
brought to nothing. Worldly wealth is uncertain; often those who are filled with it, ere they are
aware, lose it again. God has many ways of making men poor. The righteous shall rejoice. It shall
fully convince all those who deny the Divine Providence. When sinners see how justly God takes

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