| John Flavel - 1671 - 576 pages
...is added to aggravate the sin and to show how that prophecy was accomplished in him, " Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me." Ps. 4.1 : 9. Lo, this was -the traitor, and this was his name and office. 2. You have a description... | |
| Hugh Gaston - 1807 - 550 pages
...My lovers and my friends stands aloof from my sore, and my kinsmen stand afar off. xli. 2. Mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me. lv. 12. If it was an enemy that reproached me, then I could have borne it. Ver. 13. But it was thou,... | |
| Benjamin Flower - 1807 - 588 pages
...expostulate with these lier wayward sons in the language of the psalmist: — •' Minesown fami' liar friend in whom I trusted ' which did eat of my bread hath ' lift up his heel against me. It ' was not an enemy tliat reproach' ed me, then could 1 have borne... | |
| 1809 - 480 pages
...toy they, cleaveth fast unto him : and now that he lietii, -he shall rise up no more. 9 Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lift up his heel against me. 10 But thou, O Lord, be merciful unto me, and raise me up. 11 By this... | |
| 1809 - 556 pages
...able to confute), and hath laid him so low, that he cannot possibly recover. Ver. 9. TTeat mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, bath lifted up his heel against me.'] And, which is still more afflictive, the man with whom I never... | |
| Thomas Tregenna Biddulph - 1810 - 490 pages
...Psalm, (ver. 9,) wherein he personates his great antitype. (John xiii. 18.) He says, " Yea, mine " own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which " did eat of my bread, hath lift up his heel "against me." The combination of fraud and force which attended our Saviour's arrest... | |
| William Huntington (works.) - 1811 - 434 pages
...heaven and on earth. And he displayed it with a witness, as he foretold them he would; " Yea, mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lift up his heel against me. But thou, O Lord, be merciful unto me, and raise me up, that I may re*... | |
| 1812 - 382 pages
...of himself, once for all. That tender and pathetic complaint, in the forty-first Psalrn, " Mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted, « which did eat of my bread, hath lift up his heel against « me," undoubtedly might be, and probubly was, originally uttered by David,... | |
| John Murray - 1813 - 438 pages
...prophecy accurately described. Psaltn xli. 9, " Yea, mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted, who did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me." Psalm Ixix. 25, " Let their habitation be desolate^and none dwell in their tents." That these references... | |
| New Church gen. confer - 1878 - 626 pages
...Iscariot (John xiii. 18, xvii. 12). The first is a citation of a portion of Psalm xli. 9, " Yea, Mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of My bread, hath lifted up his heel against Me." Only in a typical, and therefore non-literal sense, can these words rightly apply to the treachery... | |
| |