David
Psalm 73:22ESV·traditional attribution

I was brutish and ignorant; I was like a beast toward you.

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

PSALM 73 David, or whoever may have been the author of this psalm, contending as it were against the judgment of carnal sense and reason, begins by extolling the righteousness and goodness of God. He next confesses that when he saw the wicked abounding in wealth, and living in the indulgence of every kind of pleasure, yea, even scornfully mocking God, and cruelly harassing the...

Commenting on Psalm 73:1-28

C.H. Spurgeon Reformed Baptist @princeofpreachers

So foolish was I. He, though a saint of God, had acted as if he had been one of the fools whom God abhorreth. Had he not even envied them?—and what is that but to aspire to be like them? The wisest of men have enough folly in them to ruin them unless grace prevents. And ignorant.

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

Behold Samson's riddle again unriddled, Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong sweetness; for we have here an account of the good improvement which the psalmist made of that sore temptation with which he had been assaulted and by which he was almost overcome. He that stumbles and does not fall, by recovering himself takes so much the longer steps forward.

Commenting on Psalm 73:21-28