O that my ways were directed to keep your statutes!
O that my ways were directed to keep your statutes!
Oh that my ways were established To observe thy statutes!
If only my ways were ordered so that I might keep your rules!
O that my ways were directed to keep thy statutes!
Oh that my ways were steadfast to obey your statutes!
Oh that my ways were established to observe thy statutes!
O that my ways were directed - "I wish that my way may be confirmed to keep thy statutes." Without thee I can do nothing; my soul is unstable and fickle; and it will continue weak and uncertain till thou strengthen and establish it.
O that my ways were directed ... - Indicating the desire of the pious heart. That desire - a prevailing, constant, uniform desire - is to keep the law of God. It is the aim of the life; it is the supreme purpose of the soul; it is the ruling wish of the man, thus to keep the law of God. He in whose bosom this is not the constant wish cannot be a pious man. The Hebrew particle used here, and rendered "O that," is a particle denoting a wish, or an earnest desire. The word "ways" denotes the course of life. The whole is expressive of an earnest desire to live in accordance with the law of God. It implies also a sense of dependence on God.