
Text -- Psalms 38:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Or, the punishment of mine iniquities, as this word is frequently used.

Like deep waters wherewith I am overwhelmed.
JFB: Psa 38:1-4 - -- To bring to remembrance, or, remind God of His mercy and himself of his sin. Appealing to God for relief from His heavy chastisement, the Psalmist avo...
To bring to remembrance, or, remind God of His mercy and himself of his sin. Appealing to God for relief from His heavy chastisement, the Psalmist avows his integrity before men, complains of the defection of friends and persecution of enemies, and in a submissive spirit, casting himself on God, with penitent confession he pleads God's covenant relation and his innocence of the charges of his enemies, and prays for divine comfort and help. (Psa. 38:1-22)
He deprecates deserved punishment, which is described (Psa 6:1), under the figure of bodily disease [Psa 38:3].

Clarke -> Psa 38:4
Clarke: Psa 38:4 - -- Mine iniquities are gone over mine head - He represents himself as one sinking in deep waters, or as one oppressed by a burden to which his strength...
Mine iniquities are gone over mine head - He represents himself as one sinking in deep waters, or as one oppressed by a burden to which his strength was unequal.
Calvin -> Psa 38:4
Calvin: Psa 38:4 - -- 4.For my iniquities have passed over my head Here he complains that he is overwhelmed by his sins as by a heavy burden, so that he utterly faints und...
4.For my iniquities have passed over my head Here he complains that he is overwhelmed by his sins as by a heavy burden, so that he utterly faints under their weight; and yet he again confirms the doctrine which we have already stated, that he deservedly suffered the wrath of God, which had been inflicted on him in a manner so severe and dreadful. The word
“ My punishment is greater than I can bear,” (Gen 4:13.)
It is true, indeed, that Moses uses the same word
TSK -> Psa 38:4

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 38:4
Barnes: Psa 38:4 - -- For mine iniquities are gone over mine head - This is merely an enlargement of the idea suggested in the last verse - that his present sickness...
For mine iniquities are gone over mine head - This is merely an enlargement of the idea suggested in the last verse - that his present sickness was to be traced to his sin, and that he was suffering the punishment for sin. The idea is here that his sins were very numerous and very aggravated. They had risen up around him, or had so accumulated that the mass rose, like waves of the sea, above his head. A somewhat similar idea - though the thought there refers rather to the number of sins than the degree of guilt - occurs in Psa 40:12 : "Mine iniquities ... are more than the hairs of my head."
As an heavy burden ... - That is, they are so heavy that I cannot bear them, and my frame has sunk under them. This might mean either that the sense of sin was so great that he could not bear up under it, but had been crushed by it (compare Psa 32:3-4); or that on account of sin, "as if"it were a heavy weight, he had been crushed by disease. The general idea is, that the real cause of his sickness was the fact that he was a great sinner, and that God was punishing him for it.
Poole -> Psa 38:4
Poole: Psa 38:4 - -- Mine iniquities or, the punishment of mine iniquities , as this word is frequently used; which best agrees both with the foregoing and following ver...
Mine iniquities or, the punishment of mine iniquities , as this word is frequently used; which best agrees both with the foregoing and following verses, and with the metaphor here used; which in other places of Scripture is generally applied to afflictions, and not to sins.
Gone over my head like deep waters, wherewith I am overwhelmed and almost drowned, Psa 42:7 69:2 124:4,5 .
Haydock -> Psa 38:4
Haydock: Psa 38:4 - -- Out. This alludes to his sorrow for his sins, (Origen) or to the fire of charity, which is enkindled by meditation on the last end, &c., (ver. 5.)...
Out. This alludes to his sorrow for his sins, (Origen) or to the fire of charity, which is enkindled by meditation on the last end, &c., (ver. 5.) or rather it means, that while he repressed his tongue, he could not but feel an inward zeal and indignation, (Calmet) in consequence of grief suppressed. (Worthington) ---
See Jeremias xx. 9. (Menochius)
Gill -> Psa 38:4
Gill: Psa 38:4 - -- For mine iniquities are gone over mine head,.... Like an inundation of waters, as the waves and billows of the sea; for the waters to come up to the n...
For mine iniquities are gone over mine head,.... Like an inundation of waters, as the waves and billows of the sea; for the waters to come up to the neck or chin shows great danger; but when they go over the head the case is desperate, and a person is sinking and drowning; compare with this Psa 69:1; the simile may denote both the number and weight of sins, and also signifies the overwhelming distress the psalmist was in, under a view of them;
as an heavy burden, they are too heavy for me; the guilt of sin upon the conscience, without a view of pardon, lies heavy indeed, and makes a man a burden to himself, as it did Job, Job 7:20; yea, sin is not only grieving and afflicting to pardoned ones, and who know they are pardoned, but it is a burden to them under which they groan; nor is it possible for any so to bear it as to satisfy and make atonement for it; none but Christ could ever do this, and he has done it; nor is there any relief for burdened souls, but by looking to a sin bearing and sin atoning Saviour, and by casting the burden upon him, who invites them to him for rest.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 38:1-22
MHCC -> Psa 38:1-11
MHCC: Psa 38:1-11 - --Nothing will disquiet the heart of a good man so much as the sense of God's anger. The way to keep the heart quiet, is to keep ourselves in the love o...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 38:1-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 38:1-11 - -- The title of this psalm is very observable; it is a psalm to bring to remembrance; the 70th psalm, which was likewise penned in a day of afflictio...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 38:1-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 38:1-8 - --
(Heb.: 38:2-9) David begins, as in Psa 6:1-10, with the prayer that his punitive affliction may be changed into disciplinary. Bakius correctly para...
Constable -> Psa 38:1-22; Psa 38:1-11
Constable: Psa 38:1-22 - --Psalm 38
In this psalm David expressed penitence that he had sinned against God and had thereby incurred...
