
Text -- Psalms 102:4 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Psa 102:4 - -- Or, "have forgotten," that is, in my distress (Psa 107:18), and hence strength fails.
Or, "have forgotten," that is, in my distress (Psa 107:18), and hence strength fails.
Clarke -> Psa 102:4
Clarke: Psa 102:4 - -- My heart is smitten, and withered like grass - The metaphor here is taken from grass cut down in the meadow. It is first smitten with the scythe, an...
My heart is smitten, and withered like grass - The metaphor here is taken from grass cut down in the meadow. It is first smitten with the scythe, and then withered by the sun. Thus the Jews were smitten with the judgments of God; and they are now withered under the fire of the Chaldeans.
Calvin -> Psa 102:4
Calvin: Psa 102:4 - -- 4.My heart is smitten, and dried up like grass Here he employs a third similitude, declaring that his heart is withered, and wholly dried up like mow...
4.My heart is smitten, and dried up like grass Here he employs a third similitude, declaring that his heart is withered, and wholly dried up like mown grass. But he intends to express something more than that his heart was withered, and his bones reduced to a state of dryness. His language implies, that as the grass, when it is cut down, can no longer receive juice from the earth, nor retain the life and rigor which it derived from the root, so his heart being, as it were, torn and cut off from its root, was deprived of its natural nourishment. The meaning of the last clause, I have forgotten to eat my bread, is, My sorrow has been so great, that I have neglected my ordinary food. The Jews, it is true, during their captivity in Babylon, did eat their food; and it would have been an evidence of their having fallen into sinful despair, had they starved themselves to death. But what he means to say is, that he was so afflicted with sorrow as to refuse all delights, and to deprive himself even of food and drink. True believers may cease for a time to partake of their ordinary food, when, by voluntary fasting, they humbly beseech God to turn away his wrath, but the prophet does not here speak of that kind of abstinence from bodily sustenance. He speaks of such as is the effect of extreme mental distress, which is accompanied with a loathing of food, and a weariness of all things. In the close of the verse, he adds, that his body was, as it were, consuming or wasting away, so that his bones clave to his skin.
TSK -> Psa 102:4
TSK: Psa 102:4 - -- heart : Psa 6:2, Psa 6:3, Psa 42:6, Psa 55:4, Psa 55:5, Psa 69:20, Psa 77:3, Psa 143:3, Psa 143:4; Job 6:4, Job 10:1; Lam 3:13, Lam 3:20; Mat 26:37, M...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 102:4
Barnes: Psa 102:4 - -- My heart is smitten - Broken; crushed with grief. We now speak of "a broken heart."Even death is often caused by such excessive sorrow as to cr...
My heart is smitten - Broken; crushed with grief. We now speak of "a broken heart."Even death is often caused by such excessive sorrow as to crush and break the heart.
And withered like grass - It is dried up as grass is by drought, or as when it is cut down. It loses its support; and having no strength of its own, it dies.
So that I forget to eat my bread - I am so absorbed in my trials; they so entirely engross my attention, that I think of nothing else, not even of those things which are necessary to the support of life. Grief has the effect of taking away the appetite, but this does not seem to be the idea here. It is that of such a complete absorption in trouble that everything else is forgotten.
Poole -> Psa 102:4
Poole: Psa 102:4 - -- Like grass which is smitten and withered by the heat of the sun, either whilst it stands, or after it is cut down.
I forget to eat my bread because...
Like grass which is smitten and withered by the heat of the sun, either whilst it stands, or after it is cut down.
I forget to eat my bread because my mind is wholly swallowed up with the contemplation of my own miseries.
Gill -> Psa 102:4
Gill: Psa 102:4 - -- My heart is smitten, and withered like grass,.... Like grass in the summer solstice d, which being smitten with the heat of the sun, or by some blast ...
My heart is smitten, and withered like grass,.... Like grass in the summer solstice d, which being smitten with the heat of the sun, or by some blast of thunder and lightning, is dried up, and withers away; so his heart was smitten with a sense of sin, and of God's wrath and displeasure at him, and with the heat of affliction and trouble, that it failed him, and he could not look up with joy and comfort:
so that I forget to eat my bread; sometimes, through grief and trouble, persons refuse to eat bread, as Jonathan and Ahab, which is a voluntary act, and purposely done; but here, in the psalmist, there was such a loss of appetite, through sorrow, that he forgot his stated meals, having no manner of inclination to food: some understand this of spiritual food, the bread of life, refusing to be comforted with it; so the Targum,
"for I forgot the law of my doctrine.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 102:4 I am unable to eat food. During his time of mourning, the psalmist refrained from eating. In the following verse he describes metaphorically the physi...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 102:4
Geneva Bible: Psa 102:4 My heart is smitten, and withered like grass; so that I forget ( d ) to eat my bread.
( d ) My sorrows were so great that I did not eat.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 102:1-28
TSK Synopsis: Psa 102:1-28 - --1 The prophet in his prayer makes a grievous complaint.12 He takes comfort in the eternity, and mercy of God.18 The mercies of God are to be recorded....
MHCC -> Psa 102:1-11
MHCC: Psa 102:1-11 - --The whole word of God is of use to direct us in prayer; but here, is often elsewhere, the Holy Ghost has put words into our mouths. Here is a prayer p...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 102:1-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 102:1-11 - -- The title of this psalm is very observable; it is a prayer of the afflicted. It was composed by one that was himself afflicted, afflicted with the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 102:3-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 102:3-5 - --
From this point onward the Psalm becomes original. Concerning the Beth in בעשׁן , vid., on Psa 37:20. The reading כּמו קד (in the Karait...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...

Constable: Psa 102:1-28 - --Psalm 102
Another anonymous writer poured out his personal lament to Yahweh (cf. Pss. 22, 69, 79). He fe...
