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Text -- Psalms 38:1-9 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Thy judgments outward and inward.
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Which hath provoked thee to deal thus severely with me.
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Or, the punishment of mine iniquities, as this word is frequently used.
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Like deep waters wherewith I am overwhelmed.
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Wesley: Psa 38:7 - -- The disease might be some burning fever, breaking forth outwardly in carbuncles, or boils. It is true, this and the other expressions may be taken fig...
The disease might be some burning fever, breaking forth outwardly in carbuncles, or boils. It is true, this and the other expressions may be taken figuratively, but we should not forsake the literal sense of the words without necessity.
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].
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JFB: Psa 38:5-8 - -- The loathsomeness, corruption, and wasting torture of severe physical disease set forth his mental anguish [Psa 38:6]. It is possible some bodily dise...
Clarke: Psa 38:1 - -- O Lord, rebuke me not - He was sensible that he was suffering under the displeasure of God; and he prays that the chastisement may be in mercy, and ...
O Lord, rebuke me not - He was sensible that he was suffering under the displeasure of God; and he prays that the chastisement may be in mercy, and not in judgment.
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Clarke: Psa 38:2 - -- Thine arrows stick fast in me - This no doubt, refers to the acute pains which he endured; each appearing to his feeling as if an arrow were shot in...
Thine arrows stick fast in me - This no doubt, refers to the acute pains which he endured; each appearing to his feeling as if an arrow were shot into his body.
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Clarke: Psa 38:3 - -- No soundness in my flesh - This seems to refer to some disorder which so affected the muscles as to produce sores and ulcers; and so affected his bo...
No soundness in my flesh - This seems to refer to some disorder which so affected the muscles as to produce sores and ulcers; and so affected his bones as to leave him no peace nor rest. In short, he was completely and thoroughtly diseased; and all this he attributes to his sin, either as being its natural consequence, or as being inflicted by the Lord as a punishment on its account.
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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.
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Clarke: Psa 38:5 - -- My wounds stink and are corrupt - Taking this in connection with the rest of the Psalm, I do not see that we can understand the word in any figurati...
My wounds stink and are corrupt - Taking this in connection with the rest of the Psalm, I do not see that we can understand the word in any figurative or metaphorical way. I believe they refer to some disease with which he was at this time afflicted; but whether the leprosy, the small pox, or some other disorder that had attacked the whole system, and showed its virulence on different parts of the outer surface, cannot be absolutely determined
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Clarke: Psa 38:5 - -- Because of my foolishness - This may either signify sin as the cause of his present affliction, or it may import an affliction which was the consequ...
Because of my foolishness - This may either signify sin as the cause of his present affliction, or it may import an affliction which was the consequence of that foolish levity which prefers the momentary gratification of an irregular passion to health of body and peace of mind.
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Clarke: Psa 38:6 - -- I am troubled - In mind. I am bowed down in body. I am altogether afflicted, and full of distress.
I am troubled - In mind. I am bowed down in body. I am altogether afflicted, and full of distress.
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Clarke: Psa 38:7 - -- For my loins are filled with a loathsome disease - Or rather, a burning; נקלה nikleh , from קלה kalah , to fry, scorch, etc., hence נקל...
For my loins are filled with a loathsome disease - Or rather, a burning;
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Clarke: Psa 38:7 - -- There is no soundness in my flesh - All without and all within bears evidence that the whole of my solids and fluids are corrupt.
There is no soundness in my flesh - All without and all within bears evidence that the whole of my solids and fluids are corrupt.
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Clarke: Psa 38:8 - -- I am feeble and sore broken - I am so exhausted with my disease that I feel as if on the brink of the grave, and unfit to appear before God; therefo...
I am feeble and sore broken - I am so exhausted with my disease that I feel as if on the brink of the grave, and unfit to appear before God; therefore "have I roared for the disquietness of my heart.
That David describes a natural disease here cannot reasonably be doubted; but what that disease was, who shall attempt to say? However, this is evident, that whatever it was, he most deeply deplored the cause of it; and as he worthily lamented it, so he found mercy at the hand of God. It would be easy to show a disease of which what he here enumerates are the very general symptoms; but I forbear, because in this I might attribute to one what, perhaps, in Judea would be more especially descriptive of another.
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Clarke: Psa 38:9 - -- Lord, all my desire is before thee - I long for nothing so much as thy favor; and for this my heart is continually going out after thee. Instead of ...
Lord, all my desire is before thee - I long for nothing so much as thy favor; and for this my heart is continually going out after thee. Instead of
Calvin: Psa 38:1 - -- 1.O Jehovah! rebuke me not in thy wrath As I have already expounded this verse in the beginning of the sixth psalm, where it occurs, and that I may n...
1.O Jehovah! rebuke me not in thy wrath As I have already expounded this verse in the beginning of the sixth psalm, where it occurs, and that I may not prove tedious to the reader, I shall notice it more briefly here. David does not expressly ask that his afflictions should be removed, but only that God would moderate the severity of his chastisements. Hence we may infer, that David did not give loose reins to the desires of the flesh, but offered up his earnest prayer in a duly chastened spirit of devotion. All men would naturally desire that permission should be granted them to sin with impunity. But David lays a restraint upon his desires, and does not wish the favor and indulgence of God to be extended beyond measure, but is content with a mitigation of his affliction; as if he had said, Lord, I am not unwilling to be chastised by thee, but I entreat thee, meanwhile, not to afflict me beyond what I am able to bear, but to temper the fierceness of thy indignation according to the measure of my infirmity, lest the severity of the affliction should entirely overwhelm me. This prayer, as I have said, was framed according to the rule of godliness; for it contains nothing but what God promises to all his children. It should also be noticed, that David does not secretly indulge a fretful and repining spirit, but spreads his complaint before God; and this he does, not in the way of sinful complaining, but of humble prayer and unfeigned confession, accompanied with the hope of obtaining forgiveness. He has used anger and wrath as denoting extreme rigour, and has contrasted them with fatherly chastisement.
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Calvin: Psa 38:2 - -- 2.For thy arrows go down in me He shows that he was constrained by dire necessity to ask an alleviation of his misery; for he was crushed under the w...
2.For thy arrows go down in me He shows that he was constrained by dire necessity to ask an alleviation of his misery; for he was crushed under the weight of the burden which he sustained. This rule is always to be observed in our prayers — to keep God’s promises present to our view. But God has promised that he will chastise his servants, not according to their deserts, but as they are able to bear. This is the reason why the saints so often speak of their own weakness, when they are severely oppressed with affliction. David very properly describes the malady under which he labored, by the terms, the arrows and the hand, or the chastisement of God. Had he not been persuaded that it was God who thus afflicted him, he could never have been brought to seek from him deliverance from his affliction. We know that the great majority of men are blinded under the judgments of God, and imagine that they are entirely the events of chance; and scarcely one in a hundred discerns in them the hand of God. But, in his sickness, as in all his other adversities, David views the hand of God lifted up to punish him for his sins. And certainly, the man who estimates his affliction only by the feeling of pain which it produces, and views it in no other light, differs nothing from the beasts of the field. As every chastisement of God should remind us of his judgment, the true wisdom of the saints, as the prophet declares,
“to look to the hand of him who smiteth.”— (Isa 9:13)
The pronoun thy is therefore emphatic. David’s words are, as if he had said, I have not to do with a mortal man, who can shoot his arrows with a force only in proportion to his own strength, but I have to do with God, who can discharge the arrows that come from his hand with a force altogether overwhelming.
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Calvin: Psa 38:3 - -- 3.There is no soundness in my flesh because of thy anger Others translate, There is no beauty; but this does not seem to be so suitable. In the cla...
3.There is no soundness in my flesh because of thy anger Others translate, There is no beauty; but this does not seem to be so suitable. In the clause which follows, David ascribes to God the praise of righteousness, without which, the acknowledgement which he formerly made would be of little avail; nay, instead of this, such an acknowledgement sometimes rather exasperates the minds of men, so that they provoke the wrath of God still more, by charging him with cruelty, and pouring forth horrible blasphemies against him. Nothing, therefore, can be more preposterous, than to imagine that there is in God a power so supreme and absolute, (as it is termed,) as to deprive him of his righteousness. David, as soon as he recognised his affliction as coming from God, turns to his own sin as the cause of the Divine displeasure; for he had already been fully satisfied in his own mind, that he is not like a tyrant who exercises cruelty needlessly and at random, but a righteous judge, who never manifests his displeasure by inflicting judgments but when he is grievously offended. If, then, we would render to God the praise which is due to him, let us learn by the example of David to connect our sins with his wrath.
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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
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Calvin: Psa 38:5 - -- 5.My wounds 50 have become putrid In this verse, he pleads the long continuance of his disease as an argument for obtaining some alleviation. When ...
5.My wounds 50 have become putrid In this verse, he pleads the long continuance of his disease as an argument for obtaining some alleviation. When the Lord declares, concerning his Church,
“that her warfare is accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned,
for she hath received of the Lord’s hand double for all her sins,”
(Isa 40:2)
his meaning is, that when he has sufficiently chastised his people, he is quickly pacified towards them; nay, more, that if he continue to manifest his displeasure for too long a time, he becomes through his mercy, as it were, weary of it, so that he hastens to give deliverance, as he says in another place,
“For my name’s sake will I defer mine anger, and for my praise will I refrain for thee, that I cut thee not off. Behold, I have refined thee, but not with silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction.”— (Isa 48:9)
The object, therefore, which David has in view, in complaining of the long continuance of his misery is, that when he had endured the punishment which he had merited, he might at length obtain deliverance. It was certainly no slight trial to this servant of God to be thus kept in continual languishing, and, as it were, to putrify and be dissolved into corruption in his miseries. In this his constancy is the more to be admired, for it neither broke down from the long period of delay, nor failed under the immense load of suffering. By using the term foolishness instead of sin, he does not seek in this way to extenuate his faults, as hypocrites do when they are unable to escape the charge of guilt; for in order to excuse themselves in part, they allege the false pretense of ignorance, pleading, and wishing it to be believed, that they erred through imprudence and inadvertence. But, according to a common mode of expression in the Hebrew language, by the use of the term foolishness, he acknowledges that he had been out of his right mind, when he obeyed the lusts of the flesh in opposition to God. The Spirit, by employing this term in so many places to designate crimes the most atrocious, does not certainly mean to extenuate the criminality of men, as if they were guilty merely of some slight offenses, but rather charges them with maniacal fury, because, blinded by unhallowed desires, they wilfully fly in the face of their Maker. Accordingly, sin is always conjoined with folly or, madness. It is in this sense that David speaks of his own foolishness; as if he had said, that he was void of reason and transported with madness, like the infatuated rage of wild beasts, when he neglected God and followed his own lusts.
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Calvin: Psa 38:6 - -- 6.I am bent This description clearly shows that this holy man was oppressed with extreme grief, so much so, that it is marvellous how, under such a v...
6.I am bent This description clearly shows that this holy man was oppressed with extreme grief, so much so, that it is marvellous how, under such a vast accumulation of miseries, his faith was sufficiently strong to bear up his mind. When he says bowed down, he seems tacitly to contrast his humility and dejection with the pride and stubbornness of many, who refuse to be humbled by the many chastisements with which God afflicts them, but rather harden themselves, daring to resist and oppose him. They must, no doubt, of necessity, feel the pain of their afflictions, but they fall into such a state of insensibility, that they are not affected by it. David then, from this circumstance, draws an argument to induce his heavenly Judge to have compassion on him, showing that he was not one of those who obstinately rebel against him, and refuse to bow in humble submission, even while the hand of God is upon them; but that he is abased and humbled, even as the Apostle Peter exhorts all the godly to
“humble themselves under the mighty hand of God.”
(1Pe 5:6)
Let us therefore learn, that there is no other way by which we can obtain consolation under our afflictions, than by laying aside all stubbornness and pride, and humbly submitting to the chastisement of God. The word
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Calvin: Psa 38:9 - -- 9.O Lord! thou knowest all my desire He adds this, not so much in respect of God, as to strengthen himself in the hope of obtaining some alleviation ...
9.O Lord! thou knowest all my desire He adds this, not so much in respect of God, as to strengthen himself in the hope of obtaining some alleviation of his trouble, and thus to animate himself to persevering prayer. It may be explained in a twofold sense, either as denoting his confident assurance that his prayers and groanings were heard by the Lord, or a simple declaration that he had poured out before God all his cares and troubles; but the meaning is substantially the same: for as long as men entertain any doubt whether their groanings have come up before God, they are kept in constant disquietude and dread, which so fetters and holds captive their minds, that they cannot elevate their souls to God. On the contrary, a firm persuasion that our groanings do not vanish away in their ascent to God, but that he graciously hears them, and familiarly listens to them, produces promptitude and alacrity in engaging in prayer. It might, therefore, prove no small ground of encouragement to David, that he approached God, not with a doubting and trembling heart, but strengthened and encouraged by the assurance of which we have spoken, and of which he himself speaks in another place, that his tears were laid up in God’s bottle, (Psa 56:8.) In order that we may obtain access to God, we must believe that he is “a rewarder of them that diligently seek him,” as the apostle states in his Epistle to the Hebrews, (Heb 11:6.) But I rather approve of the other interpretation, That David here declares that he had disburdened all his sorrows into the bosom of God. The reason why the greater part of men derive no profit from complaining grievously in their sorrow is, that they direct not their prayers and sighs to God. David, then, in order to encourage himself in the assured conviction that God will be his deliverer, says, that he had always been a witness of his sorrows, and was well acquainted with them, because he had neither indulged in a fretful spirit, nor poured out into the air his complaints and howlings as the unbelieving are wont to do, but had spread out before God himself all the desires of his heart.
TSK: Psa 38:1 - -- (Title), This deeply penitential Psalm is supposed to have been composed by David under some grievous affliction, either bodily or mental, or both, af...
(Title), This deeply penitential Psalm is supposed to have been composed by David under some grievous affliction, either bodily or mental, or both, after his illicit intercourse with Bathsheba.
to bring : Psa 70:1 *title
rebuke : Psa 6:1, Psa 88:7, Psa 88:15, Psa 88:16; Isa 27:8, Isa 54:8; Jer 10:24, Jer 30:11; Hab 3:2; Heb 12:5-11
hot : Deu 9:19
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TSK: Psa 38:2 - -- thine : Psa 21:12, Psa 64:7; Job 6:4; Lam 3:12
thy hand : Psa 32:4, Psa 39:10, Psa 39:11; Deu 2:15; Rth 1:13; 1Sa 5:6, 1Sa 5:11, 1Sa 6:9
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TSK: Psa 38:3 - -- soundness : Psa 31:9; 2Ch 26:19; Job 2:7, Job 2:8, Job 33:19-22; Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6
neither : Psa 6:2, Psa 51:8, Psa 102:3, Psa 102:5
rest : Heb. peace,...
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TSK: Psa 38:4 - -- mine : Psa 40:12; Ezr 9:6
as an : Lev 7:18; Isa 53:11; Lam 1:14; Mat 11:28; 1Pe 2:24
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TSK: Psa 38:5 - -- My wounds : The soul being invisible, its distempers are also so; therefore the sacred writers describe them by the distempers of the body. (See the ...
My wounds : The soul being invisible, its distempers are also so; therefore the sacred writers describe them by the distempers of the body. (See the parallel texts on these verses.) On reading these and similar passages, say Bp. Lowth, some, who were but little acquainted with the genius of Hebrew poetry, have pretended to enquire into the nature of the disease with which the poet was afflicted; not less absurdly, in my opinion, than if they had perplexed themselves to discover in what river he was plunged, when he complains that ""the deep waters had gone over his soul.""Psa 38:7, Psa 32:3; Isa 1:5, Isa 1:6; Jer 8:22
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TSK: Psa 38:6 - -- troubled : Heb. wearied
bowed : Psa 35:14, Psa 42:5 *marg. Psa 57:6, Psa 145:14
mourning : Psa 6:6, Psa 31:10, Psa 42:9, Psa 43:2, Psa 88:9; Job 30:28...
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TSK: Psa 38:7 - -- my loins : Psa 41:8; 2Ch 21:18, 2Ch 21:19; Job 7:5, Job 30:18; Act 12:23
no : Psa 38:3
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TSK: Psa 38:9 - -- Lord : Instead of adonay , ""Lord,""several manuscripts read yehowah , ""Jehovah."
groaning : Psa 102:5, Psa 102:20; Joh 1:48; Rom 8:22, Rom 8:23,...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 38:1 - -- O Lord, rebuke me not in thy wrath - See the notes at Psa 6:1, where the same language occurs, except in the change of a single Hebrew "word,"t...
O Lord, rebuke me not in thy wrath - See the notes at Psa 6:1, where the same language occurs, except in the change of a single Hebrew "word,"that is, "wrath,"though expressing the same idea.
Neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure - See the notes at Psa 6:1. The Hebrew in both is the same, except that in this place the negative particle is omitted, but without affecting the sense. It is not improbable that the one was copied from the other, or that this was composed with the language of the former in the memory. Thus we often use language with which we are familiar, as being well adapted to express our ideas.
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Barnes: Psa 38:2 - -- For thine arrows slick fast in me - See the notes at Job 6:4. The word rendered "stick fast"- נחת nâchath - means properly to go or...
For thine arrows slick fast in me - See the notes at Job 6:4. The word rendered "stick fast"-
And thy hand presseth me sore - The same word is used here which in the former part of the verse is rendered "stick fast."The idea is, that the hand of God had "descended"or "come down"upon him, prostrating his strength, and laying him on a bed of pain.
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Barnes: Psa 38:3 - -- There is no soundness in my flesh - There is no sound place in my flesh; there is no part of my body that is free from disease. The word used h...
There is no soundness in my flesh - There is no sound place in my flesh; there is no part of my body that is free from disease. The word used here -
Because of thine anger - That is, he regarded this as a punishment for sin; a specific manifestation of the divine displeasure on account of some particular offence or act of transgression. He does not refer, however, to the particular sin which he regarded as the cause of his sickness, and it is probable that this is just an instance of that state of mind, often morbid, in which we consider a particular calamity that comes upon us as a special proof of the divine displeasure. There are, undoubtedly, cases when sickness may be properly thus regarded; but it should be observed that, as this is not the universal rule in regard to sickness and other trials - as they come upon us under general laws, and because in sweeping over a community they often fall upon the righteous as well as the wicked, - we should not infer at once, when we are sick or otherwise afflicted, that it is for any "particular"sin, or that it is proof of any special displeasure of God against us. It is undoubtedly right to regard all affliction as having a close connection with sin, and to allow any calamity to suggest to us the idea of our depravity, for sin is the original cause of all the wretchedness and woe on earth; but under this general law we cannot always determine the "particular"reason why calamity comes on us. It may have other purposes and ends than that of being a specific punishment for our offences.
Neither is there any rest in my bones - Margin: "peace"or "health."The Hebrew word means "peace."The idea is, that there was no comfort; no rest. His bones were filled with constant pain. The flesh "and the bones"constitute the entire man; and the idea here is, that he was universally diseased. The disease pervaded every part of the body.
Because of my sin - Regarding his sin as the immediate cause of his suffering. In a general sense, as has been remarked above, it is not wrong to regard sin as the cause of all our misery, and we may allow our suffering to be, in some degree, a measure or gauge of the evil of sin. The error consists in our regarding a particular form of trial as the punishment of a particular sin. The effect in the case of tile psalmist was undoubtedly to bring to remembrance his sins; to impress his mind deeply with a sense of the evil of sin; to humble him at the recollection of guilt. This effect is not improper or undesirable, provided it does not lead us to the conclusion, often erroneous, that our affliction has come upon us on account of a particular transgression. That may be so indeed; but the idea that that is the universal rule in regard to affliction is one which we are not required to entertain. See the notes at Luk 13:1-5.
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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.
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Barnes: Psa 38:5 - -- My wounds stink - The word rendered "wounds"here means properly the swelling or wales produced by stripes. See the notes at Isa 1:6; notes at I...
My wounds stink - The word rendered "wounds"here means properly the swelling or wales produced by stripes. See the notes at Isa 1:6; notes at Isa 53:5. The meaning here is, that he was under chastisement for his sin; that the stripes or blows on account of it had not only left a mark and produced a swelling, but that the skin itself had been broken, and that the flesh had become corrupt, and the sore offensive. Many expositors regard this as a mere figurative representation of the sorrow produced by the consciousness of sin; and of the loathsome nature of sin, but it seems to me that the whole connection rather requires us to understand it of bodily suffering, or of disease.
And are corrupt - The word used here -
Because of my foolishness - Because of my sin, regarded as folly. Compare the notes at Psa 14:1. The Scripture idea is that sin is the highest folly. Hence, the psalmist, at the same time that he confesses his sin, acknowledges also its foolishness. The idea of sin and that of folly become so blended together - or they are so entirely synonymous - that the one term may be used for the other.
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Barnes: Psa 38:6 - -- I am troubled - Margin, "wearied."The Hebrew word means to bend, to curve; then, to be distorted, to writhe with pain, convulsions, and spasms....
I am troubled - Margin, "wearied."The Hebrew word means to bend, to curve; then, to be distorted, to writhe with pain, convulsions, and spasms. In Isa 21:3, the same word is rendered, "I was bowed down at the hearing of it;"that is, Sorrow so took hold of him, that at the intelligence he writhed with pain as a woman in travail. So here it means that he was bent, or bowed down, or that he writhed in pain as the result of his iniquities.
I am bowed down greatly - Compare Psa 35:14. The word means properly to bow down; then, to be brought low; to be depressed with pain, grief, sorrow: Psa 10:10; Isa 2:11.
I go mourning all the day long - Constantly; without any intermission. On the word rendered "go mourning"-
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Barnes: Psa 38:7 - -- For my bones are filled with a loathsome disease - This would seem to indicate the seat of the disease, though not its nature. The word used he...
For my bones are filled with a loathsome disease - This would seem to indicate the seat of the disease, though not its nature. The word used here, according to Gesenius (Lexicon), properly denotes the internal muscles of the loins near the kidneys, to which the fat adheres. The word rendered "loathsome"- the word "disease"being supplied by our translators - is derived from
And there is no soundness in my flesh - See Psa 38:3. His disease was so deep-seated and so pervading, that there did not seem to be "any"soundness in his flesh. His whole body seemed to be diseased.
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Barnes: Psa 38:8 - -- I am feeble - The word used here means properly to be cold, or without warmth; and then, to be torpid or languid. Compare Gen 45:26. Would not ...
I am feeble - The word used here means properly to be cold, or without warmth; and then, to be torpid or languid. Compare Gen 45:26. Would not this be well represented by the idea of a "chill?"
And sore broken - This word means to break in pieces; to beat small; to crush; and then it may be used to denote being broken in spirit, or crushed by pain and sorrow: Isa 57:15; Isa 53:5; Isa 19:10.
I have roared - I have cried out on account of my suffering. See the notes at Psa 22:1.
By reason of the disquietness of my heart - The word here rendered "disquietness"means properly "a roaring,"as of the sea: Isa 5:30; and then, a groaning, or roaring, as of the afflicted. Here the "heart"is represented as "roaring"or "crying out."The lips only gave utterance to the deeper groanings of the heart.
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Barnes: Psa 38:9 - -- Lord, all my desire is before thee - That is, Thou knowest all that I would ask or that I need. This is the expression of one who felt that his...
Lord, all my desire is before thee - That is, Thou knowest all that I would ask or that I need. This is the expression of one who felt that his only hope was in God, and that He fully understood the case. There was no need of repeating the request. He was willing to leave the whole case with God.
And my groaning is not hid from thee - My sighing; the expression of my sorrow and anguish. As God certainly heard these sighs, and as He wholly understood the case, David hoped that He would mercifully interpose in his behalf.
Poole: Psa 38:2 - -- Thine arrows i.e. thy judgments inflicted upon my outward and inward man, oft compared to arrows, as Deu 32:23 Psa 7:13 45:5 91:5 .
Presseth me sore...
Thine arrows i.e. thy judgments inflicted upon my outward and inward man, oft compared to arrows, as Deu 32:23 Psa 7:13 45:5 91:5 .
Presseth me sore or, comes down upon me ; as when a strong man lifts up his hand and weapon, that it may fall down with greater violence, and make the deeper wound.
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Poole: Psa 38:3 - -- My disease or grief hath seized upon all the parts of my body, my very bones not excepted, so that my bed can give me no rest;
because of my sin w...
My disease or grief hath seized upon all the parts of my body, my very bones not excepted, so that my bed can give me no rest;
because of my sin which hath provoked thee to deal, thus severely with me.
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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 .
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Poole: Psa 38:5 - -- The bruises and sores caused by my disease are not only painful, but loathsome to myself and to others.
Foolishnss i.e. sin, which really is, and ...
The bruises and sores caused by my disease are not only painful, but loathsome to myself and to others.
Foolishnss i.e. sin, which really is, and is commonly called, folly , as Psa 69:5 Pro 13:16 14:17 15:2 , &c.
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Poole: Psa 38:6 - -- Troubled Heb. distorted , or depressed ; or, as it is expressed by another word, signifying the same thing,
bowed down to wit, in my body, as dis...
Troubled Heb. distorted , or depressed ; or, as it is expressed by another word, signifying the same thing,
bowed down to wit, in my body, as diseased persons commonly are, and withal dejected in my mind. I go mourning , Heb. in black , the sign of mourning, which may here signify the thing, as signs oft do. When for my ease I rise out of my bed and walk, or rather creep about in my chamber, I do it with a sad heart and dejected countenance. Or if he did walk further, his disease had some intervals and mitigations. Or going may be here meant of his languishing, or going towards the grave, as this same word is used, Gen 15:2 , compared with Gen 25:32 Jos 23:14 .
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Poole: Psa 38:7 - -- Or, with filthiness ; or, with scorching heat . The disease might be some burning fever, being also malignant or pestilential, either burning inwa...
Or, with filthiness ; or, with scorching heat . The disease might be some burning fever, being also malignant or pestilential, either burning inwardly, or breaking forth outwardly in carbuncles or boils. It is true, this and the other expressions may be taken figuratively, of some grievous calamity; but we should not forsake the proper and the literal sense of the words without necessity, which seems not to be in this place.
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Poole: Psa 38:8 - -- Roared like a bear or a lion, through extreme pain and misery.
By reason of the disquietness of my heart for the great anxiety and torment of my mi...
Roared like a bear or a lion, through extreme pain and misery.
By reason of the disquietness of my heart for the great anxiety and torment of my mind, caused by the deep sense of my sins, and of God’ s wrath, and of the sad issue of my disease; which being added to my bodily pains, makes them more intolerable.
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Poole: Psa 38:9 - -- I do not utter all these complaints, nor roar out, that thou mayst hear and know them, for thou hearest and knowest even my lowest groans; yea, mine...
I do not utter all these complaints, nor roar out, that thou mayst hear and know them, for thou hearest and knowest even my lowest groans; yea, mine inward desires, and all my necessities. And therefore, I pray thee, pity and deliver me, as I trust thou wilt do.
Haydock: Psa 38:1 - -- A just man's peace and patience in his sufferings; considering the vanity of the world, and the providence of God.
A just man's peace and patience in his sufferings; considering the vanity of the world, and the providence of God.
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Haydock: Psa 38:1 - -- Idithun was one of the four chief masters of music, called Ethan, 1 Paralipomenon vi. 44., and Idithun, 1 Paralipomenon xvi. 41. Some think that he ...
Idithun was one of the four chief masters of music, called Ethan, 1 Paralipomenon vi. 44., and Idithun, 1 Paralipomenon xvi. 41. Some think that he was the author of this psalm; but it was rather given to him by David to sing. (Calmet) ---
The title shews that the psalms were designed for the public service of the Church, and not for David alone. (Berthier) ---
This refers to the Christian Church, though some explain it of the Jews in captivity, (Worthington) with R. Salomon, while others think that it was composed during some of David's persecutions. It is connected with the preceding, and with the two next psalms. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 38:2 - -- Tongue. The matter is very delicate and important, James iii. 2., Proverbs xviii. 21., Isaias xxxii. 17., and Ecclesiasticus xxii. 33., and xxviii. ...
Tongue. The matter is very delicate and important, James iii. 2., Proverbs xviii. 21., Isaias xxxii. 17., and Ecclesiasticus xxii. 33., and xxviii. 28. ---
Me, and was treating me with injustice and calumny. (Haydock) ---
Chilo, the sage, said: "I know how to bear ill treatment," (Laertius 1.) and this is a proof of "the greatest wisdom and virtue." (Haydock) ---
Greek: Outos kratistos. (Menander) (Calmet) ---
Weak men seek revenge; but the wise resolve to govern their tongues, and do not stand up in their own just defence, though they be, therefore, more persecuted. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 38:3 - -- Renewed. I was conscious of no offence against my enemies, (Haydock) but I reflected that I had forfeited my virtue, (Eusebius) and therefore gave v...
Renewed. I was conscious of no offence against my enemies, (Haydock) but I reflected that I had forfeited my virtue, (Eusebius) and therefore gave vent to my grief. (Haydock) ---
Being afraid of saying anything amiss, I refrained from saying what was good. But I perceived that this was wrong. (St. Augustine) ---
I deprived myself of all pleasure. (Calmet) ---
The seven first verses detail the arguments used by philosophers to comfort men, which all prove of little service. We must have recourse to God, ver. 8. (Berthier)
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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)
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Haydock: Psa 38:5 - -- End, as I desire to die, like Elias, 3 Kings xix. (Worthington) ---
The just have frequently expressed such sentiments, to move God to pity, (Job v...
End, as I desire to die, like Elias, 3 Kings xix. (Worthington) ---
The just have frequently expressed such sentiments, to move God to pity, (Job vii. 1., and Psalm ci. 4.) though they wished to live, that they might praise God on earth, (Calmet) if it were his will. (Haydock) ---
This text may indicate the impatience (Berthier) of the mere philosopher, (Haydock) or David desires to know to what a decree of perfection he must arrive. (Origen; St. Ambrose)
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Haydock: Psa 38:6 - -- Measurable. Hebrew, "of a hand's breadth." (Haydock) ---
Symmachus, "a spithame, or twelve fingers' breadth," perhaps in allusion to the Greek pro...
Measurable. Hebrew, "of a hand's breadth." (Haydock) ---
Symmachus, "a spithame, or twelve fingers' breadth," perhaps in allusion to the Greek proverb, a "spithame of life;" which denotes one very short. (Drusius) ---
The Greek copies vary: some read, (Calmet) with the Vatican Greek: palaias, "ancient;" and others of the palestra with the Alexandrian Greek:palaistas, or "contentious." I am obliged always to wrestle with my adversaries. (Grotius) ---
My days are short, and spent in conflicts. (Haydock) ---
St. Chrysostom, St. Ambrose, &c., mention both. The former word is adopted by the Arabic, Ethiopic, &c.; but the Hebrew has tephachoth, "of a palm," or four fingers' breadth; (Calmet) and St. Jerome breves, "short." (Haydock) ---
Substance. St. Jerome, "life." Hebrew, "age." ---
Living. Hebrew, "standing," how well soever he may seem to be established. Protestants, "at his best estate, is altogether vanity. Selah." (Haydock) ---
The wisest of men confirms this at large, Ecclesiastes i. 1. (Calmet) (James iv. 14.) ---
"What is this long while which has an end?" (Cicero, pro. Marcel.) (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 38:7 - -- Image, "of God." (St. Gregory, &c.) Hebrew, "in a shadow or darkness," where the fall of a leaf affrights him. Life is so short and miserable, w...
Image, "of God." (St. Gregory, &c.) Hebrew, "in a shadow or darkness," where the fall of a leaf affrights him. Life is so short and miserable, why should we strive to heap up riches? (Calmet) ---
For whom. Hebrew, "who shall gather," &c. (Haydock) ---
The term is used respecting harvest rather than money. (Calmet) ---
Hebrew has disquieted in the plural, and the rest of the words in the singular; but St. Jerome agrees with us, conturbatur....& ignorat cui dimittat ea. (Haydock) ---
The prophet still utters complaints. One step farther is necessary to ensure peace. (Berthier) ---
He acknowledges that his life is but a shadow, and what we ought not to grieve for temporal losses. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 38:8 - -- Substance. Septuagint hypostasis. Hebrew, "hope." (Haydock) ---
I can depend only on thee. (Calmet)
Substance. Septuagint hypostasis. Hebrew, "hope." (Haydock) ---
I can depend only on thee. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 38:9 - -- Thou hast. Hebrew lo, "do not;" ne, or nonne; or "hast thou not made?" &c., as the following verse intimates. (Berthier) ---
Thou hast suffe...
Thou hast. Hebrew lo, "do not;" ne, or nonne; or "hast thou not made?" &c., as the following verse intimates. (Berthier) ---
Thou hast suffered me to be reproached by the foolish, who prosper in this world. (Worthington) ---
The fool may denote the devil, (St. Jerome; Origen) and all the lovers of iniquity. (Flaminius) (Calmet)
Gill: Psa 38:1 - -- O Lord, rebuke me not in thy wrath: neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure,.... This and the following clause are the same as in Psa 6:1, only inst...
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Gill: Psa 38:2 - -- For thine arrows stick fast in me,.... Meaning either words with which as a father the Lord rebuked him; and which were sharp and cutting, entered int...
For thine arrows stick fast in me,.... Meaning either words with which as a father the Lord rebuked him; and which were sharp and cutting, entered into him and abode with him, and gave him much pain and uneasiness; and by which he concluded that his rebukes were in wrath and hot displeasure; such as those in 2Sa 12:11; so the words of men are compared to arrows, Psa 57:4 or outward afflictions, attended with inward trouble of soul; for as judgments are the arrows of God, such as famine, pestilence, &c. Eze 5:16, Deu 32:21; so the chastening dispensations of Providence, under which the people of God themselves are, are so called, because they oftentimes come swiftly, suddenly, and at unawares, and are very pungent and distressing; and sometimes stick fast and continue long, by reason of which they are inwardly wounded, and conceive of God as sorely displeased with them; see Job 6:4;
and thy hand presseth me sore; the afflicting hand of God, which lay heavy upon him; and is a mighty hand when laid on such worms as mortal sinful men are, who cannot bear up under it, unless they have divine supports; see Job 19:21. This is by some supposed to be some bodily disease inflicted on him; some have thought of the leprosy, which was a stroke from the hand of God; but this is not likely, since he must have been deposed and shut up; the Jews indeed say e that he was a leper six months, and that the divine Presence was taken from him; a late learned man f thinks it was the smallpox, from the unsoundness of his flesh, the soreness of the disease, the stench of it, temporary blindness, and his friends standing aloof from him; though perhaps no other than affliction of mired for sin, comparable to the disease described, is meant.
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Gill: Psa 38:3 - -- There is no soundness in my flesh, because of thine anger,.... Such was the nature of the affliction the psalmist laboured under, and which he took t...
There is no soundness in my flesh, because of thine anger,.... Such was the nature of the affliction the psalmist laboured under, and which he took to be an effect of the anger of God towards him, that the whole frame of nature was affected with it, and from the crown of the head to, the soles of the feet there was no health or soundness, as in Isa 1:6; where the same word is used as here; some think the word g here used has the signification of man; and that the sense is, that through, the violence of the distemper he had not so much, as the form of a man, as his antitype in Isa 52:14; and as this led him to a view of his sins, as the cause of his affliction, he was so far from thinking himself sound and whole, or perfect in a spiritual sense, that he saw he was all over diseased with sin, and that in his flesh dwelt no good thing;
neither is there any rest in my bones, because of my sin; or "peace" h there; sin breaks the believer's rest, and disturbs his peace; nor can he, in a view of it, find any rest in himself, nor in any creature, nor in any service or duty, only in Jesus Christ, his blood, righteousness, and sacrifice.
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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.
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Gill: Psa 38:5 - -- My wounds stink, and are corrupt,.... Meaning his sins, which had wounded him, and for which there is no healing but in a wounded Saviour, and by his...
My wounds stink, and are corrupt,.... Meaning his sins, which had wounded him, and for which there is no healing but in a wounded Saviour, and by his stripes we are healed, Isa 53:5; where the same word is used as here; Christ's black and blue stripes and wounds, as the word signifies, are the healing of ours, both of sins, and of the effects of them; which, to a sensible sinner, are as nauseous and loathsome as an old wound that is festered and corrupt;
because of my foolishness: as all sin arises from foolishness, which is bound in the hearts of men, and from whence it arises, Mar 7:22; perhaps the psalmist may have respect to his folly with Bathsheba, which had been the occasion of all the distress that is spoken of both before and afterwards.
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Gill: Psa 38:6 - -- I am troubled,.... Discomposed and perplexed in mind; his thoughts were disturbed and irregular, and in the utmost confusion and distress: this troubl...
I am troubled,.... Discomposed and perplexed in mind; his thoughts were disturbed and irregular, and in the utmost confusion and distress: this trouble was not only on account of the affliction that was upon him, but chiefly because of his sin; and which was increased by the view he had of the displeasure of God, concluding he was come forth against him in wrath and fury;
I am bowed down greatly; not in his body, at least not in that only, as if he was bowed together by his disorder, that he could not lift himself up; for he is said to walk in the next clause: or rather he bowed down his head as a bulrush voluntarily, and through sorrow and shame could not lift it up before the Lord; though it may chiefly design the pressure of his mind, that his soul was cast down within him, and with all his spiritual reasonings he could not erect himself; it is the Lord that raiseth up those that are bowed down in this sense; see Psa 42:5;
I go mourning all the day long; or "I go black", or "in black" i; meaning either that his skin was black, through the disease upon him, and the trouble that was in him, Job 30:30; or that he was clothed in black garments, as a token of mourning; as white garments were of joy and cheerfulness, Ecc 9:7; and he was blacker still in his own apprehension, by reason of inward corruptions and outward transgressions, which appeared in a very black hue, attended with aggravating circumstances; see Son 1:5.
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Gill: Psa 38:7 - -- For my loins are filled with a loathsome disease,.... The word here used has the signification of burning k; and the Targum renders it, "my loins are...
For my loins are filled with a loathsome disease,.... The word here used has the signification of burning k; and the Targum renders it, "my loins are filled with burning"; a burning fever was upon him, or there was an inflammation in those parts; a hot burning ulcer, which might be nauseous; and so was true in both senses. Aben Ezra interprets it abominable and vile; something not fit to be mentioned; and so Kimchi and Ben Melech. The word is rendered sometimes "lightly esteemed"; as in 1Sa 18:23; and Jarchi thinks it has this sense here; and the meaning is, that he was vile in his own eyes, and mean in his own esteem. Doubtless the psalmist has reference to something more than a bodily disease; at least not to that only, but to the disease of his soul also, sin, which has the nature of a disease; it is an hereditary one, which is derived from one to another by propagation; it is universal, and reaches to all men, and to all the parts of the body and powers of the soul; it is a complication of disorders: it is in its own nature mortal, and ever incurable but by Christ; and, as here, it is a loathsome one; it is loathsome to God, and to all sensible sinners: and when the psalmist says his loins were filled with it, it may signify that it was an internal disorder that was in him; sin that dwelt in him, a law in his members; and may denote the aboundings of sin in him, the swarms of corruptions that were in him; as also the pain it gave him, and the quick sense he had of it;
and there is no soundness in my flesh: which is repeated, see Psa 38:3; partly for confirmation's sake, and partly to show the continued sense of it, as persons under a disorder are continually making mention of it.
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Gill: Psa 38:8 - -- I am feeble,.... Both in body, natural strength being weakened by the affliction, and dried up like a potsherd by the heat of the distemper; and in so...
I am feeble,.... Both in body, natural strength being weakened by the affliction, and dried up like a potsherd by the heat of the distemper; and in soul, being weak in the exercise of faith and other graces. The word is used of Jacob, fainting at and disbelieving the news of his son Joseph being alive, Gen 45:26;
and sore broken; in his constitution with the disease, and in his mind with trouble; especially for his sin, and under a sense of the divine displeasure; his bones were broken by his fall, and his heart broken with a sense of sin, Psa 51:8;
I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart: which was like the raging of the sea, as the word l rendered disquietness here signifies; and to which the uneasiness and restlessness of wicked men is sometimes compared, Isa 5:30; and so great was the disquietude of this good man under affliction, and sense of sin and wrath, that he had no rest night nor day; and could not forbear crying out, in a very hideous manner, like the roaring of a lion.
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Gill: Psa 38:9 - -- Lord, all my desire is before thee,.... To be delivered from his afflictions, to have a discovery and application of pardoning grace, and to have com...
Lord, all my desire is before thee,.... To be delivered from his afflictions, to have a discovery and application of pardoning grace, and to have communion with his God: the desire of his soul was unto these things; and it was some satisfaction to him that it was before the Lord, and known unto him, before whom all things are naked and open;
and my groaning is not hid from thee; under the weight of his affliction, the burden of his sin, and which he expressed in prayer to the Lord, and which is often done with groanings which cannot be uttered: but even these are known and understood by the Lord.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 38:2 Heb “and your hand [?] upon me.” The meaning of the verb נָחַת (nakhat) is unclear in this context. It is pr...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:1 "A Psalm of David, to bring to ( a ) remembrance." O LORD, rebuke me not in thy ( b ) wrath: neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure.
( a ) To put ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:2 For thine ( c ) arrows stick fast in me, and thy hand presseth me sore.
( c ) Your sickness, with which you have visited me.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:3 [There is] no soundness in my flesh because of thine anger; neither [is there any] rest in my bones because of my ( d ) sin.
( d ) David acknowledges...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:4 For mine ( e ) iniquities are gone over mine head: as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me.
( e ) He confesses his sins, God's justice, and make...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:5 My wounds stink [and] are corrupt because of ( f ) my foolishness.
( f ) That rather gave place to my own lusts, than to the will of God.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 38:8 I am feeble and sore broken: I ( g ) have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
( g ) This example warns us never to despair, no matter h...
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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; Psa 38:9-14
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...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 38:9-14 - --
(Heb.: 38:10-15) Having thus bewailed his suffering before God, he goes on in a somewhat calmer tone: it is the calm of weariness, but also of the ...
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...
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