
Text -- Psalms 38:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 38:5
Sin.
JFB -> Psa 38:5-8
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 38:5 - -- 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

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.
Calvin -> Psa 38:5
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.
TSK -> Psa 38:5
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

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 38:5
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.
Poole -> Psa 38:5
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.
Haydock -> Psa 38:5
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)
Gill -> Psa 38:5
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.

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...
