
Text -- Psalms 39:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 39:4
Wesley: Psa 39:4 - -- Make me sensible of the shortness and uncertainly of life, and the near approach of death.
Make me sensible of the shortness and uncertainly of life, and the near approach of death.
JFB: Psa 39:4-7 - -- Some take these words as those of fretting, but they are not essentially such. The tinge of discontent arises from the character of his suppressed emo...
Some take these words as those of fretting, but they are not essentially such. The tinge of discontent arises from the character of his suppressed emotions. But, addressing God, they are softened and subdued.
Clarke -> Psa 39:4
Clarke: Psa 39:4 - -- Lord, make me to know mine end - I am weary of life; I wish to know the measure of my days, that I may see how long I have to suffer, and how frail ...
Lord, make me to know mine end - I am weary of life; I wish to know the measure of my days, that I may see how long I have to suffer, and how frail I am. I wish to know what is wanting to make up the number of the days I have to live.
Calvin -> Psa 39:4
Calvin: Psa 39:4 - -- 4.O Jehovah! cause me to know my end It appears from this, that David was transported by an improper and sinful excess of passion, seeing he finds fa...
4.O Jehovah! cause me to know my end It appears from this, that David was transported by an improper and sinful excess of passion, seeing he finds fault with God. This will appear still more clearly from the following verses. It is true, indeed, that in what follows he introduces pious and becoming prayers, but here he complains, that, being a mortal man, whose life is frail and transitory, he is not treated more mildly by God. Of this, and similar complaints, the discourses of Job are almost full. It is, therefore, not without anger and resentment that David speaks in this manner: “O God, since thou art acting with so much severity towards me, at least make me to know how long thou hast appointed me to live. But is it so, that my life is but a moment, why then dost thou act with so great rigour? and why dost thou accumulate upon my head such a load of miseries, as if I had yet many ages to live? What does it profit me to have been born, if I must pass the period of my existence, which is so brief, in misery, and oppressed with a continued succession of calamities?”
Accordingly, this verse should be read in connection with the following one. Behold, thou hast made my days as a hand-breadth. A hand-breadth is the measure of four fingers, and is here taken for a very small measure; as if it had been said, the life of man flies swiftly away, and the end of it, as it were, touches the beginning. Hence the Psalmist concludes that all men are only vanity before God. As to the meaning of the words, he does not ask that the brevity of human life should be shown to him, as if he knew it not. There is in this language a kind of irony, as if he had said, Let us count the number of the years which still remain to me on earth, and will they be a sufficient recompense for the miseries which I endure? Some render the word
TSK -> Psa 39:4
TSK: Psa 39:4 - -- make : Psa 90:12, Psa 119:84; Job 14:13
how frail I am : or, what time I have here
make : Psa 90:12, Psa 119:84; Job 14:13
how frail I am : or, what time I have here

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 39:4
Barnes: Psa 39:4 - -- Lord, make me to know mine end - This expresses evidently the substance of those anxious and troubled thoughts Psa 39:1-2 to which he had been ...
Lord, make me to know mine end - This expresses evidently the substance of those anxious and troubled thoughts Psa 39:1-2 to which he had been unwilling to give utterance. His thoughts turned on the shortness of life; on the mystery of the divine arrangement by which it had been made so short; and on the fact that so many troubles and sorrows had been crowded into a life so frail and so soon to terminate. With some impatience, and with a consciousness that he had been indulging feelings on this subject which were not proper, and which would do injury if they were expressed "before men,"he now pours out these feelings before God, and asks what is to be the end of this; how long this is to continue; when his own sorrows will cease. It was an impatient desire to know when the end would be, with a spirit of insubmission to the arrangements of Providence by which his life had been made so brief, and by which so much suffering had been appointed.
And the measure of my days, what it is - How long I am to live; how long I am to bear these accumulated sorrows.
That I may know how frail I am - Margin: "What time I have here."Prof. Alexander renders this: "when I shall cease."So DeWette. The Hebrew word used here -
Poole -> Psa 39:4
Poole: Psa 39:4 - -- This verse contains either,
1. A correction of himself for his impatient motions or speeches, and his retirement to God for relief under these perp...
This verse contains either,
1. A correction of himself for his impatient motions or speeches, and his retirement to God for relief under these perplexing and sadding thoughts. Or,
2. A declaration of the words which he spake.
Make me to know either,
1. Practically, so as to prepare for it. Or,
2. Experimentally, as words of knowledge are oft used. And so this is a secret desire of death, that he might be free from such torments as made his life a burden to him. Or,
3. By revelation; that I may have some prospect or foreknowledge when my calamities will be ended; which argued impatience, and an unwillingness to wait long for deliverance.
My end i.e. the end of my life, as is evident from the following words.
What it is how long or short it is, or the utmost extent or period of the days of my life.
How frail I am or, how long (or, how little , for the word may be and is by divers interpreters taken both ways) time I have or shall continue here.
Haydock -> Psa 39:4
Haydock: Psa 39:4 - -- New. Excellent. (Haydock) ---
I was before uttering complaints, now I give thanks with joy, for my health and conversion. (Calmet) ---
Song. H...
New. Excellent. (Haydock) ---
I was before uttering complaints, now I give thanks with joy, for my health and conversion. (Calmet) ---
Song. Hebrew, "Praise." The penitent changes his language, which is no longer understood by worldlings. (Berthier) ---
Many. St. Augustine reads, the just, who take part in the welfare of their brethren, (Psalm xxxi. 11.) while the wicked are filled with alarm, at the ways of God; who humbles or exalts people as he pleases. (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 39:4
Gill: Psa 39:4 - -- Lord, make me to know mine end,.... Not Christ, the end of the law for righteousness, as Jerom interprets it; nor how long he should live, how many da...
Lord, make me to know mine end,.... Not Christ, the end of the law for righteousness, as Jerom interprets it; nor how long he should live, how many days, months, and years more; for though they are known of God, they are not to be known by men; but either the end of his afflictions, or his, latter end, his mortal state, that he might be more thoughtful of that, and so less concerned about worldly things, his own external happiness, or that of others; or rather his death; see Job 6:11; and his sense is, that he might know death experimentally; or that he might die: this he said in a sinful passionate way, as impatient of his afflictions and exercises; and in the same way the following expressions are to be understood;
and the measure of my days, what it is; being desirous to come to the end of it; otherwise he knew it was but as an hand's breadth, as he says in Psa 39:5;
that I may know how frail I am; or "what time I have here"; or "when I shall cease to be" u; or, as the Targum is, "when I shall cease from the world"; so common it is for the saints themselves, in an angry or impatient fit, to desire death; see Job 7:15; and a very rare and difficult thing it is to wish for it from right principles, and with right views, as the Apostle Paul did, Phi 1:23.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 39:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Psa 39:1-13 - --1 David's care of this thoughts.4 The consideration of the brevity and vanity of life;7 the reverence of God's judgments,10 and prayer, are his bridle...
MHCC -> Psa 39:1-6
MHCC: Psa 39:1-6 - --If an evil thought should arise in the mind, suppress it. Watchfulness in the habit, is the bridle upon the head; watchfulness in acts, is the hand up...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 39:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 39:1-6 - -- David here recollects, and leaves upon record, the workings of his heart under his afflictions; and it is good for us to do so, that what was though...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 39:4-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 39:4-6 - --
(Heb.: 39:5-7) He prays God to set the transitoriness of earthly life clearly before his eyes (cf. Psa 90:12); for if life is only a few spans long...
Constable -> Psa 39:1-13; Psa 39:1-5
Constable: Psa 39:1-13 - --Psalm 39
David seems to have composed this psalm during a prolonged illness that almost proved fatal (cf...
