
Text -- Psalms 88:1-5 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
l am given up by my friends for a lost man.

Wesley: Psa 88:5 - -- Well nigh discharged from the warfare of the present life, and entered as a member into the society of the dead.
Well nigh discharged from the warfare of the present life, and entered as a member into the society of the dead.

Thou seemest to neglect and bury in oblivion.
JFB: Psa 88:1-2 - -- Upon Mahalath--either an instrument, as a lute, to be used as an accompaniment (Leannoth, "for singing") or, as others think, an enigmatic title (see ...
Upon Mahalath--either an instrument, as a lute, to be used as an accompaniment (Leannoth, "for singing") or, as others think, an enigmatic title (see on Psa 5:1, Psa 22:1, and Psa 45:1, titles), denoting the subject--that is, "sickness or disease, for humbling," the idea of spiritual maladies being often represented by disease (compare Psa 6:5-6; Psa 22:14-15, &c.). On the other terms, see on Psa 42:1 and Psa 32:1. Heman and Ethan (see on Psa 89:1, title) were David's singers (1Ch 6:18, 1Ch 6:33; 1Ch 15:17), of the family of Kohath. If the persons alluded to (1Ki 4:31; 1Ch 2:6), they were probably adopted into the tribe of Judah. Though called a song, which usually implies joy (Psa 83:1), both the style and matter of the Psalm are very despondent; yet the appeals to God evince faith, and we may suppose that the word "song" might be extended to such compositions. (Psa. 88:1-18)

Literally, "a stout man," whose strength is utterly gone.

JFB: Psa 88:5 - -- Cut off from God's care, as are the slain, who, falling under His wrath, are left, no longer sustained by His hand.
Cut off from God's care, as are the slain, who, falling under His wrath, are left, no longer sustained by His hand.
Clarke: Psa 88:1 - -- O Lord God of my salvation - This is only the continuation of prayers and supplications already often sent up to the throne of grace.
O Lord God of my salvation - This is only the continuation of prayers and supplications already often sent up to the throne of grace.

Clarke: Psa 88:2 - -- Let my prayer come before thee - It is weak and helpless, though fervent and sincere: take all hinderances out of its way, and let it have a free pa...
Let my prayer come before thee - It is weak and helpless, though fervent and sincere: take all hinderances out of its way, and let it have a free passage to thy throne. One of the finest thoughts in the Iliad of Homer concerns prayer; I shall transcribe a principal part of this incomparable passage - incomparable when we consider its origin: -
Iliad., 9:498-510
Prayers are Jove’ s daughters; wrinkled, lame, slant-eyed
Which, though far distant, yet with constant pac
Follow offense. Offence, robust of limb
And treading firm the ground, outstrips them all
And over all the earth, before them run
Hurtful to man: they, following, heal the hurt
Received respectfully when they approach
They yield us aid, and listen when we pray
But if we slight, and with obdurate hear
Resist them, to Saturnian Jove they cry
Against, us supplicating, that offens
May cleave to us for vengeance of the wrong
Thou, therefore, O Achilles! honor yiel
To Jove’ s own daughters, vanquished as the brav
Have ofttimes been, by honor paid to thee
Cowper
On this allegory the translator makes the following remarks: "Wrinkled, because the countenance of a man, driven to prayer by a consciousness of guilt, is sorrowful and dejected. Lame, because it is a remedy to which men recur late, and with reluctance. Slant-eyed, either because in that state of humiliation they fear to lift up their eyes to heaven, or are employed in taking a retrospect of their past misconduct. The whole allegory, considering when and where it was composed, forms a very striking passage."Prayer to God for mercy must have the qualifications marked above
Prayer comes from God. He desires to save us: this desire is impressed on our hearts by his Spirit, and reflected back to himself. Thus says the allegory, "Prayers are the daughters of Jupiter."But they are lame, as reflected light is much less intense and vivid than light direct. The desire of the heart is afraid to go into the presence of God, because the man knows, feels, that he has sinned against goodness and mercy. They are wrinkled - dried up and withered, with incessant longing: even the tears that refresh the soul are dried up and exhausted. They are slant-eyed; look aside through shame and confusion; dare not look God in the face. But transgression is strong, bold, impudent, and destructive: it treads with a firm step over the earth, bringing down curses on mankind. Prayer and repentance follow, but generally at a distance. The heart, being hardened by the deceitfulness of sin does not speedily relent. They, however, follow: and when, with humility and contrition, they approach the throne of grace, they are respectfully received. God acknowledges them as his offspring, and heals the wounds made by transgression. If the heart remain obdurate, and the man will not humble himself before his God, then his transgression cleaves to him, and the heartless, lifeless prayers which he may offer in that state, presuming on God’ s mercy, will turn against him; and to such a one the sacrificial death and mediation of Christ are in vain. And this will be the case especially with the person who, having received an offense from another, refuses to forgive. This latter circumstance is that to which the poet particularly refers. See the whole passage, with its context.

Clarke: Psa 88:4 - -- I am counted with them, etc. - I am as good as dead; nearly destitute of life and hope.
I am counted with them, etc. - I am as good as dead; nearly destitute of life and hope.

Clarke: Psa 88:5 - -- Free among the dead - במתים צפשי bammethim chophshi , I rather think, means stripped among the dead. Both the fourth and fifth verses seem...
Free among the dead -

Clarke: Psa 88:5 - -- They are cut off from thy hand - An allusion to the roll in which the general has the names of all that compose his army under their respective offi...
They are cut off from thy hand - An allusion to the roll in which the general has the names of all that compose his army under their respective officers. And when one is killed, he is erased from this register, and remembered no more, as belonging to the army; but his name is entered among those who are dead, in a separate book. This latter is termed the black book, or the book of death; the other is called the book of life, or the book where the living are enrolled. From this circumstance, expressed in different parts of the sacred writings, the doctrine of unconditional reprobation and election has been derived. How wonderful!
Calvin: Psa 88:1 - -- 1.O Jehovah! God of my salvation! Let me call upon you particularly to notice what I have just now stated, that although the prophet simply, and with...
1.O Jehovah! God of my salvation! Let me call upon you particularly to notice what I have just now stated, that although the prophet simply, and without hyperbole, recites the agony which he suffered from the greatness of his sorrows, yet his purpose was at the same time to supply the afflicted with a form of prayer that they might not faint under any adversities, however severe, which might befall them. We will hear him by and by bursting out into vehement complaints on account of the grievousness of his calamities; but he seasonably fortifies himself by this brief exordium, lest, carried away with the heat of his feelings, he might become chargeable with complaining and murmuring against God, instead of humbly supplicating Him for pardon. By applying to Him the appellation of the God of his salvation, casting, as it were, a bridle upon himself, he restrains the excess of his sorrow, shuts the door against despair, and strengthens and prepares himself for the endurance of the cross. When he speaks of his crying and importunity, he indicates the earnestness of soul with which he engaged in prayer. He may not, indeed, have given utterance to loud cries; but he uses the word cry, with much propriety’, to denote the great earnestness of his prayers. The same thing is implied when he tells us that he continued crying days and nights. Nor are the words before thee superfluous. It is common for all men to complain when under the pressure of grief; but they are far from pouring out their groanings before God. Instead of this, the majority of mankind court retirement, that they may murmur against him, and accuse him of undue severity; while others pour forth their cries into the air at random. Hence we gather that it is a rare virtue to set God before our eyes, that we may address our prayers to him.

Calvin: Psa 88:3 - -- 3.For my soul is filled with troubles These words contain the excuse which the prophet pleads for the excess of his grief. They imply that his contin...
3.For my soul is filled with troubles These words contain the excuse which the prophet pleads for the excess of his grief. They imply that his continued crying did not proceed from softness or effeminacy of spirit, but that from a due consideration of his condition, it would be found that the immense accumulation of miseries with which he was oppressed was such as might justly extort from him these lamentations. Nor does he speak of one kind of calamity only; but of calamities so heaped one upon another that his heart was filled with sorrow, till it could contain no more. He next particularly affirms that his life was not far from the grave. This idea he pursues and expresses in terms more significant in the following verse, where he complains that he was, as it were, dead. Although he breathed still among the living, yet the many deaths with which he was threatened on all sides were to him so many graves by which he expected to be swallowed up in a moment. And he seems to use the word

Calvin: Psa 88:5 - -- 5.Free among the dead, lie the slain who lie in the grave The prophet intended to express something more distressing and grievous than common death. ...
5.Free among the dead, lie the slain who lie in the grave The prophet intended to express something more distressing and grievous than common death. First, he says, that he was free among the dead, because he was rendered unfit for all the business which engages human life, and, as it were, cut off from the world. The refined interpretation of Augustine, that Christ is here described, and that he is said to be free among the dead, because he obtained the victory over death by a special privilege, that it might not have dominion over him, has no connection with the meaning of the passage. 510 The prophet is rather to be understood as affirming, that having finished the course of this present life, his mind had become disengaged from all worldly solicitude; his afflictions having deprived him of all feeling. 511 In the next place, comparing himself with those who have been wounded, he bewails his condition as worse than if, enfeebled by calamities, he were going down to death by little and little; for we are naturally inspired with horror at the prospect of a violent death.
What he adds, that he is forgotten of God, and cut off from his hand or guardianship, is apparently harsh and improper, since it is certain that the dead are no less under the Divine protection than the living. Even wicked Balaam, whose purpose it was to turn light into darkness, was, nevertheless, constrained to cry out,
“Let me die the death of the righteous,
and let my last end be like his,” (Num 23:10.)
To say, then, that God is no longer mindful of man after he is dead, might seem to be the language of a heathen. To this it may be answered, That the prophet speaks according to the opinion of the generality of men; just as the Scriptures, in like manner, when treating of the providence of God, accommodate their style to the state of the world as presented to the eye, because our thoughts ascend only by slow degrees to the future and invisible world. I, however, think, that he rather gave utterance to those confused conceptions which arise in the mind of a man under affliction, than that he had an eye to the opinion of the ignorant and uninstructed part of mankind. Nor is it wonderful that a man endued with the Spirit of God was, as it were, so stunned and stupified when sorrow overmastered him, as to allow unadvised words to escape from his lips. Although faith in the truth that God extends his care both to the living and the dead is deeply rooted in the hearts of all his genuine servants, yet sorrow often so overclouds their minds as to exclude from them for the time all remembrance of his providence. From perusing the complaints of Job, we may perceive, that when the minds of the godly are preoccupied with sorrow, they do not immediately pierce to the consideration of the secret providence of God, which yet has been before the subject of their careful meditation, and the truth of which they bear engraven on their hearts. Although the prophet, then, was persuaded that the dead also are under the Divine protection, yet, in the first paroxysm of his grief, he spoke less advisedly than he ought to have done; for the light of faith was, as it were, extinguished in him, although, as we shall see, it soon after shone forth. This it will be highly useful particularly to observe, that, should we be at any time weakened by temptation, we may, nevertheless, be kept from falling into despondency or despair.
TSK: Psa 88:1 - -- Maschil : etc. or, A Psalm of Heman the Ezrahite, giving instruction, Supposed to have been written by Heman, son of Zerah, and grandson of Judah, on ...
Maschil : etc. or, A Psalm of Heman the Ezrahite, giving instruction, Supposed to have been written by Heman, son of Zerah, and grandson of Judah, on the oppression of the Hebrews in Egypt.
Lord : Psa 27:1, Psa 27:9, Psa 51:14, Psa 62:7, Psa 65:5, Psa 68:19, Psa 79:9, Psa 140:7; Gen 49:18; Isa 12:2; Luk 1:47, Luk 2:30; Tit 2:10, Tit 2:13, Tit 3:4-7
I have : Psa 22:2, Psa 86:3; Neh 1:6; Isa 62:6; Luk 2:37, Luk 18:7; 1Th 3:10; 2Ti 1:3


TSK: Psa 88:3 - -- soul : Psa 88:14, Psa 88:15, Psa 22:11-21, Psa 69:17-21, Psa 77:2, Psa 143:3, Psa 143:4; Job 6:2-4; Isa 53:3, Isa 53:10, Isa 53:11; Lam 3:15-19; Mat 2...
soul : Psa 88:14, Psa 88:15, Psa 22:11-21, Psa 69:17-21, Psa 77:2, Psa 143:3, Psa 143:4; Job 6:2-4; Isa 53:3, Isa 53:10, Isa 53:11; Lam 3:15-19; Mat 26:37-39; Mar 14:33, Mar 14:34
life : Psa 107:18; Job 33:22

TSK: Psa 88:4 - -- counted : Psa 28:1, Psa 30:9, Psa 143:7; Job 17:1; Isa 38:17, Isa 38:18; Eze 26:20; Jon 2:6; 2Co 1:9
as a man : Psa 31:12, Psa 109:22-24; Rom 5:6; 2Co...

TSK: Psa 88:5 - -- Free : Isa 14:9-12, Isa 38:10-12; Eze 32:18-32
whom : Psa 136:23; Gen 8:1, Gen 19:29
cut : Psa 88:16, Psa 31:22; Job 6:9, Job 11:10; Isa 53:8
from thy...
Free : Isa 14:9-12, Isa 38:10-12; Eze 32:18-32
whom : Psa 136:23; Gen 8:1, Gen 19:29
cut : Psa 88:16, Psa 31:22; Job 6:9, Job 11:10; Isa 53:8
from thy hand : or, by thy hand

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 88:1 - -- O Lord God of my salvation - On whom I depend for salvation; who alone canst save me. Luther renders this, "O God, my Saviour." I have cri...
O Lord God of my salvation - On whom I depend for salvation; who alone canst save me. Luther renders this, "O God, my Saviour."
I have cried day and night before thee - literally, "By day I cried; by night before thee;"that is, my prayer is constantly before thee. The meaning is, that there was no intermission to his prayers; he prayed all the while. This does not refer to the general habit of his life, but to the time of his sickness. He had prayed most earnestly and constantly that he might be delivered from sickness and from the dangers of death. He had, as yet, obtained no answer, and he now pours out, and records, a more earnest petition to God.

Barnes: Psa 88:2 - -- Let my prayer come before thee - As if there were something which hindered it, or which had obstructed the way to the throne of grace; as if Go...
Let my prayer come before thee - As if there were something which hindered it, or which had obstructed the way to the throne of grace; as if God repelled it from him, and turned away his ear, and would not hear.
Incline thine ear unto my cry - See the notes at Psa 5:1.

Barnes: Psa 88:3 - -- For my soul is full of troubles - I am full of trouble. The word rendered as "full"means properly to satiate as with food; that is, when as muc...
For my soul is full of troubles - I am full of trouble. The word rendered as "full"means properly to satiate as with food; that is, when as much had been taken as could be. So he says here, that this trouble was as great as he could bear; he could sustain no more. He had reached the utmost point of endurance; he had no power to bear anymore.
And my life draweth nigh unto the grave - Hebrew, to Sheol. Compare the notes at Isa 14:9; notes at Job 10:21-22. It may mean here either the grave, or the abode of the dead. He was about to die. Unless he found relief he must go down to the abodes of the dead. The Hebrew word rendered life is in the plural number, as in Gen 2:7; Gen 3:14, Gen 3:17; Gen 6:17; Gen 7:15; et al. Why the plural was used as applicable to life cannot now be known with certainty. It may have been to accord with the fact that man has two kinds of life; the animal life - or life in common with the inferior creation; and intellectual, or higher life - the life of the soul. Compare the notes at 1Th 5:23. The meaning here is, that he was about to die; or that his life or lives approached that state when the grave closes over us; the extinction of the mere animal life; and the separation of the soul - the immortal part - from the body.

Barnes: Psa 88:4 - -- I am counted with them that go down into the pit - I am so near to death that I may be reckoned already as among the dead. It is so manifest to...
I am counted with them that go down into the pit - I am so near to death that I may be reckoned already as among the dead. It is so manifest to others that I must die - that my disease is mortal - that they already speak of me as dead. The word "pit"here means the grave - the same as Sheol in the previous verse. It means properly
(1) a pit,
(2) a cistern, Gen 37:20,
(3) a prison or dungeon, Isa 24:22,
(4) the grave, Psa 28:1; Psa 30:4; Isa 38:18.
I am as a man that hath no strength - Who has no power to resist disease, no vigor of constitution remaining; who must die.

Barnes: Psa 88:5 - -- Free among the dead - Luther renders this, "I lie forgotten among the dead."DeWette renders it, "Pertaining to the dead - (den Todten angehoren...
Free among the dead - Luther renders this, "I lie forgotten among the dead."DeWette renders it, "Pertaining to the dead - (den Todten angehorend) - stricken down, like the slain, I lie in the grave,"and explains it as meaning, "I am as good as dead."The word rendered "free"-
(1) prostrate, weak, feeble;
(2) free, as opposed to a slave or a captive;
(3) free from public taxes or burdens.
The word is translated "free"in Exo 21:2, Exo 21:5,Exo 21:26-27; Deu 15:12-13, Deu 15:18; 1Sa 17:25; Job 3:19; Job 39:5; Isa 58:6; Jer 34:9-11, Jer 34:14; and at liberty in Jer 34:16. It occurs nowhere else except in this verse. In all these places (except in 1Sa 17:25, where it refers to a house or family made free, and Job 39:5, where it refers to the freedom of the wild ass), it denotes the freedom of one who had been a servant or slave. In Job 3:19, it has reference to the grave, and to the fact that the grave delivers a slave or servant from obligation to his master: "And the servant is free from his master."This is the idea, I apprehend, here. It is not, as DeWette supposes, that he was weak and feeble, as the spirits of the departed are represented to be (compare the notes at Isa 14:9-11), but that the dead are made free from the burdens, the toils, the calamities, the servitudes of life; that they are like those who are emancipated from bondage (compare Job 7:1-2; Job 14:6); that death comes to discharge them, or to set them at liberty. So the psalmist applies the expression here to himself, as if he had already reached that point; as if it were so certain that he must die that he could speak of it as if it had occurred; as if he were actually in the condition of the dead. The idea is that he was to all appearance near the grave, and that there was no hope of his recovery. It is not here, however, the idea of release or emancipation which was mainly before his mind, or any idea of consolation as from that, but it is the idea of death - of hopeless disease that must end in death. This he expresses in the usual language; but it is evident that he did not admit any comfort into his mind from the idea of freedom in the grave.
Like the slain that lie in the grave - When slain in battle. They are free from the perils and the toils of life; they are emancipated from its cares and dangers. Death is freedom; and it is possible to derive solace from that idea of death, as Job did Job 3:19; but the psalmist here, as remarked above, did not so admit that idea into his mind as to be comforted by it.
Whom thou rememberest no more - As if they were forgotten by thee; as if they were no longer the object of thy care. They are suffered to lie and waste away, with no care on thy part to restore them to life, or to preserve them from offensiveness and decay. So the great, the beautiful, and the good lie neglected in the grave.
And they are cut off from thy hand - Margin, "by."The Hebrew is literally "from thy hand,"but still the idea is that it was by the agency of God. They had been cut down, and were forgotten - as if God regarded them no more. So we shall all moulder in the grave - in that deep, dark, cold, silent, repulsive abode, as if even God had forgotten us.
Poole: Psa 88:3 - -- My soul properly so called; for that he was under great troubles of mind from a sense of God’ s wrath and departure from him, is evident from Ps...
My soul properly so called; for that he was under great troubles of mind from a sense of God’ s wrath and departure from him, is evident from Psa 88:14-16 .

I am given up by my friends and acquaintance for a lost man.

Poole: Psa 88:5 - -- Free among the dead well nigh discharged from the warfare of the present life, and entered es a member into the society of the dead; as Israelitish s...
Free among the dead well nigh discharged from the warfare of the present life, and entered es a member into the society of the dead; as Israelitish servants, when they were made flee, were thereby made denizens of the commonwealth of Israel. I expect no other freedom from my miseries but that which death gives, as Job 3:17,18 .
Whom thou rememberest no more whom thou seemest wholly to neglect and to bury in oblivion; for he speaks of these matters not as they are in truth, for he knew very well that forgetfulness was not incident to God, and that God did remember all the dead, and would call them to an account, but only as to sense and appearance, and the opinion of the world, and the state and things of this life.
From thy hand from the care and conduct of thy providence, which is to be understood as the former clause. Or, by thy hand . But our translation seems better to agree both with the foregoing branch, which it explains and improves, and with the order of the words; for it seems improper, after he had represented the persons as dead, and in their graves, to add that they
are cut off to wit, by death.
PBC -> Psa 88:1
Haydock: Psa 88:1 - -- The perpetuity of the Church of Christ, in consequence of the promises of God: which notwithstanding, God permits her to suffer sometimes most grievou...
The perpetuity of the Church of Christ, in consequence of the promises of God: which notwithstanding, God permits her to suffer sometimes most grievous afflictions.
Israel. The Lord our king, (1 Kings viii. 7.) will protect us, (Haydock) or He will defend our King David, and his posterity, as he then promised to him, ver. 5, 20. These verses may be thus connected, as the psalmist had been led to praise the wonderful works of God, and now returns to his promises. (Berthier)

Haydock: Psa 88:1 - -- Ezrahite. Septuagint, &c., " Israelite, " as in the former psalm. The Jews think that Ethan or Eman lived during the Egyptian bondage. But this ps...
Ezrahite. Septuagint, &c., " Israelite, " as in the former psalm. The Jews think that Ethan or Eman lived during the Egyptian bondage. But this psalm was rather composed by one of the captives at Babylon who bewails the destruction of the kingdom of Juda, under Sedecias. After he had detailed the promises of God, (ver. 39.; Calmet) David might write it in the person (Haydock) of Ethan, or Idithun, 1 Paralipomenon xxv., and 3 Kings. iv. 31. (Worthington) ---
Most of the Fathers explain it of Christ's kingdom. See Psalm cxxxi. 11., and Jeremias xxxiii. 17. (Calmet) ---
The sceptre or administration of affairs was to continue in the tribe of Juda till his coming, as it really did, though kings were not always at the head of the people. (Berthier)

Haydock: Psa 88:2 - -- The. Septuagint and Houbigant, " Thy mercies, Lord." ---
Truth. Notwithstanding our distress, I know thou wilt perform thy promises. (Calmet)
The. Septuagint and Houbigant, " Thy mercies, Lord." ---
Truth. Notwithstanding our distress, I know thou wilt perform thy promises. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 88:3 - -- For thou. Hebrew, "I." Yet St. Jerome agrees with the Septuagint, (Berthier) though he is quoted by Calmet as conformable with Aquila, &c., Dixi. ...
For thou. Hebrew, "I." Yet St. Jerome agrees with the Septuagint, (Berthier) though he is quoted by Calmet as conformable with Aquila, &c., Dixi. ---
Heaven and earth shall pass away sooner than God's word. (Haydock) ---
If we do not see how his promises are accompanied we must confess our ignorance, or throw the blame on the sins of the nation: but never call in question the divine mercy. (Calmet) ---
Truth. I will perform what I have promised to thee. (Menochius) ---
The apostles, represented by the heavens, have, by their preaching, established by the Church for ever. (Worthington) ---
In them, is not in the Septuagint, St. Augustine, &c. (Calmet) ---
Houbigant would remove Dixisti, "for thou," &c., to ver. 4. (Haydock)

Haydock: Psa 88:4 - -- Elect. Abraham, and the whole body of the people to whom the Messias had been promised. David was assured that he should spring from his family, ve...
Elect. Abraham, and the whole body of the people to whom the Messias had been promised. David was assured that he should spring from his family, ver. 52. (Calmet)

Haydock: Psa 88:5 - -- Generation. David's posterity occupied the throne for a long time, (Haydock) and subsisted till the coming of Christ; so that if any conqueror of ...
Generation. David's posterity occupied the throne for a long time, (Haydock) and subsisted till the coming of Christ; so that if any conqueror of that family had then appeared, the Jews would not have hesitated to admit, that this prediction was fulfilled. It is there misfortune to understand the text in this sense, whereas God spoke of the spiritual kingdom of his Son, which is to be perpetual. They can never answer the argument which the Fathers urged in the 4th century, and which has attained fresh strength from the longer duration of misery under which the royal family of David has been depressed. It is plain, that it has enjoyed no power from many ages, and as God's word is invariable, He could not have promised an everlasting earthly dominion. (Berthier) ---
The temporal kingdom of David decayed at the captivity, and is now wholly destroyed. But Christ was of this family, and established the Church, his spiritual kingdom, which shall continue unto the end. (Worthington) ---
His ministers exercise a power, which is founded on truth and justice. See 2 Kings vii. 9. (Calmet)
Gill: Psa 88:1 - -- O Lord God of my salvation,.... The author both of temporal and spiritual salvation; see Psa 18:46 from the experience the psalmist had had of the Lor...
O Lord God of my salvation,.... The author both of temporal and spiritual salvation; see Psa 18:46 from the experience the psalmist had had of the Lord's working salvation for him in times past, he is encouraged to hope that he would appear for him, and help him out of his present distress; his faith was not so low, but that amidst all his darkness and dejection he could look upon the Lord as his God, and the God of salvation to him; so our Lord Jesus Christ, when deserted by his Father, still called him his God, and believed that he would help him, Psa 22:1.
I have cried day and night before thee, or "in the day I have cried, and in the night before thee"; that is, as the Targum paraphrases it,
"in the night my prayer was before thee.''
prayer being expressed by crying shows the person to be in distress, denotes the earnestness of it, and shows it to be vocal; and it being both in the day and in the night, that it was without ceasing. The same is said by Christ, Psa 22:2 and is true of him, who in the days of his flesh was frequent in prayer, and especially in the night season, Luk 6:12 and particularly his praying in the garden the night he was betrayed may be here referred to, Mat 26:38.

Gill: Psa 88:2 - -- Let my prayer come before thee,.... Not before men, as hypocrites desire, but before the Lord; let it not be shut out, but be admitted; and let it com...
Let my prayer come before thee,.... Not before men, as hypocrites desire, but before the Lord; let it not be shut out, but be admitted; and let it come with acceptance, as it does when it ascends before God, out of the hands of the angel before the throne, perfumed with the much incense of his mediation, Rev 8:3,
incline thine ear unto my cry; hearken to it, receive it, and give an answer to it; Christ's prayers were attended with strong crying, and were always received and heard, Heb 5:7.

Gill: Psa 88:3 - -- For my soul is full of troubles,.... Or "satiated or glutted" e with them, as a stomach full of meat that can receive no more, to which the allusion i...
For my soul is full of troubles,.... Or "satiated or glutted" e with them, as a stomach full of meat that can receive no more, to which the allusion is; having been fed with the bread of adversity and the water of affliction, so that he had his fill of trouble: every man is full of trouble, of one kind or another, Job 14:1 especially the saint, who besides his outward troubles has inward ones, arising from indwelling sin, the temptations of Satan, and divine desertions, which was now the case of the psalmist: this may be truly applied to Christ, who himself said, when in the garden, "my soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death", Mat 26:38, he was a man of sorrows all his days, but especially at that time, and when upon the cross, forsaken by his Father, and sustaining his wrath: "his soul" was then "filled with evil things" f, as the words may be rendered:
innumerable evils compassed him about, Psa 40:12, the sins of his people, those evil things, were imputed to him; the iniquity of them all was laid upon him, as was also the evil of punishment for them; and then he found trouble and sorrow enough:
and my life draweth nigh unto the grave: a phrase expressive of a person's being just ready to die, Job 33:22 as the psalmist now thought he was, Psa 88:5, it is in the plural number "my lives" g; and so may not only denote the danger he was in of his natural life, but of his spiritual and eternal life, which he might fear, being in darkness and desertion, would be lost, though they could not; yea, that he was near to "hell" itself, for so the word h may be rendered; for when the presence of God is withdrawn, and wrath let into the conscience, a person in his own apprehension seems to be in hell as it were, or near it; see Jon 2:2. This was true of Christ, when he was sorrowful unto death, and was brought to the dust of it, and under divine dereliction, and a sense of the wrath of God, as the surety of his people.

Gill: Psa 88:4 - -- I am counted with them that go down into the pit,.... With the dead, with them that are worthy of death, with malefactors that are judicially put to d...
I am counted with them that go down into the pit,.... With the dead, with them that are worthy of death, with malefactors that are judicially put to death, and are not laid in a common grave, but put into a pit together: thus Christ was reckoned and accounted of by the Jews; the sanhedrim counted him worthy of death; and the common people cried out Crucify him; and they did crucify him between two malefactors; and so he was numbered or counted with transgressors, and as one of them, Isa 53:3.
I am as a man that hath no strength; for his "strength" was "dried up like a potsherd", Psa 22:15, though he was the mighty God, and, as man, was made strong by the Lord for himself.

Gill: Psa 88:5 - -- Free among the dead,.... If he was a freeman, it was only among the dead, not among the living; if he was free of any city, it was of the city of the ...
Free among the dead,.... If he was a freeman, it was only among the dead, not among the living; if he was free of any city, it was of the city of the dead; he looked upon himself as a dead man, as one belonging to the state of the dead, who are free from all relations, and from all business and labour, and removed from all company and society; he thought himself quite neglected, of whom there was no more care and notice taken than of a dead man:
like the slain that lie in the grave, whom thou rememberest no more; in a providential way, as in life, to clothe them, and feed them, and protect and preserve them; in which sense God is said to be mindful of men, Psa 8:4, who when dead have no need to be minded, and remembered in such a manner; otherwise God does remember the dead, and takes care of their dust, and will raise them again; and especially he remembers his own people, those that sleep in Jesus, who will be thought of in the resurrection morn, and will be raised first, and brought with Christ; see Job 14:13,
and they are cut off from thy hand; that is, the slain that lie in the grave, the dead that are buried there; these are cut off from the hand of Providence, they needing no supplies from thence as in the time of life. The Targum is,
"and they are separated from the face of thy majesty.''
or "they are cut off by thine hand" i; by the immediate hand of God, in a judicial way; so Christ in his death was like one of these, he was cut off in a judicial way, not for his own sins, but for the transgressions of his people, Isa 53:8.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes




Geneva Bible: Psa 88:1 "A Song [or] Psalm for the sons of Korah, to the chief Musician upon Mahalath ( a ) Leannoth, Maschil of Heman the Ezrahite." O LORD God of my salvati...

Geneva Bible: Psa 88:5 ( c ) Free among the dead, like the slain that lie in the grave, whom thou rememberest no more: and they are cut off from thy ( d ) hand.
( c ) For h...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 88:1-18
MHCC -> Psa 88:1-9
MHCC: Psa 88:1-9 - --The first words of the psalmist are the only words of comfort and support in this psalm. Thus greatly may good men be afflicted, and such dismal thoug...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 88:1-9
Matthew Henry: Psa 88:1-9 - -- It should seem, by the titles of this and the following psalm, that Heman was the penman of the one and Ethan of the other. There were two, of these...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 88:1-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 88:1-7 - --
The poet finds himself in the midst of circumstances gloomy in the extreme, but he does not despair; he still turns towards Jahve with his complaint...
Constable: Psa 73:1--89:52 - --I. Book 3: chs 73--89
A man or men named Asaph wrote 17 of the psalms in this book (Pss. 73-83). Other writers w...

Constable: Psa 88:1-18 - --Psalm 88
This is one of the saddest of the psalms. It relates the prayer of a person who suffered intens...
