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Text -- Psalms 88:11-18 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
In the grave, where men are forgotten by their nearest relations.
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Come to thee before the dawning of the day, or the rising of the sun.
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As the waters of the sea encompass him who is in the midst of it.
JFB: Psa 88:11-12 - -- Amplify the foregoing, the whole purport (as Psa 6:5) being to contrast death and life as seasons for praising God.
Amplify the foregoing, the whole purport (as Psa 6:5) being to contrast death and life as seasons for praising God.
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The extremes of anguish and despair are depicted.
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JFB: Psa 88:18 - -- Better omit "into"--"mine acquaintances (are) darkness," the gloom of death, &c. (Job 17:13-14).
Better omit "into"--"mine acquaintances (are) darkness," the gloom of death, &c. (Job 17:13-14).
Clarke: Psa 88:11 - -- Or thy faithfulness in destruction? - Faithfulness in God refers as well to his fulfilling his threatenings as to his keeping his promises. The wick...
Or thy faithfulness in destruction? - Faithfulness in God refers as well to his fulfilling his threatenings as to his keeping his promises. The wicked are threatened with such punishments as their crimes have deserved; but annihilation is no punishment. God therefore does not intend to annihilate the wicked; their destruction cannot declare the faithfulness of God.
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Clarke: Psa 88:12 - -- The land of forgetfulness? - The place of separate spirits, or the invisible world. The heathens had some notion of this state. They feigned a river...
The land of forgetfulness? - The place of separate spirits, or the invisible world. The heathens had some notion of this state. They feigned a river in the invisible world, called Lethe,
Animae, quibus altera fat
Corpora debentur, lethaei ad fluminis unda
Securos latices et longa oblivia potant
Virg. Aen. 6: 713
To all those souls who round the river wai
New mortal bodies are decreed by fate
To yon dark stream the gliding ghosts repair
And quaff deep draughts of long oblivion there.
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Clarke: Psa 88:13 - -- Shall my prayer prevent thee - It shall get before thee; I will not wait till the accustomed time to offer my morning sacrifice, I shall call on the...
Shall my prayer prevent thee - It shall get before thee; I will not wait till the accustomed time to offer my morning sacrifice, I shall call on thee long before others come to offer their devotions.
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Clarke: Psa 88:14 - -- Why castest thou off my soul? - Instead of my soul, several of the ancient Versions have my prayer. Why dost thou refuse to hear me, and thus abando...
Why castest thou off my soul? - Instead of my soul, several of the ancient Versions have my prayer. Why dost thou refuse to hear me, and thus abandon me to death?
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Clarke: Psa 88:15 - -- From my youth up - I have always been a child of sorrow, afflicted in my body, and distressed in my mind. There are still found in the Church of God...
From my youth up - I have always been a child of sorrow, afflicted in my body, and distressed in my mind. There are still found in the Church of God persons in similar circumstances; persons who are continually mourning for themselves and for the desolations of Zion. A disposition of this kind is sure to produce an unhealthy body; and indeed a weak constitution may often produce an enfeebled mind; but where the terrors of the Lord prevail, there is neither health of body nor peace of mind.
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Clarke: Psa 88:16 - -- Thy fierce wrath goeth over me - It is a mighty flood by which I am overwhelmed.
Thy fierce wrath goeth over me - It is a mighty flood by which I am overwhelmed.
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Clarke: Psa 88:17 - -- They came round about me daily like water - Besides his spiritual conflicts, he had many enemies to grapple with. The waves of God’ s displeasu...
They came round about me daily like water - Besides his spiritual conflicts, he had many enemies to grapple with. The waves of God’ s displeasure broke over him, and his enemies came around him like water, increasing more and more, rising higher and higher, till he was at last on the point of being submerged in the flood.
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Clarke: Psa 88:18 - -- Lover and friend - I have no comfort, and neither friend nor neiphbour to sympathize with me
Lover and friend - I have no comfort, and neither friend nor neiphbour to sympathize with me
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Clarke: Psa 88:18 - -- Mine acquaintance into darkness - All have forsaken me; or מידעי מחשך meyuddai machsach , "Darkness is my companion."Perhaps he may refer ...
Mine acquaintance into darkness - All have forsaken me; or
"Weeping, I passed the place where lay my friend
Captured by death; in accents wild I cried
Where are they? And stern Fate, by Echoes voice
Returned in solemn sound the sad Where are they?
J. B. C
Calvin: Psa 88:11 - -- 13.But to thee have I cried, O Jehovah! There may have been a degree of intemperateness in the language of the prophet, which, as I have granted, can...
13.But to thee have I cried, O Jehovah! There may have been a degree of intemperateness in the language of the prophet, which, as I have granted, cannot be altogether vindicated; but still it was a sign of rare faith and piety to persevere as he did with never-failing earnestness in prayer. This is what is meant when he says, that he made haste in the morning; by which he would have us not to imagine that he slowly and coldly lingered till he was constrained by dire necessity. At the same time, he modestly intimates by these words, that his pining away in long continued miseries was not owing to his own sluggishness, as if he had not sought God. This is an example particularly worthy of notice, that we may not become discouraged if it happen sometimes that our prayers are for a time unsuccessful, although they may proceed from the heart, and may be assiduously persevered in.
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Calvin: Psa 88:14 - -- 14.Wherefore, O Jehovah! wilt thou reject my soul? These lamentations at first sight would seem to indicate a state of mind in which sorrow without a...
14.Wherefore, O Jehovah! wilt thou reject my soul? These lamentations at first sight would seem to indicate a state of mind in which sorrow without any consolation prevailed; but they contain in them tacit prayers. The Psalmist does not proudly enter into debate with God, but mournfully desires some remedy to his calamities. This kind of complaint justly deserves to be reckoned among the unutterable groanings of which Paul makes mention in Rom 8:26. Had the prophet thought himself rejected and abhorred by God, he certainly would not have persevered in prayer. But here he sets forth the judgment of the flesh, against which he strenuously and magnanimously struggled, that it might at length be manifest from the result that he had not prayed in vain. Although, therefore, this psalm does not end with thanksgiving, but with a mournful complaint, as if there remained no place for mercy, yet it is so much the more useful as a means of keeping us in the duty of prayer. The prophet, in heaving these sighs, and discharging them, as it were, into the bosom of God, doubtless ceased not to hope for the salvation of which he could see no signs by the eye of sense. He did not call God, at the opening of the psalm, the God of his salvation, and then bid farewell to all hope of succor from him.
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Calvin: Psa 88:15 - -- The reason why he says that he was ready to die 518 from his youth, (verse 15,) is uncertain, unless it may be considered a probable conjecture t...
The reason why he says that he was ready to die 518 from his youth, (verse 15,) is uncertain, unless it may be considered a probable conjecture that he was severely tried in a variety of ways, so that his life, as it were, hung by a thread amidst various tremblings and fears. Whence also we gather that God’s wraths and terrors, of which he speaks in the 16th verse, were not of short continuance. He expresses them in the 17th verse as having encompassed him daily. Since nothing is more dreadful than to conceive of God as angry with us, he not improperly compares his distress to a flood. Hence also proceeded his doubting. 519 for a sense of the divine anger must necessarily have agitated his mind with sore disquietude. But it may be asked, How can this wavering agree with faith? It is true, that when the heart is in perplexity and doubt, or rather is tossed hither and thither, faith seems to be swallowed up. But experience teaches us, that faith, while it fluctuates amidst these agitations, continues to rise again from time to time, so as not to be overwhelmed; and if at any time it is at the point of being stifled, it is nevertheless sheltered and cherished, for though the tempests may become never so violent, it shields itself from them by reflecting that God continues faithful, and never disappoints or forsakes his own children.
TSK: Psa 88:11 - -- in destruction : Psa 55:23, Psa 73:18; Job 21:30, Job 26:6; Pro 15:11; Mat 7:13; Rom 9:22; 2Pe 2:1
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TSK: Psa 88:12 - -- dark : Psa 143:3; Job 10:21, Job 10:22; Isa 8:22; Mat 8:12; Jud 1:13
in the land : Psa 88:5, Psa 31:12; Ecc 2:16, Ecc 8:10, Ecc 9:5
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TSK: Psa 88:13 - -- and in : Psa 5:3, Psa 119:147, Psa 119:148; Mar 1:35
prevent thee : ""Come before thee.""See note on Psa 21:3.
and in : Psa 5:3, Psa 119:147, Psa 119:148; Mar 1:35
prevent thee : ""Come before thee.""See note on Psa 21:3.
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TSK: Psa 88:14 - -- Lord : Psa 43:2, Psa 77:7-9; Mat 27:46
hidest : Psa 13:1, Psa 44:24, Psa 69:17; Job 13:24
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TSK: Psa 88:15 - -- afflicted : Psa 73:14; Job 17:1, Job 17:11-16; Isa 53:3
while : Psa 22:14, Psa 22:15; Job 6:4, Job 7:11-16; Isa 53:10; Zec 13:7; Luk 22:44
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TSK: Psa 88:16 - -- fierce : Psa 38:1, Psa 38:2, Psa 89:46, Psa 90:7, Psa 90:11, Psa 102:10; Isa 53:4-6; Rom 8:32; Gal 3:13; Rev 6:17
cut me : Isa 53:8; Dan 9:26
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TSK: Psa 88:17 - -- They : Psa 22:16, Psa 42:7, Psa 69:1, Psa 69:2, Psa 116:3; Job 16:12, Job 16:13, Job 30:14, Job 30:15; Lam 3:5-7; Mat 27:39-44
daily : or, all the day
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TSK: Psa 88:18 - -- Lover : Psa 88:8, Psa 31:11, Psa 38:11; Job 19:12-15
mine acquaintance : A figurative expression to denote that he now never saw them.
Lover : Psa 88:8, Psa 31:11, Psa 38:11; Job 19:12-15
mine acquaintance : A figurative expression to denote that he now never saw them.
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 88:11 - -- Shall thy loving-kindness be declared in the grave? - Thy goodness; thy mercy. Shall anyone make it known there? shall it there be celebrated? ...
Shall thy loving-kindness be declared in the grave? - Thy goodness; thy mercy. Shall anyone make it known there? shall it there be celebrated?
Or thy faithfulness in destruction? - In the place where destruction seems to reign; where human hopes perish; where the body moulders back to dust. Shall anyone there dwell on the fidelity - the truthfulness - of God, in such a way as to honor him? It is implied here that, according to the views then entertained of the state of the dead, those things would not occur. According to what is now made known to us of the unseen world it is true that the mercy of God will not be made known to the dead; that the Gospel will not be preached to them; that no messenger from God will convey to them the offers of salvation. Compare Luk 16:28-31.
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Barnes: Psa 88:12 - -- Shall thy wonders be known in the dark? - In the dark world; in "the land of darkness and the shadow of death; a land of darkness, as darkness ...
Shall thy wonders be known in the dark? - In the dark world; in "the land of darkness and the shadow of death; a land of darkness, as darkness itself, and where the light is as darkness."Job 10:21-22. "And thy righteousness."The justice of thy character; or, the ways in which thou dost maintain and manifest thy righteous character.
In the land of forgetfulness - Of oblivion; where the memory has decayed, and where the remembrance of former things is blotted out. This is a part of the general description, illustrating the ideas then entertained of the state of the dead; that they would be weak and feeble; that they could see nothing; that even the memory would fail, and the recollection of former things pass from the mind. All these are images of the grave as it appears to man when he has not the clear and full light of revelation; and the grave is all this - a dark and cheerless abode - all abode of fearfulness and gloom - when the light of the great truths of the Gospel is not suffered to fall upon it. That the psalmist dreaded this is clear, for he had not yet the full light of revealed truth in regard to the grave, and it seemed to him to be a gloomy abode. That people without the Gospel ought to dread it, is clear, for when the grave is not illuminated with Christian truth and hope, it is a place from which man by nature shrinks back, and it is not wonderful that a wicked man dreads to die.
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Barnes: Psa 88:13 - -- But unto thee have I cried, O Lord - I have earnestly prayed; I have sought thy gracious interposition. And in the morning - That is, eac...
But unto thee have I cried, O Lord - I have earnestly prayed; I have sought thy gracious interposition.
And in the morning - That is, each morning; every day. My first business in the morning shall be prayer.
Shall my prayer prevent thee - Anticipate thee; go before thee: that is, it shall be early; so to speak even before thou dost awake to the employments of the day. The language is that which would be applicable to a case where one made an appeal to another for aid before he had arisen from his bed, or who came to him even while he was asleep - and who thus, with an earnest petition, anticipated his rising. Compare the notes at Job 3:12; compare Psa 21:3; Psa 59:10; Psa 79:8; Psa 119:148; Mat 17:25; 1Th 4:15.
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Barnes: Psa 88:14 - -- Lord, why castest thou off my soul? - Why dost thou forsake or abandon me? Why is it that thou dost not interpose, since thou hast all power, a...
Lord, why castest thou off my soul? - Why dost thou forsake or abandon me? Why is it that thou dost not interpose, since thou hast all power, and since thou art a God of mercy? Why dost thou not deliver me from my troubles? How often are good people constrained to ask this question! How often does this language express exactly what is passing in their minds! How difficult, too, it is to answer the question, and to see why that God who has all power, and who is infinitely benevolent, does not interpose to deliver his people in affliction! The answer to this question cannot be fully given in this world; there will be an answer furnished doubtless in the future life.
Why hidest thou thy face from me? - Why dost thou not lift up the light of thy countenance upon me, and show me thy favor? God seemed to turn away from him. He seemed unwilling even to look upon the sufferer. He permitted him to bear his sorrows, unpitied and alone.
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Barnes: Psa 88:15 - -- I am afflicted and ready to die - I am so afflicted - so crushed with sorrow and trouble - that my strength is nearly gone, and I can endure it...
I am afflicted and ready to die - I am so afflicted - so crushed with sorrow and trouble - that my strength is nearly gone, and I can endure it but a little longer.
From my youth up - That is, for a long time; so long, that the remembrance of it seems to go back to my very childhood. My whole life has been a life of trouble and sorrow, and I have not strength to bear it longer. It may have been literally true that the author of the psalm had been a man always afflicted; or, this may be the language of strong emotion, meaning that his sufferings had been of so long continuance that they seemed to him to have begun in his very boyhood.
While I suffer thy terrors - I bear those things which produce terror; or, which fill my mind with alarm; to wit, the fear of death, and the dread of the future world.
I am distracted - I cannot compose and control my mind; I cannot pursue any settled course of thought; I cannot confine my attention to anyone subject; I cannot reason calmly on the subject of affliction, on the divine government, on the ways of God. I am distracted with contending feelings, with my pain, and my doubts, and my fears - and I cannot think clearly of anything. Such is often the case in sickness; and consequently what we need, to prepare us for sickness, is a strong faith, built on a solid foundation while we are in health; such an intelligent and firm faith that when the hour of sickness shall come we shall have nothing else to do but to believe, and to take the comfort of believing. The bed of sickness is not the proper place to examine the evidences of religion; it is not the place to make preparation for death; not the proper place to become religious. Religion demands the best vigor of the intellect and the calmest state of the heart; and this great subject should be settled in our minds before we are sick - before we are laid on the bed of death.
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Barnes: Psa 88:16 - -- Thy fierce wrath goeth over me - Like waters. See Psa 88:7. Thy terrors have cut me off - That is, I am as one already dead; I am so near...
Thy fierce wrath goeth over me - Like waters. See Psa 88:7.
Thy terrors have cut me off - That is, I am as one already dead; I am so near to death that I may be spoken of as dead.
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Barnes: Psa 88:17 - -- They came round about me daily like water - Margin, "as in"Hebrew, all the day. That is, his troubles seemed to be like the waves of the sea co...
They came round about me daily like water - Margin, "as in"Hebrew, all the day. That is, his troubles seemed to be like the waves of the sea cohnstantly breaking on the shore. See Psa 42:7.
They compassed me about together - My troubles did not come singly, so that I could meet them one at a time, but they seemed to have banded themselves together; they all came upon me at once.
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Barnes: Psa 88:18 - -- Lover and friend hast thou put far from me - That is, Thou hast so afflicted me that they have forsaken me. Those who professed to love me, and...
Lover and friend hast thou put far from me - That is, Thou hast so afflicted me that they have forsaken me. Those who professed to love me, and whom I loved - those whom I regarded as my friends, and who seemed to be my friends - are now wholly turned away from me, and I am left to suffer alone. See the notes at Psa 88:8.
And mine acquaintance into darkness - The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render this, "my acquaintance from my misery."Luther, "Thou hast caused my friends and neighbors, and my kindred, to separate themselves far from me, on account of such misery."The literal rendering would be, my acquaintances are darkness. This may mean either that they had so turned away that he could not see them, as if they were in the dark; or, that his familiars now - his companions - were dark and dismal objects - gloomy thoughts - sad forebodings. Perhaps the whole might be translated, "Far away from me hast thou put lover and friend - my acquaintances! All is darkness!"That is, When I think of any of them, all is darkness, sadness. My friends are not to be seen. They have vanished. I see no friends; I see only darkness and gloom. All have gone, leaving me alone in this condition of unpitied sorrow! This completes the picture of the suffering man; a man to whom all was dark, and who could find no consolation anywhere - in God; in his friends; in the grave; in the prospect of the future. There are such cases; and it was well that there was one such description in the sacred Scriptures of a good man thus suffering - to show us that when we thus feel, it should not be regarded as proof that we have no piety. Beneath all this, there may be true love to God; beyond all this, there may be a bright world to which the sufferer will come, and where he will forever dwell.
Poole: Psa 88:11 - -- I am not without hopes that thou hast a true kindness for me, and wilt faithfully perform thy gracious promises made to me, and to all that love the...
I am not without hopes that thou hast a true kindness for me, and wilt faithfully perform thy gracious promises made to me, and to all that love thee and call upon thee in truth. But then this must be done speedily, or I shall be utterly incapable of such a mercy.
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Poole: Psa 88:12 - -- In the dark in the grave, which is called the land of darkness , Job 10:21,22 .
In the land of forgetfulness in the grave; so called, either, firs...
In the dark in the grave, which is called the land of darkness , Job 10:21,22 .
In the land of forgetfulness in the grave; so called, either, first, Actively, because there men forget and neglect all the concerns of this life, being indeed but dead carcasses without any sense or remembrance. Or rather, secondly, Passively, because there men are forgotten not only by men, as is noted, Job 24:20 Psa 31:12 , but by God himself, as he complained, Psa 88:5 .
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Poole: Psa 88:13 - -- i.e. Early, come to thee, before the ordinary time of morning prayer, or before the dawning of the day, or the rising of the sun. The sense is, Thou...
i.e. Early, come to thee, before the ordinary time of morning prayer, or before the dawning of the day, or the rising of the sun. The sense is, Though I have hitherto got no answer to my prayers, yet I will not give over praying nor hoping for an answer.
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Poole: Psa 88:14 - -- This proceeding seems not to agree with the benignity of thy nature, nor with the manner of thy dealing with thy people.
This proceeding seems not to agree with the benignity of thy nature, nor with the manner of thy dealing with thy people.
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Poole: Psa 88:15 - -- From my youth up my whole life hath been filled with a succession of deadly calamities. O Lord, take some pity upon me, and let me have a little brea...
From my youth up my whole life hath been filled with a succession of deadly calamities. O Lord, take some pity upon me, and let me have a little breathing space before I die.
I suffer thy terrors upon my mind and conscience, which do accompany and aggravate my outward miseries.
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Poole: Psa 88:17 - -- As the waters of the sea encompass him which is in the midst and bottom of it.
As the waters of the sea encompass him which is in the midst and bottom of it.
Haydock: Psa 88:11 - -- Proud one. Hebrew Rahab, Egypt or Pharao, Psalm lxxxvi. 4., and Isaias li. 9. (Calmet) He alludes to the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians, &c....
Proud one. Hebrew Rahab, Egypt or Pharao, Psalm lxxxvi. 4., and Isaias li. 9. (Calmet) He alludes to the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians, &c. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 88:13 - -- Sea. Hebrew, "the right," (Calmet) which here denotes the south, (Psalm cvi. 3.; Menochius) as Hermon may do the east, (Du Hamel) with reference t...
Sea. Hebrew, "the right," (Calmet) which here denotes the south, (Psalm cvi. 3.; Menochius) as Hermon may do the east, (Du Hamel) with reference to Thabor, which lies to the west, though this seems unusual. (Calmet) (Berthier) ---
The north, &c., more probably refers to the limits of the promised land, from Libanus to the Indian or Mediterranean sea; and from Hermon, on the north-eastern part, to Thabor, on the west. (Haydock) ---
These two mountains were particularly fertile, and seemed to rejoice. (Berthier) ---
They "shall praise thy name," Greek: euphemesousi. (Symmachus) (Haydock)
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Might. Others can make no resistance with all their armies.
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Haydock: Psa 88:15 - -- Preparation. Hebrew, "basis." ---
Face. Like guards. (Menochius) ---
He extols the mercy, and still more the fidelity of God. (Calmet) ---
Wh...
Preparation. Hebrew, "basis." ---
Face. Like guards. (Menochius) ---
He extols the mercy, and still more the fidelity of God. (Calmet) ---
Whether he punished, or reward, all tends to promote his glory, and is perfectly just. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 88:16 - -- Jubilation. Hebrew, "how to sound the trumpet," which was the office of priests. They marched near the ark, as it were under the eyes of God. (Cal...
Jubilation. Hebrew, "how to sound the trumpet," which was the office of priests. They marched near the ark, as it were under the eyes of God. (Calmet) ---
Those who consider, and adore the ways of Providence, are blessed, (Worthington) and secure. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 88:18 - -- Horn. Power and kingdom. (Worthington) ---
He speaks like a virtuous Levite, who acknowledges that all good came from the Lord. (Haydock) ---
He...
Horn. Power and kingdom. (Worthington) ---
He speaks like a virtuous Levite, who acknowledges that all good came from the Lord. (Haydock) ---
He cannot speak of temporal blessings alone. (Berthier)
Gill: Psa 88:11 - -- Shall thy lovingkindness be declared in the grave?.... Where he saw himself now going, and where should he be detained, and not raised out of it, the ...
Shall thy lovingkindness be declared in the grave?.... Where he saw himself now going, and where should he be detained, and not raised out of it, the lovingkindness of God to him, as his Son, and as man and Mediator, and to his people in the gift and mission of him to be their Saviour and Redeemer, how would that be declared and made known? now it is, Christ being raised, and his ministers having a commission from him to preach the Gospel, in which the lovingkindness of God is abundantly manifested:
or thy faithfulness in destruction? the grave, so called from dead bodies being cast into it, and wasted, consumed, and destroyed in it: the meaning may be, that should he be laid in the grave, and there putrefy and rot, and not be raised again, where would be the faithfulness of God to his purposes, to his covenant and promises, to him his Son, and to his people?
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Gill: Psa 88:12 - -- Shall thy wonders be known in the dark?.... A description of the grave again; see Job 10:21, The sense may be, should he continue in the dark and sile...
Shall thy wonders be known in the dark?.... A description of the grave again; see Job 10:21, The sense may be, should he continue in the dark and silent grave, how would the wonders of the grace of God, of electing, redeeming, justifying, pardoning, and adopting grace, be made known; the wonders of Christ's person and offices, and the wondrous things, and doctrines of the Gospel, relating thereunto? as the glory of these would be eclipsed, there would be none to publish them:
and thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness? the grave, where the dead lie, who, having lost all sense of things, forget what were done in this world, and they themselves are quickly forgotten by the living; and had Christ continued in this state, and had not risen again to our justification, how would his justifying righteousness have been revealed, as it is from faith to faith in the Gospel, which is therefore called the word and ministration of righteousness?
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Gill: Psa 88:13 - -- But unto thee have I cried, O Lord,.... Formerly, and had been heard, answered, and relieved, and which was an encouragement to cry again to him in hi...
But unto thee have I cried, O Lord,.... Formerly, and had been heard, answered, and relieved, and which was an encouragement to cry again to him in his distress; Christ was always heard, Joh 11:42, or, now, in his present case, yet was not heard, at least not immediately answered; which was the case of the Messiah, when forsaken by his God and Father, Psa 22:1, yet still determines to continue praying, as follows:
and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee; not before the Lord is awake, and can hear; for he neither slumbers nor sleeps, and he always hears: but the meaning is, that he would pray before he entered upon another business; this should be the first thing in the morning he would do, and this he would do before others did, or he himself used to do; before the usual time of morning prayer; signifying, he would pray to him very early, which is expressive of his vehemency, fervency, and importunity and earnestness, and what a sense he had of his case, and of his need of divine help: so Christ rose early in the morning, a great while before day, to pray, Mar 1:35. See Gill on Psa 5:4.
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Gill: Psa 88:14 - -- Lord, why castest thou off my soul?.... Here begins his prayer, which he determined to present early in the morning, and consists of expostulations, a...
Lord, why castest thou off my soul?.... Here begins his prayer, which he determined to present early in the morning, and consists of expostulations, and a representation of his distressed case: this shows that he was under soul desertion, and which was what so greatly afflicted him; imagining that his soul was cast off by the Lord, and had no more share in his affection, and was no more under his care, and in his sight: such expostulations of the saints, the church, and people of God, in a like case, are elsewhere met with, Psa 43:3 and may be applied to Christ, when his soul was exceeding sorrowful unto death, and was made an offering for sin; and particularly when he was forsaken by his Father: the Targum is,
"why hast thou forsaken my soul?''
and rises the word "sabachtha", which Christ did when on the cross, Mat 27:46, the Septuagint version is,
"wherefore, O Lord, dost thou reject my prayers?''
"why hidest thou thy face from me?" which is a denial of sensible communion, a withdrawing the influences and communications of divine grace for a time; and which sometimes is the case of the best of men, as Job, David, and others; and is very grieving and distressing to them; and, for the most part, is on account of sin; it is sin which separates between God and his people, and causes him to hide his face from them, or not grant them his gracious presence: this was the case of Christ, who knew no sin, while he was suffering for the sins of his people; see Psa 69:17 compared with Mat 27:46.
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Gill: Psa 88:15 - -- I am afflicted,.... In body and mind, from within and from without, by Satan, by the men of the world, and by the Lord himself; which is the common lo...
I am afflicted,.... In body and mind, from within and from without, by Satan, by the men of the world, and by the Lord himself; which is the common lot of God's people, Psa 34:19 and was the case of the Messiah, who was afflicted both with the tongues and hands of men, by words, by blows, and by the temptations of Satan; and was smitten and afflicted of God, by divine justice, as the sinner's surety: see Psa 22:24 or
I am poor a; which as it is a character, which, for the most part, agrees with the saints, who are the poor of this world God has chosen, to whom the Gospel is sent, and by whom it is received, and who are effectually called by it, so likewise belongs to Christ, Zec 9:9,
and ready to die, from my youth up; a sickly unhealthful person from his infancy, and often in danger of death; which last was certainly the case of Christ in his infancy, through the malice of Herod; and many times afterwards, when grown up, through the attempts of the Jews to take away his life: some render it, "I am ready to die through concussion", or "shaking" b; meaning some very rough and severe dispensation of Providence, such an one as Job expresses by shaking him to pieces, Job 16:12 and was literally true of Christ, when his body was so shaken by the jog of the cross, that all his bones were put out of joint, Psa 22:14.
while I suffer thy terrors; or "bear" c them, or "carry", even terrible afflictions, in which he had terrible apprehensions of the wrath of God in them, of death they would issue in, and of an awful judgment that should follow that; all which are called the terrors of the Lord, Job 6:4, and which the saints, when left to God, have some dreadful apprehensions of: such were the terrors of the Lord the Messiah endured, when in a view of the sins of his people being laid upon him, and of the wrath of God coming on him for them, his sweat was, as it were, great drops of blood falling to the ground, Luk 22:44. Compare with this Psa 18:4.
I am distracted: not out of his mind, deprived of his senses, and without the use of reason; but his thoughts were distracted and confused, and his mind discomposed with the terrors of God upon him: the Hebrew word "aphunah" is only used in this place, and is difficult of interpretation, and is variously derived and rendered: some take it to be of the same root with "pen", which signifies "lest, perhaps" d; seeing persons in a panic are apt to use such expressions; perhaps, or it may be, such and such things will befall me; forming and framing in their minds ten thousand dreadful things, which they fear are coming upon them; so Aben Ezra and Kimchi; and is applied by Cocceius e to the solicitous care and fear of Christ concerning his body, the church, Heb 5:7 others derive it from "ophen", which signifies a wheel, and so may be rendered, "I am wheeled about" f; always in motion, and have no rest day nor night; as Christ was after his apprehension, being carried from place to place, and from bar to bar: others derive it from the Arabic word "aphan" g, which signifies to be in want of counsel and advice: Christ though, as God, needed no counsel, nor did he take counsel with any; and, as Mediator, is the wonderful Counsellor; yet, as man, he needed it, and had it from his Father, for which he blesses him, Psa 16:7, others from the Hebrew root "phanah", which signifies to look unto, as persons in a panic look here and there; and as Christ did when suffering, who looked, and there was none to help, Isa 63:5. The Syriac and Arabic versions render it "amazed", or "astonished", which is said of Christ, Mar 14:33, the Vulgate Latin version is "troubled", which also agrees with Christ, Joh 12:27 as he must needs be, when his enemies surrounded him, the sins of his people were upon him, the sword of justice awaked against him, and the wrath of God on him, as follows.
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Gill: Psa 88:16 - -- Thy fierce wrath goeth over me,.... Or "wraths" h, burning wrath; the whole of divine wrath, in all its fierceness, due to the sins of his people: the...
Thy fierce wrath goeth over me,.... Or "wraths" h, burning wrath; the whole of divine wrath, in all its fierceness, due to the sins of his people: these, like the mighty waves of the sea, passed over him, threatening to overwhelm him, Psa 89:38,
thy terrors have cut me off; from the presence of God, and out of his sight; as sometimes the Lord's people are ready to imagine, when forsaken by him, Psa 31:22 or from the land of the living, as the Messiah was, and in a judicial way, though not for any sin of his own, Isa 53:8.
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Gill: Psa 88:17 - -- They came round about me daily like water,.... That is, the terrors of the Lord, the sorrows of death and hell, Psa 18:4, this was the Messiah's case,...
They came round about me daily like water,.... That is, the terrors of the Lord, the sorrows of death and hell, Psa 18:4, this was the Messiah's case, when it was with him as is expressed Psa 69:1,
they compassed me about together; as waters coming from many places, from all quarters, meet together, and together surround a person or place in such circumstances was Christ, when the bulls of Bashan beset him around, and the assembly of the wicked enclosed him, and innumerable evils encompassed him about, Psa 22:12.
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Gill: Psa 88:18 - -- Lover and friend hast thou put far from me,.... This is mentioned in Psa 88:8, and is here repeated; and the account is closed with it, to show that t...
Lover and friend hast thou put far from me,.... This is mentioned in Psa 88:8, and is here repeated; and the account is closed with it, to show that this was a most aggravating circumstance of his affliction, and which bore exceeding hard upon him; and this must be a very uncomfortable case, to be in distress, whether of body or mind, and to have no kind friend near to yield the least help, relief, and comfort; so Christ's lovers and friends, his disciples, who loved him and he loved them, and reckoned them as his friends, and was a friend to them, when he was taken by his enemies, they all forsook him, and fled, Mat 26:56,
and mine acquaintance into darkness; either by death into the dark grave, which Job calls the land of darkness and shadow of death, Job 10:21, or being removed from him, so that he could not see them, it was all one to him as if they had been put into darkness, into some dark dungeon, or into the grave itself: or the words may be rendered, mine acquaintance are darkness i: this was the case of Christ, when on the cross; he had none near him, no acquaintance about him, but darkness; and darkness was over all the land for the space of three hours; and a darkness was on his soul, being forsaken by his Father; and the prince of darkness, with all the fiends of hell, were throwing their fiery darts at him, Mat 27:45. Thus ends this sorrowful and mournful song; a joyful one follows.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 88:11 Heb “in Abaddon,” a name for Sheol. The noun is derived from a verbal root meaning “to perish,” “to die.”
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NET Notes: Psa 88:15 Heb “I carry your horrors [?].” The meaning of the Hebrew form אָפוּנָה (’afunah), w...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 88:12 Shall thy wonders be known in the dark? and thy righteousness in the land ( k ) of forgetfulness?
( k ) That is, in the grave, where only the body li...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 88:15 I [am] afflicted and ready to die ( l ) from [my] youth up: [while] I suffer thy terrors I am distracted.
( l ) I am always in great dangers and sorr...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 88:1-18
MHCC -> Psa 88:10-18
MHCC: Psa 88:10-18 - --Departed souls may declare God's faithfulness, justice, and lovingkindness; but deceased bodies can neither receive God's favours in comfort, nor retu...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 88:10-18
Matthew Henry: Psa 88:10-18 - -- In these verses, I. The psalmist expostulates with God concerning the present deplorable condition he was in (Psa 88:10-12): " Wilt thou do a miracu...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 88:8-12; Psa 88:13-18
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 88:8-12 - --
The octastichs are now followed by hexastichs which belong together in pairs. The complaint concerning the alienation of his nearest relations sound...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 88:13-18 - --
He who complains thus without knowing any comfort, and yet without despairing, gathers himself up afresh for prayer. With ואני he contrasts him...
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...
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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...
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Constable: Psa 88:8-11 - --2. The sufferer's prayer 88:9b-12
Even though Heman had prayed for relief and restoration every ...
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