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Text -- Psalms 38:12 (NET)

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Context
38:12 Those who seek my life try to entrap me; those who want to harm me speak destructive words; all day long they say deceitful things.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Slander | SICK; SICKNESS | PSALMS, BOOK OF | IMAGINE | Homicide | Deceit | David | Conviction | Conscience | Character | BRING | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 38:12 - -- They design mischief, but cover it with fair pretences.

They design mischief, but cover it with fair pretences.

JFB: Psa 38:11-12 - -- Friends desert, but foes increase in malignity.

Friends desert, but foes increase in malignity.

JFB: Psa 38:12 - -- (1Sa 20:1; 1Sa 22:23).

Clarke: Psa 38:12 - -- They also that seek after my life - They act towards me as huntsmen after their prey; they lay snares to take away my life. Perhaps this means only ...

They also that seek after my life - They act towards me as huntsmen after their prey; they lay snares to take away my life. Perhaps this means only that they wished for his death, and would have been glad to have had it in their power to end his days. Others spoke all manner of evil of him, and told falsities against him all the day long.

Calvin: Psa 38:12 - -- 12.They also that sought for my life have laid snares for me, etc. . Here another circumstance is added, that the enemies of David laid snares for hi...

12.They also that sought for my life have laid snares for me, etc. . Here another circumstance is added, that the enemies of David laid snares for him, and talked about his destruction, and framed deceits among themselves. 54 The purport of what is stated is, that while his friends cowardly sit still and will do nothing to aid him, his enemies vigorously bestir themselves, and seek by every means to destroy him. He says that they seek his life, for as they were his deadly enemies and blood-thirsty men, they were not content with doing him some common injury, but furiously sought his destruction. He, however, here complains not so much that they assailed him by force of arms and with violence, as he accuses them of guileful conspiracy, which he designates in the first place metaphorically by the term snares, and afterwards adds in plain terms, that they talk about his destruction, and secretly consult among themselves how they might do him hurt. Now, as it is certain that David borrows not an artificial rhetoric from the bar, (as profane orators 55 do when they plead their cause,) in order to win the favor of God, but rather draws his arguments from the Word of God, the sentences which he here brings together for the confirmation of his faith we ought to appropriate to our own use. If we are altogether destitute of human aid and assistance, if our friends fail us in the time of need, and if others seek our ruin, and breathe out nothing but destruction against us, let us remember that it is not in vain for us to lay these things in prayer before God, whose province it is to succor those who are in misery, to take under his protection those who are perfidiously forsaken and betrayed, to restrain the wicked, and not only to withstand their violence, but also to anticipate their deceitful counsels and to frustrate their designs.

TSK: Psa 38:12 - -- lay snares : Psa 10:9, Psa 64:2-5, Psa 119:110, Psa 140:5, Psa 141:9; 2Sa 17:1-3; Luk 20:19, Luk 20:20 speak : Psa 35:20, Psa 62:3, Psa 62:4; 2Sa 16:7...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 38:12 - -- They also that seek after my life - This was a new aggravation of his affliction, that those who were his enemies now sought to accomplish thei...

They also that seek after my life - This was a new aggravation of his affliction, that those who were his enemies now sought to accomplish their purposes against him with better hopes of success, by taking advantage of his sickness.

Lay snares for me - On the meaning of this phrase, see the notes at Psa 9:15. The idea here is that they sought this opportunity of ensnaring or entrapping him so as to ruin him. They took advantage of the fact that he was weak and helpless, and of the fact that he was forsaken or abandoned by his friends, to accomplish his ruin. how this was done is not stated. It might have been by their coming on him when he was thus helpless; or it might have been by endeavoring in his weak condition to extort confessions or promises from him that might be turned to his ruin. An enemy may hope to succeed much better when the one opposed is sick than when he is well, and may take advantage of his weak state of body and mind, and of the fact that he seems to be forsaken by all, to accomplish what could not be done if he were in the enjoyment of health, or sustained by powerful friends, or by a public opinion in his favor.

And they that seek my hurt - They who seek to injure me.

Speak mischievous things - Slanderous words. They charge on me things that are false, and that tend to injure me. The very fact that he was thus afflicted, they might urge (in accordance with a prevailing belief, and with the conviction of the psalmist also, Psa 38:3-5) as a proof of guilt. This was done by the three friends of Job; and the enemies of the psalmist may thus have taken advantage of his sickness to circulate false reports about him which he could not then well meet.

And imagine deceits - Imagine or feign deceitful things; things which they know to be false or unfounded.

All the day long - Constantly. They seem to have no other employment. See Psa 35:20.

Poole: Psa 38:12 - -- Lay snares for me that if my disease do not kill me, they may destroy me some other way. Imagine deceits they design mischief, but cover it with fa...

Lay snares for me that if my disease do not kill me, they may destroy me some other way.

Imagine deceits they design mischief, but cover it with fair pretences.

Haydock: Psa 38:12 - -- Spider. St. Jerome, "moth." Symmachus, "thou dissolvest like corruption his desirable thing;" (Haydock) which means the soul, (Berthier) or "beauty...

Spider. St. Jerome, "moth." Symmachus, "thou dissolvest like corruption his desirable thing;" (Haydock) which means the soul, (Berthier) or "beauty." (Protestants) Remorse of conscience and God's judgments make a man pine away. ---

Disquieted is obelized in the Septuagint. (St. Jerome, ad Sun.) (Calmet) ---

It is not found in the Alexandrian and Complutensian edition (Haydock) and seems to be taken from ver. 7. It does not alter the sense. (Berthier) ---

"Man is vanity always." (St. Jerome) ---

As a spider which has consumed its moisture, so he decays. (Worthington)

Gill: Psa 38:12 - -- They also that seek after my life,.... His avowed and implacable enemies, whom nothing would satisfy but the taking away of his life: these came too n...

They also that seek after my life,.... His avowed and implacable enemies, whom nothing would satisfy but the taking away of his life: these came too near him; for these, he says,

lay snares for me, as Satan does for the souls of men, as the Jews did for Christ, and as wicked men do for the saints, Psa 124:7;

and they that seek my hurt speak mischievous things; to the injury of his character and reputation:

and imagine deceits all the day long; contrive artful schemes to deceive; see Psa 35:20.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 38:12 Heb “lay snares.”

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Psa 38:1-22 - --1 David moves God to take compassion on his pitiful case.

MHCC: Psa 38:12-22 - --Wicked men hate goodness, even when they benefit by it. David, in the complaints he makes of his enemies, seems to refer to Christ. But our enemies do...

Matthew Henry: Psa 38:12-22 - -- In these verses, I. David complains of the power and malice of his enemies, who, it should seem, not only took occasion from the weakness of his bod...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 38:9-14 - -- (Heb.: 38:10-15) Having thus bewailed his suffering before God, he goes on in a somewhat calmer tone: it is the calm of weariness, but also of the ...

Constable: Psa 38:1-22 - --Psalm 38 In this psalm David expressed penitence that he had sinned against God and had thereby incurred...

Constable: Psa 38:12-21 - --2. David's hope 38:13-22 38:13-16 David paid no attention to the threats of his enemies because he believed God would vindicate him in response to his...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 38 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 38:1, David moves God to take compassion on his pitiful case.

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

Poole: Psalms 38 (Chapter Introduction) THE ARGUMENT This is reckoned one of David’ s penitential Psalms. It was composed upon occasion of some sore disease, or grievous calamity; wh...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 38 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 38:1-11) God's displeasure at sin. (Psa 38:12-22) The psalmist's sufferings and prayers.

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 38 (Chapter Introduction) This is one of the penitential psalms; it is full of grief and complaint from the beginning to the end. David's sins and his afflictions are the ca...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 38 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 38 A Psalm of David, to bring to remembrance. This psalm was composed by David under some sore affliction, and when in great ...

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