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Psalms 38:19 King James Version with Strong's Concordance (STRONG)

19 But mine enemies H341 are lively, H2416 and they are strong: H6105 and they that hate H8130 me wrongfully H8267 are multiplied. H7231

Cross Reference

Psalms 35:19 STRONG

Let not them that are mine enemies H341 wrongfully H8267 rejoice H8055 over me: neither let them wink H7169 with the eye H5869 that hate H8130 me without a cause. H2600

Psalms 3:1 STRONG

[[A Psalm H4210 of David, H1732 when he fled H1272 from H6440 Absalom H53 his son.]] H1121 LORD, H3068 how are they increased H7231 that trouble H6862 me! many H7227 are they that rise up H6965 against me.

Psalms 18:17 STRONG

He delivered H5337 me from my strong H5794 enemy, H341 and from them which hated H8130 me: for they were too strong H553 for me.

Psalms 25:19 STRONG

Consider H7200 mine enemies; H341 for they are many; H7231 and they hate H8130 me with cruel H2555 hatred. H8135

Psalms 56:1-2 STRONG

[[To the chief Musician H5329 upon Jonathelemrechokim, H3128 Michtam H4387 of David, H1732 when the Philistines H6430 took H270 him in Gath.]] H1661 Be merciful H2603 unto me, O God: H430 for man H582 would swallow me up; H7602 he fighting H3898 daily H3117 oppresseth H3905 me. Mine enemies H8324 would daily H3117 swallow H7602 me up: for they be many H7227 that fight H3898 against me, O thou most High. H4791

Psalms 59:1-3 STRONG

[[To the chief Musician, H5329 Altaschith, H516 Michtam H4387 of David; H1732 when Saul H7586 sent, H7971 and they watched H8104 the house H1004 to kill him.]] H4191 Deliver H5337 me from mine enemies, H341 O my God: H430 defend H7682 me from them that rise up H6965 against me. Deliver H5337 me from the workers H6466 of iniquity, H205 and save H3467 me from bloody H1818 men. H582 For, lo, they lie in wait H693 for my soul: H5315 the mighty H5794 are gathered H1481 against me; not for my transgression, H6588 nor for my sin, H2403 O LORD. H3068

Psalms 69:4 STRONG

They that hate H8130 me without a cause H2600 are more H7231 than the hairs H8185 of mine head: H7218 they that would destroy H6789 me, being mine enemies H341 wrongfully, H8267 are mighty: H6105 then I restored H7725 that which I took not away. H1497

Matthew 10:22 STRONG

And G2532 ye shall G2071 be hated G3404 of G5259 all G3956 men for G1223 my G3450 name's sake: G3686 but G1161 he that G3778 endureth G5278 to G1519 the end G5056 shall be saved. G4982

John 15:18-25 STRONG

If G1487 the world G2889 hate G3404 you, G5209 ye know G1097 that G3754 it hated G3404 me G1691 before G4412 it hated you. G5216 If G1487 ye were G2258 of G1537 the world, G2889 the world G2889 would G302 love G5368 his own: G2398 but G1161 because G3754 ye are G2075 not G3756 of G1537 the world, G2889 but G235 I G1473 have chosen G1586 you G5209 out of G1537 the world, G2889 therefore G5124 G1223 the world G2889 hateth G3404 you. G5209 Remember G3421 the word G3056 that G3739 I G1473 said G2036 unto you, G5213 The servant G1401 is G2076 not G3756 greater than G3187 his G846 lord. G2962 If G1487 they have persecuted G1377 me, G1691 they will G1377 also G2532 persecute G1377 you; G5209 if G1487 they have kept G5083 my G3450 saying, G3056 they will keep G5083 yours G5212 also. G2532 But G235 all G3956 these things G5023 will they do G4160 unto you G5213 for G1223 my G3450 name's G3686 sake, G3450 because G3754 they know G1492 not G3756 him that sent G3992 me. G3165 If G1508 I had G2064 not G1508 come G2064 and G2532 spoken G2980 unto them, G846 they had G2192 not G3756 had G2192 sin: G266 but G1161 now G3568 they have G2192 no G3756 cloke G4392 for G4012 their G846 sin. G266 He that hateth G3404 me G1691 hateth G3404 my G3450 Father G3962 also. G2532 If G1508 I had G4160 not G1508 done G4160 among G1722 them G846 the works G2041 which G3739 none G3762 other man G243 did, G4160 they had G2192 not G3756 had G2192 sin: G266 but G1161 now G3568 have they G3708 both G2532 seen G3708 and G2532 hated G3404 both G2532 me G1691 and G2532 my G3450 Father. G3962 But G235 this cometh to pass, that G2443 the word G3056 might be fulfilled G4137 that is written G1125 in G1722 their G846 law, G3551 G3754 They hated G3404 me G3165 without a cause. G1432

Acts 4:25-28 STRONG

Who G3588 by G1223 the mouth G4750 of thy G4675 servant G3816 David G1138 hast said, G2036 Why G2444 did G5433 the heathen G1484 rage, G5433 and G2532 the people G2992 imagine G3191 vain things? G2756 The kings G935 of the earth G1093 stood up, G3936 and G2532 the rulers G758 were gathered G4863 together G1909 G846 against G2596 the Lord, G2962 and G2532 against G2596 his G846 Christ. G5547 For G1063 of G1909 a truth G225 against G1909 thy G4675 holy G40 child G3816 Jesus, G2424 whom G3739 thou hast anointed, G5548 both G5037 Herod, G2264 and G2532 Pontius G4194 Pilate, G4091 with G4862 the Gentiles, G1484 and G2532 the people G2992 of Israel, G2474 were gathered together, G4863 For to do G4160 whatsoever G3745 thy G4675 hand G5495 and G2532 thy G4675 counsel G1012 determined before G4309 to be done. G1096

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 38

Commentary on Psalms 38 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Prayer for the Changing of Merited Wrath into Rescuing Love

The Penitential Psalm, 38, is placed immediately after Ps 37 on account of the similarity of its close to the ת strophe of that Psalm. It begins like Psalms 6:1-10. If we regard David's adultery as the occasion of it (cf. more especially 2 Samuel 12:14), then Psalms 6:1-10; 38; 51; Psalms 32:1-11 form a chronological series. David is distressed both in mind and body, forsaken by his friends, and regarded by his foes as one who is cast off for ever. The fire of divine anger burns within him like a fever, and the divine withdrawal as it were rests upon him like darkness. But he fights his way by prayer through this fire and this darkness to the bright confidence of faith. The Psalm, although it is the pouring forth of such elevated and depressed feelings, is nevertheless symmetrically and skilfully laid out. It consists of three main paragraphs, which divide into four (Psalms 38:2), three (Psalms 38:10), and four (Psalms 38:16) tetrastichs. The way in which the names of God are brought in is well conceived. The first word of the first group or paragraph is יהוה , the first word of the second אדני , and in the third יהוה and אדני are used interchangeably twice. The Psalm, in common with Psalms 70:1-5, bears the inscription להזכּיר . The chronicler, in 1 Chronicles 16:4, refers to these Hazkir Psalms together with the Hodu and Halleluja Psalms. In connection with the presentation of meat-offerings, מנחות , a portion of the meat-offering was cast into the altar fire, viz., a handful of the meal mixed with oil and the whole of the incense. This portion was called אזכּרה , ἀνάμνησις , and to offer it הזכּיר (a denominative), because the ascending smoke was intended to bring the owner of the offering into remembrance with God. In connection with the presentation of this memorial portion of the mincha , the two Psalms are appointed to be used as prayers; hence the inscription: at the presentation of the Azcara (the portion taken from the meal-offering). The lxx adds here περὶ ( τοῦ ) σαββάτου ; perhaps equivalent to לשּׁבּת .

In this Psalm we find a repetition of a peculiarity of the penitential Psalms, viz., that the praying one has to complain not only of afflictions of body and soul, but also of outward enemies, who come forward as his accusers and take occasion from his sin to prepare the way for his ruin. This arises from the fact that the Old Testament believer, whose perception of sin was not as yet so spiritual and deep as that of the New Testament believer, almost always calls to mind some sinful act that has become openly known. The foes, who would then prepare for his ruin, are the instruments of the Satanic power of evil (cf. Psalms 38:21, ישׂטנוּני ), which, as becomes perceptible to the New Testament believer even without the intervention of outward foes, desires the death of the sinning one, whereas God wills that he should live.


Verses 1-8

(Heb.: 38:2-9) David begins, as in Psalms 6:1-10, with the prayer that his punitive affliction may be changed into disciplinary. Bakius correctly paraphrases. Psalms 38:2 : Corripe sane per legem, castiga per crucem, millies promerui, negare non possum, sed castiga, quaeso, me ex amore ut pater, non ex furore et fervore ut judex; ne punias justitiae rigore, sed misericordiae dulcore (cf. on Psalms 6:2). The negative is to be repeated in Psalms 38:2 , as in Psalms 1:5; Psalms 9:19; Psalms 75:6. In the description, which give the ground of the cry for pity, נחת , is not the Piel , as in Psalms 18:35, but the Niphal of the Kal נחת immediately following (root נח ). קצף is anger as a breaking forth, fragor (cf. Hosea 10:7, lxx φρύγανον ), with instead of ı̆ in the first syllable, vowels which alternate in this word; and חמה , as a glowing or burning. חצּים (in Homer, κῆλα ), God's wrath-arrows, i.e., lightnings of wrath, are His judgments of wrath; and יד , as in Psalms 32:4; Psalms 39:11, God's punishing hand, which makes itself felt in dispensing punishment, hence תּנחת might be attached as a mood of sequence. In Psalms 38:4 wrath is called זעם as a boiling up. Sin is the cause of this experiencing wrath, and the wrath is the cause of the bodily derangement; sin as an exciting cause of the wrath always manifests itself outwardly even on the body as a fatal power. In Psalms 38:5 sin is compared to waters that threaten to drown one, as in Psalms 38:5 to a burden that presses one down. ככבּדוּ ממּנּי , they are heavier than I, i.e., than my power of endurance, too heavy for me. In Psalms 38:6 the effects of the operation of the divine hand (as punishing) are wounds, חבּוּרת (properly, suffused variegated marks from a blow or wheals, Isaiah 1:6; from חבר , Arab. ḥbr , to be or make striped, variegated), which הבאישׁוּ , send forth an offensive smell, and נמקּוּ , suppurate. Sin, which causes this, is called אוּלת , because, as it is at last manifest, it is always the destruction of itself. With emphasis does מפּני אוּלתּי form the second half of the verse. To take נעויתי out of Psalms 38:7 and put it to this, as Meier and Thenius propose, is to destroy this its proper position. On the three מפּני , vid., Ewald, §217, l . Thus sick in soul and body, he is obliged to bow and bend himself in the extreme. נעוה is used of a convulsive drawing together of the body, Isaiah 21:3; שׁחח , of a bowed mien, Psalms 35:14; הלּך , of a heavy, lagging gait. With כּי in Psalms 38:8 the grounding of the petition begins for the third time. His כּסלים , i.e., internal muscles of the loins, which are usually the fattest parts, are full of נקלה , that which is burnt, i.e., parched. It is therefore as though the burning, starting from the central point of the bodily power, would spread itself over the whole body: the wrath of God works commotion in this latter as well as in the soul. Whilst all the energies of life thus yield, there comes over him a partial, almost total lifelessness. פּוּג is the proper word for the coldness and rigidity of a corpse; the Niphal means to be brought into this condition, just as נדכּא means to be crushed, or to be brought into a condition of crushing, i.e., of violent dissolution. The מן of מנּהמת is intended to imply that the loud wail is only the utterance of the pain that is raging in his heart, the outward expression of his ceaseless, deep inward groaning.


Verses 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 rescue which shows itself from afar. He has complained, but not as if it were necessary for him first of all to make God acquainted with his suffering; the Omniscient One is directly cognisant of (has directly before Him, נגד , like לנגד in Psalms 18:25) every wish that his suffering extorts from him, and even his softer sighing does not escape His knowledge. The sufferer does not say this so much with the view of comforting himself with this thought, as of exciting God's compassion. Hence he even goes on to draw the piteous picture of his condition: his heart is in a state of violent rotary motion, or only of violent, quickly repeated contraction and expansion ( Psychol . S. 252; tr. p. 297), that is to say, a state of violent palpitation ( סחרחר , Pealal according to Ges. §55, 3). Strength of which the heart is the centre (Psalms 40:13) has left him, and the light of his eyes, even of these (by attraction for גּם־הוּא , since the light of the eyes is not contrasted with anything else), is not with him, but has become lost to him by weeping, watching, and fever. Those who love him and are friendly towards him have placed themselves far from his stroke ( nega` , the touch of God's hand of wrath), merely looking on (Obadiah 1:11), therefore, in a position hostile (2 Samuel 18:13) rather than friendly. מנּגד , far away, but within the range of vision, within sight, Genesis 21:16; Deuteronomy 32:52. The words וּקרובי מרחק עמדוּ , which introduce a pentastich into a Psalm that is tetrastichic throughout, have the appearance of being a gloss or various reading: מנּגד = מרחק , 2 Kings 2:7. His enemies, however, endeavour to take advantage of his fall and helplessness, in order to give him his final death-blow. וינקּשׁוּ (with the ק dageshed)

(Note: The various reading וינקּשׁוּ in Norzi rests upon a misapprehended passage of Abulwalîd ( Rikma , p. 166).)

describes what they have planned in consequence of the position he is in. The substance of their words is הוּות , utter destruction (vid., Psalms 5:10); to this end it is מרמות , deceit upon deceit, malice upon malice, that they unceasingly hatch with heart and mouth. In the consciousness of his sin he is obliged to be silent, and, renouncing all self-help, to abandon his cause to God. Consciousness of guilt and resignation close his lips, so that he is not able, nor does he wish, to refute the false charges of his enemies; he has no תּוכחות , counter-evidence wherewith to vindicate himself. It is not to be rendered: “just as one dumb opens not his mouth;” כ is only a preposition, not a conjunction, and it is just here, in Psalms 38:14, Psalms 38:15, that the manifest proofs in support of this are found.

(Note: The passages brought forward by Hupfeld in support of the use of כ as a conjunction, viz., Psalms 90:5; Psalms 125:1; Isaiah 53:7; Isaiah 61:11, are invalid; the passage that seems most to favour it is Obadiah 1:16, but in this instance the expression is elliptical, כּלא being equivalent to כאשׁר לא , like ללא , Isaiah 65:1, = לאשׁר לא . It is only כּמו (Arab. kmâ ) that can be used as a conjunction; but כ (Arab. k ) is always a preposition in ancient Hebrew just as in Syriac and Arabic (vid., Fleischer in the Hallische Allgem. Lit. Zeitschr. 1843, Bd. iv. S. 117ff.). It is not until the mediaeval synagogal poetry (vid., Zunz, Synagogal-poesie des Mittelalters , S. 121, 381f.) that it is admissible to use it as a conjunction (e.g., כּמצא , when he had found), just as it also occurs in Himjaritic, according to Osiander's deciphering of the inscriptions. The verbal clause appended to the word to which this כ , instar , is prefixed is for the most part an attributive clause as above, but sometimes even a circumstantial clause (Arab. ḥâl ), as in Psalms 38:14; cf. Sur . lxii. 5: “as the likeness of an ass carrying books.”)


Verses 15-22

(Heb.: 38:16-23) Become utterly useless in himself, he renounces all self-help, for ( כּי ) he hopes in Jahve, who alone can help him. He waits for His answer, for ( כי ) he says, etc. - he waits for an answer, for the hearing of this his petition which is directed towards the glory of God, that God would not suffer his foes to triumph over him, nor strengthen them in their mercilessness and injustice. Psalms 38:18 appears also to stand under the government of the פּן ;

(Note: The following are the constructions of פן when a clause of ore than one member follows it: (1) fut . and perf ., the latter with the tone of the perf. consec ., e.g., Exodus 34:15., or without it, e.g., Psalms 28:1 (which see); (2) fut . and fut . as in Psalms 2:12, Jeremiah 51:46. This construction is indispensable where it is intended to give special prominence to the subject notion or a secondary notion of the clause, e.g., Deuteronomy 20:6. In one instance פן is even followed (3) by the perf . and fut. consec ., viz., 2 Kings 2:10.)

but, since in this case one would look for a Waw relat . and a different order of the words, Psalms 38:18 is to be regarded as a subject clause: “who, when my foot totters, i.e., when my affliction changes to entire downfall, would magnify themselves against me.” In Psalms 38:18, כּי connects what follows with בּמוט רגלי by way of confirmation: he is נכון לצלע , ready for falling (Psalms 35:15), he will, if God does not graciously interpose, assuredly fall headlong. The fourth כּי in Psalms 38:19 is attached confirmatorily to Psalms 38:18 : his intense pain or sorrow is ever present to him, for he is obliged to confess his guilt, and this feeling of guilt is just the very sting of his pain. And whilst he in the consciousness of well-deserved punishment is sick unto death, his foes are numerous and withal vigorous and full of life. Instead of חיּים , probably חנּם , as in Psalms 35:19; Psalms 69:5, is to be read (Houbigant, Hitzig, Köster, Hupfeld, Ewald, and Olshausen). But even the lxx read חיים ; and the reading which is so old, although it does not very well suit עצמוּ (instead of which one would look for ועצוּמים ), is still not without meaning: he looks upon himself, according to Psalms 38:9, more as one dead than living; his foes, however, are חיּים , living, i.e., vigorous. The verb frequently ash this pregnant meaning, and the adjective can also have it. Just as the accentuation of the form סבּוּ varies elsewhere out of pause, ורבּוּ here has the tone on the ultima , although it is not perf. consec .

(Note: As perf. consec . the following have the accent on the ultima : - וחתּוּ , Isaiah 20:5, Obadiah 1:9, and ורבּוּ , Isaiah 66:16; perhaps also וחדּוּ , וקלּוּ , Habakkuk 1:8, and ורבּוּ ( perf. hypoth .), Job 32:15. But there is no special reason for the ultima -accentuation of רכּוּ , Psalms 55:22; רבּוּ , Psalms 69:5; דּלּוּ , Isaiah 38:14; קלּוּ , Jeremiah 4:13; שׁחוּ , Proverbs 14:19; Habakkuk 3:6; חתּוּ , Job 32:15; זכּוּ , צחוּ , Lamentations 4:7.)

Psalms 38:21 is an apposition of the subject, which remains the same as in Psalms 38:20. Instead of רדופי (Ges. §61, rem. 2) the Kerî is רדפי , rādephî (without any Makkeph following), or רדפי , rādophî ; cf. on this pronunciation, Psalms 86:2; Psalms 16:1, and with the Chethîb רדופי , the Chethîb צרופה , Psalms 26:2, also מיורדי , Psalms 30:4. By the “following of that which is good” David means more particularly that which is brought into exercise in relation to his present foes.

(Note: In the Greek and Latin texts, likewise in all the Aethiopic and several Arabic texts, and in the Syriac Psalterium Medilanense , the following addition is found after Psalms 38:21 : Ce aperripsan me ton agapeton osi necron ebdelygmenon, Et projecerunt me dilectum tanquam mortuum abominatum (so the Psalt. Veronense ). Theodoret refers it to Absalom's relation to David. The words ὡσεὶ νεκρὸν ἐβδελυγμένον are taken from Isaiah 14:19.)

He closes in Psalms 38:22 with sighs for help. No lighting up of the darkness of wrath takes place. The fides supplex is not changed into fides triumphans . But the closing words, “O Lord, my salvation” (cf. Psalms 51:16), show where the repentance of Cain and that of David differ. True repentance has faith within itself, it despairs of itself, but not of God.