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Psalm 38

A Penitent Sufferer’s Plea for Healing

A Psalm of David, for the memorial offering.

1

O L ord, do not rebuke me in your anger,

or discipline me in your wrath.

2

For your arrows have sunk into me,

and your hand has come down on me.

 

3

There is no soundness in my flesh

because of your indignation;

there is no health in my bones

because of my sin.

4

For my iniquities have gone over my head;

they weigh like a burden too heavy for me.

 

5

My wounds grow foul and fester

because of my foolishness;

6

I am utterly bowed down and prostrate;

all day long I go around mourning.

7

For my loins are filled with burning,

and there is no soundness in my flesh.

8

I am utterly spent and crushed;

I groan because of the tumult of my heart.

 

9

O Lord, all my longing is known to you;

my sighing is not hidden from you.

10

My heart throbs, my strength fails me;

as for the light of my eyes—it also has gone from me.

11

My friends and companions stand aloof from my affliction,

and my neighbors stand far off.

 

12

Those who seek my life lay their snares;

those who seek to hurt me speak of ruin,

and meditate treachery all day long.

 

13

But I am like the deaf, I do not hear;

like the mute, who cannot speak.

14

Truly, I am like one who does not hear,

and in whose mouth is no retort.

 

15

But it is for you, O L ord, that I wait;

it is you, O Lord my God, who will answer.

16

For I pray, “Only do not let them rejoice over me,

those who boast against me when my foot slips.”

 

17

For I am ready to fall,

and my pain is ever with me.

18

I confess my iniquity;

I am sorry for my sin.

19

Those who are my foes without cause are mighty,

and many are those who hate me wrongfully.

20

Those who render me evil for good

are my adversaries because I follow after good.

 

21

Do not forsake me, O L ord;

O my God, do not be far from me;

22

make haste to help me,

O Lord, my salvation.


15 For on thee, O Jehovah! do I wait. David here shows the source of his patience. It consisted in this, that, trusting in the grace of God, he overcame all the temptations of the world. And certainly, the mind of man will never be framed to gentleness and meekness, nor will he be able to subdue his passions, until he has learned never to give up hope. The Psalmist, at the same time, adds, that he cherished his hope by constant meditation, lest he should yield to despair. And this is the only means of our perseverance, when, on the ground of his own promises, with which we are furnished, we appeal to him, yea, rather when setting before our view his fidelity and his constancy in fulfilling what he has promised, we are sureties to ourselves for him. Accordingly, Paul, in Romans 5:4, very properly joins patience to hope and consolation. The repetition of terms in this verse shows, that this holy man was subjected to a severe and arduous conflict. Thou, he says, O Lord! my God, wilt answer me. His language implies, that if God should delay to come to his help, there was reason to fear that he would faint from weariness, or fall into despair, unless, setting this double defense before him, he persevered valiantly in the conflict.


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