Psalms 88:1

1 The song of the psalm, to the sons of Korah, to victory on Mahalath, for to answer the learning of Heman, (the) Ezrahite. Lord God of mine health; I cried in day and night before thee. (The song of the psalm, for the sons of Korah, to victory on Mahalath, to answer the teaching of Heman, the Ezrahite. Lord God of my salvation; I have cried day and night before thee.)

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Psalms 88:1 Meaning and Commentary

Psalms 88:1

O Lord God of my salvation
The author both of temporal and spiritual salvation; see ( Psalms 18:46 ) ( 24:5 ) 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, ( Psalms 22:1 ) ( Isaiah 1:7-9 ) .

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, ( Psalms 22:2 ) and is true of him, who in the days of his flesh was frequent in prayer, and especially in the night season, ( Luke 6:12 ) ( 21:37 ) and particularly his praying in the garden the night he was betrayed may be here referred to, ( Matthew 26:38 Matthew 26:39 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F1 (twnel tlxm le) "pro infirmitate ad affligendum", so some in Munster; "de miseria ad affligendum", Tigurine version; "de infirmitate affligente", Piscator, so Gussetius, p. 622.
F2 Works, vol. 1. p. 699.
F3 Tractat. Theolog. Politic. c. 10. p. 184.
F4 Apud Meor Enayim, c. 32. p. 106.

Psalms 88:1 In-Context

1 The song of the psalm, to the sons of Korah, to victory on Mahalath, for to answer the learning of Heman, (the) Ezrahite. Lord God of mine health; I cried in day and night before thee. (The song of the psalm, for the sons of Korah, to victory on Mahalath, to answer the teaching of Heman, the Ezrahite. Lord God of my salvation; I have cried day and night before thee.)
2 My prayer enter before thy sight (Let my prayer come before thee); bow down thine ear to my prayer.
3 For my soul is [full-]filled with evils; and my life nighed to hell. (For my soul is filled full of evils; and my life came near to Sheol, that is, the land of the dead/and my life nighed to the grave.)
4 I am guessed with them that go down into the pit; I am made as a man without help,
5 and free among dead men. As men wounded sleeping in sepulchres, of which men none (thou) is mindful (of) after; and they be put away from thine hand. (and free among the dead. Like the slain who sleep in tombs, or graves, of whom there is no one thou remembereth any more; yea, they all be cut off from thy help, or thy care.)
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.