Verses 1-4
Psalms 88:1-4. O Lord God of my
salvation — Who hast so often
saved me in former distresses; I
have cried day and night before
thee — Thus God’s own elect are
said, by Christ, to cry to him,
Luke 18:7; and thus ought men
always to pray and not to faint.
Let my prayer come before thee —
To be accepted of thee. For my
soul is full of troubles —
Troubles of mind, from a sense
of God’s wrath and departure
from him, as appears Psalms
88:14-16. I am counted with them
that go down into the pit — I am
given up by my friends and
acquaintance for a lost man.
Verse 5
Psalms 88:5. Free among the dead
— Well nigh discharged from the
warfare of the present life, and
entered, as a member, into the
society of the dead; or, removed
from all the affairs and
conversation of men as if I were
really dead. Like the slain,
whom thou rememberest no more —
Whom thou seemest wholly to
neglect and to bury in oblivion.
He speaks of these matters, not
as they are in truth, for he
knew very well that
forgetfulness was not incident
to God, and that God did
remember all the dead, and would
call them to an account; but
only as to appearance, and the
opinion of the world, and the
things of this life. And they
are cut off from thy hand — From
the care and conduct of thy
providence, which is to be
understood as the former clause.
Verse 6-7
Psalms 88:6-7. Thou hast laid me
in the lowest pit, &c. — In
hopeless and remediless
calamities. Thus greatly may
good men be afflicted, and such
dismal apprehensions may they
have concerning their
afflictions, and such dark
conclusions may they sometimes
be ready to make concerning the
issue of them, through the power
of melancholy, and the weakness
of faith. Thy wrath lieth hard
upon me — The sense of thy
wrath, or rather, the effects of
it, as the next clause explains
it. Thou hast afflicted me with
all thy waves — With thy
judgments breaking in furiously
upon me, like the waves of the
sea.
Verse 8-9
Psalms 88:8-9. Thou hast put
away mine acquaintance far from
me — I can have no more
familiarity or intercourse with
my friends than if I were in
another world; for thy
providence hath removed, or
rendered them incapable, or
disinclined, to be serviceable
to me. Thou hast made me an
abomination unto them — They are
not only shy, but weary of me;
and I am looked upon by them,
not only with contempt, but with
abhorrence. Reader, do not think
it strange if thou should be
called to encounter such a trial
as this, since Heman, who was so
famed for wisdom, was thus
neglected when the world frowned
upon him, and despised as a
broken vessel, in which is no
pleasure. I am shut up — A close
prisoner under the arrest of the
divine wrath; I cannot come
forth — There being no way of
escape open. He therefore lies
down and sinks under his
troubles, because he sees not
any probability of getting out
of them. Mine eye mourneth by
reason of affliction — But
though I thus give vent to my
grief, my troubled spirit
receives no relief thereby:
nevertheless, I have called
daily upon thee — My weeping has
not hindered my praying. I have
stretched out my hands unto thee
— For help and deliverance,
though hitherto without effect,
for thou dost not hear nor
answer me.
Verses 10-12
Psalms 88:10-12. Wilt thou show
wonders to the dead? — Namely,
in raising them to life again in
this world? No: I know thou wilt
not. And therefore now hear and
help me, or it will be too late.
Shall the dead arise and praise
thee? — Namely, among mortal men
in this world? Shall thy
lovingkindness be declared in
the grave? &c. — I am not
without hopes, that thou bearest
a real good-will toward 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 receiving such a mercy. Shall
thy wonders be known in the
dark? — In the grave, which is
called the land of darkness, Job
10:21-22. Thy righteousness in
the land of forgetfulness? — The
grave, so called, either, 1st,
Because there men forget and
neglect all the concerns of this
life, being indeed but dead
carcasses without any sense or
remembrance. Or, rather, 2d,
Because there men are forgotten
even by their nearest relations.
Verses 13-18
Psalms 88:13-18. In the morning
shall my prayer prevent thee —
That is, shall be offered to
thee early, 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 and
hoping for an answer. Why hidest
thou thy face from me? — This
proceeding seems not to agree
with the benignity of thy
nature, nor with the manner of
thy dealing with thy people. I
am ready to die 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. While I suffer thy terrors
— Upon my mind and conscience,
which accompany and aggravate my
outward miseries, I am
distracted — I am so astonished,
that I know not what to do with
myself. They came about me like
water — As the waters of the sea
encompass him who is in the
midst, and at the bottom of it. |