1I waited patiently for Jehovah, and He inclined unto me, and heard my cry. 2He brought me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and secured my steps. 3And He has put a new song in my mouth, praise to our God; many shall see it and fear, and shall trust in Jehovah. 4Blessed is the man who makes Jehovah his trust and has not turned to the proud, nor to such as turn aside to lies. 5O Jehovah my God, many are the wonderful works which You have done, and Your thoughts which are toward us; they cannot be recounted to You if I were to declare and speak of them, for they are more than can be numbered. 6Sacrifice and offering You did not desire; my ears You have opened. Burnt offering and sin offering You have not asked. 7Then I said, Lo, I come (in the volume of the Book it is written of Me): 8I delight to do Your will, O My God, and Your Law is within My heart. 9I have preached righteousness in the great assembly; lo, I have not restrained My lips, O Jehovah, You know. 10I have not hidden Your righteousness within my heart; I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation; I have not hidden Your lovingkindness and Your truth from the great assembly. 11Do not withhold Your tender mercies from me, O Jehovah; let Your lovingkindness and Your truth continually keep watch over me. 12For evils without number have encompassed me; my iniquities have overtaken me, so that I am not able to look up; they are more than the hairs of my head; therefore my heart fails me. 13Be pleased, O Jehovah, to deliver me; O Jehovah, make haste to help me! 14Let them be ashamed and abashed together, those who seek after my soul to destroy it; let them be driven backward and put to dishonor, those who wish me evil. 15Let them be desolate as a consequence of their shame, those who say to me, Aha, aha! 16Let all those who seek You rejoice and be glad in You, and the ones who love Your salvation always say, Let Jehovah be magnified. 17But I am poor and needy; yet Jehovah will have regard for me. You are my help and my deliverer; O my God, do not delay.
Jamieson Fausset Brown Bible Commentary 1 In this Psalm a celebration of God's deliverance is followed by a profession of devotion to His service. Then follows a prayer for relief from imminent dangers, involving the overthrow of enemies and the rejoicing of sympathizing friends. In
Heb 10:5, &c., Paul quotes
Ps 40:6-
Ps 40:8 as the words of Christ, offering Himself as a better sacrifice. Some suppose Paul thus accommodated David's words to express Christ's sentiments. But the value of his quotation would be thus destroyed, as it would have no force in his argument, unless regarded by his readers as the original sense of the passage in the Old Testament. Others suppose the Psalm describes David's feelings in suffering and joy; but the language quoted by Paul, in the sense given by him, could not apply to David in any of his relations, for as a type the language is not adapted to describe any event or condition of David's career, and as an individual representing the pious generally, neither he nor they could properly use it (see on
Ps 40:7, below). The Psalm must be taken then, as the sixteenth, to express the feelings of Christ's human nature. The difficulties pertinent to this view will be considered as they occur. (Psa. 40:1-17)
The figures for deep distress are illustrated in Jeremiah's history (
Jer 38:6-
Jer 38:12). Patience and trust manifested in distress, deliverance in answer to prayer, and the blessed effect of it in eliciting praise from God's true worshippers, teach us that Christ's suffering is our example, and His deliverance our encouragement (
Heb 5:7-
Heb 5:8;
Heb 12:3;
1Pet 4:12-16).
inclined--(the ear,
Ps 17:6), as if to catch the faintest sigh.
3 a new song--(See on
Ps 33:3).
fear, and . . . trust--revere with love and faith.
4 Blessed-- (
Ps 1:1;
Ps 2:12).
respecteth--literally, "turns towards," as an object of confidence.
turn aside--from true God and His law to falsehood in worship and conduct.
5 be reckoned up in order--(compare
Ps 5:3;
Ps 33:14;
Isa 44:7), too many to be set forth regularly. This is but one instance of many. The use of the plural accords with the union of Christ and His people. In suffering and triumph, they are one with Him.
6 In Paul's view this passage has more meaning than the mere expression of grateful devotion to God's service. He represents Christ as declaring that the sacrifices, whether vegetable or animal, general or special expiatory offerings, would not avail to meet the demands of God's law, and that He had come to render the required satisfaction, which he states was effected by "the offering of the body of Christ" [
Heb 10:10], for that is the "will of God" which Christ came to fulfil or do, in order to effect man's redemption. We thus see that the contrast to the unsatisfactory character assigned the Old Testament offerings in
Ps 40:6 is found in the compliance with God's law (compare
Ps 40:7-
Ps 40:8). Of course, as Paul and other New Testament writers explain Christ's work, it consisted in more than being made under the law or obeying its precepts. It required an "obedience unto death" [
Phil 2:8], and that is the compliance here chiefly intended, and which makes the contrast with
Ps 40:6 clear.
mine ears hast thou opened--Whether allusion is made to the custom of boring a servant's ear, in token of voluntary and perpetual enslavement (
Exod 21:6), or that the opening of the ear, as in
Isa 48:8;
Isa 50:5 (though by a different word in Hebrew) denotes obedience by the common figure of hearing for obeying, it is evident that the clause is designed to express a devotion to God's will as avowed more fully in
Ps 40:8, and already explained. Paul, however, uses the words, "a body hast thou prepared me" [
Heb 10:5], which are found in the Septuagint in the place of the words, "mine ears hast thou opened." He does not lay any stress on this clause, and his argument is complete without it. It is, perhaps, to be regarded rather as an interpretation or free translation by the Septuagint, than either an addition or attempt at verbal translation. The Septuagint translators may have had reference to Christ's vicarious sufferings as taught in other Scriptures, as in
Isa 53:4-
Isa 53:11; at all events, the sense is substantially the same, as a body was essential to the required obedience (compare
Rom 7:4;
1Pet 2:24).
7 Then--in such case, without necessarily referring to order of time.
Lo, I come--I am prepared to do, &c.
in the volume of the book--roll of the book. Such rolls, resembling maps, are still used in the synagogues.
written of me--or on me, prescribed to me (
2Kgs 22:13). The first is the sense adopted by Paul. In either case, the Pentateuch, or law of Moses, is meant, and while it contains much respecting Christ directly, as
Gen 3:15;
Gen 49:10;
Deut 18:15, and, indirectly, in the Levitical ritual, there is nowhere any allusion to David.
9 I have preached--literally, "announced good tidings." Christ's prophetical office is taught. He "preached" the great truths of God's government of sinners.
11 may be rendered as an assertion, that God will not withhold (
Ps 16:1).
12 evils--inflicted by others.
iniquities--or penal afflictions, and sometimes calamities in the wide sense. This meaning of the word is very common (
Ps 31:11;
Ps 38:4; compare
Gen 4:13, Cain's punishment;
Gen 19:15, that of Sodom;
1Sam 28:10, of the witch of En-dor; also
2Sam 16:12;
Job 19:29;
Isa 5:18;
Isa 53:11). This meaning of the word is also favored by the clause, "taken hold of me," which follows, which can be said appropriately of sufferings, but not of sins (compare
Job 27:20;
Ps 69:24). Thus, the difficulties in referring this Psalm to Christ, arising from the usual reading of this verse, are removed. Of the terrible afflictions, or sufferings, alluded to and endured for us, compare
Luke 22:39-
Luke 22:44, and the narrative of the scenes of Calvary.
my heart faileth me-- (
Matt 26:38), "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death."
cannot look up--literally, "I cannot see," not denoting the depression of conscious guilt, as
Luke 18:13, but exhaustion from suffering, as dimness of eyes (compare
Ps 6:7;
Ps 13:3;
Ps 38:10). The whole context thus sustains the sense assigned to iniquities.
13 (Compare
Ps 22:19).
14 The language is not necessarily imprecatory, but rather a confident expectation (
Ps 5:11), though the former sense is not inconsistent with Christ's prayer for the forgiveness of His murderers, inasmuch as their confusion and shame might be the very means to prepare them for humbly seeking forgiveness (compare
Acts 2:37).
15 for a reward--literally, "in consequence of."
Aha--(Compare
Ps 35:21,
Ps 35:25).
16 (Compare
Ps 35:27).
love thy salvation--delight in its bestowal on others as well as themselves.
17 A summary of his condition and hopes.
thinketh upon--or provides for me. "He was heard," "when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears, unto Him that was able to save him from death" [
Heb 5:7].