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To you, O Lord, I cried out;
I begged the Lord for mercy:[a]
“What[b] profit is there in taking my life,[c]
in my descending into the Pit?[d]
Can the dust of the grave[e] praise you?
Can it declare your loyalty?[f]
10 Hear, O Lord, and have mercy on me.
O Lord, deliver me.”[g]
11 Then you turned my lament into dancing;
you removed my sackcloth and covered me with joy.[h]

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Footnotes

  1. Psalm 30:8 tn The prefixed verbal forms in v. 8 are probably preterites; the psalmist recalls that he prayed in his time of crisis.
  2. Psalm 30:9 sn The following two verses (vv. 9-10) contain the prayer (or an excerpt of the prayer) that the psalmist offered to the Lord during his crisis.
  3. Psalm 30:9 tn Heb “What profit [is there] in my blood?” “Blood” here represents his life.
  4. Psalm 30:9 tn The Hebrew term שָׁחַת (shakhat, “pit”) is often used as a title for Sheol (see Pss 16:10; 49:9; 55:24 HT [55:23 ET]; 103:4).
  5. Psalm 30:9 tn Heb “dust.” The words “of the grave” are supplied in the translation for clarification.
  6. Psalm 30:9 tn The rhetorical questions anticipate the answer, “Of course not!”sn According to the OT, those who descend into the realm of death/Sheol are cut off from God’s mighty deeds and from the worshiping covenant community that experiences divine intervention (Pss 6:5; 88:10-12; Isa 38:18). In his effort to elicit a positive divine response, the psalmist reminds God that he will receive no praise or glory if he allows the psalmist to die. Dead men do not praise God!
  7. Psalm 30:10 tn Heb “be a helper to me.”
  8. Psalm 30:11 sn Covered me with joy. “Joy” probably stands metonymically for festive attire here.