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Psalm 38[a]

Prayer of a Sinner in Great Peril

A psalm of David. For remembrance.[b]

Lord, do not punish me in your anger
    or chastise me in your wrath.
For your arrows[c] have pierced me deeply,
    and your hand has come down upon me.
No portion of my body[d] has been unscathed
    as a result of your anger;
my bones have become weak
    as a result of my sins.
My iniquities tower far above my head;[e]
    they are a burden too heavy to bear.
My wounds are fetid and fester
    because of my folly.
I am bowed down and bent over,
    as I spend each day in sorrow.
My loins are filled with searing pain;
    no part of my body[f] is unafflicted.
I am numb and completely crushed,
    and I groan in anguish of heart.[g]
10 Lord, all my longing is known to you,
    and my sighs are not hidden from you.
11 My heart throbs, and my strength is spent;
    even the light has faded from my eyes.
12 My friends and companions stay away from my affliction,
    and my neighbors keep their distance.
13 Those who seek my life set traps;
    those who wish me harm threaten violence
    and plot treachery all day long.[h]
14 [i]But I am like a man who cannot hear,
    like one who cannot open his mouth.
15 I am like one who hears nothing
    and has no answer to offer.
16 I place my hope in you, O Lord;
    you, O Lord, my God, will answer for me.
17 For I prayed, “Never let them gloat over me
    or exult should my foot slip.”
18 I am at the point of exhaustion,
    and my grief is with me constantly.
19 I acknowledge my iniquity,
    and I sincerely grieve for my sin.
20 [j]Numerous and strong are my enemies without cause;
    many are those who hate me without good reason.[k]
21 Those who repay my good deeds with evil
    oppose me because I follow a path of righteousness.
22 Do not abandon me, O Lord;
    my God, do not remain far from me.
23 Come quickly to my aid,
    Lord, my Savior.

Footnotes

  1. Psalm 38:1 The psalmist of this third Penitential Psalm (seven in all: Pss 6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143) is a man prostrated beneath the weight of his sickness and the vilification heaped on him by others, a man marked by the chastisement of God. He utters a suppliant and monotone plaint that seems as interminable as his suffering. Before God, he is pitiable, abandoned, and betrayed. This new Job (Job 6:4; 19:13-21) does not rebel. He thinks of himself as a sinner who deserves his lot and he suffers in silence, leveling neither recriminations nor imprecations against his adversaries. Indeed, hope stirs secretly in him.
    The complete abandonment to God that is expressed here is also found in the third Lamentation (Lam 3:26-29) and in the Songs of the Servant of the Lord (see Isa 53:7). The Christian Liturgy sees in this man of sorrows an image of the Christ who was silent during his Passion.
    In praying this psalm, we should look to ourselves, scrutinizing our lives and our consciences with a penetrating and impartial honesty, the better to discern the place of sin therein and the better to realize that we are and remain sinners (see Rom 7:14-20; 1 Jn 1:8f). This will in no way prevent us from begging God not to chastise us in his wrath but to save us as soon as possible from our afflictions and our foes.
  2. Psalm 38:1 For remembrance: the meaning is “For the memorial sacrifice” or “portion” (see Lev 2:2, 9, 16; 5:12; Isa 66:3); it occurs elsewhere only in Ps 70; an alternative translation is: “A petition.”
  3. Psalm 38:3 Arrows: i.e., the trials God has sent him (see Deut 32:23; Job 6:4; 34:6; Lam 3:12; Ezek 5:16).
  4. Psalm 38:4 Body: literally, “flesh.” Bones: see note on Ps 34:20-21.
  5. Psalm 38:5 My iniquities tower far above my head: his guilt has resulted in both physical and psychological suffering.
  6. Psalm 38:8 Body: literally, “flesh.”
  7. Psalm 38:9 Heart: see note on Ps 4:8.
  8. Psalm 38:13 This passage recalls the fourth Song of the Servant (Isa 53:4, 7; see also Pss 31:11; 35:20; 37:32; 88:9; Job 12:4f; 19:13f).
  9. Psalm 38:14 Like a man deaf and dumb, the psalmist does not reply to those who slander him; he waits for the Lord to vindicate his cause.
  10. Psalm 38:20 Passage close to Pss 35:11; 109:3-5. Some Greek manuscripts and many versions add: “They have rejected me, the loved one, like some hideous corpse” (see Isa 14:19 Greek). This allusion to the crucified Christ is made even more explicit in the Coptic version by the words: “They have nailed my flesh.”
  11. Psalm 38:20 Hate me without good reason: although the psalmist acknowledges that he sinned against the Lord, he protests his innocence of wrongdoing against his enemies (see note on Ps 35:19).