aPs 6
b6:1-3
c6:1
d39:8-11
e6:2-3
f6:6
g77:3
h119:81
i142:1-3
jPs 101
k6:4-5
l6:5
m6:6-7
n22:1
o31:9-10
p102:5
q13:3
r31:9
s38:10
tMatt 6:22
u6:8-10

‏ Psalms 6

Summary for Ps 6:1-10: Ps 6  a The occasion for this lament might have been sickness or a mental or spiritual depression from which the psalmist sought healing.
Summary for Ps 6:1-3: 6:1-3  b The psalmist asks for God’s favor and restoration at a difficult time. 6:1  c don’t rebuke me ... or discipline me: The psalmist does not explicitly connect God’s discipline with sin here (cp. 39:8-11  d), but it might be implied.
Summary for Ps 6:2-3: 6:2-3  e In his longing for God’s response to his prayer, the psalmist grew physically weak (6:6  f; see 77:3  g; 119:81  h; 142:1-3  i; see also Ps 101  j). Fasting might have played a part in his agony, but this is not mentioned.
Summary for Ps 6:4-5: 6:4-5  k The experience was so painful that the psalmist might as well have been dead, or perhaps he feared for his life.
6:5  l from the grave? Hebrew from Sheol? In the Old Testament, Sheol is the abode of the dead. It is not necessarily associated with punishment.
Summary for Ps 6:6-7: 6:6-7  m The psalmist is exhausted to the depths of his being from the anguish of his spiritual distance from the Lord (22:1  n; 31:9-10  o; 102:5  p).

• When eyes dim, the body is failing (see 13:3  q; 31:9  r; 38:10  s; Matt 6:22  t).
Summary for Ps 6:8-10: 6:8-10  u In a closing note of triumph, the psalmist reasserts his confidence in the Lord.
Copyright information for TNotes