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Saturday, August 23rd, 2025
the Week of Proper 15 / Ordinary 20
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Read the Bible

Myles Coverdale Bible

Psalms 38:8

I am feble and sore smytte, I roare for the very disquietnes of my hert.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Afflictions and Adversities;   Conviction;   Prayer;   Thompson Chain Reference - Rest-Unrest;   Unrest;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Psalms, the Book of;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Suffering;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Pit;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - English Versions;   Greek Versions of Ot;   Psalms;   Sin;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Psalms the book of;   Zion;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
I am faint and severely crushed;I groan because of the anguish of my heart.
Hebrew Names Version
I am faint and severely bruised. I have groaned by reason of the anguish of my heart.
King James Version
I am feeble and sore broken: I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
English Standard Version
I am feeble and crushed; I groan because of the tumult of my heart.
New Century Version
I am weak and faint. I moan from the pain I feel.
New English Translation
I am numb with pain and severely battered; I groan loudly because of the anxiety I feel.
Amplified Bible
I am numb and greatly bruised [deadly cold and completely worn out]; I groan because of the disquiet and moaning of my heart.
New American Standard Bible
I feel faint and badly crushed; I groan because of the agitation of my heart.
World English Bible
I am faint and severely bruised. I have groaned by reason of the anguish of my heart.
Geneva Bible (1587)
I am weakened and sore broken: I roare for the very griefe of mine heart.
Legacy Standard Bible
I am faint and badly crushed;I groan because of the agitation of my heart.
Berean Standard Bible
I am numb and badly crushed; I groan in anguish of heart.
Contemporary English Version
I am worn out and weak, moaning and in distress.
Complete Jewish Bible
For my insides burn with fever, and my whole body is sick.
Darby Translation
I am faint and broken beyond measure; I roar by reason of the agitation of my heart.
Easy-to-Read Version
I hurt so much I cannot feel anything. My pounding heart makes me scream!
George Lamsa Translation
I am feeble and miserable; I have groaned because of the despair of my heart.
Good News Translation
I am worn out and utterly crushed; my heart is troubled, and I groan with pain.
Lexham English Bible
I am faint and crushed greatly; I groan because of the roaring of my heart.
Literal Translation
I am exceedingly benumbed and crushed. I howl from the groanings of my heart.
American Standard Version
I am faint and sore bruised: I have groaned by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
Bible in Basic English
I am feeble and crushed down; I gave a cry like a lion because of the grief in my heart.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
For my loins are filled with burning; and there is no soundness in my flesh.
King James Version (1611)
I am feeble and sore broken; I haue roared by reason of the disquietnesse of my heart.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
I am feeble and sore smitten: I haue rored for the very disquietnesse of my heart.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
I have been afflicted and brought down exceedingly: I have roared for the groaning of my heart.
English Revised Version
I am faint and sore bruised: I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
I am turmentid, and maad low ful greetli; Y roride for the weilyng of myn herte.
Update Bible Version
I am faint and very bruised: I have groaned by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
Webster's Bible Translation
I am feeble and grievously broken: I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart.
New King James Version
I am feeble and severely broken; I groan because of the turmoil of my heart.
New Living Translation
I am exhausted and completely crushed. My groans come from an anguished heart.
New Life Bible
I am weak and broken. I cry because of the pain in my heart.
New Revised Standard
I am utterly spent and crushed; I groan because of the tumult of my heart.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
I am benumbed and crushed exceedingly, - I have cried aloud because of the groaning of my heart.
Douay-Rheims Bible
(37-9) I am afflicted and humbled exceedingly: I roared with the groaning of my heart.
Revised Standard Version
I am utterly spent and crushed; I groan because of the tumult of my heart.
Young's Literal Translation
I have been feeble and smitten -- unto excess, I have roared from disquietude of heart.
New American Standard Bible (1995)
I am benumbed and badly crushed; I groan because of the agitation of my heart.

Contextual Overview

1 Pvt me not to rebuke (Oh LORDE) in thine anger: Oh chaste me not in thy heuy displeasure. 2 For thy arowes stick fast in me, and thy honde presseth me sore. 3 There is no whole parte in my body, because of thy displeasure: there is no rest in my bones, by reason of my synnes. 4 For my wickednesses are gone ouer my heade, and are like a sore burthen, to heuy forme to beare. 5 My woundes styncke & are corrupte, thorow my folishnesse. 6 I am brought into so greate trouble and misery, that I go mournynge all the daye longe. 7 For my loynes are clene dried vp, and there is no whole parte in my body. 8 I am feble and sore smytte, I roare for the very disquietnes of my hert. 9 LORDE, thou knowest all my desyre, & my gronynge is not hyd from the. 10 My hert paunteth, my strength hath fayled me, & the light of myne eyes is gone fro me.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

roared: Psalms 22:1, Psalms 22:2, Psalms 32:3, Job 3:24, Job 30:28, Isaiah 59:11

Reciprocal: Psalms 6:3 - My Psalms 44:19 - Though Psalms 102:5 - the voice Romans 7:24 - wretched

Cross-References

Genesis 38:5
She proceaded yet further, & bare a sonne, who she called Sela. And wha she had borne him, she left of bearinge.
Genesis 38:8
Then sayde Iuda vnto his sonne Onan: Go lie with thy brothers wife, and marye thyself with her, that thou mayest rayse vp sede vnto thy brother.
Genesis 38:9
But when Onan knewe that the sede shulde not be his owne, whan he laye with his brothers wife, he let it fall vpon the earth and destroyed it, yt he shulde not geue sede vnto his brother.
Genesis 38:10
This thinge that he dyd displeased the LORDE sore, and he slewe him also.
Genesis 38:11
Then sayde Iudas vnto Thamar his sonnes wyfe. Remayne a wyddow in thy fathers house, tyll my sonne Sela be growne: for he thought: peraduenture he might dye also like as his brethren. So Thamar wente hir waye, and remained in hir fathers house.
Genesis 38:23
Iuda sayde: Let her take it vnto her, lest we happly be shamed, for I haue sent the kydd, and thou hast not founde her.
Genesis 38:27
Whan the tyme came that she shulde be delyuered, there were two twyns founde in hir wombe.
Leviticus 18:16
Thou shalt not vncouer the preuytie of thy brothers wife, for it is thy brothers preuytie.
Ruth 1:11
But Naemi sayde: Turne agayne my doughters, why wolde ye go with me? How can I haue children eny more in my body, to be youre hußbandes?

Gill's Notes on the Bible

I am feeble,.... Both in body, natural strength being weakened by the affliction, and dried up like a potsherd by the heat of the distemper; and in soul, being weak in the exercise of faith and other graces. The word is used of Jacob, fainting at and disbelieving the news of his son Joseph being alive, Genesis 45:26;

and sore broken; in his constitution with the disease, and in his mind with trouble; especially for his sin, and under a sense of the divine displeasure; his bones were broken by his fall, and his heart broken with a sense of sin, Psalms 51:8;

I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart: which was like the raging of the sea, as the word l rendered disquietness here signifies; and to which the uneasiness and restlessness of wicked men is sometimes compared, Isaiah 5:30; and so great was the disquietude of this good man under affliction, and sense of sin and wrath, that he had no rest night nor day; and could not forbear crying out, in a very hideous manner, like the roaring of a lion.

l מנהמת "prae fremitu", Tigurine version, Vatablus, Junius & Tremellius, Gejerus, so Piscator, Cocceius, Michaelis.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

I am feeble - The word used here means properly to be cold, or without warmth; and then, to be torpid or languid. Compare Genesis 45:26. Would not this be well represented by the idea of a “chill?”

And sore broken - This word means to break in pieces; to beat small; to crush; and then it may be used to denote being broken in spirit, or crushed by pain and sorrow: Isaiah 57:15; Isaiah 53:5; Isaiah 19:10.

I have roared - I have cried out on account of my suffering. See the notes at Psalms 22:1.

By reason of the disquietness of my heart - The word here rendered “disquietness” means properly “a roaring,” as of the sea: Isaiah 5:30; and then, a groaning, or roaring, as of the afflicted. Here the “heart” is represented as “roaring” or “crying out.” The lips only gave utterance to the deeper groanings of the heart.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Psalms 38:8. I am feeble and sore broken — I am so exhausted with my disease that I feel as if on the brink of the grave, and unfit to appear before God; therefore "have I roared for the disquietness of my heart."

That David describes a natural disease here cannot reasonably be doubted; but what that disease was, who shall attempt to say? However, this is evident, that whatever it was, he most deeply deplored the cause of it; and as he worthily lamented it, so he found mercy at the hand of God. It would be easy to show a disease of which what he here enumerates are the very general symptoms; but I forbear, because in this I might attribute to one what, perhaps, in Judea would be more especially descriptive of another.


 
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