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Passage Research

Psalm 88 — Sermon Preparation

Below is a research summary for Psalm 88, drawn from openly licensed scholarly databases — original-language morphology, classic sermons from the church fathers through the Puritans, and ancient geography data.

19
verses
142 / 112
Hebrew words / lemmas
7
classic sermon excerpts
4
preachers & commentators

Psalm 88 in the Hebrew

Distinctive vocabulary of this chapter, based on original-language morphology.

Hebrew Transliteration Strong's Count Glosses
מַחְשָׁךְ machshâk H4285 2 darkness, dark place
פֶּלֶא peleʼ H6382 2 miracle
רָחַק râchaq H7368 2 widen, recede
יָדַע yâdaʻ H3045 3 know, seeing
בּוֹר bôwr H953 2 hole
קֶבֶר qeber H6913 2 sepulchre
תְּפִלָּה tᵉphillâh H8605 2 intercession, supplication

How preachers through history handled this text

7 public-domain excerpts on Psalm 88, from the church fathers to the Puritans.

Matthew Henry 3 Spurgeon 2 Alexander MacLaren 1 John Wesley 1

“This psalm is a lamentation, one of the most melancholy of all the psalms; and it does not conclude, as usually the melancholy psalms do, with the least intimation of comfort or joy, but, from first to last, it is mourning and woe. It is not upon a public account that the psalmist here complains (here is no mention of the afflictions of the church), but only upon a personal account, especially trouble of mind, and the grief impressed upon his spirits both by his outward afflictions and by the remembrance of his sins and the fear of God's wrath. …”

— Matthew Henry, Commentary on the Whole Bible, Vol. 3 (Job to Song of Solomon), on Psalm 88:1–30 (Public Domain)

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