Turn Your Gaze from Me before I Am No More
Psalm 39:1-13
Understanding Series
by Craig C. Broyles

Psalm 39 is most akin to the prayer psalms of the individual but it is unlike any other, as its closing petition alone shows: “Look away from me, that I may rejoice again before I depart and am no more.” It resonates with Job and Ecclesiastes more than with other psalms. The refrain, “each man’s life is but a breath” (Hb. hebel, vv. 5, 11), echoes that of Ecclesiastes: “Everything is a breath” (Hb. hebel, NIV “meaningless,”Eccl. 1:2; 12:8). Unlike most psalms, this one has a ring of autobiography (esp. vv. 1–3, 9). It also reflects a contrast between those who heap up wealth (vv. 6, 11) and the speaker who characterizes himself as a social alien and stranger (or “sojourner,” v. 12; cf. the situation in Ps. 37). These two features are also prominent in Psalm 73 (vv. 3–5, 12), which similarl…

Baker Publishing Group, Understanding the Bible Commentary Series, by Craig C. Broyles