Psalms 22:12–18
The psalmist is physically broken and socially stripped, surrounded by bestial enemies who pierce His body and gamble for His very clothes.
Scripture Text
22:12 Many bulls have surrounded me. Strong bulls of Bashan have encircled me.
22:13 They open their mouths wide against me, lions tearing prey and roaring.
22:14 I am poured out like water. All my bones are out of joint. My heart is like wax. It is melted within me.
22:15 My strength is dried up like a potsherd. My tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth. You have brought me into the dust of death.
22:16 For dogs have surrounded me. A company of evildoers have enclosed me. They have pierced my hands and feet.
22:17 I can count all of my bones. They look and stare at me.
22:18 They divide my garments among them. They cast lots for my clothing.
The psalmist is physically broken and socially stripped, surrounded by bestial enemies who pierce His body and gamble for His very clothes.
The suffering of the righteous reaches a point of total disintegration where life is reduced to 'dust,' yet this very state serves as a prophetic roadmap for the ultimate sacrificial suffering of the Messiah.
To provide a graphic and visceral account of extreme physical and social suffering, portraying the victim as surrounded by predatory forces and experiencing total bodily dissolution. The suffering of the righteous reaches a point of total disintegration where life is reduced to 'dust,' yet this very state serves as a prophetic roadmap for the ultimate sacrificial suffering of the Messiah.
- 22:1-2
- 22:3-5
- 22:6-11
- 22:12-18
- 22:19-21
- 22:22-24
- 22:25-31
A cry of forsakenness moves through remembered trust, public humiliation, urgent petition, answered praise, and finally worldwide testimony to the Lord's righteous saving work.
Psalm 22 argues that the deepest experience of righteous suffering, even the felt absence of God, can be brought before the holy Lord in covenant faith. Because the Lord hears the afflicted one, suffering does not have the last word; divine deliverance becomes congregational praise, food for the poor, worldwide worship, and a proclamation of righteousness to generations not yet born.
Theological logic
- The sufferer feels forsaken but continues addressing God personally.
- God's holiness and former deliverances remain true even when present prayer seems unanswered.
- Public shame and hostile mockery intensify righteous suffering by challenging the sufferer's trust in God.
- Lifelong dependence on God grounds the plea for present nearness.
- The sufferer's extremity is real, embodied, public, and deathlike.
- The turning point comes through petition for the LORD's nearness and deliverance.
- The LORD hears the afflicted one and is therefore worthy of praise in the assembly.
- The LORD's deliverance has communal, global, and generational consequences.
- : Matthew connects Psalm 22's garments, mockery, and opening cry with the crucifixion of Jesus.
- : Mark presents Jesus' crucifixion through Psalm 22 language, including divided garments and the cry of abandonment.
- : John explicitly connects the soldiers' division of Jesus' garments with the Scripture pattern reflected in Psalm 22.
- : Hebrews quotes Psalm 22:22 to present the sanctifying Son declaring God's name among His brothers.
- : Psalm 69 provides another righteous-sufferer lament that later Scripture connects with the suffering of Christ.
- : Psalm 22's righteous sufferer and Isaiah 53's suffering servant converge canonically in the New Testament presentation of Christ's suffering and vindication.
Jesus Christ is the only one who perfectly fulfilled every agony of this passage; He was dehydrated, dislocated, pierced, and stripped, so that by His 'dust of death' He could bring us to the joy of eternal life.