Psalms 40:1–10
I waited for the Lord and He lifted me from the pit; now I delight to do His will and tell of His great salvation in the assembly of His people.
Scripture Text
40:1 I waited patiently for Yahweh. He turned to me, and heard my cry.
40:2 He brought me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay. He set my feet on a rock, and gave me a firm place to stand.
40:3 He has put a new song in my mouth, even praise to our God. Many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in Yahweh.
40:4 Blessed is the man who makes Yahweh His trust, and doesn’t respect the proud, nor such as turn away to lies.
40:5 Many, Yahweh, my God, are the wonderful works which You have done, and Your thoughts which are toward us. They can’t be declared back to You. If I would declare and speak of them, they are more than can be counted.
40:6 Sacrifice and offering You didn’t desire. You have opened my ears. You have not required burnt offering and sin offering.
40:7 Then I said, “Behold, I have come. It is written about me in the book in the scroll.
40:8 I delight to do Your will, my God. Yes, Your law is within my heart.”
40:9 I have proclaimed glad news of righteousness in the great assembly. Behold, I will not seal my lips, Yahweh, You know.
40:10 I have not hidden Your righteousness within my heart. I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation. I have not concealed Your loving kindness and Your truth from the great assembly.
I waited for the Lord and He lifted me from the pit; now I delight to do His will and tell of His great salvation in the assembly of His people.
God's deliverance from the 'pit' of destruction creates a 'new song' of praise and a heart-centered obedience that delights in God's will and boldly proclaims His faithfulness to the community.
To offer public thanksgiving for a miraculous deliverance and to declare a renewed commitment to internal, volitional obedience over external religious ritual. God's deliverance from the 'pit' of destruction creates a 'new song' of praise and a heart-centered obedience that delights in God's will and boldly proclaims His faithfulness to the community.
- A The Lord hears, lifts, establishes, and gives a new song that causes others to trust.
- B The blessed life trusts the Lord rather than proud falsehood because His works and thoughts are incomparable.
- C Opened ears, willing coming, delight in God's will, and Torah in the heart are the response God desires beyond merely external offerings.
- D The servant does not conceal the Lord's righteousness, faithfulness, salvation, steadfast love, and truth.
- E The psalm pivots from proclamation to plea as David needs continuing mercy and preservation.
- F David asks the Lord to act quickly and reverse the schemes of those who seek His life.
- G The psalm concludes with a prayer for worshiping joy among seekers and a final confession of David's poverty, need, and dependence on God's help.
Psalm 40 moves from remembered deliverance to public witness, from public witness to obedient delight in God's will, and from obedient proclamation to renewed lament that asks the Lord to help without delay.
Psalm 40 argues that the Lord's saving action creates a worshiping servant whose life moves from waiting to witness, from rescue to obedience, and from proclamation to renewed dependence. True covenant worship cannot be reduced to ritual performance; it requires opened ears, delighted obedience, internalized instruction, and public proclamation of the Lord's saving character. Yet the obedient worshiper still needs mercy because troubles, iniquities, and enemies remain. The chapter therefore teaches that faith remembers what God has done, offers itself to God's will, and keeps asking the Lord to save without delay.
Theological logic
- The LORD hears and rescues those who wait for Him.
- Personal rescue is meant to become public praise and trust-producing witness.
- The blessed person trusts the LORD rather than proud people or deceptive alternatives.
- The LORD's works and thoughts exceed human comparison and complete narration.
- The LORD desires obedient self-offering more deeply than external sacrifices detached from the heart.
- The obedient servant does not hide the LORD's saving character from the congregation.
- Past rescue and real obedience do not remove the need for fresh mercy.
- The faithful may appeal to the LORD for just reversal against malicious enemies.
- The final aim of deliverance is glad worship among all who seek and love the LORD's salvation.
- The servant's deepest safety is that the Lord remembers the poor and needy.
- Patient waiting before the Lord
- Specific remembrance of deliverance
- Public testimony in the congregation
- Refusal of proud and deceptive refuges
- Obedient hearing of God's word
- Delight in doing God's will
- Scripture-internalized heart formation
- Honest confession of iniquity and trouble
- Entrusting justice to God
- Corporate joy in God's salvation
- : Hebrews quotes Psalm 40:6-8 and applies the servant's coming to do God's will to Christ's obedient body-offering that sanctifies His people once for all.
- : The contrast between repeated sacrifices and Christ's single effective offering clarifies the sacrificial fulfillment horizon raised by Psalm 40.
- : Samuel's statement that obedience is better than sacrifice parallels Psalm 40's insistence that the Lord desires obedient hearing rather than hollow ritual.
- : The command to love the Lord and keep His words on the heart provides covenant background for Psalm 40's delight in God's will and Torah within the heart.
- : Psalm 40's law within the heart anticipates the new covenant promise of God's law written on His people's hearts, though the psalm itself remains in the Davidic worship horizon.
- : Both psalms move from suffering and rescue toward public proclamation in the assembly and wider praise of the Lord.
- : Psalm 27's waiting courage and seeking of the Lord provide a nearby Book I counterpart to Psalm 40's testimony that waiting was heard.
- : Psalm 51 similarly teaches that sacrifices detached from the heart are insufficient, emphasizing the broken and contrite heart God receives.
- : The opened ear and obedient servant pattern in Psalm 40 resonates with Isaiah's servant who listens and obeys under suffering, a trajectory fulfilled in Christ.
- : Psalm 40's public proclamation of righteousness and salvation finds gospel clarity in the righteousness of God revealed through Christ's redemptive work.
- : Christ's obedient humiliation and exaltation provides a New Testament counterpart to the obedient servant who comes to do God's will.
- : Paul's pattern of affliction, deliverance, public witness, and thanksgiving among many echoes Psalm 40's movement from rescue to communal praise.
- : The new song motif reaches consummate worship around the Lamb, whose saving work gathers universal praise.
Jesus Christ is the Perfect Servant with the 'open ear' who came to fulfill the Father's will; because He offered the sacrifice of His own body, we are lifted out of the pit of sin and given a new song of eternal life.