Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 51:2
Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
Wash me throughly from mine iniquity – literally, Multiply to wash me. The word rendered throughly is a verb, either in the infinitive or imperative mood, and suggests the idea of multiplying or increasing. The reference is to that which might need constant or repeated washings in order to remove a stain adverbially to denote intensity, or thoroughness. On the word wash as applicable to sin, see the notes at Isa 1:16.
And cleanse me from my sin – Remove it entirely. Make me wholly pure. See the notes at Isa 1:16. In what manner he hoped that this would be done is shown in the following portions of the psalm. It was –
(a) by forgiveness of the past, Psa 51:9; and
(b) by making the heart pure and holy through the renewing and sanctifying influences of the Holy Spirit, Psa 51:10-11.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 51:2
Wash me throughly from mine iniquity and cleanse me from my sin.
Davids cry for pardon
I. How David thought of his sin. The repetition of these petitions show his earnestness of soul. In like manner he asks for the gifts of Gods Spirit.
1. He speaks of transgressions, the individual acts of sin; and then–
2. Of the iniquity which is the centre and root of them all. Further, in all the petitions we see that the idea of his own single responsibility for the whole thing is uppermost in Davids mind. It is my transgression, it is mine iniquity and my sin. He has not learned to say with Adam of old, and with some so-called wise thinkers to-day, I was tempted, and I could not help it. He does not talk about circumstances, and say that they share the blame with him. He takes it all to himself. The three words which the psalmist employs for sin give prominence to different aspects of it. Transgression is not the same as iniquity, and iniquity is not the same as sin. Transgression literally means rebellion, a breaking away from and setting oneself against lawful authority. Iniquity literally means that which is twisted, bent. Sin literally means missing a mark, an aim. Think how profound and living is the consciousness of sin which lies in calling it rebellion. It is not merely, then, that we go against some abstract propriety, or break some impersonal law of nature when we do wrong, but that we rebel against a rightful Sovereign. Not less profound and suggestive is that other name for sin, that which is twisted, or bent, mine iniquity. It is the same metaphor which lies in our own word wrong, that which is wrung or warped from the straight line of right. David had the pattern before him, and by its side his unsteady purpose, his passionate lust had traced this wretched scrawl. Another very solemn and terrible thought of what sin is lies in that final word for it, which means missing an aim. How strikingly that puts a truth which we are for ever tempted to deny. Every sin is a blunder as well as a crime. Sin ever misses its aim. It is a temptress that seems so fair, and when he reaches her side, and lifts her veil, eager to embrace the tempter, a hideous skeleton grins and gibbers at him. Yes! every sin is a mistake, and the epitaph for the sinner is Thou fool.
II. How he thinks of forgiveness. As the words for sin expressed a threefold view of the burden from which the psalmist seeks deliverance, so the triple prayer, in like manner, shows that it is not merely pardon for which he asks. Forgiveness and cleansing run into each other in his prayer as they do in our own experience, for they are inseparable one from the other. The first petition regards the Divine dealing with sin as being the erasure of a writing, perhaps of an indictment. Our past is a blurred manuscript, full of false things and bad things. And we want God to blot them out. Ah! some people tell us that the past is irrevocable, that the thing once dens can never be undone, that the lifes diary written by our own hands can never be cancelled. Thank God, we know better than that. We know who blots out the handwriting that is against us, nailing it to His cross. We know that of Gods great mercy our future may copy fair our past, and the past may be all obliterated and removed. Then there is another idea in the second of these prayers for forgiveness, Wash me throughly from mine iniquity. The word expresses the antique way of cleansing garments by treading and beating. He is not praying for a mere declaration of pardon, he is not asking only for the one complete, instantaneous act of forgiveness, but he is asking for a process of purifying which will be long and hard. I am ready, says he in effect, to submit to any sort of discipline, if only I may be clean. Wash me, beat me, tread me down, hammer me with mallets, dash me against stones, rub me with smarting soap and caustic nitre–do anything, anything with me, if only those foul spots melt away from the texture of my soul. A solemn prayer, if we pray it aright, which will be answered by many a sharp application of Gods Spirit, by many a sorrow, by much very painful work, both within our own souls and in our outward lives, but which will be fulfilled at last in our being clothed like our Lord in garments which shine as the light. The deliverance from sin is still further expressed by that third supplication, Cleanse me from my sin. He thinks of it as if it were a leprosy, incurable, fatal, and capable of being cleansed only by the great High Priest, and by His finger being laid upon it.
III. Whence comes the confidence for such a prayer. His whole hope rests upon Gods character as revealed in the multitude of His tender mercies. This is the blessedness of all true penitence, that the more profoundly it feels our own sore need and great sinfulness, in that very proportion does it recognize the yet greater mercy and all-sufficient grace of Our loving God, and from the lowest depths beholds the stars in the sky, which they who dwell amid the surface-brightness of the noonday cannot discern. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The repentance of David
I. The means which won him to it. It was the preachers voice. How wretched, how fearful, how nigh unto reprobation was his state ere Nathan came to him. And now he breaks down like the snow wreath when the sun looks full upon it.
II. The signs which mark his sincerity. They are–
1. That the one thought which fills his soul is, I have sinned against the Lord. True, he had sinned against man as well as God, yet, because the aspect of his sin as committed against God was so much more terrible and awful to him that it filled up the whole field of his view, and he could see nothing else.
2. And he sees his sin in all its hugeness and vileness. There is no diminishing or excusing it, no paring it down.
3. He takes willingly the disgrace of his sin; and–
4. Its punishment. But whilst he asks not deliverance frets these, there is a cry–
5. The cry for cleansing. Create in me a clean heart, etc.
6. He turns straight to God, clinging to Him, even in this hour of shame.
7. His one terror is test he be cast away from Gods presence.
8. There is the devotion of all his after life to Gods service.
III. Conclusion.
1. Have you ever trembled under the word of God?
2. Are these marks of true repentance visible in you? Go over them one by one.
3. Seek the blessing of true repentance by prayer to God for it; it is His gift. It is the work at that tree Spirit which is Christs special gift. Until that heavenly dew falls upon thy soul, it will be, must be, dry and cold, and bare. Thou cannot work thyself into penitence. But when that gracious shower is poured upon the heart, all is done. Then the voice of the turtle is heard. Then the heart mourns apart, It is like the breaking up of some mighty northern frost, which has bound the so, ailing sea fast beneath its iron band, when the western gale has breathed upon it, and the hard, thick-ribbed ice-crest has broken up as a cobweb under the grasp of a giant. And then all is changed; on the oceans breast the mighty currents wake again into life, bearing on and on to the frozen north the life-giving streams of southern waters; and as the warm gales breathe on the snowy plains of the neighbouring shore, the long-banished verdure flashes again into colour and beauty, and the sweet spring comes on apace, the birds begin their songs, the fountains awake; and every blade and leaf, with all the tribes of life around them, rejoice before God in the blessed sunlight. And yet, what is all this to the breaking up of the ice-crest which has bound down a living soul for which Christ died? And
2. Remember thy sins.
3. Revenge thy fault (2Co 7:11).
4. As thou gazest upon thy sin, gaze more earnestly upon the face of thy Lord who, by His cross, delivers thee from thy sin. (Bishop S. Wilberforoe.)
A specific plea for pardon
I. The kinds of sin are laid down in a variety of expressions: transgression, iniquity, sin. All of them together, for the nature of them, are here exhibited as polluting and defiling. This point sets a price upon the blood of Christ, which cleanseth us from all sin.
II. The desire and endeavour of a gracious heart; and that is, to be freed and delivered from this defilement.
1. The object specified. Mine iniquity and my sin.
2. The act propounded, Wash me, etc. This washing it may be conceived of two sorts. Either first, in reference to justification, Wash me, that is, free me from the guilt of it; or else secondly, in reference to sanctification, Wash me from the defilement.
3. The intention of the act. Throughly. It was not any slight kind of sprinkling which would serve Davids turn; no, but he would be washed to purpose; he would have this work complete in him. And here we have still a further property in the true servants of God, which is considerable in them; and that is, to have the work both of forgiveness, and likewise of holiness perfected to them. A good Christian would have nothing left impure or unsanctified in him, but would be sanctified throughout; in his understanding, will, affections, outward man, and where he is any way failing; he would have all corruption cleansed from him, he would be generally and universally good as much as may be; and he sets upon reformation of particulars by reforming in general. The reason of it is this–
(1) Because one sin draws on another, in the nature of the thing itself; sins seldom go alone, but have more at the heels of them.
(2) Because the heart of man, being polluted and defiled with sin, is now ready and prone to more; so long as theres any corruption left at the bottom in us, we are never secure from the actings of it at one time or other; and if it chance not to break out now, yet at another time we are sure to hear of it.
4. The vehemency of the affection. Wash me . . . and cleanse me. We should be importunate with God in such petitions, and not easily be put off from them.
III. The manner and practice of God as to forgiveness and holiness. And that is, to go through with them.
1. Forgiveness is an utter abolition of all kinds of guilt (Psa 32:1-2; Isa 44:22; Isa 38:17; Jer 31:34; Mic 7:18-19).
2. So as to sanctification; God is also complete in this work, He works throughly.
(1) He works in His Servants a thorough fight of that evil which is in their hearts, the general corruption of their whole nature.
(2) He works in them also a thorough hatred and detestation of all sin, so as to allow of no evil at all in themselves.
(3) He gives sin its mortal wound and death-blow in them; from whence, though it be not absolutely dead, yet it is dying still in them.
(4) He will also one day, and at the last, wholly and absolutely free them from sin. (Thomas Horton, D. D.)
Deliverance from iniquity and sin sought
I. The evils from which a true penitent implores deliverance. Sin is imputed, it is communicated, and it is committed.
II. The nature of the deliverance which the penitent implores. The blessing of purification from the love and power of sin always accompanies deliverance from its guilt; and as these blessings are never separated, the one from the other, in a communication of grace, so are desires after them always united in the experience and prayers of penitent sinners. Is it not wisdom to submit to the means which are necessary for restoration to health, though those means may be, for a time, painful and distressing? (T. Biddulph, M. A.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 2. Wash me throughly] harbeh cabbeseni, “Wash me again and again, – cause my washings to be multiplied.” My stain is deep; ordinary purgation will not be sufficient.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Wash me throughly, Heb. multiply to wash me; by which phrase he implies the greatness of his guilt, and the insufficiency of all legal washings, and the absolute necessity of some other and better thing to wash him, even of Gods grace, and the blood of Christ; which as Abraham saw by faith, Joh 8:56, so did David, as is sufficiently evident (allowing for the darkness of the dispensation and expressions of the Old Testament) from divers passages of the Psalms, of which I have spoken in their proper places; and his earnest and passionate desire of pardon, which he desires above all other things; wherein he showeth himself to be a true penitent, because his chief care and desire was to obtain Gods favour, and the forgiveness of his sins, and not the prevention of those external sore judgments which God by Nathan threatened to bring upon him and his house, 2Sa 12:10,11, about which here is not one word in this Psalm; whereas the cares and desires of hypocrites chiefly are bent towards worldly things, as we see in Cain, Gen 4:13,16,17, and Saul, 1Sa 15:30, and others, Hos 7:14.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
2. Wash mePurity as well aspardon is desired by true penitents.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity,…. Which supposes defilement by sin, and that very great, and such as none can remove but the Lord himself; who, when he takes it in hand, does it effectually and thoroughly; see Eze 36:25. David’s sin had long lain upon him, the faith of it had as it were eaten into him, and spread itself over him, and therefore he needed much washing: “wash me much”, all over, and thoroughly:
and cleanse me from my sin: which only the blood of Christ can do, 1Jo 1:7. The psalmist makes use of three words to express his sin by, in this verse Ps 51:1; , which signifies “rebellion”, as all sin has in it rebellion against God the lawgiver, and a contempt of his commandments; , “perverseness”, “crookedness”, sin being a going out of the plain way of God’s righteous law; and , “a missing the mark”; going besides it or not coming up to it: and these he makes rise of to set forth the malignity of sin, and the deep sense he had of the exceeding sinfulness of it; and these are the three words used by the Lord in Ex 34:7; when he declares himself to be a sin forgiving God; so that David’s sin came within the reach of pardoning mercy.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
(2) Wash me thoroughly.Literally, Wash me much, whether we follow the Hebrew text or the Hebrew margin. The two clauses of the verse are not merely antithetic. The terms wash and cleanse seem to imply respectively the actual and the ceremonial purification, the former meaning literally to tread, describing the process of washing clothes (as blankets are washed to this day in Scotland) by trampling them with the feet, the latter used of the formal declaration of cleanliness by the priest in the case of leprosy (Lev. 13:6-34). (For the iniquity and sin, see Psa. 32:1.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
2. Wash me thoroughly Literally, multiply to wash, or wash me much, or many times. The word belongs to the fuller’s art of cleansing by treading with the feet, or scouring, and is intensive of thorough work, because of the difficulty of cleansing on account of deep stains.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Psa 51:2. Wash me thoroughly, &c. The original hereb kabseini is, multiply, or, in multiplying, wash me from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin; for the word multiply refers to both verbs, wash me and cleanse me, and is well rendered in our version by thoroughly wash me; as a garment often washed is thoroughly cleansed from its impurity. This form of expression is frequent in the Old Testament. See Isa 1:16. The meaning of the Psalmist is, that God, by repentance and faith, would recover him from all his past transgressions, and enable him to live free from the practice of them for the future.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
How beautiful these expressions are, if offered wish reference to Christ’s blood as the fountain there opened for sin and for uncleanness. And observe in what true sorrow for sin consists; an unceasing view of sin, and self loathing in consequence thereof.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 51:2 Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
Ver. 2. Wash me throughly from mine iniquity ] Heb. Multiply, wash me; so Isa 55:7 . God is said to multiply pardon as much as we multiply sin. David apprehended his sin so exceeding sinful, his stain so inveterate, so engrained, that it would hardly be ever gotten out till the cloth were almost rubbed to pieces; that God himself would have somewhat to do to do it. He had been in a deep ditch, Pro 23:27 , and was pitifully defiled; he therefore begs hard to be thoroughly rinsed, to be bathed in that blessed fountain of Christ’s blood, that is opened for sins and for uncleanness, Zec 13:1 ; to be cleansed not only from outward defilements, but from his swinish nature; for though a swine be washed never so clean, if she retain her nature, she will be ready to wallow in the next guzzle. The time of our being here is , as Nazianzen calleth it, i.e. our washing time. Wash thy heart, O Jerusalem, that thou mayest be clean, Jer 4:14 , not by thinking to set off with God, and to make amends by thy good deeds for thy bad; this is but lutum luto purgare, to wash off one filth with another; but by the practice of mortification, and by faith in Christ’s meritorious passion; for he hath washed us from our sins in his own blood, Rev 1:5 . Other blood defileth, but this purifieth from all pollutions of flesh and spirit, 1Jn 1:7 .
And cleanse me from my sin
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Wash: as a garment, Hebrew. kabas. Heb form = multiply to wash = wash thoroughly.
iniquity. Hebrew. ‘avah. App-44.
cleanse: i.e. pronounce ceremonially clean.
sin. Hebrew. chata’. App-44,
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Wash: Psa 51:7, Eze 36:25, Zec 13:1, 1Co 6:11, Heb 9:13, Heb 9:14, Heb 10:21, Heb 10:22, 1Jo 1:7-9, Rev 1:5, Rev 7:14
cleanse: Psa 51:7, Psa 19:12
Reciprocal: Gen 35:2 – clean Lev 8:6 – washed Lev 11:25 – and be unclean Lev 13:58 – be washed Lev 14:7 – seven times Lev 15:5 – General Lev 16:30 – General Num 8:7 – wash their Num 14:19 – Pardon Deu 21:6 – wash their hands Deu 23:11 – wash himself 2Sa 24:17 – I have sinned 2Ki 5:13 – Wash 1Ch 21:13 – great 2Ch 4:6 – ten lavers Psa 30:10 – Hear Psa 65:3 – transgressions Pro 30:12 – not Jer 33:8 – General Hos 14:2 – away Joh 13:5 – to wash Joh 13:9 – not 1Jo 1:9 – we confess
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Psa 51:2. Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, &c. I have made myself exceeding loathsome by my repeated and heinous acts of wickedness, which, like a stain that hath long stuck to a garment, is not easily purged away; but do not, therefore, I beseech thee, abhor me, but rather magnify thy mercy in purifying me perfectly, and cleansing me so thoroughly, that there may be no spot remaining in me. Bishop Patrick. Hebrew, , harbeh chabbeseeni, is literally, multiplica, lava me, multiply, wash me: that is, Wash me very much. By which phrase he implies the greatness of his guilt, the insufficiency of all legal washing, and the absolute necessity of some other and better means of cleansing him from it, even Gods grace and the atoning blood of Christ; which as Abraham saw by faith, Joh 8:56, so did David, as is sufficiently evident (allowance being made for the darkness of the Old Testament dispensation) from divers passages of his Psalms. Observe, reader, sin defiles us, renders us odious in the sight of the holy God, and uneasy to ourselves; it unfits us for communion with God, in grace or glory. But when God pardons sin, he cleanses us from it, so that we become acceptable to him, easy to ourselves, and have liberty of access to him. Nathan had assured David, upon his first profession of repentance, that his sin was pardoned. The Lord has taken away thy sin, thou shalt not die, 2Sa 12:13 : yet he prays, Wash me, cleanse me, blot out my transgressions; for God will be sought unto, even for that which he has promised; and those whose sins are pardoned, must pray that the pardon may be more and more evidenced to them. God had forgiven him, but he could not forgive himself, and therefore he is thus importunate for pardon as one that thought himself unworthy of it.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
51:2 Wash me {c} throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
(c) My sins strike so fast in me, that I have need of some singular kind of washing.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
The biblical writers often compared a person’s deeds to the clothing he wears because that is what other people see when they look at us. David asked God to wash away his iniquity (moral evil) like dirt that was on his garment (behavior). Cleansing is a term that comes from the tabernacle ritual. Those who came into God’s presence to worship and serve Him had to be clean. David correctly viewed his sin (falling short of what God requires) as making the worship and service of a holy God impossible.
"In the Jewish society of that day, to wash and change clothes marked a new beginning in life (Gen 35:1; Gen 41:14; Gen 45:22; Exo 19:10; Exo 19:14), and David made such a new start (2Sa 12:20)." [Note: Wiersbe, The . . . Wisdom . . ., p. 191.]