10. soul--or, "self." This use of "soul" for the person is frequent
(Ge 12:5; 46:26;
Ps 3:2; 7:2; 11:1),
even when the body may be the part chiefly affected, as in
Ps 35:13; 105:18.
Some cases are cited, as
Le 22:4;
Nu 6:6; 9:6, 10; 19:13;
Hag 2:13,
&c., which seem to justify assigning the meaning of body, or
dead body; but it will be found that the latter sense is given by some
adjunct expressed or implied. In those cases person is the
proper sense.
wilt not leave . . . hell--abandon to the power of
(Job 39:14;
Ps 49:10).
Hell as
(Ge 42:38;
Ps 6:5;
Jon 2:2)
the state or region of death, and so frequently--or the grave
itself
(Job 14:13; 17:13;
Ec 9:10,
&c.).
So the Greek Hades (compare
Ac 2:27, 31).
The context alone can settle whether the state mentioned is one of
suffering and place of the damned (compare
Ps 9:17;
Pr 5:5; 7:27).
wilt . . . suffer--literally, "give" or "appoint."
Holy One--
(Ps 4:3),
one who is the object of God's favor, and so a recipient of divine
grace which he exhibits--pious.
to see--or, "experience"--undergo
(Lu 2:26).
corruption--Some render the word, the pit, which is possible, but
for the obvious sense which the apostle's exposition
(Ac 2:27; 13:36, 37)
gives. The sense of the whole passage is clearly this: by the use of
flesh and soul, the disembodied state produced by death
is indicated; but, on the other hand, no more than the state of
death is intended; for the last clause of
Ps 16:10
is strictly parallel with the first, and Holy One corresponds to
soul, and corruption to hell. As Holy One,
or David
(Ac 13:36, 37),
which denotes the person, including soul and body, is used for
body, of which only corruption can be predicated (compare
Ac 2:31);
so, on the contrary, soul, which literally means the immaterial
part, is used for the person. The language may be thus paraphrased, "In
death I shall hope for resurrection; for I shall not be left under its
dominion and within its bounds, or be subject to the corruption which
ordinarily ensues."
JFB.
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