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15 What can I say?
He has decreed and acted.[a]
I will walk slowly all my years because I am overcome with grief.[b]
16 O Lord, your decrees can give men life;
may years of life be restored to me.[c]
Restore my health[d] and preserve my life.’
17 “Look, the grief I experienced was for my benefit.[e]

You delivered me[f] from the Pit of oblivion.[g]
For you removed all my sins from your sight.[h]

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Footnotes

  1. Isaiah 38:15 tn Heb “and he has spoken and he has acted.”
  2. Isaiah 38:15 tn Heb “because of the bitterness of my soul.”
  3. Isaiah 38:16 tn The translation offered here is purely speculative. The text as it stands is difficult and obscure. It reads literally, “O Lord, on account of them [the suffix is masculine plural], they live, and to all in them [the suffix is feminine plural], life of my spirit.”
  4. Isaiah 38:16 tn The prefixed verbal form could be taken as indicative, “you restore my health,” but the following imperatival form suggests it be understood as an imperfect of request.
  5. Isaiah 38:17 tn Heb “Look, for peace bitterness was to me bitter”; NAB “thus is my bitterness transformed into peace.”
  6. Isaiah 38:17 tc The Hebrew text reads, “you loved my soul,” but this does not fit syntactically with the following prepositional phrase. חָשַׁקְתָּ (khashaqta, “you loved”), may reflect an aural error; most emend the form to חָשַׂכְת, (khasakht, “you held back”).
  7. Isaiah 38:17 tn בְּלִי (beli) most often appears as a negation, meaning “without,” suggesting the meaning “nothingness, oblivion,” here. Some translate “decay” or “destruction.”
  8. Isaiah 38:17 tn Heb “for you threw behind your back all my sins.”