the Second Week after Easter
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Easy-to-Read Version
Psalms 22:17
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
I can count all my bones;people look and stare at me.
I can count all of my bones. They look and stare at me.
I may tell all my bones: they look and stare upon me.
I can count all my bones— they stare and gloat over me;
I can count all my bones; people look and stare at me.
I can count all my bones; my enemies are gloating over me in triumph.
I can count all my bones; They look, they stare at me.
I can count all my bones. They look, they stare at me;
I can count all of my bones. They look and stare at me.
I may tell all my bones: yet they beholde, and looke vpon me.
I count all my bones.They look, they stare at me;
I can count all my bones; they stare and gloat over me.
I can count all my bones, and my enemies just stare and sneer at me.
Dogs are all around me, a pack of villains closes in on me like a lion [at] my hands and feet.
I may count all my bones. They look, they stare upon me;
My bones ached with pain; they looked and stared upon me.
All my bones can be seen. My enemies look at me and stare.
I can count all my bones; they gaze, they look at me.
I count all My bones; they look, they stare at Me.
They pearsed my hondes and my fete, I might haue tolde all my bones: as for them, they stode staringe and lokinge vpon me.
I may count all my bones. They look and stare upon me;
I am able to see all my bones; their looks are fixed on me:
For dogs have encompassed me; a company of evil-doers have inclosed me; like a lion, they are at my hands and my feet.
I may tell all my bones: they looke and stare vpon me.
I may tell all my bones. They stande staring & gasing vpon me:
They counted all my bones; and they observed and looked upon me.
I may tell all my bones; they look and stare upon me:
thei noumbriden alle my boonys. Sotheli thei lokiden, and bihelden me;
I may count all my bones; They look and stare on me.
I may number all my bones: they look [and] stare upon me.
I can count all My bones. They look and stare at Me.
I can count all my bones. My enemies stare at me and gloat.
I can tell how many bones I have. The people look at me with wide eyes.
I can count all my bones. They stare and gloat over me;
I may tell all my bones, They, look for - they behold me!
(21-18) They have numbered all my bones. And they have looked and stared upon me.
I can count all my bones--they stare and gloat over me;
I count all my bones -- they look expectingly, They look upon me,
I can count all my bones. They look, they stare at me;
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
I may: Psalms 102:3-5, Job 33:21, Isaiah 52:14
look: Matthew 27:36, Matthew 27:39-41, Mark 15:29-32, Luke 23:27, Luke 23:35
Reciprocal: Job 16:10 - gaped Psalms 22:14 - all Isaiah 45:22 - Look Isaiah 57:4 - draw Obadiah 1:12 - looked Obadiah 1:13 - looked Zechariah 12:10 - they shall look Mark 15:24 - crucified Mark 15:31 - also John 19:37 - They
Cross-References
I will build a great nation from you. I will bless you and make your name famous. People will use your name to bless other people.
I will make your people so many that they will be like the dust of the earth. If people could count all the particles of dust on earth, they could count your people.
Then God led Abram outside and said, "Look at the sky. See the many stars. There are so many you cannot count them. Your family will be like that."
I will give you many descendants. New nations and kings will come from you.
After these things God decided to test Abraham's faith. God said to him, "Abraham!" And he said, "Yes!"
Then God said, "Take your son to the land of Moriah and kill your son there as a sacrifice for me. This must be Isaac, your only son, the one you love. Use him as a burnt offering on one of the mountains there. I will tell you which mountain."
Abraham answered, "God himself is providing the lamb for the sacrifice, my son." So both Abraham and his son went together to that place.
When they came to the place where God told them to go, Abraham built an altar. He carefully laid the wood on the altar. Then he tied up his son Isaac and laid him on the altar on top of the wood.
Then Abraham reached for his knife to kill his son.
Then Abraham noticed a ram whose horns were caught in a bush. So Abraham went and took the ram. He offered it, instead of his son, as a sacrifice to God.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
I may tell all my bones,.... For what with the stretching out of his body on the cross, when it was fastened to it as it lay on the ground, and with the jolt of the cross when, being reared up, it was fixed in the ground, and with the weight of the body hanging upon it, all his bones were disjointed and started out; so that, could he have seen them, he might have told them, as they might be told by the spectators who were around him; and so the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions render it, "they have numbered all my bones"; that is, they might have done if: the Targum is, "I will number all the scars of my members", made by the blows, scourges, and wounds he received;
they look [and] stare upon me; meaning not his bones, but his enemies; which may be understood either by way of contempt, as many Jewish interpreters explain it: so the Scribes and elders of the people, and the people themselves, looked and stared at him on the cross, and mocked at him, and insulted him; or by way of rejoicing, saying, "Aha, aha, our eye hath seen", namely, what they desired and wished for,
Psalms 35:21; a sight as was enough to have moved an heart of stone made no impression on them; they had no sympathy with him, no compassion on him, but rejoiced at his misery: this staring agrees with their character as dogs.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
I may tell all my bones - That is, I may count them. They are so prominent, so bare, that I can see them and count their number. The idea here is that of emaciation from continued suffering or from some other cause. As applied to the Redeemer, it would denote the effect of long protracted suffering and anxiety on his frame, as rendering it crushed, weakened, emaciated. Compare the notes at Isaiah 52:14; Isaiah 53:2-3. No one can prove that an effect such as is here referred to may not have been produced by the sufferings of the Redeemer.
They look and stare upon me - That is, either my bones - or, my enemies that stand around me. The most obvious construction would refer it to the former - to his bones - as if they stood out prominently and stared him in the face. Rosenmuller understands it in the latter sense, as meaning that his enemies gazed with wonder on such an object. Perhaps this, on the whole, furnishes the best interpretation, as there is something unnatural in speaking of a man’s own bones staring or gazing upon him, and as the image of his enemies standing and looking with wonder on one so wretched, so crushed, so broken, is a very striking one. This, too, will better agree with the statement in Isaiah 52:14, “Many were astonished at thee;” and Isaiah 53:2-3, “He hath no form nor comeliness, and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him;” “we hid, as it were, our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not.” It accords also better with the statement in the following verse; “they,” that is, the same persons referred to, “part my garments amoung them.”
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Psalms 22:17. I may tell all my bones — This may refer to the violent extension of his body when the whole of its weight hung upon the nails which attached his hands to the transverse beam of the cross. The body being thus extended, the principal bones became prominent, and easily discernible.