Exposition on the Psalms of David
"On account of iniquity you have corrected man." This is the reason why he proposes a twofold petition: because first the cause is removed, and afterward the effect is removed. Guilt is the cause of chastisements; and therefore he says that man is chastised on account of sin. Hence he says, "You have corrected," that is, chastised man, "on account of iniquity," that is, on account of his sins. And therefore first he asks for sins to be removed, because future punishments are for damnation, but the punishments of this life are for purification, as far as they go in themselves, and are for correction. Ps. 32: "Many are the scourges of the sinner." "And you have made his soul waste away like a spider." Here is set forth the manner or limit of correction: "to waste away," that is, to dry up. It can therefore be explained corporally, when it is referred to bodily tribulation, because the moisture and richness of the body is dried up, and thus life wastes away. Job 33: "His flesh shall waste away." Likewise there: "His flesh is consumed by punishments." In another way, it can be referred to the soul. In man there is spiritually a twofold richness. One is evil, through bodily pleasures. Deut. 32: "He grew fat, and forsook God his maker." And to be dried from this richness is good; and this is what he says: "You have made to waste away," that is, you have dried up my soul like a spider, from the love of carnal things; because the spider is a hot animal and is not fat, because it makes the finest threads; so the soul, separated from carnal pleasures, clings through its affection to invisible things and produces invisible works and affections. 2 Cor. 4: "While we look not at the things which are seen," etc. Or, "to waste away," that is, to dry up from the richness of devotion, as Ps. 63 says: "Let my soul be filled as with marrow and fatness"; and this is a bad drying up. This happens because the soul becomes undevout and clings to sins and lacks the richness of devotion like a spider. Likewise the web of the spider is fragile, and so the thoughts of sinners are vain. Is. 59: "They have woven webs of spiders," that is, useless and vain things, "they have made." Likewise the spider emits so much of those threads that it dies; so men die spiritually on account of the sins they commit. Jas. 1: "Sin, when it is completed, begets death." And it is read thus: "His soul, being like a spider, you have made to waste away," that is, to dry up with a good drying. "Surely every man is troubled in vain." Here is the failure of correction; because although he makes them waste away in this manner, nevertheless many remain in their malice or return to evil. And that some are not troubled in vain, this is not insofar as they are men, but insofar as they are elevated by God from earthly things to the contemplation of heavenly things.
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