Exposition on the Psalms of David
"My heart was troubled." Here the magnitude of the tribulation is set forth with respect to three things: that it is close at hand, great, and efficacious. When someone wishes to exaggerate his pain, he says he has been struck to the heart. And therefore he says, "My heart was troubled within me"; as if to say: not in external things, but he is wounded to the very heart. Jer. 4: "My bowels are in pain." The tribulation is also great, because no evil among worldly things is as great as death. Hence he says, "The dread of death," that is, the fear of death, "fell upon me," because Saul wanted to kill him. The tribulation is also efficacious, because when fear is strong, it has a twofold effect: one in the body, namely trembling; the other in the soul, namely trepidation. And therefore he says, "Fear and trembling of death came upon me," that is, upon my powers with respect to the soul, "and darkness covered me," that is, stupor enveloped me. Or "darkness," that is, evil men. Ps. (117): "They surrounded me like bees."
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