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  "commentary": {
    "unit_id": "PSA_141",
    "book": "Psalms",
    "book_abbrev": "PSA",
    "book_slug": "psalms",
    "page_kind": "ot_commentary_unit",
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    "passage_reference": "Psalm 141",
    "literary_unit_title": "Psalm 141",
    "genre": "Poetry",
    "subgenre": "Psalm",
    "passage_text": "141:1 O Lord, I cry out to you. Come quickly to me! Pay attention to me when I cry out to you!\n141:2 May you accept my prayer like incense, my uplifted hands like the evening offering!\n141:3 O Lord, place a guard on my mouth! Protect the opening of my lips!\n141:4 Do not let me have evil desires, or participate in sinful activities with men who behave wickedly. I will not eat their delicacies.\n141:5 May the godly strike me in love and correct me! May my head not refuse choice oil! Indeed, my prayer is a witness against their evil deeds.\n141:6 They will be thrown down the side of a cliff by their judges. They will listen to my words, for they are pleasant.\n141:7 As when one plows and breaks up the soil, so our bones are scattered at the mouth of Sheol.\n141:8 Surely I am looking to you, O sovereign Lord. In you I take shelter. Do not expose me to danger!\n141:9 Protect me from the snare they have laid for me, and the traps the evildoers have set.\n141:10 Let the wicked fall into their own nets, while I escape. Psalm 142 A well-written song by David, when he was in the cave; a prayer.",
    "historical_setting_and_dynamics": "Psalm 141 is a Davidic prayer in a setting of real opposition, moral pressure, and the threat of entrapment by wicked men. The psalm assumes a worship world shaped by tabernacle or temple sacrifice, where evening incense and offering language provide a model for acceptable prayer. The danger is not merely physical; it includes the temptation to join evildoers, to speak wrongly, and to be drawn into their table fellowship and schemes. As a lament, the poem voices urgent dependence on the Lord while also asking that the righteous may correct him and that the wicked may receive just retribution.",
    "central_idea": "The psalmist pleads for God to receive his prayer, restrain his speech and desires, and keep him from the snares of the wicked. He submits himself to godly correction and entrusts the outcome of the conflict to the Lord, asking that the wicked fall into their own traps while he is kept safe.",
    "context_and_flow": "Psalm 141 stands among Davidic prayers of distress and dependence in Book V of the Psalter. It moves from urgent petition for audience and acceptance, to requests for moral restraint and righteous correction, and finally to confident trust in the Lord for protection and vindication. The closing plea anticipates the next movement in the Psalter’s sequence of lament and deliverance, though the supplied text mistakenly appends the heading of Psalm 142 after the psalm ends.",
    "key_hebrew_terms": [
      {
        "term_original": "תְּפִלָּתִי",
        "term_english": "my prayer",
        "transliteration": "tefillati",
        "strongs": "H8605",
        "gloss": "my prayer, intercession",
        "significance": "Highlights the psalm as direct address to God; the central issue is not abstract reflection but petition that seeks divine hearing and response."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "קְטֹרֶת",
        "term_english": "incense",
        "transliteration": "qetoret",
        "strongs": "H7004",
        "gloss": "incense, fragrant smoke offering",
        "significance": "The prayer is likened to sacrificial worship, showing that acceptable speech before God is to rise as holy and pleasing like the sanctuary incense."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "עֹלַת",
        "term_english": "burnt offering",
        "transliteration": "olah",
        "strongs": "H5930",
        "gloss": "offering that ascends",
        "significance": "The evening offering imagery anchors the psalm in covenant worship and suggests that the psalmist’s lifted hands are an act of liturgical devotion."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "שָׁמְרָה",
        "term_english": "guard, keep",
        "transliteration": "shomrah",
        "strongs": "H8104",
        "gloss": "watch over, protect",
        "significance": "Repeated protection language frames the psalm’s ethical concern: God must guard both the psalmist’s speech and his path from destructive influence."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "מַצּוֹד",
        "term_english": "snare",
        "transliteration": "matsod",
        "strongs": "H4689",
        "gloss": "trap, net, snare",
        "significance": "The image of hidden traps captures the treachery of the wicked and the psalmist’s vulnerability to their schemes."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "שְׁאוֹל",
        "term_english": "Sheol",
        "transliteration": "sheol",
        "strongs": "H7585",
        "gloss": "the realm of the dead",
        "significance": "The closing imagery of death underscores the seriousness of the conflict and the extremity of the psalmist’s prayer for preservation."
      }
    ],
    "exegetical_analysis": "The psalm opens with rapid, urgent address: the psalmist cries out, asks the Lord to come quickly, and begs Him to pay attention. This establishes dependence and immediacy. Verse 2 interprets the request in worship terms: the prayer itself should be received like incense and like the evening offering. The point is not that words magically become sacrifice, but that prayer, when offered in faith and obedience, is fitting covenant worship before God.\n\nVerses 3-4 move to the moral danger that accompanies external threat. The request for a guard over the mouth shows that the crisis includes speech, not only circumstance. The psalmist asks not merely to avoid sinful acts but also sinful desires; inward corruption is the root danger. His refusal to share the wicked man’s delicacies is a concrete image of rejecting fellowship with their way of life and likely their table fellowship, which in the ancient world signified alignment and complicity.\n\nVerse 5 is difficult but important. The godly man’s rebuke is welcomed as love and as corrective oil, an image of honor and healing rather than harm. The psalmist is willing to be instructed by the righteous. The final clause is textually and syntactically debated in translation, but the sense is that the psalmist’s prayer stands over against the evil deeds of the wicked as a witness. He is not joining their counsel; he is separating himself from it.\n\nVerses 6-7 are the most compressed and most debated lines. They appear to describe the overthrow of wicked leaders or judges and the scattering of bones, vivid images of judgment and mortality. The exact syntax is uncertain, but the overall movement is clear: the psalmist looks for God to expose and judge evil, not to excuse it. Verse 7 likely uses agricultural imagery—bones scattered like soil broken up by the plow—to picture ruin, death, and humiliation. The language is poetic and severe, not a command for private vengeance.\n\nVerses 8-10 return to the psalmist’s own trust. He looks to the Lord as sovereign, takes refuge in Him, and asks not to be left exposed. The final petition is for deliverance from traps set by evildoers, with the fitting reversal that the wicked fall into their own nets while the psalmist escapes. The ending preserves both the prayer for justice and the commitment to leave the outcome in God’s hands.",
    "covenantal_redemptive_location": "Psalm 141 belongs within Israel’s covenant life, where prayer, sacrifice, moral holiness, and righteous judgment are integrated under the Mosaic order and mediated through worship. The incense and evening offering imagery situate the psalm in the sanctuary world of Israel, while the Davidic voice anticipates the righteous king who depends wholly on the Lord amid hostility. The psalm does not move beyond Israel’s covenant framework, but it does deepen the biblical pattern of the righteous sufferer who seeks cleansing, protection, and vindication from God.",
    "theological_significance": "The psalm teaches that acceptable prayer is inseparable from holiness, humility, and dependence on God’s protection. God is shown as the one who hears, receives, guards, corrects, and judges. Human speech and desire are morally weighty, and fellowship with the wicked is spiritually dangerous. The psalm also affirms that loving correction from the righteous is a good gift and that justice ultimately belongs to the Lord, not to uncontrolled personal vengeance.",
    "prophecy_typology_symbols": "No major prophecy or direct messianic oracle appears in this unit. The chief symbols are worship imagery (incense, evening offering) and trap imagery (snare, nets), both of which function as vivid poetic pictures of acceptable prayer, moral danger, and divine rescue. The righteous sufferer pattern has canonical significance and may foreshadow later righteous sufferers, but that should be handled as broad typology rather than direct prediction.",
    "eastern_thought_cultural_figures": "The psalm reflects honor/shame and table-fellowship dynamics common in the ancient world. To eat the delicacies of the wicked would imply participation in their way of life, not merely a neutral meal. The imagery of anointing oil, incense, and evening offering assumes a worship world in which sensory symbols communicate acceptance, honor, and covenant access. The prayer also uses concrete, bodily images—mouth, hands, bones, nets—to express spiritual realities in a strongly embodied poetic mode.",
    "canonical_christological_trajectory": "Within the canon, Psalm 141 contributes to the recurring portrait of the righteous servant who suffers pressure from the wicked, depends on God, and asks for vindication without seizing it by unrighteous means. Its worship language and plea for a guarded mouth resonate with later biblical calls to holiness and with the perfect obedience of the Messiah, who never yielded to sin or deceit. In the wider canon, the psalm prepares readers to expect a truly righteous king and servant whose prayer is pure and whose vindication comes from the Lord.",
    "practical_doctrinal_implications": "Believers should pray urgently and honestly, not presumptuously. The psalm presses the need for God’s help in both outward danger and inward corruption. It also commends receiving loving rebuke from the righteous rather than resisting correction. Finally, it teaches confidence that the Lord sees hidden traps, judges wicked schemes, and can preserve His people without their resorting to sinful retaliation.",
    "textual_critical_note": "No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.",
    "interpretive_cruxes": "The main cruxes are the exact syntax and referent of verse 5 and the compressed judgment imagery of verses 6-7. The overall meaning is clear, but the precise translation of some clauses remains debated.",
    "application_boundary_note": "Application should remain within the psalm’s covenantal and poetic setting. Readers should not flatten the imagery into a literal description of temple mechanics or treat the imprecatory language as a license for personal vendetta. The psalm teaches trust in divine justice and moral separation from evil, not self-authorized revenge.",
    "second_pass_needed": false,
    "second_pass_reasons": [],
    "second_pass_reason_detail": "No second-pass specialist review is needed.",
    "confirmed_second_pass_reasons": [],
    "qa_summary": "Overall sound and text-governed. The entry handles the lament/poetry genre carefully, avoids wooden literalism, and keeps typology and application broadly controlled with no material covenantal or prophecy errors detected.",
    "qa_lint_flags": [],
    "qa_priority_actions": "[]",
    "qa_final_note": "Publishable as-is; no specialist review needed.",
    "confidence_note": "High confidence. The psalm’s main movement and theological thrust are clear, though a few poetic lines remain syntactically difficult.",
    "editorial_risk_flags": [
      "debated_translation_issue",
      "application_misuse_risk",
      "poetic_literalism_risk"
    ],
    "qa_status": "pass",
    "publish_recommendation": "publish",
    "unit_slug": "psa_141",
    "canonical_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/old-testament/psalms/psa_141/",
    "data_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/data/commentary/old-testament/psalms/psa_141.json",
    "testament": "OT"
  }
}