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Psalm 40:6-8

Hebrew Key Terms:

  • כָּרָה (karah) - \"to dig, to bore, to open\" — \"my ears you have opened/bored (karita oznayim)\" (v.6); the same semantic range as the Exodus 21:6 awl-piercing; the ears that are opened/dug are the servant's ears — prepared for the master's instruction and submission
  • חָפֵץ (chaphets) - \"to delight in, to desire\" — \"I delight to do Your will\" (v.8); the inner-affective word — not obligation, not compulsion, but genuine desire; the Deuteronomy 15 servant's tov lo immak (\"well off with you\") expressed as an internal disposition
  • תּוֹרָה (torah) - \"instruction, law\" — \"Your law is within my heart\" (v.8); the Sinai covenant's external tablets (Exodus 20) here become an internal reality — anticipating Jeremiah 31:33's new covenant promise; the servant is not merely obedient but transformed
  • זֶבַח (zebach) / עוֹלָה (olah) - \"sacrifice\" / \"burnt offering\" — \"sacrifice and offering You did not desire\" (v.6); the speaker places the entire Levitical sacrifice system as secondary to the obedient ear — willing submission exceeds all external worship

Context: Psalm 40 is a psalm of thanksgiving and petition in which a Davidic speaker recounts past deliverance (vv.1-10) and cries out for present help (vv.11-17). Verses 6-8 form the theological heart: in gratitude for deliverance, the speaker reflects on what YHWH truly desires — not sacrifice and offering but an open/obedient ear and a will aligned with God's. The phrase \"my ears you have opened/dug\" (v.6b) invokes the Exodus 21 servant-law: the speaker presents himself as YHWH's voluntary permanent servant, whose ear has been marked for perpetual submission to the master's word. The contrast with sacrifice (v.6a) follows the prophetic tradition: Samuel (\"to obey is better than sacrifice,\" 1 Samuel 15:22), Hosea (\"I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice,\" 6:6), Micah (\"what does the LORD require of you but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly,\" 6:8). But Psalm 40 adds what the prophets do not: the speaker actively presents himself as the obedient servant whose ear is bored, whose will delights in Torah. This is not critique of sacrifice alone but the positive portrait of the servant YHWH is seeking.

OT-to-OT Development: Psalm 40:6-8 develops the Exodus 21/Deuteronomy 15 servant-law by applying its essential features to a speaker who presents himself before YHWH. The ear-opening (karita oznayim) echoes the awl-piercing (ratsa) of Exodus 21:6; the delight in God's will (v.8) echoes the Deuteronomy servant's love and experience of goodness with his master. The LXX translator's paraphrase — \"a body you prepared for me\" (sōma de katērtisō moi) — captures the theological core: the servant's opened ear represents the whole person prepared for obedient service. Isaiah 50:4-6 develops the motif further: the Servant whose ear is opened morning by morning by the Lord and who does not rebel. Isaiah's Servant and Psalm 40's speaker share the same profile: ear opened by God, obedient submission to the master's will, willingness to bear suffering entailed by that submission.

Connections:

  • TO: Exodus 21:6 (the awl-piercing of the servant's ear — the legal institution that Psalm 40:6's \"ears opened/dug\" applies to the Messianic speaker), 1 Samuel 15:22 (\"to obey is better than sacrifice\" — the prophetic tradition that Psalm 40:6-8 develops with positive self-presentation)
  • FROM OT: Isaiah 50:4-6 (the Servant whose ear is opened morning by morning — the developed form of Psalm 40's obedient-ear motif), Jeremiah 31:33 (\"I will put My law within them... written on their hearts\" — the new-covenant fulfillment of Psalm 40:8's \"Your law is within my heart\")
  • FROM NT: Hebrews 10:5-7 (CRITICAL — Hebrews cites Psalm 40:6-8 [LXX] as Christ's own declaration at the Incarnation: \"When Christ came into the world, He said: 'Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you prepared for me... I have come to do your will, O God'\"), Philippians 2:8 (\"became obedient to death, even death on a cross\" — the full extent of the opened-ear obedience of Psalm 40:8)

Christological Connection: Psalm 40:6-8 is the OT's clearest Messianic application of the servant-ear motif. Hebrews 10:5-7 removes any ambiguity about the intended referent: the author presents these words as Christ's own speech at the Incarnation. When the Son took on human flesh, the decisive declaration was not \"I have come to be served\" but \"I have come to do Your will, O God\" — the voluntary servant's announcement, the opened ear's first word. The body prepared (LXX) is the Incarnation itself: the eternal Son taking the bodily form through which He will execute the servant's role that Exodus 21 institutionalized.

The contrast with sacrifice in verse 6a is not anti-ritualism but Christological argument: the Levitical offerings were always penultimate, pointing to the one true self-offering of the servant whose ear was opened from eternity. Hebrews 10:8-10 makes this explicit: the repeated sacrifices (which God did not fully desire) are replaced by the one offering of Christ's body — the servant who said \"I have come to do Your will\" and did it, once for all. The law within the heart (v.8b) anticipates what the Spirit will write on new-covenant hearts (Jeremiah 31:33; 2 Corinthians 3:3) — but in the Messianic speaker, it is perfectly realized: Christ's desire was always and perfectly aligned with the Father's will.

Connection Method(s): Typology (Providential Type, Forward-Looking — Psalm 40:6-8 applies the servant-ear motif to a speaker whose profile exceeds any historical Davidic king and whose words are identified by Hebrews 10:5-7 as Christ's own incarnational declaration; OT forward-pointing indicators include the contrast with the entire Levitical system [pointing beyond it] and the law-within-the-heart language [anticipating Jeremiah 31's new covenant]; retrospective identification explicitly in Hebrews 10:5-10). Also Promise-Fulfillment — the \"I have come to do Your will\" of Psalm 40:8 is a verbal messianic declaration fulfilled in Christ's incarnation and obedient death, as Hebrews 10:7 explicitly states. Also NT References (Ninefold Methodology — Hebrews 10:5-7 cites LXX Psalm 40:6-8, identifies the speaker as Christ, and uses it as the theological ground for the once-for-all sacrifice superseding Levitical worship).

Trajectory Table: 189 - The Pierced Ear (Voluntary Eternal Servanthood)