✦ The Hyperlinked Bible

Romans 3:13b to Psalm 140:3

NT Text: Romans 3:13

OT Source(s):

Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Reference Type: Direct Quotation

Connection Method(s): Analogy + Longitudinal Theme

Significance: Paul quotes Psalm 140:3 (LXX 139:4) in the second half of Romans 3:13, continuing the catena's focus on destructive speech. The psalmist describes the wicked whose tongues are sharp as serpents, with the poison of asps (ios aspidōn) under their lips. This serpentine imagery connects to the broader biblical trajectory of the seed of the serpent (Genesis 3:15), whose speech is venomous and lethal. Paul pairs this with Psalm 5:9 to create a two-part indictment of the human mouth: the throat that devours like a grave (Ps 5:9) and the lips that poison like a snake (Ps 140:3). The verbal form follows the LXX closely. Within the Romans 3 catena, this quotation reinforces Paul's thesis that "there is no one righteous, not even one" (v. 10), establishing the universal need for the righteousness of God apart from law (v. 21).


Hermeneutical Notes

NT Use Pattern: Assimilated — Tributary element of the Romans 3:10-18 catena — Psalm 140:3 contributing the venom-under-the-lips indictment.