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How innumerable, O Lord, my God,
    are the wonders you have worked;
no one can compare with you
    in the plans you have made for us.
I would proclaim them and recount them,
    but there are far too many to enumerate.
[a]Sacrifice and offering you did not desire,
    but you have made my ears receptive.[b]
Burnt offerings and sin offerings
    you did not demand.
[c]Then I said, “Behold I come;
    it is written of me in the scroll of the book.

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Footnotes

  1. Psalm 40:7 These verses are applied to Christ by Heb 10:5-10.
  2. Psalm 40:7 Obedience is better than sacrifice (see Pss 50:7-15; 51:18f; 69:32f; 1 Sam 15:22; Isa 1:10-20; Jer 7:22; Hos 6:6; Am 5:22-25; Mic 6:6-8; Acts 7:42f). But you have made my ears receptive: a variant reading from the Greek versions has: “but a body you have prepared for me,” which was interpreted in a Messianic sense and applied to Christ (see Heb 10:5ff).
  3. Psalm 40:8 The psalmist presents himself to the Lord, submitting himself to whatever his Master may require (Heb 10:9). He presents himself as an offering to the Lord (see Rom 12:1f). It is written of me in the scroll: the scroll is the Torah or the Mosaic Law, transcribed on parchment scrolls. The alternative Greek reading is “with the scroll written for me,” which suggests a Messianic sense.