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Psalm Eight
Psalm 8
Chapter Contents
God is to be glorified, for making known himself to us.
(1,2) And for making even the heavenly bodies useful to man, thereby placing
him but little lower than the angels. (3-9)
Commentary on Psalm 8:1,2
(Read Psalm 8:1,2)
The psalmist seeks to give unto God the glory due to his
name. How bright this glory shines even in this lower world! He is ours, for he
made us, protects us, and takes special care of us. The birth, life, preaching,
miracles, suffering, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus are known
through the world. No name is so universal, no power and influence so generally
felt, as those of the Saviour of mankind. But how much brighter it shines in
the upper world! We, on this earth, only hear God's excellent name, and praise
that; the angels and blessed spirits above, see his glory, and praise that; yet
he is exalted far above even their blessing and praise. Sometimes the grace of
God appears wonderfully in young children. Sometimes the power of God brings to
pass great things in his church, by very weak and unlikely instruments, that
the excellency of the power might the more evidently appear to be of God, and
not of man. This he does, because of his enemies, that he may put them to
silence.
Commentary on Psalm 8:3-9
(Read Psalm 8:3-9)
We are to consider the heavens, that man thus may be
directed to set his affections on things above. What is man, so mean a
creature, that he should be thus honoured! so sinful a creature, that he should
be thus favoured! Man has sovereign dominion over the inferior creatures, under
God, and is appointed their lord. This refers to Christ. In Hebrews 2:6-8, the apostle, to prove the
sovereign dominion of Christ, shows he is that Man, that Son of man, here
spoken of, whom God has made to have dominion over the works of his hands. The
greatest favour ever showed to the human race, and the greatest honour ever put
upon human nature, were exemplified in the Lord Jesus. With good reason does
the psalmist conclude as he began, Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the
earth, which has been honoured with the presence of the Redeemer, and is still
enlightened by his gospel, and governed by his wisdom and power! What words can
reach his praises, who has a right to our obedience as our Redeemer?
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 8
Verse 1
[1] O
LORD our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth! who hast set thy
glory above the heavens.
In — Not only in Israel,
but among all nations. Which shews that this psalm speaks of the Messiah, and
the times of the New Testament.
Heavens —
Where thy throne of glory is established, where the blessed angels celebrate
thy praises, where Christ sitteth at thy right hand in glorious majesty, from
whence he poureth down excellent gifts upon babes.
Verse 2
[2] Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength
because of thine enemies, that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger.
Babes —
Weak and foolish, and contemptible persons, who are frequently called babes or
children. Such are very unfit to grapple with an enemy: and therefore when such
persons conquer the most powerful and malicious enemies, it must needs confound
them, and advance the glory of God: as indeed it did, when such mean persons as
the apostles, and disciples of Christ, maintained and propagated the gospel, in
spite of all the wit, power, and rage of their enemies.
Ordained —
Perfectly or firmly settled strength; that is, the praise of his strength or
power, Matthew 21:16, it is rendered praise.
Still —
Silence and confound them.
Avenger —
The devil, and all who are his vassals and espouse his quarrel.
Verse 3
[3] When
I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which
thou hast ordained;
The moon —
Either the sun is included under this general title: or he omitted it, because
he made this psalm by night.
Ordained —
Placed in that excellent and unalterable order, and directed to their several
motions.
Verse 4
[4] What
is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest
him?
What is man —
How mean and inconsiderable a thing is man, if compared with thy glorious
majesty.
Man —
Heb. infirm, or miserable man. By which it is apparent that he speaks of man,
not according to the state of his creation, but as fallen into a state of sin
and misery, and mortality.
Mindful —
Carest for him, and conferest such high favours upon him.
The son —
Heb. the son of Adam, that great apostate from God, the sinful son of a sinful
father, his son by likeness of disposition and manners, no less than by
procreation. All which tends to magnify the following mercy.
Visitest —
Not in anger, as that word is sometimes used, but with thy grace and mercy.
Verse 5
[5] For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and hast crowned
him with glory and honour.
For —
Thou hast in Christ mercifully restored man to his primitive estate, wherein he
was but one remove below the angels; from which he was fallen by sin.
Crowned —
Man, fallen and lost man: who is actually restored to glory and dominion in
Christ his head and representative, who received this crown and dominion for
man's good, and in his stead; which he will in due time communicate to his
members. And so the two expositions of this place concerning mankind and
concerning Christ, may be reconciled. For he speaks of that honourable estate
conferred first upon Christ, and then by his hands upon mankind. But the words
more literally rendered are, Thou madest him a little less than God. And hence
some have inferred, that man in his original state was the highest of all
creatures.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Psalm 8 - The Song Of The Astronomer
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
1) To consider a beautiful example of a hymn of praise
2) To observe the use and possible meaning of the word "Gittith"
3) To note man's dominion over the earth when created by God, but also
that he lost it and has now been regained by Jesus Christ
SUMMARY
The heading attributes this psalm to David, with instructions to the
Chief Musician to be sung "upon Gittith." This may mean "after the
tune of the treaders of the winepress" (Leupold) and refer to the
joyful nature in which the workers sung. The psalm is certainly a hymn
of delight, as are others with this word in the heading (Psa 81, 84). I
second Spurgeon's suggestion that this psalm can be called "The Song Of
The Astronomer" as it seems to have been prompted while contemplating
the night skies.
It begins praising God for His excellent name (i.e. character) and His
glory in the earth and above the heavens. God's glory is illustrated
in the way He is able to use "babes" and "infants" (i.e., the frailest
and weakest of men, e.g., Mt 11:25; 1 Co 1:27) to silence the enemy and
the avenger (1-2).
David's praise appears to have been sparked by comparing the work of
God in the heavens with the seeming insignificance of man on the earth.
Amazed that God would even be mindful of man, David noted that God
created man a little lower than the angels, and even set man over the
works of His hands, including the animals, birds, and fish (3-8). Of
course, after the fall of man that dominion was lost, and has since
been regained by Jesus Christ following His resurrection and ascension
to heaven (cf. He 2:5-9; Mt 28:19; Ep 1:20-22; 1 Pe 3:22).
The psalm ends the way it began, praising the excellence of God's name
in all the earth, which is the proper response of His creation,
especially man (9).
OUTLINE
I. GOD'S MAJESTY IN CREATION (8:1-2)
A. HIS NAME AND GLORY (1)
1. His name (character) exalted in all the earth
2. His glory set above the heavens
B. HIS POWER OVER ENEMIES (2)
1. Able to ordain strength from the mouths of babes and infants
2. And thereby silence the enemy and the avenger
II. MAN'S DIGNITY OVER CREATION (8:3-9)
A. MAN'S INSIGNIFICANCE (3-4)
1. In contrast to the heavens, the moon and stars
2. Amazed that God would consider man, even less care for him
B. MAN'S EXALTATION (5-8)
1. By virtue of his creation by God
a. Made a little lower than the angels
b. Crowned with glory and honor
2. By virtue of his place in creation
a. Given dominion over the works of God
b. All things placed under his feet
1) Sheep, oxen, the beasts of the field
2) The birds of the air
3) The fish that pass through the paths of the sea
C. MAN'S RESPONSE (9)
1. To praise God!
2. For His excellent Name in all the earth!
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
- God's majesty in creation (1-2)
- Man's dignity over creation (3-9)
2) Who is the author of this psalm?
- David
3) For what does the Psalmist praise God? (1)
- The excellence of His name (character) in all the earth
- His glory set above the heavens
4) How has God chosen to silence the enemy and the avenger? (2)
- By working His strength (power) through "babes" and "infants"
5) What prompted the Psalmist's amazement over God's concern for man?
(3-4)
- His contemplation of the night skies
6) How was man exalted when God created him? (5-6)
- God made him a little lower than the angels
- God crowned him with glory and honor
- God gave him dominion over the works of His hands
- God put all things under his feet
7) What things were placed under man's feet? (7-8)
- All sheep and oxen
- The beasts of the field
- The birds of the air
- The fish that pass through the paths of the sea
8) Has man maintained his dominion over the earth? (cf. He 2:5-8)
- No
9) Who now has all authority over heaven and earth? (cf. He 2:9; Mt
28:19; Ep 1:20-22; 1 Pe 3:22)
- Jesus Christ, who became man and for the suffering of death has
been crowned with glory and honor; He is now head over all things
10) Contemplating God's majesty and man's dignity, how does David end
his psalm? (9)
- With praise for the excellence of God's name (character) in all
the earth
--《Executable
Outlines》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
TITLE. "To
the Chief Musician upon Gittith, a Psalm of David." We are not clear
upon the meaning of the word Gittith. Some think it refers to Gath, and may
refer to a tune commonly sung there, or an instrument of music there invented,
or a song of Obededom the Gittite, in whose house the ark rested, or, better
still, a song sung over Goliath of Gath. Others, tracing the Hebrew to its
root, conceive it to mean a song for the winepress, a joyful hymn for the
treaders of grapes. The term Gittith is applied to two other Psalms, (81 and
84) both of which, being of a joyous character, it may be concluded, that where
we find that word in the title, we may look for a hymn of delight.
We
may style this Psalm the Song of the Astronomer: let us go abroad and sing it
beneath the starry heavens at eventide, for it is very probable that in such a
position, it first occurred to the poet's mind. Dr. Chalmers says, "There
is much in the scenery of a nocturnal sky; to lift the soul to pious
contemplation. That moon, and these stars, what are they? They are detached
from the world, and they lift us above it. We feel withdrawn from the earth,
and rise in lofty abstraction from this little theatre of human passions and
human anxieties. The mind abandons itself to reverie, and is transferred in the
ecstasy of its thought to distant and unexplored regions. It sees nature in the
simplicity of her great elements, and it sees the God of nature invested with
the high attributes of wisdom and majesty."
DIVISION.
The first and last verses are a sweet song of admiration, in which the
excellence of the name of God is extolled. The intermediate verses are made up
of holy wonder at the Lord's greatness in creation, and at his condescension
towards man. Poole, in his annotations, has well said, "It is a great
question among interpreters, whether this Psalm speaks of man in general, and
of the honour which God puts upon him in his creation; or only of the man
Christ Jesus. Possibly both may be reconciled and put together, and the
controversy if rightly stated, may be ended, for the scope and business of this
Psalm seems plainly to be this: to display and celebrate the great love and
kindness of God to mankind, not only in his creation, but especially in his
redemption by Jesus Christ, whom, as he was man, he advanced to the honour and
dominion here mentioned, that he might carry on his great and glorious work. So
Christ is the principal subject of this Psalm, and it is interpreted of him,
both by our Lord himself (Matthew 21:16), and by his holy apostle (1
Corinthians 15:27; Hebrews 2:6,7).
EXPOSITION
Verse 1. Unable
to express the glory of God, the Psalmist utters a note of exclamation. O
Jehovah our Lord! We need not wonder at this, for no heart can measure, no
tongue can utter, the half of the greatness of Jehovah. The whole creation is
full of his glory and radiant with the excellency of his power; his goodness
and his wisdom are manifested on every hand. The countless myriads of
terrestrial beings, from man the head, to the creeping worm at the foot, are
all supported and nourished by the Divine bounty. The solid fabric of the
universe leans upon his eternal arm. Universally is he present, and everywhere
is his name excellent. God worketh ever and everywhere. There is no place
where God is not. The miracles of his power await us on all sides. Traverse the
silent valleys where the rocks enclose you on either side, rising like the
battlements of heaven till you can see but a strip of the blue sky far
overhead; you may be the only traveler who has passed through that glen; the
bird may start up affrighted, and the moss may tremble beneath the first tread
of human foot; but God is there in a thousand wonders, upholding yon rocky
barriers, filling the flowercups with their perfume, and refreshing the lonely
pines with the breath of his mouth. Descend, if you will, into the lowest
depths of the ocean. where undisturbed the water sleeps, and the very sand is
motionless in unbroken quiet, but the glory of the Lord is there, revealing its
excellence in the silent palace of the sea. Borrow the wings of the morning and
fly to the uttermost parts of the sea, but God is there. Mount to the highest
heaven, or dive into the deepest hell, and God is in both hymned in everlasting
song, or justified in terrible vengeance. Everywhere, and in every place, God
dwells and is manifestly at work. Nor on earth alone is Jehovah extolled, for
his brightness shines forth in the firmament above the earth. His glory exceeds
the glory of the starry heavens; above the region of the stars he hath set fast
his everlasting throne, and there he dwells in light ineffable. Let us adore
him "who alone spreadeth out the heavens, and treadeth upon the waves of
the sea; who maketh Arcturus, Orion, and Pleiades, and the chambers of the
south." (Job 9:8, 9.) We can scarcely find more fitting words than those
of Nehemiah, "Thou, even thou, art Lord alone; thou hast made heaven, the
heaven of heavens, with all their host, the earth, and all things that are
therein, the seas, and all that is therein, and thou preservest them all; and
the host of heaven worshippeth thee." Returning to the text we are led to
observe that this Psalm is addressed to God, because none but the Lord himself
can fully know his own glory. The believing heart is ravished with what it
sees, but God only knows the glory of God. What a sweetness lies in the little
word our, how much is God's glory endeared to us when we consider our
interest in him as our Lord. How excellent is thy name! no words can
express that excellency; and therefore it is left as a note of exclamation. The
very name of Jehovah is excellent, what must his person be. Note the
fact that even the heavens cannot contain his glory, it is set above the
heavens, since it is and ever must be too great for the creature to
express. When wandering among the Alps, we felt that the Lord was infinitely
greater than all his grandest works, and under that feeling we roughly wrote
these few lines:—
Yet in all
these how great soe'er they be,
We see not Him. The glass is all too dense
And dark, or else our earthborn eyes too dim.
Yon
Alps, that lift their heads above the clouds
And hold familiar converse with the stars,
Are dust, at which the balance trembleth not,
Compared with His divine immensity.
The snow-crown'd summits fail to set Him forth,
Who dwelleth in Eternity, and bears
Alone, the name of High and Lofty One.
Depths unfathomed are too shallow to express
The wisdom and the knowledge of the Lord.
The mirror of the creatures has no space
To bear the image of the Infinite.
'Tis true the Lord hath fairly writ his name,
And set his seal upon creation's brow.
But as the skilful potter much excels
The vessel which he fashions on the wheel,
E'en so, but in proportion greater far,
Jehovah's self transcends his noblest works.
Earth's ponderous wheels would break, her axles snap,
If freighted with the load of Deity.
Space is too narrow for the Eternal's rest,
And time too short a footstool for his throne.
E'en avalanche and thunder lack a voice,
To utter the full volume of his praise.
How then can I declare him? Where are words
With which my glowing tongue may speak his name?
Silent I bow, and humbly I adore.
Verse
2. Nor only in the heavens above is the Lord seen, but the earth beneath is
telling forth his majesty. In the sky, the massive orbs, rolling in their
stupendous grandeur, are witnesses of his power in great things, while here
below, the lisping utterances of babes are the manifestations of his strength
in little ones. How often will children tell us of a God whom we have
forgotten! How doth their simple prattle refute those learned fools who deny
the being of God! Many men have been made to hold their tongues, while
sucklings have borne witness to the glory of the God of heaven. It is singular
how clearly the history of the church expounds this verse. Did not the children
cry "Hosannah!" in the temple, when proud Pharisees were silent and
contemptuous? and did not the Saviour quote these very words as a justification
of their infantile cries? Early church history records many amazing instances
of the testimony of children for the truth of God, but perhaps more modern
instances will be the most interesting. Fox tells us, in the Book of Martyrs,
that when Mr. Lawrence was burnt in Colchester, he was carried to the fire in a
chair, because through the cruelty of the Papists, he could not stand upright,
several young children came about the fire, and cried as well as they could
speak, "Lord, strengthen thy servant, and keep thy promise." God
answered their prayer, for Mr. Lawrence died as firmly and calmly as any one
could wish to breathe his last. When one of the Popish chaplains told Mr.
Wishart, the great Scotch martyr, that he had a devil in him, a child that
stood by cried out, "A devil cannot speak such words as yonder man
speaketh." One more instance is still nearer to our time. In a postscript
to one of his letters, in which he details his persecution when first preaching
in Moorfields, Whitfield says, "I cannot help adding that several little
boys and girls, who were fond of sitting round me on the pulpit while I
preached, and handed to me people's notes—though they were often pelted with
eggs, dirt, &c., thrown at me—never once gave way; but on the contrary,
every time I was struck, turned up their little weeping eyes, and seemed to
wish they could receive the blows for me. God make them, in their growing
years, great and living martyrs for him who, out of the mouths of babes and
sucklings, perfects praise!" He who delights in the songs of angels is
pleased to honour himself in the eyes of his enemies by the praises of little
children. What a contrast between the glory above the heavens, and the mouths
of babes and sucklings! yet by both the name of God is made excellent.
Verses
3, 4. At the close of that excellent little manual entitled "The Solar
System," written by Dr. Dick, we find an eloquent passage which
beautifully expounds the text:—A survey of the solar system has a tendency to
moderate the pride of man and to promote humility. Pride is one of the
distinguishing characteristics of puny man, and has been one of the chief
causes of all the contentions, wars, devastations, systems of slavery, and
ambitious projects which have desolated and demoralized our sinful world. Yet
there is no disposition more incongruous to the character and circumstances of
man. Perhaps there are no rational beings throughout the universe among whom
pride would appear more unseemly or incompatible than in man, considering the
situation in which he is placed. He is exposed to numerous degradations and
calamities, to the rage of storms and tempests, the devastations of earthquakes
and volcanoes, the fury of whirlwinds, and the tempestuous billows of the
ocean, to the ravages of the sword, famine, pestilence, and numerous diseases;
and at length he must sink into the grave, and his body must become the
companion of worms! The most dignified and haughty of the sons of men are
liable to these and similar degradations as well as the meanest of the human
family. Yet, in such circumstances, man—that puny worm of the dust, whose
knowledge is so limited, and whose follies are so numerous and glaring—has the
effrontery to strut in all the haughtiness of pride, and to glory in his shame.
When
other arguments and motives produce little effect on certain minds, no
considerations seem likely to have a more powerful tendency to counteract this
deplorable propensity in human beings, than those which are borrowed from the
objects connected with astronomy. They show us what an insignificant being—
what a mere atom, indeed, man appears amidst the immensity of creation! Though
he is an object of the paternal care and mercy of the Most High, yet he is but
as a grain of sand to the whole earth, when compared to the countless myriads
of beings that people the amplitudes of creation. What is the whole of this
globe on which we dwell compared with the solar system, which contains a mass
of matter ten thousand times greater? What is it in comparison of the hundred
millions of suns and worlds which by the telescope have been descried
throughout the starry regions? What, then, is a kingdom, a province, or a
baronial territory, of which we are as proud as if we were the lords of the
universe and for which we engage in so much devastation and carnage? What are
they, when set in competition with the glories of the sky? Could we take our
station on the lofty pinnacles of heaven, and look down on this scarcely
distinguishable speck of earth, we should be ready to exclaim with Seneca,
"Is it to this little spot that the great designs and vast desires of men are
confined? Is it for this there is so much disturbance of nations, so much
carnage, and so many ruinous wars? Oh, the folly of deceived men, to imagine
great kingdoms in the compass of an atom, to raise armies to decide a point of
earth with the sword!" Dr. Chalmers, in his Astronomical Discourses, very
truthfully says, "We gave you but a feeble image of our comparative
insignificance, when we said that the glories of an extended forest would
suffer no more from the fall of a single leaf, than the glories of this
extended universe would suffer though the globe we tread upon, 'and all that it
inherits, should dissolve.'"
Verses
5-8. These verses may set forth man's position among the creatures before he
fell; but as they are, by the apostle Paul, appropriated to man as represented
by the Lord Jesus, it is best to give most weight to that meaning. In order of
dignity, man stood next to the angels, and a little lower than they; in the
Lord Jesus this was accomplished, for he was made a little lower than the angels
by the suffering of death. Man in Eden had the full command of all creatures,
and they came before him to receive their names as an act of homage to him as
the viceregent of God to them. Jesus in his glory, is now Lord, not only of all
living, but of all created things, and, with the exception of him who put all
things under him, Jesus is Lord of all, and his elect, in him, are raised to a
dominion wider than that of the first Adam, as shall be more clearly seen at
his coming. Well might the Psalmist wonder at the singular exaltation of man in
the scale of being, when he marked his utter nothingness in comparison with the
starry universe.
Thou
madest him a little lower than the angels—a little lower in nature, since
they are immortal, and but a little, because time is short; and when that is
over, saints are no longer lower than the angels. The margin reads it, "A
little while inferior to." Thou crownest him. The dominion that God has
bestowed on man is a great glory and honour to him; for all dominion is honour,
and the highest is that which wears the crown. A full list is given of the
subjugated creatures, to show that all the dominion lost by sin is restored in
Christ Jesus. Let none of us permit the possession of any earthly creature to
be a snare to us, but let us remember that we are to reign over them, and not
to allow them to reign over us. Under our feet we must keep the world, and we
must shun that base spirit which is content to let worldly cares and pleasures
sway the empire of the immortal soul.
Verse
9. Here, like a good composer, the poet returns to his key-note, falling back,
as it were, into his first state of wondering adoration. What he started with
as a proposition in the first verse, he closes with as a well proven
conclusion, with a sort of quod erat demonstrandum. O for grace to walk
worthy of that excellent name which has been named upon us, and which we are
pledged to magnify!
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title. "Gittith,"
was probably a musical instrument used at their rejoicings after the vintage.
The vintage closed the civil year of the Jews, and this Psalm directs us to the
latter-day glory, when the Lord shall be King over all the earth, having
subdued all his enemies. It is very evident that the vintage was adopted as a
figurative representation of the final destruction of all God's enemies. Isaiah
63:1-6; Revelation 19:18-20. The ancient Jewish interpreters so understood this
Psalm, and apply it to the mystic vintage. We may then consider this
interesting composition as a prophetic anticipation of the kingdom of Christ,
to be established in glory and honour in the "world to come," the
habitable world. Hebrews 2:5. We see not yet all things put under his feet, but
we are sure that the Word of God shall be fulfilled, and every enemy, Satan,
death, and hell, shall be for ever subdued and destroyed, and creation itself
delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the
children of God. Romans 8:17-23. In the use of this Psalm, then, we anticipate
that victory, and in the praise we thus celebrate, we go on from strength to
strength, till, with him who is our glorious Head, we appear in Zion before
God. W. Wilson, D.D., in loc.
Whole
Psalm. Now, consider but the scope of the Psalm, as the apostle quoteth
it to prove the world to come. Hebrews 2. Any one that reads the Psalm would
think that the psalmist doth but set forth old Adam in his kingdom, in his
paradise, made a little lower than the angels—for we have spirits wrapped up in
flesh and blood, whereas they are spirits simply—a degree lower, as if they
were dukes, and we marquises; one would think, I say, that this were all his
meaning, and that it is applied to Christ but by way of allusion. But the truth
is, the apostle bringeth it in to prove and to convince these Hebrews, to whom
he wrote, that that Psalm was meant of Christ, of that man whom they expected
to be the Messiah, the Man Christ Jesus. And that he doth it, I prove by the
sixth verse—it is the observation that Beza hath—"One in a certain
place," quoting David. (Greek) hath testified; so we may translate it,
hath testified it, etiam atque etiam, testified most expressly; he
bringeth an express proof for it that it was meant of the Man Christ Jesus;
therefore it is not an allusion. And indeed it was Beza that did first begin
that interpretation that I read of, and himself therefore doth excuse it and
make an apology for it, that he diverteth out of the common road, though since
many others have followed him.
Now
the scope of the Psalm is plainly this: in Romans 5:14, you read that Adam was
a type of him that was to come. Now in Psalm 8, you find there Adam's world,
the type of a world to come; he was the first Adam, and had a world, so the
second Adam hath a world also appointed for him; there is his oxen and his
sheep, and the fowls of the air, whereby are meant other things, devils
perhaps, and wicked men, the prince of the air; as by the heavens there; the
angels, or the apostles, that were preachers of the gospel.
To
make this plain to you, that that Psalm where the phrase is used, "All
things under his feet," and quoted by the apostle in Ephesians
1:22—therefore it is proper—was not meant of man in innocency, but of the
Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ; and therefore, answerably, that the world there
is not this world, but a world on purpose made for this Messiah, as the other
was for Adam.
First,
it was not meant of man in innocency properly and principally. Why? Because in
the first verse he saith, "Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast
thou ordained strength." There were no babes in the time of Adam's
innocency, he fell before there were any. Secondly, he addeth, "That thou
mightest still the enemy and the avenger;" the devil that is, for he
shewed himself the enemy there, to be a manslayer from the beginning. God would
use man to still him; alas! he overcame Adam presently. It must be meant of
another therefore, one that is able to still this enemy and avenger.
Then
he saith, "How excellent is thy name in all the earth! who hast set thy
glory above the heavens." Adam had but paradise, he never propagated God's
name over all the earth; he did not continue so long before he fell as to beget
sons; much less did he found it in the heavens.
Again,
verse 4, "What is man, and the son of man?" Adam, though he was man,
yet he was not the son of man; he is called indeed, "the son of God"
(Luke 3:38), but he was not filius hominis. I remember Ribera urgeth
that.
But
take an argument the apostle himself useth to prove it. This man, saith he,
must have all subject to him; all but God, saith he; he must have the angels
subject to him, for he hath put all principalities and powers under his feet,
saith he. This could not be Adam, is could not be the man that had this world
in a state of innocency; much less had Adam all under his feet. No, my
brethren, it was too great a vassalage for Adam to have the creatures thus bow
to him. But they are thus to Jesus Christ, angels and all; they are all under
his feet, he is far above them.
Secondly,
it is not meant of man fallen, that is as plain; the apostle himself saith so.
"We see not," saith he, "all things subject unto him." Some
think that it is meant as an objection that the apostle answereth; but it is
indeed to prove that man fallen cannot be meant in Psalm 8. Why? Because, saith
he, we do not see anything, all things at least, subject unto him; you have not
any one man, or the whole race of man, to whom all things have been subject;
the creatures are sometimes injurious to him. We do not see him, saith he, that
is, the nature of man in general considered. Take all the monarchs in the
world, they never conquered the whole world; there was never any one man that
was a sinner that had all subject to him. "But we see," saith he—mark
the opposition—"but we see Jesus," that Man, "crowned with glory
and honour;" therefore it is this Man, and no man else; the opposition
implieth it." . . . . So now it remaineth, then, that it is only Christ,
God-man, that is meant in Psalm 8. And indeed, and in truth, Christ himself
interpreteth the Psalm of himself; you have two witnesses to confirm it, Christ
himself and the apostle. Matthew 21:16. When they cried hosanna to Christ, or
"save now," and made him Saviour of the world, the Pharisees were
angry, our Saviour confuteth them by this very Psalm: "Have ye not
read," saith he, "out of the mouths of babes and sucklings thou hast
perfected praise?" He quoteth this very Psalm which speaks of himself; and
Paul, by his warrant, and perhaps from that hint, doth thus argue out of it,
and convince the Jews by it. Thomas Goodwin.
Verse 1. "How
excellent is thy name in all the earth!" How illustrious is the name
of Jesus throughout the world! His incarnation, birth, humble and obscure life,
preaching, miracles, passion, death, resurrection, and ascension, are
celebrated through the whole world. His religion, the gifts and graces of his
Spirit, his people—Christians, his gospel, and the preachers of it, are
everywhere spoken of. No name is so universal, no power and influence so
generally felt, as those of the Saviour of mankind. Amen. Adam Clarke.
Verse 1. "Above
the heavens;" not in the heavens, but "above the
heavens;" even greater, beyond, and higher than they; "angels,
principalities, and powers, being made subject unto him." As Paul says, he
hath "ascended up far above all heavens." And with this his glory
above the heavens is connected, his sending forth his name upon earth through
his Holy Spirit. As the apostle adds in this passage, "He hath ascended up
far above all heavens; and he gave some apostles." And thus here:
"Thy name excellent in all the world;" "Thy glory above the heavens."
Isaac Williams.
Verse 2. "Out
of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength," etc.
In a prophetical manner, speaking of that which was to be done by children many
hundreds of years after, for the asserting of his infinite mercy in sending his
Son Jesus Christ into the world to save us from our sins. For so the Lord
applieth their crying, "Hosannah to the Son of David" in the temple.
And thus both Basil and other ancients, and some new writers also understand
it. But Calvin will have it meant of God's wonderful providing for them, by
turning their mother's blood into milk, and giving them the faculty to suck,
thus nourishing and preserving them, which sufficiently convinceth all
gainsayers of God's wonderful providence toward the weakest and shiftless of
all creatures. John Mayer, 1653.
Verse 2. Who are
these "babes and sucklings?"
1.
Man in general, who springeth from so weak and poor a beginning as that of
babes and sucklings, yet is at length advanced to such power as to grapple
with, and overcome the enemy and the avenger.
2.
David in particular, who being but a ruddy youth, God used him as an instrument
to discomfit Goliath of Gath.
3.
More especially our Lord Jesus Christ, who assuming our nature and all the
sinless infirmities of it, and submitting to the weakness of an infant, and
after dying is gone in the same nature to reign in heaven, till he hath brought
all his enemies under his feet. Psalm 110:1., and 1 Corinthians 15:27. Then was
our human nature exalted above all other creatures, when the Son of God was
made of a woman, carried in the womb.
4.
The apostles, who to outward appearance were despicable, in a manner children
and sucklings in comparison of the great ones of the world; poor despised
creatures, yet principal instruments of God's service and glory. Therefore 'tis
notable, that when Christ glorifieth his Father for the wise and free
dispensation of his saving grace (Matthew 11:25), he saith, "I thank thee,
O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the
wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes," so called from the
meanness of their condition. . . . And you shall see it was spoken when the
disciples were sent abroad and had power given them over unclean spirits.
"In that hour Jesus rejoiced in spirit, and said, I thank thee, O Father,
Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things from the wise and
prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes." This he acknowledged to be an
act of infinite condescension in God.
5.
Those children that cried Hosannah to Christ, make up part of the sense,
for Christ defendeth their practise by this Scripture. . . . . . .
6.
Not only the apostles, but all those that fight under Christ's banner, and are
listed into his confederacy, may be called babes and sucklings; first, because
of their condition; secondly, their disposition. .
1.
Because of their condition. . . . God in the government of the world is pleased
to subdue the enemies of his kingdom by weak and despised instruments.
2.
Because of their disposition: they are most humbly spirited. We are told
(Matthew 18:3), "Except ye be converted and become as little
children," etc. As if he had said, you strive for pre-eminence and worldly
greatness in my kingdom; I tell you my kingdom is a kingdom of babes, and
containeth none but the humble, and such as are little in their own eyes, and are
contented to be small and despised in the eyes of others, and so do not seek
after great matters in the world. A young child knoweth not what striving or
state meaneth, and therefore by an emblem and visible representation of a child
set in the midst of them, Christ would take them off from the expectation of a
carnal kingdom. Thomas Manton, 1620-1677.
Verse 2. "That
thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger." This very confusion
and revenge upon Satan, who was the cause of man's fall, was aimed at by God at
first; therefore is the first promise and preaching of the gospel to Adam
brought in rather in sentencing him than in speaking to Adam, that the seed of
the woman should break the serpent's head, it being in God's aim as much to
confound him as to save poor man. Thomas Goodwin.
Verse 2. The work
that is done in love loses half its tedium and difficulty. It is as with a
stone, which in the air and on the dry ground we strain at but cannot stir.
Flood the field where it lies, bury the block beneath the rising water; and
now, when its head is submerged, bend to the work. Put your strength to it. Ah!
it moves, rises from its bed, rolls on before your arm. So, when under the
heavenly influences of grace the tide of love rises, and goes swelling over our
duties and difficulties, a child can do a man's work, and a man can do a
giant's. Let love be present in the heart, and "out of the mouths of
babes and sucklings God ordaineth strength." Thomas Guthrie, D.D.
Verse 2. "Out
of the mouth of babes and sucklings," etc. That poor martyr, Alice
Driver, in the presence of many hundreds, did so silence Popish bishops, that
she and all blessed God that the proudest of them could not resist the spirit
in a silly woman; so I say to thee, "Out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings" God will be honoured. Even thou, silly worm, shalt honour
him, when it shall appear what God hath done for thee, what lusts he hath
mortified, and what graces he hath granted thee. The Lord can yet do greater
things for thee if thou wilt trust him. He can carry thee upon eagles' wings,
enable thee to bear and suffer strong affliction for him, to persevere to the
end, to live by faith, and to finish thy course with joy. Oh! in that he hath
made thee low in heart, thy other lowness shall be so much the more honour to
thee. Do not all as much and more wonder at God's rare workmanship in the ant,
the poorest bug that creeps, as in the biggest elephant? That so many parts and
limbs should be united in such a little space; that so poor a creature should
provide in the summer-time her winter's food? Who sees not as much of God in a
bee as in a greater creature? Alas! in a great body we look for great abilities
and wonder not. Therefore, to conclude, seeing God hath clothed the uncomely
parts with the more honour, bless God, and bear thy baseness more equally; thy
greatest glory is yet to come, that when the wise of the world have rejected
the counsel of God, thou hast (with those poor publicans and soldiers),
magnified the ministry of the gospel. Surely the Lord will also be admired in
thee (1 Thessalonians 1), a poor silly creature, that even thou wert made wise
to salvation and believest in that day. Be still poor in thine own eyes, and
the Lord will make thy proudest scornful enemies to worship at thy feet, to
confess God hath done much for thee, and wish thy portion when God shall visit
them. Daniel Rogers, 1642.
Verse 3. "When
I consider." Meditation fits for humiliation. When David had been
contemplating the works of creation, their splendour, harmony, motion,
influence, he lets the plumes of pride fall, and begins to have self-abasing
thoughts. "When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, the
moon and the stars which thou hast ordained, what is man that thou art mindful
of him?" Thomas Watson.
Verse 3. "When
I consider thy heavens," etc. David surveying the firmament, broke
forth into this consideration: "When I consider thy heavens, the work
of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which thou hast created, what is
man?" etc. How cometh he to mention the moon and stars, and omit the
sun? the other being but his pensioners, shining with that exhibition of light
which the bounty of the sun allots them. It is answered, this was David's night
meditation, when the sun, departing to the other world, left the lesser lights
only visible in heaven; and as the sky is best surveyed by night in the variety
of the same. Night was made for man to rest in. But when I cannot sleep, may I,
with the psalmist, entertain my waking with good thoughts. Not to use them as
opium, to invite my corrupt nature to slumber, but to bolt out bad thoughts,
which otherwise would possess my soul. Thomas Fuller, 1608 - 1661.
Verse 3. "Thy
heavens." The carnal mind sees God in nothing, not even in spiritual
things, his word and ordinances. The spiritual mind sees him in everything,
even in natural things, in looking on the heavens and the earth and all the
creatures—"THY heavens;" sees all in that notion, in their relation
to God as his work, and in them his glory appearing; stands in awe, fearing to
abuse his creatures and his favours to his dishonour. "The day is
thine, and the night also is thine;" therefore ought not I to forget
thee through the day, nor in the night. Robert Leighton, D.D.
Verse 3. "The
stars." I cannot say that it is chiefly the contemplation of their
infinitude, and the immeasurable space they occupy, that enraptures me in the
stars. These conditions rather tend to confuse the mind; and in this view of
countless numbers and unlimited space there lies, moreover, much that belongs
rather to a temporary and human than to an eternally abiding consideration.
Still less do I regard them absolutely with reference to the life after this.
But the mere thought they are so far beyond and above everything terrestrial—the
feeling, that before them everything earthly so utterly vanishes to
nothing—that the single man is so infinitely insignificant in the comparison
with these worlds strewn over all space—that his destinies, his enjoyments, and
sacrifices, to which he attaches such a minute importance—how all these fade
like nothing before such immense objects; then, that the constellations bind
together all the races of man, and all the eras of earth, that they have beheld
all that has passed since the beginning of time, and will see all that passes
until its end; in thoughts like these I can always lose myself with a silent
delight in the view of the starry firmament. It is, in very truth, a spectacle
of the highest solemnity, when, in the stillness of night, in a heaven quite
clear, the stars, like a choir of worlds, arise and descend, while existence,
as it were, falls asunder into two separate parts; the one, belonging to earth,
grows dumb in the utter silence of night, and thereupon the other mounts upward
in all its elevation, splendour, and majesty. And, when contemplated from this
point of view, the starry heavens have truly a moral influence on the mind. Alexander
Von Humboldt, 1850.
Verse 3. "When
I consider thy heavens," etc. Could we transport ourselves above the
moon, could we reach the highest star above our heads, we should instantly
discover new skies, new stars, new suns, new systems, and perhaps more
magnificently adorned. But even there, the vast dominions of our great Creator
would not terminate; we should then find, to our astonishment, that we had only
arrived at the borders of the works of God. It is but little that we can know
of his works, but that little should teach us to be humble, and to admire the
divine power and goodness. How great must that Being be who produced these
immense globes out of nothing, who regulates their courses, and whose mighty
hand directs and supports them all! What is the clod of earth which we inhabit,
with all the magnificent scenes it presents to us, in comparison of those innumerable
worlds? Were this earth annihilated, its absence would no more be observed than
that of a grain of sand from the sea shore. What then are provinces and
kingdoms when compared with those worlds? They are but atoms dancing in the
air, which are discovered to us by the sunbeams. What then am I, when reckoned
among the infinite number of God's creatures? I am lost in mine own
nothingness! But little as I appear in this respect, I find myself great in
others. There is great beauty in this starry firmament which God has chosen for
his throne! How admirable are those celestial bodies! I am dazzled with their
splendour, and enchanted with their beauty! But notwithstanding this, however
beautiful, and however richly adorned, yet this sky is void of intelligence. It
is a stranger to its own beauty, while I, who am mere clay, moulded by a divine
hand, am endowed with sense and reason. I can contemplate the beauty of these
shining worlds; nay, more, I am already, to a certain degree, acquainted with
their sublime Author; and by faith I see some small rays of his divine glory. O
may I be more and more acquainted with his works, and make the study of them my
employ, till by a glorious change I rise to dwell with him above the starry
regions. Christopher Christian Sturm's "Reflections",
1750-1786.
Verse 3. "Work
of God's fingers." That is most elaborate and accurate: a metaphor
from embroiderers, or from them that make tapestry. John Trapp.
Verse 3. "When
I consider thy heavens," etc. It is truly a most Christian exercise to
extract a sentiment of piety from the works and the appearance of nature. It
has the authority of the sacred writers upon its side, and even our Saviour
himself gives it the weight and the solemnity of his example. "Behold the
lilies of the field; they toil not, neither do they spin, yet your heavenly
Father careth for them." He expatiates on the beauty of a single flower,
and draws from it the delightful argument of confidence in God. He gives us to
see that taste may be combined with piety, and that the same heart may be
occupied with all that is serious in the contemplation of religion, and be at
the same time alive to the charms and the loveliness of nature. The psalmist
takes a still loftier flight. He leaves the world, and lifts his imagination to
that mighty expanse which spreads above it and around it. He wings his way
through space, and wanders in thought over its immeasurable regions. Instead of
a dark and unpeopled solitude, he sees it crowded with splendour, and filled
with the energy of the divine presence. Creation rises in its immensity before
him, and the world, with all which it inherits, shrinks into littleness at a
contemplation so vast and overpowering. He wonders that he is not overlooked
amid the granduer and the variety which are on every side of him; and, passing
upward from the majesty of nature to the majesty of nature's Architect, he
exclaims, "What is man, that thou art mindful of him, or the son of man
that thou shouldest deign to visit him?" It is not for us to say whether
inspiration revealed to the psalmist the wonders of modern astronomy. But, even
though the mind be a perfect stranger to the science of these enlightened
times, the heavens present a great and an elevating spectacle, an immense
concave reposing upon the circular boundary of the world, and the innumerable
lights which are suspended from on high, moving with solemn regularity along
its surface. It seems to have been at night that the piety of the psalmist was
awakened by this contemplation; when the moon and the stars were visible, and
not when the sun had risen in his strength and thrown a splendour around him,
which bore down and eclipsed all the lesser glories of the firmament. Thomas
Chalmers, D.D., 1817.
Verse 3. "Thy
heavens:"
This prospect
vast, what is it?—weigh'd aright,
'Tis natures system of divinity,
And every student of the night inspires.
'Tis elder Scripture, writ by God's own hand:
Scripture authentic! uncorrupt by man.
Edward Young.
Verse 3. "The
stars." When I gazed into these stars, have they not looked down on me
as if with pity from their serene spaces, like eyes glistening with heavenly
tears over the little lot of man! Thomas Carlyle.
Verses 3, 4. "When
I consider the heavens," etc. Draw spiritual inferences from
occasional objects. David did but wisely consider the heavens, and he breaks
out into self-abasement and humble admiration of God. Glean matter of
instruction to yourselves, and praise to your Maker from everything you see; it
will be a degree of restoration to a state of innocency, since this was Adam's
task in paradise. Dwell not upon any created object only as a virtuoso,
to gratify your rational curiosity, but as a Christian, call religion to the
feast, and make a spiritual improvement. No creature can meet our eyes but
affords us lessons worthy of our thoughts, besides the general notices of the
power and wisdom of the Creator. Thus may the sheep read us a lesson of
patience, the dove of innocence, the ant and bee raise blushes in us for our
sluggishness, and the stupid ox and dull ass correct and shame our ungrateful
ignorance. . . . . He whose eyes are open cannot want an instructor, unless he
wants a heart. Stephen Charnock.
Verse 4. "What
is man that thou art mindful of him?" etc. My readers must be careful
to mark the design of the psalmist, which is to enhance, by this comparison,
the infinite goodness of God; for it is, indeed, a wonderful thing that the
Creator of heaven, whose glory is so surpassingly great as to ravish us with
the highest admiration, condescends so far as graciously to take upon him the
care of the human race. That the psalmist makes this contrast must be inferred
from the Hebrew word (Heb.,) enosh, which we have rendered man,
and which expresses the frailty of man rather than any strength or power which
he possesses. . . . . Almost all interpreters render (Heb.), pakad, the
last word of this verse, to visit; and I am unwilling to differ from
them, since this sense suits the passage very well. But as it sometimes
signifies to remember, and as we will often find in the Psalms the
repetition of the same thought in different words, it may here be very properly
translated to remember; as if David had said, "This is a marvelous
thing, that God thinks upon men, and remembers them continually." John
Calvin, 1509-1564.
Verse 4. "What
is man?" But, O God, what a little lord hast thou made over this great
world! The least corn of sand is not so small to the whole earth, as man is to
the heaven. When I see the heavens, the sun, the moon, and stars, O God, what
is man? Who would think that thou shouldest make all these creatures for one,
and that one well-near the least of all? Yet none but he can see what thou hast
done; none but he can admire and adore thee in what he seeth: how had he need
to do nothing but this, since he alone must do it! Certainly the price and
value of things consist not in the quantity; one diamond is worth more than
many quarries of stone; one lodestone hath more virtue than mountains of earth.
It is lawful for us to praise thee in ourselves. All thy creation hath not more
wonder in it than one of us: other creatures thou madest by a simple command;
MAN, not without a divine consultation: others at once; man thou didst form,
then inspire: others in several shapes, like to none but themselves; man, after
thine own image: others with qualities fit for service; man, for dominion. Man
had his name from thee; they had their names from man. How should we be
consecrated to thee above all others, since thou hast bestowed more cost on us
than other! Joseph Hall, D.D., Bishop of Norwich, 1574-1656.
Verse 4. "What
is man, that thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that thou shouldst
visit him?" And (Job 7:17, 18) "What is man, that thou shouldst
magnify him? and that thou shouldst set thy heart upon him? and that thou
shouldst visit him every morning?" Man, in the pride of his heart, seeth
no such great matter in it; but a humble soul is filled with astonishment.
"Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is
Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite
and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart
of the contrite ones." Isaiah 57:15. Oh, saith the humble soul, will the
Lord have respect unto such a vile worm as I am? Will the Lord acquaint himself
with such a sinful wretch as I am? Will the Lord open his arms, his bosom, his
heart to me? Shall such a loathsome creature as I find favour in his eyes? In
Ezekiel 16: 1 - 5, we have a relation of the wonderful condescension of God to
man, who is there resembled to a wretched infant cast out in the day of its
birth, in its blood and filthiness, no eye pitying it; such loathsome creatures
are we before God; and yet when he passed by, and saw us polluted in our blood,
he said unto us, "Live." It is doubled because of the strength of its
nature; it was "the time of love" (verse 8). This was love indeed,
that God should take a filthy, wretched thing, and spread his skirts over it,
and cover its nakedness and swear unto it, and enter into a covenant with it,
and make it his: that is, that he should espouse this loathsome thing to
himself, that he would be a husband to it; this is love unfathomable, love
inconceivable, self-principle love; this is the love of God to man, for God is
love. Oh, the depth of the riches of the bounty and goodness of God! How is his
love wonderful, and his grace past finding out! How do you find and feel your
hearts affected upon the report of these things? Do you not see matter of
admiration and cause of wonder? Are you not as it were launched forth into an
ocean of goodness, where you can see no shore, nor feel no bottom? Ye may make
a judgment of yourselves by the motions and affections that ye feel in
yourselves at the mention of this. For thus Christ judged of the faith of the
centurion that said unto him, "Lord, I am not worthy that thou shouldst
come under my roof. When Jesus heard this, he marvelled, and said to them that
followed him, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in
Israel." Matthew 8: 8-10. If, then, you feel not your souls mightily
affected with this condescension of God, say thus unto your souls, What aileth
thee, O my soul, that thou art no more affected with the goodness of God? Art
thou dead, that thou canst not feel? Or art thou blind, that thou canst not see
thyself compassed about with astonishing goodness? Behold the King of glory
descending from the habitation of his majesty, and coming to visit thee!
Hearest not thou his voice, saying, "Open to me, my sister: behold, I
stand at the door and knock. Lift up yourselves, O ye gates, and be ye lifted
up, ye everlasting doors, that the King of glory may come in"? Behold, O
my soul, how he waits still, while thou hast refused to open to him! Oh, the
wonder of his goodness! Oh, the condescension of his love, to visit me, to sue
unto me, to wait upon me, to be acquianted with me! Thus work up your souls
into an astonishment at the condescension of God. James Janeway, 1674.
Verse 4. Man
in Hebrew—infirm or miserable man—by which it is apparent that he speaks of man
not according to the state of his creation, but as fallen into a state of sin,
and misery, and mortality. Art mindful of him, i.e., carest for him, and
conferrest such high favours upon him. The son of man, Hebrew, the
son of Adam, that great apostate from and rebel against God; the sinful son
of a sinlful father—his son by likeness of disposition and manners, no less
than by procreation; all which tends to magnify the divine mercy. That thou
visitest, him—not in anger, as that word is sometimes used, but with thy
grace and mercy, as it is taken in Genesis 21:1; Exodus 4:31; Psalm 65:9;
106:4; 144:3.
Verse 4. "What
is man?" The Scripture gives many answers to this question. Ask the
prophet Isaiah, "What is man?" and he answers (Isaiah 40:6),
man is "grass"—"All flesh is grass, and all the goodliness
thereof is as the flower of the field." Ask David, "What is
man?" He answers (Psalm 62:9), man is "a lie," not a
liar only, or a deceiver, but "a lie," and a deceit. All the
answers the Holy Ghost gives concerning man, are to humble man: man is ready to
flatter himself, and one man to flatter another, but God tells us plainly what
we are. . . . It is a wonder that God should vouchsafe a gracious look upon such
a creature as man; it is wonderful, considering the distance between God and
man, as man is a creature and God the creator. "What is man,"
that God should take notice of him? Is he not a clod of earth, a piece of clay?
But consider him as a sinful and an unclean creature, and we may wonder to
amazement: what is an unclean creature that God should magnify him? Will the
Lord indeed put value on filthiness, and fix his approving eye upon an impure
thing? One step further; what is rebellious man, man an enemy to God, that God
should magnify him! what admiration can answer this question? Will God prefer
his enemies, and magnify those who would cast him down? Will a prince exalt a
traitor, or give him honour who attempts to take away his life? The sinful nature
of man is an enemy to the nature of God, and would pull God out of heaven; yet
God even at that time is raising man to heaven: sin would lessen the great God,
and yet God greatens sinful man. Joseph Caryl.
Verse 4. "What
is man?" Oh, the granduer and littleness, the excellence and the
corruption, the majesty and meanness of man! Pascal, 1623-1662.
Verse 4. "Thou
visitest him." To visit is, first, to afflict, to chasten, yea, to
punish; the highest judgments in Scripture come under the notions of visitations.
"Visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children" (Exodus
34:7), that is, punishing them. . . . . And it is a common speech with us when
a house hath the plague, which is one of the highest strokes of temporal
affliction, we used to say, "Such a house is visited." Observe then,
afflictions are visitations. . . . Secondly, to visit, in a good sense,
signifies to show mercy, and to refresh, to deliver and to bless; "Naomi
heard how the Lord had visited his people in giving them bread." Ruth 1:6.
"The Lord visited Sarah," etc. Genesis 21:1, 2. That greatest mercy
and deliverance that ever the children of men had, is thus expressed, "The
Lord hath visited and redeemed his people." Luke 1:68. Mercies are
visitations; when God comes in kindness and love to do us good, he visiteth us.
And these mercies are called visitations in two respects: 1. Because God
comes near to us when he doth us good; mercy is a drawing near to a soul, a
drawing near to a place. As when God sends a judgment, or afflicts, he is said
to depart and go away from that place; so when he doth us good, he comes near,
and as it were applies himself in favour to our persons and habitations. 2.
They are called a visitation because of the freeness of them. A visit is
one of the freest things in the world; there is no obligation but that of love
to make a visit; because such a man is my friend and I love him, therefore I
visit him. Hence that greatest act of free grace in redeeming the world is
called a visitation, because it was as freely done as ever any friend made a
visit to see his friend, and with infinite more freedom. There was no
obligation on man's side at all, many unkindnesses and neglects there were; God
in love came to redeem man. Thirdly, to visit imports an act of care and inspection,
of tutorage and direction. The pastor's office over the flock is expressed by
this act (Zechariah 10:3; Acts 15:36); and the care we ought to have of the
fatherless and widows is expressed by visiting them. "Pure religion,"
saith the apostle James, "Is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in
their affliction" (Chapter 1:27); and in Matthew 25:34, Christ pronounceth
the blessing on them who, when he was in prison, visited him, which was not a
bare seeing, or asking 'how do you,' but it was care of Christ in his
imprisonment, and helpfulness and provision for him in his afflicted members.
That sense also agrees well with this place, Job 7:17, 18, "What is
man, that thou shouldst visit him?" Joseph Caryl.
Verse 4. "What
is man, that thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that thou visiteth
him?"
Lord, what is
man that thou
So mindful art of him? Or what's the son
Of man, that thou the highest heaven didst bow,
And to his aide didst runne?
Man's
but a piece of clay
That's animated by thy heavenly breath,
And when that breath thou tak'st away,
Hee's clay again by death.
He is not worthy of the least
Of all Thy mercies at the best.
Baser
than clay is he,
For sin hath made him like the beasts that perish,
Though next the angels he was in degree;
Yet this beast thou dost cherish.
Hee is not worthy of the least,
Of all thy mercies, hee's a beast.
Worse
than a beast is man,
Who after thine own image made at first,
Became the divel's sonne by sin. And can
A thing be more accurst?
Yet thou thy greatest mercy hast
On this accursed creature cast.
Thou
didst thyself abase,
And put off all thy robes of majesty,
Taking his nature to give him thy grace,
To save his life didst dye.
He is not worthy of the least
Of all thy mercies; one's a feast.
Lo!
man is made now even
With the blest angels, yea, superiour farre,
Since Christ sat down at God's right hand in heaven,
And God and man one are.
Thus all thy mercies man inherits,
Though not the least of them he merits.
Thomas Washbourne, D.D., 1654.
Verse 4. "What
is man?"
How poor, how
rich, how abject, how august,
How complicate, how wonderful is man!
How passing wonder HE who made him such!
Who centred in our make such strange extremes!
From different natures marvelously mix'd,
Connexion exquisite of distant worlds!
Distinguish'd link in being's endless chain!
Midway from nothing to the Deity!
A beam ethereal, sullied and absorb'd,
Though sullied and dishonour'd, still divine!
Dim miniature of greatness absolute!
An heir of glory! a frail child of dust!
Helpless, immortal! insect infinite!
A worm! a god! I tremble at myself,
And in myself am lost.
Edward Young, 1681-1775.
(Verses
4-8)—"What is man," etc.:
—Man is ev'ry
thing,
And more: he is a tree, yet bears no fruit;
A beast, yet is, or should be more:
Reason and speech we onely bring.
Parrats may thank us, if they are not mute,
They go upon the score.
Man
is all symmetrie,
Full of proportions, one limbe to another,
And all to all the world besides:
Each part may call the farthest, brother.
For head with foot hath private amitie,
And both with moons and tides.
Nothing
hath got so farre,
But man hath caught and kept it, as his prey.
His eyes dismount the highest starre:
He is in little all the sphere.
Herbs gladly cure our flesh, because that they
Finde their acquaintance there.
For
us the windes do blow;
The earth doth rest, heav'n move, and fountains flow.
Nothing we see, but means our good,
As our delight, or as our treasure:
The whole is, either our cupboard of food,
Or cabinet of pleasure.
The
starres have us to bed:
Night draws the curtain, which the sun withdraws:
Musick and light attend our head.
All things unto our flesh are kinde
In their descent and being; to our minde
In their ascent and cause.
Each
thing is full of dutie:
Waters united are our navigation;
Distinguished, our habitation;
Below, our drink; above, our meat:
Both are our cleanlinesse. Hath one such beautie?
Then how are all things neat!
More
servants wait on man,
Than he'l take notice of: in ev'ry path
He treads down that which doth befriend him,
When sicknesse makes him pale and wan,
Oh, mightie love! Man is one world, and hath
Another to attend him.
George Herbert, 1593.
Verse 5. "Thou
hast made him a little lower than the angels." Perhaps it was not so
much in nature as in position that man, as first formed, was inferior to the
angels. At all events, we can be sure that nothing higher could be affirmed of
the angels, than that they were made in the image of God. If, then, they had
originally superiority over man, it must have been in the degree of
resemblance. The angel was made immortal, intellectual, holy, powerful,
glorious, and in these properties lay their likeness to the Creator. But were
not these properties given also to man? Was not man made immortal,
intellectual, holy, powerful, glorious? And if the angel excelled the man, it
was not, we may believe, in the possession of properties which had no
counterpart in the man; both bore God's image, and both therefore had
lineaments of the attributes which centre in Deity. Whether or not these
lineaments were more strongly marked in the angels than in man, it were
presumptuous to attempt to decide; but it is sufficient for our present purpose
that the same properties must have been common to both, since both were
modelled after the same divine image; and whatever originally the relative
positions of the angel and the man, we cannot question that since the fall man
had been fearfully inferior to the angels. The effect of transgression has been
to debase all his powers, and so bring him down from his high rank in the scale
of creation; but, however degraded and sunken, he still retains the capacities
of his original formation, and since these capacities could have differed in
nothing but degree from the capacities of the angel, it must be clear that they
may be so purged and enlarged as to produce, if we may not say to restore, the
equality. . . . Oh! it may be, we again say, that an erroneous estimate is
formed, when we separate by an immense space the angel and the man, and bring
down the human race to a low station in the scale of creation. If I search
through the records of science, I may indeed find that, for the furtherance of
magnificent purposes, God hath made man "a little lower than the
angels;" and I cannot close my eyes to the melancholy fact, that as a
consequence upon apostasy there has been a weakening and a rifling of those
splendid endowments which Adam might have transmitted unimpaired to his
children. And yet the Bible teems with notices, that so far from being by nature
higher than men, angels even now possess not an importance which belongs to our
race. It is a mysterious thing, and one to which we scarcely dare allude, that
there has arisen a Redeemer of fallen men, but not of fallen angels. We would
build no theory on so awful and inscrutable a truth; but is it too much to say,
that the interference on the behalf of man and the non-interference on the
behalf of angels, gives ground for the persuasion, that men occupy at least not
a lower place than angels in the love and the solicitude of their Maker?
Beside, are not angels represented as "ministering spirits, sent forth to
minister to the heirs of salvation?" And what is the idea conveyed by such
a representation, if it be not that believers, being attended and waited on by
angels, are as children of God marching forwards to a splendid throne, and so
elevated amongst creatures, that those who have the wind in their wings, and
are brilliant as a flame of fire, delight to do them honour? And, moreover,
does not the repentance of a single sinner minister gladness to a whole throng
of angels? And who shall say that this sending of a new wave of rapture
throughout the hierarchy of heaven does not betoken such immense sympathy with
men as goes far towards proving him the occupant of an immense space in the
scale of existence? We may add, also, that angels learn of men; inasmuch as
Paul declares to the Ephesians, that "now unto the principalities and
powers in heavenly places is made known by the church, the manifold wisdom of God."
And when we further remember, that in one of those august visions with which
the Evangelist John was favoured, he beheld the representatives of the church
placed immediately before the eternal throne, whilst angels, standing at a
greater distance, thronged the outer circle, we seem to have accumulated proof
that men are not to be considered as naturally inferior to angels—that however
they may have cast themselves down from eminence, and sullied the lustre and
sapped the strength of their first estate, they are still capable of the very
loftiest elevation, and require nothing but the being restored to their
forfeited position, and the obtaining room for the development of their powers,
in order to their shining forth as the illustrious ones of the creation, the
breathing, burning images of the Godhead. . . . . The Redeemer is represented
as submitting to be humbled—"made a little lower than the angels,"
for the sake or with a view to the glory that was to be the recompense of his
sufferings. This is a very important representation—one that should be most
attentively considered; and from it may be drawn, we think, a strong and clear
argument for the divinity of Christ.
We
could never see how it could be humility in any creature, whatever the dignity
of his condition, to assume the office of a Mediator and to work out our
reconciliation. We do not forget to how extreme degradation a Mediator must
consent to be reduced, and through what suffering and ignominy he could alone
achieve our redemption; but neither do we forget the unmeasured exaltation
which was to be the Mediator's reward, and which, if Scripture be true, was to
make him far higher than the highest of principalities and powers; and we know
not where would have been the amazing humility, where the unparalleled
condescension, had any mere creature consented to take the office on the
prospect of such a recompense. A being who knew that he should be immeasurably
elevated if he did a certain thing, can hardly be commended for the greatness
of his humility in doing that thing. The nobleman who should become a slave,
knowing that in consequence he should be made a king, does not seem to us to
afford any pattern of condescension. He must be the king already, incapable of
obtaining any accession to his greatness, ere his entering the state of slavery
can furnish an example of humility. And, in like manner, we can never perceive
that any being but a divine Being can justly be said to have given a model of
condescension in becoming our Redeemer. . . . . If he could not lay aside the
perfections, he could lay aside the glories of Deity; without ceasing to be God
he could appear to be man; and herein we believe was the humiliation—herein
that self-emptying which Scripture identifies with out Lord's having been
"made a little lower than the angels." In place of manifesting
himself in the form of God, and thereby centering on himself the delighted and
reverential regards of all unfallen orders of intelligence, he must conceal
himself in the form of a servant, and no longer gathering that rich tribute of
homage, which had flowed from every quarter of his unlimited empire, produced
by his power, sustained by his providence, he had the same essential glory, the
same real dignity, which he had ever had. These belonged necessarily to his
nature, and could no more be parted with, even for a time, than could that
nature itself. But every outward mark of majesty and of greatness might be laid
aside; and Deity, in place of coming down with such dazzling manifestations of
supremacy as would have compelled the world he visited to fall prostrate and
adore, might so veil his splendours, and so hide himself in an ignoble form,
that when men saw him there should be no "beauty that they should desire
him." And this was what Christ did, in consenting to be "made a
little lower than the angels;" and in doing this he emptied himself, or
"made himself of no reputation." The very being who in the form of
God had given its light and magnificence to heaven appeared upon earth in the
form of a servant; and not merely so—for every creature is God's servant, and
therefore the form of a servant would have been assumed, had he appeared as an
angel or an archangel—but in the form of the lowest of these servants, being
"made in the likeness of men"—of men the degraded, the apostate, the
perishing. Henry Melvill, B.D., 1854.
Verses 5, 6. God
magnifies man in the work of creation. The third verse shows us what it was
that raised the psalmist to this admiration of the goodness of God to man: "When
I consider the heavens, the work of thy fingers, the moon and the stars, which
thou hast ordained; Lord, what is man?" God in the work of creation
made all these things serviceable and instrumental for the good of man. What is
man, that he should have a sun, moon, and stars, planted in the firmament for
him? What creature is this? When great preparations are made in any place, much
provisions laid in, and the house adorned with richest furnitures, we say, "What
is this man that comes to such a house?" When such a goodly fabric was
raised up, the goodly house of the world adorned and furnished, we have reason
admiringly to say, What is this man that must be the tenant or inhabitant of
this house? There is yet a higher exaltation of man in the creation; man was
magnified with the stamp of God's image, one part whereof the psalmist
describes in the sixth verse, "Thou madest him to have dominion over
the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet," etc.
Thus man was magnified in creation. What was man that he should have the rule
of the world given him? That he should be lord over the fish of the sea, and
over the beasts of the field, and over the fowls of the air? Again, man was
magnified in creation, in that God set him in the next degree to the angels; "Thou
hast made him a little lower than the angels;" there is the first part
of the answer to this question, man was magnified in being made so excellent a
creature, and in having so many excellent creatures made for him. All which may
be understood of man as created in God's image; but since the transgression it
is peculiar to Christ, as the apostle applies it (Hebrews 2:6), and if those
who have their blood and dignity restored by the work of redemption, which is
the next part of man's exaltation. Joseph Caryl.
Verses 5-8. Augustine
having allegorized much about the wine-presses in the title of this Psalm, upon
these words, "What is man, or the son of man," the one being called
(Heb.), from misery, the other (Heb.), the Son of Adam, or man,
saith, that by the first is meant man in the state of sin and corruption; by
the other, man regenerated by grace, yet called the son of man because made
more excellent by the change of his mind and life, from old corruption to
newness, and from an old to a new man; whereas he that is still carnal is
miserable; and then ascending from the body to the head, Christ, he extols his
glory as being set over all things, even the angels, and heavens, and the whole
world as is elsewhere showed that he is. Ephesians 1:21. And then leaving the
highest things he descended to "sheep and oxen;" whereby we
may understand sanctified men and preachers, for to sheep
are the faithful often compared, and preachers to oxen. 1
Corinthians 9. "Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth
out the corn." "The beasts of the field" set forth the voluptuous
that live at large, going in the broad way: the fowls of the air, the lifted
up by pride: "the fishes of the sea," such as through a covetous
desire of riches pierce into the lower parts of the earth, as the fishes dive
to the bottom of the sea. And because men pass the sea again and again for
riches, he addeth, "that passeth through the way of the sea,"
and to that of diving to the bottom of the waters may be applied (1 Timothy
6:9), "They that will be rich, fall into many noisome lusts, that drown
the soul in perdition." And hereby seem to be set forth the three things
of the world of which it is said, "they that love them, the love of the
Father is not in them." "The lust of the heart" being
sensuality; "the lust of the eyes," covetousness; to which is added,
"the pride of life." Above all these Christ was set, because without
all sin; neither could any of the devil's three temptations, which may be
referred hereunto, prevail with him. And all these, as well as "sheep and
oxen," are in the church, for which it is said, that into the ark came all
manner of beasts, both clean and unclean, and fowls; and all manner of fishes,
good and bad, came into the net, as it is in the parable. All which I have set
down, as of which good use may be made by the discreet reader. John Mayer.
Verse 6. "Thou
hast put all things under his feet." Hermodius, a nobleman born, upbraided
the valiant captain Iphicrates for that he was but a shoemaker's son. "My
blood," saith Iphicrates, "taketh beginning at me; and thy blood, at
thee now taketh her farewell;" intimating that he, not honouring his house
with the glory of his virtues, as the house had honoured him with the title of
nobility, was but as a wooden knife put into an empty sheath to fill up the
place; but for himself, he by his valorous achievements was now beginning to be
the raiser of his family. Thus, in the matter of spirituality, he is the best
gentleman that is the best Christian. The men of Berea, who received the word
with all readiness, were more noble than those of Thessalonica. The burgesses
of God's city be not of base lineage, but truly noble; they boast not of their
generation, but their regeneration, which is far better; for, by their second
birth they are the sons of God, and the church is their mother, and Christ
their elder brother, the Holy Ghost their tutor, angels their attendants, and
all other creatures their subjects, the whole world their inn, and heaven their
home. John Spencer's "Things New and Old."
Verse 6. "Thou
madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands," etc. For thy
help against wandering thoughts in prayer. . . . . . labour to keep thy
distance to the world, and that sovereignty which God hath given thee over it
in its profits and pleasures, or whatever else may prove a snare to thee. While
the father and master know their place, and keep their distance, so long
children and servants will keep theirs by being dutiful and officious; but when
they forget this, the father grows fond of the one, and the master too familiar
with the other, then they begin to lose their authority and the others to grow
saucy and under no command; bid them go, and it may be they will not stir; set
them a task, and they will bid you do it yourself. Truly, thus it fares with
the Christian; all the creatures are his servants, and so long as he keeps his
heart at a holy distance from them, and maintains his lordship over them, not
laying them to his bosom, which God hath put "under his feet,"
all is well; he marches to the duties of God's worship in a goodly order. He
can be private with God, and these not be bold to crowd in to disturb him. William
Gurnall.
Verses 7, 8. He who
rules over the material world, is Lord also of the intellectual or spiritual
creation represented thereby. The souls of the faithful, lowly and harmless,
are the sheep of his pasture; those who, like oxen, are strong to labour in the
church, and who, expounding the Word of Life, tread out the corn for the
nourishment of the people, own him for their kind and beneficent Master; nay,
tempers fierce and intractable as the beasts of the desert, are yet subject to
his will; spirits of the angelic kind, that, like the birds of the air,
traverse freely the superior region, move at his command; and those evil ones
whose habitation is in the deep abyss, even to the great leviathan himself, all
are put under the feet of King Messiah. George Horne, D.D.
Verse 8. Every dish
of fish and fowl that come to our table, is an instance of this dominion man
has over the works of God's hands, and it is a reason of our subjection to God
our chief Lord, and to his dominion over us.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse 1. "O
Lord, our Lord." Personal appropriation of the Lord as ours. The
privilege of holding such a portion.
"How
excellent", etc. The excellence of the name and nature of God in all
places, and under all circumstances.
Sermon
or lecture upon the glory of God in creation and providence.
"In
all the earth." The universal revelation of God in nature and its
excellency.
"Thy
glory above the heavens." The incomprehensible and infinite glory of
God.
"Above
the heavens." The glory of God outsoaring the intellect of angels, and
the splendour of heaven.
Verse 2. Infant
piety, its possibility, potency, "strength," and influence,
"that thou mightest still," etc.
The
strength of the gospel not the result of eloquence or wisdom in the speaker.
Great
results from small causes when the Lord ordains to work.
Great
things which can be said and claimed by babes in grace.
The
stilling of the powers of evil by the testimony of feeble believers.
The
stilling of the Great Enemy by the conquests of grace.
Verse 4. Man's
insignificance. God's mindfulness of man. Divine visits. The question,
"What is man?" Each of these themes may suffice for a discourse, or
they may be handled in one sermon.
Verse 5. Man's
relation to the angels.
The
position Jesus assumed for our sakes.
Manhood's
crown—the glory of our nature in the person of the Lord
Jesus.
Verses 5, 6, 7, 8.
The universal providential dominion of our Lord Jesus.
Verse 6. Man's
rights and responsibilities towards the lower animals.
Verse 6. Man's
dominion over the lower animals, and how he should exercise it.
Verse 6 (second
clause). The proper place for all worldly things, "under his
feet."
Verse 9. The
wanderer in many climes enjoying the sweetness of his Lord's name in every
condition.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》