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Psalm Chapter
Sixteen
Psalm 16
Chapter Contents
This psalm begins with expressions of devotion, which may
be applied to Christ; but ends with such confidence of a resurrection, as must
be applied to Christ, and to him only.
David flees to God's protection, with cheerful, believing
confidence. Those who have avowed that the Lord is their Lord, should often put
themselves in mind of what they have done, take the comfort of it, and live up
to it. He devotes himself to the honour of God, in the service of the saints.
Saints on earth we must be, or we shall never be saints in heaven. Those
renewed by the grace of God, and devoted to the glory of God, are saints on
earth. The saints in the earth are excellent ones, yet some of them so poor,
that they needed to have David's goodness extended to them. David declares his
resolution to have no fellowship with the works of darkness; he repeats the
solemn choice he had made of God for his portion and happiness, takes to
himself the comfort of the choice, and gives God the glory of it. This is the
language of a devout and pious soul. Most take the world for their chief good,
and place their happiness in the enjoyments of it; but how poor soever my
condition is in this world, let me have the love and favour of God, and be
accepted of him; let me have a title by promise to life and happiness in the
future state; and I have enough. Heaven is an inheritance; we must take that
for our home, our rest, our everlasting good, and look upon this world to be no
more ours, than the country through which is our road to our Father's house.
Those that have God for their portion, have a goodly heritage. Return unto thy
rest, O my soul, and look no further. Gracious persons, though they still covet
more of God, never covet more than God; but, being satisfied of his
loving-kindness, are abundantly satisfied with it: they envy not any their
carnal mirth and delights. But so ignorant and foolish are we, that if left to
ourselves, we shall forsake our own mercies for lying vanities. God having
given David counsel by his word and Spirit, his own thoughts taught him in the
night season, and engaged him by faith to live to God.
Verses 8-11, are quoted by St. Peter in his first
sermon, after the pouring out of the Spirit on the day of Pentecost, Acts 2:25-31; he declared that David in them
speaks concerning Christ, and particularly of his resurrection. And Christ
being the Head of the body, the church, these verses may be applied to all
Christians, guided and animated by the Spirit of Christ; and we may hence
learn, that it is our wisdom and duty to set the Lord always before us. And if
our eyes are ever toward God, our hearts and tongues may ever rejoice in him.
Death destroys the hope of man, but not the hope of a real Christian. Christ's
resurrection is an earnest of the believer's resurrection. In this world sorrow
is our lot, but in heaven there is joy, a fulness of joy; our pleasures here
are for a moment, but those at God's right hand are pleasures for evermore.
Through this thy beloved Son, and our dear Saviour, thou wilt show us, O Lord,
the path of life; thou wilt justify our souls now, and raise our bodies by thy
power at the last day; when earthly sorrow shall end in heavenly joy, pain in
everlasting happiness.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Psalms¡n
Psalm 16
Verse 2
[2] O my
soul, thou hast said unto the LORD, Thou art my Lord: my goodness extendeth not
to thee;
To thee ¡X
Thou dost not need me or my service, nor art capable of any advantage from it.
Verse 3
[3] But to the saints that are in the earth, and to the excellent, in whom is
all my delight.
But ¡X I
bear a singular respect and love to all saints, for thy sake, whose friends and
servants they are, and whose image they bear. This more properly agrees to
David, than to Christ, whose goodness was principally designed for, and
imparted to sinners.
Verse 4
[4]
Their sorrows shall be multiplied that hasten after another god: their drink
offerings of blood will I not offer, nor take up their names into my lips.
Sorrows ¡X
Having shewed his affection to the servants of the true God, he now declares
what an abhorrency he has for those that worship idols.
Offerings ¡X In
which the Gentiles used sometimes to drink part of the blood of their
sacrifices.
Names ¡X Of
those other gods mentioned before.
Verse 5
[5] The
LORD is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup: thou maintainest my lot.
The Lord ¡X I
rejoice in God as my portion, and desire no better, no other felicity.
Cup ¡X
The portion which is put into my cup, as the ancient manner was in feasts,
where each had his portion of meat, and of wine allotted to him.
Lot ¡X My
inheritance divided to me by lot, as the custom then was.
Verse 6
[6] The lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly
heritage.
Lines ¡X My
portion, which was measured with lines.
Are fallen ¡X In
a land flowing with milk and honey, and above all, blessed with the presence
and knowledge of God.
Verse 7
[7] I
will bless the LORD, who hath given me counsel: my reins also instruct me in
the night seasons.
The Lord ¡X
Hath inspired that wisdom into me, by which I have chosen the Lord for my
portion, and am so fully satisfied with him.
Reins ¡X My
inward thoughts and affections, being inspired and moved by the holy spirit.
Instruct ¡X
Direct me how to please God, and put my whole trust in him.
Night ¡X
Even when others are asleep, my mind is working upon God, and improving the
silence and solitude of holy meditations.
Verse 8
[8] I
have set the LORD always before me: because he is at my right hand, I shall not
be moved.
I have set ¡X I
have always presented him to my mind, as my witness and judge, as my patron and
protector. Hitherto David seems to have spoken with respect to himself, but now
he is transported by the spirit of prophecy, and carried above himself, to
speak as a type of Christ, in whom this and the following verses were truly
accomplished. Christ as man did always set his father's will and glory before
him.
Right-hand ¡X To
strengthen, protect, assist, and comfort me: as this assistance of God was
necessary to Christ as man.
Moved ¡X
Though the archers shoot grievously at me, and both men and devils seek my
destruction, and God sets himself against me as an enemy, yet I am assured he
will deliver me out of all my distresses.
Verse 9
[9]
Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth: my flesh also shall rest in
hope.
My glory ¡X My
tongue, which is a man's glory and privilege, above all other living creatures.
Rejoiceth ¡X
Declares my inward joy. For this word signifies not so much eternal joy, as the
outward demonstrations of it.
My flesh ¡X My
body shall quietly rest in the grave.
Shall rest ¡X in
confident assurance of its incorruption there, and of its resurrection to an
immortal life: the flesh or body is in itself, but a dead lump of clay; yet
hope is here ascribed to it figuratively, as it is to the brute creatures, Romans 8:19.
Verse 10
[10] For
thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to
see corruption.
Hell ¡X In
the state of the dead.
Holy one ¡X Me
thy holy son, whom thou hast sanctified and sent into the world. It is peculiar
to Christ, to be called the holy one of God.
To see ¡X To
be corrupted or putrefied in the grave, as the bodies of others are.
Verse 11
[11] Thou
wilt shew me the path of life: in thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right
hand there are pleasures for evermore.
Life ¡X
Thou wilt raise me from the grave, and conduct me to the place and state of
everlasting felicity.
Presence ¡X In
that heavenly paradise, where thou art gloriously present, where thou dost
clearly and fully discover the light of thy countenance; whereas in this life
thou hidest thy face and shewest us only thy back-parts.
Right-hand ¡X
Which he mentions as a place of the greatest honour, the place where the saints
are placed at the last day, and where Christ himself is said to sit, Psalms 110:1.
Pleasures ¡X
All our joys are empty and defective: But in heaven there is fulness of joy.
Our pleasures here are transient and momentary; but those at God's right hand
are pleasures for evermore. For they are the pleasures of immortal souls, in
the enjoyment of an eternal God.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Psalms¡n
Psalm 16 - David's Golden Secret
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
1) To observe the use and possible meaning of the word "Michtam"
2) To consider David's trust in the Lord and his preference for God's
people
3) To note the Messianic prophecy of the resurrection of Christ
SUMMARY
The heading describes this psalm as A Michtam of David. The meaning of
"Michtam" is uncertain, though rabbinical sources guess it to mean "a
golden poem" (ISBE). Another suggestion is that it means "a mystery
poem" (Leopold). The psalm does reveal David's trust in life and hope
in death, and so I have called it "David's Golden Secret".
David's secret was that he placed his trust in the LORD (Jehovah), along
with delighting in His saints on the earth (God's people). He found the
LORD to be a good inheritance, and sought to bless Him for His counsel.
Having set the LORD always before him and at his right hand, David was
confident he would not be moved (1-8).
David's secret was also that he had great joy and hope for the future,
even for his flesh (body). The basis for his confidence appears at
first that he (David) would not be left in Sheol (Hades, the realm of
the dead) nor would he see corruption. Yet we learn from Peter and
Paul that David was prophesying of the resurrection of the Messiah (cf.
Ac 2:25-31; 13:33-37). Of course, Jesus' resurrection ensures that one
day we (and David!) will also be raised from the dead (cf. 1 Co 15:
20-23), which serves as the basis for our hope (1 Pe 1:3). The psalm
ends with a statement of confidence in the Lord's future provision and
the blessings in His presence (9-11).
OUTLINE
I. HIS REFUGE IN LIFE (16:1-8)
A. THE LORD IS HIS LORD (1-4)
1. An introductory plea...
a. For God to preserve him
b. For he has placed his trust in God
2. The LORD is his Lord...
a. His goodness is nothing apart from Him
b. He delights in His saints, the excellent ones on the earth
3. Those who hasten after another god...
a. Their sorrows will be multiplied
b. He will not offer their drink offerings of blood
c. He will not take up their names on his lips
B. THE LORD IS HIS PORTION (5-6)
1. His inheritance and his cup
2. Who maintains his lot...
a. The lines have fallen in pleasant places
b. He has a good inheritance
C. THE LORD IS HIS STRENGTH (7-8)
1. Whom he will bless for His counsel, and the instruction of his
heart in the night seasons
2. Whom he has set before him at his right hand, so he shall not
be moved
II. HIS HOPE IN DEATH (16:9-11)
A. HIS JOY AND ASSURANCE (9)
1. His heart is glad, his glory rejoices
2. His flesh also rests in hope
B. HIS HOPE OF THE RESURRECTION (10)
1. God will not leave his soul in Sheol
2. God will not allow His Holy One to see corruption
C. HIS ANTICIPATION OF THE FUTURE (11)
1. God will show him the paths of life
2. In His presence is fullness of joy
3. At His right hand are pleasures forevermore
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
- His refuge in life (1-8)
- His hope in death (9-11)
2) What are the possible meanings of the word "Michtam"?
-"golden poem" or "mystery poem"
3) Who is the author of this psalm?
- David; confirmed by Peter in Ac 2:25-31 and Paul in Ac 13:33-37
4) In whom did David place his trust? (1)
- The LORD
5) In whom did David find great delight? (3)
- The saints who are on the earth
6) What is happens to those who hasten after another god? (4)
- Their sorrows are multiplied
7) What did David consider as the portion of his inheritance? (5)
- The LORD
8) Why does David bless the Lord? (7)
- For giving him counsel
- For giving him a heart that instructs him in the night seasons
9) What had David done? What was the result? (8)
- He set the LORD always before him, at his right hand
- He will not be moved
10) What was David's attitude regarding the future? (9)
- His heart was glad and his glory rejoices; his flesh also rests in
hope
11) To whom is verse 10 applied to by Peter in Acts 2?
- To Jesus Christ, as proof of His resurrection
12) What will be found in God's presence and at His right hand? (11)
- Fullness of joy; pleasures forevermore
"I HAVE SET THE LORD ALWAYS BEFORE ME"
Psalms 16:8
INTRODUCTION
1. In Psa 16:11 we are reminded that in the presence of God there is
fullness of joy and true happiness...
"You will show me the path of life; In Your presence is fullness
of joy; At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore."
2. I am sure that all Christians would agree; but even so, there are
times...
a. We all find ourselves not as close to God as we would like
b. We find ourselves spiritually weak, filled with depression and
anxiety
3. In such times, what can we do in order to become close to God again?
a. The answer is found in Psa 16:8
b. "I have set the LORD always before me; Because He is at my right
hand I shall not be moved."
-- It is when we "set the Lord before us" that we receive the
benefits of His Presence...
[In this lesson, I wish to review ways that you can draw closer to God,
or to "set the Lord before you", anytime you find ourselves drifting
away from God. Perhaps a good place to start is to...]
I. SET THE LORD BEFORE YOU THROUGH GOD'S CREATION
A. LET NATURE HELP YOU DRAW CLOSE TO GOD...
1. For the Creation speaks to us of God
a. It tells of His glory and His knowledge - Psa 19:1-2
b. It impresses us with His eternal power and His deity - Ro
1:20
c. In their own way, such inanimate objects worship God - Psa
68:8,11-13
2. When we take time to contemplate God's creation...
a. We understand more of His power and of His person
b. This understanding enables us to come closer to God
1) Just as increasing understanding between friends
enhances friendship
2) As it does any relationship (e.g., marriages)
B. OTHERS USED NATURAL SETTINGS IN DRAWING CLOSER TO GOD...
1. Isaac would go out into the fields to meditate - Gen 24:63
2. Jesus would often go to the mountains to pray - Mt 14:23
-- It may be easier to draw closer to God in the midst of God's
creation (nature), and away from man's creation (cities)
Walking alone at eve and viewing the skies afar,
Bidding the darkness come to welcome each silver star;
I have a great delight in the wonderful scenes above,
God in His power and might is showing His truth and Love.
-- Alone At Eve, Will W. Slater, vs. 1
[But God's creation can tell you only so much about Him. To draw
closer, you need to...]
II. SET THE LORD BEFORE YOU THROUGH GOD'S REVELATION
A. GOD'S WORD PROVIDES THE FULL REVELATION OF GOD...
1. Through nature we are limited in what we can learn from God
a. We can see His power, divinity, glory, and knowledge
b. But we learn nothing of His will and purpose for us
2. It is only through Divine revelation that God has made His
Will fully known
a. He has revealed many things through His Spirit, who in turn
revealed them through the apostles - 1 Co 2:9-12
b. Such things were written for our benefit and understanding
- Ep 3:3-5
B. OTHERS DEPENDED UPON THE WORD TO REMAIN CLOSE TO GOD...
1. David used it in many ways to stay close to God - Psa 119:92-
93,105,147-148
2. Jesus used it to ward off the Tempter - Mt 4:4,7,10
-- Let God's Word help you draw near to Him who is the source of
peace and strength
Sitting alone at eve and dreaming the hours away,
Watching the shadows falling now at the close of day;
God in His mercy comes with His word He is drawing near,
Spreading His love and truth around me and everywhere.
-- Alone At Eve, Will W. Slater, vs. 2
[But do not stop with listening to God through His Word. To really
draw close to God, you need to...]
III. SET THE LORD BEFORE YOU THROUGH YOUR PRAYERS
A. A CLOSE RELATIONSHIP MUST BE A TWO-WAY STREET...
1. God has revealed Himself to us through His creation and
revelation
2. We must reveal ourselves to Him, which we do through prayer
a. The means by which to express every concern, to receive
appropriate blessings - Ph 4:6-7
b. The means by which to draw boldly to God, to obtain mercy
and grace to help - He 4:14-16
B. OTHERS FOUND PRAYER THE MEANS TO RECEIVE HELP FROM GOD...
1. David found that confessing sins to God brought forgiveness
- Psa 32:3-6
2. Jesus found prayer to be a source of strength in times of
trial - Mt 26:36-44
-- Draw near to God's throne through prayer, let Him know of your
deepest needs
Closing my eyes at eve and thinking of heaven's grace,
Longing to see my Lord, yes, meeting Him face to face;
Trusting Him as my all wheresoever my footsteps roam,
Pleading with Him to guide me on to the spirit's home.
-- Alone At Eve, Will W. Slater, vs. 3
[Finally, allow me to suggest that you...]
IV. SET THE LORD BEFORE YOU THROUGH YOUR FELLOWSHIP
A. STRENGTH COMES FROM ASSEMBLING TOGETHER...
1. Just as there is strength in numbers - cf. Ecc 4:9-12
2. In view of the very real danger of falling away...
a. We need to exhort one another daily - He 3:12-13
b. We need to admonish one another through our frequent
assemblies - He 10:24-25
-- Like coals in a fire keeping each other hot, assembling
together is designed to keep the "spark" alive in our
relationship with God
B. THE EARLY CHURCH FOUND STRENGTH BY ASSEMBLING TOGETHER...
1. As when Peter and John were released after being arrested
- Ac 4:23-31
2. As when Peter was imprisoned - Ac 12:12
C. OUR ASSEMBLIES CAN BE A FORETASTE OF GOD'S PRESENCE...
1. In which we drawn near to God together through song, prayer,
and His word
2. In which we enjoy the fellowship of God and His servants even
now - cf. Re 7:9-17
Oh! for a home with God, a place in His courts to rest,
Sure in a safe abode with Jesus and the blest;
Rest for a weary soul once redeemed by the Savior's love,
Where I will be pure and whole and live with my God above!
-- Alone At Eve, Will W. Slater, chorus
CONCLUSION
1. Do you desire to draw closer to God?
2. Then "set the Lord before you" through these avenues:
a. Contemplating nature
b. Meditating on God's word
c. Spending time in prayer
d. Having fellowship with other Christians
Do this, and we can draw closer to God, singing with David:
"In Your presence is fullness of joy;
At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore."
(Psa 16:11)
¡Ð¡Ð¡mExecutable
Outlines¡n
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. MICHTAM
OF DAVID. This is usually understood to mean THE GOLDEN PSALM, and
such a title is most appropriate, for the matter is as the most fine gold.
Ainsworth calls it "David's jewel, or notable song." Dr. Hawker, who
is always alive to passages full of savour, devoutly cries, "Some have
rendered it precious, others golden, and others, precious
jewel; and as the Holy Ghost, by the apostles Peter and Paul, hath shown us
that it is all about the Lord Jesus Christ, what is here said of him is
precious, is golden, is a jewel indeed!" We have not met with the term
Michtam before, but if spared to write upon Psalms 56, 57, 58, 59, and 60,
we shall see it again, and shall observe that like the present these psalms,
although they begin with prayer, and imply trouble, abound in holy confidence
and close with songs of assurance as to ultimate safety and joy. Dr. Alexander,
whose notes are peculiarly valuable, thinks that the word is most probably a
simple derivative of a word signifying to hide, and signifies a secret
or mystery, and indicates the depth of doctrinal and spiritual import in these
sacred compositions. If this be the true interpretation it well accords with
the other, and when the two are put together, they make up a name which every
reader will remember, and which will bring the precious subject at once to
mind. THE PSALM OF THE PRECIOUS SECRET.
SUBJECT.
We are not left to human interpreters for the key to this golden mystery,
for, speaking by the Holy Ghost, Peter tells us, "David speaketh
concerning HIM." (Acts 2:25.) Further on in his memorable sermon he
said, "Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch
David, that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulchre is with us unto this
day. Therefore being a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to
him, that of the fruit of his loins, according to the flesh, he would raise up
Christ to sit on his throne; he seeing this before spake of the
resurrection of Christ, that his soul was not left in hell, neither his
flesh did see corruption." (Acts 2:29-31.) Nor is this our only guide, for
the apostle Paul, led by the same infallible inspiration, quotes from this
psalm, and testifies that David wrote of the man through whom is preached unto
us the forgiveness of sins. (Acts 13:35-38.) It has been the usual plan of
commentators to apply the psalm both to David, to the saints, and to the Lord
Jesus, but we will venture to believe that in it "Christ is all;"
since in the ninth and tenth verses, like the apostles on the mount, we can
see "no man but Jesus only."
DIVISION.
The whole is so compact that it is difficult to draw sharp lines of
division. It may suffice to note our Lord's prayer of faith, verse 1, avowal of
faith in Jehovah alone, 2, 3, 4, 5, the contentment of his faith in the
present, 6, 7, and the joyous confidence of his faith for the future (8, 11).
Verse 1. "Preserve
me," keep, or save me, or as Horsley thinks, "guard me,"
even as bodyguards surround their monarch, or as shepherds protect their
flocks. Tempted in all points like as we are, the manhood of Jesus needed to be
preserved from the power of evil; and though in itself pure, the Lord Jesus did
not confide in that purity of nature, but as an example to his followers,
looked to the Lord, his God, for preservation. One of the great names of God is
"the Preserver of men," (Job 7:20,) and this gracious office the
Father exercised towards our Mediator and Representative. It had been promised
to the Lord Jesus in express words, that he should be preserved, Isaiah 49:7,
8. "Thus saith the Lord, the Redeemer of Israel and his Holy One, to him
whom man despiseth, to him whom the nation abhorreth, I will preserve thee, and
give thee for a covenant of the people." This promise was to the letter
fulfilled, both by providential deliverance and sustaining power, in the case
of our Lord. Being preserved himself, he is able to restore the preserved of
Israel, for we are "preserved in Christ Jesus and called." As one
with him, the elect were preserved in his preservation, and we may view this
mediatorial supplication as the petition of the Great High Priest for all those
who are in him. The intercession recorded in John 17 is but an amplification of
this cry, "Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast
given me, that they may be one, as we are." When he says,
"preserve me," he means his members, his mystical body, himself, and
all in him. But while we rejoice in the fact that the Lord Jesus used this
prayer for his members, we must not forget that he employed it most surely for
himself; he had so emptied himself, and so truly taken upon him the form of a
servant, that as man he needed divine keeping even as we do, and often cried
unto the strong for strength. Frequently on the mountain-top he breathed forth
this desire, and on one occasion in almost the same words, he publicly prayed,
"Father, save me from this hour." (John 12:27.) If Jesus looked out
of himself for protection, how much more must we, his erring followers, do so!
"O
God." The word for God here used is EL (Heb.), by which name the Lord
Jesus, when under a sense of great weakness, as for instance when upon the
cross, was wont to address the Mighty God, the Omnipotent Helper of his people.
We, too, may turn to El, the Omnipotent One, in all hours of peril, with
the confidence that he who heard the strong crying and tears of our faithful
High Priest, is both able and willing to bless us in him. It is well to study
the name and character of God, so that in our straits we may know how and by
what title to address our Father who is in heaven.
"For
in thee do I put my trust," or, I have taken shelter in thee.
As chickens run beneath the hen, so do I betake myself to thee. Thou art my
great overshadowing Protector, and I have taken refuge beneath thy strength.
This is a potent argument in pleading, and our Lord knew not only how to use
it with God, but how to yield to its power when wielded by others upon himself.
"According to thy faith be it done unto thee," is a great rule of
heaven in dispensing favour, and when we can sincerely declare that we exercise
faith in the Mighty God with regard to the mercy which we seek, we may rest
assured that our plea will prevail. Faith, like the sword of Saul, never
returns empty; it overcomes heaven when held in the hand of prayer. As the
Saviour prayed, so let us pray, and as he became more than a conqueror, so
shall we also through him; let us when buffeted by storms right bravely cry to
the Lord as he did, "in thee do I put my trust."
Verse
2. "O my soul, thou hast said unto the Lord, Thou art my Lord."
In his inmost heart the Lord Jesus bowed himself to do service to his Heavenly
Father, and before the throne of Jehovah his soul vowed allegiance to the Lord
for our sakes. We are like him when our soul, truly and constantly in the
presence of the heart-searching God, declares her full consent to the rule and
government of the Infinite Jehovah, saying, "Thou art my Lord." To
avow this with the lip is little, but for the soul to say it, especially
in times of trial, is a gracious evidence of spiritual health; to profess it
before men is a small matter, but to declare it before Jehovah himself is of
far more consequence. This sentence may also be viewed as the utterance of
appropriating faith, laying hold upon the Lord by personal covenant and
enjoyment; in this sense may it be our daily song in the house of our
pilgrimage.
"My
goodness extendeth not to thee." The work of our Lord Jesus was not
needful on account of any necessity in the Divine Being. Jehovah would have
been inconceivably glorious had the human race perished, and had no atonement
been offered. Although the life-work and death-agony of the Son did reflect
unparalleled lustre upon every attribute of God, yet the Most Blessed and
Infinitely Happy God stood in no need of the obedience and death of his Son; it
was for our sakes that the work of redemption was undertaken, and not because
of any lack or want on the part of the Most High. How modestly does the Saviour
here estimate his own goodness! What overwhelming reasons have we for imitating
his humility! "If thou be righteous, what givest thou him? or what receiveth
he of thine hand?" (Job 35:7.)
Verse
3. "But to the saints that are in the earth." These sanctified
ones, although still upon the earth, partake of the results of Jesus'
mediatorial work, and by his goodness are made what they are. The peculiar
people, zealous for good works, and hallowed to sacred service, are arrayed in
the Saviour's righteousness and washed in his blood, and so receive of the
goodness treasured up in him; these are the persons who are profited by the
work of the man Christ Jesus; but that work added nothing to the nature,
virtue, or happiness of God, who is blessed for evermore. How much more
forcibly is this true of us, poor unworthy servants not fit to be mentioned in
comparison with the faithful Son of God! Our hope must ever be that haply some
poor child of God may be served by us, for the Great Father can never need our
aid. Well may we sing the verses of Dr. Watts:
"Oft have
my heart and tongue confess'd
How empty and how poor I am;
My praise can never make thee blest,
Nor add new glories to thy name.
Yet, Lord, thy saints on earth may reap
Some profit by the good we do;
These are the company I keep,
These are the choicest friends I know."
Poor
believers are God's receivers, and have a warrant from the Crown to receive the
revenue of our offerings in the King's name. Saints departed we cannot bless;
even prayer for them is of no service; but while they are here we should
practically prove our love to them, even as our Master did, for they are the
excellent of the earth. Despite their infirmities, their Lord thinks highly
of them, and reckons them to be as nobles among men. The title of "His
Excellency" more properly belongs to the meanest saint than to the
greatest governor. The true aristocracy are believers in Jesus. They are the
only Right Honourables. Stars and garters are poor distinctions compared with
the graces of the Spirit. He who knows them best says of them, "in whom
is all my delight." They are his Hephzibah and his land Beulah, and
before all worlds his delights were with these chosen sons of men. Their own
opinion of themselves is far other than their Beloved's opinion of them; they
count themselves to be less than nothing, yet he makes much of them, and sets
his heart towards them. What wonders the eyes of Divine Love can see where the
Hands of Infinite Power have been graciously at work. It was this quicksighted
affection which led Jesus to see in us a recompense for all his agony, and sustained
him under all his sufferings by the joy of redeeming us from going down into
the pit.
Verse
4. The same loving heart which opens towards the chosen people is fast closed
against those who continue in their rebellion against God. Jesus hates all wickedness,
and especially the high crime of idolatry. The text while it shows our Lord's
abhorrence of sin, shows also the sinner's greediness after it. Professed
believers are often slow towards the true Lord, but sinners "hasten
after another god." They run like madmen where we creep like snails.
Let their zeal rebuke our tardiness. Yet theirs is a case in which the more
they haste the worse they speed, for their sorrows are multiplied by
their diligence in multiplying their sins. Matthew Henry pithily says,
"They that multiply gods multiply griefs to themselves; for whosoever
thinks one god too little, will find two too many, and yet hundreds not
enough." The cruelties and hardships which men endure for their false gods
is wonderful to contemplate; our missionary reports are a noteworthy comment on
this passage; but perhaps our own experience is an equally vivid exposition;
for when we have given our heart to idols, sooner or later we have had to smart
for it. Near the roots of our self-love all our sorrows lie, and when that idol
is overthrown, the sting is gone from grief. Moses broke the golden calf and
ground it to powder, and cast it into the water of which he made Israel to
drink, and so shall our cherished idols become bitter portions for us, unless we
at once forsake them. Our Lord had no selfishness; he served but one Lord, and
served him only. As for those who turn aside from Jehovah, he was separate from
them, bearing their reproach without the camp. Sin and the Saviour had no
communion. He came to destroy, not to patronize or be allied with the works of
the devil. Hence he refused the testimony of unclean spirits as to his
divinity, for in nothing would he have fellowship with darkness. We should be
careful above measure not to connect ourselves in the remotest degree with
falsehood in religion; even the most solemn of Popish rites we must abhor. "Their
drink offerings of blood will I not offer." The old proverb says,
"It is not safe to eat at the devil's mess, though the spoon be never so
long." The mere mentioning of ill names it were well to avoid,¡X"nor
take up their names into my lips." If we allow poison upon the lip, it
may ere long penetrate to the inwards, and it is well to keep out of the mouth
that which we would shut out from the heart. If the church would enjoy union
with Christ, she must break all the bonds of impiety, and keep herself pure
from all the pollutions of carnal will-worship, which now pollute the service
of God. Some professors are guilty of great sin in remaining in the communion
of Popish churches, where God is as much dishonoured as in Rome herself, only
in a more crafty manner.
Verse
5. "The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup."
With what confidence and bounding joy does Jesus turn to Jehovah, whom his soul
possessed and delighted in! Content beyond measure with his portion in the Lord
his God, he had not a single desire with which to hunt after other gods; his
cup was full, and his heart was full too; even in his sorest sorrows he still
laid hold with both his hands upon his Father, crying, "My God, my
God;" he had not so much as a thought of falling down to worship the
prince of this world, although tempted with an "all these will I give
thee." We, too, can make our boast in the Lord; he is the meat and the
drink of our souls. He is our portion, supplying all our necessities, and our
cup yielding royal luxuries; our cup in this life, and our inheritance in the
life to come. As children of the Father who is in heaven, we inherit, by virtue
of our joint heirship with Jesus, all the riches of the covenant of grace; and
the portion which falls to us sets upon our table the bread of heaven and the
new wine of the kingdom. Who would not be satisfied with such dainty diet? Our
shallow cup of sorrow we may well drain with resignation, since the deep cup of
love stands side by side with it, and will never be empty. "Thou
maintainest my lot." Some tenants have a covenant in their leases that
they themselves shall maintain and uphold, but in our case Jehovah himself maintains
our lot. Our Lord Jesus delighted in this truth, that the Father was on his
side, and would maintain his right against all the wrongs of men. He knew that
his elect would be reserved for him, and that almighty power would preserve
them as his lot and reward for ever. Let us also be glad, because the Judge of
all the earth will vindicate our righteous cause.
Verse
6. Jesus found the way of obedience to lead into "pleasant
places." Notwithstanding all the sorrows which marred his countenance,
he exclaimed, "Lo, I come; in the volume of the book it is written of me,
I delight to do thy will, O my God: yea, thy law is within my heart." It
may seem strange, but while no other man was ever so thoroughly acquainted with
grief, it is our belief that no other man ever experienced so much joy and
delight in service, for no other served so faithfully and with such great
results in view as his recompense of reward. The joy which was set before him
must have sent some of its beams of splendour a-down the rugged places where he
endured the cross, despising the shame, and must have made them in some
respects pleasant places to the generous heart of the Redeemer. At any rate, we
know that Jesus was well content with the blood-bought portion which the lines
of electing love marked off as his spoil with the strong and his portion with
the great. Therein he solaced himself on earth, and delights himself in heaven;
and he asks no more "GOODLY HERITAGE" than that his own beloved may
be with him where he is and behold his glory. All the saints can use the
language of this verse, and the more thoroughly they can enter into its
contented, grateful, joyful spirit the better for themselves, and the more
glorious to their God. Our Lord was poorer than we are, for he had not where to
lay his head, and yet when he mentioned his poverty he never used a word of
murmuring; discontented spirits are as unlike Jesus as the croaking raven is
unlike the cooing dove. Martyrs have been happy in dungeons. "From the
delectable orchard of the Leonine prison the Italian martyr dated his letter,
and the presence of God made the gridiron of Laurence pleasant to him."
Mr. Greenham was bold enough to say, "They never felt God's love, or
tasted forgiveness of sin, who are discontented." Some divines think that
discontent was the first sin, the rock which wrecked our race in paradise;
certainly there can be no paradise where this evil spirit has power, its slime
will poison all the flowers of the garden.
Verse
7. "I will bless the Lord, who hath given me counsel." Praise
as well as prayer was presented to the Father by our Lord Jesus, and we are not
truly his followers unless our resolve be, "I will bless the Lord."
Jesus is called Wonderful, Counsellor, but as man he spake not of himself, but
as his Father had taught him. Read in confirmation of this, John 7:16; 8:28;
and 12:49, 50; and the prophecy concerning him in Isaiah 11:2, 3. It was our
Redeemer's wont to repair to his Father for direction, and having received it,
he blessed him for giving him counsel. It would be well for us if we would
follow his example of lowliness, cease from trusting in our own understanding,
and seek to be guided by the Spirit of God. "My reins also instruct me
in the night seasons." By the reins understand the inner man, the
affections and feelings. The communion of the soul with God brings to it an
inner spiritual wisdom which in still seasons is revealed to itself. Our
Redeemer spent many nights alone upon the mountain, and we may readily conceive
that together with his fellowship with heaven, he carried on a profitable
commerce with himself; reviewing his experience, forecasting his work, and
considering his position. Great generals fight their battles in their own mind
long before the trumpet sounds, and so did our Lord win our battle on his knees
before he gained it on the cross. It is a gracious habit after taking counsel
from above to take counsel within. Wise men see more with their eyes shut by
night than fools can see by day with their eyes open. He who learns from God
and so gets the seed, will soon find wisdom within himself growing in the
garden of his soul; "Thine ears shall hear a voice behind thee, saying,
This is the way, walk ye in it, when ye turn to the right hand and when ye turn
to the left." The night season which the sinner chooses for his sins is
the hallowed hour of quiet when believers hear the soft still voices of heaven,
and of the heavenly life within themselves.
Verse
8. The fear of death at one time cast its dark shadow over the soul of the Redeemer,
and we read that, "he was heard in that he feared." There appeared
unto him an angel, strengthening him; perhaps the heavenly messenger reassured
him of his glorious resurrection as his people's surety, and of the eternal joy
into which he should admit the flock redeemed by blood. Then hope shone full
upon our Lord's soul, and, as recorded in these verses, he surveyed the future
with holy confidence because he had a continued eye to Jehovah, and enjoyed his
perpetual presence. He felt that, thus sustained, he could never be driven from
his life's grand design; nor was he, for he stayed not his hand till he could
say, "It is finished." What an infinite mercy was this for us! In
this immovableness, caused by simple faith in the divine help, Jesus is to be
viewed as our exemplar; to recognize the presence of the Lord is the duty of
every believer; "I have set the Lord always before me;" and to
trust the Lord as our champion and guard is the privilege of every
saint; "because he is at my right hand, I shall not be moved."
The apostle translates this passage, "I foresaw the Lord always before my
face;" Acts 2:25; the eye of Jesus' faith could discern beforehand the
continuance of divine support to his suffering Son, in such a degree that he
should never be moved from the accomplishment of his purpose of redeeming his
people. By the power of God at his right hand he foresaw that he should smite
through all who rose up against him, and on that power he placed the firmest
reliance.
Verse
9. He clearly foresaw that he must die, for he speaks of his flesh resting, and
of his soul in the abode of separate spirits; death was full before his face,
or he would not have mentioned corruption; but such was his devout reliance
upon his God, that he sang over the tomb, and rejoiced in vision of the
sepulchre. He knew that the visit of his soul to Sheol, or the invisible world
of disembodied spirits, would be a very short one, and that his body in a very
brief space would leave the grave, uninjured by its sojourn there; all this
made him say, "my heart is glad," and moved his tongue, the glory
of his frame, to rejoice in God, the strength of his salvation. Oh, for
such holy faith in the prospect of trial and of death! It is the work of faith,
not merely to create a peace which passeth all understanding, but to fill the
heart full of gladness until the tongue, which, as the organ of an intelligent
creature, is our glory, bursts forth in notes of harmonious praise. Faith gives
us living joy, and bestows dying rest. "My flesh also shall rest in
hope."
Verse
10. Our Lord Jesus was not disappointed in his hope. He declared his Father's
faithfulness in the words, "thou wilt not leave my soul in hell,"
and that faithfulness was proven on the resurrection morning. Among the
departed and disembodied Jesus was not left; he had believed in the
resurrection, and he received it on the third day, when his body rose in
glorious life, according as he had said in joyous confidence, "neither
wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption." Into the outer
prison of the grave his body might go, but into the inner prison of corruption
he could not enter. He who in soul and body was pre-eminently God's "Holy
One," was loosed from the pains of death, because it was not possible that
he should be holden of it. This is noble encouragement to all the saints; die
they must, but rise they shall, and though in their case they shall see
corruption, yet they shall rise to everlasting life. Christ's resurrection is
the cause, the earnest, the guarantee, and the emblem of the rising of all his
people. Let them, therefore, go to their graves as to their beds, resting their
flesh among the clods as they now do upon their couches.
"Since
Jesus is mine, I'll not fear undressing,
But gladly put off these garments of clay;
To die in the Lord is a covenant blessing,
Since Jesus to glory through death led the way."
Wretched
will that man be who, when the Philistines of death invade his soul, shall find
that, like Saul, he is forsaken of God; but blessed is he who has the Lord at
his right hand, for he shall fear no ill, but shall look forward to an eternity
of bliss.
Verse
11. "Thou wilt shew me the path of life." To Jesus first this
way was shown, for he is the first begotten from the dead, the first-born of
every creature. He himself opened up the way through his own flesh, and then
trod it as the forerunner of his own redeemed. The thought of being made the
path of life to his people, gladdened the soul of Jesus. "In thy
presence is fulness of joy." Christ being raised from the dead
ascended into glory, to dwell in constant nearness to God, where joy is at its
full for ever: the foresight of this urged him onward in his glorious but grievous
toil. To bring his chosen to eternal happiness was the high ambition which
inspired him, and made him wade through a sea of blood. O God, when a
worldling's mirth has all expired, for ever with Jesus may we dwell "at
thy right hand," where "there are pleasures for
evermore;" and meanwhile, may we have an earnest by tasting thy love
below. Trapp's note on the heavenly verse which closes the Psalm is a sweet
morsel, which may serve for a contemplation, and yield a foretaste of our
inheritance. He writes, "Here is as much said as can be, but words are too
weak to utter it. For quality there is in heaven joy and pleasures; for quantity,
a fulness, a torrent whereat they drink without let or loathing; for constancy,
it is at God's right hand, who is stronger than all, neither can any take us
out of his hand; it is a constant happiness without intermission: and for perpetuity
it is for evermore. Heaven's joys are without measure, mixture, or end."
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title. There is a diversity
of opinion as to the meaning of the title of this Psalm. It is called "Michtam
of David," but Michtam is the Hebrew word untranslated¡Xthe
Hebrew word in English letters¡Xand its signification is involved in obscurity.
According to some, it is derived from a verb which means to hide, and
denotes a mystery or secret. Those who adopt this view, regard the title as
indicating a depth of doctrinal and spiritual import in the Psalm, which
neither the writer nor any of his contemporaries had fathomed. According to
others, it is derived from a verb which means to cut, to grave, to write,
and denotes simply a writing of David. With this view agree the Chaldee and
Septuagint versions, the former translating it, "a straight sculpture of
David:" and the latter, "an inscription upon a pillar to David."
Others again, look upon "Michtam," as being derived from a
noun which means gold, and they understand it as denoting a golden Psalm¡Xa
Psalm of surpassing excellence, and worthy of being written in letters of gold.
This was the opinion of our translators, and hence they have rendered it on the
margin¡X"A golden Psalm of David." The works of the most
excellent Arabian poets were called golden, because they were written in
letters of gold; and this golden song may have been written and hung up in some
conspicuous part of the Temple. Many other interpretations have been given of
this term, but at this distance of time, we can only regard it as representing
some unassignable peculiarity of the composition.¡XJames Frame, 1858.
Title. Such are the
riches of this Psalm, that some have been led to think the obscure title, "Michtam,"
has been prefixed to it on account of its golden stores. For (Heb.) is
used of the "gold of Ophir" (e.g., Psalm 45:9), and (Heb.) might be a
derivative from that root. But as there is a group of five other Psalms
(namely, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60), that bear this title, whose subject matter is
various, but which all end in a tone of triumph, it has been suggested
that the Septuagint may be nearly right in their Sphlografia, as if
"A Psalm to be hung up or inscribed on a pillar to commemorate
victory." It is, however, more likely still that the term "Michtam"
(like "Maschil"), is a musical term, whose real meaning and
use we have lost, and may recover only when the ransomed house of Israel return
home with songs. Meanwhile, the subject matter of this Psalm itself is very
clearly this¡Xthe righteous one's satisfaction with his lot.¡XAndrew A.
Bonar.
Whole
Psalm. Allow that in verse ten it is clear that our Lord is in this
Psalm, yet the application of every verse to Jesus in Gethsemane appears
to be farfetched, and inaccurate. How verse nine could suit the agony and
bloody sweat, it is hard to conceive, and equally so it is with regard to verse
six. The "cup" of verse five is so direct a contrast to that cup
concerning which Jesus prayed in anguish of spirit, that it cannot be a
reference to it. Yet we think it right to add, that Mr. James Frame has written
a very valuable work on this Psalm, entitled "Christ in Gethsemane,"
and he has supported his theory by the opinion of many of the ancients. He
says, "All the distinguished interpreters of ancient days, such as
Eusebius, Jerome, and Augustine, explain the Psalm as referring to the Messiah,
in his passion and his victory over death and the grave, including his
subsequent exaltation to the right hand of God;" and, in a foot note he
gives the following quotations: Jerome.¡X"The Psalm pertains to
Christ, who speaks in it. . . . . It is the voice of our King, which he utters
in the human nature that he had assumed, but without detracting from his divine
nature. . . . . The Psalm pertains to his passion." Augustine.¡X"Our
King speaks in this Psalm in the person of the human nature that he assumed, at
the time of his passion, the royal title inscribed will show itself
conspicuous."¡XC. H. S.
Whole
Psalm. The present Psalm is connected in thought and language with the
foregoing, and linked on to the following Psalm by catchwords. It is entitled
in the Syriac and Arabic versions, a Psalm on the Election of the Church, and
on the Resurrection of Christ."¡XChristopher Wordsworth, D.D., 1868.
Verse 1. "Preserve
me, O God." Here David desireth not deliverance from any special
trouble, but generally prayeth to be fenced and defended continually by the
providence of God, wishing that the Lord would continue his mercy towards him
unto the end; whereby he foresaw it was as needfull for him to be safeguarded
by God, his protection in the end, as at the time present; as also how he made no
less account of it in his prosperity than in adversity. So that the man of God
still feared his infirmity, and therefore acknowledgeth himself ever to stand
in need of God his help. And here is a sure and undoubted mark of the child of
God, when a man shall have as great a care to continue and grow in well-doing,
as to begin; and this praying for the gift of final perseverance is a special
note of the child of God. This holy jealousy of the man of God made him so
desire to be preserved at all times, in all estates, both in soul and body.¡XRichard
Greenham, 1531-1591.
Verse 1. "For
in thee do I put my trust." Here the prophet setteth down the cause
why he prayeth to God; whereby he declareth, that none can truly call upon God
unless they believe. Romans 10:14. "How shall they call on him in whom
they have not believed?" In regard whereof as he prayeth to God to be his
Saviour, so he is fully assured that God will be his Saviour. If, then, without
faith we cannot truly call upon God, the men of this world rather prate like
parrots than pray like Christians, at what time they utter these words; for
that they trust not in God they declare both by neglecting the lawful means,
and also in using unlawful means. Some we see trust in friends; some shoulder
out, as they think, the cross with their goods; some fence themselves with
authority; others bathe and baste themselves in pleasure to put the evil day
far from them; others make flesh their arm; and others make the wedge of gold
their confidence; and these men when they seek for help at the Lord, mean in
their hearts to find it in their friends, good authority and pleasure,
howsoever for fear, they dare not say this outwardly. Again, here we are to
observe under what shelter we may harbour ourselves in the showers of
adversity, even under the protection of the Almighty. And why? "Whoso
dwelleth in the secret of the Most High, shall abide in the shadow of the
Almighty." And here in effect is showed, that whosoever putteth his trust
in God shall be preserved; otherwise the prophet's reason here had not been
good. Besides, we see he pleadeth not by merit, but sueth by faith, teaching us
that if we come with like faith, we may obtain the like deliverance.¡XRichard
Greenham.
Verse 2. "O
my soul, thou hast said unto the Lord, Thou art my Lord." I wish I
could have heard what you said to yourself when these words were first
mentioned. I believe I could guess the language of some of you. When you heard
me repeat these words, "O my soul, thou hast said unto the Lord, Thou
art my Lord," you thought, "I have never said anything to the
Lord, unless when I cried out, Depart from me, for I desire not the knowledge
of thy ways." Has not something like this passed in your minds? I will try
again. When I first mentioned the text, "Let me consider," you
secretly said, "I believe that I did once say to the Lord, Thou art my
Lord; but it was so long ago, that I had almost forgotten it; but I suppose
that it must have been at such a time when I was in trouble. I had met with
disappointments in the world; and then, perhaps, I cried, Thou art my portion,
O Lord. Or, perhaps, when I was under serious impressions, in the hurry of my
spirits, I might look up to God and say, Thou art my Lord. But, whatever I
could or did formerly say, I am certain that I cannot say it at present."
Have none of you thought in this manner? I will hazard one conjecture more; and
I doubt not but in this case I shall guess rightly. When I repeated these
words, "O my soul, thou hast said unto the Lord, Thou art my Lord;"
"So have I," thought one; "So have I," thought another; I
have said it often, but I said it with peculiar solemnity and pleasure, when,
in an act of humble devotion, I lately threw my ransomed, rescued, grateful
soul at his feet and cried, "O Lord, truly I am thy servant; I am thy
servant; thou hast loosed my bonds." The very recollection of it is
pleasant; and I shall now have an opportunity of renewing my vows, and hope to
recover something of the divine serenity and joy which I at that time experienced."¡XSamuel
Lavington's Sermons, 1810.
Verse 2. "Thou
art my Lord." He acknowledgeth the Lord Jehovah; but he seeth him not
as it were then afar off, but drawing near unto him, he sweetly embraceth him;
which thing is proper unto faith, and to that particular applying which we say
to be in faith.¡XRobert Rollock, 1600.
Verse 2. "My
goodness extendeth not to thee." I think the words should be
understood of what the Messiah was doing for men. My goodness, (Heb.) tobhathi,
"my bounty" is not to thee. What I am doing can add nothing to thy
divinity; thou art not providing this astonishing sacrifice because thou canst
derive any excellence from it; but this bounty extends to the saints¡Xto
all the spirits of just men made perfect, whose bodies are still in the earth; and
to the excellent, (Heb.) addirey, "the noble or super-eminent
ones," those who through faith and patience inherit the promises. The
saints and illustrious ones not only taste of my goodness, but enjoy my
salvation. Perhaps angels themselves may be intended; they are not
uninterested in the incarnation, passion, death, and resurrection of our Lord.
They desire to look into these things; and the victories of the cross in
the conversion of sinners cause joy among the angels of God.¡XAdam Clarke.
Verse 2. "My
goodness extendeth not to thee;" "My well-doing extendeth not to
thee." Oh, what shall I render unto thee, my God, for all thy benefits
towards me? what shall I repay? Alas! I can do thee no good, for mine imperfect
goodness cannot pleasure thee who art most perfect and goodness itself; my
well-doing can do thee no good, my wickedness can do thee no harm. I receive
all good from thee, but no good can I return to thee; wherefore I acknowledge
thee to be most rich, and myself to be most beggardly; so far off is it that
thou standest in any need of me. Wherefore I will join myself to thy people,
that whatsoever I have they may profit by it; and whatsoever they have I may
profit by it, seeing the things that I have received must be put out to loan,
to gain some comfort to others. Whatsoever others have, they have not for their
own private use, but that by them, as by pipes and conduits, they liberally
should be conveyed unto me also. Wherefore in this strain we are taught, that
if we be the children of God, we must join ourselves in a holy league to his
people, and by mutual participation of the gifts of God, we must testify each
to other, that we be of the number and communion of saints; and this is an
undoubted badge and cognizance of him that loveth God, if he also loveth them
that are begotten of God. Wherefore, if we so profess ourselves to be of God
and to worship him, then we must join ourselves to the church of God which with
us doth worship God. And this must we do of necessity, for it is a branch of our
belief that there is a communion of saints in the church; and if we believe
that there is a God, we must also believe that there is a remnant of people,
unto whom God revealeth himself, and communicateth his mercies, in whom we must
have all our delight, to whom we must communicate according to the measure of
grace given unto every one of us.¡XRichard Greenham.
Verse 2. "My
goodness extendeth not to thee." Oh, how great is God's goodness to
you! He calls upon others for the same things, and conscience stands as
Pharaoh's taskmasters, requiring the tale of bricks but not allowing straw; it
impels and presseth, but gives no enlargement of heart, and buffets and wounds
them for neglect: as the hard creditor that, taking the poor debtor by the
throat, saith, "Pay me that thou owest me," but yields him no power
to do it; thus God might deal with you also, for he oweth not assistance to
us; but we owe obedience to him. Remember, we had power, and it is
just to demand what we cannot do, because the weakness that is in us is of
ourselves: we have impoverished ourselves. Therefore, when in much mercy he
puts forth his hand into the work with thee, be very thankful. If the work be
not done, he is no loser; if done, and well done, he is no gainer. Job 22:2;
35:6-8. But the gain is all to thee; all the good that comes by it is to
thyself.¡XJoseph Symonds, 1639.
Verse 2 (last
clause). It is a greater glory to us that we are allowed to serve God, than
it is to him that we offer him that service. He is not rendered happy by us;
but we are made happy by him. He can do without such earthly servants; but we
cannot do without such a heavenly Master.¡XWilliam Secker.
Verse 2 (last
clause). There is nothing added to God; he is so perfect, that no sin can
hurt him; and so righteous, that no righteousness can benefit him. O Lord,
my righteousness extendeth not to thee! thou hast no need of my righteousness.
Acts 17:24, 25. God hath no need of anything.¡XRichard Stock, 1641.
Verse 2. As Christ
is the head of man, so is God the head of Christ (1 Corinthians 11:3); and as
man is subject unto Christ, so is Christ subject to God; not in regard of the
divine nature, wherein there is an equality, and consequently no dominion or
jurisdiction; nor only in his human nature, but in the economy of a Redeemer,
considered as one designed, and consenting to be incarnate, and take our flesh;
so that after this agreement, God had a sovereign right to dispose of him
according to the articles consented to. In regard of his undertaking and the
advantage he was to bring to the elect of God upon earth, he calls God by the
solemn title of "his Lord." "O my soul, thou hast said unto the
Lord, Thou art my Lord: my goodness extendeth not to thee; but to the saints
that are in the earth." It seems to be the speech of Christ in heaven,
mentioning the saints on earth as at a distance from him. I can add nothing to
the glory of thy majesty, but the whole fruit of my mediation and suffering
will redound to the saints on earth.¡XStephen Charnock.
Verses 2, 3. "My
goodness extendeth not to thee; but to the saints." God's goodness to
us should make us merciful to others. It were strange indeed a soul should come
out of his tender bosom with a hard uncharitable heart. Some children do not
indeed take after their earthly parents, as Cicero's son, who had nothing of
his father but his name; but God's children all partake of their heavenly
Father's nature. Philosophy tells us, that there is no reaction from the earth
to the heavens; they indeed shed their influences upon the lower world, which
quicken and fructify it, but the earth returns none back to make the sun shine
the better. David knew that his goodness extended not unto God, but this
made him reach it forth to his brethren. Indeed, God hath left his poor saints
to receive the rents we owe unto him for his mercies. An ingenuous guest,
though his friend will take nothing for his entertainment, yet, to show his
thankfulness, will give something to his servants.¡XWilliam Gurnall.
Verse 3. "But
to the saints that are in the earth, and to the excellent, in whom is all my
delight." My brethren, look upon saintship as the greatest excellency
to love it. So did Christ. His eye was "upon the excellent ones in the
earth;" that is, upon the saints, who were excellent to him; yea, also
even when not saints, because God loved them. Isaiah 43:4. It is strange to
hear how men by their speeches will undervalue a saint as such, if without some
other outward excellency. For whilst they acknowledge a man a saint, yet in
other respects, they will contemn him; "He is a holy man," they will
say, "but he is weak," etc. But is he a saint? And can there be any
such other imperfection or weakness found as shall lay him low in thy thoughts
in comparison of other carnal men more excellent? Hath not Christ loved him,
bought him, redeemed him?¡XThomas Goodwin.
Verse 3. "But
to the saints." I understand that a man then evinces affection towards
God, and towards those who love God, when his soul yearns after them¡Xwhen he
obliges himself to love them by practically serving and benefiting them¡Xacting
towards them as he would act towards God himself were he to see him in need of
his service, as David says he did.¡XJuan de Valdes, 1550.
Verse 3. "The
saints." The Papists could abide no saints but those which are in
heaven; which argueth that they live in a kingdom of darkness, and err, not
knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God; for if they were but meanly
conversant in the Scriptures, in the holy epistles, they should find almost in
every epistle mention made of the saints who are thereunto called in Jesus
Christ, through whom they are sanctified by the Holy Ghost. And mark, he
calleth them "excellent." Some think rich men to be excellent,
some think learned men to be excellent, some count men in authority so to be,
but here we are taught that those men are excellent who are sanctified
by God's graces.¡XRichard Greenham.
Verse 3. By David's
language, there were many singular saints in his day: "To the saints
that are in the earth, and to the excellent, in whom is all my delight."
Was it so then, and should it not be so now? We know the New Testament
outshines the Old as much as the sun outshines the moon. If we then live in a
more glorious dispensation, should we not maintain a more glorious
conversation?. . . . "The excellent." Were the sun to give no
more delight than a star, you could not believe he was the regent of the day;
were he to transmit no more heat than a glow-worm, you would question his being
the source of elementary heat. Were God to do no more than a creature, where
would his Godhead be? Were a man to do no more than a brute, where would his
manhood be? Were not a saint to excel a sinner, where would his sanctity
be?¡XWilliam Secker.
Verse 3. Ingo, an
ancient king of the Draves, who making a stately feast, appointed his nobles,
at that time Pagans, to sit in the hall below, and commanded certain poor
Christians to be brought up into his presence-chamber, to sit with him at his
table, to eat and drink of his kingly cheer, at which many wondering, he said,
he accounted Christians, though never so poor, a greater ornament to his table,
and more worthy of his company than the greatest peers unconverted to the
Christian faith; for when these might be thrust down to hell, those might be
his comforts and fellow princes in heaven. Although you see the stars sometimes
by reflections in a puddle, in the bottom of a well, or in a stinking ditch,
yet the stars have their situation in heaven. So, although you see a godly man
in a poor, miserable, low, despised condition, for the things of this world,
yet he is fixed in heaven, in the region of heaven: "Who hath raised us
up," saith the apostle, "and made us sit together in heavenly places
in Christ Jesus."¡XCharles Bradbury's "Cabinet of Jewels,"
1785.
Verse 3. To sum up
all, we must know that we neither do nor can love the godly so well as we
should do; but all is well if we would love them better, and do like ourselves
the less because we do love them no more, and that this is common or usual with
me, then I am right: so that we are to love the godly first because God
commands it, because they are good; and in these cases our faith doth work by
our love to good men. Next, when I am at the worst, like a sick sheep, I care
not for the company of other sheep, but do mope in a corner by myself; but yet
I do not delight in the society of goats or dogs, it proves that I have some
good blood left in me; it is because for the present I take little or no
delight in myself or in my God, that I delight no better in the godly: yet as I
love myself for all that, so I may be said to love them for all this. Man
indeed is a sociable creature, a company-keeper by nature when he is himself;
and if we not associate ourselves with the ungodly, though for the present, and
care not much to show ourselves amongst the godly, the matter is not much, it
is a sin of infirmity, not a fruit of iniquity. The disciples went from Christ,
but they turned not to the other side as Judas did, who did forsake his Master,
and joined himself to his Master's enemies, but they got together. Some say
that Demas did repent (which I think to be the truth), and then he did
"embrace this present world," but for the present fit: put case he
did forsake Paul; so did better men than he. Indeed as long as a man hath his
delights about him, he will embrace the delights of this present world, or the
delights which belong to the world to come; join with Paul, or cleave to the
world. In this temptation our stay is, first, that we care not for the company
of goats; next, that as we should, so we would, and desire that we may take
delight in the company of sheep, to count them the only excellent men in
the world, in whom is all our delight. The conclusion is, that to love
the saints as saints, is a sound proof of faith; the reason is, for that we
cannot master our affections by love, but first we must master our
understandings by faith,¡XRichard Capel, 1586-1656.
Verse 4. "Drink
offerings of blood." The Gentiles used to offer, and sometimes drink
part of the blood of their sacrifices, whether of beasts or of men, as either
of them were sacrificed.¡XMatthew Poole.
Verse 4. "Drink
offerings of blood." It is uncertain whether this expression is to be
understood literally to be blood, which the heathen actually mixed in their libations
when they bound themselves to the commission of some dreadful deed, or whether
their libations are figuratively called offerings of blood to denote the horror
with which the writer regarded them.¡XGeorge R. Noyes, in loc. 1846.
Verse 4 (last
clause). A sin rolled under the tongue becomes soft and supple, and the
throat is so short and slippery a passage, that insensibly it may slide down
from the mouth into the stomach; and contemplative wantonness quickly turns
into practical uncleanness.¡XThomas Fuller.
Verse 5. "The
Lord is the portion of mine inheritance." If the Lord be thy portion,
then thou mayest conclude, omnipotentcy is my portion, immensity,
all-sufficiency, etc. Say not, If so, then I should be omnipotent, etc. There
is a vast difference betwixt identity and interest, betwixt conveying of a
title, and transmutation of nature. A friend gives thee an invaluable treasure,
and all the securities of it that thou canst desire; wilt thou deny it is thine
because thou art not changed into its nature? The attributes are thine, as thy
inheritance, as thy lands are thine; not because thou art changed into their
nature, but because the title is conveyed to thee, it is given thee, and
improved for thy benefit. If another manage it, who can do it with greater
advantage to thee than to thyself, it is no infringement of thy title. . . . .
The Lord is our portion, and this is incomparably more than if we had
heaven and earth; for all the earth is but as a point compared with the
vastness of the heavens, and the heavens themselves are but a point compared
with God. What a large possession have we then! There is no confiscation of it,
no banishment from it. Our portion fills heaven and earth, and is infinitely
above heaven and below earth, and beyond both. Poor men boast and pride
themselves of a kingdom, but we have more than all the kingdoms of the world
and the glory thereof. Christ has given us more than the devil could offer
him.¡XDavid Clarkson.
Verse 5. "Portion
of mine inheritance and of my cup," may contain an allusion to the
daily supply of food, and also to the inheritance of Levi. Deuteronomy 18:1,
2.¡X"Critical and Explanatory Pocket Bible." By A. R.
Fausset and B. M. Smith, 1867.
Verses 5, 6. "The
Lord is the portion of mine inheritance: the lines are fallen unto me in
pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly heritage." "Blessed are the
people that are in such a case; yea, blessed are the people whose God is the
Lord." No greater mercy can be bestowed upon any people, family, or person
than this, for God to dwell among them. If we value this mercy according to the
excellence and worth of that which is bestowed, it is the greatest; if we value
it according to the good will of him that gives it, it will appear likewise to
be the greatest favour. The greatness of the good will of God in giving himself
to be our acquaintance, is evident in the nature of the gift. A man may give
his estate to them to whom his love is not very large, but he never gives
himself but upon strong affection. God gives abundantly to all the works of his
hands; he causeth the sun to shine upon the evil and upon the good, and the
rain to descend upon the just and the unjust; but it cannot be conceived that
he should give himself to be a portion, a friend, father, husband, but in abundance
of love. Whosoever therefore shall refuse acquaintance with God, slighteth the
greatest favour that ever God did bestow upon man. Now, consider what a high
charge this is; to abuse such a kindness from God is an act of the greatest
vileness. David was never so provoked as when the king of Ammon abused his
kindness, in his ambassadors, after his father's death. And God is highly
provoked when his greatest mercies, bestowed in the greatest love, are rejected
and cast away. What could God give more and better than himself?. . . . . Ask
David what he thinks of God; he was well acquainted with him, he dwelt in his
house, and by his good will would never be out of his more immediate presence
and company; enquire, I pray, what he found amiss in him. That you may know his
mind the better, he hath left it upon record in more than one or two places,
what a friend he hath had of God. "The lines are fallen unto me in
pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly heritage." Why, what is that you
boast of so much, O David? Have not others had kingdoms as well as you? No,
that's not the thing; a crown is one of the least jewels in my cabinet: "The
Lord is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup."¡XJames
Janeway.
Verses 5, 6. Take
notice not only of the mercies of God, but of God in the mercies. Mercies are
never so savoury as when they savour of a Saviour.¡XRalph Venning,
1620-1673.
Verse 6. "The
lines are fallen unto me in pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly
heritage." Bitter herbs will go down very well, when a man has such
delicious "meats which the world knows not of." The sense of our
Father's love is like honey at the end of every rod; it turns stones into
bread, and water into wine, and the valley of trouble into a door of hope; it
makes the biggest evils seem as if they were none, or better than none; for it
makes our deserts like the garden of the Lord, and when we are upon the cross
for Christ, as if we were in paradise with Christ. Who would quit his duty for
the sake of suffering, that hath such a relief under it? Who would not rather
walk in truth, when he hath such a cordial to support him, than by the conduct
of fleshly wisdom, to take any indirect or irregular method for his own
deliverance?¡XTimothy Cruso.
Verse 6. "The
lines." Probably alluding to the division of the land by lot, and the
measuring of it off by ropes and lines. David believed in an overruling destiny
which fixed the bounds of his abode, and his possessions; he did more, he was
satisfied with all the appointment of the predestinating God.¡XC. H. S.
Verse 7. "I
will bless the Lord, who hath given me counsel." The Holy Ghost is a
spirit of counsel, powerfully instructing and convincingly teaching how to act
and walk, for he directs us to set right steps, and to walk with a right foot,
and thereby prevents us of many a sin, by seasonable instruction set on upon
our hearts with a strong hand; as Isaiah 8:11. For, as the same prophet says
(Isaiah 11:2), he is the spirit of counsel and of might. Of counsel to direct;
of might, to strengthen the inner man. Such he was to Christ the Head, of whom
it is there spoken. For instance, in the agony (on the determination of which
our salvation depended), and conflict in the garden, when he prayed, "Let
this cup pass," it was this good Spirit that counselled him to die; and he
blessed God for it: "I bless the Lord that hath given me counsel." It
was that counsel that in that case caused his heart to say, "Not my will,
but thine."¡XThomas Goodwin.
Verse 7. "My
reins." Common experience shows that the workings of the mind,
particularly the passions of joy, grief, and fear, have a very remarkable
effect of the reins or kidneys, and from their retired situation in the body,
and their being hid in fat, they are often used in Scripture to denote the most
secret working of the soul and affections.¡XJohn Parkhurst.
Verse 7. "My
reins also instruct me in the night seasons." This shows that God,
who, he says, was always present to him, had given him some admonition in his
dreams, or at least his waking thoughts by night, from whence he gathered a
certain assurance of his recovery; possibly he might be directed to some
remedy. Antonine thanks the gods for directing him in his sleep to remedies.¡XZ.
Mudge, in loc, 1744.
Verse 7. "My
reins also instruct me in the night seasons." We have a saying among
ourselves, that "the pillow is the best counsellor;" and there is
much truth in the saying, especially if we have first committed ourselves in
prayer to God, and taken a prayerful spirit with us to our bed. In the quiet of
its silent hours, undisturbed by the passions, and unharassed by the conflicts
of the world, we can commune with our own heart, and be instructed and guarded
as to our future course even "in the night season." David
especially seems to have made these seasons sources of great profit as well as
delight. Sometimes he loved to meditate upon God, as he lay upon his bed; and
it was no doubt as he meditated on the Lord's goodness, and on the way by which
he had led him, that he was, as it were, constrained, even at midnight, to
arise and pray. While, therefore, we acknowledge the pillow to be a good
counsellor, let us with David here acknowledge also that it is the Lord who
gives the counsel, and sends the instruction in the night season.¡XBurton
Bouchier.
Verse 8. "I
have set the Lord always before me." David did not by fits and starts
set the Lord before him; but he "always" set the Lord before
him in his course; he had his eye upon the Lord, and so much the Hebrew word
imports: I have equally set the Lord before me; that is the force of the
original word, that is, I have set the Lord before me, at one time as well as
another, without any irregular affections or passions, etc. In every place, in
every condition, in every company, in every employment, and in every enjoyment,
I have set the Lord equally before me; and this raised him, and this will raise
any Christian, by degrees, to a very great height of holiness.¡XThomas
Brooks.
Verse 8. "I
have set the Lord always before me." Hebrew, I have equally set,
or proposed. The apostle translateth it, "I foresaw the Lord always before
my face." Acts 2:25. I set the eye of my faith full upon him, and suffer
it not to take to other things; I look him in the face, oculo irretorto,
as the eagle looketh upon the sun; and oculo adamantino, with an eye of
adamant, which turns only to one point: so here, I have equally set the Lord
before me, without irregular affections and passions. And this was one of
those lessons that his reins had taught him, that the Holy Spirit had
dictated unto him.¡XJohn Trapp.
Verse 8. "I
have set the Lord ALWAYS before me." Like as the gnomon doth
ever behold the north star, whether it be closed and shut up in a coffer of
gold, silver, or wood, never losing its nature; so a faithful Christian man,
whether he abound in wealth or be pinched with poverty, whether he be of high
or low degree in this world, ought continually to have his faith and hope
surely built and grounded upon Christ, and to have his heart and mind fast
fixed and settled in him, and to follow him through thick and thin, through
fire and water, through wars and peace, through hunger and cold, through
friends and foes, through a thousand perils and dangers, through the surges and
waves of envy, malice, hatred, evil speeches, railing sentences, contempt of
the world, flesh, and devil, and even in death itself, be it never so bitter,
cruel, and tyrannical, yet never to lose sight and view of Christ, never to
give over faith, hope, and trust in him.¡XRobert Cawdray.
Verse 8. "I
have set the Lord always before me." By often thinking of God, the
heart will be enticed into desires after him. Isaiah 26:8. "The desire of
our soul is to thy name, and to the remembrance of thee;" and see what
follows, verse 9: "With my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea,
with my spirit within me will I seek thee early." Love sets the soul on
musing, and from musing to praying. Meditation is prayer in bullion, prayer in
the ore¡Xsoon melted and run into holy desires. The laden cloud soon drops into
rain; the piece charged soon goes off when fire is put to it. A meditating soul
is in proxima potentia to prayer.¡XWilliam Gurnall.
Verse 8. "I
have set the Lord always before me," etc. He that by faith eyes God
continually as his protector in trouble "shall not be moved"
with any evil that he suffers, and he that eyes God by faith as his pattern in
holiness, shall not be moved from doing that which is good. This thought¡Xthe
Lord is at our right hand¡Xkeeps us from turning either to the right hand or
to the left. It is said of Enoch, that "he walked with God" (Genesis
5:22), and though the history of his life be very short, yet 'tis said of him a
second time (verse 24), that "he walked with God." He walked so much
with God that he walked as God: he did not "walk" (which kind
of walking the apostle reproves, 1 Corinthians 3:3), "as men."
He walked so little like the world, that his stay was little in the world.
"He was not," saith the text, "for God took him." He took
him from the world to himself, or, as the author to the Hebrews reports it,
"he was translated that he should not see death, for he had this
testimony, that he pleased God."¡XJoseph Caryl.
Verse 8. "Because
he is at my right hand," etc. Of ourselves we stand not at any time,
by his power we may overcome at all times. And when we are sorest assaulted he
is ever ready at our right hand to support and stay us that we shall not
fall. He hath well begun, and shall happily go forward in his work, who hath in
truth begun. For true grace well planted in the heart, how weak soever, shall
hold out for ever. All total decays come from this¡Xthat the heart was never
truly mollified, nor grace deeply and kindly rooted therein.¡XJohn Ball.
Verse 8. "He
is at my right hand." This phrase of speech is borrowed from those
who, when they take upon them the patronage, defence, or tuition of any, will
set them on their right hand, as in place of most safeguard. Experience
confirmeth this in children, who in any imminent danger shroud and shelter
themselves under their father's arms or hands, as under a sufficient buckler.
Such was the estate of the man of God, as here appeareth, who was hemmed and
hedged in with the power of God, both against present evils, and dangers to
come.¡XRichard Greenham.
Verse 8. Even as a
column or pillar is sometimes on thy right hand, and sometimes on thy left
hand, because thou dost change thy standing, sitting or walking, for it is
unmovable and keepeth one place; so God is sometimes favourable and bountiful
unto thee, and sometimes seemeth to be wroth and angry with thee, because thou
dost fall from virtue to vice, from obedience and humility to pride and
presumption; for in the Lord there is no change, no, not so much as any shadow
of change. He is immutable, always one and everlasting. If thou wilt bend
thyself to obedience, and to a virtuous and godly life, thou shalt ever have
him a strong rock, whereupon thou mayst boldly build a castle and tower of
defence. He will be unto thee a mighty pillar, bearing up heaven and earth,
whereto thou mayst lean and not be deceived, wherein thou mayst trust and not
be disappointed. He will ever be at thy right hand, that thou shalt not fall.
He will take thy part, and will mightily defend thee against all enemies of thy
body and of thy soul; but if thou wilt shake hands with virtue, and bid it
adieu and farewell, and, forsaking the ways of God, wilt live as thou list, and
follow thy own corruption, and make no conscience of aught thou doest, defiling
and blemishing thyself with all manner of sin and iniquity, then be sure the Lord
will appear unto thee in his fury and indignation. From his justice and
judgments none shall ever be able to deliver thee.¡XRobert Cawdray.
Verse 9. "My
heart is glad." Men may for a time be hearers of the gospel, men may
for order's sake pray, sing, receive the sacraments; but if it be without joy,
will not that hypocrisy in time break out? Will they not begin to be weary?
Nay, will they not be as ready to hear any other doctrine? Good things cannot
long find entertainment in our corruptions, unless the Holy Ghost hath changed
us from our old delights to conceive pleasure in these things.¡XRichard
Greenham.
Verse 9. "My
heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth." His inward joy was not able to
contain itself. We testify our pleasure on lower occasions, even at the
gratification of our senses; when our ear is filled with harmonious melody,
when our eye is fixed upon admirable and beauteous objects, when our smell is
recreated with agreeable odours, and our taste also by the delicacy and
rareness of provisions; and much more will our soul show its delight, when its
faculties, that are of a more exquisite constitution, meet with things that are
in all respects agreeable and pleasant to them; and in God they meet with all
those: with his light our understanding is refreshed, and so is our will with
his goodness and his love.¡XTimothy Rogers.
Verse 9. "Therefore
my heart is glad," etc. That is, I am all over in very good plight, as
well as heart can wish, or require; I do over-abound exceedingly with joy;
"God forgive me mine unthankfulness and unworthiness of so great
glory" (as that martyr said): "In all the days of my life I was never
so merry as now I am in this dark dungeon," etc. Wicked men rejoice in
appearance, and not in heart (2 Corinthians 5:12); their joy is but skin deep,
their mirth frothy and flashy, such as wetteth the mouth, but warmeth not the
heart. But David is totus totus, quantus quantus exultabundus; his heart,
glory, flesh, (answerable, as some think to that of the apostle, 1
Thessalonians 5:23; spirit, soul, and body) were all overjoyed.¡XJohn
Trapp.
Verse 9. "My
flesh shall rest in hope." If a Jew pawned his bed-clothes, God
provided mercifully that it should be restored before night: "For,"
saith he, "that is his covering: wherein shall he sleep?" Exodus
22:27. Truly, hope is the saint's covering, wherein he wraps himself, when he
lays his body down to sleep in the grave: "My flesh," saith
David, "shall rest in hope." O Christian, bestir thyself to
redeem thy hope before this sun of thy temporal life goes down upon thee, or
else thou art sure to lie down in sorrow. A sad going to the bed of the grave
he hath who hath no hope of a resurrection to life.¡XWilliam Gurnall.
Verse 9. "My
flesh shall rest in hope." That hope which is grounded on the word,
gives rest to the soul; 'tis an anchor to keep it steady. Hebrews 6:13. Which
shows the unmovableness of that which our anchor is fastened to. The promise
sustains our faith, and our faith is that which supports us. He that hopes in
the Word as David did (Psalm 119:81), lays a mighty stress upon it; as Samson
did when he leaned upon the pillars of the house, so as to pull it down upon
the Philistines. A believer throws the whole weight of all his affairs and
concernments, temporal, spiritual, and eternal, upon the promises of God, like
a man resolved to stand or fall with them. He ventures himself, and all that
belongs to him, entirely upon this bottom, which is in effect to say, if they
will not bear me up, I am content to sink; I know that there shall be a
performance of those things which have been told me from the Lord, and
therefore I will incessantly look for it.¡XTimothy Cruso.
Verse 10. "For
thou wilt not leave my soul in hell," etc. The title of this golden
text may be¡XThe embalming of the dead saints: the force whereof is to
free the souls from dereliction in the state of death, and to secure the bodies
of God's saints from corruption in the grave. It is the art which I desire to
learn, and at this time, teach upon this sad occasion [A Funeral Sermon],
even the preparing of this confection against our burials.¡XGeorge Hughes,
1642.
Verse 10. Many of
the elder Reformers held that our Lord in soul actually descended into hell,
according to some of them to suffer there as our surety, and according to
others to make a public triumph over death and hell. This idea was almost
universally, and as we believe, most properly repudiated by the Puritans. To
prove this fact, it may be well to quote from Corbet's witty itinerary of,
"Foure
clerkes of Oxford, doctors two, and two
That would be doctors."
He
laments the secularisation of church appurtenances at Banbury, by the Puritans,
whom he described as,
¡X¡X¡X¡X¡X¡X¡X"They
which tell
That Christ hath nere descended into Hell,
But to the grave."
¡XC. H. S. The quotation is from Richard Corbet's Poems, 1632.
Verse 10. "My
soul in hell." Christ in soul descended into hell, when as our surety
he submitted himself to bear those hellish sorrows (or equivalent to them),
which we were bound by our sins to suffer for ever. His descension is his
projection of himself into the sea of God's wrath conceived for our sins, and
his ingression into most unspeakable straits and torments in his soul, which we
should else have suffered for ever in hell. This way of Christ's descending into
hell is expressly uttered in the person of David, as the type of Christ. Psalm
86:13; 116:3; 69:1-3. Thus the prophet Isaiah saith, "His soul was made an
offering." Isaiah 53:10. And this I take it David means, when he said of
Christ, "Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell." Psalm 16; Acts
2. And thus Christ descended into hell when he was alive, not when he was dead.
Thus his soul was in hell when in the garden he did sweat blood, and on the
cross when he cried so lamentably, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken
me?" Matthew 26:38.¡XNicholas Byfield's "Exposition of the
Creed," 1676.
Verse 10. "In
hell." Sheol here, as hades in the New Testament,
signifies the state of the dead, the separate state of souls after death, the
invisible world of souls, where Christ's soul was, though it did not remain
there, but on the third day returned to its body again. It seems best of all to
interpret this word of the grave as it is rendered; Genesis 42:38; Isaiah
38:18.¡XJohn Gill.
Verse 10. "Thine
Holy One." Holiness preserves the soul from dereliction, in the
state of death, and the body of the saint from corruption in the grave. If it
be desired by any that doubt of it, to see the clear issue of this from the
text, I shall guide them to read this text with a great accent upon that term, "Thine
Holy One," that they may take special notice of it, even the quality
of that man exempted from these evils. In this the Spirit of God puts an
emphasis on holiness, as counter-working and prevailing over death and
the grave. It is this and nothing but this, that keeps the man, dead and
buried, from desertion in death, and corruption in the grave.¡XGeorge Hughes.
Verse 10. The great
promise to Christ is, that though he took a corruptible body upon him, yet he
should "not see corruption," that is, partake of
corruption: corruption should have no communion with, much less power over
him.¡XJoseph Caryl.
Verse 10. Quoted by
the apostle Peter (Acts 2:27); on which Hackett (Com. in loc.)
observes:¡X"The sense then may be expressed thus: Thou wilt not give me up
as prey to death; he shall not have power over me, to dissolve the body and
cause it to return to dust."
Verse 11. In this
verse are four things observable:
1.
A Guide, THOU.
2.
A Traveller, ME.
3.
A Way, THE PATH.
4.
The End, LIFE, described after. For that which follows is but the
description of this life.
This
verse is a proper subject for a meditation. For, all three are solitary.
The guide is but one, the traveller, one; the way one; and
the life, the only one. To meditate well on this is to bring all
together; and at last make them all but one. Which that we may do, let us
first seek our Guide.
The
Guide. Him we find named in the first verse¡XJehovah. Here we may begin, as
we ought in all holy exercises, with adoration. For "unto him all
knees shall bow;" nay, unto his name. For holy is his name. Glory
be to thee, O God! He is Deus, therefore holy; he is Deus
fortis, therefore able. "For the strength of the hills is
his;" and if there be a way on earth, he can "show"
it; for in his hands are all the corners of the earth. But is he willing
to "show?" Yes, though he be Deus, holy (which is a
word terrible to poor flesh and blood), yet he is Deus meus, my
holiness. That takes away servile fear. He is meus, we have a property
in him; and he is willing: "Thou wilt show," etc. And that you
may know he will guide, David shows a little above, how diligently he
will guide. First, he will go before, he will lead the way himself: if I
can but follow, I shall be sure to go right. And he that hath a guide before
him, and will not follow, is worthy to be left behind. But say, I am willing, I
do desire to go, and I do follow: what if, through faintness in the long way, I
fall often? or, for want of care step out of the way, shall I not then be left
behind? Fear not; for "He is at my right hand, so that I shall not
slip." Verse 8. This is some comfort indeed. But we are so soon weary in
this way, and do fall and err so often, that it would weary the patience of a
good guide to lead us but one day. Will he bear with us, and continue to
the end? Yes, always; or this text deceives us; for all this is found in the
eighth verse. We must have him or none; for he is one, and the only one.
So confessed Asaph: "Whom have I on earth but thee? Seek this good
Guide, he is easy to be found: "Seek, and ye shall find." You
shall find that he is first holy; secondly, able; thirdly, willing;
fourthly, diligent; and fifthly, constant. O my soul! to follow
him, and he will make thee both able to follow to the end; and holy
in the end.
The
traveller. Having found the Guide, we shall not long seek for one
that wants him; for, see, here is a man out of his way. And that will
soon appear if we consider his condition. For, he is a stranger ("Thou
wilt show me"); and what am I? "I am a stranger, and a sojourner,
as all my fathers were," says he, in another place. But this was in the
old time under the law; what, are we, their sons in the gospel, any other? Peter
tells us no: that we are strangers and pilgrims too; that is, travellers. We
travel, as being out of our country; and we are strangers to those we
converse with. For neither the natives be our friends, nor anything we possess
truly our own. It is time we had animum revertendi; and surely so we
have if we could but pray on the way, Converte nos Domine. But it is so
long since we came hither, we have forgot the way home: obliti sunt montis
mei. Yet still we are travelling; and, we think, homewards. For all hope
well: oculi omnium sperant in te. But right, like pilgrims, or
rather wanderers. For we scarce know if we go right; and, what is worse, have
little care to enquire.
"Me."
David still keeps the singular number. As there is but one guide, so he
speaks in the person but of one traveller. There is somewhat,
peradventure, in that. It is to show his confidence. The Lord's prayer
is in the plural, but the creed is in the singular. We may pray that God would
guide all; but we can be confident for none but ourselves. "Thou
wilt show," or thou dost, or hast, as some translate: all is but to
show particular confidence. "Thou wilt show me;" me, not us,
a number indefinite wherein I may be one; but me in particular
that am out of the way; that am myself alone; that must walk in "the
path" alone. Either I must follow, or go before others; I must work
for myself alone; believe for myself alone; and be saved by one alone. The
way in this text that I must walk is but one; nay, it is but a "path"
where but one can go: this is no highway, but a way of sufferance by
favour: it is none of ours. It is no road; you cannot hurry here, or
gallop by troops: it is but semita, a small footpath for one to
go alone in. Nay, as it is a way for one alone, so it is a lonely
way: preparate vias ejus in solitudine, saith John, and he knew which way
God went, who is our Guide in solitudine: there is the sweetness of
solitariness, the comforts of meditation. For God is never more familiar with
man than when man is in solitudine, alone, in his path by
himself. Christ himself came thus, all lonely; without troop, or noise,
and ever avoided the tumultuous multitude, though they would have made him a
king. And he never spake to them but in parables; but to his that sought
him, in solitudine, in private, he spake plain; and so doth he still
love to do to the soul, in private and particular. Therefore well said David, "Thou
wilt show me," in particular, and in the singular number. But how
shall I know that I, in particular, shall be taught and showed this way?
This prophet, that had experience, will tell us: mites docebit, the humble
he will teach. Psalm 25:9. If thou canst humble thyself, thou mayst be sure
to see thy guide; Christ hath crowned this virtue with a blessing:
"Blessed are the meek;" for them he will call to him and teach. But
thou must be humble then. For heaven is built like our churches, high-roofed
within, but with a strait low gate; they then that enter there must stoop, ere
they can see God. Humility is the mark at every cross, whereby thou shalt know
if thou be in the way: if any be otherwise minded, God also shall reveal it
unto you, for, "Thou wilt show."
"The
path." But let us now see what he will show us: "The
path." We must know, that as men have many paths out of their
highway¡Xthe world¡Xbut they all end in destruction; so God hath many paths
out of his highway, the word, but they all end in salvation. Let us oppose ours
to his (as indeed they are opposite), and see how they agree. Ours are
not worth marking, his marked with an attendite, to begin withal;
ours bloody, his unpolluted; ours crooked, his
straight; ours lead to hell, his to heaven. Have not we strayed
then? We had need to turn and take another path, and that quickly: we may well
say, semitas nostrus,. . . vis tus. Well, here is the Book, and
here are the ways before you; and he will show you. Here is semita
mandatorum, in the one hundred-and-nineteenth Psalm, verse thirty-five:
here is semita pacifica (Proverbs 3:17); here is semita aequitatis
(Proverbs 4:11); here is semita justitiae (Psalm 23:3); here is semita
judicii (Proverbs 17:23); and many others. These are, every one of them, God's
ways; but these are somewhat too many and too far off: we must seek the way
where all these meet, and that will bring us into "the path;"
these are many, but I will show you yet "a more excellent way," saith
Paul. 1 Corinthians 12:31.
We
must begin to enter at via mandatorum; for till then we are in the dark
and can distinguish no ways, whether they be good or bad. But there we
shall meet with a lantern and a light in it. Thy commandment is a
lantern, and thy law a light. Proverbs 6:23. Carry this with thee (as a good
man should, lex Dei in corde ejus); and it will bring thee into the way.
And see how careful our Guide is; for lest the wind should blow out this
light, he hath put it into a lantern to preserve it. For the fear, or sanction,
of the "commandments," preserves the memory of the law in our hearts,
as a lantern doth a light burning within it. The law is the light, and the
commandment the lantern. So that neither flattering Zephyrus, nor blustering
Boreas shall be able to blow it out, so long as the fear of the sanction keeps
it in. This is lucerna pedibus (Psalm 119:105); and will not only show
thee where thou shalt tread, but what pace thou shalt keep. When thou hast this
light, take Jeremy's counsel; enquire for semita antiqua, before thou
goest any further. "Stand (saith he) in the ways, and behold and ask for
the old way; which is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest
for your souls." This will bring you some whither where you may rest
awhile. And whither is that? Trace this path, and you shall find this
"old way" to run quite through all the Old Testament till it end in
the New, the gospel of peace, and there is rest. And that this is so
Paul affirms. For the law, which is the "old way," is but the
pedagogue to the gospel. This then is "a more excellent way" than the
law, the ceremonies whereof in respect of this were called "beggarly
rudiments." When we come there, we shall find the way pleasant and very light,
so that we shall plainly see before us that very path, that only
path, "the path of life" (semita vitae), in which the
gospel ends, as the law ends in the gospel. Now what is semita vitae
that we seek for? "All the ways of God are truth," saith
David. Psalm 119:151. He doth not say they are verae, or veritates,
but veritas; all one truth. So, all the ways of God end in one
truth. Semita vitae, then, is truth. And so sure a way to
life is truth, that John says, he had "no greater joy: than to hear
that his sons "walked in truth." 3 John 1:3. "No greater
joy:" for it brings them certainly to a joy, than which there is none
greater. Via veritatis is "the gospel of truth," but semita
vitae is the truth itself. Of these, Esay prophesied, "et erit ibi
semita et via," etc. "There shall be a path, and a way;" and
the way shall be called holy, the proper epithet of the gospel: "the
holy gospel," that is the way. But the path is the
epitome of this way (called in our text, by way of excellence, "the
path," in the singular); than which there is no other. "The
gospel of your salvation," saith Paul, is "the word of truth;"
and "thy word is truth," saith our Saviour to his Father. Truth,
then, is "the path of life," for it is the epitome of the
gospel, which is the way. This is that truth which Pilate (unhappy man)
asked after, but never stayed to be resolved of. He himself is the word; the
word is the truth; and the truth is "the path of life,"
trodden by all the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, martyrs and confessors, that
ever went to heaven before us. The abstract of the gospel, the gate of heaven, semita
vitae, "the path of life," even Jesus Christ the righteous, who
hath beaten the way for us, gone himself before us, and left us the prints of
his footsteps for us to follow, where he himself sits ready to receive us. So,
the law is the light, the gospel is the way, and Christ is "the path of
life."¡XWilliam Austin, 1637.
Verse 11. It is
Christ's triumphing in the consideration of his exaltation, and taking pleasure
in the fruits of his sufferings: "Thou wilt show me the paths of
life." God hath now opened the way to paradise, which was stopped up
by a flaming sword, and made the path plain by admitting into heaven the head of
the believing world. This is a part of the joy of the soul of Christ; he hath
now a fulness of joy, a satisfying delight instead of an overwhelming sorrow; a
"fulness of joy," not only some sparks and drops as he had now and
then in his debased condition; and that in the presence of his Father. His soul
is fed and nourished with a perpetual vision of God, in whose face he beholds
no more frowns, no more designs of treating him as a servant but such smiles
that shall give a perpetual succession of joy to him, and fill his soul with
fresh and pure flames. Pleasures they are, pleasantness in comparison whereof
the greatest joys in this life are anguish and horrors. His soul hath joys
without mixture, pleasures without number, a fulness without want, a constancy
without interruption, and a perpetuity without end.¡XStephen Charnock.
Verse 11. "In
thy presence," etc. To the blessed soul resting in Abraham's bosom,
there shall be given an immortal, impassible, resplendent, perfect, and
glorious body. Oh, what a happy meeting will this be, what a sweet greeting
between the soul and the body, the nearest and dearest acquaintance that ever
were! What a welcome will that soul give to her beloved body! Blessed be thou
(will she say), for thou hast aided me to the glory I have enjoyed since I
parted with thee; blessed art thou that sufferedst thyself to be mortified,
giving "thy members as weapons of righteousness unto God." Romans
6:13. Cheer up thyself, for now the time of labour is past, and the time of rest
is come. Thou wast sown and buried in the dust of earth with ignominy, but now
raised in glory; sown in weakness, but raised in power; sown a natural body,
but raised a spiritual body; sown in corruption, but raised in incorruption. 1
Corinthians 15:43. O my dear companion and familiar, we took sweet counsel
together, we two have walked together as friends on God's house (Psalm 55:14).
for when I prayed inwardly, thou didst attend my devotions with bowed knees and
lifted-up hands outwardly. We two have been fellow labourers in the works of
the Lord, we two have suffered together, and now we two shall ever reign
together; I will enter again into thee, and so both of us together will enter
into our Master's joy, where we shall have pleasures at his right hand for
evermore.
The
saints, entered as it were into the chambers of God's presence, shall have joy
to their ears in hearing their own commendating and praise, "Well done,
good and faithful servant" (Matthew 25:21); and in hearing the divine
language of heavenly Canaan; for our bodies shall be vera et viva,
perfect like Christ's glorious body, who did both hear other and speak himself
after his resurrection, as it is apparent in the gospel's history. Now, then,
if the words of the wise spoken in due places be like "apples of gold with
pictures of silver" (Proverbs 25:11). if the mellifluous speech of Origen,
the silver trumpet of Hillary, the golden mouth of Chrysostom, bewitched as it
were their auditory with exceeding great delight; if the gracious eloquence of
heathen orators, whose tongues were never touched with a coal from God's altar,
could steal away the hearts of their hearers, and carry them up and down
whither they would, what a "fulness of joy" will it be to hear
not only the sanctified, but also the glorified tongues of saints and angels in
the kingdom of glory? . . . . . Bonaventure fondly reports at all adventure,
that St. Francis hearing an angel a little while playing on a harp, was so
moved with extraordinary delight, that he thought himself in another world. Oh!
what a "fulness of joy" will it be to hear more than twelve
legions of angels, accompanied with a number of happy saints which no man is
able to number, all at once sing together, "Hallelujah, holy, holy, holy,
Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come." "And every
creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as
are in the sea, and all them that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, and
honour, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and
unto the Lamb for ever and ever." Revelation 4:8; 5:13. If the voices of
mortal men, and the sound of cornet, trumpet, harp, sackbut, psaltery,
dulcimer, and other well-tuned instruments of music, passing through our dull
ears in this world be so powerful, that all our affections are diversely
transported according to the divers kinds of harmony, then how shall we be
ravished in God's presence when we shall hear heavenly airs with heavenly ears!
Concerning
"fulness of joy" to the rest of the senses, I find a very
little or nothing in holy Scriptures, and therefore seeing God's Spirit will
not have a pen to write, I may not have a tongue to speak. Divines in general
affirm, that the smelling, and taste, and feeling, shall have joy
proportionable to their blessed estate, for this corruptible must put on
incorruption, and this mortal immortality; the body which is sown in weakness
is to be raised in power; it is sown a natural body, but it is raised a
spiritual body; buried in dishonour, raised in glory; that is, capable of good,
and, as being impassible, no way subject to suffer evil, insomuch that it
cannot be hurt if it should be cast into hell fire, no more than Shadrach,
Meshech, and Abednego, were hurt in the burning oven. In one word, God is not
only to the souls, but also to the bodies of the saints, all in all things;
a glass to their sight, honey to their taste, music to their hearing, balm to
their smelling.¡XJohn Boys.
Verse 11. "In
thy presence is fulness of joy." The saints on earth are all but viatores,
wayfaring men, wandering pilgrims far from home; but the saints in heaven are comprehensores,
safely arrived at the end of their journey. All we here present for the
present, are but mere strangers in the midst of danger, we are losing ourselves
and losing our lives in the land of the dying. But ere long, we may find our
lives and ourselves again in heaven with the Lord of life, being found of him
in the land of the living. If when we die, we be in the Lord of life, our souls
are sure to be bound up in the bundle of life, that so when we live again we
may be sure to find them in the life of the Lord. Now we have but a dram, but a
scruple, but a grain of happiness, to an ounce, to a pound, to a thousand
weight of heaviness; now we have but a drop of joy to an ocean of sorrow; but a
moment of ease to an age of pain; but then (as St. Austin very sweetly in his Soliloquies),
we shall have endless ease, without any pain, true happiness without any
heaviness, the greatest measure of felicity without the least of misery, the
fullest measure of joy that may be, without any mixture of grief. Here
therefore (as St. Gregory the divine adviseth us), let us ease our heaviest
loads of sufferings, and sweeten our bitterest cups of sorrows with the
continual meditation and constant expectation of the fulness of joy in the
presence of God, and of the pleasure at his right hand for evermore.
"In
thy presence, IS," etc., there it is, not there it was, nor
there it may be, nor there it will be, but there it is, there it is
without cessation or intercision, there it always hath been, and is, and must
be. It is an assertion aeternae veritatis, that is always true, it may
at any time be said that there it is. "In thy presence is
the fulness of joy;" and herein consists the consummation of felicity; for
what does any man here present wish for more than joy? And what measure of joy
can any man wish for more than fulness of joy? And what kind of fulness would
any man wish for rather than this fulness, the fulness kat exochn? And
where would any man wish to enjoy this fulness of joy rather than in the
presence of God, which is the ever-flowing and the over-flowing fountain of
joy? And when would any man wish for this enjoyment of the fulness of joy in
the very fountain of joy rather than presently, constantly, and incessantly?
Now all these desirables are encircled within the compass of the first
remarkable, to make up the consummation of true felicity. "In thy
presence is fulness of joy."¡XThe Consummation of Felicity," by
Edward Willan, 1654.
Verse 11. The human
nature of Christ in heaven hath a double capacity of glory, happiness and
delight; one on that mere fellowship and communion with his Father and the
other persons, through his personal union with the Godhead. Which joy of his in
this fellowship, Christ himself speaks of as to be enjoyed by him: "In
thy presence is fulness of joy, and at thy right hand are pleasures for
evermore." And this is a constant and settled fulness of pleasure,
such as admits not any addition or diminution, but is always one and the same,
and absolute and entire in itself; and of itself alone sufficient for the Son
of God, and heir of all things to live upon, though he should have had no other
comings in of joy and delight from any creature. And this is his natural
inheritance.¡XThomas Goodwin.
Verse 11. "In
thy presence is FULNESS of joy." In heaven they are free from
want; they can want nothing there is unless it be want itself. They may find
the want of evil, but never feel the evil of want. Evil is but the want of
good, and the want of evil is but the absence of want. God is good, and no want
of good can be in God. What want then can be endured in the presence of God,
where no evil is, but all good that the fulness of joy may be enjoyed? Here
some men eat their meat without any hunger, whilst others hunger without any
meat to eat, and some men drink extremely without any thirst, whilst others
thirst extremely without any drink. But in the glorious presence of God, not
any one can be pampered with too much, nor any one be pined with too little.
They that gather much of the heavenly manna, "have nothing over;" and
"they that gather little have no lack." They that are once possessed
of that presence of God, are so possessed with it that they can never feel the
misery of thirst or hunger.¡XEdward Willan.
Verse 11. "Fulness."
Every soul shall there enjoy an infinite happiness, because it shall enjoy an
infinite goodness. And it shall be for ever enjoyed, without disliking of it,
or losing of it, or lacking any of it. Every soul shall enjoy as much good in
that presence, by the presence of that good, as it shall be able to receive, or
to desire to receive. As much as shall make it fully happy. Every one shall be
filled so proportionably full; and every desire in any soul shall be filled so
perfectly in that presence of glory, with the glory of that presence, that no
one shall ever wish for any more, or ever be weary of that it has, or be
willing to change it for any other.¡XEdward Willan.
Verse 11. "Fulness
of joy." When a man comes to the sea, he doth not complain that he
wants his cistern of water: though thou didst suck comfort from thy relations;
yet when thou comest to the ocean, and art with Christ, thou shalt never
complain that thou hast left thy cistern behind. There will be nothing to breed
sorrow in heaven; there shall be joy, and nothing but joy: heaven is set
out by that phrase, "Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." Here joy
enters into us, there we enter into joy; the joys we have here are from heaven;
the joys that we shall have with Christ are without measure and without
mixture. "In thy presence is fulness of joy."¡XThomas
Watson.
Verse 11. "In
thy presence is fulness of joy." In this life our joy is mixed with
sorrow like a prick under the rose. Jacob had joy when his sons returned home
from Egypt with the sacks full of corn, but much sorrow when he perceived the
silver in the sack's mouth. David had much joy in bringing up the ark of God,
but at the same time great sorrow for the breach made upon Uzza. This is the
Lord's great wisdom to temper and moderate our joy. As men of a weak
constitution must have their wine qualified with water for fear of distemper,
so must we in this life (such is our weakness), have our joy mixed with sorrow,
lest we turn giddy and insolent. Here our joy is mixed with fear (Psalm 2),
"Rejoice with trembling;" the women departed from the sepulchre of
our Lord "with fear and great joy." Matthew 28:8. In our regenerate
estate, though we have joy from Christ that is "formed in us," yet
the impression of the terrors of God before the time of our new birth remains
in us; as in a commotion of the sea by a great tempest after a stormy wind hath
ceased, yet the impression of the storm remains and makes an agitation. The
tender mother recovering her young child from danger of a fall hath joy from
the recovery; but with much fear with the impression of the danger; so after we
are recovered here from our dangerous falls by the rich and tender mercies of
our God, sometime prevening us, sometime restoring us; though we rejoice in his
mercy, and in our own recovery out of the snares of Satan, yet in the midst of
our joy the remembrance of former guiltiness and danger do humble our hearts
with much sorrow, and some trepidation of heart. As our joy here is mixed with
fears, so with sorrow also. Sound believers do look up to Christ crucified, and
do rejoice in his incomparable love, that such a person should have died such a
death for such as were enemies to God by sinful inclinations and wicked works;
they look down also upon their own sins that have wounded and crucified the
Lord of glory, and this breaketh the heart, as a widow should mourn, who by her
froward and lewd behaviour hath burst the heart of a kind and loving husband.
The
sound believers look to their small beginnings of grace, and they rejoice in
the work of God's hands; but when they compare it with that original and
primitive righteousness, they mourn bitterly, as the elders of Israel did at
the rebuilding of the temple (Ezra 3:12; "They who had seen the first
house wept." But in heaven our joy will be full, without mixture of sorrow
(John 16:20); "Your sorrow," saith our Lord, "shall be turned
into joy." Then will there be no sorrow for a present trouble, nor present
fear of future troubles. Then their eye will deeply affect their heart; the
sight and knowledge of God the supreme and infinite good will ravish, and take
up all their heart with joy and delight. Peter in the Mount (Matthew 17), was
so affected with that glorious sight, that he forgot both the delights and
troubles that were below; "It is good to be here," said he. How much
more will all worldly troubles and delights be forgot at that soul-satisfying
sight in heaven, which is as far above that of Peter in the Mount, as the third
heaven is above that Mount, and as the uncreated is above the created glory!¡XWilliam
Colvill's "Refreshing Streams," 1655.
Verse 11. "In
thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for
evermore." Mark, for quality, there are pleasures; for
quantity, fulness; for dignity, at God's right hand; for
eternity, for evermore. And millions of years multiplied by millions,
make not up one minute to this eternity of joy that the saints shall have in
heaven. In heaven there shall be no sin to take away your joy, nor no devil to
take away your joy; nor no man to take away your joy. "Your joy no man
taketh from you." John 16:22. The joy of the saints in heaven is never
ebbing, but always flowing to all contentment. The joys of heaven never fade,
never wither, never die, nor never are lessened nor interrupted. The joy of the
saints in heaven is a constant joy, an everlasting joy, in the root and in the
cause, and in the matter of it and in the objects of it. "Their joy lasts
for ever whose objects remain for ever."¡XThomas Brooks.
Verse 11. "Pleasures
for evermore." The soul that is once landed at the heavenly shore is
past all storms. The glorified soul shall be for ever bathing itself in the rivers
of pleasure. This is that which makes heaven to be heaven, "We shall
be ever with the Lord." 1 Thessalonians 4:17. Austin saith, "Lord, I
am content to suffer any pains and torments in this world, if I might see thy
face one day; but alas! were it only a day, then to be ejected heaven, it would
rather be an aggravation of misery;" but this word, "ever with the
Lord," is very accumulative, and makes up the garland of glory: a
state of eternity is a state of security.¡XThomas Watson.
Verse 11. This then
may serve for a ground of comfort to every soul distressed with the tedious
bitterness of this life; for short sorrow here, we shall have eternal joy; for
a little hunger, an eternal banquet; for light sickness and affliction,
everlasting health and salvation; for a little imprisonment, endless liberty;
for disgrace, glory. Instead of the wicked who oppress and afflict them, they
shall have the angels and saints to comfort and solace them, instead of Satan
to torment and tempt them, they shall have Jesus to ravish and affect them.
Joseph's prison shall be turned into a palace; Daniel's lions' den into the
presence of the Lion of the Tribe of Judah; the three children's hot fiery
furnace, into the new Jerusalem of pure gold; David's Gath, into the tabernacle
of the living God.¡XJohn Cragge's "Cabinet of Spiritual Jewels,"
1657.
Verse 11. This
heavenly feast will not have an end, as Ahasuerus's feast had, though it lasted
many days; but "At thy right hand are pleasures for evermore."¡XWilliam
Colvill.
Michtam
of David. Under the title of "The Golden Psalm," Mr. Canon Dale
has published a small volume, which is valuable as a series of good simple
discourses, but ought hardly to have been styled "an exposition." We
have thought it right to give the headings of the chapters into which his
volume is divided, for there is much showiness, and may be some solidity in the
suggestions.
Verse
1. The seeking of the gold. The believer conscious of danger, trusting
in God only for deliverance.
Verses
2, 3. The possessing of the gol.d The believer looking for justification
to the righteousness of God alone, while maintaining personal holiness by
companionship with the saints.
Verses
4, 5. The testing of the gold. The believer finding his present portion,
and expecting his eternal inheritance in the Lord.
Verse
6. The prizing or valuing of the gold. The believer congratulating
himself on the pleasantness of his dwelling and the goodness of his heritage.
Verses
7, 8. The occupying of the gold. The believer seeking instruction from
the counsels of the Lord by night, and realising his promise by day.
Verses
9, 10. The summing or reckoning of the gold. The believer rejoicing and
praising God for the promise of a rest in hope and resurrection into glory.
Verse
11. The perfecting of the gold. The believer realising at God's right
hand the fulness of joy and the pleasures for evermore.
Upon
this suggestive Psalm we offer the following few hints out of many¡X
Verse 1. The prayer
and the plea. The preserver and the truster. The dangers of the saints and the
place of their confidence.
Verse 2. "Thou
art my Lord." The soul's appropriation, allegiance, assurance, and
avowal.
Verses 2, 3. The
influence and sphere of goodness. No profit to God, or departed saints or
sinners, but to living men. Need of promptness, etc.
Verse 2, 3.
Evidences of true faith.
Verse 3. Excellent
of the earth. May be translated noble, wonderful, magnificent. They are so
in their new birth, nature, clothing, attendance, heritage, etc., etc.
Verse 3. "In
whom is all my delight." Why Christians should be objects of our
delight. Why we do not delight in them more. Why they do not delight in us. How
to make our fellowship more delightful.
Verse 3. Collection
sermon for poor believers.
¡XMatthew Henry. Verse 4. Sorrows of idolatry illustrated in
heathens and ourselves.
Verse 4 (Second
clause). The duty of complete separation from sinners in life and lip.
Verse 5. Future
inheritance and present cup found in God. (See exposition.)
Verse 6.
Verse 6 (second
clause).
Verse 6. "A
goodly heritage." That which makes our portion good is¡X
Verse 6. We may put
this acknowledgment into the mouth of¡X
¡XWilliam Jay.
Verse 7. Taking
counsel's opinion. Of whom? Upon what? Why? When? How? What then?
Verse 7. Upward and
inward, or two schools of instruction.
Verse 8. Set the
Lord always before you as¡X
¡XWilliam Jay.
Verses 8, 9. A sense
of the divine presence our best support. It yields,
Verse 9. (last
clause).
Verses 9, 10. Jesus
cheered in prospect of death by the safety of his soul and body; our
consolation in him as to the same.
Verse 10. Jesus
dead, the place of his soul and his body. A difficult but interesting topic.
Verses 10, 11. Because
he lives we shall live also. The believers, therefore, can also say, "Thou
wilt show me the path of life." This life means the blessedness
reserved in heaven for the people of God after the resurrection. It has three
characters. The first regards its source¡Xit flows from "his
presence." The second regards its plenitude¡Xit is "fulness"
of joy." The third regards its permanency¡Xthe pleasures are "for
evermore."¡XWilliam Jay.
Verse 11. A sweet
picture of heaven. (See EXPOSITION.)
WORKS
UPON THE SIXTEENTH PSALM
An
Exposition upon some select Psalms of David. . . . . . By ROBERT ROLLOCK.
1600. 16mo.
A
Godly Exposition of the Sixteenth Psalm: in R. Greenham's
"Works:" pp. 316-331. Folio: 1612.
In
the "Works" of John Boys, 1626, folio, pp. 898-908, there is an
Exposition of Psalm Sixteen,
"Devotions
Augustinianae Flamma; or, Certayne Devout, Godly, and Learned Meditations.
Written by the excellently accomplisht gentleman, WILLIAM AUSTIN, of Lincolnes
Inne, Esquire. . . . 1637," contains "Notes on the Sixteenth Psalme;
more particularly on the last verse." Small folio.
The
Golden Psalm. Being an Exposition practical, experimental, and prophetical
of Psalm Sixteenth. By the Rev. THOMAS DALE, M.A. Canon Residentiary of St.
Paul's, London, and Vicar of St. Pancras, Middlesex. London: 1847.
Christ
in Gethsemane. An Exposition of Psalm Sixteen. By JAMES FRAME, Minister of
Queen Street Chapel, Ratcliff, London: 1858.
¢w¢w C.H. Spurgeon¡mThe Treasury of David¡n