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Psalm Seventeen
Psalm 17
Chapter Contents
David's integrity. (1-7) The character of his enemies.
His hope of happiness. (8-15)
Commentary on Psalm 17:1-7
(Read Psalm 17:1-7)
This psalm is a prayer. Feigned prayers are fruitless;
but if our hearts lead our prayers, God will meet them with his favour. The
psalmist had been used to pray, so that it was not his distress and danger that
now first brought him to his duty. And he was encouraged by his faith to expect
God would notice his prayers. Constant resolution and watchfulness against sins
of the tongue, will be a good evidence of our integrity. Aware of man's
propensity to wicked works, and of his own peculiar temptations, David had made
God's word his preservative from the paths of Satan, which lead to destruction.
If we carefully avoid the paths of sin, it will be very lead to destruction. If
we carefully avoid the paths of sin, it will be very comfortable in the
reflection, when we are in trouble. Those that are, through grace, going in
God's paths, should pray that their goings may be held up in those paths. David
prays, Lord, still hold me up. Those who would proceed and persevere in the
ways of God, must, by faith prayer, get daily fresh supplies of grace and
strength from him. Show thy marvellous loving-kindness, distinguishing favours,
not common mercies, but be gracious to me; do as thou usest to do to those who
love thy name.
Commentary on Psalm 17:8-15
(Read Psalm 17:8-15)
Being compassed with enemies, David prays to God to keep
him in safety. This prayer is a prediction that Christ would be preserved,
through all the hardships and difficulties of his humiliation, to the glories
and joys of his exalted state, and is a pattern to Christians to commit the
keeping of their souls to God, trusting him to preserve them to his heavenly
kingdom. Those are our worst enemies, that are enemies to our souls. They are
God's sword, which cannot move without him, and which he will sheathe when he
has done his work with it. They are his hand, by which he chastises his people.
There is no fleeing from God's hand, but by fleeing to it. It is very
comfortable, when we are in fear of the power of man, to see it dependent upon,
and in subjection to the power of God. Most men look on the things of this
world as the best things; and they look no further, nor show any care to
provide for another life. The things of this world are called treasures, they
are so accounted; but to the soul, and when compared with eternal blessings,
they are trash. The most afflicted Christian need not envy the most prosperous
men of the world, who have their portion in this life. Clothed with Christ's
righteousness, having through his grace a good heart and a good life, may we by
faith behold God's face, and set him always before us. When we awake every
morning, may we be satisfied with his likeness set before us in his word, and
with his likeness stamped upon us by his renewing grace. Happiness in the other
world is prepared only for those that are justified and sanctified: they shall
be put in possession of it when the soul awakes, at death, out of its slumber
in the body, and when the body awakes, at the resurrection, out of its slumber
in the grave. There is no satisfaction for a soul but in God, and in his good
will towards us, and his good work in us; yet that satisfaction will not be
perfect till we come to heaven.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 17
Verse 1
[1] Hear
the right, O LORD, attend unto my cry, give ear unto my prayer, that goeth not
out of feigned lips.
The right —
Regard my righteous cause.
Verse 2
[2] Let my sentence come forth from thy presence; let thine eyes behold the
things that are equal.
Sentence —
Judgment on my behalf.
Come —
From thy tribunal.
Verse 3
[3] Thou
hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited me in the night; thou hast tried me,
and shalt find nothing; I am purposed that my mouth shall not transgress.
Proved —
Or, searched or tried it, by many temptations and afflictions.
Night —
When mens minds being freed from the distraction of business, and from the
society of men, they act more vigorously and freely, according to their several
inclinations.
Tried — As
gold-smiths do metals.
Nothing —
Nothing of unrighteousness.
Purposed — I
have resolved, upon deliberation, as the word implies.
Mouth — I
am so far from practising against Saul's life, as they charge me, that I will
not wrong him so much as in a word.
Verse 4
[4]
Concerning the works of men, by the word of thy lips I have kept me from the
paths of the destroyer.
Concerning —
Observing the works of the men of this age, how wicked they are, I was resolved
to take more care in ordering my own actions.
By — By the help of thy
blessed word.
Paths —
The customs and practices.
Destroyer —
Or, of the violent man: such as Saul, and his courtiers and soldiers.
Verse 7
[7] Shew thy marvellous lovingkindness, O thou that savest by thy right hand
them which put their trust in thee from those that rise up against them.
By — By thy great power.
Verse 10
[10] They
are inclosed in their own fat: with their mouth they speak proudly.
They —
They live in splendor and prosperity.
Verse 11
[11] They
have now compassed us in our steps: they have set their eyes bowing down to the
earth;
Steps — In
all our ways. We go from place to place, to rocks, and caves, and woods; but
wheresoever we go they are at hand, and ready to surround us.
Eyes —
They keep their eyes fixed upon us.
Bowing —
Couching down upon the earth, that they may watch the fittest opportunity to
surprize us.
Verse 13
[13] Arise,
O LORD, disappoint him, cast him down: deliver my soul from the wicked, which
is thy sword:
Sword —
Thy instrument to execute vengeance upon thine enemies. Do not punish me with
this rod: let me fall into thy hands, and not into the hands of men.
Verse 14
[14] From
men which are thy hand, O LORD, from men of the world, which have their portion
in this life, and whose belly thou fillest with thy hid treasure: they are full
of children, and leave the rest of their substance to their babes.
Thy hand —
Wherewith thou dost correct me.
World —
Who set their hearts upon this world, and neither have, nor desire any other
portion.
Belly —
Mind or appetite, as that word is used, Job 20:20. Proverbs 20:30.
Treasure —
With extraordinary wealth and glory.
Children —
When many of thy faithful servants are barren, these are blessed with a
numerous posterity.
Verse 15
[15] As
for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied, when I
awake, with thy likeness.
I will — I
do not place my portion in earthly treasures, but in beholding God's face, in
the enjoyment of God's presence and favour; which is enjoyed in part in this
life, but not fully.
Satisfied —
The time is coming, wherein I shall be abundantly satisfied with beholding thy
face.
Awake —
When I arise from he dead.
Likeness —
With the image of God stamped upon my glorified soul.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
TITLE and
SUBJECT. A prayer of David. David would not have been a man after God's own
heart, if he had not been a man of prayer. He was a master in the sacred art of
supplication. He flies to prayer in all times of need, as a pilot speeds to the
harbour in the stress of tempest. So frequent were David's prayers that they
could not be all dated and entitled; and hence this simply bears the author's
name, and nothing more. The smell of the furnace is upon the present psalm, but
there is evidence in the last verse that he who wrote it came unharmed out of
the flame. We have in the present plaintive song, AN APPEAL TO HEAVEN from
the persecutions of earth. A spiritual eye may see Jesus here.
DIVISIONS.
There are no very clear lines of demarcation between the parts; but we
prefer the division adopted by that precious old commentator, David Dickson. In
verses 1-4, David craves justice in the controversy between him and his
oppressors. In verses 5 and 6, he requests of the Lord grace to act rightly
while under the trial. From verse 7-12, he seeks protection from his foes, whom
he graphically describes; and in verses 13 and 14, pleads that they may be
disappointed; closing the whole in the most comfortable confidence that all
would certainly be well with himself at the last.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. "Hear the right, O Lord." He that has the worst cause makes
the most noise; hence the oppressed soul is apprehensive that its voice may be
drowned, and therefore pleads in this one verse for a hearing no less than
three times. The troubled heart craves for the ear of the great Judge,
persuaded that with him to hear is to redress. If our God could not or would
not hear us, our state would be deplorable indeed; and yet some professors set
such small store by the mercy-seat, that God does not hear them for the simple
reason that they neglect to plead. As well have no house if we persist like
gipsies in living in the lanes and commons; as well have no mercy-seat as be
always defending our own cause and never going to God. There is more fear that we
will not hear the Lord than that the Lord will not hear us. "Hear the
right;" it is well if our case is good in itself and can be urged as a
right one, for right shall never be wronged by our righteous Judge; but if our
suit be marred by our infirmities, it is a great privilege that we may make
mention of the righteousness of our Lord Jesus, which is ever prevalent on
high. Right has a voice which Jehovah always hears; and if my wrongs
clamour against me with great force and fury, I will pray the Lord to hear that
still louder and mightier voice of the right, and the rights of his dear Son.
"Hear, O God, the Just One;" i.e., "hear the
Messiah," is a rendering adopted by Jerome, and admired by Bishop Horsley,
whether correct or not as a translation, it is proper enough as a plea. Let the
reader plead it at the throne of the righteous God, even when all other
arguments are unavailing.
"Attend
unto my cry." This shows the vehemence and earnestness of the
petitioner; he is no mere talker, he weeps and laments. Who can resist a cry? A
real hearty, bitter, piteous cry, might almost melt a rock, there can be no
fear of its prevalence with our heavenly Father. A cry is our earliest
utterance, and in many ways the most natural of human sounds; if our prayer
should like the infant's cry be more natural than intelligent, and more earnest
than elegant, it will be none the less eloquent with God. There is a mighty
power in a child's cry to prevail with a parent's heart. "Give ear unto
my prayer." Some repetitions are not vain. The reduplication here used
is neither superstition nor tautology, but is like the repeated blow of a
hammer hitting the same nail on the head to fix it the more effectually, or the
continued knocking of a beggar at the gate who cannot be denied an alms. "That
goeth not out of feigned lips." Sincerity is a sine quà non in
prayer. Lips of deceit are detestable to man and much more to God. In
intercourse so hallowed as that of prayer, hypocrisy even in the remotest
degree is as fatal as it is foolish. Hypocritical piety is double iniquity. He
who would feign and flatter had better try his craft with a fool like himself,
for to deceive the all-seeing One is as impossible as to take the moon in a
net, or to lead the sun into a snare. He who would deceive God is himself
already most grossly deceived. Our sincerity in prayer has no merit in it, any
more than the earnestness of a mendicant in the street; but at the same time
the Lord has regard to it, through Jesus, and will not long refuse his ear to
an honest and fervent petitioner.
Verse
2. "Let my sentence come forth from thy presence." The
psalmist has now grown bold by the strengthening influence of prayer, and he
now entreats the Judge of all the earth to give sentence upon his case. He has been
libelled, basely and maliciously libelled; and having brought his action before
the highest court, he, like an innocent man, has no desire to escape the
enquiry, but even invites and sues for judgment. He does not ask for secrecy,
but would have the result come forth to the world. He would have sentence
pronounced and executed forthwith. In some matters we may venture to be as bold
as this; but except we can plead something better than our own supposed
innocence, it were terrible presumption thus to challenge the judgment of a
sin-hating God. With Jesus as our complete and all-glorious righteousness we
need not fear, though the day of judgment should commence at once, and hell
open her mouth at our feet, but might joyfully prove the truth of our hymn writer's
holy boast—
"Bold
shall I stand in that great day;
For who aught to my charge shall lay?
While, through thy blood, absolved I am,
From sin's tremendous curse and shame."
"Let
thine eyes behold the things that are equal." Believers do not desire
any other judge than God, or to be excused from judgment, or even to be judged
on principles of partiality. No; our hope does not lie in the prospect of
favouritism from God, and the consequent suspension of his law; we expect to be
judged on the same principals as other men, and through the blood and
righteousness of our Redeemer we shall pass the ordeal unscathed. The Lord will
weigh us in the scales of justice fairly and justly; he will not use false
weights to permit us to escape, but with the sternest equity those balances
will be used upon us as well as upon others; and with our blessed Lord Jesus as
our all in all we tremble not, for we shall not be found wanting. In David's
case, he felt his cause to be so right that he simply desired the Divine eyes
to rest upon the matter, and he was confident that equity would give him all
that he needed.
Verse
3, "Thou hast proved mine heart." Like Peter, David uses the
argument, "Thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I love thee."
It is a most assuring thing to be able to appeal at once to the Lord, and call
upon our Judge to be a witness for our defence. "Beloved, if our heart
condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God." "Thou hast
visited me in the night." As if he had said, "Lord, thou hast
entered my house at all hours; and thou hast seen me when no one else was nigh;
thou hast come upon me unawares and marked my unrestrained actions, and thou
knowest whether or no I am guilty of the crimes laid at my door." Happy
man who can thus remember the omniscient eye, and the omnipresent visitor, and
find comfort in the remembrance. We hope we have had our midnight visits from
our Lord, and truly they are sweet; so sweet that the recollection of them sets
us longing for more of such condescending communings. Lord, if indeed, we had
been hypocrites, should we have had such fellowship, or feel such hungerings
after a renewal of it? "Thou hast tried me, and shalt find
nothing." Surely the Psalmist means nothing hypocritical or wicked in
the sense in which his slanderers accused him; for if the Lord should put the
best of his people into the crucible, the dross would be a fearful sight, and
would make penitence open her sluices wide. Assayers very soon detect the
presence of alloy, and when the chief of all assayers shall, at the last, say
of us he has found nothing, it will be a glorious hour indeed—"They are
without fault before the throne of God." Even here, as viewed in our
covenant Head, the Lord sees no sin in Jacob, nor perverseness in Israel; even
the all-detecting glance of Omniscience can see no flaw where the great
Substitute covers all with beauty and perfection. "I am purposed that
my mouth shall not transgress." Oh those sad lips of ours! we had need
purpose to purpose if we would keep them from exceeding their bounds. The
number of diseases of the tongue is as many as the diseases of all the rest of
the man put together, and they are more inveterate. Hands and feet one may
bind, but who can fetter the lips? iron bands may hold a madman, but what
chains can restrain the tongue? It needs more than a purpose to keep this
nimble offender within its proper range. Lion-taming and serpent-charming are
not to be mentioned in the same day as tongue-taming, for the tongue can no man
tame. Those who have to smart from the falsehoods of others should be the more
jealous over themselves; perhaps this led the Psalmist to register this holy
resolution; and, moreover, he intended thereby to aver that if he had said too
much in his own defence, it was not intentional, for he desired in all-respects
to tune his lips to the sweet and simple music of truth. Notwithstanding all
this David was slandered, as if to show us that the purest innocence will be
bemired by malice. There is no sunshine without a shadow, no ripe fruit
unpecked by the birds.
Verse
4. "Concerning the works of men." While we are in the midst of
men we shall have their works thrust under our notice, and we shall be
compelled to keep a corner of our diary headed "concerning the works of
men." To be quite clear from the dead works of carnal humanity is the
devout desire of souls who are quickened by the Holy Spirit. "By the
word of thy lips I have kept me from the paths of the destroyer." He
had kept the highway of Scripture, and not chosen the bye-paths of malice. We
should soon imitate the example of the worst of men if the grace of God did not
use the Word of God as the great preservative from evil. The paths of the
destroyer have often tempted us; we have been prompted to become destroyers
too, when we have been sorely provoked, and resentment has grown warm; but we
have remembered the example of our Lord, who would not call fire from heaven
upon his enemies, but meekly prayed, "Father, forgive them." All the
ways of sin are the paths of Satan,—the Apollyon or Abaddon, both of which
words signify the destroyer. Foolish indeed are those who give their hearts to
the old murderer, because for the time he panders to their evil desires. That
heavenly Book which lies neglected on many a shelf is the only guide for those
who would avoid the enticing and entangling mazes of sin; and it is the best
means of preserving the youthful pilgrim from ever treading those dangerous
ways. We must follow the one or the other; the Book of Life, or the way of
death; the word of the Holy Spirit, or the suggestion of the Evil Spirit. David
could urge as the proof of his sincerity that he had no part or lot with the
ungodly in their ruinous ways. How can we venture to plead our cause with God,
unless we also can wash our hands clean of all connection with the enemies of
the Great King?
Verse
5. Under trial it is not easy to behave ourselves aright; a candle is not
easily kept alight when many envious mouths are puffing at it. In evil times
prayer is peculiarly needful, and wise men resort to it at once. Plato said to
one of his disciples, "When men speak ill of thee, live so that no one
will believe them;" good enough advice, but he did not tell us how to carry
it out. We have a precept here incorporated in an example; if we would be
preserved, we must cry to the Preserver, and enlist divine support upon our
side. "Hold up my goings"—as a careful driver holds up his
horse when going down hill. We have all sorts of paces, both fast and slow, and
the road is never long of one sort, but with God to hold up our goings, nothing
in the pace or in the road can cast down. He who has been down once and cut his
knees sadly, even to the bone, had need redouble his zeal when using this
prayer; and all of us, since we are so weak on our legs through Adam's fall,
had need use it every hour of the day. If a perfect father fell, how shall an
imperfect son dare to boast? "In thy paths." Forsaking Satan's
paths, he prayed to be upheld in God's paths. We cannot keep from evil
without keeping to good. If the bushel be not full of wheat, it may soon
be once more full of chaff. In all the appointed ordinances and duties of our
most holy faith, may the Lord enable us to run through his upholding grace! "That
my footsteps slip not." What! slip in God's ways? Yes, the road is
good, but our feet are evil, and therefore slip, even on the King's highway.
Who wonders if carnal men slide and fall in ways of their own choosing, which
like the vale of Siddim, are full of deadly slime-pits? One may trip over an
ordinance as well as over a temptation. Jesus Christ himself is a
stumbling-block to some, and the doctrines of grace have been the occasion of
offence to many. Grace alone can hold up our goings in the paths of truth.
Verse
6. "I have called upon thee, for thou wilt hear me, O God."
Thou hast always heard me, O my Lord, and therefore I have the utmost
confidence in again approaching thine altar. Experience is a blessed teacher.
He who has tried the faithfulness of God in hours of need, has great boldness
in laying his case before the throne. The well of Bethlehem, from which we drew
such cooling draughts in years gone by, our souls long for still; nor will we
leave it for the broken cisterns of earth. "Incline thine ear unto me,
and hear my speech." Stoop out of heaven and put thine ear to my
mouth; give me thine ear all to myself, as men do when they lean over to catch
every word from their friend. The Psalmist here comes back to his first prayer,
and thus sets us an example of pressing our suit again and again, until we have
a full assurance that we have succeeded.
Verse
7. "Shew thy marvellous lovingkindness." Marvellous in its
antiquity, its distinguishing character, its faithfulness, its immutability,
and above all, marvellous in the wonders which it works. That marvellous grace
which has redeemed us with the precious blood of God's only begotten, is here
invoked to come to the rescue. That grace is sometimes hidden; the text says, "Shew
it." Present enjoyments of divine love are matchless cordials to support
fainting hearts. Believer, what a prayer is this! Consider it well. O Lord,
shew thy marvellous lovingkindness; shew it to my intellect, and remove my
ignorance; shew it to my heart, and revive my gratitude; shew it to my faith,
and renew my confidence; shew it to my experience, and deliver me from all my
fears. The original word here used is the same which in Psalm 4:3 is rendered set
apart, and it has the force of, Distinguish thy mercies, set them out, and
set apart the choicest to be bestowed upon me in this hour of my severest
affliction. "O thou that savest by thy right hand them which put their
trust in thee from those that rise up against them." The title here
given to our gracious God is eminently consolatory. He is the God of salvation;
it is his present and perpetual habit to save believers; he puts forth his best
and most glorious strength, using his right hand of wisdom and might, to save
all those, of whatsoever rank or class, who trust themselves with him. Happy
faith thus to secure the omnipotent protection of heaven! Blessed God, to be
thus gracious to unworthy mortals, when they have but grace to rely upon thee!
The right hand of God is interposed between the saints and all harm; God is
never at a loss for means; his own bare hand is enough. He works without tools
as well as with them.
Verse
8. "Keep me as the apple of the eye." No part of the body more
precious, more tender, and more carefully guarded than the eye; and of the eye,
no portion more peculiarly to be protected than the central apple, the pupil,
or as the Hebrew calls it, "the daughter of the eye." The all-wise
Creator has placed the eye in a well-protected position; it stands surrounded
by projecting bones like Jerusalem encircled by mountains. Moreover, its great
Author has surrounded it with many tunics of inward covering, besides the hedge
of the eyebrows, the curtain of the eyelids, and the fence of the eyelashes;
and, in addition to this, he has given to every man so high a value for his
eyes, and so quick an apprehension of danger, that no member of the body is
more faithfully cared for than the organ of sight. Thus, Lord, keep thou me,
for I trust I am one with Jesus, and so a member of his mystical body. "Hide
me under the shadow of thy wings." Even as the parent bird completely
shields her brood from evil, and meanwhile cherishes them with the warmth of
her own heart, by covering them with her wings, so do thou with me, most
condescending God, for I am thine offspring, and thou hast a parent's love in
perfection. This last clause is in the Hebrew in the future tense, as if to
show that what the writer had asked for but a moment before he was now sure
would be granted to him. Confident expectations should keep pace with earnest
supplication.
Verse
9. "From the wicked that oppress me, from my deadly enemies, who
compass me about." The foes from whom David sought to be rescued were wicked
men. It is hopeful for us when our enemies are God's enemies. They were deadly
enemies, whom nothing but his death would satisfy. The foes of a believer's
soul are mortal foes most emphatically, for they who war against our faith aim
at the very life of our life. Deadly sins are deadly enemies, and what sin is
there which hath not death in its bowels? These foes oppressed David,
they laid his spirit waste, as invading armies ravage a country, or as wild
beasts desolate a land. He likens himself to a besieged city, and complains
that his foes compass him about. It may well quicken our business
upward, when all around us, every road, is blockaded by deadly foes. This is
our daily position, for all around us dangers and sins are lurking. O God, do
thou protect us from them all.
Verse
10. "They are inclosed in their own fat." Luxury and gluttony
beget vainglorious fatness of heart, which shuts up its gates against all
compassionate emotions and reasonable judgments. The old proverb says that full
bellies make empty skulls, and it is yet more true that they frequently make empty
hearts. The rankest weeds grow out of the fattest soil. Riches and
self-indulgence are the fuel upon which some sins feed their flames. Pride and
fulness of bread were Sodom's twin sins. (Ezekiel 16:49.) Fed hawks forget
their masters; and the moon at its fullest is furthest from the sun. Eglon was
a notable instance that a well-fed corporation is no security to life, when a
sharp message comes from God, addressed to the inward vitals of the body. "With
their mouth they speak proudly." He who adores himself, will have no
heart to adore the Lord. Full of selfish pleasure within his heart, the wicked
man fills his mouth with boastful and arrogant expressions. Prosperity and
vanity often lodge together. Woe to the fed ox when it bellows at its owner,
the poleax is not far off.
Verse
11. "They have now compassed us in our steps." The fury of the
ungodly is aimed not at one believer alone, but at all the band; they have
compassed us. All the race of the Jews were but a morsel for Haman's
hungry revenge, and all because of one Mordecai. The prince of darkness hates
all the saints for their Master's sake. The Lord Jesus is one of the us,
and herein is our hope. He is the Breaker, and will clear a way for us through
the hosts which environ us. The hatred of the powers of evil is continuous and
energetic, for they watch every step, hoping that the time may come when
they shall catch us by surprise. If our spiritual adversaries thus compass
every step, how anxiously should we guard all our movements, lest by any means
we should be betrayed into evil! "They have set their eyes bowing down
to the earth." Trapp witily explains this metaphor by an allusion to a
bull when about to run at his victim; he lowers his head, looks downward, and
then concentrates all his force in the dash which he makes. It most probably
denotes the malicious jealousy with which the enemy watches the steps of the
righteous; as if they studied the ground on which they trod, and searched after
some wrong foot-mark to accuse them for the past, or some stumbling-stone to
cast in their future path to trip them in days to come.
Verse
12. Lions are not more greedy, nor their ways more cunning than are Satan and
his helpers when engaged against the children of God. The blood of souls the
adversary thirsts after, and all his strength and craft are exerted to the
utmost to satisfy his detestable appetite. We are weak and foolish like sheep;
but we have a shepherd wise and strong, who knows the old lion's wiles, and is
more than a match for his force; therefore will we not fear, but rest in safety
in the fold. Let us beware, however, of our lurking foe; and in those parts of
the road where we feel most secure, let us look about us lest, peradventure,
our foe should leap upon us.
Verse
13. "Arise, O Lord." The more furious the attack, the more
fervent the Psalmist's prayer. His eye rests singly upon the Almighty, and he
feels that God has but to rise from the seat of his patience, and the work will
be performed at once. Let the lion spring upon us, if Jehovah steps between we
need no better defence. When God meets our foe face to face in battle, the
conflict will soon be over. "Disappoint him." Be beforehand
with him, outwit and outrun him. Appoint it otherwise than he has appointed,
and so disappoint him. "Cast him down." Prostrate him. Make
him sink upon his knees. Make him bow as the conquered bows before the
conqueror. What a glorious sight will it be to behold Satan prostrate beneath
the foot of our glorious Lord! Haste, glorious day! "Deliver my soul
from the wicked, which is thy sword." He recognizes the most profane
and oppressive as being under the providential rule of the King of kings, and
used as a sword in the divine hand. What can a sword do unless it be wielded by
a hand? No more could the wicked annoy us, unless the Lord permitted them so to
do. Most translators are, however, agreed that this is not the correct reading,
but that it should be as Calvin puts it, "Deliver my soul from the ungodly
man by thy sword." Thus David contrasts the sword of the Lord with human
aids and reliefs, and rests assured that he is safe enough under the patronage
of heaven.
Verse
14. Almost every word of this verse has furnished matter for discussion to
scholars, for it is very obscure. We will, therefore, rest content with the
common version, rather than distract the reader with divers translations. "From
men which are thy hand." Having styled the ungodly a sword in his
Father's hand, he now likens them to that hand itself, to set forth his
conviction that God could as easily remove their violence as a man moves his
own hand. He will never slay his child with his own hand. "From men of
the world," mere earthworms; not men of the world to come, but mere
dwellers in this narrow sphere of mortality; having no hopes or wishes beyond
the ground on which they tread. "Which have their portion in this
life." Like the prodigal, they have their portion, and are not content
to wait their Father's time. Like Passion in the "Pilgrim's
Progress," they have their best things first, and revel during their
little hour. Luther was always afraid lest he should have his portion here, and
therefore frequently gave away sums of money which had been presented to him.
We cannot have earth and heaven too for our choice and portion; wise men choose
that which will last the longest. "Whose belly thou fillest with thy
hid treasure." Their sensual appetite gets the gain which it craved
for. God gives to these swine the husks which they hunger for. A generous man
does not deny dogs their bones; and our generous God gives even his enemies
enough to fill them, if they were not so unreasonable as never to be content.
Gold and silver which are locked up in the dark treasuries of the earth are
given to the wicked liberally, and they therefore roll in all manner of carnal
delights. Every dog has his day, and they have theirs, and a bright summer's
day it seems; but ah! how soon it ends in night! "They are full of
children." This was their fondest hope, that a race from their loins
would prolong their names far down the page of history, and God has granted
them this also; so that they have all that heart can wish. What enviable
creatures they seem, but it is only seeming! "They are full of
children, and leave the rest of their substance to their babes." They
were fat housekeepers, and yet leave no lean wills. Living and dying they
lacked for nothing but grace and alas! that lack spoils everything. They had a
fair portion within the little circle of time, but eternity entered not into
their calculations. They were penny wise, but pound foolish; they remembered
the present, and forgot the future; they fought for the shell, and lost the
kernel. How fine a description have we here of many a successful merchant, or
popular statesman; and it is, at first sight, very showy and tempting, but in
contrast with the glories of the world to come, what are these paltry molehill
joys. Self, self, self, all these joys begin and end in basest selfishness; but
oh, our God, how rich are those who begin and end in thee! From all the contamination
and injury which association with worldly men is sure to bring us, deliver thou
us, O God!
Verse
15. "As for me." "I neither envy nor covet these men's
happiness, but partly have and partly hope for a far better." To behold
God's face and to be changed by that vision into his image, so as to partake in
his righteousness, this is my noble ambition; and in the prospect of this I
cheerfully waive all my present enjoyments. My satisfaction is to come; I do
not look for it as yet. I shall sleep awhile, but I shall wake at the sound of
the trumpet; wake to everlasting joy, because I arise in thy likeness, O my God
and King! Glimpses of glory good men have here below to stay their sacred
hunger, but the full feast awaits them in the upper skies. Compared with this
deep, ineffable, eternal fulness of delight, the joys of the worldlings are as
a glowworm to the sun, or the drop of a bucket to the ocean.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title.
"A prayer of David." Since many of the Psalms consist of prayers,
the question may be asked why such an inscription more especially belongs to
this. But though the others contain divers prayers mixed with other matters,
this is a supplication through its whole course.—The Venerable Bede,
672-735.
Verse 1. "Hear
. . . attend . . . give ear." This petition repeated thrice, indicates
a great power of feeling and many tears; because the craft of the ungodly, in
truth, grieves and afflicts the spiritual man more than their power and
violence, for we can get a knowledge of open force and violence, and, when we
see the danger, can in some way guard against it.—Martin Luther.
Verse 1. "That
goeth not out of feigned lips." There are such things as "feigned
lips;" a contraction between the heart and the tongue, a clamour in
the voice and scoffing in the soul, a crying to God, "Thou art my father,
the guide of my youth;" and yet speaking and doing evil to the utmost of
our power (Jeremiah 3:4, 5), as if God could be imposed upon by fawning
pretences, and, like old Isaac, take Jacob for Esau, and be cozened by the
smell of his garments; as if he could not discern the negro heart under an
angel's garb. . . This is an unworthy conceit of God, to fancy that we can
satisfy for inward sins, and avert approaching judgments by external offerings,
by a loud voice, with a false heart, as if God (like children), would be
pleased with the glittering of an empty shell, or the rattling of stones, the
chinking of money, a mere voice, and crying without inward frames and
intentions of service.—Stephen Charnock.
Verse 1. "Not
out of feigned lips." It is observable that the eagle soareth on high,
little intending to fly to heaven, but to gain her prey; and so it is that many
do carry a great deal of seeming devotion in lifting up their eyes towards
heaven; but they do it only to accomplish with more ease, safety, and applause
their wicked and damnable designs here on earth; such as without are Catos,
within Neros; hear them, no man better; search and try them, no man worse; they
have Jacob's voice, but Esau's hands; they profess like saints, but practise
like Satans; they have their long prayers, but short prayings; they are like
apothecaries' gallipots—having without the title of some excellent
preservative, but within are full of deadly poison; counterfeit holiness is
their cloak for all manner of villanies, and the midwife to bring forth all
their devilish designs.
Peter Bales, in Spencer's "Things New and Old."
Verse 1. "Not
out of feigned lips." Not only a righteous cause, but a righteous
prayer are urged as motives why God should hear. Calvin remarks on the
importance of joining prayer to the testimony of a good conscience, lest we
defraud God of his honour by not committing all judgments to him.
J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse 1. Though thy
prayers be never so well framed in regard of words, and reverently performed as
to thy external gestures; yet all is nothing, if thy heart be not in the
duty. For prayer is not a work of the head, or hand, or eyes only, but
chiefly a work of the heart, and therefore called in Scripture, the
"pouring out of the soul" (1 Samuel 1:15); and the "pouring out
of the heart." Psalm 62:8. And, indeed, the very soul of prayer lieth in
the pouring out of the soul before the Lord. Whensoever, therefore, thou
drawest near unto God in prayer, let it be with thine heart and soul, otherwise
thou canst have no assurance of audience, and acceptance; for as Cyprian
speaketh, Quomodo te audiri a Deo postulas, etc. How canst thou expect
the Lord should hear thee, when thou hearest not thyself? or that he should
regard thy prayers, when thou regardest not what thou prayest? Certainly that
prayer reacheth not the heart of God, which reacheth not our own.—Thomas
Gouge, 1605-1681.
Verse 2. David
appeals unto God to judge the righteousness of his heart towards Saul—"Let
my sentence come forth from thy presence." From Saul and his courtiers
there comes a hard sentence; they call me traitor, they call me rebel; but,
Lord, leave me not unto their sentence, "Let my sentence come from thy
presence;" that I know will be another sentence than what cometh from
them, for thou hast proved me, and tried me, and findest nothing in me.—Jeremiah
Burroughs.
Verse 3. "Thou
hast proved mine heart:"—
What! take it
at adventure, and not try
What metal it is made of? No, not I.
Should I now lightly let it pass,
Take sullen lead for silver, sounding brass,
Instead of solid gold, alas!
What would become of it in the great day
Of making jewels, 'twould be cast away.
The
heart thou giv'st me must be such a one,
As is the same throughout. I will have none
But that which will abide the fire.
'Tis not a glitt'ring outside I desire,
Whose seeming shows do soon expire;
But real worth within, which neither dross,
Nor base alloys, make subject unto loss.
If,
in the composition of thine heart,
A stubborn, steely willfulness have part,
That will not bow and bend to me,
Save only in a mere formality
Of tinsel-trimm'd hypocrisy,
I care not for it, though it show as fair
As the first blush of the sun-gilded air.
The
heart that in my furnace will not melt,
When it the glowing heat thereof hath felt,
Turn liquid, and dissolve in tears
Of true repentance for its faults, that hears
My threat'ning voice, and never fears,
Is not an heart worth having. If it be
An heart of stone, 'tis not an heart for me.
The
heart, that, cast into my furnace, spits,
And sparkles in my face, fall into fits
Of discontented grudging, whines
When it is broken of its will, repines
At the least suffering, declines
My fatherly correction, is an heart
On which I care not to bestow mine art.
* *
* * * * * * *
The
heart that vapours out itself in smoke,
And with these cloudy shadows thinks to cloak
Its empty nakedness, how much
Soever thou esteemest, it is such
As never will endure my touch.
I'll
bring it to my furnace, and there see
What it will prove, what it is like to be.
If it be gold, it will be sure
The hottest fire that can be to endure,
And I shall draw it out more pure.
Affliction may refine, but cannot waste
That heart wherein my love is fixed fast.
—Francis Quarles.
Verse 3. "Thou
hast visited me in the night," etc. In the night the soul is free from
business with the world, and therefore freest for business with God; and then
did God prove and visit David, that is, examine and sift him, by calling to his
mind all his ways and works in former passages; and the issue of this trial
was, he found nothing; not that his soul was empty of good things, or
that there was nothing evil in him; but God, upon examination, found nothing of
that evil in him which some men suspected him of; namely either any ill will or
evil design against Saul, in reference to whom he called his cause a righteous
cause, or "the right" (verse 1); "Hear the right, O
Lord."—Joseph Caryl.
Verse 3 (third
clause, New Translation.) "Thou hast smelted me, and found in me no
dross." A metaphor taken from the smelting of metals to purify them
from extraneous matter.—Geddes.
Verse 3. "Proved
. . . visited in the night . . . tried." Tribulation whereby, when
examined, I was found righteous, is called not only night, in that it is wont
to disturb with fear, but fire in that it actually burns.—Augustine.
Verse 3. "I
am purposed that my mouth shall not transgress." Wherefore, if thou be
upon a mountain, look not backward again unto Sodom as Lot's wife did; if thou
be within the ark, fly not out again into the world as Noah's crow did; if thou
be well washed, return not again to the mire as the hog doth; if thou be clean,
run not again to thy filth, as the dog doth; if thou be going towards the land
of Canaan, think not on the flesh-pots of Egypt; if thou be marching against
the host of Midian, drink not of the waters of Harod; if thou be upon the
housetop, come not down; if thou have set thy hand to the plough, look not
behind thee; remember not those vices which are behind thee.—Thomas
Playfere.
Verses 3, 4, 5. Where
there is true grace, there is hatred of all sin, for hatred is (Greek). Can a
man be resolved to commit what he hates? No, for his inward aversion would
secure him more against it than all outward obstacles. As this inward purpose
of a good man is against all sin, so more particularly against that which doth
so easily beset him. David seems in several places to be naturally inclined to
lying, but he takes up a particular resolution against it: (verse 3), "I
am purposed that my mouth shall not transgress;" (Heb.)—I have
contrived to waylay and intercept the sin of lying when it hath an occasion to
approach me. A good man hath not only purposes, but he endeavours to fasten and
strengthen those purposes by prayer; so David (verse 5), "Hold up my
goings in the paths, that my footsteps slip not." He strengthens
himself by stirring up a liveliness in duty, and by avoiding occasions of sin;
(verse 4), "I have kept me from the paths of the destroyer;"
whereas, a wicked man neither steps out of the way of temptation, nor steps up
to God for strength against it.—Stephen Charnock.
Verse 4. "Concerning
the works of men, by the word of thy lips have I kept me from the paths of the
destroyer:" as if he had said, Would you know how is comes to pass
that I escape those ungodly works and practices which men ordinarily take
liberty to do? I must ascribe it to the good word of God; it is this I consult
with, and by it I am kept from those foul ways whereunto others, that make no
use of the word for their defence, are carried by Satan the destroyer. Can we
go against sin and Satan with a better weapon than Christ used to vanquish the
tempter with? And, certainly, Christ did it to set us an example how we should
come armed into the field against them; for Christ could with one beam shot
from his Deity (if he had pleased to exert it), have as easily laid the bold
fiend at his foot, as afterward he did them that came to attack him; but he
chose rather to conceal the majesty of his Divinity, and let Satan come up
closer to him, that so he might confound him with the word, and thereby give
him a proof of that sword of his saints, which he was to leave them for their
defence against the same enemy. The devil is set out by the leviathan (Isaiah
27:1), him God threatens to punish with his strong sword; alluding to that
great fish, the whale, which fears no fish like the sword-fish, by whom this
great devourer of all other fish is so often killed; for, receiving one prick
from his sword, he hasteneth to the shore, and beats himself against it till he
dies. Thus the devil, the great devourer of souls, who sports himself in the
sea of this world, as the leviathan in the waters, and swallows the greatest
part of mankind without any power to make resistance against him, is himself
vanquished by the word. When he has to do with a saint armed with this sword,
and instructed how to use this weapon, he then, and not till then, meets his
match.—William Gurnall.
Verse 4. "By
the word of thy lips," etc. It is a great relief against temptations
to have the word ready. The word is called, "The sword of the
Spirit." Ephesians 6:17. In spiritual conflicts there is none like to
that. Those that ride abroad in time of danger, will not be without a sword. We
are in danger, and had need handle the sword of the Spirit. The more ready the
Scripture is with us, the greater advantage in our conflicts and temptations.
When the devil came to assault Christ, he had Scripture ready for him, whereby
he overcame the tempter. The door is barred upon Satan, and he cannot find such
easy entrance when the word is hid in our hearts, and made use of pertinently.
"I write unto you, young men, because ye are strong." Where lies
their strength? "And the word of God abideth in you, and ye have overcome
the wicked one." 1 John 2:14. Oh, it is a great advantage when we have the
word, not only by us, but in us, engrafted in the heart; when it is present
with us, we are more able to resist the assaults of Satan. Either a man forgets
the word, or hath lost his affection to it, before he can be drawn to sin.—Thomas
Manton.
Verse 5. "Hold
up my goings in thy paths, that my footsteps slip not." Lord,
whatsoever the wrath of Saul be against me, yet let neither that, nor any other
thing put me out of thy way, but keep my heart close unto thee, and keep my
paths in thy way; let not my footsteps so much as slide from thee, for, Lord,
they watch for my halting; if they can find but the least slip from me, they
take advantage of it to the utmost; and I am a poor and a weak creature,
therefore Lord help me, that my footsteps may not slide.—Jeremiah Burroughs.
Verse 5. "Hold
up my goings in thy paths, that my footsteps slip not." As a stone
cast into the air cannot go any higher, neither yet there abide when the power
of the hurler ceaseth to drive it; even so, seeing our corrupt nature can go
downward only, and the devil, the world, and the flesh, driveth to the same
way; how can we proceed further in virtue, or stand therein, when we are
tempted, if our merciful and good God do not by his Holy Spirit, from time to
time, guide and govern us?—Robert Cawdray.
Verse 5. "Hold
up my goings in thy paths, that my footsteps slip not." Lord, hold me
up, that I may hold out. Thou hast set the crown at the end of the race; let me
run the race, that I may wear the crown. It was Beza's prayer, and let it be
ours, "Lord, perfect what thou hast begun in me, that I may not suffer
shipwreck when I am almost at the haven."—Thomas Watson.
Verse 5. In fierce
assaults and strong temptations, when Satan layeth siege to the soul, shooting
his fiery darts, and using stratagems of policy, joining his endeavours with
our corruptions, as wind with tide, then we have cause to pray as David, "Hold
up my goings in thy paths, that my footsteps slip not." The apostle
also found he had need of help from heaven when he was assaulted, and therefore
he prayed "thrice," that the thing that he feared might depart
from him. 2 Corinthians 12. Christ hath taught us to pray daily, "Lead us
not into temptation," for it is dangerous; and then temptations are most
dangerous, when, 1. Most suitable—when Satan joins with our disposition
or constitution; 2. Continual; 3. When opportunity and power is
greatest.—Joseph Symonds.
Verse 6. "I
have called upon thee, for thou wilt hear me." I have cried, says the
Psalmist, because thou hast heard me. One would think he should have said
contrariwise; thou hast heard me because I have cried; yet, he says, I have
cried because thou hast heard me; to show that crying doth not always go before
hearing with God, as it doth with us; but that God will not only hear our cry,
but also hear us before we cry, and will help us.—T. Playfere.
Verse 6. "I
have called upon thee," etc. Prayer is the best remedy in a calamity.
This is indeed a true catholicon, a general remedy for every malady. Not
like the empiric's catholicon, which sometimes may work, but for the
most part fails, but that which upon assured evidence and constant experience
hath its probatum est; being that which the most wise, learned, honest,
and skilful Physician that ever was, or can be, hath prescribed, even he that
teacheth us how to bear what is to be borne, or how to heal and help what hath
been borne.—William Gough, 1575-1653.
Verse 6. I have
called upon thee formerly, therefore, Lord, hear me now. It will be a great
comfort to us if trouble, when it comes, finds the wheels of prayer a-going,
for then may we come with the more boldness to the throne of grace. Tradesmen
are willing to oblige those that have been long their customers.—Matthew
Henry.
Verse 8. "Keep
me as the apple of the eye." He prays for deliverance (verse 7),
""Show thy marvellous lovingkindness" to me; Lord, my
straits they are marvellous, I know not what to do, whither to turn me, but my
eyes are toward thee; as straits are marvellous, so let the lovingkindness of
God be marvellous towards me, and "Keep me as the apple of thy
eye." O Lord, unto them I am but a dog, a vile creature in the eyes of
Saul and those about him; but blessed be thy name, I can look up to thee, and
know that I am dear unto thee as the apple of thy eye. All the saints of
God are dear to God at all times, but the persecuted saints, they are the apple
of God's eye; if at any time they are dear to God, then especially when they
are most persecuted; now they are the apple of his eye, and the apple
of an eye is weak, and little able to resist any hurt, but so much the more
is the man tender of the apple of his eye. The saints are weak and shiftless
for themselves, but the Lord is so much the more tender over them.—Jeremiah
Burroughs.
Verse 8. Does it not
appear to thee to be a work of providence, that considering the weakness of the
eye, he has protected it with eyelids, as with doors, which whenever there is
occasion to use it are opened, and are again closed in sleep? And that it may
not receive injury from the winds, he has planted on it eyelashes like a
strainer; and over the eyes has disposed the eyebrows like a penthouse, so that
the sweat from the head may do no mischief.—Socrates, in Xenophon.
Verse 9. "From
the wicked:" as though he had said, "They are equally enemies to
thee and me; not more opposite to me by their cruelty, than by their wickedness
they are to thee. Vindicate then, at once, thyself, and deliver me."—John
Howe.
Verse 10. "They
are inclosed in their own fat," or their fat has inclosed them;
either their eyes, that they can hardly see out of them, or their hearts, so
that they are stupid and senseless, and devoid of the fear of God; the phrase
is expressive of the multitude of their wealth, and increase of power, by which
they were swelled with pride and vanity, and neither feared God nor regarded
man; so the Targum paraphrases it, "their riches are multiplied, their fat
covers them."—John Gill.
Verse 10. "They
are inclosed in their own fat." Their worldly prosperity puffeth them
up, and makes them insensible and obdurate against all reason and just fear;
and the Scripture doth use this term of a fattened heart in this sense, because
that the fat of man hath no feeling in it, and those that are very fat are less
subject to the passion of fear.—John Diodati.
Verse 10. "They
are inclosed in their own fat." To say a man is fat, often means he is
very proud. Of one who speaks pompously it is said, "What can we do? tassi
kullap inal," that is, "from the fat of his flesh he declares
himself." "Oh, the fat of his mouth! how largely he talks!"
"Take care, fellow! or I will restrain the fat of thy mouth."—J.
Roberts, in "Oriental Illustrations," 1844.
Verse 11. "They
have now compassed us in our steps: they have set their eyes bowing down to the
earth." A man who has people watching him to find out a cause for
accusation against him to the king, or to great men, says, "Yes, they are
around my legs and my feet; their eyes are always open; they are ever watching
my 'suvadu,' 'steps;'" that is, they are looking for the impress or
footsteps in the earth. For this purpose the eyes of the enemies of David were "bowing
down to the earth."—Joseph Roberts.
Verse 11. "They
have now compassed us in our steps." Like those who destroy game by
battue, and so make a ring around their prey from which their victims cannot
escape.—C. H. S.
Verse 11. "They
have set their eyes bowing down to the earth." The allusion probably
is to the huntsman tracing the footmarks of the animal he pursues.—Religious
Tract Society's Commentary.
Verse 11. "They
have set their eyes bowing down to the earth." It is an allusion, as I
conceive, to hunters, who go poring upon the ground to prick the hare, or to
find the print of the hare's claw, when the hounds are at a loss, and can make
nothing of it by the scent.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse 12. "Like
a lion," etc. In "Paradise Lost," we have a fine
poetical conception of the arch enemy prowling around our first parents when he
first beheld their happiness, and resolved to ruin them.
—About them
round
A lion now, he stalks with fiery glare;
Then, as a tiger, who by chance hath spied
In some purlieu, two gentle fawns at play,
Straight crouches close, then rising, changes oft
His couchant watch, as one who chose his ground,
Whence rushing he might surest seize them both,
Grip'd in each paw.
John Milton.
Verse 12. We were
consulting as to the best means of getting at a rhinoceros cow which we saw
standing at some distance under a tree, when a troop of impalas came charging
down, with a fine old lioness after them. We went and saw her lying down, but
so flat to the ground, head and all, that no man could shoot with any certainty;
and she never for a moment took her eyes from us. When we got up to her, she
was lying down flat as a plate to the ground; but her head might have been on a
pivot, as her watchful eye glared on us all round, without appearing to move
her body, as we decreased the circle, in the hopes she would stand up and give
us a fair chance of a shot behind the shoulder. . . I looked for a tree to
climb up, near enough to make tolerably sure of my shot, and was just getting
up one, when the lioness made off.—William Charles Baldwin, F.R.G.S., in
"African Hunting," 1863.
Verse 13. "The
wicked, which is thy sword." The devil and his instruments both are
God's instruments, therefore "the wicked" are called his "sword,"
his "axe" (Psalm 17:13; Isaiah 10:15); now let God alone to wield the
one, and handle the other. He is but a bungler that hurts and hackles his own
legs with his own axe; which God should do if his children should be the worse
for Satan's temptations. Let the devil choose his way, God is a match for him at
every weapon. If he will try it by force of arms, and assaults the saints by
persecution, as the "Lord of hosts" he will oppose him. If by policy
and subtlety, he is ready there also. The devil and his whole council are but
fools to God; nay, their wisdom foolishness.—William Gurnall.
Verses 13, 14. "Thy
sword . . . thy hand." Thou canst as easily command and manage them,
as a man may wield his sword, or move his hand. Wilt thou suffer thine own
sword, thine own hand, to destroy thine own servant?—J. Howe
Verse 14 (first
clause). How wonderful are the dispensations of the providence of God, who
can use even the wicked to promote the present happiness and the final
salvation of his saints!—J. Edwards, M.A., 1856.
Verse 14. "Men
of the world, which have their portion in this life." Time and this
lower world, bound all their hopes and fears. They have no serious believing
apprehensions of anything beyond this present life; therefore, have nothing to
withhold them from the most injurious violence, if thou withhold them not; men
that believe not another world, are the ready actors of any imaginable
mischiefs and tragedies in this.—John Howe.
Verse 14. "Men
which are thy hand," etc. What shall we say then? Because God maketh
use of thy sins, art thou excused? Is not thine evil evil, because he picketh
good out of it? Deceive not thyself therein. When thou hast done such service
to thy Master and Maker, though seven and seven years, as Jacob did service to
Laban, thou shalt lose thy wages and thy thanks too. Oh, well were thou if thou
didst but lose, for thou shalt also gain a sorrowful advantage. It is
unprofitable, nay, miserable service which thou hast thus bestowed. Babylon
shall be the hammer of the Lord a long time to bruise the nations, himself
afterwards bruised; Asshur his rod to scourge his people, but Asshur shall be
more scourged. These hammers, rods, axes, saws, other instruments, when they
have done their offices, which they never meant, shall be thrown themselves
into the fire, and burnt to ashes. Satan did service to God, it cannot be
denied, in the afflicting of Job, winnowing of Peter, buffeting of Paul,
executing of Judas, and God did a work in all these either to prove patience,
or to confirm faith, or to try strength, or to commend justice; yet is Satan
"reserved in chains under darkness, to the retribution of the great
day." Judas did service to God, in getting honour to his blessed name for
the redemption of mankind, whilst the worlds endureth, yet was his wages an
alder-tree to hang himself upon, and, what is worse, he hangeth in hell for
eternal generations. He had his wages, and lost his wages. That which the
priest gave him, he lost, and lost his apostleship, but gained the recompense
of everlasting unhappiness, and lies in the lowest lake, for the worm and death
to gnaw upon without ceasing.—John King.
Verse 14. "Thy
hand." The hand of God, his correcting or cherishing hand, sometimes
is an immediate, and sometimes a mediate hand. Sometimes it is immediate, when
God by himself doth chasten, or punish, or afflict, when no second cause doth
appear or intervene. So it may seem Satan means, when he saith (Job 1:11), "Put
forth thy hand," that is, do it thine own self, let no other have the
handling of Job but thyself. God doth send such immediate afflictions; a man is
afflicted in his body, in his estate, and many other ways, and he cannot find
anything in the creature whence it should come; it is an immediate stroke of
God, he cannot see how, or which way, or at what door this evil came in upon him;
therefore it is called a creating of evil. Isaiah 45:7. "I make peace, and
create evil." Now creation is out of nothing, there is nothing out of
which it is wrought. So many times God bringeth evil upon a people or person
when there is no appearance of second cause, no matter out of which it is made,
but it comes as a creature, formed by the only hand of God. Sometimes likewise
it is called God's hand, when it is the hand of a creature; it is God's hand in
a creature's hand; God's hand when it is the hand of wicked men, God's hand
when it is Satan's hand. So that place is translated (Psalm 17:13,14), "Deliver
my soul from the wicked, which is thy sword: from men which are thy hand:"
so that "thy hand" may be understood of an instrument; Satan
himself is God's hand to punish in that sense, as wicked men here are said to
be God's hand: "from men which are thy hand," though there be
other readings of that place; some read it, deliver me from men by thy hand;
and others, deliver me from men of thy hand; but our translation may
very well carry the sense of the original in it, "from men which are
thy hand;" as Nebuchadrezzar, that wicked king, is called God's
servant (Jeremiah 43:10), "I will send and take Nebuchadrezzar my
servant:" God speaks of him as his servant, or as his hand in the
thing.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse 14. "Men
of the world, which have their portion in this life." The large
portion of the wicked in the things of this world, may tell the righteous of
how little value this is, in the account of God; in that these things are often
given to his enemies plentifully, when denied in such a measure to his
children. Now this cannot be because he loves or favours his enemies most; but
because these lower things, given them in what degree soever, are so mean in
his account, as that his chosen may learn by his distribution of them, to
regard them as he does; namely, as no part of their felicity, but as common
favours to all his creatures, good or bad, enemies or friends.—Daniel
Wilcox.
Verse 14. "Men
which have their portion in this life." God gives wicked men a portion
here to show unto them what little good there is in all these things, and to
show the world what little good there is in all the things that are here below
in the world. Certainly if they were much good they should never have them; it
is an argument there is no great excellency in the strength of body, for an ox
hath it more than you; an argument there is no great excellency in agility of
body, for a dog hath it more than you; an argument of no great excellency in
gay clothes, for a peacock hath them more than you; an argument there is not
great excellency in gold and silver, for the Indians that know not God have
them more than you; and if these things had any great worth in them, certainly
God would never give them to wicked men—a certain argument. As it is an
argument that there is no great evil in affliction in this world, because that
the saints are so much afflicted; so no great argument there is any great good
in this world, for the wicked they enjoy so much of it. Luther hath such an
expression as this in his comment upon Genesis, saith he, "The Turkish
empire, as great as it is, is but a crumb, that the Master of the family, that
God, casts to dogs:" the whole Turkish empire, such an esteem had Luther
of it; and indeed, it is no more. All the things of the world, God in giving of
them to Turks and wicked ones, his enemies, shows there is not much excellency
and good in them: God therefore will cast them promiscuously up and down in the
world, because he looks upon them as worthless things; God doth not so much
regard whether men be prepared to give him the glory of them, yea or no, they
shall have them; however he is content to venture them. Indeed, when God comes
into his choice mercies in Christ, there he looks to have glory from them, and
he doth never give them to any, but first he prepares them, that they may give
him the glory of those mercies. But it is otherwise with others; as, suppose
you see a man gathering of crabs, although swine be under the tree, he cares
not much to drive them away; they are but crabs, let them have them; but if he
were gathering any choice and precious fruit, if any swine should come under,
he drives them away. As for outward things, crabs, the Lord suffers the swine
of the world to come grunting and take them up; but when he comes to his choice
mercies in his Christ, there he makes a distinction. Oh, this is precious
fruit! A blacksmith that is working upon iron, though a great many cinders and
little bits of iron fly up and down, he regards them not; but a goldsmith that
is working upon gold, he preserves every rag, and every dust of gold; and a
lapidary that is working upon precious stones, every little bit he will be sure
to preserve; a carpenter that is only hewing of timber, he regards it not much
if chips fly up and down; but it is not so with a lapidary. So these outward
things are but as the chips and cinders, and such kind of things as those are,
and therefore God ever gives a portion to wicked men out of them.—Jeremiah
Burroughs.
Verse 14. "Men
which have their portion in this life." I have read of Gregory, that
being advanced to preferment, professed that there was no Scripture that went
so to his heart, that struck such a trembling into his spirit, that daunted him
so much, as this Scripture did:—"Here you have your reward, son; in your
lifetime you have had your pleasure." Oh, this was a dreadful Scripture
that sounded in his ears continually, as Hierom speaks of that Scripture,
"Arise ye dead, and come to judgment;" night and day he thought that
Scripture sounded in his ears: so Gregory:—"Here you have your reward; in
this life you have had your pleasure." This was the Scripture that night
and day sounded in his ears. O that it might please God to assist so far, to
speak out of this Scripture to you, that I might make this Scripture ring in
your ears even when you lie upon your beds, after the sermon is done; that yet
you may think this Scripture rings in your ears: "Men of this world,
who have their portion in this life."—Jeremiah Burroughs.
Verse 14. "Which
have their portion in this life." The earth and the commodities
thereof God distributeth without respect of persons, even to them that are his
children by creation only, and not by adoption. But yet there is a difference
between the prosperity of the one and the other; for the one is but with
anxiety of heart (even in laughter their heart is heavy); the others' is with
cheerfulness and joy in the Spirit; the one's is a pledge of the greater preferment
in the world to come, the others' is their whole portion, and as if God
should say, "Let them take that and look for no more." The
one's is with the blessing of the people, who wish they had more; the others'
with their curse and hatred, who are grieved that they have so much.—Miles
Smith.
Verse 14. "Their
portion in this life." The good man's best, and the bad man's
worst, lie in shall be's (Isaiah 3:10, 11), in reversion. Here Dives had
nothing but his "good things," but hereafter he had no good thing.
Here Lazarus had all his "evil things," but afterwards no evil thing.
The good man when he dies, takes his leave of, and departs from, all evil; and
the evil man when he dies, takes his leave of, and departs from, all his goods,
which was all the good he had. "Now he is comforted, but thou art
tormented." Luke 16:25. Oh! 'tis a sad thing to have one's portion of
good only in this life.—Ralph Venning's "Helps to Piety,"
1620-1673.
Verse 14. "This
life." There is yet another thing to be seen far more monstrous in
this creature; that whereas he is endued with reason and counsel, and knoweth
that this life is like unto a shadow, to a dream, to a tale that is told, to a
watch in the night, to smoke, to chaff which the wind scattereth, to a
water-bubble, and such-like fading things; and that life to come shall never
have end; he yet nevertheless setteth his whole mind most carefully upon this
present life, which is to-day, and to-morrow is not; but of the life which is
everlasting he doth not so much as think. If this be not a monster, I know not
what may be called monstrous.—Thomas Tymme.
Verse 14. What
wicked men possess of this world is all that ever they can hope for: why should
we grudge them filled bags, or swelling titles! it is their whole portion; they
now receive their good things. Hast thou food and clothing? that is children's
fare; envy not ungodly men, who flaunt it in the gallantry of the world: they
have more than you; but it is all they are like to have: the psalmist gives us
an account of their estate. They are the men of this world, which
have their portion in this life, and whose bellies God filleth with his hid
treasure. Whereas thou, O Christian, who possessest nothing, art
heir-apparent of heaven, co-heir with Jesus Christ, who is the heir of all
things, and hast an infinite mass of riches laid up for thee; so great and
infinite, that all the stars of heaven are too few to account it by: you have
no reason to complain of being kept short; for all that God hath is yours,
whether prosperity ar adversity, life or death, all is yours. What God gives is
for your comfort; what he denies or takes away is for your trial: it is for the
increase of those graces which are far more gracious than any temporal
enjoyment. If, by seeing wicked and ungodly men flow in wealth and ease, when
thou art forced to struggle against the inconveniences and difficulties of a
poor estate, thou hast learnt a holy contempt and disdain of the world, believe
it, God hath herein given thee more than if he had given thee the world
itself.—Ezekiel Hopkins.
Verse 14. To show
that wicked men have often the greatest portion in this world, I need
not speak much: the experience of all ages since the beginning of the world
confirms it, your own observation, I believe, can seal to it; however,
Scripture abundantly evinces it. The first murderer that ever was,
carries possessions in his very name: Cain signifies so much. Genesis 4:8. Go
on in the whole series of Scripture, and you shall find Joseph persecuted by
his brethren; Esau (as Rivet observes on Genesis 32), advanced in the world for
a time far above Jacob; go on, and you find the Israelites, God's peculiar, in
captivity, and Pharaoh on the throne; Saul ruling, and David in a cave, or in a
wilderness; Job upon the dunghill; Jeremy in the dungeon; Daniel in the den,
and the children in the furnace, and Nebuchadnezzar on the throne. In the New
Testament you have Felix on the bench, Paul at the bar; Dives in the palace,
Lazarus at his gate (Luke 16:19); he clothed in purple, Lazarus in rags and
overspread with sores; he banqueted and fared deliciously every day, the other
desired but the crumbs from the table, and could not have them; Dives beset
with his rich and stately attendance, Lazarus hath no other society but the
dogs which came to lick his sores; all which Austin and Tertullian against
Marcion (lib. 4), conceive to be a true history of what was really acted,
though others think it parabolical. Job tells us that "the tabernacle of
robbers" sometimes "prosper" (Job 12:6), which prosperity he at
large describes (chapter 21 from verse 7 to 14); exalted in "power,"
verse 7; multiplied in their posterity, verses 8, 11; safe at home,
verse 9; increased abroad, verse 10; have their fill of pleasure,
verse 12, and wealth at will, verse 13. David speaks his own experience
of this. Psalm 37:35; 73:7. So in the text, they enjoy not only common favours,
as air to breathe in, earth to walk on; their bellies are filled with his "hid
treasure," and that not for themselves only, but for their posterity
too; they "leave the rest of their substance to their babes;"
in a word, "they have their portion in this life."—John Frost,
1657.
Verse 14. A master
or lord pays his servant his present wages, while he cuts his son
short in his allowance during his nonage, that he may learn to depend upon his
father for the inheritance. Thus doth God, the great Lord of all, deal with his
slaves, who serve him for the hire of some temporal advantage; he gives
them their present reward and wages; but though his goodness hath determined a
better portion to be a reward to the piety and obedience of his children,
yet he gives it them in reversion, little in hand, that they may learn to live
upon the promise, and by faith to depend upon the goodness and faithfulness of
their Father for their heavenly inheritance; that they, walking not by sight
but faith (which is a Christian's work and condition here), may "not look
at the things which are seen," etc. 2 Corinthians 4:18. . . . . This
discovers that rotten foundation upon which many men build their hopes of
heaven. Surely (are many ready to argue) if God did not love me he would not
give me such a portion in the world. Deceive not thyself in a matter of so
great concernment. Thou mayest as well say God loved Judas, because he had the
bags, or Dives, because he fared deliciously, who are now roaring in hell.—John
Frost.
Verse 14. The word
which denotes the "belly" may have been fixed, by the divine
Spirit, to indicate the fact, that a very great proportion of the sin of worldly
and depraved characters is connected with the indulgence of base and degrading
lusts; and that they abuse the very bounty of heaven, in riveting the chain of
sense upon their unhappy souls. But let them remember, that their sensual
idolatries will, at last, be followed up by the most fearful visitations of
divine wrath.—John Morrison.
Verse 14. "Whose
belly thou fillest with thy hid treasure." Wicked men may abound in
earthly things. They may have the earth and the fulness of it, the earth, and
all that is earthly; their bellies are filled by God himself with hidden
treasure. Precious things are usually hidden, and all that's named treasure,
though it be but earthly, hath a preciousness in it. Hidden treasures of earth
fill their bellies who slight the treasures of heaven, and whose souls shall
never have so much as a taste of heavenly treasures: riches and honour are the
lots of their inheritance who have no inheritance among those whose lot is
glory. They have the earth in their hands (Job 9:24), who have nothing of
heaven in their hearts; they bear sway in the world who are slaves to the
world; they govern and order others at their will who are led captive by Satan
at his will. Be not offended and troubled to see the reins of government in
their hands who know not how to govern themselves, or to see them rule the
world who are unworthy to live in the world.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse 14. "Whose
belly thou fillest with thy hid treasure." The hearts of saints only
are filled with the "hidden manna," but the bellies of the
wicked are often filled with hidden treasure; that is, with those
dainties and good things which are virtually hidden in, and formally spring out
of, the belly and bowels of the earth. The Lord easily grants them their wish
in such things, and gives them "their portion," which is all
their portion, "in this life." For as they are but common
professors, so these are but common mercies, such as many of his enemies
receive, who are but fatted as oxen for the slaughter, and fitted for
destruction. True happiness is not to be judged by lands or houses, by gold or
silver. The world is a narrow bound: unless we get beyond the creature, and set
our hopes above this world, we cannot by happy. As hypocrites desire, so they
obtain much of the world, but they shall attain no more, how much soever they
seem to desire it.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse 14. "Whose
belly thou fillest." That is, their sensual appetite, as oftentimes
that term is used (Romans 16:18; Philippians 3:19), "with thy hid
treasures;" namely, the riches which either God is wont to hide in the
bowels of the earth, or lock up in the repository of providence, dispensing
them at his own pleasure.—John Howe.
Verse 14. "Whose
belly thou fillest," etc.:—
Thou from thy
hidden store,
Their bellies, Lord, hast fill'd;
Their sons are gorg'd, and what is o'er,
To their sons' sons they yield.
Richard Mant.
Verse 14. "They
are full of children." So it appears by that which follows, it ought
to be read, and not according to that gross, but easy (Greek) for (Greek) mistake
of some transcribers of the seventy. As if in all this he pleaded thus:
"Lord, thou hast abundantly indulged those men already, what need they
more? They have themselves, from thy unregarded bounty, their own vast swollen
desires sufficiently filled, enough for their own time; and when they can live
no longer in their persons, they may in their posterity, and leave not
strangers, but their numerous offspring, their heirs. Is it not enough that
their avarice be gratified, except their malice be also? that they have
whatsoever they can conceive desirable for themselves, unless they may also
infer whatever they can think mischievous on me?" To this description of
his enemies, he ex opposito, subjoins some account of himself in this
his closure of the Psalm. "As for me," here he is at his
statique point; and, after some appearing discomposure, his spirit returns to a
consistency, in consideration of his own more happy state, which he opposes and
prefers to their, in the following respects. That they were wicked, he
righteous. "I will behold thy face in righteousness." That their
happiness was worldly, terrene, such only as did spring from the earth; his
heavenly and divine, such as should result from the face and image of God. Theirs
present, temporary, compassed within this life; his future, everlasting,
to be enjoyed when he should awake. Theirs partial, defective, such as
would but gratify their bestial part, fill their bellies; his adequate,
complete (the eudaimonia tou ounetou . . . . . a happiness of proportion),
such as should satisfy the man. "I shall be satisfied," etc.—John
Howe.
Verse 14. "They
are full of children." Margin, their children are full. The
margin probably expresses the sense of the Hebrew better than the text. The
literal rendering would be, "satisfied are their sons;" that is, they
have enough to satisfy the wants of their children. The expression, "they
are full of children," is harsh and unnatural, and is not demanded by the
original, or by the main thought in this passage. The obvious signification is,
that they have enough for themselves and for their children.—Albert Barnes.
Verse 15. "I
will behold thy face." I look upon the face of a stranger and it moves
me not; but upon a friend and his face presently transforms mine into a lively,
cheerful aspect. "As iron sharpeneth iron, so doth the face of a man his
friend" (Proverbs 27:17), puts a sharpness and a quickness into his looks.
The soul that loves God, opens itself to him, admits his influence and
impressions, is easily molded and wrought to his will, yields to the
transforming power of his appearing glory. There is no resistant principle
remaining when the love of God is perfected in it; and so overcoming is the
first sight of his glory upon the awaking soul, that it perfects it, and so his
likeness, both at once.—John Howe.
Verse 15. "I
will behold," etc.—In the words we have, 1. The time of his complete
and consummate happiness—"When I awake." 2. The matter of his
happiness, and the manner of enjoying it; the matter and object—"God's
face, or likeness;" the manner of enjoying—"I will behold thy
face." 3. His perfect disposition and condition in the state of
happiness—"I shall behold in righteousness," having my heart
perfectly conformed to the will of God, the perfect and adequate rule of
righteousness. 4. The measure of his happiness—"I shall be
satisfied;" my happiness will be full in the measure, without want of
anything that can make me happy; all my desires shall be satisfied, and my
happiness in respect of duration shall be eternal, without a shadow or fear of
a change.—William Colvill.
Verse 15. He doth
profess his resolution, yet notwithstanding all the danger he was in, to go on
in the ways of God, and expect a gracious issue; but I, saith he, "will
behold thy face in righteousness;" indeed, I cannot behold the face of
the king without danger to me; there are a great many that run to kill me, and
they desire his face; but though I cannot see his face, yet, Lord, I shall
behold thy face; "I will behold thy face," and it shall
be "in righteousness;" I will still keep on in the ways of
righteousness, and "when I awake"—for I believe that these
troubles will not hold long—I shall not sleep in perpetual sleep, but I
shall awake and be delivered, and then "I shall be satisfied with
thy likeness:" there shall be the manifestation of thy glory to me,
that shall satisfy me for all the trouble that I have endured for thy name's
sake, that my soul shall say, I have enough.—Jeremiah Burroughs.
Verse 15. "I
shall be satisfied," etc. The fulness of the felicity of heaven may
appear if we compare it with the joys and comforts of the Holy Spirit.
Such they are, as that the Scripture styles them strong consolations
(Hebrews 6:17); full joys (John 15:11); joy unspeakable and full of
glory (1 Peter 1:8); abounding consolations. 2 Corinthians 1:5. And
yet all the joy and peace that believers are partakers of in this life is but
as a drop to the ocean, as a single cluster to the whole vintage, as the thyme
or honey upon the thigh of a bee to the whole hive fully fraught with it, or as
the break and peep of day to the bright noontide. But yet these tastes of the
water, wine, and honey of this celestial Canaan, with which the Holy Spirit
makes glad the hearts of believers, are both far more desirable and
satisfactory than the overflowing streams of all earthly felicities. And there
are none who have once tasted of them, but say as the Samaritan woman did,
"Lord, give me that water, that I thirst not, neither come hither to
draw." John 4:15. So also the first and early dawnings of the heavenly
light fill the soul with more serenity, and ravish it with more pure joy, than
the brightest sunshine of all worldly splendour can ever do. I have read of a
devout person who but dreaming of heaven, the signatures and impressions it
made upon his fancy were so strong, as that when he awaked he knew not his
cell, could not distinguish the night from the day, nor difference by his
taste, oil from wine; still he was calling for his vision and saying, Redde
mihi campos floridos, columnam auream, comitem Hieronymum, assistentes angelos:
give me my fresh and fragrant fields again, my golden pillar of light, Jerome
my companion, angels my assistants. If heaven in a dream produce such ecstasies
as drown and overwhelm the exercises of the senses to inferior objects, what
trances and complacencies must the fruition of it work in those who have their
whole rational appetite filled, and their body beautified with its endless
glory?—William Spurstow, 1656.
Verse 15. "I
shall be satisfied." Have you never seen how when they were finishing
the interior of buildings they kept the scaffolding up? The old Pope, when he
had Michael Angelo employed in decorating the interior of that magnificent
structure, the Sistine Chapel, demanded that the scaffolding should be taken
down so that he could see the glowing colours that with matchless skill were
being laid on. Patiently and assiduously did that noble artist labour, toiling
by day, and almost by night, bringing out his prophets and sibyls and pictures
wondrous for their beauty and significance, until the work was done. The day
before it was done, if you had gone into that chapel and looked up, what would
you have seen? Posts, planks, ropes. lime, mortar, slop, dirt. But when all was
finished, the workmen came, and the scaffolding was removed. And then, although
the floor was yet covered with rubbish and litter, when you looked up, it was
as if heaven itself had been opened, and you looked into the courts of God and
angels. Now, the scaffolding is kept around men long after the fresco is
commenced to be painted; and wondrous disclosures will be made when God shall
take down this scaffolding body, and reveal what you have been doing. By sorrow
and by joy; by joys which are but bright colours, and by sorrows which are but
shadows of bright colours; by prayer; by the influences of the sanctuary; by
your pleasures; by your business; by reverses; by successes and by failures; by
what strengthened your confidence, and by what broke it down; by the things
that you rejoiced in, and by the things that you mourned over—by all that God
is working in you. And you are to be perfected, not according to the things
that you plan, but according to the divine pattern. Your portrait and mine are
being painted, and God by wondrous strokes and influences is working us up to
his own ideal. Over and above what you are doing for yourself, God is working
to make you like him. And the wondrous declaration is, that when you stand
before God, and see what has been done for you, you shall be "satisfied."
Oh, word that has been wandering solitary and without a habitation ever since
the world began, and the morning stars sang together for joy! Has there ever
been a human creature that could stand on earth while clothed in the flesh, and
say, "I am satisfied?" What is the meaning of the word? Sufficiently
filled; filled full; filled up in every part. And when God's work is complete,
we shall stand before him, and, with the bright ideal and glorified conception of
heavenly aspiration upon us, looking up to God, and back on ourselves,we shall
say, "I am satisfied:" for we shall be like him. Amen. Why should we
not be satisfied?—Henry Ward Beecher, in "Royal Truths," 1862.
Verse 15. "When
I awake, I shall be satisfied with thy likeness." He speaks here of
the resurrection; he calls it an awaking, for you know death is called a sleep.
"Those that are asleep in the Lord shall rise first." He had spoken
before of those that had put their happiness in the comforts of this life, suitable
to their bodies, to the animal state of their bodies; that is clear by the
fourteenth verse, "Deliver me from the men that are thine hand, O Lord,
who have their portion in this life, whose belly thou fillest with thy
treasure: they are full of children, and leave to them outward things,"
bodily things. "But as for me," saith he, "I will behold thy
face in thy righteousness" (there is the vision of God which is his
happiness in his soul): "and I shall be satisfied when I awake" (when
I rise again), "with thine image." It is not the image of God only
upon himself that he means here. Why? Because that doth not satisfy a holy
heart, but it is that image of the invisible God which the human nature of
Jesus Christ is, who, in opposition to all these outward pleasures, will be all
in all to us; he is a spiritual creature, his human nature is spiritualised,
made glorious, and our bodies shall be made spiritual likewise. "The body
is made for the Lord, and the Lord for the body," and this when they are
both raised up; Christ is raised up already, and because he hath ordained the
one to be serviceable to the other, he will also raise up our bodies; and when
he doth raise me up, saith David, though other men have their bellies full
here, and have animal pleasures they delight in; yet when I shall awake at
latter day, and shall see this image of thine, shall see thy Son, I shall be
satisfied: "When I awake, I shall be satisfied with thine image."—Thomas
Goodwin.
Verse 15. "I
shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness." In this Psalm
holy David's afflictions are neither few nor small; his innocency that
is wounded by malicious slanderers, his life that is in jeopardy by
deadly enemies that compass him about; his present condition that is
embittered unto him by the pressing wants of a barren wilderness, while his
foes live deliciously in Saul's court. And yet under the weight and combination
of so many sore evils, David carries himself as one that is neither hopeless
nor forsaken, yea, lays his estate in the balance against theirs, and in this
low ebb of his, vies with them for happiness; and at last shutting up the Psalm
with a triumphant epiphonema, concludes himself to be by far the better
man. "As for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness; I shall be
satisfied, when I awake with thy likeness." They, 'tis true, enjoy the
face of their king, whose favour is as a cloud of latter rain promising a
fruitful harvest of many blessings, "but I," saith he, "shall
behold the face of God in righteousness," whose lovingkindness is
better than life, clothed with all its royalties. They have their bellies
filled with hidden treasure, having more than a common hand of bounty opened
unto them; but I have more gladness put into my heart, more than in the time
that their corn and wine increased. They have their portion in hand, and as
being men of this world; but I have mine laid up in the other: "I shall
be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness." In these words we have
his and every believer's eternal happiness in the other life, set forth in
three particulars as a most effectual antidote against present troubles and
temptations that arise from the malice of wicked men against them.—William
Spurstow.
Verse 15. "I
shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness." The saints in
heaven have not yet awaked in God's likeness. The bodies of the righteous still
sleep, but they are to be satisfied on the resurrection morn, when they awake.
When a Roman conqueror had been at war, and won great victories, he would
return to Rome with his soldiers, enter privately into his house, and enjoy
himself till the next day, when he would go out of the city to re-enter it
publicly in triumph. Now, the saints, as it were, enter privately into heaven
without their bodies; but on the last day, when their bodies wake up, they will
enter into their triumphal chariots. Methinks I see that grand procession, when
Jesus Christ first of all, with many crowns on his head, with his bright,
glorious, immortal body, shall lead the way. Behind him come the saints, each
of them clapping their hands, or pouring sweet melody from their golden harps;
all entering in triumph. And when they come to heaven's gates, and the doors
are opened wide to let the King of glory in, how will the angels crowd at the windows
and on the housetops, like the inhabitants in the Roman triumphs, to watch the
pompous procession, and scatter heaven's roses and lilies upon them, crying,
"Hallelujah! hallelujah! hallelujah! the Lord God Omnipotent
reigneth." "I shall be satisfied" in that glorious day when all
the angels of God shall come to see the triumphs of Jesus, and when his people
shall be victorious with him.—Spurgeon's Sermons.
Verse 15. "I
shall be satisfied . . . . . with thy likeness." Let a man who is
thirsty be brought to an ocean of pure water, and he has enough. If there be
enough in God to satisfy the angels, then sure there is enough to satisfy us.
The soul is but finite, but God is infinite. Though God be a good that
satisfies, yet he does not surfeit. Fresh joys spring continually from his
face; and he is as much to be desired after millions of years by glorified
souls as at the first moment. There is a fulness in God that satisfies, and yet
so much sweetness that the soul still desires. God is a delicious good.
That which is the chief good must ravish the soul with pleasure; there must be
in it rapturous delight and quintessence of joy. In Deo quadam dulcedine
delectatur anima immo rapitur: the love of God drops such infinite suavity
into the soul as is unspeakable and full of glory. If there be so much delight
in God, when we see him only by faith (1 Peter 1:8), what will the joy of
vision be, when we shall see him face to face! If the saints have found so much
delight in God while they were suffering, oh, what joy and delight will they
have when they are being crowned! If flames are beds of roses, what will it be
to lean on the bosom of Jesus! What a bed of roses that will be! God is a superlative
good. He is better than anything you can put in competition with him; he is
better than health, riches, honour. Other things maintain life, he gives life.
Who would put anything in balance with the Deity? Who would weigh a feather
against a mountain of gold? God excels all other things more infinitely than
the sun the light of a taper. God is an eternal good. He is the Ancient
of days, yet never decays, nor waxes old. Daniel 7:9. The joy he gives is
eternal, the crown fadeth not away. 1 Peter 5:4. The glorified soul shall be
ever solacing itself in God, feasting on his love, and sunning itself in the
light of his countenance. We read of the river of pleasure at God's right hand;
but will not this in time be dried up? No. There is a fountain at the bottom
which feeds it. Psalm 36:9. "With the Lord is a fountain of life."
Thus God is the chief good, and the enjoyment of God for ever is the highest
felicity of which the soul is capable.—Thomas Watson.
Verse 15. "When
I awake," etc. The sincere Christian is progressive, never at his
journey's end till he gets to heaven; this keeps him always in motion,
advancing in his desires and endeavours forward: he is thankful for little
grace, but not content with great measures of grace. "When I
awake," saith David, "I shall be satisfied with thy
likeness." He had many a sweet entertainment at the house of God in
his ordinances. The Spirit of God was the messenger that brought him many a
covered dish from God's table, inward consolations which the world knew not of.
Yet David has not enough, it is heaven alone that can give him his full draught.
They say the Gauls, when they first tasted of the wines of Italy, were so taken
with their lusciousness and sweetness, that they could not be content to trade
thither for this wine, but resolved they would conquer the land where they
grew. Thus the sincere soul thinks it not enough to receive a little now and
then of grace and comfort from heaven, by trading and holding commerce at a
distance with God in his ordinances here below, but projects and meditates of
that holy land and blessed place from which such rich commodities come, that he
may drink the wine of that kingdom in that kingdom.—William Gurnall.
Verse 15. "When
I awake." How apt and obvious is the analogy between our awakening out
of natural sleep, and the holy soul's rising up out of the darkness and torpor
of its present state into the enlivening light of God's presence? It is truly
said so to awake at its first quitting these darksome regions, when it
lays aside its cumbersome night-veil. It doth so more perfectly in the joyful
morning of the resurrection-day when mortality is swallowed up in life, and all
the yet hovering shadows of it are vanished and fled away. And how known and
usual an application this is of the metamorphical terms of sleeping and awaking
in Holy Writ, I need not tell them who have read the Bible. Nor doth this
interpretation less fitly accord to the other contents of this verse; for to
what state do the sight of God's face, and satisfaction with his likeness, so
fully agree, as to that of future blessedness in the other world? But then the
contexture of discourse in this and the foregoing verse together, seems plainly
to determine us to this sense: for what can be more conspicuous in them, than a
purposed comparison, an opposition of two states of felicity mutually to each
other? That if the wicked whom he calls men of time (as the words Hebrew
are rendered by Pagninus—Homines de tempore—and do literally signify)
and whose portion, he tells us, is in this life: and the righteous man's, his
own; which he expected not to be till he should awake, that is, not till after
this life.—John Howe.
Verse 15. There is a
sleep of deadness of spirit, out of which the shining of God's loving
countenance doth awake a believer and revive the spirit of the contrite ones;
and there is a sleep of death bodily, out of which the lovingkindness of the
Lord shall awake all his own in the day of the resurrection, when he shall so
change them into the similitude of his own holiness and glorious felicity that
they shall be fully contented for ever: and this first and second delivery out
of all trouble may every believer expect and premise to himself. "I shall
be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness."—David Dickson.
Verse 15. There is a
threefold meaning in this verse, inasmuch as it is in Christ alone, the
firstborn from the dead, the express image of Jehovah's glory, that the saints
will rise immortal, incorruptible, and be like the angels in heaven. 1. They
will greatly delight in the glorious state in which they will rise. 2. They
will greatly delight in Jesus, in whom, and by whom, resurrection and
immortality are brought to light; and 3. They will delight greatly in beholding
the blessed and reconciled countenance of Jehovah, the Father, whom no eye of
flesh can see. This is the difference between the appearance of God to Israel
on Mount Sinai, and the happy state in which the saints will behold him in the
resurrection. Glorious as the scene on Sinai was, yet the Lord said to Israel,
"You have seen no (Heb.)(Temunah), no manner of similitude,"
or likeness, or countenance; but David speaks of the spiritual glory of the
triumphant saints in the resurrection, when they shall see Jehovah as he is,
and rejoice in his beatific presence for ever and ever.—Benjamin Weiss, in
loc, 1858.
Verse 15. Everlasting
life and salvation in heaven, is not a truth revealed only by the gospel, but
was well known, clearly revealed, and firmly believed, by the saints of old.
They had assurance of this, that they should live with God for ever in glory. "When
I awake, with thy likeness." Psalm 17:15. "Thou wilt receive me
to glory." Psalm 73:24. "In thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy
right hand there are pleasures for evermore." Psalm 16:11. They looked
for another country, whereof Canaan was but a type and shadow, as the apostle
shows in the epistle to the Hebrews, chapter 11:16. They knew there was an
eternal state of happiness for the saints, as well as an eternal state of
misery for the wicked; they did believe this in those days.—Samuel Mather on
the "Types," 1705.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse 1. The voice
of Jesus—our Righteousness, and our own voice. Work out the thought of both
coming up to the ear of heaven, noting the qualities of our prayer as indicated
by the psalmist's language, such as earnestness, perseverance, sincerity, etc.
Verse 2. "Let
my sentence come forth from thy presence."
I.
When it will come.
II.
Who dare meet it now.
III.
How to be among them.
Verse 3. "Thou
hast proved mine heart." The metal, the furnace, the refiner, etc.
Verse 3. "Thou
hast visited me in the night."
I.
Glorious visitor.
II.
Favoured individual.
III.
Peculiar season.
IV.
Refreshing remembrance.
V.
Practical result.
Verse 3 (last
sentence). Transgressions of the lip, and how to avoid them.
Verse 4. The highway
and the by-paths. The world and sin. "The paths of the
destroyer"—a significant name for transgression.
Verse 5. "Hold
up."
I.
Who? God.
II.
What? "My goings."
III.
When? Present tense.
IV.
Where? "In thy paths."
V.
Why? "That my footsteps slip not."
Verse 5. Let me
observe David and learn to pray as he prayed, "Hold up my goings in thy
paths, that my footsteps slip not."
I.
See his course. He speaks of his "goings." Religion does not
allow a man to sit still. He speaks of his goings "in God's paths."
These are threefold.
(1).
The path of his commands.
(2).
The path of his ordinances.
(3).
The path of his dispensations.
II.
His concern respecting this course. It is the language of—
(1).
Conviction;
(2).
of apprehension;
(3).
of weakness;
(4).
of confidence.
—William Jay.
Verse 6. Two
words, both great, though little, "call" and "hear." Two
persons, one little and the other great, "I," "Thee, O
God." Two tenses: past, "I have;" future, "Thou
wilt." Two wonders, that we do not call more, and that God hears
such unworthy prayers.
Verse 7. (first
sentence). See Exposition. A view of divine lovingkindness desired.
Verse 7. "O
thou," etc. God, the Saviour of believers.
Verse 8. Two most
suggestive emblems of tenderness and care. Involving in the one case living
unity, as the eye with the body, and in the other, loving relationship,
as the bird and its young.
Verse 14. "Men
of the world, which have their portion in this life." Who they are?
What they have? Where they have it? What next?
Verse 14. "Men
which are thy hand." Providential control and use of wicked men.
Verse 15. This is
the language
(1).
of a man whose mind is made up; who has decided for himself; who does not
suspend his conduct upon the resolution of others.
(2).
Of a man rising in life, and with great prospects before him.
(3).
It is the language of a Jew.
Verse 15. The
beholding of God's face signifies two things.
I.
The enjoyment of his favour.
II.
Intimate communions with him.—William Jay.
Verse 15. See
"Spurgeon's Sermons," No. 25. Title, "The
Hope of Future Bliss." Divisions.
I.
The Spirit of this utterance.
II.
The matter of it.
III.
The contrast implied in it.
Verse 15. To see God
and to be like him, the believer's desire.—J. Fawcett.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》