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Psalm Twenty-two
Psalm 22
Chapter Contents
Complaints of discouragement. (1-10) With prayer for
deliverance. (11-21) Praises for mercies and redemption. (22-31)
Commentary on Psalm 22:1-10
(Read Psalm 22:1-10)
The Spirit of Christ, which was in the prophets,
testifies in this psalm, clearly and fully, the sufferings of Christ, and the
glory that should follow. We have a sorrowful complaint of God's withdrawings.
This may be applied to any child of God, pressed down, overwhelmed with grief
and terror. Spiritual desertions are the saints' sorest afflictions; but even
their complaint of these burdens is a sign of spiritual life, and spiritual
senses exercised. To cry our, My God, why am I sick? why am I poor? savours of
discontent and worldliness. But, "Why hast thou forsaken me?" is the
language of a heart binding up its happiness in God's favour. This must be
applied to Christ. In the first words of this complaint, he poured out his soul
before God when he was upon the cross, Matthew 27:46. Being truly man, Christ felt a
natural unwillingness to pass through such great sorrows, yet his zeal and love
prevailed. Christ declared the holiness of God, his heavenly Father, in his
sharpest sufferings; nay, declared them to be a proof of it, for which he would
be continually praised by his Israel, more than for all other deliverances they
received. Never any that hoped in thee, were made ashamed of their hope; never
any that sought thee, sought thee in vain. Here is a complaint of the contempt
and reproach of men. The Saviour here spoke of the abject state to which he was
reduced. The history of Christ's sufferings, and of his birth, explains this
prophecy.
Commentary on Psalm 22:11-21
(Read Psalm 22:11-21)
In these verses we have Christ suffering, and Christ
praying; by which we are directed to look for crosses, and to look up to God
under them. The very manner of Christ's death is described, though not in use
among the Jews. They pierced his hands and his feet, which were nailed to the
accursed tree, and his whole body was left so to hang as to suffer the most
severe pain and torture. His natural force failed, being wasted by the fire of
Divine wrath preying upon his spirits. Who then can stand before God's anger?
or who knows the power of it? The life of the sinner was forfeited, and the
life of the Sacrifice must be the ransom for it. Our Lord Jesus was stripped,
when he was crucified, that he might clothe us with the robe of his
righteousness. Thus it was written, therefore thus it behoved Christ to suffer.
Let all this confirm our faith in him as the true Messiah, and excite our love
to him as the best of friends, who loved us, and suffered all this for us.
Christ in his agony prayed, prayed earnestly, prayed that the cup might pass
from him. When we cannot rejoice in God as our song, yet let us stay ourselves
upon him as our strength; and take the comfort of spiritual supports, when we
cannot have spiritual delights. He prays to be delivered from the Divine wrath.
He that has delivered, doth deliver, and will do so. We should think upon the
sufferings and resurrection of Christ, till we feel in our souls the power of
his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings.
Commentary on Psalm 22:22-31
(Read Psalm 22:22-31)
The Saviour now speaks as risen from the dead. The first
words of the complaint were used by Christ himself upon the cross; the first
words of the triumph are expressly applied to him, Hebrews 2:12. All our praises must refer to the
work of redemption. The suffering of the Redeemer was graciously accepted as a
full satisfaction for sin. Though it was offered for sinful men, the Father did
not despise or abhor it for our sakes. This ought to be the matter of our
thanksgiving. All humble, gracious souls should have a full satisfaction and
happiness in him. Those that hunger and thirst after righteousness in Christ,
shall not labour for that which satisfies not. Those that are much in praying,
will be much in thanksgiving. Those that turn to God, will make conscience of
worshipping before him. Let every tongue confess that he is Lord. High and low,
rich and poor, bond and free, meet in Christ. Seeing we cannot keep alive our
own souls, it is our wisdom, by obedient faith, to commit our souls to Christ,
who is able to save and keep them alive for ever. A seed shall serve him. God
will have a church in the world to the end of time. They shall be accounted to
him for a generation; he will be the same to them that he was to those who went
before them. His righteousness, and not any of their own, they shall declare to
be the foundation of all their hopes, and the fountain of all their joys.
Redemption by Christ is the Lord's own doing. Here we see the free love and
compassion of God the Father, and of our Lord Jesus Christ, for us wretched
sinners, as the source of all grace and consolation; the example we are to
follow, the treatment as Christians we are to expect, and the conduct under it
we are to adopt. Every lesson may here be learned that can profit the humbled
soul. Let those who go about to establish their own righteousness inquire, why
the beloved Son of God should thus suffer, if their own doings could atone for
sin? Let the ungodly professor consider whether the Saviour thus honoured the
Divine law, to purchase him the privilege of despising it. Let the careless
take warning to flee from the wrath to come, and the trembling rest their hopes
upon this merciful Redeemer. Let the tempted and distressed believer cheerfully
expect a happy end of every trial.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 22
Verse 1
[1] My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far from helping me,
and from the words of my roaring?
My God —
Who art my friend and father, though now thou frownest upon me. The repetition
denotes, the depth of his distress, which made him cry so earnestly.
Forsaken —
Withdrawn the light of thy countenance, the supports and comforts of thy
spirit, and filled me with the terrors of thy wrath: this was in part verified
in David, but much more fully in Christ.
Roaring — My
out-cries forced from me, by my miseries.
Verse 3
[3] But thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel.
But thou art —
Just and true in all thy ways, this he adds to strengthen his faith, and to
enforce his prayers, and prevail with God for the honour of his holy name, to
hear and help him.
Inhabitest —
Whom thy people are perpetually praising.
Verse 6
[6] But
I am a worm, and no man; a reproach of men, and despised of the people.
A worm —
Neglected and despised.
People —
Not only of the great men, but also of the common people. Which doth not so
truly agree to David as to Christ.
Verse 7
[7] All
they that see me laugh me to scorn: they shoot out the lip, they shake the
head, saying,
Shoot out — They
gape with their mouths, in mockery. This and the next verse are applied to
Christ, Matthew 27:39,43.
Verse 12
[12] Many bulls have compassed me: strong bulls of Bashan have beset me round.
Bulls —
Wicked and violent, and potent enemies; for such are so called, Ezekiel 39:18; Amos 4:1.
Of Bashan — As
the cattle there bred were, and therefore fierce and furious.
Verse 14
[14] I am
poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: my heart is like wax;
it is melted in the midst of my bowels.
Water — My
spirits are spent and gone like water which once spilt can never be recovered;
my very flesh is melted within me, and I am become as weak as water.
Bones — I
am as unable to help myself, and as full of torment, as if all my bones were
disjointed.
Wax —
Melted, through fear and overwhelming grief.
Verse 15
[15] My
strength is dried up like a potsherd; and my tongue cleaveth to my jaws; and
thou hast brought me into the dust of death.
Dried — I
have in a manner no more moisture left in me, than is in a dry potsherd.
Cleaveth —
Through excessive thirst and drought.
Death —
Thy providence, delivering me into the power of mine enemies, and by thy
terrors in my soul.
Verse 16
[16] For
dogs have compassed me: the assembly of the wicked have inclosed me: they
pierced my hands and my feet.
Dogs — So
he calls his enemies for their insatiable greediness, and implacable fierceness
against him.
Pierced —
These words cannot with any probability be applied to David, but were properly
and literally verified in Christ.
Verse 17
[17] I
may tell all my bones: they look and stare upon me.
May tell — By
my being stretched out upon the cross.
Verse 18
[18] They
part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my vesture.
They part —
This also cannot be applied to David, but was literally fulfilled in Christ, Matthew 27:35; John 19:24.
Verse 20
[20]
Deliver my soul from the sword; my darling from the power of the dog.
Darling —
Heb. my only one; his soul, which he so calls, because it was left alone and
destitute of friends and helpers.
Verse 21
[21] Save
me from the lion's mouth: for thou hast heard me from the horns of the
unicorns.
Heard —
Answered and delivered me.
Verse 22
[22] I
will declare thy name unto my brethren: in the midst of the congregation will I
praise thee.
Declare —
When thou hast delivered me.
Thy name —
that power and faithfulness and goodness, which thou hast manifested on my
behalf.
Congregations —
The same whom he calls the congregation, and the seed of Jacob and Israel:
which also does not so fitly agree to David, who never gives this title to any,
but such as were near a-kin to him, as it does to Christ, who extends this name
to all his disciples, Matthew 12:48,49, and to whom this very text is
applied, Hebrews 2:11,12.
Verse 24
[24] For
he hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted; neither hath
he hid his face from him; but when he cried unto him, he heard.
Abhorred — He
did not turn away his face from it, as men do from things which they abhor.
From him —
For ever: tho' he did so for a time.
Verse 25
[25] My
praise shall be of thee in the great congregation: I will pay my vows before
them that fear him.
Great congregation — In
the universal church, of Jews and Gentiles.
Verse 26
[26] The
meek shall eat and be satisfied: they shall praise the LORD that seek him: your
heart shall live for ever.
Satisfied —
This is doubtless to be understood, of those spiritual blessings, that grace
and peace, and comfort, which all believing souls have in the sense of God's
love, the pardon of their sins, and the influences of God's spirit.
Seek him —
That seek his favour.
Your heart — He
speaks of the same persons still, though there be a change from the third to
the second person, as is usual in these poetical books.
For ever —
Your comfort shall not be short and transitory, as worldly comforts are, but
everlasting.
Verse 27
[27] All
the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the LORD: and all the
kindreds of the nations shall worship before thee.
The world —
All nations from one end of the world to the other. So this is an evident
prophecy of the calling of the Gentiles, and a clear proof, that this psalm
immediately speaks of Christ; to whom alone, this and divers other passages of
it, belong.
Remember —
They shall remember their former wickedness with grief and shame, and fear;
particularly in worshiping dead and impotent idols. They shall remember their
great and manifold obligation to God, which they had quite forgotten, his
patience in sparing them so long, in the midst of all their impieties, and in
giving his son for them: they shall remember the gracious words and glorious
works of Christ, what he did, and suffered for them; which possibly divers of
them had been eye and ear-witnesses of.
The Lord —
Into the only true God, and unto Jesus Christ, to whom this name of Jehovah is
often ascribed in scripture.
Verse 28
[28] For
the kingdom is the LORD's: and he is the governor among the nations.
For —
This is added as a reason, why the Gentiles should be converted, because God is
not only God and the Lord of the Jews, but also of the Gentiles, and of all
nations.
Verse 29
[29] All
they that be fat upon earth shall eat and worship: all they that go down to the
dust shall bow before him: and none can keep alive his own soul.
Fat —
Kings and princes, and the great men of the world.
Shall eat —
Shall feed upon the bread of life, Christ and all his benefits.
Worship —
This is added to shew what kind of eating he spoke of.
Go down —
That is, all mankind, for none can escape death.
Verse 30
[30] A
seed shall serve him; it shall be accounted to the Lord for a generation.
A seed —
Christ shall not want a seed or posterity, for though the Jewish nation will
generally reject him, the Gentiles shall come in their stead.
A generation —
That believing seed shall be reputed both by God and men, The generation, or
people of the Lord, as the Jews formerly were.
Verse 31
[31] They
shall come, and shall declare his righteousness unto a people that shall be
born, that he hath done this.
They —
The seed last mentioned.
Come — From
Judea and Jerusalem (from whence the gospel was first to go forth) to the
Gentile world, to the several parts whereof the apostles went upon this errand.
His —
God's righteousness: his wonderful grace and mercy unto mankind, in giving them
Christ and the gospel; for righteousness is often put for mercy or kindness.
Unto —
Unto succeeding generations. Whereby David gives us a key to understand this
psalm, and teaches us that he speaks not here of himself, but of things which
were to be done in after-ages, even of the spreading of the gospel among the
Gentiles, in the time of the New Testament.
That he —
They shall declare that this is the work of God, and not of man.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Psalm 22 - The Victorious Sufferer
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
1) To note the messianic nature of this psalm fulfilled in the
crucifixion of Jesus
2) To be impressed with its literal fulfillment, and the insight it
gives us into how Jesus must have felt as He hung on the cross
3) To see what gave the psalmist confidence that God would hear his cry
for deliverance
SUMMARY
This psalm of David could be called "The Psalm Of The Cross", as much of
the suffering described in it was literally fulfilled in the crucifixion
of Jesus Christ (though it may also relate to sufferings experienced by
David). Where the four gospel writers provide a description of Jesus'
sufferings from the viewpoint of witnesses, this messianic psalm reveals
His suffering from the viewpoint of Jesus Himself.
The heading indicates the psalm was set to "The Deer of the Dawn". No
one really knows what this refers to, though it may be the name of a
tune known by the Chief Musician.
The psalm begins with a cry that was uttered by Jesus on the cross (Mt
27:46). The first half of the psalm depicts a sufferer surrounded by
enemies who feels forsaken by God. While much of the suffering is
described figuratively ("Many bulls have surrounded me"), some of it was
literally fulfilled. Not only the words of Jesus in verse 1, but also
the very words of the chief priests and scribes who mocked while Jesus
hung on the cross (Mt 27:43). There is also the piercing of the hands
and feet, the dividing of the garments (Mt 27:35). As the psalmist
cries out for deliverance, he also expresses hope based upon God's
faithfulness in the past. At the end of the first half, the psalmist
declares that God has answered him (1-21).
The second half of the psalm expresses the joy of "The Victorious
Sufferer". He will gladly praise God for hearing him and providing
deliverance. He encourages all those who fear God to praise and glorify
Him, confident that God's blessings will extend to many nations and to
people not yet born. This is because the kingdom is the Lord's, and He
rules over the nations (22-31).
OUTLINE
I. THE SUFFERER FORSAKEN BY GOD (22:1-21)
A. HIS FORLORN CRY (1-2)
1. Why has God forsaken him? Why does God not help?
2. Day and night his cry is made...why does God not hear?
B. HIS HOPE FOR DELIVERANCE (3-5)
1. God is holy, enthroned on the praises of Israel
2. The fathers trusted in God, and He delivered them
3. They cried to Him, and God did not disappoint them
C. HIS TORMENT BY OTHERS (6-8)
1. Reduced to be like a worm, not a man
2. The object of derision, despised by others
3. Ridiculed, he is taunted by those who mock his trust in God
D. HIS FAITH IN GOD (9-11)
1. He acknowledges that God has been with him since birth
2. He looks to God as his only helper
E. HIS SUFFERING DESCRIBED (12-18)
1. Depiction of his enemies
a. They surround him like strong bulls of Bashan
b. Their mouths opened like a raging and roaring lion
2. Depiction of his suffering
a. Poured out like water, bones out of joint
b. Heart like wax, melted within him
c. Strength dried up, tongues clinging to his jaws
d. Brought to the dust of death
3. The suffering imposed by his enemies
a. Like dogs, they surround him; like evildoers they encircle
him
b. They have pierced his hands and feet
c. He can count all his bones, while they feast their eyes on
him
d. They divide his garments, and cast lots for his clothing
F. HIS FINAL CRY (19-21)
1. For God not to be far off
a. For He who is his strength to hasten and help him
b. For Him to deliver his life from the sword, his precious
life from the power of the dog
c. For Him to save him from the lion's mouth and horns of wild
oxen
2. A sudden declaration that God has answered him!
II. THE SUFFERER DELIVERED BY GOD (22:22-31)
A. GOD BE PRAISED! (22-25)
1. The sufferer will praise God
a. Proclaiming His name to his brethren
b. Praising Him in the middle of the assembly
2. Let those who fear God praise Him
a. Let the descendants of Jacob honor Him
b. Let the descendants of Israel stand in awe of Him
3. Reasons for such praise
a. God has not despised or abhorred his affliction
b. God has not hidden His face from him, but hearkened to his
cry
4. The sufferer will praise God and pay his vows
a. In the great assembly
b. Before them that fear Him
B. GOD BE WORSHIPPED! (26-31)
1. By the meek, and those that seek the Lord
a. They shall be eat and be satisfied
b. They shall praise Him
2. By those from the ends of the earth
a. Who shall bear these things in mind and return to the Lord
b. All families of the nations will bow down before Him
c. For the kingdom is the Lord's, and He is the Ruler among the
nations
3. By the prosperous and the dead
a. The prosperous will eat, and worship Him
b. The dying shall bow before Him
4. By the generations to come
a. Posterity shall serve him
b. For men shall tell of what God has done
c. People yet born shall hear of God's justice
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
- Forsaken by God (1-21)
- Delivered by God (22-31)
2) Who is the author of this psalm?
- David
3) What is the nature of this psalm?
- Messianic
4) When did Jesus quote the first verse of Psalm 22?
- As He suffered on the cross (Mt 27:46)
5) Upon what basis does the psalmist hope for deliverance? (3-5)
- The fathers trusted in God, and He delivered them when they cried
out to Him
6) What scornful remark in the psalm were also expressed at Jesus'
crucifixion? (8)
- "He trusted in the LORD, let Him rescue Him..." (Mt 27:43)
7) Upon what basis does the psalmist have faith in God's help? (9-11)
- God has been with him since birth
8) What two metaphors are used to describe the enemies of the psalmist?
(12-13)
- They surround him like strong bulls of Bashan
- They gape at him with mouths like a raging and roaring lion
9) How does the psalmist describe his bodily suffering? (14-15)
- Poured out like water
- Bones out of joint
- Heart like wax, melted within him
- Strength dried up like a potsherd
- Tongue clinging to his jaws
- God has brought him to the dust of death
10) What two things did the enemies do to the psalmist that were
literally fulfilled at the crucifixion of Jesus? (16-18)
- They pierced his hands and feet (Mt 27:35a )
- They divide his garments and cast lots for his clothing (Mt 27:35b)
11) As the psalmist makes another cry for deliverance, how does he
indicate that God has helped him? (19-21)
- By saying "You have answered me."
12) What does the psalmist promise to do in response to God's
deliverance? (22,25)
- Declare God's name to his brethren
- Praise God in the midst of the congregation (cf. He 2:11-12)
- Pay his vows in the presence of those who fear Him
13) What does the psalmist call upon people to do? Why? (23-24)
- To praise, glorify, and fear God
- For God has heard the cry of the afflicted
14) As the psalm nears its end, what eight things does the psalmist say
will happen? (25-31)
- The poor will eat and be satisfied
- Those who seek God will praise Him
- All the ends of the world shall remember and turn to the Lord
- All the families of the nations shall worship before Him
- All the prosperous of the earth shall eat and worship
- All who go down to the dust shall bow before Him
- A posterity shall serve Him
- God's deliverance and righteousness will be recounted to the next
generation, even those who are yet unborn
15) Why is the psalmist confident that such things will occur? (28)
- For the kingdom is the Lord's, and He rules over the nations
--《Executable
Outlines》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Work
TITLE. "To
the chief Musician upon Aijeleth Shahar. A Psalm of David." This ode of
singular excellence was committed to the most excellent of the temple
songsters; the chief among ten thousand is worthy to be extolled by the chief
Musician; no meaner singer must have charge of such a strain; we must see to it
that we call up our best abilities when Jesus is the theme of praise. The words
Aijeleth Shahar are enigmatical, and their meaning is uncertain; some refer
them to a musical instrument used upon mournful occasions, but the majority
adhere to the translation of our margin, "Concerning the kind of the
morning." This last interpretation is the subject of much enquiry and
conjecture. Calmet believed that the psalm was addressed to the music master
who presided over the band called the "Morning Hind," and Adam Clarke
thinks this to be the most likely of all the conjectural interpretations,
although he himself inclines to the belief that no interpretation should be
attempted, and believes that it is a merely arbitrary and unmeaning title, such
as Orientals have always been in the habit of appending to their songs. Our
Lord Jesus is so often compared to a hind, and his cruel huntings are so
pathetically described in this most affecting psalm, that we cannot but believe
that the title indicates the Lord Jesus under a well-known poetical metaphor;
at any rate, Jesus is the Hind of the morning concerning whom David here sings.
SUBJECT.
This is beyond all others THE PSALM OF THE CROSS. It may have been
actually repeated word by word by our Lord when hanging on the tree; it would
be too bold to say that it was so, but even a casual reader may see that it
might have been. It begins with, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken
me?" and ends, according to some, in the original with "It is
finished." For plaintive expressions uprising from unutterable depths of
woe we may say of this psalm, "there is none like it." It is the
photograph of our Lord's saddest hours, the record of his dying words, the
lachrymatory of his last tears, the memorial of his expiring joys. David and
his afflictions may be here in a very modified sense, but, as the star is
concealed by the light of the sun, he who sees Jesus will probably neither see
nor care to see David. Before us we have a description both of the darkness and
of the glory of the cross, the sufferings of Christ and the glory which shall
follow. Oh for grace to draw near and see this great sight! We should read
reverently, putting off our shoes from off our feet, as Moses did at the
burning bush, for if there be holy ground anywhere in Scripture it is in this
psalm.
DIVISION.
From the commencement to the twenty-first verse is a most pitiful cry for
help, and from verse 21 to 31 is a most precious foretaste of deliverance. The
first division may be subdivided at the tenth verse, from verse 1 to 10 being
an appeal based upon covenant relationship; and from verse 10 to 21 being an
equally earnest plea derived from the imminence of his peril.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" This was the
startling cry of Golgotha: Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani. The Jews mocked, but
the angels adored when Jesus cried this exceeding bitter cry. Nailed to the
tree we behold our great Redeemer in extremities, and what see we? Having ears
to hear let us hear, and having eyes to see let us see! Let us gaze with holy
wonder, and mark the flashes of light amid the awful darkness of that
midday-midnight. First, our Lord's faith beams forth and deserves our reverent
imitation; he keeps his hold upon his God with both hands and cries twice, "My
God, my God!" The spirit of adoption was strong within the suffering
Son of Man, and he felt no doubt about his interest in his God. Oh that we
could imitate this cleaving to an afflicting God! Nor does the sufferer
distrust the power of God to sustain him, for the title used —"El"—signifies
strength, and is the name of the Mighty God. He knows the Lord to be the
all-sufficient support and succour of his spirit, and therefore appeals to him
in the agony of grief, but not in the misery of doubt. He would fain know why
he is left, he raises that question and repeats it, but neither the power nor
the faithfulness of God does he mistrust. What an enquiry is this before us! "Why
hast thou forsaken me?" We must lay the emphasis on every word of this
saddest of all utterances. "Why?" what is the great cause of
such a strange fact as for God to leave his own Son at such a time and in such
a plight? There was no cause in him, why then was he deserted? "Hast:"
it is done, and the Saviour is feeling its dread effect as he asks the
question; it is surely true, but how mysterious! It was no threatening of
forsaking which made the great Surety cry aloud, he endured that forsaking in
very deed. "Thou:" I can understand why traitorous Judas and
timid Peter should be gone, but thou, my God, my faithful friend, how
canst thou leave me? This is worst of all, yea, worse than all put together.
Hell itself has for its fiercest flame the separation of the soul from God. "Forsaken:"
if thou hadst chastened I might bear it, for thy face would shine; but to
forsake me utterly, ah! why is this? "Me:" thine innocent,
obedient, suffering Son, why leavest thou me to perish? A sight of self
seen by penitence, and of Jesus on the cross seen by faith will best expound
this question. Jesus is forsaken because our sins had separated between us and
our God.
"Why
art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?"
The Man of Sorrows had prayed until his speech failed him, and he could only
utter moanings and groanings as men do in severe sicknesses, like the roarings
of a wounded animal. To what extremity of grief was our Master driven? What
strong crying and tears were those which made him too hoarse for speech! What
must have been his anguish to find his own beloved and trusted Father standing
afar off, and neither granting help nor apparently hearing prayer! This was
good cause to make him "roar." Yet there was reason for all this
which those who rest in Jesus as their Substitute well know.
Verse
2. "O my God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not." For
our prayers to appear to be unheard is no new trial, Jesus felt it before us,
and it is observable that he still held fast his believing hold on God, and
cried still, "My God." On the other hand his faith did not
render him less importunate, for amid the hurry and horror of that dismal day
he ceased not his cry, even as in Gethsemane he had agonized all through the
gloomy night. Our Lord continued to pray even though no comfortable answer
came, and in this he set us an example of obedience to his own words, "men
ought always to pray, and not to faint." No daylight is too glaring, and
no midnight too dark to pray in; and no delay or apparent denial, however
grievous, should tempt us to forbear from importunate pleading.
Verse
3. "But thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel."
However ill things may look, there is no ill in thee, O God! We are very apt to
think and speak hardly of God when we are under his afflicting hand, but not so
the obedient Son. He knows too well his Father's goodness to let outward
circumstances libel his character. There in no unrighteousness with the God of
Jacob, he deserves no censure; let him do what he will, he is to be praised,
and to reign enthroned amid the songs of his chosen people. If prayer be
unanswered it is not because God is unfaithful, but for some other good and
weighty reason. If we cannot perceive any ground for the delay, we must leave
the riddle unsolved, but we must not fly in God's face in order to invent an
answer. While the holiness of God is in the highest degree acknowledged and
adored, the afflicted speaker in this verse seems to marvel how the holy God
could forsake him, and be silent to his cries. The argument is, thou art holy,
Oh! why is it that thou dost disregard thy holy One in his hour of sharpest
anguish? We may not question the holiness of God, but we may argue from it, and
use it as a plea in our petitions.
Verse
4. "Our fathers trusted in thee: they trusted, and thou didst deliver
them." This is the rule of life with all the chosen family. Three
times over is it mentioned, they trusted, and trusted, and trusted,
and never left off trusting, for it was their very life; and they fared well
too, for thou didst deliver them. Out of all their straits,
difficulties, and miseries faith brought them by calling their God to the
rescue; but in the case of our Lord it appeared as if faith would bring no
assistance from heaven, he alone of all the trusting ones was to remain without
deliverance. The experience of other saints may be a great consolation to us
when in deep waters if faith can be sure that their deliverance will be ours;
but when we feel ourselves sinking, it is poor comfort to know that others are
swimming. Our Lord here pleads the past dealings of God with his people as a
reason why he should not be left alone; here again he is an example to us in
the skilful use of the weapon of all prayer. The use of the plural pronoun "our"
shows how one with his people Jesus was even on the cross. We say, "Our
Father which art in heaven," and he calls those "our fathers"
through whom we came into the world, although he was without father as to the
flesh.
Verse
5. "They cried unto thee, and were delivered: they trusted in thee, and
were not confounded." As if he had said, "How is it that I am now
left without succour in my overwhelming griefs, while all others have been
helped? We may remind the Lord of his former lovingkindnesses to his people,
and beseech him to be still the same. This is true wrestling; let us learn the
art. Observe, that ancient saints cried and trusted, and that in
trouble we must do the same; and the invariable result was that they were not
ashamed of their hope, for deliverance came in due time; this same happy
portion shall be ours. The prayer of faith can do the deed when nothing else
can. Let us wonder when we see Jesus using the same pleas as ourselves, and
immersed in griefs far deeper than our own.
Verse
6. "But I am a worm, and no man." This verse is a miracle in
language. How could the Lord of glory be brought to such abasement as to be not
only lower than the angels, but even lower than men. What a contrast between
"I AM" and "I am a worm"! yet such a double nature
was found in the person of our Lord Jesus when bleeding upon the tree. He felt
himself to be comparable to a helpless, powerless, down-trodden worm, passive
while crushed, and unnoticed and despised by those who trod upon him. He
selects the weakest of creatures, which is all flesh; and becomes, when trodden
upon, writhing, quivering flesh, utterly devoid of any might except strength to
suffer. This was a true likeness of himself when his body and soul had become a
mass of misery—the very essence of agony—in the dying pangs of crucifixion. Man
by nature is but a worm; but our Lord puts himself even beneath man, on account
of the scorn that was heaped upon him and the weakness which he felt, and
therefore he adds, "and no man." The privileges and blessings
which belonged to the fathers he could not obtain while deserted by God, and
common acts of humanity were not allowed him, for he was rejected of men; he
was outlawed from the society of earth, and shut out from the smile of heaven.
How utterly did the Saviour empty himself of all glory, and become of no
reputation for our sakes! "A reproach of men" —their common
butt and jest; a byword and a proverb unto them: the sport of the rabble, and
the scorn of the rulers. Oh the caustic power of reproach, to those who endure
it with patience, yet smart under it most painfully! "And despised of
the people." The vox populi was against him. The very people
who would once have crowned him then contemned him, and they who were benefited
by his cures sneered at him in his woes. Sin is worthy of all reproach and
contempt, and for this reason Jesus, the Sinbearer, was given up to be thus
unworthily and shamefully entreated.
Verse
7. "All they that see me laugh me to scorn." Read the
evangelistic narrative of the ridicule endured by the Crucified One, and then
consider, in the light of this expression, how it grieved him. The iron entered
into his soul. Mockery has for its distinctive description "cruel
mockings;" those endured by our Lord were of the most cruel kind. The
scornful ridicule of our Lord was universal; all sorts of men were unanimous in
the derisive laughter, and vied with each other in insulting him. Priests and
people, Jews and Gentiles, soldiers and civilians, all united in the general
scoff, and that at the time when he was prostrate in weakness and ready to die.
Which shall we wonder at the most, the cruelty of man or the love of the bleeding
Saviour? How can we ever complain of ridicule after this?
"They
shoot out the lip, they shake the head." These were gestures of
contempt. Pouting, grinning, shaking of the head, thrusting out of the tongue,
and other modes of derision were endured by our patient Lord; men made faces at
him before whom angels vail their faces and adore. The basest signs of disgrace
which disdain could devise were maliciously cast at him. They punned upon his
prayers, they made matter for laughter of his sufferings, and set him utterly
at nought. Herbert sings of our Lord as saying,—
"Shame
tears my soul, my body many a wound;
Sharp nails pierce this, but sharper that confound;
Reproaches which are free, while I am bound.
Was ever grief like mine?"
Verse
8. "Saying, He trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him: let him
deliver him, seeing he delighted in him." Here the taunt is cruelly
aimed at the sufferer's faith in God, which is the tenderest point in a good
man's soul, the very apple of his eye. They must have learned the diabolical
art from Satan himself, for they made rare proficiency in it. According to
Matthew 27:39-44, there were five forms of taunt hurled at the Lord Jesus; this
special piece of mockery is probably mentioned in this psalm because it is the
most bitter of the whole; it has a biting, sarcastic irony in it, which gives
it a peculiar venom; it must have stung the Man of Sorrows to the quick. When
we are tormented in the same manner, let us remember him who endured such
contradiction of sinners against himself, and we shall be comforted. On reading
these verses one is ready, with Trapp, to ask, Is this a prophecy or a history?
for the description is so accurate. We must not lose sight of the truth which
was unwittingly uttered by the Jewish scoffers. They themselves are witnesses
that Jesus of Nazareth trusted in God: why then was he permitted to perish?
Jehovah had aforetime delivered those who rolled their burdens upon him: why
was this man deserted? Oh that they had understood the answer! Note further,
that their ironical jest, "seeing he delighted in him," was
true. The Lord did delight in his dear Son, and when he was found in fashion as
a man, and became obedient unto death, he still was well pleased with him.
Strange mixture! Jehovah delights in him, and yet bruises him; is well pleased,
and yet slays him.
Verse
9. "But thou art he that took me out of the womb." Kindly
providence attends with the surgery of tenderness at every human birth; but the
Son of Man, who was marvelously begotten of the Holy Ghost, was in an especial
manner watched over by the Lord when brought forth by Mary. The destitute state
of Joseph and Mary, far away from friends and home, led them to see the
cherishing hand of God in the safe delivery of the mother, and the happy birth
of the child; that Child now fighting the great battle of his life, uses the
mercy of his nativity as an argument with God. Faith finds weapons everywhere.
He who wills to believe shall never lack reasons for believing. "Thou
didst make me hope when I was upon my mother's breasts." Was our Lord
so early a believer? Was he one of those babes and sucklings out of whose
mouths strength is ordained? So it would seem; and if so, what a plea for help!
Early piety gives peculiar comfort in our after trials, for surely he who loved
us when we were children is too faithful to cast us off in our riper years.
Some give the text the sense of "gave me cause to trust, by keeping me
safely," and assuredly there was a special providence which preserved our
Lord's infant days from the fury of Herod, the dangers of travelling, and the
ills of poverty.
Verse
10. "I was cast upon thee from the womb." Into the Almighty
arms he was first received, as into those of a loving parent. This is a sweet
thought. God begins his care over us from the earliest hour. We are dandled
upon the knee of mercy, and cherished in the lap of goodness; our cradle is
canopied by divine love, and our first totterings are guided by his care. "Thou
art my God from my mother's belly." The psalm begins with "My
God, my God," and here, not only is the claim repeated, but its early
date is urged. Oh noble perseverance of faith, thus to continue pleading with
holy ingenuity of argument! Our birth was our weakest and most perilous period
of existence; if we were then secured by Omnipotent tenderness, surely we have
no cause to suspect that divine goodness will fail us now. He who was our God
when we left our mother, will be with us till we return to mother earth, and
will keep us from perishing in the belly of hell.
Verses
11-21. The crucified Son of David continues to pour out his complaint and
prayer. We need much grace that while reading we may have fellowship with his sufferings.
May the blessed Spirit conduct us into a most clear and affecting sight of our
Redeemer's woes.
Verse
11. "Be not far from me." This is the petition for which he
has been using such varied and powerful pleas. His great woe was that God had
forsaken him, his great prayer is that he would be near him. A lively sense of
the divine presence is a mighty stay to the heart in times of distress. "For
trouble is near; for there is none to help." There are two "fors,"
as though faith gave a double knock at mercy's gate; that is a powerful prayer
which is full of holy reasons and thoughtful arguments. The nearness of trouble
is a weighty motive for divine help; this moves our heavenly Father's heart,
and brings down his helping hand. It is his glory to be our very present help
in trouble. Our Substitute had trouble in his inmost heart, for he said,
"the waters have come in, even unto my soul;" well might he cry, "be
not far from me." The absence of all other helpers is another telling
plea. In our Lord's case none either could or would help him, it was needful
that he should tread the winepress alone; yet was it a sore aggravation to find
that all his disciples had forsaken him, and lover and friend were put far from
him. There is an awfulness about absolute friendlessness which is crushing to
the human mind, for man was not made to be alone, and is like a dismembered
limb when he has to endure heart-loneliness.
Verse
12. "Many bulls have compassed me: strong bulls of Bashan have beset me
round." The mighty ones in the crowd are here marked by the tearful
eye of their victim. The priests, elders, scribes, Pharisees, rulers, and
captains bellowed round the cross like wild cattle, fed in the fat and solitary
pastures of Bashan, full of strength and fury; they stamped and foamed around
the innocent One, and longed to gore him to death with their cruelties.
Conceive of the Lord Jesus as a helpless, unarmed, naked man, cast into the
midst of a herd of infuriated wild bulls. They were brutal as bulls, many, and
strong, and the Rejected One was all alone, and bound naked to the tree. His
position throws great force into the earnest entreaty, "Be not far from
me."
Verse
13. "They gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring
lion." Like hungry cannibals they opened their blasphemous mouths as
if they were about to swallow the man whom they abhorred. They could not vomit
forth their anger fast enough through the ordinary aperture of their mouths,
and therefore set the doors of their lips wide open like those who gape. Like
roaring lions they howled out their fury, and longed to tear the Saviour in
pieces, as wild beasts raven over their prey. Our Lord's faith must have passed
through a most severe conflict while he found himself abandoned to the tender mercies
of the wicked, but he came off victorious by prayer; the very dangers to which
he was exposed being used to add prevalence to his entreaties.
Verse
14. Turning from his enemies, our Lord describes his own personal condition in
language which should bring the tears into every loving eye. "I am
poured out like water." He was utterly spent, like water poured upon
the earth; his heart failed him, and had no more firmness in it than running
water, and his whole being was made a sacrifice, like a libation poured out
before the Lord. He had long been a fountain of tears; in Gethsemane his heart
welled over in sweat, and on the cross he gushed forth with blood; he poured
out his strength and spirit, so that he was reduced to the most feeble and
exhausted state. "All my bones are out of joint," as if
distended upon a rack. Is it not most probable that the fastenings of the hands
and feet, and the jar occasioned by fixing the cross in the earth, may have
dislocated the bones of the Crucified One? If this is not intended, we must
refer the expression to that extreme weakness which would occasion relaxation
of the muscles and a general sense of parting asunder throughout the whole
system. "My heart is like wax; it is melted in the midst of my
bowels." Excessive debility and intense pain made his inmost life to
feel like wax melted in the heat. The Greek liturgy uses the expression,
"thine unknown sufferings," and well it may. The fire of Almighty
wrath would have consumed our souls for ever in hell; it was no light work to
bear as a substitute the heat of an anger so justly terrible. Dr. Gill wisely
observes, "if the heart of Christ, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, melted
at it, what heart can endure, or hands be strong, when God deals with them in
his wrath?"
Verse
15. "My strength is dried up like a potsherd." Most complete
debility is here portrayed; Jesus likens himself to a broken piece of
earthenware, or an earthen pot, baked in the fire till the last particle of
moisture is driven out of the clay. No doubt a high degree of feverish burning
afflicted the body of our Lord. All his strength was dried up in the tremendous
flames of avenging justice, even as the paschal lamb was roasted in the fire. "My
tongue cleaveth to my jaws;" thirst and fever fastened his tongue to
his jaws. Dryness and a horrible clamminess tormented his mouth, so that he
could scarcely speak. "Thou hast brought me into the dust of
death;" so tormented in every single part as to feel dissolved into
separate atoms, and each atom full of misery; the full price of our redemption
was paid, and no part of the Surety's body or soul escaped its share of agony.
The words may set forth Jesus as having wrestled with Death until he rolled
into the dust with his antagonist. Behold the humiliation of the Son of God!
The Lord of Glory stoops to the dust of death. Amid the mouldering relics of
mortality Jesus condescends to lodge!
Bishop
Mant's version of the two preceding verses is forcible and accurate:—
"Pour'd
forth like water is my frame;
My bones asunder start;
As wax that feels the searching flame,
Within me melts my heart.
My wither'd sinews shrink unstrung
Like potsherd dried and dead:
Cleaves to my jaws my burning tongue
The dust of death my bed."
Verse
16. We are to understand every item of this sad description as being urged by
the Lord Jesus as a plea for divine help; and this will give us a high idea of
his perseverance in prayer. "For dogs have compassed me." Here
he marks the more ignoble crowd, who, while less strong than their brutal
leaders, were not less ferocious, for there they were howling and barking like
unclean and hungry dogs. Hunters frequently surround their game with a circle,
and gradually encompass them with an ever-narrowing ring of dogs and men. Such
a picture is before us. In the centre stands, not a panting stag, but a
bleeding, fainting man, and around him are the enraged and unpitying wretches
who have hounded him to his doom. Here we have the "hind of the
morning" of whom the psalm so plaintively sings, hunted by bloodhounds,
all thirsting to devour him. The assembly of the wicked have inclosed me:
thus the Jewish people were unchurched, and that which called itself an
assembly of the righteous is justly for its sins marked upon the forehead as an
assembly of the wicked. This is not the only occasion when professed churches
of God have become synagogues of Satan, and have persecuted the Holy One and
the Just. They pierced my hands and my feet. This can by no means refer
to David, or to any one but Jesus of Nazareth, the once crucified but now
exalted Son of God. Pause, dear reader, and view the wounds of thy Redeemer.
Verse
17. So emaciated was Jesus by his fastings and sufferings that he says, "I
may tell all my bones." He could count and recount them. The posture
of the body on the cross, Bishop Horne thinks, would so distend the flesh and
skin as to make the bones visible, so that they might be numbered. The zeal of
his Father's house had eaten him up; like a good soldier he had endured
hardness. Oh that we cared less for the body's enjoyment and ease and more for
our Father's business! It were better to count the bones of an emaciated body
than to bring leanness into our souls.
"They
look and stare upon me." Unholy eyes gazed insultingly upon the
Saviours's nakedness, and shocked the sacred delicacy of his holy soul. The
sight of the agonizing body ought to have ensured sympathy from the throng, but
it only increased their savage mirth, as they gloated their cruel eyes upon his
miseries. Let us blush for human nature, and mourn in sympathy with our
Redeemer's shame. The first Adam made us all naked, and therefore the second
Adam became naked that he might clothe our naked souls.
Verse
18. "They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my
vesture." The garments of the executed were the perquisites of the
executioners in most cases, but it was not often that they cast lots at the
division of the spoil; this incident shows how clearly David in vision saw the
day of Christ, and how surely the Man of Nazareth is he of whom the prophets
spake: "these things, therefore, the soldiers did." He who
gave his blood to cleanse us gave his garments to clothe us. As Ness says,
"this precious Lamb of God gave up his golden fleece for us." How
every incident of Jesus' griefs is here stored up in the treasury of
inspiration, and embalmed in the amber of sacred song; we must learn hence to
be very mindful of all that concerns our Beloved, and to think much more of
everything which has a connection with him. It may be noted that the habit of
gambling is of all others the most hardening, for men could practise it even at
the cross-foot while besprinkled with the blood of the Crucified. No Christian
will endure the rattle of the dice when he thinks of this.
Verse
19. "But be thou not far from me, O Lord." Invincible faith
returns to the charge, and uses the same means, viz., importunate prayer. He
repeats the petition so piteously offered before. He wants nothing but his God,
even in his lowest state. He does not ask for the most comfortable or nearest
presence of God, he will be content if he is not far from him; humble requests
speed at the throne. "O my strength, haste thee to help me."
Hard cases need timely aid: when necessity justifies it we may be urgent with
God as to time, and cry, "make haste;" but we must not do this out of
willfulness. Mark how in the last degree of personal weakness he calls the Lord
"my strength;" after this fashion the believer can sing,
"when I am weak, then am I strong."
Verse
20. "Deliver my soul from the sword." By the sword is probably
meant entire destruction, which as a man he dreaded; or perhaps he sought
deliverance from the enemies around him, who were like a sharp and deadly sword
to him. The Lord had said, "Awake, O sword," and now from the terror
of that sword the Shepherd would fain be delivered as soon as justice should
see fit. "My darling from the power of the dog." Meaning his
soul, his life, which is most dear to every man. The original is, "my only
one," and therefore is our soul dear, because it is our only soul. Would
that all men made their souls their darlings, but many treat them as if they
were not worth so much as the mire of the streets. The dog may mean
Satan, that infernal Cerberus, that cursed and cursing cur; or else the whole
company of Christ's foes, who though many in number were as unanimous as if
there were but one, and with one consent sought to rend him in pieces. If Jesus
cried for help against the dog of hell, much more may we. Cave canem,
beware of the dog, for his power is great, and only God can deliver us from
him. When he fawns upon us, we must not put ourselves in his power; and when he
howls at us, we may remember that God holds him with a chain.
Verse
21. "Save me from the lion's mouth: for thou hast heard me from the
horns of the unicorns." Having experienced deliverance in the past
from great enemies, who were strong as the unicorns, the Redeemer utters his
last cry for rescue from death, which is fierce and mighty as the lion. This
prayer was heard, and the gloom of the cross departed. Thus faith, though
sorely beaten, and even cast beneath the feet of her enemy, ultimately wins the
victory. It was so in our Head, it shall be so in all the members. We have
overcome the unicorn, we shall conquer the lion, and from both lion and unicorn
we shall take the crown.
Verses
22-31. The transition is very marked; from a horrible tempest all is changed
into calm. The darkness of Calvary at length passed away from the face of
nature, and from the soul of the Redeemer, and beholding the light of his
triumph and its future results the Saviour smiled. We have followed him through
the gloom, let us attend him in the returning light. It will be well still to
regard the words as a part of our Lord's soliloquy upon the cross, uttered in
his mind during the last few moments before his death.
Verse
22. "I will declare thy name unto my brethren." The delights
of Jesus are always with his church, and hence his thoughts, after much
distraction, return at the first moment of relief to their usual channel; he
forms fresh designs for the benefit of his beloved ones. He is not ashamed to
call them brethren, "Saying, I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in
the midst of the church will I sing praise unto thee." Among his first
resurrection words were these, "Go to my brethren." In the verse
before us, Jesus anticipates happiness in having communication with his people;
he purposes to be their teacher and minister, and fixes his mind upon the
subject of his discourse. The name, i.e., the character and conduct of
God are by Jesus Christ's gospel proclaimed to all the holy brotherhood; they
behold the fulness of the Godhead dwelling bodily in him, and rejoice greatly
to see all the infinite perfections manifested in one who is bone of their bone
and flesh of their flesh. What a precious subject is the name of our God! It is
the only one worthy of the only Begotten, whose meat and drink it was to do the
Father's will. We may learn from this resolution of our Lord, that one of the
most excellent methods of showing our thankfulness for deliverances is to tell
to our brethren what the Lord has done for us. We mention our sorrows readily
enough; why are we so slow in declaring our deliverances? "In the midst
of the congregation will I praise thee." Not in a little household
gathering merely does our Lord resolve to proclaim his Father's love, but in
the great assemblies of his saints, and in the general assembly and church of
the first-born. This the Lord Jesus is always doing by his representatives, who
are the heralds of salvation, and labour to praise God. In the great universal
church Jesus is the One authoritative teacher, and all others, so far as they
are worthy to be called teachers, are nothing but echoes of his voice. Jesus,
in this second sentence, reveals his object in declaring the divine name, it is
that God may be praised; the church continually magnifies Jehovah for
manifesting himself in the person of Jesus, and Jesus himself leads the song,
and is both precentor and preacher in his church. Delightful are the seasons
when Jesus communes with our hearts concerning divine truth; joyful praise is
the sure result.
Verse
23. "Ye that fear the Lord praise him." The reader must
imagine the Saviour as addressing the congregation of the saints. He exhorts
the faithful to unite with him in thanksgiving. The description of
"fearing the Lord" is very frequent and very instructive; it is the
beginning of wisdom, and is an essential sign of grace. "I am a Hebrew and
I fear God" was Jonah's confession of faith. Humble awe of God is so
necessary a preparation for praising him that none are fit to sing to his
honour but such as reverence his word; but this fear is consistent with the
highest joy, and is not to be confounded with legal bondage, which is a fear
which perfect love casteth out. Holy fear should always keep the key of the
singing pew. Where Jesus leads the tune none but holy lips may dare to sing. "All
ye the seed of Jacob glorify him." The genius of the gospel is praise.
Jew and Gentile saved by sovereign grace should be eager in the blessed work of
magnifying the God of our salvation. All saints should unite in the
song; no tongue may be silent, no heart may be cold. Christ calls us to glorify
God, and can we refuse? "And fear him, all ye the seed of Israel."
The spiritual Israel all do this, and we hope the day will come when Israel
after the flesh will be brought to the same mind. The more we praise God the
more reverently shall we fear him, and the deeper our reverence the sweeter our
songs. So much does Jesus value praise that we have it here under his dying
hand and seal that all the saints must glorify the Lord.
Verse
24. "For he hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the
afflicted." Here is good matter and motive for praise. The experience
of our covenant Head and Representative should encourage all of us to bless the
God of grace. Never was man so afflicted as our Saviour in body and soul from
friends and foes, by heaven and hell, in life and death; he was the foremost in
the ranks of the afflicted, but all those afflictions were sent in love, and
not because his Father despised and abhorred him. 'Tis true that justice
demanded that Christ should bear the burden which as a substitute he undertook
to carry, but Jehovah always loved him, and in love laid that load upon him
with a view to his ultimate glory and to the accomplishment of the dearest wish
of his heart. Under all his woes our Lord was honourable in the Father's sight,
the matchless jewel of Jehovah's heart. "Neither hath he hid his face
from him." That is to say, the hiding was but temporary, and was soon
removed; it was not final and eternal. "But when he cried unto him, he
heard." Jesus was heard in that he feared. He cried in extremis
and de profundis, and was speedily answered; he therefore bids his
people join him in singing a Gloria in excelsis.
Every
child of God should seek refreshment for his faith in this testimony of the Man
of Sorrows. What Jesus here witnesses is as true to-day as when it was first
written. It shall never be said that any man's affliction or poverty prevented
his being an accepted suppliant at Jehovah's throne of grace. The meanest
applicant is welcome at mercy's door:—
"None that
approach his throne shall find
A God unfaithful or unkind."
Verse
25. "My praise shall be of thee in the great congregation."
The one subject of our Master's song is the Lord alone. The Lord and the Lord
only is the theme which the believer handleth when he gives himself to imitate
Jesus in praise. The word in the original is "from thee,"—true praise
is of celestial origin. The rarest harmonies of music are nothing unless they
are sincerely consecrated to God by hearts sanctified by the Spirit. The clerk
says, "Let us sing to the praise and glory of God;" but the choir
often sing to the praise and glory of themselves. Oh when shall our service of
song be a pure offering? Observe in this verse how Jesus loves the public
praises of the saints, and thinks with pleasure of the great congregation. It
would be wicked on our part to despise the twos and threes; but, on the other
hand, let not the little companies snarl at the greater assemblies as though
they were necessarily less pure and less approved, for Jesus loves the praise
of the great congregation. "I will pay my vows before them that fear
him." Jesus dedicates himself anew to the carrying out of the divine
purpose in fulfilment of his vows made in anguish. Did our Lord when he
ascended to the skies proclaim amid the redeemed in glory the goodness of
Jehovah? And was that the vow here meant? Undoubtedly the publication of the
gospel is the constant fulfilment of covenant engagements made by our Surety in
the councils of eternity. Messiah vowed to build up a spiritual temple for the
Lord, and he will surely keep his word.
Verse
26. "The meek shall eat and be satisfied." Mark how the dying
Lover of our souls solaces himself with the result of his death. The
spiritually poor find a feast in Jesus, they feed upon him to the satisfaction
of their hearts, they were famished until he gave himself for them, but now
they are filled with royal dainties. The thought of the joy of his people gave
comfort to our expiring Lord. Note the characters who partake of the benefit of
his passion; "the meek," the humble and lowly. Lord, make us
so. Note also the certainty that gospel provisions shall not be wasted, "they
shall eat;" and the sure result of such eating, "and be
satisfied." "They shall praise the Lord that seek him." For
a while they may keep a fast, but their thanksgiving days must and shall come. "Your
heart shall live for ever." Your spirits shall not fail through trial,
you shall not die of grief, immortal joys shall be your portion. Thus Jesus
speaks even from the cross to the troubled seeker. If his dying words are so
assuring, what consolation may we not find in the truth that he ever liveth to
make intercession for us! They who eat at Jesus' table receive the fulfilment
of the promise, "Whosoever eateth of this bread shall live for ever."
Verse
27. In reading this verse one is struck with the Messiah's missionary spirit.
It is evidently his grand consolation that Jehovah will be known throughout all
places of his dominion. "All the ends of the world shall remember and
turn unto the Lord." Out from the inner circle of the present church
the blessing is to spread in growing power until the remotest parts of the
earth shall be ashamed of their idols, mindful of the true God, penitent for
their offences, and unanimously earnest for reconciliation with Jehovah. Then
shall false worship cease, "and all the kindreds of the nations shall
worship before thee," O thou only living and true God. This hope which
was the reward of Jesus is a stimulus to those who fight his battles.
It
is well to mark the order of conversion as here set forth; they shall "remember"—this
is reflection, like the prodigal who came unto himself; "and turn unto
Jehovah"—this is repentance, like Manasseh who left his idols and "worship"—this
is holy service, as Paul adored the Christ whom once he abhorred.
Verse
28. "For the kingdom is the Lord's." As an obedient Son the
dying Redeemer rejoiced to know that his Father's interests would prosper
through his pains. "The Lord reigneth" was his song as it is
ours. He who by his own power reigns supreme in the domains of creation and
providence, has set up a kingdom of grace, and by the conquering power of the
cross that kingdom will grow until all people shall own its sway and proclaim
that "he is the governor among the nations." Amid the tumults
and disasters of the present the Lord reigneth; but in the halcyon days of
peace the rich fruit of his dominion will be apparent to every eye. Great
Shepherd, let thy glorious kingdom come.
Verse
29. "All they that be fat upon earth," the rich and great are
not shut out. Grace now finds the most of its jewels among the poor, but in the
latter days the mighty of the earth "shall eat," shall taste
of redeeming grace and dying love, and shall "worship" with
all their hearts the God who deals so bountifully with us in Christ Jesus.
Those who are spiritually fat with inward prosperity shall be filled with the
marrow of communion, and shall worship the Lord with peculiar fervour. In the
covenant of grace Jesus has provided good cheer for our high estate, and he has
taken equal care to console us in our humiliation, for the next sentence is, "all
they that go down to the dust shall bow before him." There is relief
and comfort in bowing before God when our case is at its worst; even amid the
dust of death prayer kindles the lamp of hope.
While
all who come to God by Jesus Christ are thus blessed, whether they be rich or
poor, none of those who despise him may hope for a blessing. "None can
keep alive his own soul." This is the stern counterpart of the gospel
message of "look and live." There is no salvation out of Christ. We
must hold life, and have life as Christ's gift, or we shall die eternally. This
is very solid evangelical doctrine, and should be proclaimed in every corner of
the earth, that like a great hammer it may break in pieces all self-confidence.
Verse
30. "A seed shall serve him." Posterity shall perpetuate the
worship of the Most High. The kingdom of truth on earth shall never fail. As
one generation is called to its rest, another will arise in its stead. We need
have no fear for the true apostolic succession; that is safe enough. "It
shall be accounted to the Lord for a generation." He will reckon the
ages by the succession of the saints, and set his accounts according to the
families of the faithful. Generations of sinners come not into the genealogy of
the skies. God's family register is not for strangers, but for the children
only.
Verse
31. "They shall come." Sovereign grace shall bring out from
among men the bloodbought ones. Nothing shall thwart the divine purpose. The
chosen shall come to life, to faith, to pardon, to heaven. In this the dying
Saviour finds a sacred satisfaction. Toiling servant of God, be glad at the
thought that the eternal purpose of God shall suffer neither let nor hindrance.
"And shall declare his righteousness unto a people that shall be
born." None of the people who shall be brought to God by the irresistible
attractions of the cross shall be dumb, they shall be able to tell forth the
righteousness of the Lord, so that future generations shall know the truth.
Fathers shall teach their sons, who shall hand it down to their children; the
burden of the story always being "that he hath done this," or,
that "It is finished." Salvation's glorious work is done, there is
peace on earth, and glory in the highest. "It is finished," these
were the expiring words of the Lord Jesus, as they are the last words of this
Psalm. May we by living faith be enabled to see our salvation finished by the
death of Jesus!
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title.—Aijeleth
Shahar. The title of the twenty-second Psalm is Aijeleth Shahar—the
morning hart. The whole Psalm refers to Christ, containing much that cannot
be applied to another: parting his garments, casting lots for his vesture, etc.
He is described as a kindly, meek and beautiful hart, started by the huntsman
at the dawn of the day. Herod began hunting him down as soon as he appeared.
Poverty, the hatred of men, and the temptation of Satan, joined in the pursuit.
There always was some "dog," or "bull," or
"unicorn," ready to attack him. After his first sermon the huntsmen
gathered about him, but he was too fleet of foot, and escaped. The church had
long seen the Messiah "like a roe, or a young hart, upon the
mountains," had "heard the voice of her Beloved," and had cried
out, "Behold, he cometh, leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the
hills;" sometimes he was even seen, with the dawn of the day, in the
neighbourhood of the temple, and beside the enclosures of the vineyards. The
church requested to see him "on the mountains of Bether," and upon
"the mountains of spices." The former probably signifying the place of
his sufferings, and the latter the sublime acclivities of light, glory, and
honour, where the "hart" shall be hunted no more. But in the
afternoon, the huntsmen who had been following the "young roe" from
early day-break, had succeeded in driving him to the mountains of Bether.
Christ found Calvary a craggy, jagged, and fearful hill—"a mountain of
division." Here he was driven by the huntsmen to the edges of the awful
precipices yawning destruction from below, while he was surrounded and held at
bay by all the beasts of prey and monsters of the infernal forest. The
"unicorn," and the "bulls of Bashan," gored him with their
horns; the great "lion" roared at him; and the "dog"
fastened himself upon him. But he foiled them all. In his own time he bowed his
head and gave up the ghost. He was buried in a new grave; and his assailants
reckoned upon complete victory. They had not considered that he was a
"morning hart." Surely enough, at the appointed time, did he escape
from the hunter's net, and stand forth on the mountains of Israel ALIVE, and never,
NEVER to die again. Now he is with Mary in the garden, giving evidence of his
own resurrection; in a moment he is at Emmaus, encouraging the too timid and
bewildered disciples. Nor does it cost him any trouble to go thence to Galilee
to his friends, and again to the Mount of Olives, "on the mountains of
spices," carrying with him the day-dawn, robed in life and beauty
for ever more." Christmas Evans, 1766-1838.
Title. It will be
very readily admitted that the hind is a very appropriate emblem of the
suffering and persecuted righteous man who meets us in this Psalm. . . . That
the hind may be a figurative expression significant of suffering
innocence, is put beyond a doubt by the fact, that the wicked and the persecutors
in this Psalm, whose peculiar physiognomy is marked by emblems drawn from
the brute creation, are designed by the terms dogs, lions, bulls,
etc. E. W. Hengstenberg.
Title.
"The hind." Much extraordinary symbolism has by old authors been conjured up
and clustered around the hind. According to their curious natural history,
there exists a deadly enmity between the deer and the serpent, and the deer by
its warm breath draws serpents out of their holes in order to devour them. The
old grammarians derived Elaphas, or hart, from elaunein tous opheis,
that is, of driving away serpents. Even the burning a portion of the deer's
horns was said to drive away all snakes. If a snake had escaped the hart after
being drawn out by the hart by its breath, it was said to be more vehemently
poisonous than before. The timidity of the deer was ascribed to the great size
of its heart, in which they thought was a bone shaped like a cross. Condensed
from Wood's "Bible Animals," by C. H. S.
Whole
Psalm. This is a kind of gem among the Psalms, and is peculiarly
excellent and remarkable. It contains those deep, sublime, and heavy sufferings
of Christ, when agonising in the midst of the terrors and pangs of divine wrath
and death, which surpass all human thought and comprehension. I know not
whether any Psalm throughout the whole book contains matter more weighty, or
from which the hearts of the godly can so truly perceive those sighs and
groans, inexpressible by man, which their Lord and Head, Jesus Christ, uttered
when conflicting for us in the midst of death, and in the midst of the pains
and terrors of hell. Wherefore this Psalm ought to be most highly prized by all
who have any acquaintance with temptations of faith and spiritual conflicts. Martin
Luther.
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm, as it sets out the sufferings of Christ to the full,
so also his three great offices. His sufferings are copiously described from
the beginning of the Psalm to verse 22. The prophetical office of Christ, from
verse 22 to verse 25. That which is foretold about his vows (verse 25), hath
respect to his priestly function. In the rest of the Psalm the kingly office of
Christ is set forth. William Gouge, D.D. (1575-1653), in "A
Commentary on the whole Epistle to the Hebrews." [Reprinted in
Nichol's Series of Commentaries.]
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm seems to be less a prophecy than a history. Cassiodorus.
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm must be expounded, word for word, entire and in every
respect, of Christ only; without any allegory, trope, or anagoge. Bakius,
quoted by F. Delitzsch, D.D., on Hebrews, ii. 12.
Whole
Psalm. A prophecy of the passion of Christ, and of the vocation of the Gentiles.
Eusebius of Cæsarea.
Verse 1. "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" We contrast this with John
16:32, "I am not alone, because the Father is with me." That
these words in David were notwithstanding the words of Christ, there is no true
believer ignorant; yet how cross our Lord's words in John! Answer:— It is one
thing to speak out of present sense of misery, another thing to be confident of
a never-separated Deity. The condition of Christ in respect of his human state
(not the divine), is in all outward appearances, like ours; we conceive the
saints' condition very lamentable at times, as if God were for ever gone. And Christ
(to teach us to cry after God the Father, like children after the mother, whose
very stepping but at the door, ofttimes makes the babe believe, and so saith
that his father is gone for ever), presents in his own sufferings how much he
is sensible of ours in that case. As for his divine nature, he and his Father
can never sunder in that, and so at no time is he alone, but the Father is
always with him. William Streat, in "The Dividing of the Hoof,"
1654.
Verse 1. "My
God, my God," etc. There is a tradition that our Lord, hanging on the
cross, began, as we know from the gospel, this Psalm; and repeating it and
those that follow, gave up his most blessed spirit when he came to the sixth
verse of the thirty-first Psalm. However that may be, by taking these first
words on his lips, he stamped the Psalm as belonging to himself. Ludolph,
the Carthusian (circa.1350), in J. M. Neale's Commentary.
Verse 1. "My
God, my God," etc. It was so sharp, so heavy an affliction to Christ's
soul, that it caused him who was meek under all other sufferings as a lamb, to
roar under this like a lion. For so much those words of Christ signify, "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far from helping me,
and from the words of my roaring?" It comes from a root that signifies
to howl or roar as a lion, and rather signifies the noise made by a wild beast
than the voice of a man. And it is as much as if Christ had said, O my God, no
words can express my anguish, I will not speak, but roar, howl out my
complaints. Pour it out in volleys of groans. I roar as a lion. It's no small
matter will make that majestic creature to roar. And sure so great a spirit as
Christ's would not have roared under a slight burden.
Did
God really forsake Jesus Christ upon the cross? then from the desertion of
Christ singular consolation springs up to the people of God; yea, manifold
consolation. Principally it's a support in these two respects, as it is preventive
of your final desertion, and a comfortable pattern to you in your present sad
desertions. 1. Christ's desertion is preventive of your final desertion.
Because he was forsaken for a time you shall not be forsaken for ever. For he
was forsaken for you. It is every way as much for the dear Son of God, the
darling delight of his soul, to be forsaken of God for a time, as if such a
poor inconsiderable thing as thou art shouldst be cast off to eternity. Now,
this being equivalent and borne in thy room, must needs give thee the highest
security in the world that God will never finally withdraw from thee. 2.
Moreover, this sad desertion of Christ becomes a comfortable pattern to
poor deserted souls in divers respects; and the proper business of such souls,
at such times, is to eye it believingly. Though God deserted Christ, yet at the
same time he powerfully supported him. His omnipotent arms were under him,
though his pleased face was hid from him. He had not indeed his smiles, but he
had his supportations. So, Christian, just so shall it be with thee. Thy God
may turn away his face, he will not pluck away his arm. When one asked of holy
Mr. Baines how the case stood with his soul, he answered, "Supports I
have, though suavities I want." Our Father in this deals with us as we
ourselves sometimes do with a child that is stubborn and rebellious. We turn
him out of doors and bid him begone out of our sight, and there he sighs and
weeps; but however for the humbling of him, we will not presently take him into
house and favour; yet we order, at least permit the servants to carry him meat
and drink: here is fatherly care and support, though no former smiles or
manifested delights. . . . Though God forsook Christ, yet at that time he could
justify God. So you read, "O my God (saith he), I cry in the day time; but
thou hearest not, and in the night season, and am not silent; but thou art
holy." Is not thy spirit according to thy measure, framed like Christ's in
this; canst thou not, say even when he writes bitter things against thee, he is
a holy, faithful and good God for all this! I an deserted but not wronged.
There is not one drop of injustice in all the sea of my sorrows. Though he
condemned me I must and will justify him: this also is Christ-like. John
Flavel.
Verse 1. "My
God, my God." The repetition is expressive of fervent desire—"My
God," in an especial sense, as in his words after the resurrection to
Mary Magdalene, "I ascend unto my God, and your God;" "My
God," not as the Son of God only, but in that nature which he hath
assumed, as the beloved Son in whom the Father is well pleased; who is loved of
the Father and who loveth the Father more than the whole universe. It is
observed that this expression, "My God," is three times repeated. Dionysius,
quoted by Isaac Williams.
Verse 1. "My
God." It was possible for Christ by faith to know that he was
beloved of God, and he did know that he was beloved of God, when yet as to sense
and feeling he tasted of God's wrath. Faith and the want of sense
are not inconsistent; there may be no present sense of God's love, nay, there
may be a present sense of his wrath, and yet there may be faith at the same
time. John Row's "Emmanuel," 1680.
Verse 1. This word, "My
God," takes in more than all the philosophers in the world could draw
out of it. Alexander Wedderburn, 1701.
Verse 1. That there
is something of a singular force, meaning, and feeling in these words is
manifest from this—the evangelists have studiously given us this verse in the
very words of the Hebrew, in order to show their emphatic force. And moreover I
do not remember any one other place in the Scriptures where we have this
repetition, ELI, ELI. Martin Luther.
Verse 1. "Why?"
Not the "why" of impatience or despair, not the sinful
questioning of one whose heart rebels against his chastening, but rather the
cry of a lost child who cannot understand why his father has left him, and who
longs to see his father's face again. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse 1. "My
roaring." (Heb.), seems primarily to denote the roaring of a lion;
but, as applied to intelligent beings, it is generally expressive of profound
mental anguish poured forth in audible and even vehement strains. Psalm 38:9;
33:3; Job 3:24. Thus did the suffering Messiah pour forth strong crying and
tears, to him that was able to save him from death. Hebrews 5:7. John
Morison.
Verse 1. When Christ
complains of having been forsaken by God, we are not to understand that he was
forsaken by the First Person, or that there was a dissolution of the hypostatic
union, or that he lost the favour and friendship of the Father; but he
signifies to us that God permitted his human nature to undergo those dreadful
torments, and to suffer an ignominious death, from which he could, if he chose,
most easily deliver him. Nor did such complaints proceed either from impatience
or ignorance, as if Christ were ignorant of the cause of his suffering, or was
not most willing to bear such abandonment in his suffering; such complaints
were only a declaration of his most bitter sufferings. And whereas, through the
whole course of his passion, with such patience did our Lord suffer, as not to
let a single groan or sigh escape from him, so now, lest the bystanders may
readily believe that he was rendered impassible by some superior power; therefore,
when his last moments were nigh he protests that he is true man, truly
passible; forsaken by his Father in his sufferings, the bitterness and
acuteness of which he then intimately felt. Robert Bellarmine (Cardinal),
1542-1621.
Verse 1. Divines are
wont commonly to say, that Christ, from the moment of his conception, had the
sight of God, his human soul being immediately united to the Deity, Christ from
the very moment of his conception had the sight of God. Now for our Saviour,
who had known experimentally how sweet the comfort of his Father's face had
been, and had lived all his days under the warm beams and influences of the
Divinity, and had had his soul all along refreshed with the sense of the Divine
presence, for him to be left in that horror and darkness, as to have no taste
of comfort, no glimpse of the Divinity breaking in upon his human soul, how
great an affliction must that needs be unto him! John Row.
Verse 1. Desertion
is in itself no sin; for Christ endured its bitterness, ay, he was so deep in
it, that when he died, he said, "Why hast thou forsaken me?" A
total, a final desertion ours is not; partial the best have had and have. God
turns away his face, David himself is troubled: "The just shall live by
faith," and not by feeling. Richard Capel.
Verse 1. Oh! how
will our very hearts melt with love, when we remember that as we have been
distressed for our sins against him; so he was in greater agonies for us? We
have had gall and wormwood, but he tasted a more bitter cup. The anger of God has
dried up our spirits, but he was scorched with a more flaming wrath. He was
under violent pain in the garden, and on the cross; ineffable was the sorrow
that he felt, being forsaken of his Father, deserted by his disciples,
affronted and reproached by his enemies, and under a curse for us. This Sun was
under a doleful eclipse, this living Lord was pleased to die, and in his death
was under the frowns of an angry God. That face was then hid from him that had
always smiled before; and his soul felt that horror and that darkness which it
had never felt before. So that there was no separation between the divine and
human nature, yet he suffered pains equal to those which we had deserved to
suffer in hell for ever. God so suspended the efficacies of his grace that it
displayed in that hour none of its force and virtue on him. He had no comfort
from heaven, none from his angels, none from his friends, even in that
sorrowful hour when he needed comfort most. Like a lion that is hurt in the
forest, so he roared and cried out, though there was no despair in him; and
when he was forsaken, yet there was trust and hope in these words, "My
God, my God." Timothy Rogers.
Verse 1. Here is
comfort to deserted souls; Christ himself was deserted; therefore, if
thou be deserted, God dealeth no otherwise with thee than he did with Christ.
Thou mayest be beloved of God and not feel it; Christ was so, he was beloved of
the Father, and yet he had no present sense and feeling of his love. This may
be a great comfort to holy souls under the suspension of those comforts and
manifestations which sometimes they have felt; Christ himself underwent such a
suspension, therefore such a suspension of divine comfort may consist with
God's love. Thou mayest conclude possibly, "I am a hypocrite, and
therefore God hath forsaken me;" this is the complaint of some doubting
Christians, "I am a hypocrite, and therefore God hath forsaken me;"
but thou hast no reason so to conclude: there was no failure in Christ's
obedience, and yet Christ was forsaken in point of comfort; therefore
desertion, in point of comfort, may consist with truth of grace, yea, with the
highest measure of grace; so it did in our Saviour. John Row.
Verse 1. Lord, thou
knowest what it is for a soul to be forsaken, it was sometime thine own case
when thou complainedst, "My God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
not, O my Lord! but that thou hadst a divine supportment, but thou hadst not
(it seemeth) that inward joy which at other times did fill thee; now thou art
in thy glory, pity a worm in misery, that mourns and desires more after
thee than all things: Lord, thou paidst dear for my good, let good come unto
me. Joseph Symonds, 1658.
Verse 1. The first
verse expresses a species of suffering that never at any other time was felt in
this world, and never will be again—the vengeance of the Almighty upon his
child—"MY God, why hast thou forsaken me? R. H. Ryland.
Verse 2. "O
my God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not," etc. How like is
this expostulation to that of a human child with its earthly parent! It is
based on the ground of relationship—"I am thine; I cry day and night, yet
I am not heard. Thou art my God, yet nothing is done to silence me. In the
daytime of my life I cried; in this night season of my death I intreat. In the
garden of Gethsemane I occupied the night with prayers; with continual
ejaculations have I passed through this eventful morning. O my God, thou hast
not yet heard me, therefore am I not yet silent; I cannot cease till thou
answerest." Here Christ urges his suit in a manner which none but filial
hearts adopt. The child knows that the parent yearns over him. His importunity
is strengthened by confidence in paternal love. He keeps not silence, he gives
him no rest because he confides in his power and willingness to grant the
desired relief. This is natural. It is the argument of the heart, an appeal to
the inward yearnings of our nature. It is also scriptural, and is thus stated,
"If ye then being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how
much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask
him?" Luke 11:13. John Stevenson, in "Christ on the Cross,"
1842.
Verse 2. The
princely prophet says, "Lord, I cry unto thee in the daytime, but thou
hearest not, also in the night time, and yet this is not to be thought folly to
me." (Septuagint version.) Some perhaps would think it a great point
of folly for a man to cry and call unto him who stops his ears, and seems not
to hear. Nevertheless, this folly of the faithful is wiser than all the wisdom
of the world. For we know well enough, that howsoever God seem at the first not
to hear, yet the Lord is a sure refuge in due time—in affliction. Psalm
9:9. Thomas Playfere.
Verses 2, 3. Well,
what hears God from him, now he hears nothing from God, as to the deliverance
prayed for? No murmuring at God's proceedings; nay, he hears quite the
contrary, for he justifies and praises God: "But thou art holy, O thou
that inhabitest the praises of Israel." Observe whether thou canst not
gather something from the manner of God's denying the thing prayed for, which
may sweeten it to thee! Haply thou shalt find he denies thee, but it is with a
smiling countenance, and ushers it in with some expressions of grace and
favour, that may assure thee his denial proceeds not from displeasure. As you
would do with a dear friend, who, may be, comes to borrow a sum of money of
you; lend it you dare not, because you see plainly it is not for his good; but
in giving him the denial, lest he should misinterpret it, as proceeding from
want of love and respect, you preface it with some kind of language of your
hearty affection to him, as that you love him, and therefore deny him, and
shall be ready to do for him more than that comes to. Thus God sometimes wraps
up his denials in such sweet intimations of love, as prevents all jealousies
arising in the hearts of his people. William Gurnall.
Verses 2, 3. They
that have conduit-water come into their houses, if no water come they do not
conclude the spring to be dry, but the pipes to be stopped or broken. If prayer
speed not, we must be sure that the fault is not in God, but in ourselves; were
we but ripe for mercy, he is ready to extend it to us, and even waits for the
purpose. John Trapp.
Verse 3. "But
thou art holy." Here is the triumph of faith—the Saviour stood like a
rock in the wide ocean of temptation. High as the billows rose, so did his
faith, like the coral rock, wax greater and stronger till it became an island
of salvation to our shipwrecked souls. It is as if he had said, "It
matters not what I endure. Storms may howl upon me; men despise; devils tempt;
circumstances overpower; and God himself forsake me, still God is holy; there
is no unrighteousness in him." John Stevenson.
Verse 3. "But
thou art holy." Does it seem strange that the heart in its darkness
and sorrow should find comfort in this attribute of God? No, for God's holiness
is but another aspect of his faithfulness and mercy. And in that remarkable
name, "the Holy One of Israel," we are taught that he who is
the "holy" God is also the God who has made a covenant with
his chosen. It would be impossible for an Israelite to think of God's holiness
without thinking also of that covenant relationship. "Be ye holy; for I,
the Lord your God am holy," were the words in which Israel was reminded of
their relation to God. See especially Leviticus 19:1. We see something of this
feeling in such passages as Psalm 89:16-19; 99:5-9; Hosea 11:8, 9; Isaiah
41:14; 47:4. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse 3. Were
temptations never so black, faith will not hearken to an ill word spoken
against God, but will justify God always. David Dickson.
Verses 4, 5. Those
who look upon this Psalm as having a primary reference to the King of Israel,
attribute great beauty to these words, from the very pleasing conjecture that
David was, at the time of composing them, sojourning at Mahanaim, where Jacob,
in his distress, wrestled with the angel, and obtained such signal blessings.
That, in a place so greatly hallowed by associations of the past, he should
make his appeal to the God of his fathers, was alike the dictate of patriarchal
feeling and religion. John Morison, D.D., in "Morning
Meditations."
Verse 5. "Thou
didst deliver them," but thou wilt not deliver me; nay, rather thou
didst deliver them because thou wilt not deliver me. Gerhohus.
Verse 6. "But
I am a worm, and no man." A fisherman, when he casts his angle into
the river, doth not throw the hook in bare, naked and uncovered, for then he
knows the fish will never bite, and therefore he hides the hook within a worm,
or some other bait, and so, the fish, biting at the worm, is catched by the
hook. Thus Christ, speaking of himself, saith, "Ego vermis et non
homo." He, coming to perform the great work of our redemption, did
cover and hide his Godhead within the worm of his human nature. The grand
water-serpent, Leviathan, the devil, thinking to swallow the worm of his
humanity, was caught upon the hook of his divinity. This hook stuck in his
jaws, and tore him very sore. By thinking to destroy Christ, he destroyed his
own kingdom, and lost his own power for ever. Lancelot Andrewes.
Verse 6. "I
am a worm." Christ calls himself "a worm" . . . on
account of the opinion that men of the world had of him . . . the Jews esteemed
Christ as a worm, and treated him as such; he was loathsome to them and hated
by them; every one trampled upon him, and trod him under foot as men do worms .
. . The Chaldee paraphrase renders it here a weak worm; and though
Christ is the mighty God, and is also the Son of man, whom God made strong for
himself; yet there was a weakness in his human nature, and he was crucified
through it, 2 Corinthians 13:4: and it has been observed by some, that the word
(Heb.) there used signifies the scarlet worm, or the worm that is in the grain
or berry with which scarlet is dyed: and like this scarlet worm did our Lord
look, when by way of mockery he was clothed with a scarlet robe; and especially
when he appeared in his dyed garments, and was red in his apparel, as one that
treadeth in the wine fat; when his body was covered with blood when he hung
upon the cross, which was shed to make crimson and scarlet sins as white as
snow. John Gill.
Verse 6. "I
am a worm." An humble soul is emptied of all swelling thoughts of
himself. Bernard calls humility a self-annihilation. Job 22:29. "Thou wilt
save the humble;" in the Hebrew it is, "Him that is of low
eyes." An humble man has lower thoughts of himself than others can have of
him; David, though a king, yet looked upon himself as "a worm:" "I
am a worm, and no man." Bradford, a martyr, yet subscribes himself
"a sinner." Job 10:15. "If I be righteous, yet will I not lift
up my head:" like the violet a sweet flower, but hangs down the head. Thomas
Watson.
Verse 6. "A
worm." So trodden under foot, trampled on, maltreated, buffeted and
spit upon, mocked and tormented, as to seem more like a worm than a man. Behold
what great contempt hath the Lord of Majesty endured, that his confusion may be
our glory; his punishment our heavenly bliss! Without ceasing impress this
spectacle, O Christian, on thy soul! Dionysius, quoted by Isaac Williams.
Verse 6. "I
am a worm." Among the Hindoos, when a man complains and abhors
himself, he asks; "What am I! a worm! a worm!" "Ah, the proud
man! he regarded me as a worm, well should I like to say to him, 'We are all
worms.'" "Worm, crawl out of my presence." Joseph Roberts.
Verse 7. "All
they that see me laugh me to scorn," etc. Imagine this dreadful scene.
Behold this motley multitude of rich and poor, of Jews and Gentiles! Some stand
in groups and gaze. Some recline at ease and stare. Others move about in
restless gratification at the event. There is a look of satisfaction on every
countenance. None are silent. The velocity of speech seems tardy. The theme is far
too great for one member to utter. Every lip, and head, and finger, is now a
tongue. The rough soldiers, too, are busied in their coarse way. The work of
blood is over. Refreshment has become necessary. Their usual beverage of
vinegar and water is supplied to them. As they severally are satisfied, they
approach the cross, hold some forth to the Saviour, and bid him drink as they
withdraw it. Luke 23:36. They know he must be suffering an intense thirst, they
therefore aggravate it with the mockery of refreshment. Cruel Romans! and ye, O
regicidal Jews! Was not death enough? Must mockery and scorn be added? On this
sad day Christ made you one indeed! Dreadful unity—which constituted you
the joint mockers and murderers of the Lord of glory! John Stevenson.
Verse 7. "All
they that see me, laugh me to scorn," etc. There have been persons in
our own days, whose crimes have excited such detestation that the populace
would probably have torn them in pieces, before, and even after their trial, if
they could have had them in their power. Yet when these very obnoxious persons
have been executed according to their sentence, if, perhaps, there was not one
spectator who wished them to escape, yet neither was one found so lost to
sensibility as to insult them in their dying moments. But when Jesus suffers, all
that see him laugh him to scorn; they shoot out the lip, they shake the head;
they insult his character and his hope. John Newton.
Verse 7. "They
shoot out the lip." To protrude the lower lip is, in the East, considered
a very strong indication of contempt. Its employment is chiefly confined to the
lower orders. Illustrated Commentary.
Verses 7, 8. It was
after his crucifixion, and during the hours that he hung upon the cross, that
his sufferings in this way—the torment of beholding and hearing the scorn and
mockery which was made of the truth of his person and doctrine—exceedingly
abounded, and in such and so many kinds of mockery and insult that some
consider this to have been the chiefest pain and sorrow which he endured in his
most sacred passion. For as, generally, those things are considered the most
painful to endure of which we are most sensible, so it seems to these persons,
that sufferings of this kind contain in them more cause for feeling than any
other sufferings. And, therefore, although all the torments of the Lord were
very great, so that each one appears the greatest, and no comparison can be
made between them; yet, nevertheless, this kind of suffering appears to be the
most painful. Because in other troubles, not only the pain and suffering of
them, but the troubles themselves, in themselves, may be desired by us, and
such as we suffer for love's sake, in order by them to evince that love.
Wherefore, the stripes, the crown of thorns, the buffetings, the cross, the
gall, the vinegar, and other bodily torments, besides that they torment the
body, are often a means for promoting the divine honour, which it holds in
esteem above all else. But to blaspheme God, to give the lie to eternal truths,
to deface the supreme demonstration of the divinity and majesty of the Son of
God (although God knoweth how to extract from these things the good which he
intends), nevertheless are, in their nature, things, which, from their so
greatly affecting the divine honour, although they may be, for just
considerations, endured, can never be desired by any one, but must be abhorrent
to all. Our Lord then, being, of all, the most zealous for the divine honour,
for which he also died, found in this kind of suffering, more than in all
other, much to abhor and nothing to desire. Therefore with good reason it may
be held to be the greatest of all, and that in which, more than in all other,
he exhibited the greatest suffering and patience. Fra Thom‚ de Jesu, in
"The Sufferings of Jesus," 1869.
Verses 7-9. All that
see me made but a laughynge stocke on me, they mocked me wyth their lyppes, and
wagged theyr heades at me. Sayenge, thys vyllayne referred all thynges to the
Lord, let him now delyver hym yf he wyll, for he loveth hym well. But yet thou
arte he whyche leddest me oute of my mother's wombe myne own refuge, even from
my mother's teats. As sone as I came into this worlde, I was layde in thy
lappe, thou art my God even from my mother's wombe. From "The Psalter
of David in English, truly translated out of Latyn," in "Devout
Psalms," etc., by E. Whitchurche, 1547.
Verse 8. Here are
recorded some of those very words, by which the persecutors of our Lord
expressed their mockery and scorn. How remarkable to find them in a Psalm
written so many hundred years before! John Stevenson.
Verses 9, 10. Faith
is much strengthened by constant evidences of God's favour. Herewith did he
support his faith that said to God, "Thou art he that took me out of
the womb: thou didst make me hope when I was upon my mother's breasts. I was
cast upon thee from the womb: thou art my God from my mother's belly."
"Thou art my trust from my youth. By thee have I been holden up from the
womb: thou art he that took me out of my mother's bowels." Psalm 71:5, 6.
It was not only the disposition of Obadiah towards God, but also the evidence
that thereby he had of God's affection towards him, that made him with
confidence say to Elijah, "I fear the Lord from my youth." 1 Kings
18:12. By long continuance of ancient favour, many demonstrations are given of
a fast, fixed, and unremovable affection. So as if, by reason of temptations,
one or more evidences should be questioned, yet others would remain to uphold
faith, and to keep it from an utter languishing, and a total falling away. As
when a house is supported by many pillars, though some be taken away, yet by
the support of them which remain, the house will stand. William Gouge.
Verses 9, 10. David
acknowledges ancient mercies, those mercies which had been cast upon him long
ago, these were still fresh and new in his memory, and this is one affection
and disposition of a thankful heart—to remember those mercies which another
would have quite forgotten, or never thought of. Thus does David here; the
mercies of his infancy, and his childhood, and his younger
years, which one would have imagined, that now in his age had been quite
out of his mind; yet these does he here stir up himself to remember and bring
to his thoughts. "Took me out of the womb:" when was that? It
may have been threescore years ago when David penned the Psalms. He thinks of
those mercies which God vouchsafed him when he was not capable of thinking,
nor considering what was bestowed upon him; and so are we taught hence to do,
in an imitation of this holy example which is here set before us: those mercies
which God hast bestowed in our minority, we are to call to mind and acknowledge
in our riper years. Thomas Horton.
Verses 9, 10. Here
the tribulation begins to grow lighter, and hope inclines towards victory; a
support, though small, and sought out with deep anxiety, is now found. For
after he had felt that he had suffered without any parallel or example, so that
the wonderful works of God as displayed toward the fathers afforded him no
help, he comes to the wonderful works of God toward himself, and in these he
finds the goodwill of God towards him, and which was displayed towards him
alone in so singular a way. Martin Luther.
Verses 9, 10. The
bitter severity of the several taunts with which his enemies assailed our Lord,
had no other effect than to lead the Saviour to make a direct appeal to his
Father. . . . That appeal is set before us in these two verses. It is of an
unusual and remarkable nature. The argument on which it is founded is most
forcible and conclusive. At the same time, it is the most seasonable and
appropriate that can be urged. We may thus paraphrase it, "I am now
brought as a man to my last extremity. It is said that God disowns me; but it
cannot be so. My first moment of existence he tenderly cared for. When I could
not even ask for, or think of his kindness, he bestowed it upon me. If, of his
mere good pleasure he brought me into life at first, he will surely not forsake
me when I am departing out of it. In opposition, therefore, to all their
taunts, I can and I will appeal to himself. Mine enemies declare, O God, that
thou hast cast me off —but thou art he that took me out of the womb.
They affirm that I do not, and need not trust in thee; but thou didst make
me hope (or, keptest me in safety, margin) when I was upon my
mother's breasts. They insinuate that thou wilt not acknowledge me as thy
Son; but I was cast upon thee from the womb; thou art my God from my
mother's belly." John Stevenson.
Verse 10. "I
was cast upon thee from the womb: thou art my God from my mother's belly."
There is a noble passage in Eusebius, in which he shows the connection between
our Lord's incarnation and his passion: that he might well comfort himself
while hanging on the cross by the remembrance that the very same body then
"marred more than any man, and his form more than the sons of men"
(Isaiah 52:14), was that which had been glorified by the Father with such
singular honour, when the Holy Ghost came upon Mary, and the power of the
Highest overshadowed her. That this body, therefore, though now so torn and so
mangled, as it had once been the wonder, so it would for ever be the joy, of
the angels; and having put on immortality, would be the support of his faithful
people to the end of time. J. M. Neale, in loc.
Verse 10. I was like
one forsaken by his parent, and wholly cast upon Providence. I had no father
upon earth, and my mother was poor and helpless. Matthew Poole.
Verse 11. "Be
not far from me; for trouble is near;" and so it is high time for thee
to put forth a helping hand. Hominibus profanis mirabilis videtur h‘cratio,
to profane persons, this seemeth to be a strange reason, saith an interpreter;
but it is a very good one, as this prophet knew, who therefore makes it his
plea. John Trapp.
Verse 12. "Strong
bulls of Bashan have beset me round." These animals are remarkable for
the proud, fierce, and sullen manner in which they exercise their great
strength. Such were the persecutors who now beset our Lord. These were first,
human, and secondly, spiritual foes; and both were alike distinguished by the
proud, fierce, and sullen manner in which they assaulted him. John
Stevenson.
Verses 12, 13.
"Bashan" was a fertile country (Numbers 32:4), and the cattle there
fed were fat and "strong." Deuteronomy 32:14. Like them, the Jews, in
that good land, "waxed fat and kicked," grew proud, and rebelled;
forsook God "that made them, and lightly esteemed the rock of their
salvation." George Horne.
Verse 13. A helpless
infant, or a harmless lamb, surrounded by furious bulls, and hungry lions,
aptly represented the Saviour encompassed by his insulting and bloody
persecutors. Thomas Scott, 1747-1821.
Verse 14. "I
am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: my heart is like
wax; it is melted in the midst of my bowels." He was faint. Such a
feeling of languor and faintness supervened that language fails to express it,
and the emblem of "water poured out" is employed to represent it. As
the water falls from the vessel to the earth, see how its particles separate
farther and farther from each other. Its velocity increases as it falls. It has
no power to stay itself midway, much less to return to its place. It is the
very picture of utter weakness. So did our Lord feel himself to be when hanging
on the cross. He was faint with weakness. The sensations experienced when about
to faint away are very overpowering. We appear to our own consciousness to be
nothing but weakness, as water poured out. All our bones feel relaxed and out
of joint; we seem as though we had none. The strength of bone is gone, the
knitting of the joints is loosened, and the muscular vigour fled. A sickly
giddiness overcomes us. We have no power to bear up. All heart is lost. Our
strength disappears like that of wax, of melting wax, which drops upon
surrounding objects, and is lost. Daniel thus describes his sensations on
beholding the great vision, "There remained no strength in me: for my
vigour was turned into corruption, and I retained no strength." Daniel
10:8. In regard, however, to the faintness which our Lord experienced, we ought
to notice this additional and remarkable circumstance, that he did not
altogether faint away. The relief of insensibility he refused to take. When
consciousness ceases, all perception of pain is necessarily and instantly
terminated. But our Lord retained his full consciousness throughout the awful
scene; and patiently endured for a considerable period, those, to us,
insupportable sensations which precede the actual swoon. John Stevenson.
Verse 14. "I
am poured out like water:" that is, in the thought of my enemies I am
utterly destroyed. "For we must needs die, and are as water spilt on the
ground, which cannot be gathered up again." 2 Samuel 14:14. "What
marvel," asks St. Bernard, "that the name of the Bridegroom should be
as ointment poured forth, when he himself, for the greatness of his love, was
poured forth like water!" J. M. Neale.
Verse 14. "I
am poured out like water," i.e., I am almost past all recovery, as
water spilt upon the ground. John Trapp.
Verse 14. "All
my bones are out of joint." The rack is devised as a most
exquisite pain, even for terror. And the cross is a rack, whereon
he was stretched till, saith the Psalm, "all his bones were out of
joint." But even to stand, as he hung, three long hours
together, holding up but the arms at length, I have heard it avowed of some
that have felt it, to be a pain scarce credible. But the hands and the feet
being so cruelly nailed (part, of all other, most sensible, by reason of
the texture of sinews there in them most) it could not but make his pain out of
measure painful. It was not for nothing, that dolores acerrimi dicuntur
cruciatus (saith the heathen man), that the most sharp and bitter pains of
all other have their name from hence, and are called cruciatus—pains
like those of the cross. It had a meaning, that they gave him,
that he had (for his welcome to the cross) a cup mixed with gall or
myrrh; and (for his farewell) a sponge of vinegar; to show by the
one the bitterness, and by the other the sharpness of the pains
of this painful death. Lancelot Andrewes.
Verse 14. "All
my bones are out of joint." We know that the greatest and most
intolerable pain that the body can endure, is that arising from a bone out of
its place, or dislocated joint. Now when the Lord was raised up upon the cross,
and his sacred body hung in the air from the nails, all the joints began to
give, so that the bones were parted the one from the other so visibly that, in
very truth (as David had prophesied) they might tell all his bones, and
thus, throughout the whole body, he endured acute torture. Whilst our Lord
suffered these torments, his enemies, who had so earnestly desired to see him
crucified, far from pitying him, were filled with delight, as though
celebrating a victory. Fra Thom‚ de Jesu.
Verse 15. "My
strength is dried up," etc. Inflammation must have commenced early and
violently in the wounded parts—then been quickly imparted to those that were
strained, and have terminated in a high degree of feverish burning over the
whole body. The animal juices would be thus dried up, and the watery
particles of the blood absorbed. The skin parched by the scorching sun till
midday would be unable to supply or to imbibe any moisture. The loss of blood
at the hands and feet would hasten the desiccation. Hence our Lord says,
"My strength is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue cleaveth to my
jaws." The fever would devour his small remaining strength. And THIRST,
that most intolerable of all bodily privations, must have been overpowering.
His body appeared to his feeling like a potsherd that had been charred in the
potter's kiln. It seemed to have neither strength nor substance left in it. So
feeble had he become, so parched and dried up that CLAMMINESS OF THE MOUTH, one
of the forerunners of immediate dissolution, had already seized him; "My
tongue cleaveth to my jaws, and thou hast brought me into the dust of
death." John Stevenson.
Verse 15. "My
strength is dried up;" not as in the trial of gold and silver, but "like
a potsherd," as the earthen vessel dried up by the heat, spoken in
humiliation. Isaac Williams, in loc.
Verse 15. "A
potsherd." (Heb.) rendered potsherd, is a word which denotes a
piece of earthenware, frequently in a broken state. As employed in the verse
under consideration, it seems to derive considerable illustration from the
corresponding word in ARABIC, which expresses roughness of skin, and might well
convey to the mind the idea of the bodily appearance of one in whom the
moisture of the fluids had been dried up by the excess of grief. John
Morison.
Verse 15. That hour
what his feelings were is dangerous to define: we know them not; we may be too
bold to determine of them. To very good purpose it was that the ancient Fathers
of the Greek church in their liturgy, after they had recounted all the
particular pains, as they are set down in his passion, and by all and by
everyone of them called for mercy, do, after all, shut up with this Di
agnwstwn kopwn basanwn elehson ki swson emas. By thine unknown sorrows and
sufferings, felt by thee, but not distinctly known by us, have mercy upon us
and save us. Lancelot Andrewes.
Verse 16. "Dogs
have compassed me." So great and varied was the malignity exhibited by
the enemies of our Lord, that the combined characteristics of two species of
ferocious animals were not adequate to its representation. Another emblematical
figure is therefore introduced. The assembly of the wicked is compared to that
of "dogs" who haunt about the cities, prowl in every corner, snarl
over the carrion, and devour it all with greediness—like "dogs," with
their wild cry in full pursuit, with unfailing scent tracking their victim,
with vigilant eye on all its movements, and with a determination which nothing
can falter, they run it on to death. The Oriental mode of hunting, both in
ancient and modern times, is murderous and merciless in the extreme. A circle
of several miles in circumference is beat round; and the men, driving all
before them, and narrowing as they advance, inclose the prey on every side.
Having thus made them prisoners, the cruel hunters proceed to slaughter at
their own convenience. So did the enemies of our Lord: long before his
crucifixion it is recorded that they used the most treacherous plans to get him
into their power. John Stevenson.
Verse 16. "Dogs
have compassed me." At the hunting of the lion, a whole district is
summoned to appear, who, forming themselves first into a circle, enclose a
space of four or five miles in compass, according to the number of the people
and the quality of the ground which is pitched upon for the scene of action.
The footmen advance first, running into the thickets with their dogs and
spears, to put up the game; while the horsemen, keeping a little behind, are
always ready to charge upon the first sally of the wild beast. In this manner
they proceed, still contracting their circle, till they all at last close in
together, or meet with some other game to divert them. Dr. Shaw's Travels,
quoted in Paxton's "Illustrations of Scripture."
Verse 16. "They
pierced my hands and my feet;" namely, when they nailed Christ to the
cross. Matthew 27:35; John 20:25. Where let me simulate, saith a learned man,
the orator's gradation, Facinus vincire civem Romanum, etc. It was much
for the Son of God to be bound, more to be beaten, most of all to be slain; Quid
dicam in crucem tolle? but what shall I say to this, that he was crucified?
That was the most vile and ignominious; it was also a cruel and cursed kind of
death, which yet he refused not; and here we have a clear testimony for his
cross. John Trapp.
Verse 16. "They
pierced my hands and my feet." Of all sanguinary punishments, that of
crucifixion is one of the most dreadful—no vital part is immediately affected
by it. The hands and the feet which are furnished with the most numerous and
sensitive organs, are perforated with nails, which must necessarily be of some
size to suit their intended purpose. The tearing asunder of the tender fibres
of the hands and feet, the lacerating of so many nerves, and bursting so many
blood-vessels, must be productive of intense agony. The nerves of the hand and
foot are intimately connected, through the arm and leg, with the nerves of the
whole body; their laceration therefore must be felt over the entire frame.
Witness the melancholy result of even a needle's puncture in even one of the
remotest nerves. A spasm is not unfrequently produced by it in the muscles of
the face, which locks the jaws inseparably. When, therefore the hands and feet
of our blessed Lord were transfixed with nails, he must have felt the sharpest
pangs shoot through every part of his body. Supported only by his lacerated
limbs, and suspended from his pierced hands, our Lord had nearly six hours'
torment to endure. John Stevenson.
Verse 16. "They
pierced my hands and my feet." That evangelical prophet testifies it,
"Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands." Isaiah
49:16. Were we not engraven there when his hands were pierced for us?
"They digged my hands and my feet." And they digged them so deep, that
the very prints remained after his resurrection, and their fingers were thrust
into them for evidence sake. Some have thought that those scars remain still in
his glorious body, to be showed at his second appearing: "They shall see
him whom they have pierced." That is improbable, but this is certain;
there remains still an impression upon Christ's hands and his heart, the
sealing and wearing of the elect there, as precious jewels. Thomas Adams.
Verse 17. "I
may tell all my bones: they look and stare upon me." The skin and
flesh were distended by the posture of the body on the cross, that the bones,
as through a thin veil, became visible, and might be counted. George Horne.
Verse 17. "I
may tell all my bones." For, as the first Adam by his fall, lost the
robe of innocence, and thenceforth needed other garments, so the second Adam
vouchsafed to be stripped of his earthly vestments, to the end it might
hereafter be said to us, "Bring forth the first robe, and put it on
him." Luke 15:22. Gerhohus, quoted by J. M. Neale.
Verse 17. "They
look and stare upon me." Sensitively conscious of his condition upon
the cross, the delicate feelings of the holy Saviour were sorely pained by the
gaze of the multitude. With impudent face they looked upon him. To view him better
they halted as they walked. With deliberate insolence they collected in groups,
and made their remarks to each other on his conduct and appearance. Mocking his
naked, emaciated, and quivering body, they "looked and stared upon
him." John Stevenson.
Verse 17. "They
look and stare upon me." Oh, how different is that look which the
awakened sinner directs to Calvary, when faith lifts up her eye to him who
agonised, and bled, and died, for the guilty! And what gratitude should
perishing men feel, that from him that hangs upon the accursed tree there is
heard proceeding the inviting sound, "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all
ye ends of the earth, for I am God, and besides me there is none else. John
Morison.
Verse 18. "They
part my garments," etc. Perfectly naked did the cruciarii hang upon
the cross, and the executioners received their clothes. There is nothing to
show that there was a cloth even round the loins. The clothes became the
property of the soldiers, after Roman usage. The outer garment was divided
probably into four, by ripping up the seams. Four soldiers were counted off as
a guard, by the Roman code. The under garment could not be divided being woven;
and this led the soldiers to the dice-throwing. J. P. Lange, D.D., on
Matthew, 27:35.
Verse 18. "They
part my garments," etc. Instruments will not be wanting to crucify
Christ, if it were but for his old clothes, and those but little worth; for
these soldiers crucify him, though they got but his garments for their reward.
Christ did submit to suffer naked, hereby to teach us:—1. That all flesh are
really naked before God by reason of sin (Exodus 32:25; 2 Chronicles 28:19),
and therefore our Surety behoved to suffer naked. 2. That he offered himself a
real captive in his sufferings, that so he might fully satisfy justice by being
under the power of his enemies, till he redeemed himself by the strong hand,
having fully paid the price; for therefore did he submit to be stripped naked,
as conquerors use to do with prisoners. 3. That by thus suffering naked he
would expiate our abuse of apparel, and purchase to us a liberty to make use of
suitable raiment, and such as becometh us in our station. 4. That by this
suffering naked he would purchase unto them who flee to him, to be covered with
righteousness and glory, and to walk with him in white for ever, and would
point out the nakedness of those, who, not being found clothed with his
righteousness, shall not be clothed upon with immortality and glory. 2
Corinthians 5:2, 3. 5. He would also by this, teach all his followers to
resolve on nakedness in their following of him, as a part of their conformity
with their Head (1 John 4:17; Romans 8:35; Hebrews 11:37), and that therefore
they should not dote much on their apparel when they have it. George
Hutcheson, 1657.
Verse 18. "And
cast lots upon my vesture." Trifling as this act of casting the lot
for our Lord's vesture may appear, it is most significant. It contains a double
lesson. It teaches us how greatly that seamless shirt was valued; how little he
to whom it had belonged. It seemed to say, this garment is more valuable than
its owner. As it was said of the thirty pieces of silver, "A goodly price
at which I was prized at of them;" so may we say regarding the casting of
the lot, "How cheaply Christ was held!" John Stevenson.
Verse 20. "My
darling" had better be rendered "my lonely, or solitary
one." For he wishes to say that his soul was lonely and forsaken by all,
and that there was no one who sought after him as a friend, or cared for him,
or comforted him: as we have it, Psalm 142:4, "Refuge failed me; no one
cared for my soul; I looked on my right hand, but there was no one who would
know me;" that is, solitude is of itself a certain cross, and especially
so in such great torments, in which it is most grievous to be immersed without
an example and without a companion. And yet, in such a state, everyone of us
must be, in some suffering or other, and especially in that of death; and we
must be brought to cry out with Psalm 25:16, "Turn thee unto me, and have
mercy upon me, for I am desolate and afflicted." Martin Luther.
Verse 20. "The
dog." It is scarcely possible for a European to form an idea of the
intolerable nuisance occasioned in the villages and cities of the East, by the
multitudes of dogs that infest the streets. The natives, accustomed from their
earliest years to the annoyance, come to be regardless of it; but to a
stranger, these creatures are the greatest plague to which he is subjected; for
as they are never allowed to enter a house, and do not constitute the property
of any particular owner, they display none of those habits of which the
domesticated species among us are found susceptible, and are destitute of all
those social qualities which often render the dog the trusty and attached friend
of man. . . . The race seems wholly to degenerate in the warm regions of the
East, and to approximate to the character of beasts of prey, as in disposition
they are ferocious, cunning, bloodthirsty, and possessed of the most insatiable
voracity: and even in their very form there is something repulsive; their sharp
and savage features; their wolf-like eyes; their long hanging ears; their
straight and pointed tails; their lank and emaciated forms, almost entirely
without a belly, give them an appearance of wretchedness and degradation, that
stands in sad contrast with the general condition and qualities of the breed in
Europe. . . . These hideous creatures, dreaded by the people for their
ferocity, or avoided by them as useless and unclean, are obliged to prowl about
everywhere in search of a precarious existence. . . . They generally run in
bands, and their natural ferocity, inflamed by hunger, and the consciousness of
strength, makes them the most troublesome and dangerous visitors to the
stranger who unexpectedly finds himself in their neighbourhood, as they will
not scruple to seize whatever he may have about him, and even, in the event of
his falling, and being otherwise defenceless, to attack and devour him. . .
These animals, driven by hunger, greedily devour everything that comes in their
way; they glut themselves with the most putrid and loathsome substances that
are thrown about the cities, and of nothing are they so fond as of human flesh,
a repast, with which the barbarity of the despotic countries of Asia frequently
supplies them, as the bodies of criminals slain for murder, treason, or
violence, are seldom buried, and lie exposed till the mangled fragments are
carried off by the dogs. From "Illustrations of Scripture, by the late
Professor George Paxton, D.D., revised and enlarged by Robert Jamieson,"
1843.
Verse 21. "Save
me from the lion's mouth." Satan is called a lion, and that fitly; for
he hath all the properties of the lion: as bold as a lion, as strong as a lion,
as furious as a lion, as terrible as the roaring of a lion. Yea, worse: the
lion wants subtlety and suspicion; herein the devil is beyond the lion. The
lion will spare the prostrate, the devil spares none. The lion is full and
forbears, the devil is full and devours. He seeks all; let not the simple say,
He will take no notice of me; nor the subtle, He cannot overreach me; nor the
noble say, He will not presume to meddle with me; nor the rich, He dares not
contest with me; for he seeks to devour all. He is our common adversary, therefore
let us cease all quarrels amongst ourselves, and fight with him. Thomas
Adams.
Verse 21. "Save
me . . . from the horns of the unicorns." Those who are in great
trouble from the power or cruelty of others, often cry out to their gods,
"Ah! save me from the tusk of the elephant! from the mouth of the tiger
and the tusks of the boar, deliver me, deliver me!" Who will save me from
the horn of the K„ndam?" This animal is now extinct in these
regions, and it is not easy to determine what it was; the word in the Sathur —Agar„the—is
rendered "jungle cow." Joseph Roberts.
Verse 21. "The
horns of the unicorns." On turning to the Jewish Bible we find that
the word (Heb.) is translated as buffalo, and there is no doubt that this
rendering is nearly the correct one, and at the present day naturalists are
nearly agreed that the reˆm of the Old Testament must have been now the extinct
urus. . . . The presence of these horns affords a remarkable confirmation to a
well-known passage in Julias Caesar's familiar "Commentaries."
"The uri are little inferior to elephants in size ("magnitudine
paulo infra elephantos;") "but are bulls in their nature, color,
and figure. Great is their strength, and great their swiftness; nor do they
spare man or beast when they have caught sight of them." J. G. Wood,
M.A., F.L.S., in "Bible Animals." 1869.
Verse 22. "I
will declare thy name unto my brethren." Having thus obtained relief
from the oppressive darkness, and regained conscious possession of the joy and
light of his Father's countenance, the thoughts and desires of the Redeemer
flow into their accustomed channel. The glory of God in the salvation of his
church. John Stevenson.
Verse 22. "My
brethren." This give evidence of the low condescension of the Son of
God, and also of the high exaltation of sons of men; for the Son of God to be a
brother to sons of men is a great degree of humiliation, and for the sons of
men to be made brethren with the Son of God is a high degree of exaltation; for
Christ's brethren are in that respect sons of God, heirs of heaven, or kings,
not earthly, but heavenly; not temporary, but everlasting kings. . . . This
respect of Christ to his brethren is a great encouragement and comfort to such
as are despised and scorned by men of this world for Christ's professing of
them. William Gouge.
Verse 24. "For
he hath not despised nor abhorred the prayer of the poor, neither hath he hid
his face from me; but when I cried unto him, he heard me." Let him,
therefore, that desires to be of the seed of Israel, and to rejoice in the
grace of the gospel, become poor, for this is a fixed truth, our God is one
that has respect unto the poor! And observe the fulness and diligence of the
prophet. He was not content with having said "will not despise," but
adds, "and will not abhor;" and, again, "will not turn away his
face;" and again, "will hear." And then he adds himself as an
example, saying, "When I cried," as our translation has it. As if he
had said, "Behold ye, and learn by my example, who have been made the most
vile of all men, and numbered among the wicked; when I was despised, cast out,
rejected, behold! I was held in the highest esteem, and taken up, and heard.
Let not this state of things, therefore, after this, my encouraging example,
frighten you; the gospel requires a man to be such a character before it will
save him. These things, I say, because our weakness requires so much
exhortation, that it might not dread being humbled, nor despair when humbled,
and thus might, after the bearing of the cross, receive the salvation. Martin
Luther.
Verse 25. "My
praise shall be of thee in the great congregation," etc. The joy and
gratitude of our adorable Lord rise to such a height at this great deliverance,
his heart so overflows with fresh and blessed consciousness of his heavenly
Father's nearness, that he again pours forth the expression of his praise. By
its repetition, he teaches us that this is not a temporary burst of gratitude,
but an abiding determination, a full and settled resolution. John Stevenson.
Verse 25. "In
the great congregation." Saints are fittest witnesses of sacred
duties. That which, in Psalm 116:14, is implied under this particle of
restraint, "his," in "the presence of all his people," is
in Psalm 22:25, more expressly noted by a more apparent description, thus: "I
will pay my vows before them that fear him." None but true saints do
truly fear God. 1. This property of God's people, that they fear the Lord,
showeth that they will make the best use of such sacred, solemn duties
performed in their presence. They will glorify God for this your zeal; they
will join their spirits with your spirit in this open performance of duty; they
will become followers of you, and learn of you to vow and pay unto the Lord,
and that openly, publicly. 2. As for others, they are no better than such hogs
and dogs as are not meet to have such precious pearls and holy things cast
before them, lest they trample them under their feet. William Gouge.
Verse 26. "The
meek shall eat and be satisfied: they shall praise the Lord that seek him; your
heart shall live for ever." A spiritual banquet is prepared in the
church for the "meek" and lowly in heart. The death of Christ
was the sacrifice for sin; his flesh is meat indeed, and his blood is drink
indeed. The poor in spirit feed on this provision, in their hearts by faith,
and are satisfied; and thus, whilst they "seek" the Lord,
they "praise" him also, and their "hearts"
(or souls), are preserved unto eternal life. Practical Illustrations of the
Book of Psalms," 1826.
Verse 26. "The
meek." Bonaventure engraved this sweet saying of our Lord, "Learn
of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart," in his study. O that this saying
was engraved upon all your foreheads, and upon all your hearts! Charles
Bradbury.
Verse 26. "They
shall praise the Lord that seek him; your heart shall live for ever."
Now, I would fain know the man that ever went about to form such laws as should
bind the hearts of men, or prepare such rewards as should reach the
souls and consciences of men! Truly, if any mortal man should make a law that
his subjects should love him with all their hearts and souls, and not dare,
upon peril of his greatest indignation, to entertain a traitorous thought
against his royal person, but presently confess it to him, or else he would be avenged
on him, he would deserve to be more laughed at for his pride and folly, than
Xerxes for casting his fetters into the Hellespont, to chain the waves into his
obedience; or Caligula, that threatened the air, if it durst rain when he was
at his pastimes, who durst not himself so much as look into the air when it
thundered. Certainly a madhouse would be more fit for such a person than a
throne, who should so far forfeit his reason, as to think that the thoughts and
hearts of men were within his jurisdiction. William Gurnall.
Verse 26. "Your
heart," that is, not your outward man, but the hidden man of the heart
(Ezekiel 36:26); the new man which is created after the image of God in
righteousness and true holiness, "shall live for ever." The
life which animates it is the life of the Spirit of God. John Stevenson.
Verse 27. "All
the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord; and all the
kindreds of the nations shall worship before him." This passage is a
prediction of the conversion of the Gentiles. It furnishes us with two
interesting ideas; the nature of true conversion—and the extent of it under the
reign of the Messiah. 1. The NATURE of true conversion: —It is to "remember"—to
"turn to the Lord"—and to "worship before him."
This is a plain and simple process. Perhaps the first religious exercise of
mind of which we are conscious is reflection. A state of unregeneracy is a
state of forgetfulness. God is forgotten. Sinners have lost all just sense of
his glory, authority, mercy, and judgment; living as if there were no God, or
as if they thought there was none. But if ever we are brought to be the
subjects of true conversion, we shall be brought to remember these things. This
divine change is fitly expressed by the case of the prodigal, who is said to
have come to himself, or to his right mind. But further, true conversion
consists not only in remembering, but in "turning to the Lord."
This part of the passage is expressive of a cordial relinquishment of our
idols, whatever they have been, and an acquiescence in the gospel way of
salvation by Christ alone. Once more, true conversion to Christ will be
accompanied with the "worship" of him. Worship, as a religious
exercise, is the homage of the heart, presented to God according to his
revealed will. . . . 2. The EXTENT of conversion under the kingdom or reign of
the Messiah: "All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto
the Lord; and all the kindreds of the nations shall worship before him."
It was fit that the accession of the Gentiles should be reserved for the gospel
day, that it might grace the triumph of Christ over his enemies, and appear to
be what it is, "the travail of his soul." This great and good work,
begun in the apostles' day, must go on, and "must increase,"
till "All the ends of the world shall remember and turn," and "all
the kindreds of the nations shall worship before him." Conversion work
has been individual; God has gathered sinners one by one. Thus it is at
present with us; but it will not be thus always. People will flock to Zion as
doves to their windows. Further, conversion work has hitherto been
circumscribed within certain parts of the world. But the time will come when
"all the kindreds of the earth" shall worship. These hopes are not
the flight of an ardent imagination; they are founded on the true sayings of
God. Finally, while we are concerned for the world, let us not forget our own
souls. So the whole world be saved and we lost, what will it avail us? Condensed
from Andrew Fuller.
Verse 27. "All
the ends of the world shall REMEMBER"—this is a remarkable expression.
It implies that man has forgotten God. It represents all the successive
generations of the world as but one, and then it exhibits that one
generation, as if it had been once in paradise, suddenly remembering the Lord
whom it had known there, but had long forgotten. . . . The converted nations,
we learn by this verse, will not only obtain remembrance of their past loss,
but will also be filled with the knowledge of present duty. John Stevenson.
Verse 27. "All
the nations of the world" ((Heb.) jizkeru, the same Hebrew root
with (Heb.) azkir) "shall remember;" why? what is that?
or what shall they remember? Even this: they shall turn to the Lord, and
worship him, in his name, in his ordinances; as is explained in the words
following of this verse: "And all the families of the nations"
((Heb.) jishtachavu, "shall bow" down themselves, or) "worship
before thee," etc. And so in Psalm 86:9, "All nations whom thou
hast made shall come" ((Heb.) vejishtachavu) "and they shall
worship before thee;" and how shall they do so? Even by recording,
remembering, and making mention of the glory of thy name; as in the words
following ((Hebrew) vicabbedu lishmecha), "and shall glorify thy
name." William Strong's "Saints Communion with God,"
1656.
Verses 27, 28. The
one undeviating object of the Son all through was, the glory of the Father: he
came to do his will, and he fulfilled it with all the unvarying intensity of
the most heavenly affection. What, then, will not be the exuberant joy of his
heart, when in his glorious kingdom, he shall see the Father beyond all measure
glorified? . . . The praise and honour and blessing which will be yielded to
the Father in that day through him, so that God shall be all in all, will make
him feel he underwent not a sorrow too much for such a precious consummation. .
. . Every note of thanksgiving which ascends to the Father, whether from the
fowls of the air, or the beasts of the field, or the fishes of the sea, or the
hills, or the mountains, or the trees of the forest, or the rivers of the
valleys—all shall gladden his heart, as sweet in the ears of God, for the sake
of him who redeemed even them from the curse, and restored to them a harmony
more musical than burst from them on the birthday of their creation. And man!
renewed and regenerated man! for whose soul the blood was spilt, and for the
redemption of whose body death was overcome, how shall the chorus of his
thanksgiving, in its intelligent and articulate hallelujahs, be the incense
which that Saviour shall still love to present unto the Father, a
sweet-smelling savour through himself, who, that he might sanctify his people
by his own blood, suffered without the camp. How are the channels choked up or
impaired in this evil world, wherein the praise and glory of our God should
flow as a river! How will Christ then witness, to the delight of his soul, all
cleared and restored! No chill upon the heart, no stammering in the tongue, in
his Father's praises! No understanding dull, or eye feeble, in the apprehension
of his glory! No hand unready, or foot stumbling, in the fulfilling of his
commandments. God, the glory of his creatures: his glory their service and
their love; and all this the reward to Jesus of once suffering himself. C.
J. Goodhart, M.A., in "Bloomsbury Lent Lectures," 1848.
Verse 29. "And
they shall bow that go down into the dust; their soul liveth not:"
that is, whose soul liveth not, by an Hebraism; it being meant, that he
who is of most desperate condition, being without hope of life and salvation,
his sins are so notorious, shall "eat" also of this feast, and be
turned to God to "worship" and serve him; being thus plucked out of
the jaws of death and everlasting destruction, as it were, being before this
very hour ready to seize upon him. The new translation, "None can keep
alive his own soul," as it agreeth not with the Hebrew, so it makes
the sense more perplexed. By "him that goeth down to the dust, whose
soul liveth not," some understand the most miserably poor, who have
nothing to feed upon, whereby their life may be preserved, yet shall feed also
of this feast as well as the rich, and praise God. Ainsworth is for either
spiritually poor and miserable, because most wicked, or worldly poor; and there
is an exposition of Basil's, understanding by the rich, the rich in faith and
grace, touching which, or the rich properly so called, he is indifferent. But
because it is said, "The fat of the earth," I prefer the
former, and that the close of the verse may best answer to the first part; the
latter by "those that are going to the dust," understand the
miserably poor. So that there is a commonplace of comfort for all, both richest
and poorest, if they be subjects of God's kingdom of grace: their souls shall
be alike fed by him and saved. John Mayer.
Verse 29. "All
they that go down to the dust;" either those who stand quivering on
the brink of the grave, or those who occupy the humble, sequestered walks of
life. As the great and opulent of the earth are intended in the first clause,
it is not by any means unnatural to suppose that the image of going "down
to the dust," is designed to represent the poor and mean of mankind,
who are unable to support themselves, and to provide for their multiplied
necessities. If the grave be alluded to, as is thought by many eminent divines,
the beautiful sentiment of the verse will be, that multitudes of dying sinners
shall be brought to worship Jehovah, and that those who cannot save or deliver
themselves shall seek that shelter which none can find but those who approach
the mercy-seat. "Rich and poor," as Bishop Horne observes, "are
invited"—that is, to "worship God;" "and the hour is coming
when all the race of Adam, as many as sleep in the 'dust' of the earth, unable
to raise themselves from thence, quickened and called forth by the voice of the
Son of Man, must bow the knee to King Messiah." John Morison.
Verse 29. To be
brought to the dust, is, at first, a circumlocution or description of death: "Shall
the dust praise thee, shall it declare thy truth?" Psalm 30:9. That
is, shall I praise thee when I am among the dead? "What profit is there
in my blood, when I go down to the pit?" Not that profit, sure, I
cannot bring thee in the tribute of praise when my life's gone out. Secondly,
to be brought to the dust is a description of any low and poor condition. "All
they that be fat upon the earth" (that is, the great and mighty), "shall
eat and worship" "all they that go down to the dust" (that
is, the mean and base), "shall bow before him." As if he had
said, rich and poor, high and low, the king and the beggar, have alike need of
salvation by Jesus Christ, and must submit unto him, that they may be saved,
for, as it there follows, "none can keep alive his own soul."
The captivity of the Jews in Babylon is expressed under those notions of death,
and of dwelling in the dust (Isaiah 26:19); to show how low, that no
power but his who can raise the dead, could work their deliverance. Joseph
Caryl.
Verse 29. "None
can keep alive his own soul." And yet we look back to our conversion,
and its agonies of earnestness, its feelings of deep, helpless dependence—of
Christ's being absolutely our daily, hourly need —supplier—as a past
something—a stage of spiritual life which is over. And we are satisfied
to have it so. The Spirit of God moved over our deadness, and breathed into us
the breath of life. My soul became a living soul. But was this enough?
God's word says, No. "None can keep alive his own soul." My
heart says, No. Truth must ever answer to truth. I cannot (ah! have I not
tried, and failed?) I cannot keep alive my own soul. We cannot live upon
ourselves. Our physical life is kept up by supply from without—air, food,
warmth. So must the spiritual life. Jesus gives, Jesus feeds us day by day,
else must the life fade out and die. "None can keep alive his own
soul." It is not enough to be made alive. I must be fed, and guided, and
taught, and kept in life. Mother, who hast brought a living babe into the
world, is your work done? Will you not nurse it, and feed it, and care for it,
that it may be kept alive? Lord, I am this babe. I live indeed, for I
can crave and cry. Leave me not, O my Saviour. Forsake not the work of thine
own hands. In thee I live. Hold me, carry me, feed me, let me abide in thee.
"For thy kingdom is the Lord's: and he is the governor among the nations.
All they that be fat upon earth shall eat and worship: all they that go down to
the dust shall bow before him: and none can keep alive his own soul." In
our work for God, we need to remember this. Is not the conversion, the arousing
of sinners, the great, and with many, the sole aim in working for God? Should
it be so? Let us think of this other work. Let us help to keep alive.
Perhaps it is less distinguished, as it may be less distinguished to feed a
starving child than to rescue a drowning man. But let us walk less by sight,
more by faith. Let us not indeed neglect to call to life those who are
spiritually dead. But Oh! let us watch for the more hidden needs of the
living—the fading, starving, fainting souls, which yet can walk and speak, and
cover their want and sorrow. Let us be fellow-workers with God in all
his work. And with a deep heart-feeling of the need of constant life
supplies from above, let us try how often, how freely, we may be made the
channels of those streams of the "water of life,"—for "none can
keep alive his own soul." Mary B. M. Duncan, in "Bible
Hours." 1856.
Verse 29. Having
considered the vastness and glory of the prospect, our Lord next contemplates
the reality and minuteness of its accomplishment. He sets before his mind
individual cases and particular facts. He appears to look upon this picture of
the future as we do upon a grand historical painting of the past. It seems
natural to gaze with silent admiration on the picture as a whole, then to fix
the attention on particular groups, and testify our sense of the general
excellence, by expatiating on the truth and beauty of the several parts. John
Stevenson.
Verse 30. "A
seed shall serve him." This figurative expression signifies Christ and
his people, who yield true obedience to God—they are called by this name in a
spiritual and figurative, but most appropriate sense. The idea is taken from
the operations of the husbandman who carefully reserves every year a portion of
his grain for seed. Though it be small, compared with all the produce of his
harvest, yet he prizes it very highly and estimates it by the value of that
crop which it may yield in the succeeding autumn. Nor does he look only to the
quantity, he pays particular regard to the quality of the seed. He reserves
only the best, nay, he will put away his own if spoiled, that he may procure
better. The very smallest quantity of really good seed, is, to him, an object
of great desire, and if by grievous failure of crops, he should not be able to
procure more than a single grain, yet would he accept it thankfully, preserve
it carefully, and plant it in the most favourable soil. Such is the source from
which the metaphor is taken. John Stevenson.
Verse 31. "And
shall declare his righteousness." The occupation of the seed is to "declare,"
to testify from their own experience, from their own knowledge and convictions,
that grand subject, theme, or lesson, which they have learned. . . . They will
declare the righteousness of God the Holy Ghost in his convictions of sin, in
his reproofs of conscience, in his forsaking of the impenitent, and in his
abiding with the believer. And in a special manner, they will declare the
righteousness of God the Son, during his human life, in his sufferings, and
death, as man's surety, by which he "magnified the law, and made it
honourable" (Isaiah 42:21), and on account of which they are able to
address him by this name, "The Lord our Righteousness." (Jeremiah 23:6.)
John Stevenson.
Verse 31. "A
people that shall be born." What is this? What people is there that is
not born? According to my apprehensions I think this is said for this
reason—because the people of other kings are formed by laws, by customs, and by
manners; by which, however, you can never move a man to true righteousness: it
is only a fable of righteousness, and a mere theatrical scene or
representation. For even the law of Moses could form the people of the Jews
unto nothing but unto hypocrisy. But the people of this King are not formed by
laws to make up an external appearance, but they are begotten by water and by
the Spirit unto a new creature of truth. Martin Luther.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Whole
Psalm. The volume entitled "Christ on the Cross," by Rev. J.
Stevenson, has a sermon upon every verse. We give the headings, they are
suggestive. Verse 1. The Cry. 2. The Complaint. 3. The Acknowledgment.
4-6. The Contrast. 6. The Reproach. 7. The Mockery. 8. The Taunt. 9, 10. The
Appeal. 11. The Entreaty. 12, 13. The Assault. 14. The Faintness. 15. The
Exhaustion. 16. The Piercing. 17. The Emaciation. 17. The Insulting Gaze. 18.
The Partition of the Garments and Casting Lots. 19-21. The Importunity. 21. The
Deliverance. 22. The Gratitude. 23. The Invitation. 24. The Testimony. 25. The
Vow. 26. The Satisfaction of the Meek; the Seekers of the Lord Praising Him;
the Eternal Life. 27. The Conversion of the World. 28. The Enthronement. 29.
The Author of the Faith. 30. The Seed. 31. The Everlasting Theme and
Occupation. The Finish of the Faith.
Verse 1. The
Saviour's dying cry.
Verse 2. Unanswered
prayer. Enquire the reason for it; encourage our hope concerning it; urge
to continue in importunity.
Verse 3. Whatever
God may do, we must settle it in our minds that he is holy and to be praised.
Verse 4. God's
faithfulness in past ages a plea for the present.
Verses 4, 5. Ancient
saints.
I.
Their life. "They trusted."
II.
Their practice. "They cried."
III.
Their experience. "Were not confounded."
IV.
Their voice to us.
Verses 6-18. Full of
striking sentences upon our Lord's suffering.
Verse 11. A saint's
troubles, his arguments in prayer.
Verse 20. "My
darling." A man's soul to be very dear to him.
Verse 21 (first
clause). "Lion's mouth." Men of cruelty. The devil. Sin.
Death. Hell.
Verse 22. Christ as
a brother, a preacher, and a precentor.
Verse 22. A sweet
subject, a glorious preacher, a loving relationship, a heavenly exercise.
Verse 23. A threefold
duty, "praise him, "glorify him;" "fear him;" towards
one object, "the Lord;" for three characters, "ye
that fear him, seed of Jacob, seed of Israel," which are but one
person.
Verse 23. Glory to
God the fruit of the tree on which Jesus died.
Verse 24. A
consoling fact in history attested by universal experience.
Verse 24. (first
clause). A common fear dispelled.
Verse 25. Public
praise.
I.
A delightful exercise—"praise."
II.
A personal participation—"My praise."
III.
A fitting object—"of thee."
IV.
A special source—"from thee."
V.
An appropriate place—"in the great congregation."
Verse 25. (second
clause). Vows. What vows to make, when and how to make them, and the
importance of paying them.
Verse 26. Spiritual
feasting. The guests, the food, the host, and the satisfaction.
Verse 26. (second
clause). Seekers who shall be singers. Who they are? What they shall
do? When? and what is the reason for expecting that they shall?
Verse 27. (last
clause). Life everlasting. What lives? Source of life. Manner of
life. Why for ever? What occupation? What comfort to be derived from it?
Verse 27. Nature of
true conversion, and extent of it under the reign of the Messiah. Andrew
Fuller.
Verse 27. The
universal triumph of Christianity certain.
Verse 27. The order
of conversion. See the Exposition.
Verse 28. The empire
of the King of kings as it is, and as it shall be.
Verse 29. Grace for
the rich, grace for the poor, but all lost without it.
Verse 29 (last
clause). A weighty text upon the vanity of self-confidence.
Verse 30. The
perpetuity of the church.
Verse 30 (last
clause). Church history, the marrow of all history.
Verse 31. Future
prospects for the church.
I.
Conversions certain.
II.
Preachers promised.
III.
Succeeding generations blest.
IV.
Gospel published.
V.
Christ exalted.
WORK UPON THE
TWENTY-SECOND PSALM
Christ
on the Cross: An Exposition of the Twenty-second Psalm. By the Rev. JOHN
STEVENSON, Perpetual Curate of Curry and Gunwalloe, Cornwall. 1842.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》