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Psalm Twenty-seven
Psalm 27
Chapter Contents
The psalmist's faith. (1-6) His desire toward God, and
expectation from him. (7-14)
Commentary on Psalm 27:1-6
(Read Psalm 27:1-6)
The Lord, who is the believer's light, is the strength of
his life; not only by whom, but in whom he lives and moves. In God let us
strengthen ourselves. The gracious presence of God, his power, his promise, his
readiness to hear prayer, the witness of his Spirit in the hearts of his
people; these are the secret of his tabernacle, and in these the saints find
cause for that holy security and peace of mind in which they dwell at ease. The
psalmist prays for constant communion with God in holy ordinances. All God's
children desire to dwell in their Father's house. Not to sojourn there as a
wayfaring man, to tarry but for a night; or to dwell there for a time only, as
the servant that abides not in the house for ever; but to dwell there all the
days of their life, as children with a father. Do we hope that the praising of
God will be the blessedness of our eternity? Surely then we ought to make it
the business of our time. This he had at heart more than any thing. Whatever
the Christian is as to this life, he considers the favour and service of God as
the one thing needful. This he desires, prays for and seeks after, and in it he
rejoices.
Commentary on Psalm 27:7-14
(Read Psalm 27:7-14)
Wherever the believer is, he can find a way to the throne
of grace by prayer. God calls us by his Spirit, by his word, by his worship,
and by special providences, merciful and afflicting. When we are foolishly
making court to lying vanities, God is, in love to us, calling us to seek our
own mercies in him. The call is general, "Seek ye my face;" but we
must apply it to ourselves, "I will seek it." The word does us no
good, when we do not ourselves accept the exhortation: a gracious heart readily
answers to the call of a gracious God, being made willing in the day of his
power. The psalmist requests the favour of the Lord; the continuance of his
presence with him; the benefit of Divine guidance, and the benefit of Divine
protection. God's time to help those that trust in him, is, when all other
helpers fail. He is a surer and better Friend than earthly parents are, or can
be. What was the belief which supported the psalmist? That he should see the
goodness of the Lord. There is nothing like the believing hope of eternal life,
the foresights of that glory, and foretastes of those pleasures, to keep us
from fainting under all calamities. In the mean time he should be strengthened
to bear up under his burdens. Let us look unto the suffering Saviour, and pray
in faith, not to be delivered into the hands of our enemies. Let us encourage
each other to wait on the Lord, with patient expectation, and fervent prayer.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 27
Verse 2
[2] When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came
upon me to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell.
Light — My counsellor in all my difficulties, and my comforter
and deliverer in all my distresses.
Strength — The supporter and preserver of my life.
Verse 3
[3] Though an host should encamp against me, my heart shall
not fear: though war should rise against me, in this will I be confident.
In this — That God is my light.
Verse 4
[4] One thing have I desired of the LORD, that will I seek
after; that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, to
behold the beauty of the LORD, and to enquire in his temple.
Dwell. … — Have opportunity of constant attendance upon God.
To behold — That there I may delight myself,
in the contemplation of thy amiable and glorious majesty, and of thy infinite
wisdom, holiness, justice, truth, and mercy.
Verse 5
[5] For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his
pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up
upon a rock.
The secret — In his tabernacle, into which
mine enemies cannot come. He alludes to the ancient custom of offenders, who
used to flee to the tabernacle or altar.
Rock — A place high and inaccessible.
Verse 9
[9] Hide not thy face far from me; put not thy servant away
in anger: thou hast been my help; leave me not, neither forsake me, O God of my
salvation.
Away — From thy face or presence, or from the place of thy
worship.
Verse 11
[11] Teach me thy way, O LORD, and lead me in a plain path,
because of mine enemies.
Because of — That I may neither fall into
their hands by my folly, nor give them any occasion of triumphing over me.
Verse 13
[13] I had fainted, unless I had believed to see the goodness
of the LORD in the land of the living.
The living — David was thus earnestly desirous
of this mercy in this life, not because he placed his portion in these things;
but because the truth and glory of God, were highly concerned in making good
the promise of the kingdom to him.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
JEHOVAH IN PSALM 27.
Ⅰ.
Light, to direct. “ The Lord is my
Light” (verse 1).
Ⅱ.
Salvation, to deliver. “ And my
Salvation” (verse 1).
Ⅲ.
Strength, to uphold. “ The Lord is
the Strength of my life” (verse 1).
Ⅳ.
Object of desire. “ One thing have I
desired of the Lord” (verse 4).
Ⅴ.
House of shelter. “ That I may dwell
in the house of the Lord” (verse 4).
Ⅵ.
Beauty, to admire. “ The beauty of
the Lord” (verse 4).
Ⅶ.
Teacher, to instruct. “ To enquire
in His temple” (verse 4).
Ⅷ.
Protector, to hide. “ He shall hide
me in His pavilion” (verse 5).
Ⅸ.
Treasurer, to keep. “ In the secret
of His tabernacle shall He hide me” (verse 5).
Ⅹ.
Uplifter, to save. “ He shall set me
up upon a rock” (ver.5).
Ⅺ. Lord,
to worship. “I will sing praises unto the Lord” (verse 6).
Ⅻ. Hearer
of prayer. “ Hear, O Lord, when I cry” (verse 7).
XIII. Director of saints. “Seek
ye My face” (verse 8).
XIV. God of salvation. “ O God my salvation” (verse 9).
XV. Gatherer of forsaken. “ The Lord will take me up” ( verse 10).
XVI. Leader, to guide. “ Lead me in a plain path” (verse 11).
XVII. Goodness, to bless. “ The goodness of the Lord” (verse 13).
XVIII. Encourager, to strengthen. “ Be of good courage, and He shall
strengthen thine heart” ( verse 14).
── F.E. Marsh《Five Hundred Bible Readings》
Psalm 27 - Light And Salvation In Dark Times
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
1) To glean David's source of strength and courage in difficult times
2) To learn where to turn when persecuted by enemies or forsaken by
family
SUMMARY
This psalm is ascribed to David, evidently written in a time of danger
(12). It may have been prompted by the help provided by Ahimelech the
priest, and the opposition of Doeg the Edomite, who saw David at the
tabernacle and later reported him to Saul (cf. 1 Sam 21:1-10; 22:9).
This was also a time when David sought protection for his parents (cf. 1
Sam 22:3) which may have left David feeling abandoned (10).
As always, David found the LORD to be his "Light And Salvation In Dark
Times". The first part of the psalm expresses his confident trust in
the LORD for blessings received in the past, and his desire to dwell in
the house of the LORD who will protect him in the future (1-6). In the
second part David offers an anxious plea for God's mercy and deliverance
from his enemies (7-12). It ends with a confession that he would have
lost heart without faith in God's goodness, and an exhortation to wait
on the Lord for strength and courage of heart (13-14).
OUTLINE
I. CONFIDENT TRUST IN TIME OF DANGER (27:1-6)
A. CONFIDENCE IN THE LORD (1-3)
1. Of whom shall David be afraid?
a. When the LORD is his light and salvation
b. When the LORD is the strength of his life
2. The LORD's help in the past
a. When the wicked, his enemies and foes came against him
b. They stumbled and fell
3. The LORD's help in the future
a. Though encamped by an army in time of war
b. His heart will not fear, it remains confident in the LORD
B. COMMUNION WITH GOD (4-6)
1. The one thing he desires of the LORD
a. To dwell in His house all his life
b. To behold His beauty, and inquire in His temple
2. The reason for David's fervent desire
a. In time of trouble the LORD will hide him
1) In His pavilion
2) In the secret place of His tabernacle
b. The LORD will set him high upon a rock
3. His response to being lifted high above his enemies
a. To offer sacrifices of joy in His tabernacle
b. To sing praises to the LORD
II. ANXIOUS PRAYER IN TIME OF DANGER (27:7-12)
A. PLEA FOR MERCY (7-10)
1. David's cry to the LORD
a. To hear when he cries with his voice
b. To have mercy and answer him
c. For his heart responded to the LORD saying "Seek My face"
2. David's plea to the LORD
a. Do not hide His face from him
b. Do not turn His servant away in anger, for He has been his
help
c. Do not leave or forsake him, for He is the God of his
salvation
3. David's hope in the LORD
a. When forsaken by his parents
b. The LORD will take care of him
B. PLEA FOR DELIVERANCE (11-12)
1. David's request for guidance from the LORD
a. To teach him His way
b. To lead him in a smooth path, because of his enemies
2. David's reason for asking the LORD for deliverance from his
adversaries
a. For false witnesses have risen against him
b. Such as breathe out violence
III. REASSURING SELF IN TIME OF DANGER (27:13-14)
A. NEED FOR FAITH IN THE LORD (13)
1. He would have lost heart unless he believed
2. That he would see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the
living
B. NEED TO WAIT ON THE LORD (14)
1. To be of good courage
2. He shall strengthen your heart
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
- Confident trust in time of danger (1-6)
- Anxious prayer in time of danger (7-12)
- Lessons learned in time of danger (13-14)
2) What does David offer as the solution to fear? (1)
- The LORD as one's light and salvation
- The LORD as one's strength in life
3) Why would David not fear though an army may encamp him? (2-3)
- In the past his enemies and foe stumbled and fell
4) What did David earnestly desire of the Lord? (4)
- To dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of his life
- To behold the behold the beauty of the LORD, to inquire in His
temple
5) Why did David desire such fellowship with God? (5)
- The LORD would hide him in His tabernacle in times of trouble
6) How would David respond to victory over his enemies? (6)
- Offer sacrifices of joy in His tabernacle
- Sing praises to the LORD
7) Why did David hope for the LORD to hear his prayer and have mercy on
him? (7-9)
- He responded to the LORD's invitation to seek His face
- The LORD had been his help in time past
8) Who would take care of David when forsaken by his parents? (10)
- The LORD
9) What did David ask for when enemies and false witnesses rose against
him? (11-12)
- For the LORD to teach him, and lead him in a smooth path
- For the LORD to not deliver him to the will of his enemies
10) What prevented David from losing heart? (13)
- Faith that he would see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the
living
11) What is the key to being of good courage? (14)
- To wait on the LORD, for He will strengthen your heart
--《Executable
Outlines》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE AND
SUBJECT. Nothing whatever can be drawn from the title as to the time when
this Psalm was written, for the heading, "A Psalm of David, "is
common to so many of the Psalms; but if one may judge from the matter of the
song, the writer was pursued by enemies, Ps 27:2-3, was shut out from the house
of the Lord, Ps 27:4, was just parting from father and mother, Ps 27:10, and
was subject to slander, Ps 27:12; do not all these meet in the time when Doeg,
the Edomite, spake against him to Saul? It is a song of cheerful hope, well
fitted for those in trial who have learned to lean upon the Almighty arm. The
Psalm may with profit be read in a threefold way, as the language of David, of
the Church, and of the Lord Jesus. The plenitude of Scripture will thus appear
the more wonderful.
DIVISION. The poet first
sounds forth his sure confidence in his God, Ps 27:1-3, and his love of
communion with him, Ps 27:4-6. He then betakes himself to prayer, Ps 27:7-12,
and concludes with an acknowledgment of the sustaining power of faith in his
own case, and an exhortation to others to follow his example.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. The Lord is my light and my salvation. Here is personal
interest, "my light, ""my salvation; "the soul is
assured of it, and therefore, declaring it boldly. "My light; "—into
the soul at the new birth divine light is poured as the precursor of salvation;
where there is not enough light to see our own darkness and to long for the
Lord Jesus, there is no evidence of salvation. Salvation finds us in the dark,
but it does not leave us there; it gives light to those who sit in the valley
of the shadow of death. After conversion our God is our joy, comfort, guide,
teacher, and in every sense our light; he is light within, light around, light
reflected from us, and light to be revealed to us. Note, it is not said merely
that the Lord gives light, but that he "is" light; nor that he
gives salvation, but that he is salvation; he, then, who by faith has laid hold
upon God has all covenant blessings in his possession. Every light is not the
sun, but the sun is the father of all lights. This being made sure as a fact,
the argument drawn from it is put in the form of a question, Whom shall I
fear? A question which is its own answer. The powers of darkness are not to
be feared, for the Lord, our light, destroys them; and the damnation of hell is
not to be dreaded by us, for the Lord is our salvation. This is a very
different challenge from that of boastful Goliath, for it is based upon a very
different foundation; it rests not upon the conceited vigour of an arm of
flesh, but upon the real power of the omnipotent I AM. The Lord is the
strength of my life. Here is a third glowing epithet, to show that the
writer's hope was fastened with a threefold cord which could not be broken. We
may well accumulate terms of praise where the Lord lavishes deeds of grace. Our
life derives all its strength from him who is the author if it; and if he
deigns to make us strong we cannot be weakened by all the machinations of the
adversary. Of whom shall I be afraid? The bold question looks into the
future as well as the present. "If God be for us, "who can be against
us, either now or in time to come?
Verse
2. This verse records a past deliverance, and is an instance of the
way in which experience should be employed to reassure our faith in times of
trial. Each word is instructive. When the wicked. It is a hopeful sign
for us when the wicked hate us; if our foes were godly men it would be a sore
sorrow, but as for the wicked their hatred is better than their love. Even
mine enemies and my foes. There were many of them, they were of different
sorts, but they were unanimous in mischief and hearty in hatred. Came upon
me—advanced to the attack, leaping upon the victim like a lion upon its
prey. To eat up my flesh, like cannibals they would make a full end of
the man, tear him limb from limb, and make a feast for their malice. The
enemies of our souls are not deficient in ferocity, they yield no quarter, and
ought to have none in return. See in what danger David was; in the grip and
grasp of numerous, powerful, and cruel enemies, and yet observe his perfect
safety and their utter discomfiture! They stumbled and fell. God's
breath blew them off their legs. There were stones in the way which they never
reckoned upon, and over these they made an ignominious tumble. This was
literally true in the case of our Lord in Gethsemane, when those who came to
take him went backward and fell to the ground; and herein he was a prophetic
representative of all wrestling believers who, rising from their knees shall,
by the power of faith, throw their foes upon their faces.
Verse
3. Though an host should encamp against me, my heart shall not
fear. Before the actual conflict, while as yet the battle is untried, the
warrior's heart, being held in suspense, is very liable to become fluttered.
The encamping host often inspires greater dread than the same host in actual
affray. Young tells us of some—"Who feel a thousand deaths in fearing
one." Doubtless the shadow of anticipated trouble is, to timorous minds, a
more prolific source of sorrow than the trouble itself, but faith puts a
strengthening plaister to the back of courage, and throws out of the window the
dregs of the cup of trembling. Though war should rise against me, in this
will I be confident. When it actually comes to push of pike, faith's shield
will ward off the blow; and if the first brush should be but the beginning of a
war, yet faith's banners will wave in spite of the foe. Though battle should
succeed battle, and one campaign should be followed by another, the believer will
not be dismayed at the length of the conflict. Reader, this third verse is the
comfortable and logical inference from the second, confidence is the child of
experience. Have you been delivered out of great perils? then set up your
ensign, wait at your watch fire, and let the enemy do his worst.
Verse
4. One thing. Divided aims tend to distraction, weakness,
disappointment. The man of one book is eminent, the man of one pursuit is
successful. Let all our affections be bound up in one affection, and that affection
set upon heavenly things. Have I desired—what we cannot at once attain,
it is well to desire. God judges us very much by the desire of our hearts. He
who rides a lame horse is not blamed by his master for want of speed, if he
makes all the haste he can, and would make more if he could; God takes the will
for the deed with his children. Of the Lord. This is the right target
for desires, this is the well into which to dip our buckets, this is the door
to knock at, the bank to draw upon; desire of men, and lie upon the dunghill
with Lazarus: desire of the Lord, and to be carried of angels into Abraham's
bosom. Our desires of the Lord should be sanctified, humble, constant,
submissive, fervent, and it is well if, as with the psalmist, they are all molten
into one mass. Under David's painful circumstances we might have expected him
to desire repose, safety, and a thousand other good things, but no, he has set
his heart on the pearl, and leaves the rest. That will I seek after.
Holy desires must lead to resolute action. The old proverb says, "Wishers
and woulders are never good housekeepers, "and "wishing never fills a
sack." Desires are seed which must be sown in the good soil of activity,
or they will yield no harvest. We shall find our desires to be like clouds
without rain, unless followed up by practical endeavours. That I may dwell
in the house of the Lord all the days of my life. For the sake of communion
with the King, David longed to dwell always in the palace; so far from being
wearied with the services of the Tabernacle, he longed to be constantly engaged
in them, as his life long pleasure. He desired above all things to be one of
the household of God, a home born child, living at home with his Father. This
is our dearest wish, only we extend it to those days of our immortal life which
have not yet dawned. We pine for our Father's house above, the home of our
souls; if we may but dwell there for ever, we care but little for the goods or
ills of this poor life. "Jerusalem the golden" is the one and only
goal of our heart's longings. To behold the beauty of the Lord. An
exercise both for earthly and heavenly worshippers. We must not enter the
assemblies of the saints in order to see and be seen, or merely to hear the
minister; we must repair to the gatherings of the righteous, intent upon the
gracious object of learning more of the loving Father, more of the glorified
Jesus, more of the mysterious Spirit, in order that we may the more lovingly
admire, and the more reverently adore our glorious God. What a word is that, "the
beauty of the Lord!" Think of it, dear reader! Better far—behold it by
faith! What a sight will that be when every faithful follower of Jesus shall
behold "the King in his beauty!" Oh, for that infinitely blessed
vision! And to enquire in his temple. We should make our visits to the
Lord's house enquirers' meetings. Not seeking sinners alone, but assured saints
should be enquirers. We must enquire as to the will of God and how we may do
it; as to our interest in the heavenly city, and how we may be more assured of
it. We shall not need to make enquiries in heaven, for there we shall know even
as we are known; but meanwhile we should sit at Jesus' feet, and awaken all our
faculties to learn of him.
Verse
5. This verse gives an excellent reason for the psalmist's desire
after communion with God, namely, that he was thus secured in the hour of
peril. For in the time of trouble, that needy time, that time when
others forsake me, he shall hide me in his pavilion: he shall give me
the best of shelter in the worst of danger. The royal pavilion was erected in
the centre of the army, and around it all the mighty men kept guard at all
hours; thus in that divine sovereignty which almighty power is sworn to
maintain, the believer peacefully is hidden, hidden not by himself furtively,
but by the king, who hospitably entertains him. In the secret of his
tabernacle shall he hide me. Sacrifice aids sovereignty in screening the
elect from harm. No one of old dared to enter the most holy place on pain of death;
and if the Lord has hidden his people there, what foe shall venture to molest
them? He shall set me up upon a rock. Immutability, eternity, and
infinite power here come to the aid of sovereignty and sacrifice. How blessed
is the standing of the man whom God himself sets on high above his foes, upon
an impregnable rock which never can be stormed! Well may we desire to dwell
with the Lord who so effectually protects his people.
Verse
6. And now shall mine head be lifted up above mine enemies round
about me. He is quite sure of it. Godly men of old prayed in faith, nothing
wavering, and spoke of their answer to their prayers as a certainty. David was
by faith so sure of a glorious victory over all those who beset him, that he
arranged in his own heart what he would do when his foes lay all prostrate
before him; that arrangement was such as gratitude suggested. Therefore will
I offer in his tabernacle sacrifices of joy. That place for which he longed
in his conflict, should see his thankful joy in his triumphant return. He does
not speak of jubilations to be offered in his palace, and feastings in his
banqueting halls, but holy mirth he selects as most fitting for so divine a
deliverance. I will sing. This is the most natural mode of expressing
thankfulness. Yea, I will sing praises unto the Lord. The vow is
confirmed by repetition, and explained by addition, which addition vows all the
praise unto Jehovah. Let who will be silent, the believer when his prayer is
heard, must and will make his praise to be heard also; and let who will sing
unto the vanities of the world, the believer reserves his music for the Lord
alone.
Verse
7. Hear, O Lord, when I cry with my voice. The pendulum of
spirituality swings from prayer to praise. The voice which in the last verse
was tuned to music is here turned to crying. As a good soldier, David knew how
to handle his weapons, and found himself much at home with the weapon of
"all prayer." Note his anxiety to be heard. Pharisees care not a fig
for the Lord's hearing them, so long as they are heard of men, or charm their
own pride with their sounding devotions; but with a genuine man, the Lord's ear
is everything. The voice may be profitably used even in private prayer;
for though it is unnecessary, it is often helpful, and aids in preventing
distractions. Have mercy also upon me. Mercy is the hope of sinners and
the refuge of saints. All acceptable petitioners dwell much upon this
attribute. And answer me. We may expect answers to prayer, and should
not be easy without them any more than we should be if we had written a letter
to a friend upon important business, and had received no reply.
Verse
8. In this verse we are taught that if we would have the Lord hear
our voice, we must be careful to respond to his voice. The true heart
should echo the will of God as the rocks among the Alps repeat in sweetest
music the notes of the peasant's horn. Observe, that the command was in the
plural, to all the saints, Seek ye; but the man of God turned it into
the singular by a personal application, Thy face, Lord, will I seek. The
voice of the Lord is very effectual where all other voices fail. When thou
saidst, then my heart, my inmost nature was moved to an obedient
reply. Note the promptness of the response—no sooner said than done; as soon as
God said "seek, "the heart said, "I will seek."
Oh, for more of this holy readiness! Would to God that we were more plastic to
the divine hand, more sensitive of the touch of God's Spirit.
Verse
9. Hide not thy face far from me. The word "far"
is not in the original, and is a very superfluous addition of the translators,
since even the least hiding of the Lord's face is a great affliction to a
believer. The command to seek the Lord's face would be a painful one if the
Lord, by withdrawing himself, rendered it impossible for the seeker to meet
with him. A smile from the Lord is the greatest of comforts, his frown the
worst of ills. Put not thy servant away in anger. Other servants had
been put away when they proved unfaithful, as for instance, his predecessor
Saul; and this made David, while conscious of many faults, most anxious that
divine long suffering should continue him in favour. This is a most appropriate
prayer for us under a similar sense of unworthiness. Thou hast been my help.
How truly can we join in this declaration; for many years, in circumstances of
varied trial, we have been upheld by our God, and must and will confess our
obligation. "Ingratitude, "it is said, "is natural to fallen
man, "but to spiritual men it is unnatural and detestable. Leave me
not, neither forsake me. A prayer for the future, and an inference from the
past. If the Lord had meant to leave us, why did he begin with us? Past help is
but a waste of effort if the soul now be deserted. The first petition, "leave
me not, "may refer to temporary desertions, and the second word to the
final withdrawal of grace, both are to be prayed against; and concerning the
second, we have immutable promises to urge. O God of my salvation. A
sweet title worthy of much meditation.
Verse
10. When my father and my mother forsake me. These dear
relations will be the last to desert me, but if the milk of human kindness
should dry up even from their breasts, there is a Father who never forgets.
Some of the greatest of the saints have been cast out by their families, and
persecuted for righteousness' sake. Then the Lord will take me up. Will
espouse my cause, will uplift me from my woes, will carry me in his arms, will
elevate me above my enemies, will at last receive me to his eternal dwelling
place.
Verse
11. Teach me thy way, O Lord. He does not pray to be indulged
with his own way, but to be informed as to the path in which the righteous
Jehovah would have him walk. This prayer evinces an humble sense of personal
ignorance, great teachableness of spirit, and cheerful obedience of heart. Lead
me in a plain path. Help is here sought as well as direction; we not only
need a map of the way, but a guide to assist us in the journey. A path is here
desired which shall be open, honest, straightforward, in opposition to the way
of cunning, which is intricate, tortuous, dangerous. Good men seldom succeed in
fine speculations and doubtful courses; plain simplicity is the best spirit for
an heir of heaven: let us leave shifty tricks and political expediencies to the
citizens of the world—the New Jerusalem owns plain men for its citizens. Esau
was a cunning hunter, Jacob was a plain man, dwelling in tents. Because of
mine enemies. These will catch us if they can, but the way of manifest,
simple honesty is safe from their rage. It is wonderful to observe how honest
simplicity baffles and outwits the craftiness of wickedness. Truth is wisdom.
"Honesty is the best policy."
Verse
12. Deliver me not over unto the will of mine enemies; or I
should be like a victim cast to the lions, to be rent in pieces and utterly
devoured. God be thanked that our foes cannot have their way with us, or
Smithfield would soon be on a blaze again. For false witnesses are risen up
against me. Slander is an old fashioned weapon out of the armoury of hell,
and is still in plentiful use; and no matter how holy a man may be, there will
be some who will defame him. "Give a dog an ill name, and hang him;
"but glory be to God, the Lord's people are not dogs, and their ill names
do not injure them. And such as breathe out cruelty. It is their vital
breath to hate the good; they cannot speak without cursing them; such was Paul
before conversion. They who breathe out cruelty may well expect to be sent to
breathe their native air in hell; let persecutors beware!
Verse
13. Faintness of heart is a common infirmity; even he who slew
Goliath was subject to its attacks. Faith puts its bottle of cordial to the lip
of the soul, and so prevents fainting. Hope is heaven's balm for present
sorrow. In this land of the dying, it is our blessedness to be looking and
longing for our fair portion in the land of the living, whence the goodness of
God has banished the wickedness of man, and where holy spirits charm with their
society those persecuted saints who were vilified and despised among men. We
must believe to see, not see to believe; we must wait the appointed time, and
stay our soul's hunger with foretastes of the Lord's eternal goodness which
shall soon be our feast and our song.
Verse
14. Wait on the Lord. Wait at his door with prayer; wait at
his foot with humility; wait at his table with service; wait at his window with
expectancy. Suitors often win nothing but the cold shoulder from earthly
patrons after long and obsequious waiting; he speeds best whose patron is in
the skies. Be of good courage. A soldier's motto. Be it mine. Courage we
shall need, and for the exercise of it we have as much reason as necessity, if
we are soldiers of King Jesus. And he shall strengthen thine heart. He
can lay the plaister right upon the weak place. Let the heart be strengthened,
and the whole machine of humanity is filled with power; a strong heart makes a
strong arm. What strength is this which God himself gives to the heart? Read
the "Book of Martyrs, "and see its glorious deeds of prowess; go to
God rather, and get such power thyself. Wait, I say, on the Lord. David,
in the words "I say, "sets his own private seal to the word
which, as an inspired man, he had been moved to write. It is his
testimony as well as the command of God, and indeed he who writes these scanty
notes has himself found it so sweet, so reviving, so profitable to draw near to
God, that on his own account he also feels bound to write, "Wait, I
SAY, on the Lord."
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Verse
1. The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?
Alice Driver, martyr, at her examination, put all the doctors to silence, so
that they had not a word to say, but one looked upon another; then she said,
"Have you no more to say? God be honoured, you be not able to resist the
Spirit of God, in me, a poor woman. I was an honest poor man's daughter, never
brought up at the University as you have seen; but I have driven the plough
many a time before my father, I thank God; yet, notwithstanding, in the defence
of God's truth, and in the cause of my Master, Christ, by his grace I will set
my foot against the foot of any of you all, in the maintenance and defence of
the same; and if I had a thousand lives they should go for the payment thereof."
So the Chancellor condemned her, and she returned to the prison joyful. Charles
Bradbury.
Verse
1. The Lord is my light, etc. St. John tells us, that
"in Christ was life; and the life was the light of men; "but he adds
that, "the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it
not." Joh 1:4-5. There is a great difference between the light, and
the eye that sees it. A blind man may know a great deal about the shining of
the sun, but it does not shine for him—it gives him no light. So, to know that
"God is light, "is one thing 1Jo 1:5, and to be able to say,
"The Lord is my light, "is quite another thing. The Lord must
be the light by which the way of life is made plain to us—the light by which we
may see to walk in that way—the light that exposes the darkness of sin—the
light by which we can discover the hidden sins of our own hearts. When he is
thus our light, then he is our salvation also. He is pledged to
guide us right; not only to show us sin, but to save us from it. Not only to
make us see God's hatred of sin, and his curse upon it, but also to draw us
unto God's love, and to take away the curse. With the Lord lighting us along
the road of salvation, who, or what need we fear? Our life is hid with Christ
in God. Col 3:3. We are weak, very weak, but his "strength is made perfect
in weakness." 2Co 12:2. With the Lord himself pledged to be the strength
of our life, of whom need we be afraid? From Sacramental Meditations on the
Twenty-seventh Psalm, 1843.
Verse
1. The Lord is my light. "Light" which makes all
things visible, was the first made of all visible things; and whether God did
it for our example, or no, I know not; but ever since, in imitation of this
manner of God's proceeding, the first thing we do when we intend to do
anything, is to get us "light." Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
1. The Lord is my light. Adorable Sun, cried St. Bernard, I
cannot walk without thee: enlighten my steps, and furnish this barren and
ignorant mind with thoughts worthy of thee. Adorable fulness of light and heat,
be thou the true noonday of my soul; exterminate its darkness, disperse its
clouds; burn, dry up, and consume all its filth and impurities. Divine Sun,
rise upon my mind, and never set. Jean Baptiste Elias Avrillon,
1652-1729.
Verse
1. Whom shall I fear? Neither spiritual nor military heroes
do exploits through cowardice, Courage is a necessary virtue. In Jehovah is the
best possible foundation for unflinching intrepidity. William S. Plumer.
Verse
1. Of whom shall I be afraid? I have no notion of a timid, disingenuous
profession of Christ. Such preachers and professors are like a rat playing at
hide and seek behind a wainscot, who puts his head through a hole to see if the
coast is clear, and ventures out if nobody is in the way; but slinks back again
if danger appears. We cannot be honest to Christ except we are bold for him. He
is either worth all we can lose for him, or he is worth nothing. H.
G. Salter, A.M., in "The Book of Illustrations, "1840.
Verse
2. When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me
to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell. There is no such dainty dish to
a malicious stomach, as the flesh of an enemy; it goes down without chewing,
and they swallow it up whole like cormorants. But though malice have a ravenous
stomach, yet she hath but slow digestion; though her teeth be sharp, yet her
feet are lame, at least apt to stumble; and this made well for David, for when
his enemies came upon him to eat up his flesh, because they came upon the feet
of malice, they stumbled and fell. A man may stumble and yet not fall;
but to stumble and fall withal, is the proper stumbling of the wicked,
and especially of the maliciously wicked; and such, it seems, was the stumbling
of David's enemies, because the enemies were such; and such I doubt not shall
be the stumbling of mine enemies, because mine are such; and of what then, of
whom now, should I be afraid? Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
2. When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me
to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell. He describes his enemies by
their malice and by their ruin. 1. His enemies were cruel enemies, blood
suckers, eaters of flesh. We call them cannibals. As indeed men that have not
grace, if they have greatness, and be opposed, their greatness is inaccessible,
one man is a devil to another. The Scripture calls them "wolves, that
leave nothing till morning." Zep 3:3. As the great fishes eat up the
little ones, so great men they make no more conscience of eating up other men,
than of eating bread; they make no more bones of overthrowing men and undoing
them, than of eating bread. "They eat up my people as they eat
bread." Ps 14:4. 2. But not withstanding their cruelty, they were
overthrown. Saith David, When my foes came upon me to eat up my flesh,
they stumbled and fell. For, indeed, God's children, when they are
delivered, it is usually with the confusion of their enemies. God doth two
things at once, because the special grievance of God's children it is from
inward and outward enemies. He seldom or never delivers them but with the
confusion of their enemies. This will be most apparent at the day of judgment
when Satan, and all that are led by his spirit, all the malignant church, shall
be sent to their own place, and the church shall be for ever free from all kind
of enemies. When the church is most free, then the enemies of the church are
nearest to destruction; like a pair of balances, when they are up at the one
end, they are down at the other. So when it is up with the church, down go the
enemies. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
2. The wicked, mine enemies. The wicked hate the godly; there
is enmity between the seed of the woman and the serpent. Ge 3:15. As in nature
there is an antipathy between the vine and the bay tree, the elephant and the
dragon. Vultures have an antipathy against sweet smells: so in the wicked there
is an antipathy against the people of God; they hate the sweet perfumes of
their graces. It is true the saints have their infirmities; but the wicked do
not hate them for these, but for their holiness; and from this hatred ariseth
open violence: the thief hates the light, therefore would blow it out. Thomas
Watson.
Verse
2. There was great wisdom in the prayer of John Wesley: "Lord,
if I must contend, let it not be with thy people." When we have for foes
and enemies those who hate good men, we have at least this consolation, that
God is not on their side, and therefore it is essentially weak. William S.
Plumer.
Verse
3. Though an host should encamp against me, etc. He puts the case of
the greatest danger that can be. Though an host should encompass me, my
heart shall not fear: though war should rise against me, in this will I be
confident. Here is great courage for the time to come. "Experience
breeds hope and confidence." David was not so courageous a man of
himself; but upon experience of God's former comfort and assistance, his faith
brake as fire out of the smoke, or as the sun out of a cloud. Though I was in
such and such perplexities, yet for the time to come, I have such confidence
and experience of God's goodness, that I will not fear. He that seeth God by a
spirit of faith in his greatness and power, he sees all other things below as
nothing. Therefore, he saith here, he cares not for the time to come for any
opposition; no, not of an army. "If God be with us, who can be against
us?" Ro 8:31. He saw God in his power; and then, looking from God to the
creature, alas! who was he? As Micah, when he had seen God sitting upon his
throne; what was Ahab to him, when he had seen God once? So when the prophet
David had seen God once, then "though an host should encamp against me,
my heart shall not fear, "etc. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
3. Though an host should encamp against me, etc. If I love my God,
and I love him with a noble spirited love, all my enemies will fight against me
in vain; I shall never fear them, and the whole world cannot harm me. Charity
cannot be offended, because she takes offence at nothing. Enemies, enviers,
slanderers, persecutors, I defy you; if I love, I shall triumph over your
attacks. Ye can take away my goods; but if my love has a generous spirit, I
shall be always rich enough, and ye cannot take away my love, which alone makes
all my riches and treasures. Ye may blacken my reputation; but as I hold you
cheaply quit of all homage of praise and applause, I, with all my heart, give
you a free leave to blame and to defame. Happily for me, ye cannot blacken me
before my God, and his esteem alone makes amends to me, and rewards me, for all
your contempt. Ye can persecute my body, but there I even will help you on by
my penances; the sooner it shall perish, the sooner shall I be delivered from
this domestic enemy, which is a burden to me. What harm, then, can ye do me? If
I am resolved to suffer all, and if I think I deserve all the outrages ye can
do me, ye will only give more loftiness of spirit to my love, more brilliancy
to my crown. Jean Baptiste Elias Avrillon.
Verse
3. Those who are willing to be combatants for God, shall also
be more than conquerors through God. None are so truly courageous as
those who are truly religious. If a Christian live, he knows by whose might he
stands; and if he die, he knows for whose sake he falls. Where there is no
confidence in God, there will be no continuance with God. When
the wind of faith ceases to fill the sails, the ship of obedience cease to
plough the seas. The taunts of Ishmael shall never make an Isaac disesteem his
inheritance, William Secker.
Verses
3-4. The favourite grows great by the many favours, gifts, jewels,
offices, the prince bestows upon him. The Christian grows rich in experiences,
which he wears as bracelets, and keeps as his richest jewels. He calls one Ebenezer—"hitherto
God hath helped; "and other Naphtali—"I have wrestled with God
and prevailed; "another Gershom—"I was a stranger;
"another Joseph—"God will yet add more; "and another, Peniel—"I
have seen the face of God." 1Sa 7:12 Ge 30:8 Ex 2:22 Ge 30:24 Ge 32:30. I
have been delivered from the lion, therefore shall be from the bear;
from lion and bear, therefore from the Philistine; from the Philistine,
therefore from Saul; from Saul, therefore God will deliver me from every
evil work, and preserve me blameless to his heavenly kingdom. John
Sheffield.
Verse
4. One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after;
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to behold
the beauty of the Lord, and to enquire in his temple. Some interpreters
vary concerning what the psalmist aims at; I understand thus much in a
generality, which is clear that he means a communion and fellowship with God,
which is that one thing, which if a Christian had, he needs desire no
more: that we should all desire and desire again and be in love with, and that
is enough even to satisfy us, the fruition of God, and the beholding of him in
his ordinances, in his temple, to have correspondence and fellowship and
communion with him there. O God, vouchsafe us that! Now this is so infinitely
sweet, that it was the psalmist's only desire, and the sum of all his desires
here, and therefore much more in the tabernacle of heaven, which doth make up
the consummation and completeness of all our happiness. John Stoughton.
Verse
4. One thing have I desired of the Lord, etc. Seeing David
would make but one request to God, why would he not make a greater? for,
alas! what a poor request is this—to desire to dwell in God's house? and
what to do? but only to see? and to see what? but only a beauty,
a fading thing, at most but to enquire; and what is enquiring? but only
to hear news; a vain fancy. And what cause in any of these why David should
make it his request to God? But mark, O my soul, what goes with it! Take
altogether—to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his temple.
And now tell me, if there be, if there can be, any greater request to be made?
any greater cause to be earnest about it? For though worldly beauty be a fading
thing, yet "the beauty of the Lord, "shall continue when the
world shall fade away; and though enquiring after news be a vain fancy, yet to
enquire in God's Temple is the way to learn there is no new thing under the
sun, and there it was that Solomon learned that "all is vanity."
Indeed, this "one thing, "that David desires, is in effect
that unum necessarium that Christ speaks of in the gospel; which Mary
makes choice of there, as David doth here. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
4. One thing, etc. A heavenly mind gathers itself up into one
wish and no more. "One thing have I desired of the Lord, which I will
require." Grant me thyself, O Lord, and I will ask no more. The new
creature asks nothing of God, but to enjoy God: give me this, O Lord, and for
the rest, let Ziba take all. I will part with all to buy that one pearl, the
riches of heavenly grace. Jeremy Taylor.
Verse
4. One thing. The first thing, then, is David's choice,
summarily described in the word, "one thing." So Christ
confirmeth the prophet's word, while he called Mary's choice, "one
thing." Lu 10:42. And that for these three reasons: First, because it
is not a common but a chief good. If there be any good above it, it is
not the chief good; and if there be any good equal unto it, it is not alone.
Next, because it is the last end which we mind eternally to enjoy; if
there be any end beyond it, it is not the last, but amidst, and a degree to it.
All mids and ends are used for it, but it is sought for itself, and, therefore,
must be but one. Thirdly, it is a centre whereunto all reasonable
spirits draw. As all lines from a circle meet in the centre, so every one that
seeketh happiness aright meeteth in the chief good, as the only thing which
they intend, and, therefore, must be one. William Struther, in "True
Happiness, or King David's Choice," 1633.
Verse
4. One thing. Changes, great changes, and many bereavements
there have been in my life. I have been emptied from vessel to vessel. But one
thing has never failed—one thing makes me feel that my life has been one;
it has calmed my joys, it has soothed my sorrows, it has guided me in
difficulty, it has strengthened me in weakness. It is the presence of
God—a faithful and loving God. Yes, brethren, the presence of God is not only light,
it is unity. It gives unity to the heart that believes it—unity
to the life that is conformed to it. It was the presence of God in David's soul
that enabled him to say, "One thing have I desired of the Lord;
"and in St, Paul's that enabled him to say, "This one thing I
do." George Wagner, in the "Wanderings of the Children of
Israel," 1862.
Verse
4. One thing.—
One
master passion in the breast,
Like Aaron's serpent, swallows up the rest.
—Alexander Pope.
Verse
4. That I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my
life. To approach continually unto the temple, and thither continually to
repair was the dwelling, no doubt, here meant; to dwell, to
reside continually there, not to come for a spurt or a fit...And thus dwelt
Hannah, the daughter of Phanuel, who is said, in the second of Luke, for the
space of four score and four years not to have gone out of the temple. Not that
she was there always, but often, saith Lyra; and venerable Bede to the same
purpose. Not that she was never absent, no, not an hour; but for that she was
often in the temple. And the same St. Luke, speaking of our Saviour's
disciples, after they had seen him ascended into heaven—"They returned, "saith
he, "to Jerusalem with great joy: and were continually in the temple,
praising and blessing God, " Lu 24:52-53. Thus, St. Austin's mother, in
her time too, might be said to dwell in God's house, whereunto she came
so duly and truly twice a day, "That she, in thy Scriptures, "saith
St. Austin, "might hear, O God, what thou saidst to her, and thou, in her
prayers, what she said to thee." In a word, such were the Christians the
same St. Austin speaks of in another place, whom he calleth the emmets
of God. "Behold the emmet of God, "saith he, "it rises early
every day, it runs to God's church, it there prays, it hears the lesson read,
it sings a psalm, it ruminates what it hears, it meditates thereupon, and
hoards up within itself the precious corn gathered from that barn floor." John
Day's "David's Desire to go to Church, "1609.
Verse
4. That I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my
life. In the beginning of the Psalm, David keeps an audit of his soul's
accounts, reckoning up the large incomes and lasting treasures of God's bounty,
grace, and mercy; the sum whereof is this: The Lord is my light and my life, my
strength and my salvation. And now, where shall David design his presence, but
where is his light? Where shall he desire his person, but where is his
strength? Where shall he wish his soul, but where is his life? and where shall
he fix his habitation, but where is his salvation? even in communion with his
God; and this, especially, in the holy worship of his sanctuary. No wonder,
then, if above all things he desires and seeks after this "one thing,
""to dwell in the house of the Lord, "etc. Robert Mossom.
Verse
4. The house of the Lord. It (the tabernacle, the sanctuary),
is called the house of God because he is present there, as a man delights to be
present in his house. It is the place where God will be met withal. As a man
will be found in his house, and there he will have suitors come to him, where
he reveals his secrets. A man rests, he lies, and lodgeth in his house. Where
is a man so familiar as in his house? and what other place hath he such care to
protect and provide for as his house? and he lays up his treasures and his
jewels in his house. So God lays up all the treasures of grace and comfort in
the visible church. In the church he is to be spoken with as a man in his
house. There he gives us sweet meetings; there are mutual, spiritual kisses.
"Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth." So 1:2. A man's house
is his castle, as we say, that he will protect and provide for. God will be
sure to protect and provide for his church. Therefore he calls the church of
God, that is, the tabernacle (that was the church at that time), the house
of God. If we apply it to our times, that answers the tabernacle now is
particular visible churches under particular pastors, where the means of
salvation are set up. Particular visible churches now are God's tabernacle. The
church of the Jews was a national church. There was but one church, but one
place, and one tabernacle; but now God hath erected particular tabernacles.
Every particular church and congregation under one pastor, their meeting is the
church of God, a several church independent. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
4. To behold the beauty of the Lord. That was one end of his
desire, to dwell in the house of God; not to feed his eyes with speculations
and goodly sights (as indeed there were in the tabernacle goodly things to be
seen). No; he had a more spiritual sight than that. He saw the inward spiritual
beauty of those spiritual things. The other were but outward things, as the
apostle calls them. I desire to dwell in the house of the Lord, to behold
the beauty of the Lord, the inward beauty of the Lord especially. Richard
Sibbes.
Verse
4. The beauty of the Lord. In connection with these words, we
would try to show that the character of God is attractive, and fitted to
inspire us with love for him, and to make us, as it were, run after him. The
discussion of our subject may be arranged under three heads. I. Some of the
elements of the beauty of the Lord. II. Where the beauty of the Lord may be
seen. III. Peculiar traits of the beauty of the Lord. I. Some of the elements
of the beauty of the Lord. God is a Spirit. Hence his beauty is spiritual, and
its elements must be sought for in spiritual perfection. 1. One of the elements
of this beauty is holiness. 2. But the elements of the divine beauty on which
we intend at this time to dwell, are those which are included under the general
description of God's mercy and grace. The attractiveness of these is more easily
perceived, and their influence is sooner felt by persons in our fallen
condition. It is mainly through the instrumentality of these that sinners are
won over from their enmity against God, and that the Holy Ghost sheds abroad
the love of God in our hearts. 3. Another thing, which we may call an element
of beauty in God, is the combination of his various attributes in one
harmonious whole. The colours of the rainbow are beautiful, when taken one by
one: but there is a beauty in the rainbow, which arises not from any single
tint; there is a beauty in it which would not exist if the several hues were
assumed in succession—a beauty which is a result of their assemblage and
collocation, and consists in their blended radiance. In like manner so the
several perfections, which coexist and unite in the nature of God, produce a
glorious beauty. Holiness is beautiful; mercy is beautiful; truth is beautiful.
But, over and above, there is a beauty which belongs to such combinations and
harmonies as the psalmist describes, when he tells us, "Mercy and truth
are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other."
"Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto
the clouds. Thy righteousness is like the great mountains; thy judgments are a
great deep, "etc. II. We are next to inquire where the beauty of the Lord
may be seen It may so far be seen in the natural world. The throne of
nature, although in some respects clouds and darkness are round about it, is
not without its rainbow of beauty, any more than the throne of grace. The
beauty of the Lord may be seen in the moral law. In the law! Even so. In
the unbending law, with its terrible anathema, his beauty and amiableness shine
forth. The law is full of love. The duties of the law are duties of love. Love
is the fulfilling of the law. The curse of the law is designed and employed for
the maintenance of love. Obedience to the law, and the reign of love, are but
different aspects of the same state of things. And one of the most sublime lessons
of the law is the fact, that God is love. Again, the beauty of the Lord may be
seen in the gospel. We see it, as it were, by reflection, in the law; in
the gospel, we see it directly. The law shows us the hearts of men, as God
would have them to be; the gospel shows us God's own heart. Again the beauty of
the Lord is seen in Christ. It is seen in Christ, for he is the
brightness of the Father's glory, and the express image of his person; and he
that hath seen Christ, hath seen the Father. The beauty of the Lord is seen in
Christ, when we consider him as the Father's gift, and when we look to his
offices and to his character. The character of Christ was the finest spectacle
of moral beauty which men or angels ever set their eyes on. III. We conclude by
noticing some traits of the beauty of the Lord. 1. It never deceives. 2. It
never fades. 3. It never loses its power. 4. It never disappoints. Condensed
from Andrew Gray (1805-1861), in "Gospel Contrasts and
Parallels."
Verse
4. The beauty of the Lord. The Lord's beauty, to be
seen in his house, is not the beauty of his essence, for so no man can see God
and live Ex 23:18,20; before this glorious beauty the angels cover their faces
with their wings Isa 6:1-2; but it is the beauty of his ordinances, wherein God
doth reveal to the eyes of men's minds, enlightened by his Spirit, the pleasant
beauty of his goodness, justice, love, and mercy in Jesus Christ. Thomas
Pierson, M.A., 1570-1633.
Verse
4. The beauty of the Lord. "Beauty" is too
particular a word to express the fulness of the Holy Ghost, the pleasantness or
the delight of God. Take the word in a general sense, in your apprehensions. It
may be the object of all senses, inward and outward. Delight is most
transcendent for pleasantness; for indeed God in his ordinances, is not only
"beauty" to the eye of the soul, but is ointment to the smell, and
sweetness to the taste, and all in all to all the powers of the soul. God in
Christ, therefore, he is delightful and sweet...The beauty of the Lord
is especially the amiable things of God, which is his mercy and love, that
makes all other things beautiful that is in the church. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
4. To enquire in his temple. The more grace the more business
ye will find ye have to do with God in his ordinances; little grace hath little
to do, and much grace hath much to do; he hath always business with God,
special earnest business. To behold the beauty of the Lord, and to enquire
in his temple. Oh, I have somewhat to enquire after; I am to do something
by this duty, and therefore cannot trifle. He that comes to visit his friend in
a compliment, he talks, he walks, he trifles, and goes home again; but he that
comes upon business, he is full of it: he is like Abraham's honest and faithful
servant. Ge 24:33. "And there was set meat before him to eat: but he said,
I will not eat, until I have told my errand." I have great business with
the Lord, about the church and about my soul, and I will not eat, nor talk, nor
think, nor dally about anything, till I have told mine errand, or heard my
Maker's errand unto me. And for this end it's a rare thing to carry somewhat
always on the spirit, to spread before God, a heart pregnant with some needful
request or matter whereof to treat with God. Ps 45:1. Richard Steele's
"Antidote against Distractions, "1673.
Verse
4. It was David's earnest prayer, One thing have I desired of the
Lord, that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the
days of my life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to enquire in his
temple. There are many that pray David's words, but not with David's heart.
Unum petii, one thing have I desired, de praeterito, for the time
past; et hoc requiram, this I will seek after, de futuro, for the
time to come: I have required it long, and this suit I will urge till I have
obtained it. What? To dwell in some of the houses of God all the days of my
life, and to leave them to my children after me; not to serve him there with
devotion, but to make the place mine own possession? These love the house of
God too well; they love it to have and to hold; but because the conveyance is
made by the lawyer, and not by the minister, their title will be found naught
in the end; and if there be not a nisi prius to prevent them, yet at
that great day of universal audit, the Judge of all the world shall condemn
them. By this way, the nearer to the church, the further from God. The Lord's
temple is ordained to gain us to him, not for us to gain it from him. If we
love the Lord, we "will love the habitation of his house, and the place
where his honour dwelleth; "that so by being humble frequenters of his
temple below, we may be made noble saints of his house above, the glorious
kingdom of Jesus Christ. Thomas Adams.
Verse
4. David being in this safe condition, what doth he now think upon
or look at, as his main scope? Not as Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, to sit still and
be merry, when he had overcome the Romans and all his enemies, as he sometime
said to Cyneas, the philosopher, but to improve his rest to perpetual piety, in
going from day to day to God's house, as Hannah is said afterwards to have
done. Luke 2. And this, first, for the solace of his soul, in seeing the beauty
of his sanctuary. Secondly, that he might still be directed aright and be safe.
Thirdly, that he might yet be more highly exalted in kingly glory. Fourthly,
for all this, as he should have abundant cause, sacrificing and singing psalms
to God without ceasing: see Ps 27:5-6. John Mayer.
Verse
4. O my soul, what sights have I seen in the house of God! what
provisions have I tasted! what entertainments have I had! what enlargements in
prayer, and answers thereto! what impression under his word, what entertainment
at his table, as he has sometimes brought me into his banqueting house, and his
banner over me has been love! And though I cannot, it may be, say so much of
this as some others; yet what I have found, I cannot but remember with
thankfulness, and desire more; and as this was in the house of God, here
would I still desire to dwell. Daniel Wilcox, 1676-1733.
Verse
5. The time of trouble. Though God does not always deliver
his people out of trouble, yet he delivers them from the evil of trouble, the
despair of trouble, by supporting the spirit; nay, he delivers by trouble, for
he sanctifies the trouble to cure the souls, and by less troubles delivers them
from greater. From a Broad Sheet in the British Museum, dated, London:
printed for D. M., 1678.
Verse
5. He shall hide me. The word here used means to hide, to
secrete, and then, to defend or protect. It would properly be applied to one
who had fled from oppression, or from any impending evil, and who should be secreted
in a house or cavern, and thus rendered safe from pursuers, or from the
threatening evil. Albert Barnes.
Verse
5. Pavilion comes from papilio, a butterfly. It
signifies a tent made of cloth stretched out on poles, which in form
resembles in some measure the insect above named. Adam Clarke.
Verse
5. In the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me. He
alludes to the ancient custom of offenders, who used to flee to the tabernacle
or altar, where they esteemed themselves safe. 1Ki 2:28. Matthew Poole.
Verse
5. In the secret of his tabernacle. Were there no other
place, he would put me in the holy of holies, so that an enemy would not
dare to approach me. Adam Clarke.
Verse
6. Now shall mine head be lifted up above mine enemies round
about me. A man cannot drown so long as his head is above water. Now, it is
the proper office of hope to do this for the Christian in times of any danger. Lu
21:28. "When these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up
your heads: for your redemption draweth nigh." A strange time, one would
think, for Christ then to bid his disciples lift up their heads in, when
they see other men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those
things which are coming on the earth Lu 21:26; yet now is the time of the
rising of their sun, when others' is setting, and the blackness of darkness is
overtaking others; because now the Christian's feast is coming, for which hope
hath saved its stomach so long. "Your redemption draweth nigh." Two
things make the head hang down—fear and shame; hope eases the Christian's heart
of both these, and so forbids him to give any sign of a desponding mind by a
dejected countenance. William Gurnall.
Verse
6. Therefore will I offer in his tabernacle sacrifices of joy.
"Surely, "some may say, "he could have called on God beyond the
precincts of the temple. Wherever he wandered as an exile, he carried with him
the precious promise of God, so that he needed not to put so great a value upon
the sight of the external edifice. He appears, by some gross imagination or
other, to suppose that God could be enclosed by wood and stones." But if
we examine the words more carefully, it will be easy to see, that his object
was altogether different from a mere sight of the noble building and its
ornaments, however costly. He speaks, indeed, of the temple, but he places that
beauty not so much in the goodliness that was to be seen by the eye, as in its
being the celestial pattern which was shown to Moses, as it is written in Ex
25:40: "And look that thou make them after their pattern, which was showed
thee in the mount." As the fashion of the temple was not framed according
to the wisdom of man, but was an image of spiritual things, the prophet
directed his eyes and all his affections to this object. Their madness is,
therefore, truly detestable who wrest this place in favour of pictures and
images, which, instead of deserving to be numbered among temple ornaments, are
rather like the dung and filth, defiling all the purity of holy things. John
Calvin.
Verse
8. When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said unto thee,
Thy face, Lord, will I seek. In the former verse, David begins a prayer to
God, "Hear, O Lord; have mercy upon me, and answer me." This verse is
a ground of that prayer, Seek ye my face, saith God. The heart answers
again, Thy face, Lord, will I seek; therefore I am encouraged to pray to
thee. In the words are contained God's command and David's obedience. God's
warrant and David's work answerable, the voice and the echo: the voice, "Seek
my face; "the rebound back again of a gracious heart, "Thy
face, Lord, will I seek." "When thou saidst." It is not in
the original. It only makes way to the sense. Passionate speeches are usually
abrupt: "Seek my face:" "Thy face, Lord, will I
seek." ...
God
is willing to be known. He is willing to open and discover himself; God
delights not to hide himself. God stands not upon state, as some emperors do
that think their presence diminishes respect. God is no such God, but he may be
searched into. Man, if any weakness be discovered, we can soon search into the
depth of his excellency; but with God it is clean otherwise. The more we know
of him, the more we shall admire him. None admire him more than the blessed
angels, that see most of him, and the blessed spirits that have communion with
him. Therefore he hides not himself, nay, he desires to be known; and all those
that have his Spirit desire to make him known. Those that suppress the
knowledge of God in his will, what he performs for men, and what he requires of
them, they are enemies to God and of God's people. They suppress the opening of
God, clean contrary to God's meaning; "Seek my face; "I desire
to be made known, and lay open myself to you. Therefore we may observe by the
way, that when we are in any dark condition, that a Christian finds not the
beams of God shining on him, let him not lay the blame upon God, as if God were
a God that delighted to hide himself. Oh, no! it is not his delight. He loves
not strangeness to his poor creatures. It is not a point of his policy. He is
too great to affect (Choose=love) such poor things. No; the fault is altogether
in us. We walk not worthy of such a presence; we want humility and preparation.
If there be any darkness in the creature, that he finds God doth not so shine
on him as in former times, undoubtedly the cause is in himself; for God saith, "Seek
my face." He desires to reveal himself. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
8. When thou saidst, Seek ye my face, etc. All the Spirit's
motions are seasonable, and therefore not to be put off; for delay is a kind of
denial, and savours of such ungrateful contempt, as must needs be very
displeasing to him. When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said unto
thee, Thy face, Lord, will I seek. God does not only expect such an answer,
but expects it immediately upon his call. Whenever he blows with his wind, he
looks that we should spread our sails. If we refuse his offered help, we may
deservedly want it when desired. As Christ withdrew himself from the spouse
because she let him stand knocking so long at the door of her heart, and she
still deferred to open, and tired out his loving forbearance with vain and frivolous
excuses. So 5:2, etc. But as we must not omit the present performance of any
duty which he excites unto, we must not check his influences by being weary of
the duties which he assists us in: if we do not improve extraordinary aids by
holding out the longer, we provoke him to depart. Timothy Cruso.
Verse
8. When thou saidst, Seek ye my face, etc. We see here thus
much, that God must begin with us, before we can close with him;
God must seek us, before we can seek him; God must first desire that we draw near
to him, before we for our particulars are able to draw near unto God. Thou
saidst, Seek my face; and then and not till then my heart said, Thy face, Lord,
will I seek. Thomas Horton.
Verse
8. When thou saidst, etc. Now God then speaks to the heart to
pray when not only he puts upon the duty by saying to the conscience, This thou
oughtest to do; but God's speaking to pray is such as his speech at first was,
when he made the world, when he said, "Let there be light, and there was
light:" so he says, let there be a prayer, and there is a prayer; that is,
he pours upon a man a spirit of grace and supplication, a praying disposition;
he puts in motives, suggests arguments and pleas to God; all which you shall
find come in readily, and of themselves, and that likewise with a quickening
heat and enlargement of affection, and with a lingering and longing, and
restlessness of spirit to be alone, to pour out the soul to God, and to vent
and form those motions and suggestions into a prayer, till you have laid them
together, and made a prayer of them. And this is a speaking to the heart.
Observe such times when God doth thus, and neglect them not, then to strike
whilst the iron is hot; thou hast then his ear; it is a special opportunity for
that business, such a one as thou mayest never have the like. Suitors at court
observe molissima fandi tempora, their times of begging when they have
kings in a good mood, which they will be sure to take the advantage of; but
especially if they should find that the king himself should begin of himself to
speak of the business which they would have of him: and thus that phrase of Ps
10:17, that God prepares the heart, is understood by some, that God prepares
the heart, and causeth the ear to hear; that is, he fashions it and composes it
into a praying frame. And sure it is a great sign that God means to hear us
when himself shall thus indite the petition. Thomas Goodwin.
Verse
8. When thou saidst, etc. And well may this be pleaded, in
that God useth not so to stir up and strengthen us to seek him, but when he
intends to be found of us. Ps 10:17. "Thou hast heard the desire of the
humble: thou wilt prepare their heart, thou wilt cause thine ear to hear."
Jer 29:13. "And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me
with all your heart." And God maketh it an argument to himself, that if he
say to any inwardly as well as outwardly, Seek my face, he that speaketh
righteousness cannot speak thus to them, and frustrate their prayers, and so
bid them seek his face in vain. Isa 45:19, "I said not unto the seed of
Jacob, Seek ye me in vain; I the Lord speak right things." If Ahasuerus
bid his spouse to ask, surely he will not fail to grant her petition Es 7:2; so
here. And as when Christ called the blind man to come to him to tell him his
grievance, it was truly said to him by them, "Be of good comfort, rise,
for he calleth thee." Mr 10:49. So it is in this case. Thomas Cobbett.
Verse
8. My heart said unto thee. The heart is between God and our
obedience, as it were, an ambassador. It understands from God what God would
have done, and then it lays a command upon the whole man. The heart and
conscience of man is partly divine, partly human. It hath some divinity in it,
especially if the man be a holy man. God speaks, and the heart speaks. God
speaks to the heart, and the heart speaks to us. And ofttimes when we hear
conscience speaking to us, we neglect it; and as St. Augustine said of himself,
"God spake often to me, and I was ignorant of it." When there is no
command in the word that the heart directly thinks of (as indeed many profane
careless men scarce have a Bible in their houses), God speaks to them thus;
conscience speaks to them some broken command, that they learn against their
wills. They heed it not, but David did not so. God said, Seek ye my face:
his heart answers, "Thy face, Lord, will I seek." The heart
looks upward to God, and then to itself, My heart said. It said to thee
and then to itself. First, his heart said to God, "Lord, I have
encouragement from thee. Thou hast commanded that I should seek thy face."
So his heart looked to God, and then it speaks to itself. Thy face, Lord,
will I seek. It looks first to God, and then to all things that come from
itself. Richard Sibbes.
Verse
8. There are diverse things considerable of us in this answer
and compliance of David's with God's command or invitation
to him. First, it was seasonable, and in due time; presently does David
make this return: "Thy face, Lord, will I seek." This is the property
and disposition of every wise and prudent Christian, to close with the very
first opportunities of God's invitation. Secondly, this answer, as it was
seasonable and present, so it was also full and complete; the
performance was proportionable to the injunction. Ye shall have some kind of
people in the world that God bids them do one thing and they will be sure to do
the quite contrary; or, at least, not do as much as the should do, but do it by
halves. But, now, here David makes return to God in the full extent and
proportion of obedience. God said, Seek my face, and he answered Thy
face, Lord, will I seek. Thirdly, it was real, and entire, and sincere;
"My heart said." It is one thing to say it with the mouth,
and it is another thing to say it with the heart. With the mouth
it is quite easy and ordinary, and nothing more usual. Lord, thy face will we
seek, especially in any trouble or calamity, which is incident unto us; but for
the heart to say it, that is not so frequent. Fourthly, it was settled and
peremptory. "Thy face will I seek; "there is nothing shall hinder
me of it, or keep me from it, but I will do it against all opposition. Lastly,
this protestation of David was absolute and indefinite and unlimited;
"I will seek thy face; "without prescription of time, or place, or
condition; not only now, but hereafter: not only for a time, but for ever, in
all seasons, in all estates, in all circumstances, still I shall keep me to
this—to hold my communion with thee. Then are we Christians, indeed, when we
are so immutably and irreversibly and independently upon the opinions or
practices of any other person. Condensed from Thomas Horton.
Verse
8. God hath promised his favour, and, therefore, his people may seek
his favour. Nay, he hath commanded his people to seek his favour, and therefore
they should seek it. It is an unadvised folly, during the suspension of God's
favour, to unson ourselves, and unpeople ourselves, i.e., by denying the
grace and spiritual relation which exist between us and God. That is not the
way to gain favour; for when we have undone our relation of children we exclude
ourselves from the expectation of favour. No, the wisest and surest way is to
seek the renewing of God's loving countenance, and not to be driven away from
God by our unbelief. Obadiah Sedgwick, in "The Doubting Believer,
"1653.
Verse
9. Hide not thy face far from me. When I seek thy face,
vouchsafe, O God, not to hide thy face from me; for to what purpose should I
seek it if I cannot find it? and what hope of finding it if thou be bent to
hide it? Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
9. Put not thy servant away in anger. God puts away many in
anger for their supposed goodness, but not any at all for their confessed
badness. John Trapp.
Verse
9. Thy servant. It is a blessed and happy thing to be God's
true "servant." Consider what the Queen of Sheba said of
Solomon's servants 1Ki 10:8: "Happy are these thy servants, "&c.
Now Christ Jesus is greater than Solomon, Mt 12:42, and so a better Master.
Good earthly masters will honour good servants, as Pr 27:18, "He that waiteth
on his master shall be honoured; " Pr 17:2, "A wise servant shall
have a portion, or inheritance, among the brethren." But however some
earthly masters may be Nabals and Labans, yet God will not be so: Joh 12:26:
"Where I am, there shall also my servant be." "If any man serve
me, him will my father honour, "see Lu 12:37. The watchful servants are
blessed; their master will make them to sit down to meat, and will come forth
and serve them, as Mt 25:21,23: "Well done, thou good and faithful
servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over
many things: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." Thomas Pierson.
Verse
9. Thou hast been my help; leave me not, etc. One act of
mercy engages God to another. Men argue thus: I have showed you kindness
already, therefore trouble me no more; but because God has shown mercy he is
more ready still to show mercy; his mercy in election makes him justify, adopt,
glorify. Thomas Watson.
Verse
9. Leave me not; rather, "dismiss me not;
""let not go thy hold of me." This is the proper sense of the
Hebrew verb (vjn), to set a thing loose, to let it go, to abandon it. Samuel
Horsley.
Verse
10. When my father and my mother forsake me. As there seems to
be some difficulty in supposing the psalmist's parents to have
"deserted" him, they might perhaps be said to have "forsaken"
him (as Muis conjectures), that is, to have left him behind them, as
being dead. James Merrick, M.A., 1720-1769.
Verse
10. When my father and my mother forsake me. It is indeed the
nature of all living creatures, though never so tender of their young ones, yet
when they are grown to a ripeness of age and strength, to turn them off to
shift for themselves; and even a father and a mother, as tender as they are,
have yet somewhat of this common nature in them; for while their children are
young they lead them by the hand, but when they are grown up they leave them to
their own legs, and if they chance to fall let them rise as they can. But God
even then takes his children up, for he knows of what they are made; he knows
their strength must be as well supported as their weakness be assisted; he
knows they must as well be taken up when they fall, as be held up when they
stand. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
10. Father and mother. First, who are they? Properly and
chiefly our natural parents, of whom we were begotten and born; to whom (under
God) we owe our being and breeding. Yet here, not they only; but by synecdoche
all other kinsfolks, neighbours, friends, acquaintances, or, indeed, more generally
yet, all worldly comforts, stays, and helps whatsoever. 2. But, then, why these
named the rathest, and the rest to be included in these? Because we promise to
ourselves more help from them than from any of the other. We have a nearer
relation to, and a greater interest in them than in any other; and they of all
other are the least likely to forsake us. The very brute creatures forsake not
their young ones. A hen will not desert her chickens, nor a bear endure to be
robbed of her whelps. 3. But, then, thirdly, why both named—father
and mother too? Partly because it can hardly be imagined that both of
them should forsake their child, though one should hap to be unkind. Partly,
because the father's love being commonly with more providence,
the mother's with more tenderness; both together do better
express than alone either would do, the abundant love of God towards us, who is
infinitely dear over us, beyond the care of the most provident father, beyond
the affection of the most tender mother. 4. But, then, fourthly, when may they
be said to forsake us? When at any time they leave us destitute of such
help as we stand in need of; whether it be out of choice, when they list
not to help us, though they might if they would; or out of necessity,
when they cannot help us, though they would if they could. Robert Sanderson.
Verse
10. Then the Lord will take me up. But dictum factum:
these are but words: Are there producible and deeds to make it
good? Verily, there are, and that to the very letter. When Ishmael's mother,
despairing of his life, had forsaken him, and laid him down gasping (his
last, for ought she knew or could do to help it), in the wilderness, the Lord took
him up; he opened a new spring of water, and opened her eyes to see it, and
so the child was preserved. Genesis 21. When Moses' parents had also forsaken
him (for they durst not stand by him any longer), and laid him down among the
rushy flags, the Lord took him up too. He provided him of a saviour, the
king's own daughter, and of a nurse the child's own mother—and so he was
preserved too. Ex 2:6-9. Take but two examples more, out of either Testament
one. David and St. Paul, both forsaken of men, both taken up of
God. How was David forsaken, in Ps 142:4, when he had looked upon his right
hand, and saw no man that would know him; he had no place to fly unto, and no
man cared for his soul. But all the while Dominus ad dextris, there was
one at his right hand (though at first he was not aware of him), ready to take
him up; as it there followeth, Ps 142:5, "I cried unto thee, O Lord; I
said, Thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living." And
how St. Paul was forsaken; take it from himself, 2Ti 4:16, "At my first
answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me:" a heavy case, and
had been heavier had there not been one ready to take his part, at the next
verse, "Nevertheless the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me,
"etc. What need we any more witnesses? In ore duorum—in the mouth
of two such witnesses the point is sufficiently established. But you will yet
say, these two might testify what they had already found post factum.
But David, in the text, pronounces it de futuro, beforehand, and that
somewhat confidently: "The Lord will take me up." As he doth
also elsewhere: "Sure I am that the Lord will avenge the poor, and
maintain the cause of the helpless, " Psalm 109. But is there any ground
for that? Doubtless there is; a double ground; one in the nature,
another in the promise of God. In his nature four qualities
there are (we take leave so to speak, suitably to our own low apprehensions,
for in the Godhead there are properly no qualities); but call them qualities
or attributes or what else you will; there are four perfections
in God, opposite to those defects which in our earthly parents we
have found to be the chief causes why they do so oft forsake us; which
give us full assurance that he will take us up when all other succors
fail us. Those are his love, his wisdom, his power, his eternity,
and all in his nature. To which four, add his promise, and you
have the fulness of all the assurance that can be desired. Robert Sanderson.
Verse
10. The Lord will take me up: Hebrew, will gather me,
that is, take me into his care and keeping. In the civil law, we find provision
made for outcasts and friendless persons; some hospitals to entertain them,
some liberties to comfort and compensate their trouble. It is sure, that in God
the forlorn and fatherless find mercy. John Trapp.
Verse
11. Teach me thy way, O Lord. Having compared himself to an
exposed, deserted infant, adopted by God, he anon fairly asks to be shown how
to walk. He asks the grace of being able to observe all his holy commandments,
which he never loses sight of through the whole one hundred and fifty Psalms.
What else could he do? when it was the only path to that heavenly house of God,
which he had just declared to be the only wish and desire of his heart. Robert
Bellarmine (Cardinal), 1542-1621.
Verse
11. Lead me in a plain path, because of mine enemies. If a man
travelling in the King's highway, be robbed between sun and sun, satisfaction
is recoverable upon the county where the robbery was made; but if he takes his
journey in the night, being an unseasonable time, then it is at his own peril,
he must take what falls. So, if a man keep in God's ways, he shall be
sure of God's protection; but if he stray out of them, he exposes himself to
danger. Robert Skinner (Bishop), 1636.
Verse
11. Because of mine enemies. If once a man commence a
professor, the eyes of all are upon him; and well they may, for his profession in
the world is a separation from the world. Believers condemn those by
their lives who condemn them by their lips. Righteous David saw many who were
waiting to triumph in his mistakes. Hence the more they watched, the more he
prayed: "Teach me thy way, O Lord, and lead me in a plain path, because of
mine enemies." It may be rendered, because of mine observers.
Christian, if you dwell in the open tent of licentiousness, the wicked will not
walk backward, like modest Shem and Japheth, to cover your shame: but they will
walk forward, like cursed Ham, to publish it. Thus they make use of your
weakness as a plea for their wickedness. Men are merciless in their censures of
Christians; they have no sympathy for their infirmity: while God weighs them in
more equal scales, and says, "The spirit is willing, but the flesh is
weak." While a saint is a dove in the eyes of God, he is only a raven
in the estimation of sinners. William Secker.
Verse
13. I had fainted, etc. Study much the all sufficiency, the
power, the goodness, the unchangeableness of God. 1. The all sufficiency of
God. What fulness there is in him to make up all you can lose for him; what
refreshments there are in him to sweeten all you can suffer for him. What fulness!
You may as well doubt that all the waters of the ocean cannot fill a spoon, as
that the divine fulness cannot be enough to you, if you should have nothing
left in this world; for all the waters that cover the sea are not so much as a
spoonful, compared with the boundless and infinite fulness of all sufficiency.
What refreshments in him! One drop of divine sweetness is enough to make one in
the very agony of the cruellest death to cry out with joy, "The bitterness
of death is past." Now in him there are not only drops, but rivers; not a
scanty sprinkling, but an infinite fulness. 2. Eye much the power of God, how
it can support under the cross, what it can bring to pass for you by the cross.
No cross so sharp and grievous, but he can make it sweet and comfortable. No
cross so heavy and intolerable, but he can make light and easy. No cross so
ignominious and reproachful, but he can turn it to your honour. No cross so
fastened to you, but he can easily remove it. 3. His goodness. His all
sufficiency and power make him able, his goodness makes him willing to
do for his people under the cross what his all sufficiency and almighty power
can afford. His goodness sets his mighty power to work for his suffering
saints. His goodness sets his all sufficiency, his fulness, abroach for
them, so that it runs freely upon them; and never more freely than when they
are under the cross. I had fainted unless I had believed to see the goodness
of the Lord, &c. What is it that makes you ready to faint under
the cross, or thoughts and foresight of it? Look to the goodness of God,
there is support. Condensed from David Clarkson.
Verse
13. I had fainted. The words in italics are supplied by our
translators; but, far from being necessary, they injure the sense. Throw out
the words, I had fainted, and leave a break after the verse, and
the elegant figure of the psalmist will be preserved: "Unless I had
believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living"—what!
what, alas! should have become of me! Adam Clarke.
Verse
13. Unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the
land of the living. In the Hebrew this verse is elliptical, as Calvin here
translates it. In the French version he supplies the ellipsis, by adding to the
end of the verse the words, "C'estoit fait de moy, ""I had
perished." In our English version the words, "I had fainted,
"are introduced as a supplement in the beginning of the verse. Both the
supplement of Calvin, and that of our English version, which are substantially
the same, doubtless explain the meaning of the passage; but they destroy the
elegant abrupt form of the expression employed by the psalmist, who breaks off
in the middle of his discourse without completing the sentence, although what
he meant to say is very evident. Editorial note to Calvin, in loc.
Verse
13. Under sore trouble and distress, labour to exercise a strong and
lively faith. It was a noble and heroic resolution in that holy man Job, under
his singular trials Job 13:15: "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in
him; "as if he had said, Let my strokes be never so sore and heavy, yet I
will not let go my grips of his word and promises, I will not raze these
foundations of my hope. It was the way the psalmist kept himself from sinking
under his heavy burdens: I had fainted, unless I had believed to see the
goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. ...Faith brings new
strength and auxiliary supplies of grace from heaven, when the former supply is
exhausted and spent; whereof David had the sweet experience here. As God doth
plant and actuate grace in the soul, so he is pleased to come in with
seasonable supplies and reinforcements to the weak and decayed graces of his
people, answerable to their present exigencies and pressures; and thus he doth
from time to time feed the believer's lamp with fresh oil, give in more faith,
more love, more hope, and more desires; and hereby he gives power to the faint,
and strengthens the things which remain when ready to die. John Willison.
Verse
13. Unless I had believed to see the goodness of the Lord in the
land of the living: a cordial made up of three sovereign ingredients—a hope
to see; and to see the goodness of God; and the goodness of God in
the land of the living. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
13. The land of the living. Alas! what a land of the living
is this, in which there are more dead than living, more under ground than above
it; where the earth is fuller of graves than houses; where life lies trembling
under the hand of death; and where death hath power to tyrannize over life! No,
my soul, there only is the land of the living where there are
none but the living; where there is a church, not militant, but triumphant; a
church indeed, but no churchyard, because none dead, nor none that can die;
where life is not passive, nor death active; where life sits crowned, and where
death is swallowed up in victory. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
14. Wait on the Lord, be of good courage. Be comfortable, hold
fast (as the Greek hath), be manly, or quit thee as a man; which
word the apostle useth. 1Co 16:13. These are the words of encouragement against
remissness, fear, faintness of heart, or other infirmities. Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
14. Wait on the Lord, be of good courage.
Stand
but your ground, your ghostly foes will fly—
Hell trembles at a heaven directed eye;
Choose rather to defend than to assail—
Self confidence will in the conflict fail:
When you are challenged you may dangers meet—
True courage is a fixed, not sudden heat;
Is always humble, lives in self distrust,
And will itself into no danger thrust.
Devote yourself to God, and you will find
God fights the battles of a will resigned.
Love Jesus! love will no base fear endure—
Love Jesus! and of conquest rest secure.
—Thomas Ken (Bishop), 1637-1710-11.
Verse
14. Think not the government is out of Christ's hand, when men are
doing many sad things, and giving many heavy blows to the work of God. No, no;
men are but his hand; and it is the hand of God that justly and righteously is
lying heavy upon his people. Look above men, then; you have not to do with
them: there is a turn of matters, just as he is pleased to turn his hand. Ralph
Erskine, 1685-1752.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. (first clause). The relation of illumination to salvation,
or the need of light if men would be saved.
Verse
1. The Christian hero, and the secret springs of his courage.
Verse
1. The believer's fearless challenge.
Verse
2. The character, number, power, and cruelty of the enemies of the
church, and the mysterious way in which they have been defeated.
Verse
3. Christian peace. 1. Exhibited in the calm foresight of trouble.
2.
Displayed in the confident endurance of affliction.
3.
Sustained by divine help and past experience Ps 27:1-2.
4.
Producing the richest results, glory to God, etc.
Verse
4. Model Christian life.
1.
Unity of desire.
2. Earnestness of action.
3. Nearness of communion.
4. Heavenliness of contemplation.
5. Progress in divine education.
Verse
4. The affection of moral esteem towards God. Thomas Chalmers.
Verse
4. A breathing after God. R. Sibbes's Sermon.
Verse
4. (last clause). Sabbath occupations and heavenly delights.
Verse
4. (final clause). Matters for enquiry in the Temple of old
opened up in the light of the New Testament.
Verse
6. The saint's present triumph over his spiritual foes, his
practical gratitude, and his vocal praises.
Verse
7. Prayer. To whom addressed? How? Cry, etc. When? Left
indefinite. On what is it based? Mercy. What it needs? Hear, answer.
Verse
8. The heart in tune with its God. Note, the promptness, heartiness,
personality, unreservedness, accuracy, and resolution of the response to the
precept.
Verse
8. The successful seeker. R. Sibbe's Sermon.
Verse
8. The echo. See Spurgeon's Sermons. No. 767.
Verse
9. 1. Desertion deprecated in all its forms.
2. Experience pleaded.
3. Divine aid implored.
Verse
9. The horror of saints at the hell of sinners. James Scot.
Verse
10. The portion of the orphan, the comfort of the persecuted, the
paradise of the departing.
Verse
11. The plain man's pathway desired, described, divinely approved, "thy
way", "a plain way", and divinely taught, "teach me,
O Lord, ""lead me."
Verse
13. Faith, its precedence of sight, its objects, its sustaining
power.
Verse
13. Believing to see. See Spurgeon's Sermons. No. 766.
Verse
14. The believer's position," wait;" his condition, "good
courage;" his support," he shall," etc.; his
perseverance, "wait" repeated a second time; his reward.
WORKS UPON THE
TWENTY-SEVENTH PSALM
Excellent
Encouragements against Afflictions, containing David's Triumph over Distress;
or an Exposition of Psalm 27. By THOMAS PIERSON, M.A. (Reprinted in
Nichol's Series of Puritan Commentaries.)
Meditations
upon the 27th Psalm of David. By SIR RICHARD BAKER.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》