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Psalm Twenty-eight
Psalm 28
Chapter Contents
A prayer in distress. (1-5) Thanksgiving for deliverance.
(6-9)
Commentary on Psalm 28:1-5
(Read Psalm 28:1-5)
David is very earnest in prayer. Observe his faith in
prayer; God is my rock, on whom I build my hope. Believers should not rest till
they have received some token that their prayers are heard. He prays that he
may not be numbered with the wicked. Save me from being entangled in the snares
they have laid for me. Save me from being infected with their sins, and from
doing as they do. Lord, never leave me to use such arts of deceit and treachery
for my safety, as they use for my ruin. Believers dread the way of sinners; the
best are sensible of the danger they are in of being drawn aside: we should all
pray earnestly to God for his grace to keep us. Those who are careful not to
partake with sinners in their sins, have reason to hope that they shall not
receive their plagues. He speaks of the just judgments of the Lord on the
workers of iniquity, verse 4. This is not the language of passion or
revenge. It is a prophecy that there will certainly come a day, when God will
punish every man who persists in his evil deeds. Sinners shall be reckoned
with, not only for the mischief they have done, but for the mischief they
designed, and did what they could to effect. Disregard of the works of the
Lord, is the cause of the sin of sinners, and becomes the cause of their ruin.
Commentary on Psalm 28:6-9
(Read Psalm 28:6-9)
Has God heard our supplications? Let us then bless his
name. The Lord is my strength, to support me, and carry me on through all my
services and sufferings. The heart that truly believes, shall in due time greatly
rejoice: we are to expect joy and peace in believing. God shall have the praise
of it: thus must we express our gratitude. The saints rejoice in others'
comfort as well as their own: we have the less benefit from the light of the
sun, nor from the light of God's countenance, for others' sharing therein. The
psalmist concludes with a short, but comprehensive prayer. God's people are his
inheritance, and precious in his eyes. He prays that God would save them; that
he would bless them with all good, especially the plenty of his ordinances,
which are food to the soul. And direct their actions and overrule their affairs
for good. Also, lift them up for ever; not only those of that age, but his
people in every age to come; lift them up as high as heaven. There, and there
only, will saints be lifted up for ever, never more to sink, or be depressed.
Save us, Lord Jesus, from our sins; bless us, thou Son of Abraham, with the
blessing of righteousness; feed us, thou good Shepherd of the sheep, and lift
us up for ever from the dust, O thou, who art the Resurrection and the Life.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 28
Verse 2
[2] Hear the voice of my supplications, when I cry unto
thee, when I lift up my hands toward thy holy oracle.
Towards — Towards the holy of holies, because there the ark was;
from whence God gave oracular answers to his people.
Verse 3
[3] Draw me not away with the wicked, and with the workers
of iniquity, which speak peace to their neighbours, but mischief is in their
hearts.
Draw not — Do not drag me; as thou dost these, to execution and
destruction.
Verse 5
[5] Because they regard not the works of the LORD, nor the
operation of his hands, he shall destroy them, and not build them up.
Regard not — The providential works of God
towards his people.
Verse 7
[7] The LORD is my strength and my shield; my heart trusted
in him, and I am helped: therefore my heart greatly rejoiceth; and with my song
will I praise him.
I am helped — He speaks of it as past, because
God assured him by his spirit, that he had heard and accepted his prayers.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE AND
SUBJECT. Again, the title "A Psalm of David," is too
general to give us any clue to the occasion on which it was written. Its
position, as following the twenty-seventh, seems to have been designed, for it
is a most suitable pendant and sequel to it. It is another of those "songs
in the night" of which the pen of David was so prolific. The thorn at the
breast of the nightingale was said by the old naturalists to make it sing:
David's griefs made him eloquent in holy psalmody. The main pleading of this
Psalm is that the suppliant may not be confounded with the workers of iniquity
for whom he expresses the utmost abhorrence; it may suit any slandered saint,
who being misunderstood by men, and treated by them as an unworthy character,
is anxious to stand aright before the bar of God. The Lord Jesus may be seen
here pleading as the representative of his people.
DIVISION. The first and
second verses earnestly entreat audience of the Lord in a time of dire
emergency. From Ps 28:2-5, the portion of the wicked is described and
deprecated. In Ps 28:6-8, praise is given for the Lord's mercy in hearing
prayer, and the Psalm concludes with a general petition for the whole host of
militant believers.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Unto thee will I cry, O Lord, my rock. A cry is the
natural expression of sorrow, and is a suitable utterance when all other modes
of appeal fail us; but the cry must be alone directed to the Lord, for to cry
to man is to waste our entreaties upon the air. When we consider the readiness
of the Lord to hear, and his ability to aid, we shall see good reason for
directing all our appeals at once to the God of our salvation, and shall use
language of firm resolve like that in the text, "I will cry." The
immutable Jehovah is our rock, the immovable foundation of all our hopes
and our refuge in time of trouble: we are fixed in our determination to flee to
him as our stronghold in every hour of danger. It will be in vain to call to
the rocks in the day of judgment, but our rock attends to our cries. Be not
silent to me. Mere formalists may be content without answers to their
prayers, but genuine suppliants cannot; they are not satisfied with the results
of prayer itself in calming the mind and subduing the will—they must go further
and obtain actual replies from heaven, or they cannot rest; and those replies
they long to receive at once, if possible; they dread even a little of God's
silence. God's voice is often so terrible that it shakes the wilderness; but
his silence is equally full of awe to an eager suppliant. When God seems to
close his ear, we must not therefore close our mouths, but rather cry with more
earnestness; for when our note grows shrill with eagerness and grief, he will
not long deny us a hearing. What a dreadful case should we be in if the Lord
should become for ever silent to our prayers! This thought suggested itself to David,
and he turned it into a plea, thus teaching us to argue and reason with God in
our prayers. Lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down
into the pit. Deprived of the God who answers prayer, we should be in a
more pitiable plight than the dead in the grave, and should soon sink to the
same level as the lost in hell. We must have answers to prayer: ours is
an urgent case of dire necessity; surely the Lord will speak peace to our
agitated minds, for he never can find it in his heart to permit his own elect
to perish.
Verse
2. This is much to the same effect as the first verse, only that it
refers to future as well as present pleadings. Hear me! Hear me! Hear the
voice of my supplications! This is the burden of both verses. We cannot be put
off with a refusal when we are in the spirit of prayer; we labour, use
importunity, and agonize in supplications until a hearing is granted us. The
word "supplications, "in the plural, shows the number, continuance,
and variety of a good man's prayers, while the expression "hear the
voice, "seems to hint that there is an inner meaning, or heart voice,
about which spiritual men are far more concerned than for their outward and
audible utterances. A silent prayer may have a louder voice than the cries of those
priests who sought to awaken Baal with their shouts. When I lift up my hands
toward thy holy oracle: which holy place was the type of our Lord Jesus;
and if we would gain acceptance, we must turn ourselves evermore to the blood
besprinkled mercy seat of his atonement. Uplifted hands have ever been a form
of devout posture, and are intended to signify a reaching upward towards God, a
readiness, an eagerness to receive the blessing sought after. We stretch out
empty hands, for we are beggars; we lift them up, for we seek heavenly
supplies; we lift them towards the mercy seat of Jesus, for there our
expectation dwells. O that whenever we use devout gestures, we may possess
contrite hearts, and so speed well with God.
Verse
3. Draw me not away with the wicked. They shall be dragged
off to hell like felons of old drawn on a hurdle to Tyburn, like logs drawn to
the fire, like fagots to the oven. David fears lest he should be bound up in
their bundle, drawn to their doom; and the fear is an appropriate one for every
godly man. The best of the wicked are dangerous company in time, and would make
terrible companions for eternity; we must avoid them in their pleasures, if we
would not be confounded with them in their miseries. And with the workers of
iniquity. These are overtly sinful, and their judgment will be sure; Lord,
do not make us to drink of their cup. Activity is found with the wicked even if
it be lacking to the righteous. Oh! to be "workers" for the Lord. Which
speak peace to their neighbours, but mischief is in their hearts. They have
learned the manners of the place to which they are going: the doom of liars is
their portion for ever, and lying is their conversation on the road. Soft
words, oily with pretended love, are the deceitful meshes of the infernal net
in which Satan catches the precious life; many of his children are learned in
his abominable craft, and fish with their father's nets, almost as cunningly as
he himself could do it. It is a sure sign of baseness when the tongue and the
heart do not ring to the same note. Deceitful men are more to be dreaded than
wild beasts: it were better to be shut up in a pit with serpents than to be
compelled to live with liars. He who cries "peace" too loudly, means
to sell it if he can get his price. "Good wine need no bush:" if he
were so very peaceful he would not need to say so; he means mischief, make sure
of that.
Verse
4. When we view the wicked simply as such, and not as our fellow
men, our indignation against sin leads us entirely to coincide with the acts of
divine justice which punish evil, and to wish that justice might use her power
to restrain by her terrors the cruel and unjust; but still the desires of the
present verse, as our version renders it, are not readily made consistent with
the spirit of the Christian dispensation, which seeks rather the reformation
than the punishment of sinners. If we view the words before us as prophetic, or
as in the future tense, declaring a fact, we are probably nearer to the true
meaning than that given in our version. Ungodly reader, what will be your lot
when the Lord deals with you according to your desert, and weighs out to you
his wrath, not only in proportion to what you have actually done, but according
to what you would have done if you could. Our endeavours are taken as
facts; God takes the will for the deed, and punishes or rewards accordingly.
Not in this life, but certainly in the next, God will repay his enemies to
their faces, and give them the wages of their sins. Not according to their
fawning words, but after the measure of their mischievous deeds, will the Lord
mete out vengeance to them that know him not.
Verse
5. Because they regard not the works of the Lord, nor the
operation of his hands. God works in creation—nature teems with proofs of
his wisdom and goodness, yet purblind atheists refuse to see him: he works in
providence, ruling and overruling, and his hand is very manifest in human
history, yet the infidel will not discern him: he works in grace—remarkable
conversions are still met with on all hands, yet the ungodly refuse to see the
operations of the Lord. Where angels wonder, carnal men despise. God
condescends to teach, and man refuses to learn. He shall destroy them:
he will make them "behold, and wonder, and perish." If they would not
see the hand of judgment upon others, they shall feel it upon themselves. Both
soul and body shall be overwhelmed with utter destruction for ever and ever. And
not build them up. God's cure is positive and negative; his sword has two
edges, and cuts right and left. Their heritage of evil shall prevent the
ungodly receiving any good; the ephah shall be too full of wrath to contain a
grain of hope. They have become like old, rotten, decayed houses of timber,
useless to the owner, and harbouring all manner of evil, and, therefore, the
Great Builder will demolish them utterly. Incorrigible offenders may expect
speedy destruction: they who will not mend, shall be thrown away as worthless.
Let us be very attentive to all the lessons of God's word and work, lest being
found disobedient to the divine will, we be made to suffer the divine wrath.
Verse
6. Blessed be the Lord. Saints are full of benedictions; they
are a blessed people, and a blessing people; but they give their best
blessings, the fat of their sacrifices, to their glorious Lord. Our Psalm was
prayer up to this point, and now it turns to praise. They who pray well, will
soon praise well: prayer and praise are the two lips of the soul; two bells to
ring out sweet and acceptable music in the ears of God; two angels to climb
Jacob's ladder: two altars smoking with incense; two of Solomon's lilies
dropping sweet smelling myrrh; they are two young roes that are twins, feeding
upon the mountain of myrrh and the hill of frankincense. Because he hath
heard the voice of my supplications. Real praise is established upon
sufficient and constraining reasons; it is not irrational emotion, but rises,
like a pure spring, from the deeps of experience. Answered prayers should be
acknowledged. Do we not often fail in this duty? Would it not greatly encourage
others, and strengthen ourselves, if we faithfully recorded divine goodness,
and made a point of extolling it with our tongue? God's mercy is not such an
inconsiderable thing that we may safely venture to receive it without so much
as thanks. We should shun ingratitude, and live daily in the heavenly
atmosphere of thankful love.
Verse
7. Here is David's declaration and confession of faith, coupled with
a testimony from his experience. The Lord is my strength. The Lord employs
his power on our behalf, and moreover, infuses strength into us in our
weakness. The psalmist, by an act of appropriating faith, takes the omnipotence
of Jehovah to be his own. Dependence upon the invisible God gives great
independence of spirit, inspiring us with confidence more than human. And my
shield. Thus David found both sword and shield in his God. The Lord
preserves his people from unnumbered ills; and the Christian warrior, sheltered
behind his God, is far more safe than the hero when covered with his shield of
brass or triple steel. My heart trusted in him, and I am helped. Heart
work is sure work; heart trust is never disappointed. Faith must come before
help, but help will never be long behindhand. Every day the believer may say,
"I am helped, "for the divine assistance is vouchsafed us every
moment, or we should go back unto perdition; when more manifest help is needed,
we have but to put faith into exercise, and it will be given us. Therefore
my heart greatly rejoiceth; and with my song will I praise him. The heart
is mentioned twice to show the truth of his faith and his joy. Observe the
adverb "greatly, "we need not be afraid of being too full of
rejoicing at the remembrance of grace received. We serve a great God, let us
greatly rejoice in him. A song is the soul's fittest method of giving vent to
its happiness, it were well if we were more like the singing lark, and less
like the croaking raven. When the heart is glowing, the lips should not be
silent. When God blesses us, we should bless him with all our heart.
Verse
8. The Lord is their strength. The heavenly experience of one
believer is a pattern of the life of all. To all the militant church, without
exception, Jehovah is the same as he was to his servant David, "the least
of them shall be as David." They need the same aid and they shall have it,
for they are loved with the same love, written in the same book of life, and
one with the same anointed Head. And he is the saving strength of his
anointed. Here behold king David as the type of our Lord Jesus, our
covenant Head, our anointed Prince, through whom all blessings come to us. He
has achieved full salvation for us, and we desire saving strength from him, and
as we share in the unction which is so largely shed upon him, we expect to
partake of his salvation. Glory be unto the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, who has magnified the power of his grace in his only begotten Son, whom
he has anointed to be a Prince and a Saviour unto his people.
Verse
9. This is a prayer for the church militant, written in short words,
but full of weighty meaning. We must pray for the whole church, and not for
ourselves alone. Save thy people. Deliver them from their enemies,
preserve them from their sins, succour them under their troubles, rescue them
from their temptations, and ward off from them every ill. There is a plea
hidden in the expression, "thy people:" for it may be safely
concluded that God's interest in the church, as his own portion, will lead him
to guard it from destruction. Bless thine inheritance. Grant positive
blessings, peace, plenty, prosperity, happiness; make all thy dearly purchased
and precious heritage to be comforted by thy Spirit. Revive, refresh, enlarge,
and sanctify thy church. Feed them also. Be a shepherd to thy flock, let
their bodily and spiritual wants be plentifully supplied. By thy word, and
ordinances, direct, rule, sustain, and satisfy those who are the sheep of thy
hand. And lift them up for ever. Carry them in thine arms on earth, and
then lift them into thy bosom in heaven. Elevate their minds and thoughts,
spiritualise their affections, make them heavenly, Christlike, and full of God.
O Lord, answer this our petition, for Jesus' sake.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Verse
1. Unto thee do I cry. It is of the utmost importance that we
should have a definite object on which to fix our thoughts. Man, at the
best of times, has but little power for realising abstractions; but least of
all in his time of sorrow. Then he is helpless; then he needs every possible
aid; and if his mind wander in vacancy, it will soon weary, and sink down
exhausted. God has graciously taken care that this need not be done. He has so
manifested himself to man in his word, that the afflicted one can fix his
mind's eye on him, as the definite object of his faith, and hope, and prayer.
"Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and shew thee great
and mighty things, which thou knowest not." Jer 33:3. This was what the
psalmist did; and the definiteness of God, as the object of his trust in
prayer, is very clearly marked. And specially great is the privilege of the Christian
in this matter. He can fix his eye on Jesus; he, without any very great stretch
of the imagination, can picture that Holy One looking down upon him; listening
to him; feeling for him; preparing to answer him. Dear reader, in the time of
your trouble, do not roam; do not send out your sighs into vacancy; do not let
your thoughts wander, as though they were looking for some one on whom to fix;
for some one to whom you could tell the story of your heart's need and
desolation. Fix your heart as the psalmist did, and say, "Unto thee
will I cry." ... Oh! happy is that man, who feels and knows that when
trouble comes, he cannot be bewildered and confused by the stroke, no matter
how heavy it may be. Sorrow stricken he will be, but he has his resource, and
he knows it, and will avail himself of it. His is no vague theory of the
general sympathy of God for man; his is a knowledge of God, as a personal and
feeling God; he says with the psalmist, "Unto thee will I
cry." Philip Bennett Power.
Verse
1. My rock. One day a female friend called on the Rev.
William Evans, a pious minister in England, and asked how he felt himself.
"I am weakness itself, "he replied; "but I am on the Rock.
I do not experience those transports which some have expressed in the view of
death; but my dependence is on the mercy of God in Christ. Here my religion
began, and here it must end."
Verse
1. My rock. The Rev, John Rees, of Crownstreet, Soho, London,
was visited on his deathbed by the Rev. John Leifchild, who very seriously
asked him to describe the state of his mind. This appeal to the honour of his
religion roused him, and so freshened his dying lamp, that raising himself up
in his bed, he looked his friend in the face, and with great deliberation,
energy, and dignity, uttered the following words:—"Christ in his person,
Christ in the love of his heart, and Christ in the power of his arm, is the
Rock on which I rest; and now (reclining his head gently on the pillow), Death,
strike!" K. Arvine.
Verse
1. Be not silent to me. Let us next observe what the heart
desires from God. It is that he would speak. Be not silent to me.
Under these circumstances, when we make our prayer, we desire that God would
let us know that he hears us, and that he would appear for us, and that he
would say, he is our Father. And what do we desire God to say? We want him to
let us know that he hears us; we want to hear him speak as distinctly to us, as
we feel that we have spoken to him. We want to know, not only by faith
that we have been heard, but by God's having spoken to us on the very
subject whereupon we have spoken to him. When we feel thus assured that God
has heard us, we can with the deepest confidence leave the whole matter about
which we have been praying, in his hands. Perhaps an answer cannot come for a
long time; perhaps things, meanwhile, seem working in a contrary way; it may
be, that there is no direct appearance at all of God upon the scene; still
faith will hold up and be strong; and there will be comfort in the heart, from
the felt consciousness that God has heard our cry about the matter, and that he
has told us so. We shall say to ourselves, "God knows all about it; God
has in point of fact told me so; therefore I am in peace." And let it be
enough for us that God tells us this, when he will perhaps tell us no more; let
us not want to try and induce him to speak much, when it is his will to speak
but little: the best answer we can have at certain times is simply the
statement that "he hears; "by this answer to our prayer he at once
encourages and exercises our faith. "It is said, "saith Rutherford,
speaking of the Saviour's delay in responding to the request of the
Syrophenician woman, "he answered not a word, "but it is not
said, he heard not a word. These two differ much. Christ often heareth
when he doth not answer—his not answering is an answer, and
speaks thus—"pray on, go on and cry, for the Lord holdeth his door fast
bolted, not to keep you out, but that you may knock, and knock, and it shall be
opened." Philip Bennett Power.
Verse
1. Lest...I become like them that go down into the pit. Thou
seest, great God, my sad situation. Nothing to me is great or desirable upon
this earth but the felicity of serving thee, and yet the misery of my destiny,
and the duties of my state, bring me into connection with men who regard all
godliness as a thing to be censured and derided. With secret horror I daily
hear them blaspheming the ineffable gifts of thy grace, and ridiculing the
faith and fervour of the godly as mere imbecility of mind. Exposed to such
impiety, all my consolation, O my God, is to make my cries of distress ascend
to the foot of thy throne. Although for the present, these sacrilegious
blasphemies only awaken in my soul emotions of horror and pity, yet I fear that
at last they may enfeeble me and seduce me into a crooked course of policy,
unworthy of thy glory, and of the gratitude which I owe to thee. I fear that
insensibly I may become such a coward as to blush at thy name, such a sinner as
to resist the impulses of thy grace, such a traitor as to withhold my testimony
against sin, such a self deceiver as to disguise my criminal timidity by the
name of prudence. Already I feel that this poison is insinuating itself into my
heart, for while I would not have my conduct resemble that of the wicked who
surround me, yet I am too much biased by the fear of giving them offence. I
dare not imitate them, but I am almost as much afraid of irritating them. I
know that it is impossible both to please a corrupt world and a holy God, and
yet I so far lose sight of this truth, that instead of sustaining me in
decision, it only serves to render my vacillation the more inexcusable. What
remains for me but to implore thy help! Strengthen me, O Lord, against these
declensions so injurious to thy glory, so fatal to the fidelity which is due to
thee. Cause me to hear thy strengthening and encouraging voice. If the voice of
thy grace be not lifted up in my spirit, reanimating my feeble faith, I feel
that there is but a step between me and despair. I am on the brink of the
precipice, I am ready to fall into a criminal complicity with those who would
fain drag me down with them into the pit. Jean Baptiste Massillon,
1663-1742, freely translated by C.H.S.
Verse
2. I lift up my hands toward thy holy oracle. Called (rybd), debhir,
because there hence God spake and gave answer. Toward this (a type of Christ,
the Word essential), David lifteth up his hands, that it might be as a ladder,
whereby his prayer might get up to heaven. John Trapp.
Verse
3. Draw me not away with the wicked...which speak peace to their
neighbours, but mischief is in their hearts. The godly man abhors
dissimulation towards men; his heart goes along with his tongue, he cannot
flatter and hate, commend and censure. "Let love be without
dissimulation." Ro 12:9. Dissembled love is worse than hatred;
counterfeiting of friendship is no better than a lie Ps 78:36, for there is a
pretence of that which is not. Many are like Joab: "He took Amasa by the
beard to kiss him, and smote him with his sword in the fifth rib, that he
died." There is a river in Spain, where the fish seem to be of a golden
colour, but take them out of the water, and they are like other fish. All is not
gold that glitters; there are some pretend much kindness, but they are like
great veins which have little blood; if you lean upon them they are as a leg
out of joint. For my part, I much question his truth towards God, that will
flatter and lie to his friend. "He that hideth hatred with lying lips, and
he that uttereth a slander is a fool." Pr 10:18. Thomas Watson.
Verse
3. Draw me not out with. An allusion, I conceive, to a
shepherd selecting out a certain portion of his flock. "Reckon me not
among." Professor Lee.
Verse
3. Draw me not away. (ynkvmt-la) from (Kvm); that signifies,
both to draw and apprehend, will be best rendered here, seize not on me,
as he that seizes on any to carry or drag him to execution.
Henry Hammond.
Verse
4. Give them according to their deeds, etc. Here, again,
occurs the difficult question about praying for vengeance, which, however, I
shall despatch in a few words. In the first place, then, it is unquestionable,
that if the flesh move us to seek revenge, the desire is wicked in the sight of
God. He not only forbids us to imprecate evil upon our enemies in revenge for
private injuries, but it cannot be otherwise than that all those desires which
spring from hatred must be disordered. David's example, therefore, must not be
alleged by those who are driven by their own intemperate passion to seek
vengeance. The holy prophet is not inflamed here by his own private sorrow to
devote his enemies to destruction; but laying aside the desire of the flesh, he
give judgment concerning the matter itself. Before a man can, therefore,
denounce vengeance against the wicked, he must first shake himself free from
all improper feelings in his own mind. In the second place, prudence must be
exercised, that the heinousness of the evils which offend us drive us not to
intemperate zeal, which happened even to Christ's disciples, when they desired
that fire might be brought from heaven to consume those who refused to
entertain their Master. Lu 9:54. They pretended, it is true, to act according
to the example of Elias, but Christ severely rebuked them, and told them that
they knew not by what spirit they were actuated. In particular, we must observe
this general rule, that we cordially desire and labour for the welfare of the
whole human race. Thus it will come to pass, that we shall not only give way to
the exercise of God's mercy, but shall also wish the conversion of those who
seem obstinately to rush upon their own destruction. In short, David, being
free from every evil passion, and likewise endued with the spirit of discretion
and judgment, pleads here not so much his own cause as the cause of God. And by
this prayer, he further reminds both himself and the faithful, that although
the wicked may give themselves loose reins in the commission of every species
of vice with impunity for a time, they must at length stand before the judgment
seat of God. John Calvin.
Verse
4. Give them according to their deeds, and according to the
wickedness of their endeavours. Yes, great God, since thou hast from the beginning
been only occupied in saving men, thou wilt surely strike with an eternal
malediction these children of iniquity who appear to have been born only to be
lost themselves, and to destroy others. The very benevolence towards mankind
solicits thy thunders against these corrupters of society. The more thou hast
done for our race, the more surely will the severity of thy justice reveal
itself in destroying the wretches whose only study is to counteract thy
goodness towards mankind. They labour incessantly to put men far away from
thee, O my God, and in return thou wilt put them far away from thee for ever.
They count it great gain to make their fellows thine enemies, and they shall
have the desperate consolation of being such themselves to all eternity. What
more fitting punishment for the wretches who desire to make all hearts rebel
against thine adorable Majesty, than to lie through the baseness of their
nature, under the eternal and frightful necessity of hating thee for ever. Jean
Baptiste Massillon, rendered very freely by C. H. S.
Verse
4. Give them according to their deeds. The Egyptians
killed the Hebrew male children, and God smote the firstborn of Egypt. Sisera,
who thought to destroy Israel with his iron chariots, was himself killed with
an iron nail, stuck through his temples. Adonibezek, Jud 1:5-7. Gideon
slew forty elders of Succoth, and his sons were murdered by Abimelech. Abimelech
slew seventy sons of Gideon upon one stone, and his own head was broken by a
piece of millstone thrown by a woman. Samson fell by the "lust of
the eye, "and before death the Philistines put out his eyes. Agag,
1Sa 20:33. Saul slew the Gibeonites, and seven of his sons were hung up
before the Lord. 2Sa 21:1-9. Ahab, after coveting Naboth's vineyard, 1Ki
21:19, fulfilled 2Ki 9:24-26. Jeroboam, the same hand that was stretched
forth against the altar was withered, 1Ki 13:1-6. Joab having killed
Abner, Amasa, and Absalom, was put to death by Solomon. Daniel's accusers
thrown into the lion's den meant for Daniel. Haman hung upon the gallows
designed for Mordecai. Judas purchased the field of blood, and then went
and hanged himself. So in the history of later days, Bajazet was carried
about by Tamerlane in an iron cage, as he intended to have carried Tamerlane. Mazentius
built a bridge to entrap Constantine, and was overthrown himself of that very
spot. Alexander VI. was poisoned by the wine he had prepared for
another. Charles IX. made the streets of Paris to stream with Protestant
blood, and soon after blood streamed from all parts of his body in a bloody
sweat. Cardinal Beaton condemned George Wishart to death, and presently
died a violent death himself. He was murdered in bed, and his body was laid out
in the same window from which he had looked upon Wishart's execution. G. S.
Bowes, in "Illustrative Gatherings."
Verse
4. Render to them their desert. Meditate on God's
righteousness, that it is not only his will, but his nature to punish sin; sin
must damn thee without Christ, there is not only a possibility or probability
that sin may ruin, but without an interest in Christ it must do so; whet much
upon thy heart that must; God cannot but hate sin, because he is holy;
and he cannot but punish sin, because he is righteous. God must not forego his
own nature to gratify our humours. Christopher Fowler, in "Morning
Exercises," 1676.
Verse
4. He prayeth against his enemies, not out of any private revenge,
but being led by the infallible spirit of prophecy, looking through these men
to the enemies of Christ, and of his people in all ages. David Dickson.
Verses
4-5. In these verses, as indeed in most of the imprecatory passages,
the imperative and the future are used promiscuously: Give them—render
them—he shall destroy them. If therefore, the verbs, in all such passages,
were uniformly rendered in the "future, "every objection against the
Scripture imprecations would vanish at once, and they would appear clearly to
be what they are, namely, prophecies of the divine judgments, which have been
since executed against the Jews, and which will be executed against all the
enemies of Jehovah, and his Christ; whom neither the "works" of
creation, nor those of redemption, can lead to repentance. George Horne.
Verses
4-5. See Psalms on "Ps 28:4" for further information.
In these verses, as indeed in most of the imprecatory passages, the imperative
and the future are used promiscuously: Give them—render them—he shall
destroy them. If therefore, the verbs, in all such passages, were uniformly
rendered in the "future, "every objection against the Scripture
imprecations would vanish at once, and they would appear clearly to be what
they are, namely, prophecies of the divine judgments, which have been since
executed against the Jews, and which will be executed against all the enemies
of Jehovah, and his Christ; whom neither the "works" of creation, nor
those of redemption, can lead to repentance. George Horne.
Verse
6. He hath heard. Prayer is the best remedy in a calamity.
This is indeed a true catholicum, a general remedy for every malady. Not
like the empiric's catholicum, which sometimes may work, but for the
most part fails: but that which upon assured evidence and constant experience
hath its probatum est; being that which the most wise, learned, honest,
and skilful Physician that ever was, or can be, hath prescribed—even he that
teacheth us how to bear what is to be borne, or how to heal and help what hath
been borne. William Gouge.
Verse
7. The Lord is my strength. Oh, sweet consolation! If a man
have a burden upon him, yet if he have strength added to him, if the
burden be doubled, yet if his strength be trebled, the burden will not
be heavier, but lighter than it was before to his natural strength; so if our
afflictions be heavy, and we cry out, Oh, we cannot bear them! yet if we cannot
bear them with our own strength, why may we not bear them with the strength of
Jesus Christ? Do we think that Christ could not bear them? or if we dare not
think but that Christ could bear them, why may not we come to bear them? Some
may question, can we have the strength of Christ? Yes; that very strength is
made over to us by faith, for so the Scripture saith frequently, The Lord is
our strength; God is our strength; The Lord Jehovah is our strength; Christ is
our strength Ps 28:7 43:2 Ps 118:14 Isa 12:2 Hab 3:19 Col 1:11; and,
therefore, is Christ's strength ours, made over unto us, that we may be able to
bear whatsoever lies upon us. Isaac Ambrose.
Verse
7. The Lord is my strength inwardly, and my shield
outwardly. Faith finds both these in Jehovah, and the one not without the
other, for what is a shield without strength, or strength without a shield? My
heart trusted in him, and I am helped: the idea of the former sentence is
here carried out, that outward help was granted to inward confidence. W.
Wilson, D.D.
Verse
7. My heart trusted in him, and I am helped. Faith
substantiates things not yet seen; it altereth the tense, saith one, and
putteth the future into the present tense as here. John Trapp.
Verse
8. The Lord is their strength: not mine only, but the
strength of every believer. Note—the saints rejoice in their friends' comforts
as well as their own; for as we have not the less benefit by the light of the
sun, so neither by the light of God's countenance, for others sharing therein;
for we are sure there is enough for all, and enough for each. This is our
communion with all saints, that God is their strength and ours; Christ their
Lord and ours. 1Co 1:2. He is their strength, the strength of all Israel,
because he is the saving strength of his anointed, i.e., 1. Of David in
the type: God in strengthening him that was their king and fought their
battles, strengthened the whole kingdom. He calls himself God's anointed,
because it was the unction he had received that exposed him to the envy of his
enemies, and therefore entitled him to the divine protection. 2. Of Christ, his
Anointed, his Messiah, in the antitype. God was his saving strength,
qualified him for his undertaking, and carried him through it. Matthew
Henry.
Verse
9. Lift them up. The word here used may mean sustain
them, or support them; but it more properly means bear, and would
be best expressed by a reference to the fact, that the shepherd carries the
feeble, the young, and the sickly of his flock in his arms, or that he lifts
them up when unable themselves to rise. Albert Barnes.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. (first clause). A sinner's wise resolution in the hour of
despondency.
Verse
1. The saint's fear of becoming like the ungodly.
Verse
1. God's silence—what terror may lie in it.
Verse
1. (last clause). How low a soul may sink when God hides his
face.
Verses
1-2. Prayer. 1. Its nature—a "cry": (a) The utterance
of life, (b) The expression of pain, (c) The pleading of need, (d) The voice of
deep earnestness.
2. Its
object—"O Lord, my rock." God as our Foundation, Refuge, and
immutable Friend.
3. Its
aim—"Hear, ""Be not silent." We expect an answer, a
clear and manifest answer, a speedy answer, a suitable answer, an effectual
answer.
4. Its
medium—"Towards thy holy oracle." Our Lord Jesus, the true mercy
seat, etc.
Verse
3. The characters to be avoided, the doom to be dreaded, the grace
to keep us from both.
Verse
4. Measure for measure, or punishment proportioned to desert.
Verse
4. Endeavour the measure of sin rather than mere result. Hence some
are guilty of sins which they were unable to commit.
Verse
5. Culpable negligence constantly persisted in, losing much
blessing, and involving terrible condemnation.
Verse
6. Answered prayers, a retrospect and song.
Verse
7. The heart's possessions, confidence, experience, joy, and music.
Verse
7. Adoring God for his mercies. 1. What God is to the believer.
2.
What should be the disposition of our hearts towards him. —C. Simeon.
Verse
8. All power given to believers because of their union with Jesus.
Verse
9. "A prayer for the church militant." See Exposition and
Spurgeon's Sermons, No. 768.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》