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Psalm Thirty
Psalm 30
Chapter Contents
Praise to God for deliverance. (1-5) Others encouraged by
his example. (6-12)
Commentary on Psalm 30:1-5.
(Read Psalm 30:1-5.)
The great things the Lord has done for us, both by his
providence and by his grace, bind us in gratitude to do all we can to advance
his kingdom among men, though the most we can do is but little. God's saints in
heaven sing to him; why should not those on earth do the same? Not one of all
God's perfections carries in it more terror to the wicked, or more comfort to
the godly, than his holiness. It is a good sign that we are in some measure
partakers of his holiness, if we can heartily rejoice at the remembrance of it.
Our happiness is bound up in the Divine favour; if we have that, we have
enough, whatever else we want; but as long as God's anger continues, so long
the saints' weeping continues.
Commentary on Psalm 30:6-12
(Read Psalm 30:6-12)
When things are well with us, we are very apt to think
that they will always be so. When we see our mistake, it becomes us to think
with shame upon our carnal security as our folly. If God hide his face, a good
man is troubled, though no other calamity befal him. But if God, in wisdom and
justice, turn from us, it will be the greatest folly if we turn from him. No;
let us learn to pray in the dark. The sanctified spirit, which returns to God,
shall praise him, shall be still praising him; but the services of God's house
cannot be performed by the dust; it cannot praise him; there is none of that
device or working in the grave, for it is the land of silence. We ask aright
for life, when we do so that we may live to praise him. In due time God
delivered the psalmist out of his troubles. Our tongue is our glory, and never
more so than when employed in praising God. He would persevere to the end in
praise, hoping that he should shortly be where this would be the everlasting
work. But let all beware of carnal security. Neither outward prosperity, nor
inward peace, here, are sure and lasting. The Lord, in his favour, has fixed
the believer's safety firm as the deep-rooted mountains, but he must expect to
meet with temptations and afflictions. When we grow careless, we fall into sin,
the Lord hides his face, our comforts droop, and troubles assail us.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 30
Verse 5
[5] For
his anger endureth but a moment; in his favour is life: weeping may endure for
a night, but joy cometh in the morning.
Cometh —
Speedily and in due season.
Verse 7
[7] LORD, by thy favour thou hast made my mountain to stand strong: thou didst
hide thy face, and I was troubled.
Mountain — My
kingdom: kingdoms are usually called mountains in prophetical writings.
Verse 9
[9] What
profit is there in my blood, when I go down to the pit? Shall the dust praise
thee? shall it declare thy truth?
Profit —
What wilt thou gain by it? The dust - Shall they that are dead celebrate thy
goodness in the land of the living? Or, shall my dust praise thee?
Verse 11
[11] Thou
hast turned for me my mourning into dancing: thou hast put off my sackcloth,
and girded me with gladness;
Sackcloth —
Given me occasion to put off that sackcloth, which they used to wear in times
of mourning, Esther 4:1; Psalms 35:13; Isaiah 32:11; Joel 1:13.
Girded —
With joy, as with a garment, surrounding me on every side.
Verse 12
[12] To the end that my glory may sing praise to thee, and not be silent. O
LORD my God, I will give thanks unto thee for ever.
My glory — My
tongue.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. A Psalm and
Song at the Dedication of the House of David; or rather, A Psalm; a Song of
Dedication for the House. By David. A song of faith since the house of Jehovah,
here intended, David never lived to see. A Psalm of praise, since a sore
judgment had been stayed, and a great sin forgiven. From our English version it
would appear that this Psalm was intended to be sung at the building of that
house of cedar which David erected for himself, when he no longer had to hide
himself in the Cave of Adullam, but had become a great king. If this had been
the meaning, it would have been well to observe that it is right for the
believer when removing, to dedicate his new abode to God. We should call
together our Christian friends, and show that where we dwell, God Dwells, and
where we have a tent, God has an altar. But as the song refers to the temple,
for which it was David's joy to lay by in store, and for the site of which he
purchased in his later days the floor of Ornan, we must content ourselves with
remarking the holy faith which foresaw the fulfilment of the promise made to
him concerning Solomon. Faith can sing—
"Glory to
thee for all the grace
I have not tasted yet."
Throughout
this Psalm there are indications that David had been greatly afflicted, both
personally and relatively, after having, in his presumption, fancied himself
secure. When God's children prosper one way, they are generally tried another,
for few of us can bear unmingled prosperity. Even the joys of hope need to be
mixed with the pains of experience, and the more surely so when comfort breeds
carnal security and self confidence. Nevertheless, pardon soon followed
repentance, and God's mercy was glorified. The Psalm is a song, and not a
complaint. Let it be read in the light of the last days of David, when he had
numbered the people, and God had chastened him, and then in mercy had bidden the
angel sheathe his sword. On the floor of Ornan, the poet received the
inspiration which glows in this delightful ode. It is the Psalm of the
numbering of the people, and of the dedication temple which commemorated the
staying of the plague. DIVISION. In Ps 30:1-3, David extols the Lord for
delivering him. Ps 30:4-5 he invites the saints to unite with him in
celebrating divine compassion. In Ps 30:6-7 he confesses the fault for which he
was chastened, Ps 30:8-10 repeats the supplication which he offered, and
concludes with commemorating his deliverance and vowing eternal praise.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. I will extol thee. I will have high and honourable
conceptions of thee, and give them utterance in my best music. Others may
forget thee, murmur at thee, despise thee, blaspheme thee, but "I will
extol thee, "for I have been favoured above all others. I will extol thy
name, thy character, thine attributes, thy mercy to me, thy great forbearance
to my people; but, especially will I speak well of thyself; "I will extol
thee, "O Jehovah; this shall be my cheerful and constant employ. For
thou hast lifted me up. Here is an antithesis, "I will exalt thee, for
thou hast exalted me." I would render according to the benefits received.
The Psalmist's praise was reasonable. He had a reason to give for the praise
that was in his heart. He had been drawn up like a prisoner from a dungeon,
like Joseph out of the pit, and therefore he loved his deliverer. Grace has
uplifted us from the pit of hell, from the ditch of sin, from the Slough of
Despond, from the bed of sickness, from the bondage of doubts and fears: have
we no song to offer for all this? How high has our Lord lifted us? Lifted us up
into the children's place, to be adopted into the family; lifted us up into
union with Christ, "to sit together with him in heavenly places."
Lift high the name of our God, for he has lifted us up above the stars. And
hast not made my foes to rejoice over me. This was the judgment which David
most feared out of the three evils; he said, let me fall into the hand of the
Lord, and not into the hand of man. Terrible indeed were our lot if we were
delivered over to the will of our enemies. Blessed be the Lord, we have been
preserved from so dire a fate. The devil and all our spiritual enemies have not
been permitted to rejoice over us; for we have been saved from the fowler's
snare. Our evil companions, who prophesied that we should go back to our old
sins, are disappointed. Those who watched for our halting, and would fain say,
"Aha! Aha! So would we have it!" have watched in vain until now. O
happy they whom the Lord keeps so consistent in character that the lynx eyes of
the world can see no real fault in them. Is this our case? let us ascribe all
the glory to him who has sustained us in our integrity.
Verse
2. O Lord my God, I cried unto thee, and thou hast healed me.
David sent up prayers for himself and for his people when visited with the
pestilence. He went at once to head quarters, and not roundabout to fallible
means. God is the best physician, even for our bodily infirmities. We do very
wickedly and foolishly when we forget God. It was a sin in Asa that he trusted
to physicians and not to God. If we must have a physician, let it be so, but
still let us go to our God first of all; and, above all, remember that there
can be no power to heal in medicine of itself; the healing energy must flow
from the divine hand. If our watch is out of order, we take it to the
watchmaker; if our body or soul be in an evil plight, let us resort to him who
created them, and has unfailing skill to put them in right condition. As for
our spiritual diseases, nothing can heal these evils but the touch of the Lord
Christ: if we do but touch the hem of his garment, we shall be made whole,
while if we embrace all other physicians in our arms, they can do us no
service. "O Lord my God." Observe the covenant name which
faith uses—"my God." Thrice happy is he who can claim the Lord
himself to be his portion. Note how David's faith ascends the scale; he sang
"O Lord" in the first verse, but it is "O Lord my God, "in
the second. Heavenly heart music is an ascending thing, like the pillars of
smoke which rose from the altar of incense. I cried unto thee. I could
hardly pray, but I cried; I poured out my soul as a little child pours out its
desires. I cried to my God: I knew to whom to cry; I did not cry to my friends,
or to any arm of flesh. Hence the sure and satisfactory result—Thou hast
healed me. I know it. I am sure of it. I have the evidence of spiritual
health within me now: glory be to thy name! Every humble suppliant with God who
seeks release from the disease of sin, shall speed as well as the Psalmists
did, but those who will not so much as seek a cure, need not wonder if their
wounds putrefy and their soul dies.
Verse
3. O Lord, thou hast brought up my soul from the grave. Mark,
it is not "I hope so; "but it is, "Thou hast; thou hast; thou
hast"—three times over. David is quite sure, beyond a doubt, that God
has done great things for him, whereof he is exceeding glad. He had descended
to the brink of the sepulchre, and yet was restored to tell of the forbearance
of God; nor was this all, he owned that nothing but grace had kept him from the
lowest hell, and this made him doubly thankful. To be spared from the grave is
much; to be delivered from the pit is more; hence there is growing cause for
praise, since both deliverances are alone traceable to the glorious right hand
of the Lord, who is the only preserver of life, and the only Redeemer of our
souls from hell.
Verse
4. Sing unto the Lord, O ye saints of his. "Join my
song; assist me to express my gratitude." He felt that he could not praise
God enough himself, and therefore he would enlist the hearts of others. Sing
unto the Lord, O ye saints of his. David would not fill his choir with
reprobates, but with sanctified persons, who could sing from their hearts. He
calls to you, ye people of God, because ye are saints: and if sinners
are wickedly silent, let your holiness constrain you to sing. You are his
saints—chosen, blood bought, called, and set apart for God; sanctified on
purpose that you should offer the daily sacrifice of praise. Abound ye in this
heavenly duty. Sing unto the Lord. It is a pleasing exercise; it is a
profitable engagement. Do not need to be stirred up so often to so pleasant a
service. And give thanks. Let your songs be grateful songs, in which the
Lord's mercies shall live again in joyful remembrance. The very remembrance of
the past should tune our harps, even if present joys be lacking. At the
remembrance of his holiness. Holiness is an attribute which inspires the
deepest awe, and demands a reverent mind; but still give thanks at the
remembrance of it. "Holy, holy, holy!" is the song of seraphim and
cherubim; let us join it—not dolefully, as though we trembled at the holiness
of God, but cheerfully, as humbly rejoicing in it.
Verse
5. For his anger endureth but a moment. David here alludes to
those dispensations of God's providence which are the chastisement ordered in
his paternal government towards his erring children, such as the plague which
fell upon Jerusalem for David's sins; these are but short judgments, and they
are removed as soon as real penitence sues for pardon and presents the great
and acceptable sacrifice. What a mercy is this, for if the Lord's wrath smoked
for a long season, flesh would utterly fail before him. God puts up his rod
with great readiness as soon as its work is done; he is slow to anger and swift
to end it. If his temporary and fatherly anger be so severe that it has need be
short, what must be the terror of eternal wrath exercised by the Judge towards
his adversaries? In his favour is life. As soon as the Lord looked
favourably upon David, the city lived, and the king's heart lived too. We die
like withered flowers when the Lord frowns, but his sweet smile revives us as
the dews refresh the field. His favour not only sweetens and cheers life, but
it is life itself, the very essence of life. Who would know life, let him seek
the favour of the Lord. Weeping may endure for a night; but nights are
not for ever. Even in the dreary winter the day star lights his lamp. It seems
fit that in our nights the dews of grief should fall. When the Bridegroom's
absence makes it dark within, it is meet that the widowed soul should pine for
a renewed sight of the Well beloved. But joy cometh in the morning. When
the Sun of Righteousness comes, we wipe our eyes, and joy chases out intruding
sorrow. Who would not be joyful that knows Jesus? The first beams of the
morning brings us comfort when Jesus is the day dawn, and all believers know it
to be so. Mourning only lasts to morning: when the night is gone the gloom
shall vanish. This is adduced as a reason for saintly singing, and forcible
reason it is; short nights and merry days call for the psaltery and harp.
Verse
6. In my prosperity. When all his foes were quiet, and his
rebellious son dead and buried, then was the time of peril. Many a vessel
founders in a calm. No temptation is so bad as tranquillity. I said, I shall
never be moved. Ah! David, you said more than was wise to say, or even to
think, for God has founded the world upon the floods, to show us what a poor,
mutable, moveable, inconstant world it is. Unhappy he who builds upon it! He
builds himself a dungeon for his hopes. Instead of conceiving that we shall
never be moved, we ought to remember that we shall very soon be removed
altogether. Nothing is abiding beneath the moon. Because I happen to be
prosperous today, I must not fancy that I shall be in my high estate tomorrow.
As in a wheel, the uppermost spokes descend to the bottom in due course, so it
is with mortal conditions. There is a constant revolution: many who are in the
dust today shall be highly elevated tomorrow; while those who are now aloft
shall soon grind the earth. Prosperity had evidently turned the psalmist's
head, or he would not have been so self confident. He stood by grace, and yet
forgot himself, and so met with a fall. Reader, is there not much of the same
proud stuff in all our hearts? let us beware lest the fumes of intoxicating
success get into our brains and make fools of us also.
Verse
7. Lord, by thy favour thou hast made my mountain to stand
strong. He ascribed his prosperity to the Lord's favour—so far good, it is
well to own the hand of the Lord in all our stability and wealth. But observe
that the good in a good man is not unmingled good, for this was alloyed with
carnal security. His state he compares to a mountain, a molehill would have
been nearer—we never think too little of ourselves. He boasted that his
mountain stood strong, and yet he had before, in Psalm 29, spoken of Sirion and
Lebanon as moving like young unicorns. Was David's state more firm than
Lebanon? Ah, vain conceit, too common to us all! How soon the bubble bursts
when God's people get conceit into their heads, and fancy that they are to
enjoy immutability beneath the stars, and constancy upon this whirling orb. How
touchingly and teachingly God corrected his servant's mistake: Thou didst
hide thy face, and I was troubled. There was no need to come to blows, a
hidden face was enough. This proves, first, that David was a genuine saint, for
no hiding of God's face on earth would trouble a sinner; and, secondly, that
the joy of the saint is dependent upon the presence of his Lord. No mountain,
however firm, can yield us rest when our communion with God is broken, and his
face is concealed. However, in such a case, it is well to be troubled. The next
best thing to basking in the light of God's countenance, is to be thoroughly unhappy
when that bliss is denied us.
"Lord,
let me weep for nought for sin!
And after none but thee!
And then I would—O that I might,
A constant weeper be!"
Verse
8. I cried to thee, O Lord. Prayer is the unfailing resource
of God's people. If they are driven to their wit's end, they may still go to
the mercyseat. When an earthquake makes our mountain tremble, the throne of
grace still stands firm, and we may come to it. Let us never forget to pray,
and let us never doubt the success of prayer. The hand which wounds can heal:
let us turn to him who smites us, and he will be entreated of us. Prayer is
better solace than Cain's building a city, or Saul's seeking for music. Mirth
and carnal amusements are a sorry prescription for a mind distracted and despairing:
prayer will succeed where all else fails.
Verse
9. In this verse we learn the form and method of David's prayer. It
was an argument with God, an urging of reasons, a pleading of his cause. It was
not a statement of doctrinal opinions, nor a narration of experience, much less
a sly hit at other people under pretence of praying to God, although all these
things and worse have been substituted for holy supplication at certain prayer
meetings. He wrestled with the angel of the covenant with vehement pleadings,
and therefore he prevailed. Head and heart, judgment and affections, memory and
intellect were all at work to spread the case aright before the Lord of love. What
profit is there in my blood, when I go down to the pit? Wilt thou not lose
a songster from thy choir, and one who loves to magnify thee? Shall the dust
praise thee? shall it declare thy truth? Will there not be one witness the
less to thy faithfulness and veracity? Spare, then, thy poor unworthy one for
thine own name sake!
Verse
10. Hear, O Lord, and have mercy upon me. A short and
comprehensive petition, available at all seasons, let us use it full often. It
is the publican's prayer; be it ours. If God hears prayer, it is a great act of
mercy; our petitions do not merit a reply. Lord, be thou my helper.
Another compact, expressive, ever fitting prayer. It is suitable to hundreds of
the cases of the Lord's people; it is well becoming in the minister when he is
going to preach, to the sufferer upon the bed of pain, to the toiler in the
field of service, to the believer under temptation, to the man of God under
adversity; when God helps, difficulties vanish. He is the help of his people, a
very present help in trouble. The two brief petitions of this verse are
commended as ejaculations to believers full of business, denied to those longer
seasons of devotion which are the rare privilege of those whose days are spent
in retirement.
Verse
11. Observe the contrast, God takes away the mourning of his people;
and what does he give them instead of it? Quiet and peace? Aye, and a great
deal more than that. Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing.
He makes their hearts to dance at the sound of his name. He takes off their
sackcloth. That is good. What a delight to be rid of the habiliments of woe!
But what then? He clothes us. And how? With some common dress? Nay, but with
that royal vestment which is the array of glorified spirits in heaven. Thou
hast girded me with gladness. This is better than to wear garments of silk
or cloth of gold, bedight with embroidery and bespangled with gems. Many a poor
man wears this heavenly apparel wrapped around his heart, though fustian and
corduroy are his only outward garb; and such a man needs not envy the emperor
in all his pomp. Glory be to thee, O God, if, by a sense of full forgiveness
and present justification, thou hast enriched my spiritual nature, and filled
me with all the fulness of God.
Verse
12. To the end—namely, with this view and intent—that my
glory—that is, my tongue or my soul—may sing praise to thee, and not be
silent. It would be a shameful crime, if, after receiving God's mercies, we
should forget to praise him. God would not have our tongues lie idle while so
many themes for gratitude are spread on every hand. He would have no dumb
children in the house. They are all to sing in heaven, and therefore they
should all sing on earth. Let us sing with the poet:
"I
would begin the music here,
And so my soul should rise:
Oh for some heavenly notes to bear
My passions to the skies."
O Lord my God, I will give thanks unto thee for ever.
"I will praise him in life; I will praise him in death;
I will praise him as long as he lendeth me breath;
And say when the death dew lays cold on my brow,
If ever I loved thee, my Jesus, it is now."
EXPLANATORY NOTES
AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title. "A
Psalm and Song, "etc. It is thought that when these two words of Psalm
and Song are both put in the title of a Psalm, it is meant that the sound
of instruments was to be joined with the voice when they were sung in the Temple,
and that the voice went before when it is said Song and Psalm,
and did come after when it is said Psalm and Song. John Diodati.
Title. At the
dedication of it. (tybh tknx) The original word (Knx) signifies initiari,
egkainizein, rei novae primam usurpationem. So Cocceius, to initiate, or
the first use that is made of anything. It was common, when any person had
finished a house and entered into it, to celebrate it with great rejoicing, and
keep a festival, to which his friends are invited, and to perform some
religious ceremonies, to secure the protection of heaven. Thus, when the second
temple was finished, the Priests and Levites, and the rest of the captivity,
kept the dedication of the house of God with joy, and offered numerous
sacrifices. Ezr 6:16. We read in the New Testament Joh 10:22, of the feast
of the dedication appointed by Judas Maccabaeus, in memory of the
purification and restoration of the temple of Jerusalem, after it had been
defiled and almost laid in ruins by Antiochus Epiphanes; and celebrated
annually, to the time of its destruction by Titus, by solemn sacrifices, music,
songs, and hymns, to the praises of God, and feasts, and everything that could
give the people pleasure, for eight days successively. Josephus Ant. 1:7. Judas
ordained, that "the days of the dedication should be kept in their season,
from year to year, with mirth and gladness." 1 Mac 4:59. And that this was
customary, even amongst private persons, to keep a kind of religious festival,
upon their first entrance into a new house, appears from the order of God De
20:5, that no person who had built a new house should be forced into the army,
"if he had not dedicated the house, "i.e., taken possession of
it according to the usual ceremonies practised on such occasions; a custom this
that hath more or less prevailed amongst all nations. Thus the Romans dedicated
their temples, their theatres, their statues, and their palaces and houses.
Suet. Octav. c. 43. p 13; c. 31. p 9. Samuel Chandler.
Title. The present
Psalm is the only one that is called a shir, or song, in the first book
of the Psalms, i.e., Psalms 1-41. The word (ryv) shir is found in
the titles of Psalms 45, 46, 48, 65, 68, 75, 83, 87, 88, 92, 108, 120, 134.
Psalm 18 is entitled, "a shirah (or song) of deliverance
from his enemies, "and the present shir may be coupled with it. Christopher
Wordsworth.
Title. As by offering
the first fruits to God they acknowledged that they received the increase of
the whole year from him, in like manner, by consecrating their houses to God,
they declared that they were God's tenants, confessing that they were
strangers, and that it was he who lodged and gave them a habitation there. If a
levy for war, therefore, took place, this was a just cause of exemption, when
any one alleged that he had not yet dedicated his house. Besides, they were at
the same time admonished by this ceremony, that every one enjoyed his house
aright and regularly, only when he so regulated it that it was as it were a
sanctuary of God, and that true piety and the pure worship of God reigned in
it. The types of the law have now ceased, but we must still keep to the
doctrine of Paul, that whatsoever things God appoints for our use, are still
"sanctified by the word of God and prayer." 1Ti 4:4-5. John Calvin.
Whole
Psalm. Calmet supposes it to have been made by David on the dedication
of the place which he built on the threshing floor of the Araunah, after the
grievous plague which had so nearly desolated the kingdom. 2Sa 24:25 1Ch
21:26. All the parts of the Psalm agree to this: and they agree to this so
well, and to no other hypothesis, that I feel myself justified in modelling the
comment on this principle alone. Adam Clarke.
Whole
Psalm. In the following verses I have endeavoured to give the spirit of
the Psalm, and to preserve the frequent antitheses.
I
will exalt thee, Lord of hosts,
For thou'st exalted me;
Since thou hast silenced Satan's boasts,
I will therefore boast in thee.
My sins had brought me near the grave,
The grave of black despair;
I looked, but there was none to save,
Till I looked up in prayer.
In answer to my piteous cries,
From hell's dark brink I am brought:
My Jesus saw me from the skies,
And swift salvation wrought.
All through the night I wept full sore,
But morning brought relief;
That hand, which broke my bones before,
Then broke my bonds of grief.
My mourning he to dancing turns,
For sackcloth joy he gives,
A moment, Lord, thine anger burns,
But long thy favour lives.
Sing with me then, ye favoured men,
Who long have known his grace;
With thanks recall the seasons when
Ye also sought his face.
—C. H. S.
Verse
1. I will extol thee, O Lord; for thou hast lifted me up. I
will lift thee up, for thou hast lifted me up. Adam Clarke.
Verse
1. Thou hast lifted me up. (yntyld) The verb is used, in its
original meaning, to denote the reciprocating motion of the buckets of a
well, one descending as the other rises, and vice versa; and is here
applied with admirable propriety, to point out the various reciprocations and
changes of David's fortunes, as described in this Psalm, as to prosperity and
adversity; and particularly that gracious reverse of his afflicted condition
which he now celebrates, God having raised him up to great honour and
prosperity; for having built his palace, he "perceived that the Lord had
established him king over Israel, and that he had exalted his kingdom for his
people Israel's sake." 2Sa 5:12. Samuel Chandler.
Verse
2. Thou hast healed me. (wnakdt) The verb is used, either for
the healing of bodily disorders Ps 103:3, or to denote the happy alteration of
any person's affairs, either in private or public life, by the removal of any
kind of distress, personal or national. Ps 107:20 Isa 19:22. So in the place
before us: "Thou hast healed me, "means, Thou hast brought me
out of my distresses, hast restored my health, and rendered me safe and
prosperous. Under Saul, he was frequently in the most imminent danger of his
life, out of which God wonderfully brought him, which he strongly expresses by
saying, "Thou hast brought up my soul from Hades: thou hast kept
me alive, that I should not go down to the pit." I thought myself
lost, and that nothing could prevent my destruction, and we can scarce help
looking on the deliverance thou hast vouchsafed me otherwise than as a kind of
restoration from the dead: Thou hast revived me, or recovered me to
life, from amongst those who go down to the pit; according to the
literal rendering of the latter clause. Samuel Chandler.
Verse
4. Sing unto the Lord, O ye saints of his. If it were to sing
of another thing, I should require the whole quire of God's creatures to join
in the singing; but now that it is to sing of God's "holiness, "what
should profane voices do in the concert? None but "saints, "are
fit to sing of "holiness, "and specially of God's holiness; but most
specially with songs of holiness. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
4. Sing unto the Lord, O ye saints of his. As God requires
outward and inward worship, so a spiritual frame for inward worship may be
forwarded by the outward composure. Gazing drowsiness hinders the activity of
the soul, but the contrary temper furthers and helps it. Singing calls up the
soul into such a posture, and doth, as it were, awaken it: it is a lively
rousing up of the heart. Singing God's praise is a work of the most meditation
of any we perform in public. It keeps the heart longest upon the thing spoken.
Prayer and hearing pass quick from one sentence to another; this sticks long
upon it. Meditation must follow after hearing the word, and praying with the
minister—for new sentences, still succeeding, give not liberty, in the instant,
well to muse and consider upon what is spoken; but in this you pray and
meditate. God hath so ordered this duty, that, while we are employed in it, we
feed and chew the cud together. "Higgaion, "or "Meditation,
"is set upon some passages of the Psalms, as Ps 9:16. The same may be writ
up the whole duty, and all parts of it; namely, "Meditation." Set
before you one in the posture to sing to the best advantage: eyes lifted to
heaven, denote his desire that his heart may be there too; he hath before him a
line or verse of prayer, mourning, praise, mention of God's works; how fairly
now may his heart spread itself in meditation on the thing, while he is singing
it over! Our singing is measured in deliberate time not more for music than
meditation. He that seeks not, finds not, this advantage in singing Psalms—hath
not yet learned what it means. John Lightfoot, 1675.
Verse
5. His anger. Seeing God is often angry with his own
servants, what cause have those of you who fear him, to bless him that he is
not angry with you, and that you do not feel his displeasure! He sets up others
as his mark against which he shoots his arrows; you hear others groaning for
his departure, and yet your hearts are not saddened as theirs are; your eyes
can look up toward heaven with hope, whilst theirs are clouded with a veil of
sorrow; he speaks roughly to them, but comfortable words to you; he seems to
set himself against them as his enemies, whilst he deals with you as a loving
friend; you see a reviving smile on his face and they can discern nothing there
but one continued and dreadful frown. O admire, and for ever wonder at the
sovereign, distinguishing grace of God. Are you that are at ease better than
many of his people that are now thrown into a fiery furnace? Have you less
dross than they? Have they sinned, think you, at a higher rate than you have
ever done? He is angry with them for their lukewarmness, for their backsliding;
and have your hearts always burned with love? Have your feet always kept his
way and not declined? Have you never wandered? Have you never turned aside to
the right hand or to the left? Surely you have; and therefore, what a mercy is
it, that he is not angry with you as well as with them...Do not presume for all
this; for though he is not angry yet with you, he may be so. This was the fault
of David: "In my prosperity I said, I shall never be moved; "but
it immediately follows, "Thou didst hide thy face, and I was
troubled." The sun shines now upon you, the candle of the Lord does
refresh your tabernacle; but you may meet with many storms, and clouds, and
darkness before you come to your journey's end. The disciples were once greatly
pleased with the glory of the transfiguration; and during the delightful
interview between Christ, and Moses, and Elias, they thought themselves as in
heaven; but a cloud came and obscured the preceding glory, and then the poor
men were afraid. It is true the anger of God endured but for a moment;
but even that moment is very sad, and terrible beyond expression. Weeping
endureth for a night; but it may be a very bitter and doleful night for
all this. It is a night like that of the Egyptians: when they arose they saw
all their firstborn slain, and there was a hideous universal cry and mourning
throughout all the land. So this night of the anger of the Lord may destroy all
our comforts, and make the firstborn of our strength, the confidence and
pleasure of our hopes to give up the ghost. Timothy Rogers.
Verse
5. In his favour is life. Let us see wherein the weight of
the blessing and cursing of sheep and goats doth lie. Is it not the gift of
eternal life that is our happiness in heaven; but as David saith, "in
his favour is life." If a damned soul should be admitted to the
fruition of all the pleasures of eternal life without the favour of God, heaven
would be hell to him. It is not the dark and horrid house of woe that maketh a
soul miserable in hell, but God's displeasure, ite maledicti. If an
elect soul should be cast thither, and retain the favour of God, hell would be
an heaven to him, and his joy could not all the devils in hell take from him;
his night would be turned into day. Edward Marbury.
Verse
5. As an apprentice holds out in hard labour and (it may be) bad
usage for seven years together or more, and in all that time is serviceable to
his master without any murmuring or repining, because he sees that the time
wears away, and that his bondage will not last always, but he shall be set at
large and made a freeman in the conclusion: thus should everyone that groaneth
under the burden of any cross or affliction whatsoever, bridle his affections,
possess his soul in patience, and cease from all murmuring and repining
whatsoever, considering well with himself, that the rod of the wicked shall not
always rest upon the lot of the righteous; that weeping may abide at
evening, but joy cometh in the morning; and that troubles will have an end,
and not continue for ever. John Spencer.
Verse
5. How often have we experienced the literal truth of that verse, Weeping
may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning! How heavily does any
trouble weigh on us at night! Our wearied nerve and brain seem unable to
bear up under the pressure. Our pulse throbs, and the fevered restless body
refuses to help in the work of endurance. Miserable and helpless we feel; and
passionately weep under the force of the unresisted attack. At last sleep
comes. Trouble, temptation, whatever it be that strives to overcome us, takes
the one step too far which overleaps its mark, and by sheer force drives our
poor humanity beyond the present reach of further trial. After such a night of
struggle, and the heavy sleep of exhaustion, we awake with a vague sense of
trouble. Our thoughts gather, and we wonder over our own violence, as
the memory of it returns upon us. What was it that seemed so hopeless—so dark?
Why were we so helpless and despairing? Things do not look so now—sad
indeed still, but endurable—hard, but no longer impossible—bad enough perhaps,
but we despair no more. Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in
the morning. And so, when life with its struggles and toils and sins,
bringing us perpetual conflict, ends at last in the fierce struggle of death,
then God "giveth his beloved sleep." They sleep in Jesus, and awake
to the joy of a morning which shall know no wane—the morning of joy. The Sun of
Righteousness is beaming on them. Light is now on all their ways. And they can
only wonder when they recall the despair and darkness, and toil, and violence
of their earthly life, and say, as they have often said on earth, "Weeping
has endured only for the night, and now it is morning, and joy has
come!" And our sorrows, our doubts, our difficulties, our long looks
forward, with despair of enduring strength for so long a night of trial—Where
are they? Shall we not feel as is so beautifully described in the words of one
of our hymns—
"When
in our Father's happy land
We meet our own once more,
Then we shall scarcely understand
Why we have wept before."
—Mary B. M. Duncan, 1825-1865.
Verse
5. Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.
Their mourning shall last but till morning. God will turn their winter's night
into a summer's day, their sighing into singing, their grief into gladness,
their mourning into music, their bitter into sweet, their wilderness into a
paradise. The life of a Christian is filled up with interchanges of sickness
and health, weakness and strength, want and wealth, disgrace and honour,
crosses, and comforts, miseries and mercies, joys and sorrows, mirth and
mourning; all honey would harm us, all wormwood would undo us; a composition of
both is the best way in the world to keep our souls in a healthy constitution.
It is best and most for the health of the soul that the south wind of mercy,
and the north wind of adversity, do both blow upon it; and though every wind
that blows shall blow good to the saints, yet certainly their sins die most,
and their graces thrive best, when they are under the drying, nipping north
wind of calamity, as well as under the warm, cherishing south wind of mercy and
prosperity. Thomas Brooks.
Verse
5. Joy cometh in the morning. The godly man's joy cometh
in the morning, when the wicked man's goeth; for to him "the morning is
even as the shadow of death." Job 24:17. He is not only afraid of reproof
and punishment, but he grieves and suffers sufficiently, though nobody should
know of his actions, for the impair and loss, and misspence of his strength and
his time and his money. Zachary Bogan.
Verse
5. In the second half of the verse weeping is personified,
and represented by the figure of a wanderer, who leaves in the morning the
lodging, into which he had entered the preceding evening. After him another
guest arrives, namely, joy. E. W. Hengstenberg.
Verse
5. The princely prophet says plainly, heaviness may endure for a
night, but joy cometh in the morning. As the two angels that came to Lot
lodged with him for a night, and when they had dispatched their errand, went
away in the morning; so afflictions, which are the angels or the messengers of
God. God sendeth afflictions to do an errand unto us; to tell us we forget God,
we forget ourselves, we are too proud, too self conceited, and such like; and
when they have said as they were bid, then presently they are gone. Thomas
Playfere.
Verses
5-10. When a man's heart is set upon the creatures, there being thorns
in them all, therefore if he will grasp too much of them, or too hard, he shall
find it. God's children are trained up so to it, that God will not let them go
away with a sin; if they be too adulterously affected, they shall find a cross
in such a thing. You may observe this in the thirtieth Psalm; there you may see
the circle God goes in with his children. David has many afflictions, as
appeareth by the fifth verse: I cried, and then God returned to me, and joy
came. What did David then? "I said, I shall never be moved:" his
heart grew wanton, but God would not let him go away so: "God turned away
his face and I was troubled." At the seventh verse he is, you see, in
trouble again: well, David cries again, at the eighth and tenth verses, and
then God turned his mourning into joy again. And this is to be his dealing you
shall find in all the Scriptures; but because we find his dealing set so close
together in this Psalm, therefore I name it. John Preston, D.D.
(1587-1628), in "The Golden Scepter held forth to the Humble."
Verse
6. In my prosperity I said, I shall never be moved. Our
entering upon a special service for God, or receiving a special favour from
God, are two solemn seasons, which Satan makes use of for temptation...We are
apt to get proud, careless, and confident, after or upon such employments and
favours; even as men are apt to sleep or surfeit upon a full meal, or to forget
themselves when they are advanced to honour. Job's great peace and plenty made
him, as he confesseth, so confident, that he concluded he should "die in
his nest." Job 29:18. David enjoying the favour of God in a more than
ordinary measure, though he was more acquainted with vicissitudes and changes
than most of men, grows secure in his apprehension that he "should
never be moved; "but he acknowledgeth his mistake, and leaves it upon
record as an experience necessary for others to take warning by, that when he
became warm under the beams of God's countenance, then he was apt to fall into
security; and this it seems was usual with him in all such cases—when he was
most secure he was nearest some trouble or disquiet. "Thou didst hide
thy face"—and then to be sure the devil will show him his—"and
I was troubled." Enjoyments beget confidence; confidence brings forth
carelessness; carelessness makes God withdraw, and gives opportunity to Satan
to work unseen. And thus, as armies after victory growing secure, are oft
surprised; so are we oft after our spiritual advancements thrown down. Richard
Gilpin.
Verse
6. In my prosperity. (ywlvg) The word denotes peace and
tranquillity, arising from an affluent prosperous condition. When God had
settled him quietly on the throne, he thought all his troubles were over, and
that he should enjoy uninterrupted happiness; and that God"had made his
mountain so strong, as that it should never be moved; "i.e., placed
him as secure from all danger as though he had taken refuge upon an
inaccessible mountain; or made his prosperity firm, and subject to no more
alteration, than a mountain is liable to be removed out of its place; or,
raised him to an eminent degree of honour and prosperity; a mountain, by its
height, being a very natural representation of a very superior condition,
remarkable for power, affluence, and dignity. He had taken the fortress of
Mount Sion, which was properly his mountain, as he had fixed on it for
his dwelling. It was strong by nature, and rendered almost impregnable by the
fortifications he had added to it. This he regarded as the effect of God's
favour to him, and promised himself that his peace and happiness for the future
should be as undisturbed and unshaken as Mount Sion itself. Samuel Chandler.
Verse
6. In my prosperity. Prosperity is more pleasant than
profitable to us. Though in show it look like a fair summer, yet it is indeed a
wasting winter, and spendeth all the fruit we have reaped in the harvest of
sanctified affliction. We are never in greater danger than in the sunshine of
prosperity. To be always indulged of God, and never to taste of trouble, is
rather a token of God's neglect than of his tender love. William Struther.
Verse
7. It is rare to receive much of this world, and not as the prodigal
to go afar off; it is hard to keep close to God in prosperity, when we have
much of this world to live upon and content ourselves with; to live upon God,
and make him our content and stay, as if we had no other life nor livelihood
but in him; we are very apt in such a case to contract a carnal frame, let go
our hold of God, discustom ourselves to the exercise of faith, abate and
estrange our affections from God. See how it was with David: "I said, I
shall never be moved, thou hast made my mountain so strong." I solaced
myself on these outward accommodations, as if I needed no other support,
strength, or content, and there were no fear of a change; no care now to make
God my constant joy and stay, and reckon upon God only for my portion, and that
I must follow him with a cross, and be conformed to my Saviour, in being
crucified to the world. What comes of this? Thou didst hide thy face, and I
was troubled; namely, because he had too much indulged a life of sense.
Children that are held up by their nurses' hand, and mind not to feel their
feet and ground when the nurses let them go, they fall, as if they had no feet
or ground to stand upon. Or thus: we are like children, who, playing in the
golden sunshine, and following their sport, stray so far from their father's
house, that night coming upon them ere they are aware, they are as it were
lost, and full of fears, not knowing how to recover home. The world steals away
our hearts from God, gives so few opportunities for the exercise of the life of
faith, and such advantages to a life of sense, wears off the sense of our
dependence on God, and need thereof, so that when we are put to it by
affliction, we are ready to miscarry ere we can recover our weapon or hold.
Faith is our cordial Ps 27:13; now if it be not at hand (as in health, when we
have no need of it, it use to be) we may faint ere we recover the use of it. Elias
Pledger's Sermon in "The Morning Exercises," 1677.
Verse
7. Thou didst hide thy face, and I was troubled. What soul
can be deserted and not be afflicted? Certainly his absence cannot but be
lamented with greatest grief, whose presence the soul prizes above all earthly
joy; when the evidence of salvation is obscured, the light of God's countenance
darkened, the comforts of the Spirit detained, then the heavens appear not so
clear, the promises taste not so sweet, the ordinances prove not so lively,
yea, the clouds which hang over the soul gather blackness, doubts arise, fears
overflow, terrors increase, troubles enlarge, and the soul becomes
languishingly afflicted, even with all variety of disquietments. Robert
Mossom.
Verse
7. Thou didst hide thy face, and I was troubled. A believer
puts on the sackcloth of contrition, for having put off the garment of
perfection. As the sugar loaf is dissolved, and weeps itself way, when dipped
in wine; so do our hearts melt under a sense of divine love. William Secker.
Verse
7. (last clause). No verse can more plainly teach us that
glorious and comforting truth on which the medieval writers especially love to
dwell, that it is the looking, or not looking, of God upon his creature, that
forms the happiness or the misery of that creature; that those secret springs
of joy which sometimes seem to rise up of themselves, and with which a stranger
intermeddleth not, are nothing but God's direct and immediate looking on us;
while the sorrow for which we cannot assign any especial cause—call it
melancholy, or low spirits, or by whatever other name—is nothing but his
turning away his face from us. John Mason Neale.
Verse
7. (last clause). Is spiritual desertion and the hiding of
God's face matter of affliction, and casting down to believers? Yes, yes; it
quails their hearts, nothing can comfort them. Thou didst hide thy face, and
I was troubled. Outward afflictions do but break the skin, this touches the
quick; they like rain fall only upon the tiles, this soaks into the house; but
Christ brings to believers substantial matter of consolation against the
troubles of desertion; he himself was deserted of God for a time, that they
might not be deserted for ever. John Flavel.
Verse
7. (last clause). If God be thy portion, then there is no
loss in all the world that lies so hard and so heavy upon thee as the loss of
thy God. There is no loss under heaven that doth so affect and afflict a man
that hath God for his portion, as the loss of his God. David met with many a
loss, but no loss made so sad and so great a breach upon his spirit as the loss
of the face of God, the loss of the favour of God: "In my prosperity I
said, I shall never be moved. Lord, by thy favour thou hast made my mountain to
stand strong: thou didst hide thy face, and I was troubled." The
Hebrew word (lhn) bahal signifies to be greatly troubled, to be sorely
terrified, as you may see in that 1Sa 28:21. "And the woman came unto
Saul, and saw that he was sore troubled." Here is the same Hebrew word bahal.
Saul was so terrified, affrighted, and disanimated with the dreadful news that
the devil in Samuel's likeness told him, that his very vital spirits so failed
him, that he fell into a deadly swoon. And it was even so with David upon God's
hiding of his face. David was like a withered flower that had lost its sap,
life, and vigour, when God had wrapped himself up in a cloud. The life of some
creatures lieth in the light and warmth of the sun; and so doth the life of the
saints lie in the light and warmth of God's countenance. And, as in an eclipse
of the sun, there is a drooping in the whole frame of nature, so when God hides
his face, gracious souls cannot but droop and languish, and bow down themselves
before him. Many insensible creatures, some by opening and shutting, as
marigolds and tulips, others by bowing and inclining the head, as the solsequy
(the early name of the sunflower) and mallow flowers, are so sensible of the
presence and absence of the sun, that there seems to be such a sympathy between
the sun and them, that if the sun be gone or clouded, they wrap up themselves
or hang down their heads, as being unwilling to be seen by any eye but his that
fills them: and just thus it was with David when God had his face in a cloud. Thomas
Brooks.
Verse
8. I cried to thee, O Lord; and unto the Lord I made
supplication. Bernard, under a fiction, proposes a fable well worthy of our
beholding: therein the kings of Babylon and Jerusalem, signifying the state of
the world and the church, always warring together; in which encounter, at
length it fell out, that one of the soldiers of Jerusalem was fled to the
castle of Justice. Siege laid to the castle, and a multitude of enemies
entrenched round about it, Fear gave over all hope, but Prudence ministered her
comfort. "Does thou not know, "saith she, "that our king is the
King of glory; the Lord strong and mighty, even the Lord mighty in battle? Let
us therefore despatch a messenger that may inform him of our necessities."
Fear replies, "But who is able to break through? Darkness is upon the face
of the earth, and our walls are begirt with a watchful troop of armed men, and
we, utterly inexpert in the way into so far a country." Whereupon Justice
is consulted. "Be of good cheer, "saith Justice, "I have a
messenger of especial trust, well known to the king and his court, Prayer by
name, who knoweth to address herself by ways unknown in the stillest silence of
the night, till she cometh to the secrets and chamber of the King
himself." Forthwith she goeth, and findeth the gates shut, knocketh again,
"Open, ye gates of righteousness, and be ye opened, ye everlasting doors,
that I may come in and tell the King of Jerusalem how our case standeth."
Doubtless the trustiest and most effectual messenger we have to send is Prayer.
If we send up merits, the stars in heaven will disdain it, that we which dwell
at the footstool of God dare to presume so far, when the purest creatures in
heaven are impure in his sight. If we send up fear and distrustfulness, the
length of the way will tire them out. They are as heavy and lumpish as gads of
iron; they will sink to the ground before they come half way to the throne of
salvation. If we send up blasphemies and curses, all the creatures betwixt
heaven and earth will band themselves against us. The sun and the moon will
rain down blood; the fire, hot burning coals; the air, thunderbolts upon our
heads. Prayer, I say again, is the surest ambassador; which neither the
tediousness of the way, nor difficulties of the passage, can hinder from her
purpose; quick of speed, faithful for trustiness, happy for success, able to
mount above the eagles of the sky, into the heaven of heavens, and as a chariot
of fire bearing us aloft into the presence of God to seek his assistance. John
King.
Verse
9. What profit is there in my blood, when I go down to the pit?
Implying that he would willingly die, if he could thereby do any real service
to God, or his country. Php 2:17. But he saw not what good could be done by his
dying in the bed of sickness, as might be if he had died in the bed of honour.
Lord, saith he, wilt thou sell one of "thine own people for nought, and
not increase thy wealth by the price?" Ps 44:12. Matthew Henry.
Verse
9. What profit is there in my blood, etc. The little gain
that the Lord would have by denying his people in the mercies they request, may
also be used as a plea in prayer. David begs his own life of God, using this
plea, What profit is there in my blood? So did the captive church plead
Ps 44:12; "Thou sellest thy people for nought, and dost not increase thy
wealth by their price." So then, poor saints of God when they come and
tell the Lord in their prayers that indeed he may condemn, or confound, or cut
or cast them off; he may continue to frown upon them; he may deny such and such
requests of theirs, for such and such just causes in them; but what will he
gain thereby? He may gain many praises, etc., by hearing them, and helping them;
but what good will it do him to see them oppressed by the enemies of their
souls? or what delight would it be to him to see them sighing and sinking, and
fainting under sad pressures, etc.? this is an allowed and a very successful
kind of pleading. Thomas Cobbet.
Verse
9. Shall the dust praise thee? Can any number be sufficient
to praise thee? Can there ever be mouths enough to declare thy truth? And may
not I make one—a sinful one I know—but yet one in the number, if thou be
pleased to spare me from descending into the pit? Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
9. Prayer that is likely to prevail with God must be argumentative.
God loves to have us plead with him and overcome him with arguments in prayer. Thomas
Watson.
Verse
11. Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing: thou hast
put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness. This might be true of
David, delivered from his calamity; it was true of Christ, arising from the
tomb, to die no more; it is true of the penitent, exchanging his sackcloth for
the garments of salvation; and it will be verified in all us, at the last day,
when we shall put off the dishonours of the grave, to shine in glory
everlasting. George Horne.
Verse
11. Thou hast turned. I do so like the ups and downs in the
Psalms. Adelaide Newton.
Verse
11. Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness.
I say with the apostle, "Overcome evil with good, " sorrow with joy.
Joy is the true remedy for sorrow. It never had, never could have any other. We
must always give the soul that weeps reason to rejoice; all other consolation
is utterly useless. Alexander Rodolph Vinet, D.D., 1797-1847.
Verse
11. Thou hast girded me with gladness. My
"sackcloth" was but a loose garment about me, which might easily be
put off at pleasure, but my "gladness" is girt about
me, to be fast and sure, and cannot leave me though it would; at least none
shall be able to take it from me. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
12. Even as the Chaldeans formerly measured their natural day
differently from the Israelites; they put the day first and the night after;
but the Israelites, on the contrary, according to the order that was observed
in the creation; for in the beginning darkness was upon the face of the deep,
and of every one of the six days it is said, "The evening and the morning
were the first day, "etc. So the times of the world and of the church are
differently disposed; for the world begins hers by the day of temporal
prosperity, and finishes it by a night of darkness and anguish that is eternal;
but the church, on the contrary, begins hers by the night of adversity, which
she suffers for awhile, and ends them by a day of consolation which she shall
have for ever. The prophet in this Psalm begins with the anger of God,
but ends with his favour: as of old, when they entered into the
tabernacle they did at first see unpleasant things, as the knives of the
sacrifices, the blood of victims, the fire that burned upon the altar, which
consumed the offerings; but when they passed a little further there was the holy
place, the candlestick of gold, the shewbread, and the altar of gold on which
they offered perfumes; and in fine, there was the holy of holies, and the ark
of the covenant, and the mercyseat and the cherubims which was called the face
of God. Timothy Rogers.
Verse
12. I will give thanks. What is praise? The rent we owe to
God; and the larger the farm the greater the rent should be. G. S. Bowes,
1863.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Title. House
dedication, and how to arrange it.
Whole
Psalm. In this ode we may see the workings of David's mind before, and
under, and after, the affliction. 1. Before the affliction: Ps 30:6.
2. Under the affliction: Ps 30:7-10.
3. After the affliction: Ps 30:11-12.
—William Jay.
Verse
1. (first clause). God and his people exalting each other.
Verse
1. (second clause). The happiness of being preserved so as
not to be the scorn of our enemies.
Verse
1. The disappointment of the devil.
Verse
2. The sick man, the physician, the night bell, the medicine, and
the cure; or, a covenant God, a sick saint, a crying heart, a healing hand.
Verse
3. Upbringing and preservation, two choice mercies; made the
more illustrious by two terrible evils, grave, and pit; traced
immediately to the Lord, thou hast.
Verse
4. Song, a sacred service; saints especially called to
it; divine holiness, a choice subject for it; Memory, an
admirable aid in it.
Verse
5. The anger of God in relation to his people.
Verse
5. The night of weeping, and the morning of joy.
Verse
5. Life in God's favour.
Verse
5. The transient nature of the believer's trouble, and the
permanence of his joy.
Verse
6. The peculiar dangers of prosperity.
Verses
6-12. David's prosperity had lulled him into a state of undue security;
God sent him this affliction to rouse him from it. The successive frames of his
mind are here clearly marked; and must successively be considered as they are
here presented to our view. 1. His carnal security.
2. His spiritual dereliction.
3. His fervent prayers.
4. His speedy recovery.
5. His grateful acknowledgments.
—Charles Simeon.
Verse
7. (first clause). Carnal security; its causes, dangers, and
cures.
Verse
7. (last clause). The gracious bemoanings of a soul in
spiritual darkness.
Verse
8., in connection with verse 3 prayer the universal remedy.
Verse
9. (first clause). Arguments with God for continued life and
renewed favour.
Verse
9. (last clause). The resurrection, a time in which the dust
shall praise God, and declare his truth.
Verse
10. Two gems of prayer; short, but full and needful.
Verse
10. Lord, be thou my helper. I see many fall; I shall fall too
except thou hold me up. I am weak; I am exposed to temptation. My heart is
deceitful. My enemies are strong. I cannot trust in man; I dare not trust in
myself. The grace I have received will not keep me without thee. Lord, be
thou my helper. In every duty; in every conflict; in every trial; in every
effort to promote the Lord's cause; in every season of prosperity; in every
hour we live, this short and inspired prayer is suitable. May it flow from our
hearts, be often on our lips, and be answered in our experience. For if the
Lord help us, there is no duty which we cannot perform; there is no foe which
we cannot overcome; there is no difficulty which we cannot surmount. James
Smith's Daily Remembrancer.
Verse
11. Transformations. Sudden; complete; divine, thou;
personal, "for me; "gracious.
Verse
11. Holy dancing: open up the metaphor.
Verse
11. The believer's change of raiment: illustrate by life of Mordecai
or Joseph; mention all the garbs the believer is made to wear, as a mourner, a
beggar, a criminal, &c.
Verse
12. Our glory, and its relation to God's glory.
Verse
12. The end of gracious dispensations.
Verse
12. Silence—when sinful.
Verse
12. (last clause). The believer's vow and the time for making
it. See the whole Psalm.
WORKS UPON THE
THIRTIETH PSALM
Meditations
upon the XXX Psalme of David. By Sir RICHARD BAKER. (See Page 10.)
In
Chandler's Life of David (Vol. II., pp. 8-15), there is an Exposition of Psalm 30.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》