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Psalm Thirty-four
Psalm 34
Chapter Contents
David praises God, and encourages to trust him. (1-10) He
exhorts to fear. (11-22)
Commentary on Psalm 34:1-10
(Read Psalm 34:1-10)
If we hope to spend eternity in praising God, it is fit
that we should spend much of our time here in this work. He never said to any
one, Seek ye me in vain. David's prayers helped to silence his fears; many
besides him have looked unto the Lord by faith and prayer, and it has
wonderfully revived and comforted them. When we look to the world, we are
perplexed, and at a loss. But on looking to Christ depends our whole salvation,
and all things needful thereunto do so also. This poor man, whom no man looked
upon with any respect, or looked after with any concern, was yet welcome to the
throne of grace; the Lord heard him, and saved him out of all his troubles. The
holy angels minister to the saints, and stand for them against the powers of
darkness. All the glory be to the Lord of the angels. By taste and sight we
both make discoveries, and have enjoyment; Taste and see God's goodness; take
notice of it, and take the comfort of it. He makes all truly blessed that trust
in him. As to the things of the other world, they shall have grace sufficient
for the support of spiritual life. And as to this life, they shall have what is
necessary from the hand of God. Paul had all, and abounded, because he was
content, Philippians 4:11-18. Those who trust to
themselves, and think their own efforts sufficient for them, shall want; but
they shall be fed who trust in the Lord. Those shall not want, who with
quietness work, and mind their own business.
Commentary on Psalm 34:11-22
(Read Psalm 34:11-22)
Let young persons set out in life with learning the fear
of the Lord, if they desire true comfort here, and eternal happiness hereafter.
Those will be most happy who begin the soonest to serve so good a Master. All
aim to be happy. Surely this must look further than the present world; for
man's life on earth consists but of few days, and those full of trouble. What
man is he that would see the good of that where all bliss is perfect? Alas! few
have this good in their thoughts. That religion promises best which creates
watchfulness over the heart and over the tongue. It is not enough not to do
hurt, we must study to be useful, and to live to some purpose; we must seek
peace and pursue it; be willing to deny ourselves a great deal for peace' sake.
It is the constant practice of real believers, when in distress, to cry unto
God, and it is their constant comfort that he hears them. The righteous are
humbled for sin, and are low in their own eyes. Nothing is more needful to true
godliness than a contrite heart, broken off from every self-confidence. In this
soil every grace will flourish, and nothing can encourage such a one but the
free, rich grace of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The righteous are taken under
the special protection of the Lord, yet they have their share of crosses in
this world, and there are those that hate them. Both from the mercy of Heaven,
and the malice of hell, the afflictions of the righteous must be many. But
whatever troubles befal them, shall not hurt their souls, for God keeps them from
sinning in troubles. No man is desolate, but he whom God has forsaken.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 34
Verse 2
[2] My soul shall make her boast in the LORD: the humble
shall hear thereof, and be glad.
Shall boast — Shall glory in this, that I have
so powerful and so gracious a master.
The humble — The righteous.
Verse 3
[3] O magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt his name
together.
Together — Not in place, for David was now banished from the
place of God's publick worship, but in affection: let our souls meet, and let
our praises meet in the ears of the all-hearing God.
Verse 5
[5] They looked unto him, and were lightened: and their
faces were not ashamed.
Lightened — Comforted and encouraged.
Ashamed — They were not disappointed of their hope.
Verse 6
[6] This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him, and saved
him out of all his troubles.
This man — David.
Verse 7
[7] The angel of the LORD encampeth round about them that
fear him, and delivereth them.
The angel — The angels, the singular number
being put for the plural.
Verse 8
[8] O taste and see that the LORD is good: blessed is the
man that trusteth in him.
O taste — Make trial, of it by your own experience of it.
Good — Merciful and gracious.
Verse 9
[9] O fear the LORD, ye his saints: for there is no want to
them that fear him.
Fear — Reverence, serve, and trust him: for fear is commonly
put for all the parts of God's worship.
Verse 12
[12] What man is he that desireth life, and loveth many days,
that he may see good?
Life — A long and happy life, begun in this world and
continued for ever in the next.
Good — In which he may enjoy good, prosperity or happiness.
Verse 13
[13] Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy lips from speaking
guile.
Evil — From all manner of evil speaking, from all injurious,
false and deceitful speeches.
Verse 14
[14] Depart from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue
it.
Depart — From all sin.
Do good — Be ready to perform all good offices to all men.
Seek — Study by all means possible to live peaceable with all
men.
Pursue it — Do not only embrace it gladly
when it is offered, but follow hard after it, when it seems to flee away from
thee.
Verse 16
[16] The face of the LORD is against them that do evil, to
cut off the remembrance of them from the earth.
The face — His anger, which discovers itself in the face.
Verse 18
[18] The LORD is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart;
and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.
Nigh — Ready to hear and succour them.
To — Those whose spirits are truly humbled under the hand
of God, and the sense of their sins, whose hearts are subdued, and made
obedient to God's will and submissive to his providence.
Verse 20
[20] He keepeth all his bones: not one of them is broken.
Bones — All the parts and members of their bodies.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. Psalm of
David, when he changed his behaviour before Abimelech; who drove him away, and
he departed. Of this transaction, which reflects no credit upon David's memory,
we have a brief account in 1Sa 21:1-15. Although the gratitude of the psalmist
prompted him thankfully to record the goodness of the Lord in vouchsafing an
undeserved deliverance, yet he weaves none of the incidents of the escape into
the narrative, but dwells only on the grand fact of his being heard in the hour
of peril. We may learn from his example not to parade our sins before others,
as certain vainglorious professors are wont to do who seem as proud of their
sins as old Greenwich pensioners of their battles and their wounds. David
played the fool with singular dexterity, but he was not so real a fool as to
sing of his own exploits of folly. In the original, the title does not teach us
that the psalmist composed this poem at the time of his escape from Achish, the
king or Abimelech of Gath, but that it is intended to commemorate that event,
and was suggested by it. It is well to mark our mercies with well carved
memorials. God deserves our best handiwork. David in view of the special peril
from which he was rescued, was at great pains with this Psalm, and wrote it
with considerable regularity, in almost exact accordance with the letters of
the Hebrew alphabet. This is the second alphabetical Psalm, the twenty-fifth
being the first.
DIVISION. The Psalm is
split into two great divisions at the close of Ps 34:10, when the Psalmist
having expressed his praise to God turns in direct address to men. The first
ten verses are A HYMN, and the last twelve A SERMON. For further assistance to
the reader we may subdivide thus: In Ps 34:1-3, David vows to bless the Lord,
and invites the praise of others; from Ps 34:4-7 he relates his experience, and
in Ps 34:8-10 exhorts the godly to constancy of faith. In Ps 34:1-14, he gives
direct exhortation, and follows it up by didactic teaching from Ps 34:15-22 to
the close.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. I will bless the Lord at all times. He is resolved and
fixed, I will; he is personally and for himself determined, let others
so as they may; he is intelligent in head and inflamed in heart—he knows to
whom the praise is due, and what is due, and for what and when. To Jehovah, and
not to second causes our gratitude is to be rendered. The Lord hath by right a
monopoly in his creatures praise. Even when a mercy may remind us of our sin
with regard to it, as in this case David's deliverance from the Philistine
monarch was sure to do, we are not to rob God of his meed of honour because our
conscience justly awards a censure to our share in the transaction. Though the
hook was rusty, yet God sent the fish, and we thank him for it. At all times,
in every situation, under every circumstance, before, in and after trials, in
bright days of glee, and dark nights of fear. He would never have done
praising, because never satisfied that he had done enough; always feeling that
he fell short of the Lord's deservings. Happy is he whose fingers are wedded to
his harp. He who praises God for mercies shall never want a mercy for which to
praise. To bless the Lord is never unseasonable. His praise shall
continually be in my mouth, not in my heart merely, but in my mouth too.
Our thankfulness is not to be a dumb thing; it should be one of the daughters
of music. Our tongue is our glory, and it ought to reveal the glory of God.
What a blessed mouthful is God's praise! How sweet, how purifying, how
perfuming! If men's mouths were always thus filled, there would be no repining
against God, or slander of neighbours. If we continually rolled this dainty
morsel under our tongue, the bitterness of daily affliction would be swallowed
up in joy. God deserves blessing with the heart, and extolling with the
mouth—good thoughts in the closet, and good words in the world.
Verse
2. My soul shall make her boast in the Lord. Boasting is a
very natural propensity, and if it were used as in this case, the more it were
indulged the better. The exultation of this verse is no mere tongue bragging, "the
soul" is in it, the boasting is meant and felt before it is expressed.
What scope there is for holy boasting in Jehovah! His person, attributes,
covenant, promises, works, and a thousand things besides, are all incomparable,
unparalleled, matchless; we may cry them up as we please, but we shall never be
convicted of vain and empty speech in so doing. Truly he who writes these words
of comment has nothing of his own to boast of, but much to lament over, and yet
none shall stop him of his boast in God so long as he lives. The humble
shall hear thereof, and be glad. They are usually grieved to hear
boastings; they turn aside from vauntings and lofty speeches, but boasting in
the Lord is quite another matter; by this the most lowly are consoled and
encouraged. The confident expressions of tried believers are a rich solace to
their brethren of less experience. We ought to talk of the Lord's goodness on
purpose that others may be confirmed in their trust in a faithful God.
Verse
3. O magnify the Lord with me. Is this request addressed to
the humble? If so it is most fitting. Who can make God great but those who feel
themselves to be little? He bids them help him to make the Lord's fame greater
among the sons of men. Jehovah is infinite, and therefore cannot really be made
greater, but his name grows in manifested glory as he is made known to his
creatures, and thus he is said to be magnified. It is well when the soul feels
its own inability adequately to glorify the Lord, and therefore stirs up others
to the gracious work; this is good both for the man himself and for his
companions. No praise can excel that which lays us prostrate under a sense of
our own nothingness, while divine grace like some topless Alp rises before our
eyes and sinks us lower and lower in holy awe. Let us exalt his name
together. Social, congregated worship is the outgrowth of one of the
natural instincts of the new life. In heaven it is enjoyed to the full, and
earth is like heaven where it abounds.
Verse
4. I sought the Lord, and he heard me. It must have been in a
very confused manner that David prayed, and there must have been much of self
sufficiency in his prayer, or he would not have resorted to methods of such
dubious morality as pretending to be mad and behaving as a lunatic; yet his
poor limping prayer had an acceptance and brought him succour: the more reason
for then celebrating the abounding mercy of the Lord. We may seek God even when
we have sinned. If sin could blockade the mercyseat it would be all over with
us, but the mercy is that there are gifts even for the rebellious, and an
advocate for men who sin. And delivered me from all my fears. God makes
a perfect work of it. He clears away both our fears and their causes, all of
them without exception. Glory be to his name, prayer sweeps the field, slays
all the enemies and even buries their bones. Note the egoism of this verse and
of those preceding it; we need not blush to speak of ourselves when in so doing
we honestly aim at glorifying God, and not at exalting ourselves. Some are
foolishly squeamish upon this point, but they should remember that when modesty
robs God it is most immodest.
Verse
5. They looked unto him, and were lightened. The psalmist
avows that his case was not at all peculiar, it was matched in the lives of all
the faithful; they too, each one of them on looking to their Lord were
brightened up, their faces began to shine, their spirits were uplifted. What a
means of blessing one look at the Lord may be! There is life, light, liberty,
love, everything in fact, in a look at the crucified One. Never did a sore
heart look in vain to the good Physician; never a dying soul turned its
darkening eye to the brazen serpent to find its virtue gone. And their faces
were not ashamed. Their faces were covered with joy but not with blushes.
He who trusts in God has no need to be ashamed of his confidence, time and
eternity will both justify his reliance.
Verse
6. This poor man cried. Here he returns to his own case. He
was poor indeed, and so utterly friendless that his life was in great jeopardy;
but he cried in his heart to the protector of his people and found relief. His
prayer was a cry, for brevity and bitterness, for earnestness and simplicity,
for artlessness and grief; it was a poor man's cry, but it was none the less
powerful with heaven, for the Lord heard him, and to be heard of God is
to be delivered; and so it is added that the Lord saved him out of all his
troubles. At once and altogether David was clean rid of all his woes. The
Lord sweeps our griefs away as men destroy a hive of hornets, or as the winds
clear away the mists. Prayer can clear us of troubles as easily as the Lord
made riddance of the frogs and flies of Egypt when Moses entreated him. This
verse is the psalmist's own personal testimony: he being dead yet speaketh. Let
the afflicted reader take heart and be of good courage.
Verse
7. The angel of the Lord. The covenant angel, the Lord Jesus,
at the head of all the bands of heaven, surrounds with his army the dwellings
of the saints. Like hosts entrenched so are the ministering spirits encamped
around the Lord's chosen, to serve and succour, to defend and console them. Encampeth
round about them that fear him. On every side the watch is kept by warriors
of sleepless eyes, and the Captain of the host is one whose prowess none can
resist. And delivereth them. We little know how many providential
deliverances we owe to those unseen hands which are charged to bear us up lest
we dash our foot against a stone.
Verse
8. O taste and see. Make a trial, an inward, experimental
trial of the goodness of God. You cannot see except by tasting for yourself;
but if you taste you shall see, for this, like Jonathan's honey, enlightens the
eyes. That the Lord is good. You can only know this really and
personally by experience. There is the banquet with its oxen and fatlings; its
fat things full of marrow, and wine on the lees well refined; but their
sweetness will be all unknown to you except you make the blessings of grace
your own, by a living, inward, vital participation in them. Blessed is the
man that trusteth in him. Faith is the soul's taste; they who test the Lord
by their confidence always find him good, and they become themselves blessed.
The second clause of the verse, is the argument in support of the exhortation
contained in the first sentence.
Verse
9. O fear the Lord, ye his saints. Pay to him humble
childlike reverence, walk in his laws, have respect to his will, tremble to
offend him, hasten to serve him. Fear not the wrath of men, neither be tempted
to sin through the virulence of their threats; fear God and fear nothing else. For
there is no want to them that fear him. Jehovah will not allow his faithful
servants to starve. He may not give luxuries, but the promise binds him to
supply necessaries, and he will not run back from his word. Many whims and
wishes may remain unfulfilled, but real wants the Lord will supply. The fear of
the Lord or true piety is not only the duty of those who avow themselves to be
saints, that is, persons set apart and consecrated for holy duties, but it is
also their path of safety and comfort. Godliness hath the promise of the life
which now is. If we were to die like dogs, and there were no hereafter, yet
were it well for our own happiness' sake to fear the Lord. Men seek a patron
and hope to prosper; he prospers surely who hath the Lord of Hosts to be his
friend and defender.
Verse
10. The young lions do lack, and suffer hunger. They are
fierce, cunning, strong, in all the vigour of youth, and yet they sometimes
howl in their ravenous hunger, and even so crafty, designing, and oppressing
men, with all their sagacity and unscrupulousness, often come to want; yet
simple minded believers, who dare not act as the greedy lions of earth, are fed
with food convenient for them. To trust God is better policy than the craftiest
politicians can teach or practice. But they that seek the Lord shall not
want any good thing. No really good thing shall be denied to those whose
first and main end in life is to seek the Lord. Men may call them fools, but
the Lord will prove them wise. They shall win where the world's wiseacres lose
their all, and God shall have the glory of it.
Verse
11. Come, ye children. Though a warrior and a king, the
psalmist was not ashamed to teach children. Teachers of youth belong to the
true peerage; their work is honourable, and their reward shall be glorious.
Perhaps the boys and girls of Gath had made sport of David in his seeming
madness, and if so, he here aims by teaching the rising race to undo the
mischief which he had done aforetime. Children are the most hopeful persons to
teach—wise men who wish to propagate their principles take care to win the ear
of the young. Hearken unto me: I will teach you the fear of the Lord. So
far as they can be taught by word of mouth, or learned by the hearing of the
ear, we are to communicate the faith and fear of God, inculcating upon the
rising generation the principles and practices of piety. This verse may be the
address of every Sabbath school teacher to his class, of every parent to his
children. It is not without instruction in the art of teaching. We should be
winning and attractive to the youngsters, bidding them "come, "and
not repelling them with harsh terms. We must get them away, apart from toys and
sports, and try to occupy their minds with better pursuits; for we cannot well
teach them while their minds are full of other things. We must drive at the
main point always, and keep the fear of the Lord ever uppermost in our
teachings, and in so doing we may discreetly cast our own personality into the
scale by narrating our own experiences and convictions.
Verse
12. Life spent in happiness is the desire of all, and he who can give
the young a receipt for leading a happy life deserves to be popular among them.
Mere existence is not life; the art of living, truly, really, and joyfully
living, it is not given to all men to know. To teach men how to live and how to
die, is the aim of all useful religious instruction. The rewards of virtue are
the baits with which the young are to be drawn to morality. While we teach piety
to God we should also dwell much upon morality towards man.
Verse
13. Keep thy tongue from evil. Guard with careful diligence
that dangerous member, the tongue, lest it utter evil, for that evil will
recoil upon thee, and mar the enjoyment of thy life. Men cannot spit forth
poison without feeling some of the venom burning their own flesh. And thy
lips from speaking guile. Deceit must be very earnestly avoided by the man
who desires happiness. A crafty schemer lives like a spy in the enemy's camp,
in constant fear of exposure and execution. Clean and honest conversation, by
keeping the conscience at ease, promotes happiness, but lying and wicked talk
stuffs our pillow with thorns, and makes life a constant whirl of fear and
shame. David had tried the tortuous policy, but he here denounces it, and begs
others as they would live long and well to avoid with care the doubtful devices
of guile.
Verse
14. Depart from evil. Go away from it. Not merely take your
hands off, but yourself off. Live not near the pest house. Avoid the lion's
lair, leave the viper's nest. Set a distance between yourself and temptation. And
do good. Be practical, active, energetic, persevering in good. Positive
virtue promotes negative virtue; he who does good is sure to avoid evil. Seek
peace. Not merely prefer it, but with zeal and care endeavour to promote
it. Peace with God, with thine own heart, with thy fellow man, search after
this as the merchantman after a precious pearl. Nothing can more effectually
promote our own happiness than peace; strife awakens passions which eat into
the heart with corroding power. Anger is murder to one's own self, as well as
to its objects. And pursue it. Hunt after it, chase it with eager
desire. It may soon be lost, indeed, nothing is harder to retain, but do your
best, and if enmity should arise let it be no fault of yours. Follow after
peace when it shuns you; be resolved not to be of a contentious spirit. The
peace which you thus promote will be returned into your own bosom, and be a
perennial spring of comfort to you.
Verse
15. The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous. He observes
them with approval and tender consideration; they are so dear to him that he
cannot take his eyes off them; he watches each one of them as carefully and
intently as if there were only that one creature in the universe. His ears
are open unto their cry. His eyes and ears are thus both turned by the Lord
towards his saints; his whole mind is occupied about them: if slighted by all
others they are not neglected by him. Their cry he hears at once, even as a
mother is sure to hear her sick babe; the cry may be broken, plaintive,
unhappy, feeble, unbelieving, yet the Father's quick ear catches each note of
lament or appeal, and he is not slow to answer his children's voice.
Verse
16. The face of the Lord is against them that do evil. God is
not indifferent to the deeds of sinners, but he sets his face against them, as
we say, being determined that they shall have no countenance and support, but
shall be thwarted and defeated. He is determinately resolved that the ungodly
shall not prosper; he sets himself with all his might to overthrow them. To
cut off the remembrance of them from the earth. He will stamp out their
fires, their honour shall be turned into shame, their names forgotten or
accursed. Utter destruction shall be the lot of all the ungodly.
Verse
17. The righteous cry. Like Israel in Egypt, they cry out
under the heavy yoke of oppression, both of sin, temptation, care, and grief. And
the Lord heareth; he is like the night watchman, who no sooner hears the
alarm bell than he flies to relieve those who need him. And delivereth them
out of all their troubles. No net of trouble can so hold us that the Lord
cannot free us. Our afflictions may be numerous and complicated, but prayer can
set us free from them all, for the Lord will show himself strong on our behalf.
Verse
18. The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart.
Near in friendship to accept and console. Broken hearts think God far away,
when he is really most near them; their eyes are holden so that they see not
their best friend. Indeed, he is with them, and in them, but they know it not.
They run hither and thither, seeking peace in their own works, or in
experiences, or in proposals and resolutions, whereas the Lord is nigh them,
and the simple act of faith will reveal him. And saveth such as be of a
contrite spirit. What a blessed token for good is a repentant, mourning
heart! Just when the sinner condemns himself, the Lord graciously absolves him.
If we chasten our own spirits the Lord will spare us. He never breaks with the
rod of judgment those who are already sore with the rod of conviction.
Salvation is linked with contrition.
Verse
19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous. Thus are they
made like Jesus their covenant Head. Scripture does not flatter us like the
story books with the idea that goodness will secure us from trouble; on the
contrary, we are again and again warned to expect tribulation while we are in
this body. Our afflictions come from all points of the compass, and are as many
and as tormenting as the mosquitoes of the tropics. It is the earthly portion
of the elect to find thorns and briars growing in their pathway, yea, to lie
down among them, finding their rest broken and disturbed by sorrow. BUT,
blessed but, how it takes the sting out of the previous sentence! But
the Lord delivereth him out of them all. Through troops of ills Jehovah
shall lead his redeemed scatheless and triumphant. There is an end to the
believer's affliction, and a joyful end too. None of his trials can hurt so
much as a hair of his head, neither can the furnace hold him for a moment after
the Lord bids him come forth of it. Hard would be the lot of the righteous if
this promise, like a bundle of camphire, were not bound up in it, but this
sweetens all. The same Lord who sends the afflictions will also recall them
when his design is accomplished, but he will never allow the fiercest of them
to rend and devour his beloved.
Verse
20. He keepeth all his bones: not one of them is broken. David
had come off with kicks and cuffs, but no broken bones. No substantial injury
occurs to the saints. Eternity will heal all their wounds. Their real self is
safe; they may have flesh wounds, but no part of the essential fabric of their
being shall be broken. This verse may refer to frequent providential
protections vouchsafed to the saints; but as good men have had broken limbs as
well as others, it cannot absolutely be applied to bodily preservations; but
must, it seems to me, be spiritually applied to great injuries of soul, which
are for ever prevented by divine love. Not a bone of the mystical body of
Christ shall be broken, even as his corporeal frame was preserved intact.
Divine love watches over every believer as it did over Jesus; no fatal injury
shall happen to us, we shall neither be halt or maimed in the kingdom, but
shall be presented after life's trials are over without spot or wrinkle or any
such thing, being preserved in Christ Jesus, and kept by the power of God
through faith unto salvation.
Verse
21. Evil shall slay the wicked. Their adversaries shall be
killing; they are not medicine, but poison. Ungodly men only need rope enough
and they will hang themselves; their own iniquities shall be their punishment.
Hell itself is but evil fully developed, torturing those in whom it dwells. Oh!
happy they who have fled to Jesus to find refuge from their former sins, such,
and such only will escape. And they that hate the righteous shall be
desolate. They hated the best of company, and they shall have none; they
shall be forsaken, despoiled, wretched, despairing. God makes the viper poison
itself. What desolation of heart do the damned feel, and how richly have they
deserved it!
Verse
22. The Lord redeemeth the soul of his servants—with price and
with power, with blood and with water. All providential helps are a part of the
redemption by power, hence the Lord is said still to redeem. All thus ransomed
belong to him who bought them—this is the law of justice and the verdict of
gratitude. Joyfully will we serve him who so graciously purchases us with his
blood, and delivers us by his power. And none of them that trust in him
shall be desolate. Faith is the mark of the ransomed, and wherever it is
seen, though in the least and meanest of the saints, it ensures eternal
salvation. Believer, thou shalt never be deserted, forsaken, given up to ruin.
God, even thy God, is thy guardian and friend, and bliss is thine.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Title. Abimelech
was king of Gath, the same with Achish, 1Sa 21:20: who either had two names, or
this of Abimelech, as it should seem, was a common name to all the kings of the
Philistines (see Ge 20:2 26:8); as Pharaoh was to the Egyptian kings and Caesar
to the Roman emperors: the name signifies a father king, or my father
king, or a royal father; as kings should be the fathers of their
country: before him David changed his behaviour, his taste, sense, or
reason; he imitated a madman. John Gill.
Whole
Psalm. (This Psalm is alphabetical.) The Alphabetical Psalms, the psalmi
abcedarii, as the Latin fathers called them, are nine in number; and I
cannot help thinking it is a pity that, except in the single instance of the
hundred and nineteenth, no hint of their existence should have been suffered to
appear in our authorised version. I will not take it upon me to affirm, with
Ewald, that no version is faithful in which the acrostic is suppressed; but I
do think that the existence of such a remarkable style of composition ought to
be indicated in one way or another, and that some useful purposes are served by
its being actually reproduced in the translation. No doubt there are
difficulties in the way. The Hebrew alphabet differs widely from any of those
now employed in Europe. Besides differences of a more fundamental kind, the
Hebrew has only twenty-two letters, for our twenty-six; and of the twenty-two,
a considerable number have no fellows in ours. An exact reproduction of a
Hebrew acrostic in English version is therefore impossible. William Binnie,
D.D.
Whole
Psalm. Mr. Hapstone has endeavoured to imitate the alphabetical
character of this Psalm in his metrical version. The letter answering to F is
wanting, and the last stanza begins with the letter answering to R. One verse
of his translation may suffice—
"At
all times bless Jehovah's name will I;
His praise shall in my mouth be constantly:
Boast in Jehovah shall my soul henceforth;
Hear it, ye meek ones, and exult with mirth."
Verse
1. I will bless the Lord at all times. Mr. Bradford, martyr,
speaking of Queen Mary, at whose cruel mercy he then lay, said, If the queen be
pleased to release me, I will thank her; if she will imprison me, I will thank
her; if she will burn me, I will thank her, etc. So saith a believing soul: Let
God do with me what he will, I will be thankful. Samuel Clarks's
"Mirror."
Verse
1. Should the whole frame of nature be unhinged, and all outward
friends and supporters prove false and deceitful, our worldly hopes and schemes
be disappointed, and possessions torn from us, and the floods of sickness,
poverty, and disgrace overwhelm our soul with an impetuous tide of trouble; the
sincere lover of God, finding that none of these affects his portion and the
object of his panting desires, retires from them all to God his refuge and
hiding place, and there feels his Saviour incomparably better, and more than
equivalent to what the whole of the universe can ever offer, or rob him of; and
his tender mercies, unexhausted fulness, and great faithfulness, yield him consolation
and rest; and enable him, what time he is afraid, to put his trust in him. Thus
we find the holy psalmist expressing himself: I will bless the Lord at all
times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. William Dunlop.
Verse
1. S. Basil tells us that the praise of God, once rightly impressed
as a seal on the mind, though it may not always be carried out into action, yet
in real truth causes us perpetually to praise God. J. M. Neal's Commentary.
Verse
2. My soul shall make her boast in the Lord. Not like the
boasting of the Pharisee, so hateful in the eyes of God, so offensive in the
ears of the humble; for the humble can hear this boasting and be glad,
which they would never do if it were not conformable to the rules of humility.
Can any boasting be greater than to say, "I can do all things"? Yet
in this boasting there is humility when I add, "In him that strengtheneth
me." For though God likes not of boasting, yet he likes of this boasting,
which arrogates nothing to ourselves, but ascribes all to him. Sir Richard
Baker.
Verses
2-6. There is somewhat very striking and pleasing in the sudden
transitions, and the change of persons, that is observable in these few verses.
"My soul shall boast; ""The humble shall hear; " "I
sought the Lord; ""They looked to him; ""This poor man
cried." There is a force and elegance in the very unconnectedness of
the expressions, which, had they been more closely tied by the proper
particles, would have been in a great measure lost. Things thus separated from
each other, and yet accelerated, discover, as Longinus observes, the
earnestness and the vehemency of the inward working of the mind; and though it
may seem to interrupt, or disturb the sentence, yet quickens and enforces it. Samuel
Chandler, D.D.
Verse
3. Venema remarks that after the affair with Achish, we are told in
1Sa 22:1, "His brethren, and all his father's house went down to the cave
Adullam unto him, "and these, together with those who were in debt, and
discontented with Saul's government, formed a band of four hundred men. To
these his friends and comrades, he relates the story of his escape, and bids
them with united hearts and voices extol the Lord. C. H. S.
Verse
4. I sought the Lord, and he heard me. God expects to hear
from you before you can expect to hear from him. If you restrain prayer, it is
no wonder the mercy promised is retained. Meditation is like the lawyer's
studying the case in order to his pleading at the bar; when, therefore, thou
hast viewed the promise, and affected thy heart with the riches of it, then fly
thee to the throne of grace, and spread it before the Lord. William Gurnall.
Verse
4. He delivered me from all my fears. To have delivered me
from all my troubles had been a great favour, but a far greater to deliver me
from all my fears; for where that would but have freed me from present evil,
this secures me from evil to come; that now I enjoy not only tranquillity, but
security, a privilege only of the godly. The wicked may be free from trouble,
but can they be free from fear? No; God knows, though they be not in trouble
like other men, yet they live in more fear than other men. Guiltiness of mind,
or mind of the world, never suffers them to be secure: though they be free
sometimes from the fit of an ague, yet they are never without a grudging; and
(if I may use the expression of poets) though they feel not always the whip of
Tysiphone, yet they feel always her terrors; and, seeing the Lord hath done
this for me, hath delivered me from all my fears, have I not cause, just cause,
to magnify him, and exalt his name? Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
5. They looked unto him. The more we can think upon our Lord,
and the less upon ourselves, the better. Looking to him, as he is seated upon
the right hand of the throne of God, will keep our heads, and especially our
hearts, steady when going through the deep waters of affliction. Often have I
thought of this when crossing the water opposite the old place of Langholm. I
found, when I looked down on the water, I got dizzy; I therefore fixed my eyes
upon a steady object on the other side, and got comfortably through. David
Smith, 1792-1867.
Verse
6. This poor man cried. The reasons of crying are 1.
Want cannot blush. The pinching necessity of the saints is not tied to the law
of modesty. Hunger cannot be ashamed. "I mourn in my complaint, and make a
noise, "saith David Ps 55:2; and Hezekiah, "Like a crane or a
swallow, so did I chatter: I did mourn as a dove" Isa 38:14. "I went
mourning without the sun: I stood up, and I cried in the congregation" Job
30:28. 2. Though God hear prayer only as prayer offered in Christ, not because
very fervent; yet fervour is a heavenly ingredient in prayer. An arrow drawn
with full strength hath a speedier issue; therefore, the prayers of the saints
are expressed by crying in Scripture. "O my God, I cry in the
daytime, but thou hearest not" Ps 22:2. "At noon, will I pray, and
cry aloud" Ps 55:17. "In my distress I cried to the Lord" Ps
18:6. "Unto thee have I cried, O Lord" Ps 88:13. "Out of the
depths have I cried" Ps 130:1. "Out of the belly of hell cried
I" Jon 2:2. "Unto thee will I cry, O Lord my rock" Ps 28:1. Yea,
it goeth to somewhat more than crying: "I cry out of wrong, but I
am not heard" Job 19:7. "Also when I cry and shout, he shutteth out
my prayer" La 3:8. He who may teach us all to pray, sweet Jesus, "In
the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with
strong crying and tears" Heb 5:7; he prayed with war shouts. 3. And these
prayers are so prevalent, that God answereth them: This poor man cried, and
the Lord heard him, and saved him out of all his fears Ps 34:6. "My
cry came before him, even into his ears" Ps 18:6. The cry addeth
wings to the prayer, as a speedy post sent to court upon life and death:
"Our fathers cried unto thee, and were delivered" Ps 22:5. "The
righteous cry, and the Lord heareth" Ps 34:17. Samuel Rutherford.
Verse
7. The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear
him, and delivereth them. I will not rub the questions, whether these
angels can contract themselves, and whether they can subsist in a point, and so
stand together the better in so great a number, neither will I trouble myself
to examine whether they are in such and such a place in their substance,
or only in their virtue and operation. But this the godly man may
assure himself of, that whensoever he shall want their help, in spite of doors,
and locks, and bars, he may have it in a moment's warning. For there is no
impediment, either for want of power because they are spirits, or from want of
good will, both because it is their duty, and because they bear an affection to
him; not only rejoicing at his first conversion Lu 15:10, but, I dare
confidently affirm, always disposed with abundance of cheerfulness to do
anything for him. I cannot let pass some words I remember of Origen's to this
purpose, as I have them from his interpreter. He brings in the angels speaking
after this manner:—"If he (meaning the Son of God) went down, and went
down into a body, and was clothed with flesh, and endured its infirmities and
died for men, what do we stand still for? Come, let's all down from heaven
together." Zachary Bogan.
Verse
7. The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear
him. This is the first time that, in the psalter, we read of the ministrations
of angels. But many fathers rather take this passage of the "Angel of the
Great Counsel, "and gloriously to him it applies. J. M. Neale.
Verse
7. The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear
him, etc. By whom may be meant, either the uncreated Angel, the Lord Jesus
Christ, the Angel of God's presence, and of the covenant, the Captain of
salvation, the Leader and Commander of the people; and whose salvation is as
walls and bulwarks about them, or as an army surrounding them; or a created
angel may be intended, even a single one, which is sufficient to guard a
multitude of saints, since one could destroy at once such a vast number of
enemies, as in 2Ki 19:35; or one may be put for more, since they are an
innumerable company that are on the side of the Lord's people, and to whom they
are joined; and these may be said to encamp about them, because they are an
host or army (see Ge 32:1-2 Lu 2:13); and are the guardians of the saints, that
stand up for them and protect them, as well as minister to them. John Gill.
Verse
7. The angel of the Lord is represented in his twofold
character in this pair of Psalms, as an angel of mercy, and also as an angel of
judgment, Ps 35:6. This pair of Psalms (the thirty-fourth and thirty-fifth),
may in this respect be compared with the twelfth chapter of the Acts of the
Apostles, where the angel of the Lord is displayed as encamping about St.
Peter, and delivering him, and also as smiting the persecutor, Herod Agrippa. Christopher
Wordsworth, D.D.
Verse
7. Round about. In illustration of this it may be observed,
that according to D'Arvieux, it is the practice of the Arabs to pitch their
tents in a circular form; the prince being in the middle, and the Arabs about
him, but so as to leave a respectful distance between them. And Thevenot,
describing a Turkish encampment near Cairo, having particularly; noticed the
spaciousness, decorations, and conveniences of the Bashaw's tent, or pavilion,
adds, "Round the pale of his tent, within a pistol shot, were above two
hundred tents, pitched in such a manner that the doors of them all looked
towards the Bashaw's tent; and it ever is so, that they may have their eye
always upon their master's lodging, and be in readiness to assist him if he be
attacked." Richard Mant.
Verse
8. O taste and see that the Lord is good. Our senses help our
understandings; we cannot by the most rational discourse perceive what the
sweetness of honey is; taste it and you shall perceive it. "His
fruit was sweet to my taste." Dwell in the light of the Lord, and
let thy soul be always ravished with his love. Get out the marrow and the
fatness that thy portion yields thee. Let fools learn by beholding thy face how
dim their blazes are to the brightness of thy day. Richard Alleine, in
"Heaven Opened, "1665.
Verse
8. O taste and see, etc. It is not enough for thee to see it
afar off, and not have it, as Dives did; or to have it in thee, and not to
taste it, as Samson's lion had great store of honey in him, but tasted no
sweetness of it; but thou must as well have it as see it, and as well taste it
as have it. O taste and see, says he, "how sweet the Lord is;
"for so indeed Christ giveth his church not only a sight but
also "a taste" of his sweetness. A sight is where he
saith thus: "We will rise up early, and go into the vineyard, and see
whether the vine have budded forth the small grapes, and whether the
pomegranates flourish; "there is a sight of the vine. A taste
is where he says thus, "I will bring thee into the wine cellar, and cause
thee to drink spice wine, and new wine of the pomegranates; "there is a
taste of the wine. The church not only goes into the vineyard and sees
the wine, but also goes into the wine cellar, and tastes the wine. Thomas
Playfere.
Verse
8. Taste and see. There are some things, especially in the
depths of the religious life, which can only be understood by being
experienced, and which even then are incapable of being adequately embodied in
words. O taste and see that the Lord is good. The enjoyment must come
before the illumination; or rather the enjoyment is the illumination. There are
things that must be loved before we can know them to be worthy of our love;
things to be believed before we can understand them to be worthy of belief. And
even after this—after we are conscious of a distinct apprehension of some
spiritual truth, we can only, perhaps, answer, if required to explain it, in
the words of the philosopher to who the question was put, "What is
God?" "I know, if I am not asked." Thomas Binney's
"Sermons," 1869.
Verse
8. Taste and see. Be unwilling that all the good gifts of God
should be swallowed without taste, or maliciously forgotten, but use your
palate, know them, and consider them. D. H. Mollerus.
Verse
8. Heaven and earth are replete with the goodness of God. We omit to
open our mouths and eyes, on which account the psalmist desires us to taste
and see. Agustus F. Tholuck.
Verse
8. The taste and see invite, as it were, to a sumptuous
feast, which has long been ready; to a rich sight openly exposed to view. The
imperatives are in reality not oratory but persuasive. E. W. Hengstenberg.
Verse
8. All that the believer can attain of spiritual consolation in this
life is but a taste. David Dickson.
Verse
8.
O
taste the Lord, and see how sweet He is,
The man that trusts in him lives still in bliss.
—Sir John Davies, 1569-1626.
Verses
8-10. All these verses are beautiful representations of the fulness,
suitableness, completeness, and all sufficiency of God in Christ to answer all
the wants of his people. And is there not a vast elegance in the comparison
taken from the hunger and rapacity of the lion, even the impetuousness of the
young lion, to that of the patience and silent waiting of the faithful
believer? A life of faith will find food in everything, because it is all
founded in Christ. The young lions may, and will lack, because nothing will
supply their voracious appetites but that which is carnal. Robert Hawker.
Verse
10. The young lions do lack, and suffer hunger, The old lions
will have it for them, if it be to be had. But they that seek the Lord shall
not want any good thing. As they would feel no evil thing within, so they
shall want no good thing without. He that freely opens the upper, will never
wholly close the nether springs. There shall be no silver lacking in Benjamin's
sack, while Joseph has it to throw in. Grace is not such a beggarly visitant,
as will not pay its own way. When the best of beings is adored, the best of
blessings are enjoyed. William Secker.
Verse
10. People are apt to fancy that a wild beast's life must be happy—in
a brute's sense—and that the carnivorous and graminivorous creatures which have
never come under the dominion of mankind are better off than the domesticated
quadrupeds which buy their quieter and safer lives at the price of ministering
to the luxuries or necessities of their human lords. But the contrary is the
case: the career of a flesh eating animal must be wretched, even from the
tiger's or leopard's point of view. They must often suffer pangs of long
continued hunger, and when they find and kill food they frequently have to wage
desperate war for the enjoyment of their victim. The cry of almost every wild
beast is so melancholy and forlorn, that it impresses the traveller with
sadness more even than with fear. If the opportunity occurs for watching them
in the chase, they are seen to sneak and sniff about, far less like "kings
of the forest, "than poor, dejected, starving wretches, desperate upon the
subject of their next meal. They suffer horribly from diseases induced by foul
diet and long abstinence; and very few are found without scars in their
hide—the tokens of terrible combats. If they live to old age their lot is
piteous: their teeth are worn down, their claws are blunt, and in this state
numbers of them perish by starvation. Not one half of the wild animals die a
natural death; and their life, so far as can be observed, is a series of stern
privations, with desperate and bloody fights among themselves. Clipping from
"Daily Telegraph."
Verse
10. They that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing.
There shall be no want to such, and such shall want no good thing: so that he
must be such an one to whom the promise is made; and he must also be sure that
it is good for him which is promised. But oftentimes it is not good for
a man to abound with earthly blessings; as strong drink is not good for weak
brains. Yea, if anything be wanting to a good man, he may be sure it is not
good for him; and then better that he doth want it, than that he did enjoy it;
and what wise man will complain of the want of that, which if he had, would
prove more gainful than hurtful to him? As a sword to a madman, a knife to a
child, drink to them that have a fever or the dropsy. "No good thing will
God withhold, "etc., and therefore, not wants themselves, which to many
are also good, yea, very good things, as I could reckon up many. Want
sanctified is a notable means to bring to repentance, to work in us amendment
of life, it stirs up prayer, it weans from the love of the world, it keeps us
always prepared for the spiritual combat, discovers whether we be true
believers or hypocrites, prevents greater evils of sin and punishment to come;
it makes us humble, conformable to Christ our Head, increaseth our faith, our
joy, and thankfulness, our spiritual wisdom, and likewise our patience, as I
have largely shown in another treatise. Richard Young, in the "Poor's
Advocate," 1653.
Verse
10. I remember as I came through the country, that there was a poor
widow woman, whose husband fell at Bothwell: the bloody soldiers came to
plunder her house, telling her they would take all she had. "We will leave
thee nothing, "said they, "either to put in thee, or on thee."
"I care not," said she, "I will not want as long as God is in
the heavens." That was a believer indeed. Alexander Peden's Sermon,
1682.
Verse
10. Take a survey of heaven and earth and all things therein, and
whatsoever upon sure ground appears good, ask it confidently of Christ; his
love will not deny it. If it were good for you that there were no sin, no
devil, no affliction, no destruction, the love of Christ would instantly
abolish these. Nay, if the possession of all the kingdoms of the world were
absolutely good for any saint, the love of Christ would instantly crown him
monarch of them. David Clarkson.
Verse
10. (last clause). Part of his last afternoon was spent by
Columba, in transcribing the Psalms of David. Having come to that passage in
the thirty-fourth Psalm, where it is said, They that seek the Lord shall not
want any good thing, he said, "I have come to the end of a page, and I
will stop here, for the following Ps 34:11, "Come, ye children, hearken
unto me: I will teach you the fear of the Lord, "will better suit my
successor to transcribe than me. I will leave it, therefore, to Baithen."
As usual the bell was rung at midnight for prayers. Columba was the first to
hasten to church. On entering it soon after, Dermid found him on his knees in
prayer, but evidently dying. Raising him up in his arms, he supported his head on
his bosom. The brethren now entered. When they saw Columba in this dying
condition they wept aloud. Columba heard them. He opened his eyes and attempted
to speak, but his voice failed. He lifted up his hands as if to bless them,
immediately after which he breathed out his spirit. His countenance retained in
death the expression it wore in life, so that it seemed as if he had only
fallen asleep. "Story of Columba and his successors, "in the
Christian Treasury for 1848.
Verse
11. Come, ye children. Venema in substance remarks that David
in addressing his friends in the cave, called them his sons or children,
because he was about to be their teacher, and they his disciples; and again,
because they were young men in the flower of their age, and as sons, would be the
builders up of his house; and still more, because as their leader to whose
discipline and command they were subject, he had a right to address them as his
children. C. H. S.
Verse
11. Come, ye children, etc. You know your earthly parents,
aye, but labour to know your heavenly. You know the fathers of your flesh, aye,
but strive to know the Father of your spirits. You are expert it may be in
Horace's Odes, Virgil's Eclogues, Cicero's Orations; oh! but strive to get
understanding in David's Psalms, Solomon's Proverbs, and the other plain books
of Holy Writ. Manna was to be gathered in the morning. The orient pearl is
generated of the morning dew; aurora musis amica, the morning is a
friend to the muses. O "remember thy Creator, "know him in the
morning of thy childhood. When God had created the heavens and the earth, the
first thing he did was to adorn the world with light, and separate it from the
darkness. Happy is that child on whom the light of saving knowledge begins to
dawn early. God, in the law, required the firstborn, and the first fruits, so
he doth still our first days, to be offered to him. They are wisdom's words,
"They that seek me early shall find me." Pr 8:17. Where a rabbin
observeth a (n is added to the verb more than usual, which in numbering goeth
for fifty. With this note, that early seeking hath not only twenty, or thirty,
but fifty, nay, indeed, an hundred fold recompense attending on it. Nathaneal
Hardy.
Verse
11. Come, ye children. David in this latter part of the Psalm
undertakes to teach children; though a man of war and anointed to be king, he
did not think it below him: though now he had his head so full of cares, and
his hands of business, yet he could find heart and time to give good counsel to
young people from his own experience. Matthew Henry.
Verse
11. Observe. I. What he expects from them, Hearken unto me,
leave your play, lay by your toys, and hear what I have to say to you; not only
give me the hearing, but observe and obey me. II. What he undertakes to teach
them, The fear of the Lord, inclusive of all the duties of religion.
David was a famous musician, a statesman, a soldier, but he doth not say to his
children, I will teach you to play upon the harp, or to handle the sword or
spear, or draw the bow, or I will teach you the maxims of state policy, but I
will teach you the fear of the Lord, which is better than all arts and
sciences, better than all burnt offerings and sacrifices. That is it which we
should be solicitous both to learn ourselves, and to teach our children. Matthew
Henry.
Verse
11. I will teach you the fear of the Lord. I shall introduce
the translation and paraphrase from my old Psalter; and the
rather because I believe there is a reference to that very improper and unholy
method of teaching youth the system of heathen mythology before they are taught
one sound lesson of true divinity, till at last their minds are imbued
with heathenism and the vicious conduct of gods, goddesses, and heroes
(here very properly called tyrants), becomes the model of their own; and they
are as heathenish without as they are heathenish within.
Translation. Cummes sones lere me: dred of Lard I sal you lere. Paraphrase.
"Cummes, with trauth and luf: sones, qwam I gette in haly lere: beres me.
With eres of hert. I sal lere you, noght the fabyls of poets; na the storys of
tryauntz; bot the dred of oure Larde, that wyl bring you til the felaghschippe
of aungels; and thar in is lyfe." I need not paraphrase this paraphrase,
as it is plain enough. Adam Clarke.
Verse
11. The fear of the Lord. The Master of Sentences dwells, from
this verse, on the four kinds of fear: mundane, servile, initial, filial. Mundane,
when we fear to commit sin, simply lest we should lose some worldly advantage
or incur some worldly inconvenience. Servile, when we fear to commit sin
simply because of hell torments due to it. Initial, when we fear to
commit it, lest we should lose the happiness of heaven. Filial, when we
fear, only, and entirely because we dread to offend that God whom we love with
all our hearts. I will teach. Whence notice, that this fear is not a
thing to be learnt all at once; it needs careful study and a good master. S.
Chrysostom compares the Psalmist's school here with the resort of heathen
students to the academy; and S. Ephraem, referring to this passage, calls the
fear of God itself the school of the mind. As if he proclaimed, "says S.
Lawrence Justiniani, "I will teach you, not the courses of the stars, not
the nature of things, not the secrets of the heavens, but the fear of the
Lord." The knowledge of such matters, without fear, puffs up; but the
fear of the Lord, without any such knowledge, can save." "Here,
"says Cassiodorus, "is not fear to be feared, but to be loved. Human
fear is full of bitterness; divine fear of sweetness: the one drives to
slavery, the other allures to liberty; the one dreads the prison of Gehenna,
the other opens the kingdom of heaven." J. M. Neale.
Verse
11. The fear of the Lord. Let this, therefore, good children,
be your principal care and study: for what shall it avail you to be cunning in
Tully, Virgil, Homer, and other profane writers, if you be unskilful in God's
book? to have learned Greek and Latin, if you learn not withal the language of
Canaan? to have your speech agreeable to the rules of Priscian, of Lily, if
your lives and courses be not consonant to the rules and laws of Christianity?
to have knowledge of the creatures when you are ignorant of the Creator? to
have learned that whereby you may live a while here, and neglect that whereby
you may live eternally hereafter? Learn to fear God, to serve God, and then God
will bless you; for "He will bless them that fear him, both small and
great." Ps 115:13. Thomas Gataker's "David's Instructor, "1637.
Verse
12. It is no great matter to live long, or always, but to live
happily. That loyal prayer, "Let the king live" (in every language)
imports a prosperous state. When the psalmist saith, "Who is the man that
would see life?" he explains himself presently after by "good
days." Vivere among the Latins is sometimes as much as valere,
to live is as much as to be well; and upon this account it is that, on the one
hand, the Scripture calls the state of the damned an eternal death, because
their life is only a continuance in misery; so on the other hand the state of
the blessed is an eternal life, because it is a perpetual abode in felicity. Nathanael
Hardy.
Verse
12. The benefit of life is not in the length, but in the use of it.
He sometimes lives the least that lives the longest. Seneca.
Verse
13. Keep thy tongue from evil, etc. Ficinus, after his tracts,
De sanitate tuenda, of keeping good health; and another, of
recovering health; and a third, of prolonging life; because all will
not do, wisely addeth a fourth, of laying hold on eternal life; which
cannot be done but by mortifying this earthly member, a loose and lewd tongue.
"For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be
condemned, "saith the Judge himself. Mt 12:37. Compare Ge 49:21, with De
33:23, and it will appear that good words ingratiate with God and man. John
Trapp.
Verse
13. And thy lips from speaking guile. Perhaps David is warning
us that we speak no guile, reflects upon his own sin in changing his behaviour.
They that truly repent of what they have done amiss, will warn others to take
heed in doing likewise. Matthew Henry.
Verse
14. Depart from evil, etc. This denotes that evil is near to
men; it keeps close to them, and should be declined and shunned: and it regards
all sorts of evil; evil men and their evil company; evil things, evil words and
works, and all appearance of evil; and the fear of the Lord shows itself in a
hatred of it, and a departure from it. Pr 8:13 16:6. John Gill.
Verse
14. Depart from evil. The other precepts are the duty of
works, and they are four, where the precepts of words were but two; because we
must be more in works than in words; and they are all affirmative, for it is
against the nature of a work to be in the negative; for so working should be no
better than idleness: the two former are general, as general as good and evil;
that if we meet with anything that is evil, our part is to depart, for
there is no demurring upon evil. Sir Richard Baker.
Verse
14. Do good. Negative goodness is not sufficient to entitle us
to heaven. There are some in the world whose religion runs all upon negatives;
they are not drunkards, they are not swearers, and for this they do bless
themselves. See how the Pharisee vapours Lu 18:11, "God, I thank thee that
I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, "etc. Alas!
the not being scandalous will no more make a Christian than a cypher will make
a sum. We are bid, not only to cease from evil, but to do good.
It will be a poor plea at last—Lord, I kept myself from being spotted with
gross sin: I did no hurt. But what good is there in thee? It is not enough for
the servant of the vineyard that he doth no hurt there, he doth not break the
trees, or destroy the hedges; if he doth not work in the vineyard he loseth his
pay. It is not enough for us to say at the last day, we have done no hurt, we
have lived in no gross sin; but what good have we done in the vineyard? Where
is the grace we have gotten? If we cannot show this, we shall lose our pay, and
miss of salvation. Thomas Watson.
Verse
14. Seek peace, and pursue it. Yea, do well, and thou shalt
not need to pursue it; peace will find thee without seeking. Augustine says, Fiat
justitia, et habebis pacem—Live righteously, and live peaceably. Quietness
shall find out righteousness wheresoever he lodgeth. But she abhorreth the
house of evil. Peace will not dine where grace hath not first broken her fast.
Let us embrace godliness, and "the peace of God, that passeth all
understanding, shall preserve our hearts and minds in Jesus Christ." Php
4:7. Thomas Adams.
Verse
14. See peace and pursue it. The most desirable things are not
the easiest to be obtained. What is more lovely to the imagination than the
tranquillity of peace? But this great blessing does not voluntarily present
itself: it must be sought. Even when sought it often eludes the grasp:
it flies away, and must be pursued.
1.
The man of a peaceable carriage must be cautious not to give offence when
needless, or, when it may innocently be spared.
2.
Another part of the peaceable man's character is, not to take offence;
especially in small matters, which are hardly worth a wise man's notice. 3. If
any needless offence has been either given or taken, we must endeavour to put a
stop to it as soon as may be. If a difference is already begun, stifle it in
the birth, and suffer it not to proceed farther. Condensed from Dr.
Waterland's Sermon, in J. R. Pitman's Course of Sermons on the Psalms,
1846.
Verse
15. His ears are open unto their cry. The word
"open" is not in the original, but the meaning is that the ear of God
is propense, and in a leaning kind of posture, towards the cries of the
righteous; the word may here be taken emphatically, as many times in Scripture
it is, for some worthy, choice, and excellent strain of righteousness. Those
who are worthy and righteous indeed, the ear of God, I say, is propense, and
leans and hangs towards them and their prayers, according to that of So 2:14,
"Let me hear thy voice, for sweet is thy voice." There is a kind of
naturalness and pleasantness between the ear of God and the prayers, and
petitions, and cries of such a righteous man. Joh 15:7. John Goodwin.
Verse
15. His ears are open unto their cry. Hebrew, Are to their
cry, or as St. Peter hath it, His ears are into their prayers 1Pe
3:12; to show that though their prayers are so faint and feeble that they
cannot enter into the ears of the Lord of Hosts, yet that he will bow down and
incline his ears unto, nay, into their prayers, their breathings.
La 3:56. John Trapp.
Verses
15-17. The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and his ears are
open unto their cry. Strangers may howl, and we take little notice what
they ail—it is a venture whether we relieve them or no; but if our children
cry, being in great distress, we hasten to their help. Our relation to God may
well strengthen our hope that our desires shall be heard. He that can cry, Abba,
Father, may be confident of the success of his suit, and that God will deal
with him as a son. George Swinnock.
Verse
18. The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart. God
is nigh unto them (with reverence be it spoken), God takes so much
complacency in the company of such, that he cannot endure to have them far from
him; he must have them always under his eyes; as for these broken ones,
he will be sure not to leave them long, nor go far from them, but will be ready
at hand to set their bones, to bind up their wounds to keep them from
festering. It may be he may put them to much pain before he brings the cure to
perfection, but it is to prevent future aches. He is a foolish cruel
chirurgeon, who, for fear of putting his patient to some pain, never searcheth
the wound, but skins it over presently; and a wise man will not think him
unmerciful that puts him to exquisite pain, so he may make a thorough cure of
it. Thus God doth by his patients sometimes, when the nature of their distemper
calls for it. But, however, he will be sure not to be out of the way when they
want him most. It is possible that they may look upon themselves as forgotten
by God, they may not know their Physician when he is by them, and they may take
their Friend for an enemy; they may think God far off when he is near; but when
their eyes are opened and their distemper is pretty well worn off, they will,
with shame and thankfulness, acknowledge their error; nay, they do from their
souls confess, that they do not deserve the least look of kindness from God,
but to be counted strangers and enemies; but God will let them know that he
loves to act like himself, that is, like a God of love, mercy, and goodness; and
that they are the persons that he hath set his heart upon; he will have them in
his bosom, never leave them nor forsake them; and though these contrite ones
many times look upon themselves as lost, yet God will save them, and they shall
sing a song of thankfulness amongst his delivered ones. James Janeway.
Verse
18. The Lord is nigh unto them, etc. Consider the ADVANTAGES
of this broken heart; as I. A broken heart is acceptable and wellpleasing to
God, "A broken and a contrite heart, O God thou wilt not despise." Ps
51:17. II. It makes up many defects in your service and duties, "The
sacrifices of God are a broken spirit." Ps 51:17. III. It makes the soul a
fit receptacle for God to dwell in, "For thus saith the high and lofty One
that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is holy; I dwell in the high and holy
place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the
spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones." Isa
57:15. IV. It brings God near to men, "The Lord is nigh unto them that
are of a broken heart, and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit." Ps
34:18. And V. It lays you open to Christ's sweet healing, "I will bind up
that which was broken, and will strengthen that which was sick." Eze
34:16. And, oh, who would not be broken that they might find Christ's soft hand
healing them, and find the proof of that sweet word, "For I will restore
health unto thee, and I will heal thee of thy wounds, saith the Lord." Jer
30:17. Yea, VI. It puts you in the right road to heaven, where all your wounds
and bruises will be cured; for there is a tree Re 22:2 the leaves whereof are
for the healing of the nations; there is no complaining there of wounds or
bruises, but all are perfectly healed. John Spalding, in "Synaxis
Sacra, or a Collection of Sermons, " etc., 1703.
Verse
18. "The Lord is nigh unto them, "etc. We are apt to
overlook men, in proportion as they are humbled beneath us; God regards them in
that proportion. Vessels of honour are made of that clay which is "broken"
into the smallest parts. George Horne.
Verse
18. Broken heart...contrite spirit. Oh, this is the misery of
all miseries which ministers have most cause to complain of, that men are not
fitted enough for Jesus Christ, they are not lost enough in themselves for a
Saviour. "In thee the fatherless findeth mercy." Ho 14:3. Were we
more hopeless, helpless, and fatherless, we should find more mercy from the
hand of Jesus Christ. O that God would awaken and shake some sin sleeping soul
this day! O that this doctrine thus opened might be as a thunderbolt to let
some of you see the inside of yourselves! O poor sinner, thou hast an
unsupportable burden of sin and guilt lying on thy soul, ready to press thee
down to hell, and yet you feel it not; thou hast the wrath of God hanging over
thy head by the twined thread of a short life, which it may be thou mayest not
be free from one year, nay, perhaps not one month, but thou seest it not; if
thou didst but see it, then thou wouldest cry out as he did in Bosworth field, "A
horse! a horse! a kingdom for a horse!" So thou wouldest cry out, None but
Christ! nothing but Christ! ten thousand worlds for Christ! James Nalton,
1664.
Verse
18. A contrite spirit. (xwr-yakd), dakkeey ruach,
"the beaten out spirit." In both words the hammer is
necessarily implied; in breaking to pieces the ore first, and then plating out
the metal when it has been separated from the ore. This will call to the
reader's remembrance Jer 23:29, "Is not my word like as a fire?"
saith the Lord: and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in
pieces? The breaking to shivers, and the beating out are
metaphorical expressions: so are the hammer and the rock. What
the large hammer struck on a rock by a powerful hand would do, so does
the word of the Lord when struck on the sinner's heart by the power of the Holy
Spirit. The broken heart, and the contrite spirit, are two
essential characteristics of true repentance. Adam Clarke.
Verse
19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous, etc. Be our
troubles many in number, strange in nature, heavy in measure; yet God's mercies
are more numerous, his wisdom more wondrous, his power more miraculous; he will
deliver us out of all. Thomas Adams.
Verse
19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous, etc. When David
did behold his trouble, like the host of the Aramites 2Ki 6:16, he looked back
unto God like Elisha, and spied one with him stronger than all against him.
Therefore, respecting his afflictions he crieth, Many are the troubles of
the righteous; respecting the promise he says, The Lord delivereth him
out of all. Thus, by his own foot, David measures the condition of the
righteous, and saith, Many are the troubles of the righteous; and then,
by his own cure, he showeth how they should be healed, saying, The Lord will
deliver him out of them all. ...The lawyer can deliver his client but from
strife, the physician can deliver his patient but from sickness, the master can
deliver his servant but from bondage, but the Lord delivereth us from all.
As when Moses came to deliver the Israelites, he would not leave a hoof behind
him, so when the Lord cometh to deliver the righteous he will not leave a
trouble behind him. He who saith, "I put away all thine iniquities,"
will also say, "I put away all thine infirmities." Henry Smith.
Verse
20. He keepeth all his bones, which were very many. Perhaps
(saith Abenezra here), David had been scourged by the Philistines, but his
bones were not broken, nor were our Saviour's. Joh 19:36. John Trapp.
Verse
20. All his bones. Muis observes, "It says not his body,
for this he permits to be afflicted; but it signifies that the evils of the
godly are light, and scarcely penetrate to the bone; "but Geier observes,
"This is too subtle, rather the bone reminds us of the essential parts of
the body, by whose injury the whole frame is endangered. It is a proverbial
form of speech like that in Mt 10:30, `The very hairs of your head are all
numbered, ' expressing the remarkable defence afforded to the righteous."
Genebrard says, "The bones are put by synecdoche for all the
members." From Poli Synopsis.
Verse
20. The passover lamb, of which not a bone was broken, prefigured
Jesus as one, "not a bone of whose body should be broken; " and yet,
at the same time, it prefigured the complete keeping and safety of Christ's
body, the church; as it is written, He keepeth all his bones; not one of
them is broken. Andrew A. Bonar's Commentary on Leviticus.
Verse
20. Christ's bones were in themselves breakable, but could not
actually be broken by all the violence in the world, because God had fore
decreed, a bone of him shall not be broken. So we confess God's children
mortal; but all the power of devil or man may not, must not, cannot, kill them
before their conversion, according to God's election of them to life, which
must be fully accomplished. Thomas Fuller.
Verse
20. Observe as a point of resemblance between this and the following
Psalm, the mention of the bones here and in Ps 35:10. C. Wordsworth.
Verse
21. Evil. Afflictions though in the plural, prove not ruinous
to the righteous, for the Lord delivers him out of them all, whereas evil
in the singular slays the wicked, to signify the difference of God's
economy towards righteous and wicked men. The former is permitted to fall into
many pressures, the latter is not so frequently exercised with them, yet the
many that befall the one do no hurt, but work good for him, whereas the few
that befall the wicked, or perhaps the one singular affliction of his
life is the utter ruin of him. Henry Hammond.
Verse
21. Conscience self the culprit tortures, gnawing him with pangs
unknown; For that now amendment's season is for ever past and gone, And that
late repentance findeth pardon none for all her moan. S. Peter Damiano,
988-1072.
Verse
21. Shall be desolate. In the margin it is, shall be
guilty. And this is the proper meaning of the original word, (wmvay). They
are guilty, and liable to punishment. Thus the word is frequently rendered in
our version (see Le 4:13,22); and generally includes it in the idea of guilt,
and the punishment incurred by it. Samuel Chandler, D.D.
Verse
22. The promises of God to his church, and his threatenings of sin
recorded in the living book of his word, are not antiquate; no age shall ever
superannuate them, or put them out of full force and virtue. What if good
persons and good causes do suffer oppression? The poet is a divine in that
case—
Informes
hiemes reducit
Jupiter; idem
Summovet. Non si male nunc, et olim
Sic erit.
After
foul weather comes fair; though it be ill with us now, it will not be always.
What if enemies of religion and moths of commonwealth do flourish and prosper,
and have all things at will, let it not trouble David and Job; both of them saw
as fair a sunshine shut up in a dark cloud, and a world of foul weather
following. Edward Marbury.
Verse
22. Satan cannot tempt longer than God shall give him leave; and he
will never suffer thee to be tempted above measure, but will give a good issue
unto the temptation. Thou art called to fight under the banner of Christ Jesus,
and in the name of the Lord thou shalt be enabled to do valiantly and overcome.
If Satan continue his assaults, "God's grace is sufficient for thee."
2Co 12:9. If thy strength be clean gone, God's power shall be magnified the
more in thee, and he hath brought thee low that thou mayest not trust in
thyself, but in the living Lord, and that the whole praise of the victory might
be ascribed unto him. If thy strength did remain, it was not to be leaned unto;
and now it is decayed and gone, there is no cause of fear, for the Lord will be
thy stay. In the most difficult assaults and tedious encounters, we are
exhorted to "be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might."
Be of good courage, and God will grant thee an easy, a joyful victory. Satan's
drift in tempting is to turmoil, dishearten, and perplex with fears, and drive
into despair; and if thou take heart to rest quietly upon God's grace, and fly
unto his name, thou shalt put him to flight, thou hast already got the day.
Wait but awhile, and these dark mists and terrible storms shall be dispersed.
By these temptations the Lord hath taught thee to see by weakness, and the
malice of Satan; to deny thine own wisdom and prize his favour, lightly to
esteem all things here below, and highly to value mercy reaching to the pardon
of sin, and heavenly communion and fellowship with God. And if this bitter
potion hath wrought so kindly for thy spiritual good, why shouldest thou be
dismayed? Trust in the Lord, be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thee. The
Lord redeemeth the soul of his servants: and none of them that trust in him
shall be desolate, John Ball.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. Firm resolution, serious difficulties in carrying it out, helps
for its performance, excellent consequences of so doing. Six questions.—Who?
"I." What? "Will bless." Whom? "The
Lord." When? "At all times." How? Why?
Verse
1. Direction for making a heaven below.
Verse
2. The commendable boaster and his gratified audience. We may boast
of the Lord, in himself, his manifestations of himself, his relationship to us,
our interest in him, our expectations from him, etc. The duty of believers to
relate their experience for the benefit of others.
Verse
3. Invitation to united praise.
Verse
3. Magnifying—or making great the work of God, a noble
exercise.
Verse
4. Confessions of a ransomed soul. Simple, honouring to God,
exclude merit, and encourage others to seek also.
Verse
4. Four stages, "fears, ""sought,
""heard, ""delivered."
Verse
5. The power of a faith look.
Verse
6.
1.
The poor man's heritage, "troubles."
2. The poor man's friend.
3. The poor man's cry.
4. The poor man's salvation.
Verse
6. The poor man's wealth.
The
position of prayer in the economy of grace, or the natural history of mercy in
the soul.
Verse
7. Castra angelorum, salvatio bonorum.
Verse
7. The ministry of angels. In what sense Jesus is "The angel of
the Lord."
Verse
8. Experience the only true test of religious truth.
Verse
8. Taste. The sanctified palate, the recherche
provision, the gratified verdict, the celestial host.
Verse
9. The blest estate of a God fearing man.
Verse
9. Fear expelling fear. Similia similibus curantur.
Verse
10. Lions lacking, but the children satisfied. See "Spurgeon's
Sermons, "No. 65.
1.
Description of a true Christian, "seek the Lord."
2. The promise set forth by a contract.
3. The promise fulfilled.
Verse
10. What is a good thing?
Verse
11. A royal teacher, his youthful disciples, his mode of instruction,
"Come; "his choice subject.
Verse
11. Sunday school work.
Verses
12-14. How to make the best of both worlds.
Verse
13. Sins of the tongue—their mischief, their cause, and their cure.
Verse
14. (first clause). The relation between the negative and
positive virtues.
Verse
14. (second clause). The royal hunt. The game, the
difficulties of the chase, the hunters, their methods, and their rewards.
Verse
15. Our observant God. Eyes and ears both set on us.
Verse
16. The evil man checkmated in life, and forgotten in death.
Verse
17. Afflictions and their threefold blessing.
1.
They make us pray.
2.
They bring us the Lord's hearing ear.
3.
They afford room for joyful experience of deliverance.
Verse
18. The nearness of God to broken hearts, and the certainty of their
salvation.
Verse
19. Black and white, or bane and antidote. Special people, special
trials, special deliverances, special faith as a duty.
Verse
20. The real safety of a believer when in great perils. His soul, his
spiritual life, his faith, hope, love, etc.; his interest in Jesus, his
adoption, justification, these all kept.
Verse
21. Wickedness, its own executioner, illustrated by scriptural cases,
by history, by the lost in hell. Lessons from the solemn fact. The forlorn
condition of a man of malicious spirit.
Verses
21-22. Who shall and who shall not be desolate.
Verse
22. Redemption in its various meanings; faith in its
universal preservation; the Lord in his unrivalled glory in the work of
grace.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》