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Psalm Thirty-six
Psalm 36
Chapter Contents
The bad state of the wicked. (1-4) The goodness of God.
(5-12)
Commentary on Psalm 36:1-4
(Read Psalm 36:1-4)
From this psalm our hearts should be duly affected with
hatred of sin, and seek satisfaction in God's loving-kindness. Here is the root
of bitterness, from which all the wickedness of wicked men comes. It takes rise
from contempt of God, and the want of due regard to him. Also from the deceit
they put upon their own souls. Let us daily beg of God to preserve us from
self-flattery. Sin is very hurtful to the sinner himself, and therefore ought
to be hateful; but it is not so. It is no marvel, if those that deceive
themselves, seek to deceive all mankind; to whom will they be true, who are
false to their own souls? It is bad to do mischief, but worse to devise it, to
do it with plot and management. If we willingly banish holy meditations in our
solitary hours, Satan will soon occupy our minds with sinful imaginations.
Hardened sinners stand to what they have done, as though they could justify it
before God himself.
Commentary on Psalm 36:5-12
(Read Psalm 36:5-12)
Men may shut up their compassion, yet, with God we shall
find mercy. This is great comfort to all believers, plainly to be seen, and not
to be taken away. God does all wisely and well; but what he does we know not
now, it is time enough to know hereafter. God's loving-kindness is precious to
the saints. They put themselves under his protection, and then are safe and
easy. Gracious souls, though still desiring more of God, never desire more than
God. The gifts of Providence so far satisfy them, that they are content with
such things as they have. The benefit of holy ordinances is sweet to a
sanctified soul, and strengthening to the spiritual and Divine life. But full
satisfaction is reserved for the future state. Their joys shall be constant.
God not only works in them a gracious desire for these pleasures, but by his
Spirit fills their souls with joy and peace in believing. He quickens whom he
will; and whoever will, may come, and take from him of the waters of life
freely. May we know, and love, and uprightly serve the Lord; then no proud
enemy, on earth or from hell, shall separate us from his love. Faith calleth
things that are not, as though they were. It carries us forward to the end of
time; it shows us the Lord, on his throne of judgment; the empire of sin fallen
to rise no more.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 36
Verse 1
[1] The
transgression of the wicked saith within my heart, that there is no fear of God
before his eyes.
No fear —
When I consider the manifold transgressions of ungodly men, I conclude within
myself, that they have cast off all fear of the Divine majesty.
Verse 2
[2] For he flattereth himself in his own eyes, until his iniquity be found to
be hateful.
Flattereth — He
deceiveth himself with vain persuasions, that God does not mind his sins, or
will not punish them.
Found —
Punish, as the same phrase is used, Numbers 32:23.
Verse 3
[3] The
words of his mouth are iniquity and deceit: he hath left off to be wise, and to
do good.
Left off —
Once he had some degrees of wisdom, but now he is become an open apostate.
Verse 4
[4] He
deviseth mischief upon his bed; he setteth himself in a way that is not good;
he abhorreth not evil.
Deviseth —
Freely, from his own inclination, when none are present to provoke him to it.
Verse 5
[5] Thy mercy, O LORD, is in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto
the clouds.
Thy mercy —
Mine enemies are cruel and perfidious, but thou art infinite in mercy, and
faithfulness.
Heavens — Is
infinite and incomprehensible.
Faithfulness —
The truth both of thy threatenings against thine enemies, and of thy promises
made to good men.
The clouds — Is
far above our reach, greater and higher than we can apprehend.
Verse 6
[6] Thy
righteousness is like the great mountains; thy judgments are a great deep: O
LORD, thou preservest man and beast.
Mountains —
Stedfast and unmoveable: eminent and conspicuous to all men.
Judgments —
The executions of thy counsels.
Deep —
Unsearchable, as the ocean.
Man —
The worst of men; yea, the brute-beasts have experience of thy care and
kindness.
Verse 7
[7] How
excellent is thy lovingkindness, O God! therefore the children of men put their
trust under the shadow of thy wings.
Loving-kindness —
Though all thine attributes be excellent, yet, above all, thy mercy is most
excellent, or precious and amiable.
Verse 8
[8] They
shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt
make them drink of the river of thy pleasures.
Satisfied —
Who trust in thee, as he now said.
Fatness —
With those delightful provisions, which thou hast prepared for them in heaven.
The river —
Which denotes both their plenty, and their perpetuity.
Verse 9
[9] For
with thee is the fountain of life: in thy light shall we see light.
Life — It
is in God as in a fountain, and from him is derived to us.
But — Of
that glorious and blessed, and endless life, which alone is worthy of the name.
Light — In
the light of thy glorious presence, which shall be fully manifested, when we
see thee face to face.
Light —
Joy and comfort, and happiness: the word light is elegantly repeated in another
signification; in the former clause it is light discovering, in this light,
discovered or enjoyed.
Verse 11
[11] Let
not the foot of pride come against me, and let not the hand of the wicked
remove me.
The foot — Of
my proud and insolent enemies.
Come — So
as to overthrow me.
Verse 12
[12]
There are the workers of iniquity fallen: they are cast down, and shall not be
able to rise.
There — He
seems as it were to point at the place, as if it were already done.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
TITLE. To the Chief
Musician, He who had the leadership of the Temple service was charged with the
use of this song in public worship. What is everybody's business is never done.
It was well to have one person specially to attend to the service of song in
the house of the Lord. Of David the servant of the Lord. This would seem to
indicate that the Psalm peculiarly befits one who esteems it an honour to be
called Jehovah's servant. It is THE SONG OF HAPPY SERVICE; such a one as all
may join in who bear the easy yoke of Jesus. The wicked are contrasted with the
righteous, and the great Lord of devout men is heartily extolled; thus
obedience to so good a Master is indirectly insisted on, and rebellion against
him is plainly condemned.
DIVISION. From Ps 36:1-4
David describes the rebellious: in Ps 36:5-9 he extols the various attributes
of the Lord; in Ps 36:10-11 he addresses the Lord in prayer, and in the last
verse his faith sees in vision the overthrow of all the workers of iniquity.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. The transgression of the wicked. His daring and wanton
sin; his breaking the bounds of law and justice. Saith within my heart, that
there is no fear of God before his eyes. Men's sins have a voice to godly
ears. They are the outer index of an inner evil. It is clear that men who dare
to sin constantly and presumptuously cannot respect the great Judge of all.
Despite the professions of unrighteous men, when we see their unhallowed
actions our heart is driven to the conclusion that they have no religion
whatever. Unholiness is clear evidence of ungodliness. Wickedness is the fruit
of an atheistic root. This may be made clear to the candid head by cogent
reasoning, but it is clear already and intuitively to the pious heart. If God
be everywhere, and I fear him, how can I dare to break his laws in his very
presence? He must be a desperate traitor who will rebel in the monarch's own
halls. Whatever theoretical opinions bad men may avow, they can only be classed
with atheists, since they are such practically. Those eyes which have no fear
of God before them now, shall have the terrors of hell before them for ever.
Verse
2. For. Here is the argument to prove the proposition laid
down in the former verse. David here runs over the process of reasoning by
which he had become convinced that wicked men have no proper idea of God or
respect for him. God fearing men see their sins and bewail them, where the
reverse is the case we may be sure there is no fear of God. He flattereth
himself in his own eyes. He counts himself a fine fellow, worthy of great
respect. He quiets his conscience, and so deceives his own judgment as to
reckon himself a pattern of excellence; if not for morality, yet for having
sense enough not to be enslaved by rules which are bonds to others. He is the
free thinker, the man of strong mind, the hater of cant, the philosopher; and
the servants of God are, in his esteem, mean spirited and narrow minded. Of all
flatteries this is the most absurd and dangerous. Even the silliest bird will
not set traps for itself; the most pettifogging attorney will not cheat
himself. To smooth over one's own conduct to one's conscience (which is the
meaning of the Hebrew) is to smooth one's own path to hell. The descent to
eternal ruin is easy enough, without making a glissade of it, as self flatters
do. Until his iniquity be found to be hateful. At length he is found out
and detested, despite his self conceit. Rottenness smells sooner or later too
strong to be concealed. There is a time when the leprosy cannot be hidden. At
last the old house can no longer be propped up, and falls about the tenant's
ears: so there is a limit to a man's self gratulation; he is found out amid
general scorn, and can no longer keep up the farce which he played so well. If
this happens not in this life, the hand of death will let light in upon the
coveted character, and expose the sinner to shame and contempt. The self
flattering process plainly proves the atheism of sinners, since the bare
reflection that God sees them would render such self flatteries extremely
difficult, if not impossible. Belief in God, like light reveals, and then our
sin and evil are perceived; but wicked men are in the dark, for they cannot see
what is so clearly within them and around them that it stares them in the face.
Verse
3. The words of his mouth are iniquity and deceit. This pair
of hell dogs generally hunt together, and what one does not catch the other
will; if iniquity cannot win by oppression, deceit will gain by chicanery. When
the heart is so corrupt as to flatter itself, the tongue follows suit. The open
sepulchre of the throat reveals the foulness of the inner nature. God fearing
men make a conscience of their words, and if they sin through infirmity they do
not invent excuses, or go about to boast of their wickedness: but because
wicked men think little of evil and artful speeches, we may be clear that God
rules not in their souls. The original by declaring that the words of the
wicked are falsehood and deceit is peculiarly strong; as if they were not only
false in quality, but actual falseness itself. He hath left off to be wise,
and to do good. From the good way he has altogether gone aside. Men who
fear God proceed from strength to strength in the right path, but godless men
soon forsake what little good they once knew. How could men apostatise if they
had respect unto the supreme Judge? Is it not because they grow more and more
forgetful of God, that in due season they relinquish even that hypocritical
reverence of him which in former days they maintained in order to flatter their
souls?
Verse
4. He deviseth mischief upon his bed. His place of rest
becomes the place for plotting. His bed is a hot bed for poisonous weeds. God
fearing men meditate upon God and his service; but when men turn all their
thoughts and inventive faculties towards evil, their godlessness is proved to a
demonstration. He hath the devil for his bed fellow who lies abed and schemes
how to sin. God is far from him. He setteth himself in a way that is not
good. When he gets up he resolutely and persistently pursues the mischief
which he planned. The worst of ways he prefers for his walking, for he has
taught his heart to love filthiness, having accustomed himself to revel in it
in imagination. He abhorreth not evil. So far from having a contempt and
abhorrence for evil, he even rejoices in it, and patronises it. He never hates
a wrong thing because it is wrong, but he meditates on it, defends it, and
practises it. What a portrait of a graceless man these few verses afford us!
His jauntiness of conscience, his licentiousness of speech, his intentness upon
wrong doing, his deliberate and continued preference of iniquity, and withal
his atheistic heart, are all photographed to the life. Lord, save us from being
such.
Verses
5-9. From the baseness of the wicked the psalmist turns his
contemplation to the glory of God. Contrasts are impressive.
Verse
5. Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens. Like the ethereal
blue, it encompasses the whole earth, smiling upon universal nature, acting as
a canopy for all the creatures of earth, surmounting the loftiest peaks of
human provocations, and rising high above the mists of mortal transgression.
Clear sky is evermore above, and mercy calmly smiles above the din and smoke of
this poor world. Darkness and clouds are but of earth's lower atmospheres: the
heavens are evermore serene, and bright with innumerable stars. Divine mercy
abides in its vastness of expanse, and matchless patience, all unaltered by the
rebellions of man. When we can measure the heavens, then shall we bound the
mercy of the Lord. Towards his own servants especially, in the salvation of the
Lord Jesus, he has displayed grace higher than the heaven of heavens, and wider
than the universe. O that there atheist could but see this, how earnestly would
he long to become a servant of Jehovah! Thy faithfulness reacheth unto the
clouds. Far, far above all comprehension is the truth and faithfulness of
God. He never fails, nor forgets, nor falters, nor forfeits his word.
Afflictions are like clouds, but the divine truthfulness is all around them.
While we are under the cloud we are in the region of God's faithfulness; when
we mount above it we shall not need such an assurance. To every word of threat,
or promise, prophecy or covenant, the Lord has exactly adhered, for he is not a
man that he should lie, nor the son of man that he should repent.
Verse
6. Thy righteousness is like the great mountains. Firm and
unmoved, lofty and sublime. As winds and hurricanes shake not an Alp, so the
righteousness of God is never in any degree affected by circumstances; he is
always just. Who can bribe the Judge of all the earth, or who can, by
threatening, compel him to pervert judgment? Not even to save his elect would
the Lord suffer his righteousness to be set aside. No awe inspired by mountain
scenery can equal that which fills the soul when it beholds the Son of God
slain as a victim to vindicate the justice of the Inflexible Lawgiver. Right
across the path of every unholy man who dreams of heaven stand the towering
Andes of divine righteousness, which no unregenerate sinner can ever climb.
Among great mountains lie slumbering avalanches, and there the young lightnings
try their callow wings until the storm rushes down amain from the awful peaks;
so against the great day of the Lord's wrath the Lord has laid up in the
mountains of his righteousness dreadful ammunition of war with which to
overwhelm his adversaries. Thy judgments are a great deep. God's
dealings with men are not to be fathomed by every boaster who demands to see a
why for every wherefore. The Lord is not to be questioned by us as to why this
and why that. He has reasons, but he does not choose to submit them to our
foolish consideration. Far and wide, terrible and irresistible like the ocean
are the providential dispensations of God: at one time they appear as peaceful
as the unrippled sea of glass; at another tossed with tempest and whirlwind,
but evermore most glorious and full of mystery. Who shall discover the springs
of the sea? He who shall do this may hope to comprehend the providence of the
Eternal.
"Undiscovered
sea!
Into thy dark, unknown, mysterious caves,
And secret haunts unfathomably deep,
Beneath all visible retired, none went
And came again to tell the wonders there."
Yet
as the deep mirrors the sky, so the mercy of the Lord is to be seen reflected
in all the arrangements of his government on earth, and over the profound depth
the covenant rainbow casts its arch of comfort, for the Lord is faithful in all
that he doeth. O Lord, thou preservest man and beast. All the myriads of
creatures, rational and irrational, are fed by Jehovah's hand. The countless
beasts, the innumerable birds, the inconceivable abundance of fishes, the all
but infinite armies of insects, all owe their continuance of life to the
unceasing outgoings of the divine power. What a view of God this presents to
us! What a debased creature must he be who sees no trace of such a God, and
feels no awe of him!
Verse
7. How excellent is thy lovingkindness, O God. Here we enter
into the Holy of Holies. Benevolence, and mercy, and justice, are everywhere,
but the excellence of that mercy only those have known whose faith has lifted
the veil and passed into the brighter presence of the Lord; these behold the
excellency of the Lord's mercy. The word translated excellent may be
rendered "precious; "no gem or pearl can ever equal in value a sense
of the Lord's love. This is such a brilliant as angels wear. King's regalia are
a beggardly collection of worthless pebbles when compared with the tender
mercies of Jehovah. David could not estimate it, and therefore, after putting a
note of admiration, he left our hearts and imagination, and, better still, our
experience, to fill up the rest. He writes how excellent! because he
cannot tell us the half of it. Therefore the children of men put their trust
under the shadow of thy wings. The best of reasons for the best of courses.
The figure is very beautiful. The Lord overshadows his people as a hen protects
her brood, or as an eagle covers its young; and we as the little ones run under
the blessed shelter and feel at rest. To cower down under the wings of God is
so sweet. Although the enemy be far too strong for us, we have no fear, for we
nestle under the Lord's wing. O that more of Adam's race knew the excellency of
the heavenly shelter! It made Jesus weep to see how they refused it: our tears
may well lament the same evil.
Verse
8. They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy
house. Those who learn to put their trust in God shall be received into his
house, and shall share in the provision laid up therein. The dwelling place of
the Lord is not confined to any place, and hence reside where we may, we may
regard our dwelling, if we be believers, as one room in the Lord's great house;
and we shall, both in providence and grace, find a soul contenting store
supplied to us as the result of living by faith in nearness to the Lord. If we
regard the assembly of the saints as being peculiarly the house of God,
believers shall, indeed, find in sacred worship the richest spiritual food.
Happy is the soul that can drink in the sumptuous dainties of the
gospel—nothing can so completely fill the soul. And thou shalt make them
drink of the river of thy pleasures. As they have the fruits of Eden to
feed on, so shall they have the river of Paradise to drink from. God's
everlasting love bears to us a constant and ample comfort, of which grace makes
us to drink by faith, and then our pleasure is of the richest kind. The Lord
not only brings us to this river, but makes us drink: herein we see the
condescension of divine love. Heaven will, in the fullest sense, fulfil these
words; but they who trust in the Lord enjoy the antepast even here. The
happiness given to the faithful is that of God himself; purified spirits joy
with the same joy as the Lord himself. "That my joy may be in you, that
your joy may be full."
Verse
9. For with thee is the fountain of life. This verse is made
of simple words, but like the first chapter of John's Gospel, it is very deep.
From the Lord, as from an independent self sufficient spring, all creature life
proceeds, by him is sustained, through him alone can it be perfected. Life is
in the creature, but the fountain of it is only in the Creator. Of spiritual
life, this is true in the most emphatic sense; "it is the Spirit that
quickeneth, ""and we are dead, and our life is hid with Christ in
God." In thy light shall we see light. Light is the glory of life.
Life in the dark is misery, and rather death than life. The Lord alone can give
natural, intellectual, and spiritual life; he alone can make life bright and
lustrous. In spiritual things the knowledge of God sheds a light on all other
subjects. We need no candle to see the sun, we see it by its own radiance, and
then see everything else by the same lustre. We never see Jesus by the light of
self, but self in the light of Jesus. No inward intelligence of ours leads us
to receive the Spirit's light, but the rather, it often helps to quench the
sacred beam; purely and only by his own illumination, the Holy Ghost lights up
the dark recesses of our heart's ungodliness. Vain are they who look to
learning and human wit, one ray from the throne of God is better than the
noonday splendour of created wisdom. Lord, give me the sun, and let those who
will delight in the wax candles of superstition and the phosphorescence of
corrupt philosophy. Faith derives both light and life from God, and hence she
neither dies nor darkens.
Verse
10. O continue thy lovingkindness unto them that know thee. We
ask no more than a continuance of the past mercy. Lord, extend this grace of
thine to all the days of all who have been taught to know thy faithful love,
thy tenderness, thine immutability and omnipotence. As they have been taught of
the Lord to know the Lord, so go on to instruct them and perfect them. This
prayer is the heart of the believer asking precisely that which the heart of
his God is prepared to grant. It is well when the petition is but the
reflection of the promise. And thy righteousness to the upright in heart.
As thou hast never failed the righteous, so abide thou in the same manner their
defender and avenger. The worst thing to be feared by the man of God is to be
forsaken of heaven, hence this prayer; but the fear is groundless, hence the
peace which faith brings to us. Learn from this verse, that although a
continuance of mercy is guaranteed in the covenant, we are yet to make it a
matter of prayer. For this good thing will the Lord be enquired of.
Verse
11. Let not the foot of pride come against me. The general
prayer is here turned into a particular and personal one for himself. Pride is
the devil's sin. Good men may well be afraid of proud men, for the serpent's
seed will never cease to bite the heel of the godly. Fain would proud scoffers
spurn the saints or trample them under foot: against their malice prayer lifts
up her voice. No foot shall come upon us, no hand shall prevail against us,
while Jehovah is on our side. Let not the hand of the wicked remove me.
Suffer me not to be driven about as a fugitive, nor torn from my place like an
uprooted tree. Violence with both hand and foot, with means fair and means
foul, strove to overthrow the psalmist, but he resorts to his great Patron, and
sings a song of triumph in anticipation of the defeat of his foes.
Verse
12. There are the workers of iniquity fallen. Faith sees them
scattered on the plain. There! before our very eyes sin, death, and hell, lie
prostrate. Behold the vanquished foes! They are cast down. Providence
and grace have dashed them from their vantage ground. Jesus has already thrown
all the foes of his people upon their faces, and in due time all sinners shall
find it so. And shall not be able to rise. The defeat of the ungodly and
of the powers of evil is final, total, irretrievable. Glory be to God, however
high the powers of darkness may carry it at this present, the time hastens on
when God shall defend the right, and give to evil such a fall as shall for ever
crush the hopes of hell; while those who trust in the Lord shall eternally
praise him and rejoice in his holy name.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. To the Chief
Musician, has given rise to many conjectures. In the Septuagint the Hebrew word
is translated, eiz to telos, to the end; a meaning so utterly vague as to defy
all reasonable conjecture. ...The meaning of the term appears to be this: the
Psalms in which it occurs were given in charge by their inspired authors to the
Chief Musician overseeing some specific band of music, whether harps,
psalteries, or wind instruments. John Jebb, A.M., in "A Literal
Translation of the Book of Psalms," 1846.
Title. The servant of
the Lord. David only uses this title here and in Psalm eighteen. In both he
describes the dealings of God both with the righteous and the wicked, and it is
most fit that at the very outset he should take his place with the servants of
the Lord. C. H. S.
Whole
Psalm. First Part. A character of a wicked man Ps 36:1. 1. He
calls evil good Ps 36:2. 2. He continues in it. 3. He is an hypocrite Ps 36:3.
4. He is obstinate. 5. He is studious in wickedness Ps 36:4. Second part.
God's patience and mercy Ps 36:5-6. 1. To all, even all creatures. 2. But
particularly to his people, which he admires. Upon which the faithful (1)
trust, (2) are satisfied Ps 36:7-8. The Third part. He prays that this
effect may light, 1. On God's people Ps 36:10. 2. On himself Ps 36:11. 3. His
acclimation upon it Ps 36:12. William Nicholson (Bishop), 1662.
Verse
1. In this Psalm we have a description of sin, especially as it
appears in those who have openly broken God's bands. The introduction is very
striking; The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart, that there
is no fear of God before his eyes. How could the transgression of the
wicked speak within the heart of him who in the inscription of the
Psalm declares himself to be the servant of JEHOVAH? These words are
generally understood as signifying that the outward conduct of the sinner, as
often as he thought of it, naturally suggested this conclusion to his mind,
that he was destitute of all fear of God. But they may perhaps admit of another
meaning, equally agreeable to the literal reading; wickedness, saith of the
wicked, within my heart, etc. According to this view, the psalmist meant
that notwithstanding the external pretences of the wicked, and all their
attempts to cover their iniquity, he was certain that they had no real sense of
the presence of God, that they secretly renounced his authority. How was he
assured of this? By a comparison of their conduct with the dictates of the
heart. He could not indeed look into their hearts, but he could look into his
own, and there he found corruption so strong, that were it not for the
fear of God that was implanted within him, he would be as bad as they. John
Jamieson.
Verse
1. It is not the imperfection or shortcoming in the fear of God, but
the being destitute of it altogether, that proveth a wicked man: There is no
fear of God before his eyes. David Dickson.
Verse
1. (last clause). Not having the fear of God before his
eyes, has become inwoven into proceedings in criminal courts. When a man
has no fear of God, he is prepared for any crime. Total depravity is not too
strong a term to describe human wickedness. The sinner has no fear of God.
Where that is wanting, how can there be any piety? And if there is no piety,
there must be total want of right affections, and that is the very essence of
depravity. William S. Plumer.
Verse
1. Durst any mock God with flourishes and formalities in religion,
if they feared him? Durst any provoke God to his face by real and open
wickedness, if they feared him? Durst any sin with the judgments of God fresh
bleeding before their eyes, if they feared the Lord and his wrath? Durst they
sin with heaps of precious mercy before their eyes, if they feared the Lord and
his goodness? Durst any flatter either others or themselves with hopes of
impunity in their sin, if they feared the Lord and his truth? Durst any slight
their own promises, professions, protestations, oaths, or design the entangling
of others by them, rather than the binding of themselves, did they fear the
Lord and his faithfulness, even the Lord who keepeth covenant and promise for
ever? All these and many more transgressions of the wicked (all these ways of
transgression are found among the wicked, it were well if none of them were
found among those who have a name of godliness; I say, all these transgressions
of the wicked) say, There is no fear of God before their eyes. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
1. The wicked man has no regard to the oracles of God: he had
one in his own heart, which dictates nothing but rebellion. Zachary Mudge.
Verse
2. For he flattereth himself in his own eyes. The matter
which this self flattery especially concerns is sin, as appears from the
following clause. He deceives himself as to its nature and consequences, its
evil and aggravations, and he continues to do so until his iniquity be found
to be hateful; till it be fully discovered, and appear in its magnitude and
atrocious circumstances both to himself and others, by some awful divine
judgment, such as that mentioned in the last verse of the Psalm: "There
are the workers of iniquity fallen: they are cast down, and shall not be able
to rise." He adduces this self deceit and continuance in it, as
illustrating the truth of that judgment he had formed of the state of such a
person: There is no fear of God before his eyes: for he flattereth himself
in his own eyes. And surely the proof is incontrovertible. For a man under
the bondage of sin would never flatter himself in his own eyes, were it
not that God is not before them. The reason why he thinks so well of himself
is, that God is not in all his thoughts. He hath cast off all fear about
himself because he hath no fear of God. John Jamieson.
Verse
2. He flattereth himself. 1. Some flatter themselves with a
secret hope, that there is no such thing as another world. 2. Some
flatter themselves that death is a great way off, and that they shall
hereafter have much opportunity to seek salvation. 3. Some flatter themselves
that they lead moral and orderly lives, and therefore think that they
shall not be damned. 4. Some make the advantages under which they live
an occasion of self flattery. They flatter themselves that they live in a place
where the gospel is powerfully preached, and among a religious people, where
many have been converted; and they think it will be much easier for them to be
saved on that account. 5. Some flatter themselves with their own intentions.
They intend to give themselves liberty for a while longer, and then to
reform. 6. There are some who flatter themselves that they do, and have done,
a great deal for their salvation, and therefore hope they shall obtain it; when
indeed they neither do what they ought to do, nor what they might do even in
their present state of unregeneracy; nor are they in any likely way to be
converted. 7. Some hope by their strivings to obtain salvation of themselves.
They have a secret imagination that they shall, by degrees, work in themselves
sorrow and repentance of sin, and love towards God and Jesus Christ. Their
striving is not so much an earnest seeking to God, as a striving to do
themselves that which is the work of God. 8. Some sinners flatter themselves
that they are already converted. They sit down and rest in a false hope,
persuading themselves that all their sins are pardoned; that God loves them;
that they shall go to heaven when they die; and that they need trouble
themselves no more. "Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with
goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked." Re 3:17. Condensed from
Jonathan Edwards.
Verse
2. In his own eyes. He had not God before his eyes in holy
awe, therefore he puts himself there in unholy admiration. He who makes little
of God makes much of himself. They who forget adoration fall into adulation.
The eyes must see something, and if they admire not God, they will flatter
self. C. H. S.
Verse
2. Until his iniquity be found to be hateful; that is, until
he finds by experience that it is a more dreadful thing to sin against God, and
break his holy commands, than he imagined. Jonathan Edwards.
Verse
2. Hateful. Odious to himself, others, and to God. Gilbert
Genebrard, 1537-1597.
Verse
3. He hath left off. That little light he once had, he hath
lost, and cast off such good practices as once in hypocrisy he performed;
neither will he learn to do better. John Trapp.
Verse
3. (last clause). Apostasy from God is really an undoing of
all the good which we have done. It is a wicked repentance quite contrary to
the grace of repentance; as that is a repentance from dead works, so this is a
repentance from works of a better sort: He hath left off to be wise, and to
do good. It is a perversion to evil after a seeming conversion from it. Timothy
Cruso.
Verses
3-4.
Yet
did he spare his sleep, and hear the clock
Number the midnight watches, on his bed
Devising mischief more; and early rose,
And made most hellish meals of good men's names.
From door to door you might have seen him speed,
Or placed amid a group of gaping fools.
Peace fled the neighbourhood in which he made
His haunts; and, like a moral pestilence,
Before his breath the healthy shoots and blooms
Of social joy and happiness decayed.
Fools only in his company were seen,
And those forsaken of God, and to themselves
Given up. The prudent shunned him and his house
As one who had a deadly moral plague.
—Robert Pollock, 1799-1827.
Verse
4. He deviseth mischief upon his bed. As the man that fears
God communes with his heart upon his bed, that he may not sin, no, not in his
heart; so the man that fears not God, devises how he may plot and perform sin
willingly. David Dickson.
Verse
4. Upon his bed. Most diligently does Ayguan follow up the
scriptural expressions concerning a bed, and tell us that there are six
different beds of wickedness—that of luxury, that of avarice, of ambition, of
greediness, of torpor, and of cruelty, and he illustrates them all by examples from
Scripture. J. M. Neale.
Verse
4. He setteth himself in a way that is not good. To wait to
sin is to sin deliberately, yea, to wait to sin resolvedly. That sin is
exceedingly sinfully committed which we set and prepare ourselves to commit.
David, describing a wicked man, saith, He setteth himself in a way that is
not good; that is, in an evil way: he doth not only fall into sin (that may
be the case of a good man), but he takes or chooseth an evil way, and then sets
or settles himself in it, resolving not to leave it, no, nor to be beaten out
of it. Sin may be said to wait for a godly man, that is, Satan waits and
watches his season to tempt him unto sin; but a godly man doth not wait nor
watch to sin. It is bad enough to be overtaken with sin, or with a fault (as
the apostle speaks, Ga 6:1); but to be taken with sin, and so to wait for a
season to take our fill of it, is as bad as bad can be. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
4. He setteth himself in a way that is not good. Proud
sinners have strongest conceit that they go right, at least in the way of their
choice. Satan blindeth them so, that they mistake both the end and the way: in
their count they are running to heaven, when they are posting to hell: he
serveth them kindly with fresh post horses. Sometimes he mounts them on
drunkenness, and when they have run a stage on that beastliness, he can mount
them on lechery. Again, he can refresh them with avarice; and if they be weary
of that slow jade, he setteth them on lofty ambition, and to make them more
spirited he can horse them on restless contention. Every one seeth not Satan's
enquiry: there is no complexion or disposition, but he hath a fit horse for it,
and that of itself. Every man's predominant is a beast of Satan's saddling and
providing to carry men to hell. The way is one, the post master is one, he is
to be found at every stage, mounting his gallants, their horses are all of one
kind though not of one colour. Happy is the man whom God dismounts in that evil
way, and more happy is he who taketh with that stay, and turneth his course to
heaven. William Struther.
Verse
4. He abhorreth not. i.e., is far enough from rejecting any
instrument, however sinful, for attaining his purposes. J. J. Stewart
Perowne.
Verse
5. Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens. David considering
the thoughts and deeds of impious men, and the mercy of God towards them,
utters this exclamation. When men are so impudently, who does not admire the
divine longsuffering! Sebastian Munster, 1489-1552.
Verses
5-7. This Psalm doth fitly set forth unto us the estate and condition
of these times, wherein wickedness increaseth: and so in the former part of the
Psalm is a discovery of wickedness, verse 3. And what should we do when there
is such wickedness in the earth? In the fifth verse, Thy mercy, O Lord, is
in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds. God is
gathering up all goodness, mercy, and peace from man to himself; and though
there is cruelty, mischief, and wickedness in the world, in the earth, yet
there is mercy, truth, and faithfulness in the clouds; and it's good that
wisdom, goodness, truth, and righteousness leave the world, and cleave to God,
that so we may follow it; and that what goodness, mercy, truth, and
faithfulness we formerly enjoyed in man, we may enjoy it in God. And when
wickedness increaseth, righteousness increaseth likewise: Thy righteousness
is like the great mountains: when the world tears and breaks itself in
pieces, then is the righteousness of God a great mountain. Thy judgments are
a great deep; when the whole world is become one sea of confusion, then are
the judgments of the Lord a great deep, where not only man, but beasts may rest
safely. Thou preservest man and beast. And though this time is a time of
growing and spreading wickedness in man, yet it is a time of sweetest
admiration and love in God; and when men that sin do cry out, O woeful man!
they that enjoy God, cry out, O happy man! And though men that live in the
earth cry out, O miserable! what times are here? men that live in heaven cry
out, How excellent is thy lovingkindness, O God! The Lord makes all
things naked and bare, that we only may have him to be our safety. William
Sedgwick (1600-1668). In "The Excellency of the love of God,
"a sermon in a volume, entitled "Some Flashes of Lightnings of the
Son of Man, "1648.
Verses
5-9.
Thy
mercie Lord doth to the HEAUENS extend,
Thy faithfulness doth to the CLOUDES assend;
Thy justice stedfast as a MOUNTAINE is,
Thy JUDGEMENTS deepe as is the great Abisse;
Thy noble mercies saue all liueinge thinges,
The sonnes of men creepe underneath thy winges:
With thy great plenty they are fedd at will,
And of thy pleasure's streame they drinke their fill;
For euen the well of life remaines with thee,
And in thy glorious light wee light shall see.
—Sir John Davies.
Verse
6. Thy righteousness is like the great mountains. Literally mountains
of God, which men have not planted, and which men cannot move. Christopher
Wordsworth.
Verse
6. Thy judgments are a great deep. Men's sins are a great
deep, and Satan's ways are called a depth; but God's judgments, his ways in the
wheels, are the greatest deep of all, they are unsearchable. William
Greenhill.
Verse
7. How excellent is thy lovingkindness, O God! etc. The
expressions here which denote the abundance of divine blessings upon the
righteous man, seems to be taken from the temple, from whence they were to
issue. Under the covert of the temple, the wings of the cherubim, they were to
be sheltered. The richness of the sacrifices, the streams of oil, wine, odours,
etc., and the light of the golden candlestick, are all plainly referred to. Samuel
Burder.
Verse
7. Therefore the children of men put their trust under the shadow
of thy wings. The word signifies to fly, to betake one's self to a place of
safety: as the chickens in danger to be seized on, fly under the wings of the
hen. "Under whose wings thou art come to trust." Ru 2:12. The
helpless bird pursued by the kite, in danger to be devoured, runs under the
shadow of the dam. Thus it is with a sinner at the first working of faith, he
apprehends himself pursued by wrath and judgment; he knows if they seize on him
he must perish without remedy. Oh, the sad condition of such a soul! Oh, but he
sees Christ spreading his wings ready to secure perishing sinners; he hears him
inviting in the gospel to come under his shadow! Oh, how sweet is that voice to
him (however, while senseless he rejected it)! He hears, obeys, and runs to
Christ for shelter, and so he is safe. How excellent is thy lovingkindness,
O God! therefore the children of men put their trust under the shadow of thy
wings. David Clarkson.
Verse
7. Thy wings. A common figure in the Psalms, taken more
immediately, in my opinion, from the wings of the cherubim overshadowing the
mercyseat which covered the ark; but more remotely from the birds, which defend
their young from the solar rays by overshadowing them with their wings. Francis
Hare (Bishop), 1740.
Verse
7.
In
lonesome cell, guarded and strong I lie,
Bound by Christ's love, his truth to testify,
Though walls be thick the door no hand unclose,
God is my strength, my solace, and repose.
In
a letter of Jeronius Segerson, written in the prison at Antwerp to his wife,
named Lysken, who likewise lay a prisoner there, 1551.
Verse
9. For with thee is the fountain of life. These are some of
the most wonderful words in the Old Testament. Their fulness of meaning no
commentary can ever exhaust. They are, in fact, the kernel and the anticipation
of much of the profoundest teaching of S. John. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
9. In thy light shall we see light. The object and matter of
our eternal happiness is called light. It will not be a dazzling and
confounding light as was the brightness of Moses' face at his coming down from
the mount; the people could not behold him: it will not be an astonishing
light, as that in the mount at our Lord's transfiguration; the disciples fell
to the ground, their weak eyes could not behold those glimpses of glory that
shined through the vail of flesh. But the light in our heaven of happiness will
be a strengthening and comforting light; it will strengthen and confirm
the eyes of our understanding to behold it. Then shall we be enabled as the
young eagles, to behold the Sun of Righteousness in his brightness and glory.
It was said by the Lord to Moses, "None can see my face and live." Ex
33:20. That glorious sight which Daniel saw took strength from him. Da 10:8.
The object being without him, drew out all his spirits to behold and admire it
and so weakened him; but in heaven our God, whom we shall see and know, will be
within us to strengthen us; then shall we live because we see his face. It will
be also a comforting light, like the light of the morning to the wearied
watchman, who longed after it in the nighttime. William Colville.
Verse
9. In thy light shall we see light. It is but a kind of dim
twilight comparatively, which we enjoy here in this world. While we are hid in
this prison house we can see but little; but our Father's house above is full
of light; "Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun, "etc.
Mt 13:43. If the Day star be risen in your hearts, live in the pleasant and
cheerful expectation of perfect day. For we can ascend but a little way into
the mysteries of the kingdom, as long as we are upon the footstool; and we
shall know vastly and inconceivably more in the first moment after we come to
heaven, than we are capable of attaining here throughout all our days. Timothy
Cruso.
Verse
9. In thy light shall we see light. The light of nature is
like a spark, the light of the gospel a lamp, the light of grace a star, but
the light of glory the sun itself. The higher our ascent the greater our light;
God dwelleth "in the light which no man can approach unto." 1Ti
6:16—no man, while he carries mortality and sin about him; but when those two
corrupt and incapable qualities shall be put off, then shall we be brought to
that light. We are now glad of the sun and stars over our heads, to give us
light: what light and delight shall that be when these are under our feet! That
light must needs go as far beyond their light as they now go beyond us. But
alas! they are only able to discourse of that light, that do enjoy it, to whom
that eternal day is risen; not we that live in the humble shade of mortality
and natural dimness. I leave it therefore to your meditations: it is a glorious
light which we do well often to consider, considering to admire, admiring to
love, loving to desire, desiring to seek, and finding to enjoy for ever. Thomas
Adams.
Verse
9. In thy light shall we see light. There is a great boast of
light in the world, and there is some ground for it in natural things; but, as
of old the world by wisdom knew not God, so of late. If ever we know God, it
must be through he medium of his word. This I take to be the meaning of the
passage. The term light in the last clause means the true knowledge of
God; and, in the first, the true medium of attaining it, namely, divine
revelation. The sum seems to amount to this: the word of God is the grand
medium by which we can attain a true and saving knowledge of God. What the sun
and stars are to the regions of matter, that revelation is to the mental
region. Ge 1:13,17. ...There are many things of which you may entertain no
doubt, concerning which there may be no manner of dispute; yet, make a point of
seeing them in God's light. Many content themselves with seeing them in the
light in which great and good men have placed them; but, though angels, they
are not the true light: they all view things partially. If what they say be true,
yet, if we receive it merely on their representation, our faith will stand in
the wisdom of men, and not in the power of God. 1Co 2:5. That knowledge or
faith which has not God's word for its ground will not stand in the day of
trial. Andrew Fuller.
Verse
9. In this communion of God what can we want? Why, God shall be all
and in all unto us; he shall be beauty for the eye, music for the ear, honey
for the taste, the full content and satisfaction of our desires, and that
immediately from himself. True it is God is all in all in this world, "In
him we live, and move, and have our being; " but here he works by means of
secondary causes; here he gives wine to make the heart glad, and oil, etc.; but
there all intervening means between God and us is removed: with thee is the
fountain of life: in thy light shall we see light; not in the light of the
sun, or the light of a candle; there is no need of them Re 22:5; but "in thy
light, "the light of God himself; yea, the whole life of glory, together
with all the concomitants of it, flows from him as the sole and original
fountain of it. Oh, how sweet must that happiness be that is so derived! Edmund
Pinchbeck, B.D., in "The Fountain of Life:" a Funeral Sermon,
1652.
Verse
9. Whatsoever can be found in the creature, even when God blesseth
the use thereof to his own children, is but a drop from the ocean, is but a
little water out of the well, in comparison of what a believer will see and
feel to be in God reconciled through Christ, for with thee is the fountain
of life. David Dickson.
Verse
10. Continue thy lovingkindness. When God begins once to let
out mercy to his servants, he stints not presently, but proceeds. ...When
Rachel had her first son, she called his name Joseph, which signifieth adding,
or increase; for she said, "The Lord shall add to me another son." Ge
30:24. Now God hath begun to show kindness, he shall not only give me this, but
he shall give me another son also. When the Lord hath bestowed one mercy on
you, you may name it Joseph, increase, addition, for God will bestow another
upon you. Abraham had many mercies from God, one after another; and Moses, a
multitude of mercies; he converses with God face to face; he hears God speak;
he has God's presence to go along with him; yea, he sees all God's goodness and
glory to pass before him. When mercies come forth, God will not presently shut
the door of mercy again. Continue thy lovingkindness. The Hebrew is,
draw forth, or draw out thy lovingkindness: a metaphor either taken from
vessels of wine, which being set abroach once, yield not only one cup, but many
cups; so when God setteth abroach the wine of his mercy, he will not fill your
cup once, but twice and seven times: or, taken from a mother, who hath her
breasts full of milk, draws them out for her child, not once, but often; the
child shall have the breast many times in the day, and many times in the night,
so when God begins to show mercy to you, he will draw out his breasts of
consolation, and will bestow mercy after mercy upon you; or, from a line which
is extended, for so God being in a way of mercy, will extend the line of mercy,
and measure out mercy after mercy for you. William Greenhill.
Verse
10. The true mark of a godly man standeth in the conjunction of faith
in God, with sincere study of obedience to him, for, He is the man that
knoweth God, and is upright in heart. David Dickson.
Verse
11. Foot...Hand. Both foot and hand are named because both
used in waging war. Simeon de Muis.
Verse
12. There are the workers of iniquity fallen. This is said as
if the psalmist pointed, when he said it, to a particular place with his
finger; and the same mode of expression occurs in Ps 14:5; or, it may be
rendered, then (i.e., when the just are satisfied with the plenteousness
of thy house, being rewarded for sincerely worshipping thee in it), shall
they fall, all that work wickedness; they shall be cast down, and shall not be
able to rise, as is the case with persons who have been thrown with
violence upon the hard ground. Daniel Cresswell.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. What is the fear of God? How does it operate? What is the effect
of its absence? What should we learn from seeing such evil results? Or the
atheism underlying transgression.
Verse
2. The arts, motives, assistances, results, and punishments of self
flattery, and the discovery which concludes it.
Verse
2. Self flatteries. Jonathan Edwards' Sermon.
Verse
2. On the deceitfulness of the heart, with regard to the commission
of sin. Two Sermons, in Jamieson's "Sermons on the Heart."
Verse
3. Bad words. Two out of many kinds.
Verse
3. (second clause). The relation between true wisdom and
practical goodness.
Verse
4. Diligence in doing evil, a mark of deep depravity. W.S.
Plumer.
Verse
4. The abuse of retirement to wicked purposes, a sure characteristic
of an habitual sinner. N. Marshall.
Verse
4. The sinner on his bed, in his conduct, in his heart; and to this,
in his death, and in his doom.
Verse
4. (second clause). Ways which are not good.
Verse
4. (last clause). Neutrality condemned.
Verses
5-6. Four glorious similes of the mercy, faithfulness, and providence
of God. The preacher has here a wealth of poetic imagery never surpassed.
Verse
6. God's word and works mysterious. C. Simeon.
Verse
6. (second clause). God's judgments are—
1.
Often unfathomable—we cannot discover the foundation or cause, and spring of
them.
2.
They are safe sailing. Ships never strike on rocks out in the great deeps.
3.
They conceal great treasure.
4.
They work much good—the great deep, though ignorance thinks it to be all waste,
a salt and barren wilderness, is one of the greatest blessings to this round
world.
5.
They become a highway of communion with God. The sea is today the great highway
of the world.
Verse
6. (last clause). Kindness of God to the lower animals, as
well as man.
Verse
7. The object, reasons, nature, and experience of faith.
Verses
7-8. Admiration! Confidence! Expectation! Realisation!
Verse
8. (first clause). The provisions of the Lord's house.
What they are, their excellence and abundance, and for whom provided.
Verse
8. (second clause). The heavenly Hiddekel—Its source,
its flood, the happy drinkers, how they came to drink.
Verse
9. (first clause). LIFE, natural, mental, spiritual, proceeds
from God, is sustained, restored, purified, and perfected by him. In him it
dwells with permanency, from him it flows freely, with freshness, abundance,
and purity; to him it should be consecrated.
Verse
9. (second clause). LIGHT, what it is to see it. Divine
light, what it is; how it is the medium by which we see other light. The
experience here described, and the duty here hinted at.
Verse
10.
1. The
character of the righteous—he knows God, and is upright in heart.
2. His
privilege—lovingkindness and righteousness.
3. His
prayer, continue, etc.
Verse
10. The need of daily supplies of grace.
Verse
12. A view of the overthrow of evil powers, principles, and men.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》