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Psalm Forty-two
Psalm 42
Chapter Contents
The conflict in the soul of a believer.
Commentary on Psalm 42:1-5
(Read Psalm 42:1-5)
The psalmist looked to the Lord as his chief good, and
set his heart upon him accordingly; casting anchor thus at first, he rides out
the storm. A gracious soul can take little satisfaction in God's courts, if it
do not meet with God himself there. Living souls never can take up their rest
any where short of a living God. To appear before the Lord is the desire of the
upright, as it is the dread of the hypocrite. Nothing is more grievous to a
gracious soul, than what is intended to shake its confidence in the Lord. It
was not the remembrance of the pleasures of his court that afflicted David; but
the remembrance of the free access he formerly had to God's house, and his pleasure
in attending there. Those that commune much with their own hearts, will often
have to chide them. See the cure of sorrow. When the soul rests on itself, it
sinks; if it catches hold on the power and promise of God, the head is kept
above the billows. And what is our support under present woes but this, that we
shall have comfort in Him. We have great cause to mourn for sin; but being cast
down springs from unbelief and a rebellious will; we should therefore strive
and pray against it.
Commentary on Psalm 42:6-11
(Read Psalm 42:6-11)
The way to forget our miseries, is to remember the God of
our mercies. David saw troubles coming from God's wrath, and that discouraged
him. But if one trouble follow hard after another, if all seem to combine for
our ruin, let us remember they are all appointed and overruled by the Lord.
David regards the Divine favour as the fountain of all the good he looked for.
In the Saviour's name let us hope and pray. One word from him will calm every
storm, and turn midnight darkness into the light of noon, the bitterest
complaints into joyful praises. Our believing expectation of mercy must quicken
our prayers for it. At length, is faith came off conqueror, by encouraging him
to trust in the name of the Lord, and to stay himself upon his God. He adds,
And my God; this thought enabled him to triumph over all his griefs and fears.
Let us never think that the God of our life, and the Rock of our salvation, has
forgotten us, if we have made his mercy, truth, and power, our refuge. Thus the
psalmist strove against his despondency: at last his faith and hope obtained
the victory. Let us learn to check all unbelieving doubts and fears. Apply the
promise first to ourselves, and then plead it to God.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 42
Verse 1
[1] As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth
my soul after thee, O God.
Panteth — After the enjoyment of thee in thy sanctuary.
Verse 2
[2] My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when
shall I come and appear before God?
Thirsteth — Not after vain useless idols, but
after the only true and living God.
Appear — In the place of his special presence and publick
worship.
Verse 4
[4] When I remember these things, I pour out my soul in me:
for I had gone with the multitude, I went with them to the house of God, with
the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept holyday.
Remember — My banishment from God's presence, and mine enemies
triumphs.
In me — I breathe out my sorrows and complaints to God within
my own breast.
The multitudes — Israelites, who went thither in
great numbers.
Holy-day — Or that kept the feast, the three solemn festival
solemnities, which they kept holy unto the Lord.
Verse 5
[5] Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou
disquieted in me? hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise him for the help of
his countenance.
For — Heb. for the salvations of his face, for those
supports, deliverances and comforts which I doubt not I shall enjoy both in his
presence and sanctuary, and from his presence, and the light of his
countenance.
Verse 6
[6] O my God, my soul is cast down within me: therefore will
I remember thee from the land of Jordan, and of the Hermonites, from the hill
Mizar.
Therefore — Therefore that I may revive my
drooping spirits.
Remember — I will consider thy infinite mercy and power, and
faithfulness.
Mizar — From all the parts of the land, to which I shall be
driven; whether from the parts beyond Jordan on the east: or mount Hermon,
which was in the northern parts.
Verse 7
[7] Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of thy waterspouts:
all thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.
Deep — One affliction comes immediately after another, as if
it were called for by the former. A metaphor taken from violent and successive
showers of rain; which frequently come down from heaven, as it were at the
noise, or call of God's water spouts.
Verse 8
[8] Yet the LORD will command his lovingkindness in the
daytime, and in the night his song shall be with me, and my prayer unto the God
of my life.
Command — Will effectually confer upon me.
Loving-kindness — His blessings, the effects of his
loving-kindness.
Verse 10
[10] As with a sword in my bones, mine enemies reproach me;
while they say daily unto me, Where is thy God?
As — As a sword, which cutteth the very bones, so painful
are their reproaches.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. To the chief
Musician, Maschil, for the sons of Korah. Dedicated to the Master of Music,
this Psalm is worthy of his office; he who can sing best can have nothing
better to sing. It is called, Maschil, or an instructive ode; and full as it is
of deep experimental expressions, it is eminently calculated to instruct those
pilgrims whose road to heaven is of the same trying kind as David's was. It is
always edifying to listen to the experience of a thoroughly gracious and much
afflicted saint.
That
choice band of singers, the sons of Korah, are bidden to make this delightful
Psalm one of their peculiars. They had been spared when their father and all
his company, and all the children of his associates were swallowed up alive in
their sin. Numbers 26:11. They were the spared ones of sovereign grace.
Preserved, we know not why, by the distinguishing favour of God, it may be
surmised that after their remarkable election to mercy, they became so filled
with gratitude that they addicted themselves to sacred music in order that
their spared lives might be consecrated to the glory of God. At any rate, we
who have been rescued as they were from going down into the pit, out of the
mere good pleasure of Jehovah, can heartily join in this Psalm, and indeed in
all the songs which show forth the praises of our God and the pantings of our
hearts after him. Although David is not mentioned as the author, this Psalm
must be the offspring of his pen; it is so Davidic, it smells of the son of
Jesse, it bears the marks of his style and experience in every letter. We could
sooner doubt the authorship of the second part of Pilgrim's Progress than
question David's title to be the composer of this Psalm.
SUBJECT. It is the cry
of a man far removed from the outward ordinances and worship of God, sighing
for the long loved house of his God; and at the same time it is the voice of a
spiritual believer, under depressions, longing for the renewal of the divine
presence, struggling with doubts and fears, but yet holding his ground by faith
in the living God. Most of the Lord's family have sailed on the sea which is
here so graphically described. It is probable that David's flight from Absalom
may have been the occasion for composing this Maschil.
DIVISION. The structure
of the song directs us to consider it in two parts which end with the same
refrain; Ps 42:1-5 and then Ps 42:6-11.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul
after the, O God. As after a long drought the poor fainting hind longs for
the streams, or rather as the hunted hart instinctively seeks after the river
to lave its smoking flanks and to escape the dogs, even so my weary, persecuted
soul pants after the Lord my God. Debarred from public worship, David was
heartsick. Ease he did not seek, honour he did not covet, but the enjoyment of
communion with God was an urgent need of his soul; he viewed it not merely as
the sweetest of all luxuries, but as an absolute necessity, like water to a
stag. Like the parched traveller in the wilderness, whose skin bottle is empty,
and who finds the wells dry, he must drink or die—he must have his God or
faint. His soul, his very self, his deepest life, was insatiable for a
sense of the divine presence. As the hart brays so his soul prays. Give him his
God and he is as content as the poor deer which at length slakes its thirst and
is perfectly happy; but deny him his Lord, and his heart heaves, his bosom
palpitates, his whole frame is convulsed, like one who gasps for breath, or
pants with long running. Dear reader, dost thou know what this is, by
personally having felt the same? It is a sweet bitterness. The next best thing
to living in the light of the Lord's love is to be unhappy till we have it, and
to pant hourly after it—hourly, did I say? thirst is a perpetual appetite, and
not to be forgotten, and even thus continual is the heart's longing after God.
When it is as natural for us to long for God as for an animal to thirst, it is
well with our souls, however painful our feelings. We may learn from this verse
that the eagerness of our desires may be pleaded with God, and the more so,
because there are special promises for the importunate and fervent.
Verse
2. My soul. All my nature, my inmost self. Thirsteth.
Which is more than hungering; hunger you can palliate, but thirst is awful,
insatiable, clamorous, deadly. O to have the most intense craving after the
highest good! this is no questionable mark of grace. For God. Not merely
for the temple and the ordinances, but for fellowship with God himself. None
but spiritual men can sympathise with this thirst. For the living God.
Because he lives, and gives to men the living water; therefore we, with greater
eagerness, desire him. A dead God is a mere mockery; we loathe such a monstrous
deity; but the ever living God, the perennial fountain of life and light and
love, is our soul's desire. What are gold, honour, pleasure, but dead idols?
May we never pant for these. When shall I come and appear before God? He
who loves the Lord loves also the assemblies wherein his name is adored. Vain
are all pretences to religion where the outward means of grace have no
attraction. David was never so much at home as in the house of the Lord; he was
not content with private worship; he did not forsake the place where saints
assemble, as the manner of some is. See how pathetically he questions as to the
prospect of his again uniting in the joyous gathering! How he repeats and
reiterates his desire! After his God, his Elohim (his God to be worshipped, who
had entered into covenant with him), he pined even as the drooping flowers for
the dew, or the moaning turtle for her mate. It were well if all our resortings
to public worship were viewed as appearances before God, it would then be a
sure mark of grace to delight in them. Alas, how many appear before the
minister, or their fellow men, and think that enough! "To see the face of
God" is a nearer translation of the Hebrew; but the two ideas may be
combined—he would see his God and be seen of him: this is worth thirsting
after!
Verse
3. My tears have been my meat day and night. Salt meats, but
healthful to the soul. When a man comes to tears, constant tears, plenteous
tears, tears that fill his cup and trencher, he is in earnest indeed. As the
big tears stand in the stag's eyes in her distress, so did the salt drops
glitter in the eyes of David. His appetite was gone, his tears not only
seasoned his meat, but became his only meat, he had no mind for other diet.
Perhaps it was well for him that the heart could open the safety valves; there
is a dry grief far more terrible than showery sorrows. His tears, since they were
shed because God was blasphemed, were "honourable dew, "drops of holy
water, such as Jehovah putteth into his bottle. While they continually say
unto me, Where is thy God? Cruel taunts come naturally from coward minds.
Surely they might have left the mourner alone; he could weep no more than he
did—it was a supererogation of malice to pump more tears from a heart which
already overflowed. Note how incessant was their jeer, and how artfully they
framed it! It cut the good man to the bone to have the faithfulness of his God
impugned. They had better have thrust needles into his eyes than have darted
insinuations against his God. Shimei may here be alluded to who after this
fashion mocked David as he fled from Absalom. He roundly asserted that David
was a bloody man, and that God was punishing him for supplanting Saul and his
house; his wish was father to his thought. The wicked know that our worst
misfortune would be to lose God's favour, hence their diabolical malice leads
them to declare that such is the case. Glory be to God, they lie in their
throats, for our God is in the heavens, aye, and in the furnace too, succouring
his people.
Verse
4. When I remember these things, I pour out my soul in me.
When he harped upon his woes his heart melted into water and was poured out
upon itself. God hidden, and foes raging, a pair of evils enough to bring down
the stoutest heart! Yet why let reflections so gloomy engross us, since the
result is of no value: merely to turn the soul on itself, to empty it from itself
into itself is useless, how much better to pour out the heart before the Lord!
The prisoner's tread wheel might sooner land him in the skies than mere inward
questioning raise us nearer to consolation. For I had gone with the
multitude, I went with them to the house of God. Painful reflections were
awakened by the memory of past joys; he had mingled in the pious throng, their
numbers had helped to give him exhilaration and to awaken holy delight, their
company had been a charm to him as with them he ascended the hill of Zion.
Gently proceeding with holy ease, in comely procession, with frequent strains
of song, he and the people of Jehovah had marched in reverent ranks up to the
shrine of sacrifice, the dear abode of peace and holiness. Far away from such goodly
company the holy man pictures the sacred scene and dwells upon the details of
the pious march. With the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that
kept holyday. The festive noise is in his ears, and the solemn dance before
his eyes. Perhaps he alludes to the removal of the ark and to the glorious
gatherings of the tribes on that grand national holy day and holiday. How
changed his present place! For Zion, a wilderness; for the priests in white
linen, soldiers in garments of war; for the song, the sneer of blasphemy; for
the festivity, lamentation; for joy in the Lord, a mournful dirge over his
absence.
Verse
5. Why art thou cast down, O my soul? As though he were two
men, the psalmist talks to himself. His faith reasons with his fears, his hope
argues with his sorrows. These present troubles, are they to last forever? The
rejoicings of my foes, are they more than empty talk? My absence from the
solemn feasts, is that a perpetual exile? Why this deep depression, this
faithless fainting, this chicken hearted melancholy? As Trapp says, "David
chides David out of the dumps; "and herein he is an example for all
desponding ones. To search out the cause of our sorrow is often the best
surgery for grief. Self ignorance is not bliss; in this case it is misery. The
mist of ignorance magnifies the causes of our alarm; a clearer view will make
monsters dwindle into trifles. Why art thou disquieted within me? Why is
my quiet gone? If I cannot keep a public Sabbath, yet wherefore do I deny my
soul her indoor Sabbath? Why am I agitated like a troubled sea, and why do my
thoughts make a noise like a tumultuous multitude? The causes are not enough to
justify such utter yielding to despondency. Up, my heart! What aileth thee?
Play the man, and thy castings down shall turn to up liftings, and thy
disquietudes to calm. Hope thou in God. If every evil be let loose from
Pandora's box, yet is there hope at the bottom. This is the grace that swims,
though the waves roar and be troubled. God is unchangeable, and therefore his grace
is the ground for unshaken hope. If everything be dark, yet the day will come,
and meanwhile hope carries stars in her eyes; her lamps are not dependent on
oil from without, her light is fed by secret visitations of God, which sustain
the spirit. For I shall yet praise him. Yet will my sighs give place to
songs, my mournful ditties shall be exchanged for triumphal paeans. A loss of
the present sense of God's love is not a loss of that love itself; the jewel is
there, though it gleams not on our breast; hope knows her title good when she
cannot read it clear; she expects the promised boon though present providence
stands before her with empty hands. For I shall yet praise him for the help
of his countenance. Salvations come from the propitious face of God, and he
will yet lift up his countenance upon us. Note well that the main hope and
chief desire of David rest in the smile of God. His face is what he seeks and
hopes to see, and this will recover his low spirits, this will put to scorn his
laughing enemies, this will restore to him all the joys of those holy and happy
days around which memory lingers. This is grand cheer. This verse, like the
singing of Paul and Silas, looses chains and shakes prison walls. He who can
use such heroic language in his gloomy hours will surely conquer. In the garden
of hope grow the laurels for future victories, the roses of coming joy, the
lilies of approaching peace.
Verse
6. O my God, my soul is cast down within me. Here the song
begins again upon the bass. So sweet an ending deserves that for the sake of a
second hopeful close the Psalm should even begin again. Perhaps the psalmist's
dejection continued, the spasm of despondency returned; well, then, he will
down with his harp again, and try again its power upon himself, as in his
younger days, he saw its influence upon Saul when the evil spirit came upon
him. With God the song begins a second time more nearly than at first. The
singer was also a little more tranquil. Outward expression of desire was gone;
there was no visible panting; the sorrow was not all restrained within doors.
Within or upon himself he was cast down; and, verily, it may well be so, while
our thoughts look more within than upward. If self were to furnish comfort, we
should have but poor provender. There is no solid foundation for comfort in
such fickle frames as our heart is subject to. It is well to tell the Lord how
we feel, and the more plain the confession the better: David talks like a sick
child to its mother, and we should learn to imitate him. Therefore will I
remember thee. It is well to fly to our God. Here is terra firma.
Blessed down casting which drives us to so sure a rock of refuge as thee, O
Lord! From the hill Mizar. He recalls his seasons of choice communion by
the river and among the hills, and especially that dearest hour upon the little
hill, where love spake her sweetest language and revealed her nearest
fellowship. It is great wisdom to store up in memory our choice occasions of
converse with heaven; we may want them another day, when the Lord is slow in
bringing back his banished ones, and our soul is aching with fear. "His
love in times past" has been a precious cordial to many a fainting one;
like soft breath it has fanned the smoking flax into a flame, and bound up the
bruised reed. Oh, never to be forgotten valley of Achor, thou art a door of
hope! Fair days, now gone, ye have left a light behind you which cheers our
present gloom. Or does David mean that even where he was he would bethink him
of his God; does he declare that, forgetful of time and place, he would count
Jordan as sacred as Siloa, Hermon as holy as Zion, and even Mizar, that
insignificant rising ground as glorious as the mountains which are round about
Jerusalem! Oh! it is a heavenly heart which can sing
"To
me remains nor place nor time;
my country is in every clime;
I can be calm and free from care
On any shore, since God is there."
"Could
I be cast where thou art not,
That were indeed a dreadful lot,
But regions none remote I call,
Secure of finding God in all."
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of thy waterspouts.
Thy severe dealings with me seem to excite all creation to attack me; heaven,
and earth, and hell, call to each other, stirring each other up in dreadful
conspiracy against my peace. As in a waterspout, the deeps above and below
clasp hands, so it seemed to David that heaven and earth united to create a
tempest around him. His woes were incessant and overwhelming. Billow followed
billow, one sea echoed the roaring of another; bodily pain aroused mental fear,
Satanic suggestions chimed in with mistrustful forebodings, outward tribulation
thundered in awful harmony with inward anguish: his soul seemed drowned as in a
universal deluge of trouble, over whose waves the providence of the Lord moved
as a watery pillar, in dreadful majesty inspiring the utmost terror. As for the
afflicted one he was like a lonely bark around which the fury of a storm is
bursting, or a mariner floating on a mast, almost every moment submerged. All
thy waves and thy billows are gone over me. David thought that every
trouble in the world had met in him, but he exaggerated, for all the
breaking waves of Jehovah have passed over none but the Lord Jesus; there are
griefs to which he makes his children strangers for his love's sake. Sorrow
naturally states its case forcibly; the mercy is that the Lord after all hath
not dealt with us according to our fears. Yet what a plight to be in! Atlantic
rollers sweeping in ceaseless succession over one's head, waterspouts coming nearer
and nearer, and all the ocean in uproar around the weary swimmer; most of the
heirs of heaven can realise the description, for they have experienced the
like. This is a deep experience unknown to babes in grace, but common enough to
such as do business on great waters of affliction: to such it is some comfort
to remember that the waves and billows are the Lord's, "thy waves
and thy billows, "says David, they are all sent, and directed by
him, and achieve his designs, and the child of God knowing this, is the more
resigned.
Verse
8. Yet the Lord will command his lovingkindness in the daytime.
Come what may there shall be "a certain secret something" to sweeten
all. Lovingkindness is a noble life belt in a rough sea. The day may darken
into a strange and untimely midnight, but the love of God ordained of old to be
the portion of the elect, shall be by sovereign decree meted out to them. No
day shall ever dawn on an heir of grace and find him altogether forsaken of his
Lord: the Lord reigneth, and as a sovereign he will with authority command
mercy to be reserved for his chosen. And in the night. Both divisions of
the day shall be illuminated with special love, and no stress of trial shall
prevent it. Our God is God of the nights as well as the days; none shall find
his Israel unprotected, be the hour what it may. His song shall be with me.
Songs of praise for blessings received shall cheer the gloom of night. No music
sweeter than this. The belief that we shall yet glorify the Lord for mercy
given in extremity is a delightful stay to the soul. Affliction may put out our
candle, but if it cannot silence our song we will soon light the candle again. And
my prayer unto the God of my life. Prayer is yoked with praise. He who is
the living God, is the God of our life, from him we derive it, with him in
prayer and praise we spend it, to him we devote it, in him we shall prefect it.
To be assured that our sighs and songs shall both have free access to our
glorious Lord is to have reason for hope in the most deplorable condition.
Verse
9. I will say unto God my rock, Why hast thou forgotten me?
Faith is allowed to enquire of her God the causes of his displeasure, and she
is even permitted to expostulate with him and put him in mind of his promises,
and ask why apparently they are not fulfilled. If the Lord be indeed our
refuge, when we find no refuge, it is time to be raising the question,
"Why is this?" Yet we must not let go our hold, the Lord must be my
rock still; we must keep to him as our alone confidence, and never forego our
interest in him. Why go I mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?
He who condescends to be pleaded with by Abraham, his friend, allows us to put
to him the question that we may search out the causes of his severity towards
us. Surely he can have no pleasure in seeing the faces of his servants stained
and squalid with their tears; he can find no content in the harshness with
which their foes assail them. He can never take pleasure in the tyranny with
which Satan vexes them. Why then does he leave them to be mocked by his enemies
and theirs? How can the strong God, who is as firm and abiding as a rock, be
also as hard and unmoved as a rock towards those who trust in him? Such
enquiries humbly pressed often afford relief to the soul. To know the reason
for sorrow is in part to know how to escape it, or at least to endure it. Want
of attentive consideration often makes adversity appear to be more mysterious
and hopeless than it really is. It is a pitiable thing for any man to have a
limb amputated, but when we know that the operation was needful to save life,
we are glad to hear that it has been successfully performed; even thus as trial
unfolds, the design of the Lord sending it becomes far more easy to bear.
Verse
10. As with a sword in my bones, mine enemies reproach me.
Cruel mockeries cut deeper than the flesh, they reach the soul as though a
rapier were introduced between the ribs to prick the heart. If reproaches kill
not, yet they are killing, the pain caused is excruciating. The tongue cuts to
the bone, and its wounds are hard to cure. While they say daily unto me,
Where is thy God? This is the most unkind cut of all, reflecting as it does
both upon the Lord's faithfulness and his servant's character. Such was the
malice of David's foes, that having thought of the cruel question, they said
it, said it daily, repeated it to him, and that for a length, of
time; surely the continual yapping of these curs at his heel was enough to
madden him, and perhaps would have done so had he not resorted to prayer and
made the persecutions of his enemies a plea with his Lord.
Verse
11. Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted
within me? In the rehearsal of his sorrow, he finds after all no sufficient
ground for being disquieted. Looked in the face, his fears were not so
overwhelming as they seemed when shrouded in obscurity. Hope thou in God.
Let the anchor still keep its hold. God is faithful, God is love, therefore
there is room and reason for hope. Who is the health of my countenance, and
my God. This is the same hopeful expression as that contained in verse
five, but the addition of and my God shows that the writer was growing
in confidence, and was able defiantly to reply to the question, "Where is
thy God?" Here, even here, he is, ready to deliver me. I am not ashamed to
own him amid your sneers and taunts, for he will rescue me out of your hands.
Thus faith closes the struggle, a victor in fact by anticipation, and in heart
by firm reliance. The saddest countenance shall yet be made to shine, if there
be a taking of God at his word and an expectation of his salvation.
"For
yet I know I shall him praise
Who graciously to me,
The health is of my countenance,
Yea, mine own God is he."
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. "Sons
of Korah." Who were the sons of Korah? These opinions have more
or less prevailed. One is that they sprang from some one of that name in the
days of David. Mudge and others think that the sons of Korah were a society of
musicians, founded or presided over by Korah. Others think that the sons of
Korah were the surviving descendants of that miserable man who, together with
two hundred and fifty of his adherents, who were princes, perished when
"the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up, together with
Korah." In Nu 26:11 we read: "Notwithstanding the children of Korah
died not." They had taken the warning given, and had departed from the
tents of these wicked men. Nu 16:24,26. It must be admitted that the name Korah
and the patronymic Korahite are found in the Scriptures in a way that
creates considerable doubt respecting the particular man from whom the
Korahites are named. See 1Ch 1:35 2:43 6:22,54 9:19 26:1 2Ch 20:19. Yet the
more common belief is that they descended from him who perished in his
gainsaying. This view is taken by Ainsworth with entire confidence, by Gill,
and others. Korah, who perished, was a Levite. Whatever may have been their
origin, it is clear the sons of Korah were a Levitical family of
singers. Nothing, then, could be more appropriate than the dedication of a
sacred song to these very people. William S. Plumer.
Title. "Sons
of Korah." The "Korah" whose "sons"
are here spoken of, is the Levite who headed the insurrection against Moses and
Aaron in the wilderness. Nu 16:1-50. We find his descendants existing as a
powerful Levitical family in the time of David, at least, if they are to be
identified, as is probable, with the Korahites mentioned in 1Ch 12:6, who, like
our own warlike bishops of former times, seem to have known how to doff the
priestly vestment for the soldier's armour, and whose hand could wield the
sword as well as strike the harp. The Korahites were a part of the band who
acknowledged David as their chief, at Ziklag; warriors "whose faces,
"it is said, "were like the faces of lions, and who were (for speed)
like gazelles upon the mountains." According to 1Ch 9:17-19, the Korahites
were in David's time, keepers of the threshold of the tabernacle; and still
earlier, in the time of Moses, watchmen at the entrance of the camp of the
Levites. In 1Ch 26:1-19, we find two branches of this family associated with
that of Merari, as guardians of the doors of the Temple. There is probably an
allusion to this their office, in Ps 84:10. But the Korahites were also celebrated
musicians and singers; see 1Ch 6:16-33, where Heman, one of the three famous
musicians of the time, is said to be a Korahite (compare 1Ch 25:1-31). The
musical reputation of the family continued in the time of Jehoshaphat 2Ch
20:19, where we have the peculiar doubly plural form (Myxrqhynb), "Sons of
the Korahites." J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Title. "Sons
of Korah." Medieval writers remark how here, as so often, it was the
will of God to raise up saints where they could have been least looked for. Who
should imagine that from the posterity of him who said, "Ye take too much
upon you, ye sons of Aaron, "should have risen those whose sweet Psalms
would be the heritage of the church of God to the end of time? J. M. Neale.
Verse
1. The hart panteth after the water brooks. And here we have
started up, and have sent leaping over the plain another of Solomon's
favourites. What elegant creatures these gazelles are, and how gracefully they
bound! ...The sacred writers frequently mention gazelles under the various names
of harts, roes, and hinds...I have seen large flocks of these panting harts
gather round the water brooks in the great deserts of Central Syria, so subdued
by thirst that you could approach quite near them before they fled. W. M.
Thomson.
Verse
1. Little do the drunkards think that take so much pleasure in
frequenting the houses of Bacchus, that the godly take a great deal more, and
have a great deal more joy in frequenting the houses of God. But it is a thing
that God promised long ago by the prophet: "Then will I bring to my holy
mountain, and make them joyful in my house of prayer: their burnt offerings and
their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar; for mine house shall be
called an house of prayer for all people." Isa 56:7. And I think, I hear
the willing people of God's power, merrily calling one to another in the words
of Mic 4:2, "Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, and to
the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will
walk in his paths: for the law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of the Lord
from Jerusalem." How is a godly man ravished with "the beauty of
holiness, "when he is at such meetings! How was holy David taken with
being in the house of God at Jerusalem! insomuch, that if he were kept from it
but a little while, his soul panted for it, and longed after it, and fainted
for lack of it, as a thirsty hart would do for lack of water! As the hart
panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. My soul
thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come and appear before God?
The poor disconsolate captives preferred it to the best place in their memory.
"If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her
cunning." Ps 137:5; nay, they preferred it to their chiefest joy: "If
I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I
prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy, "Ps 42:6. There was no place in
the world that David regarded or cared to be in in comparison of it. "A
day in thy courts is better than a thousand. I had rather be a doorkeeper in
the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness" Ps 84:10,
insomuch, that he could find it in his heart, nay, and would choose, if he
might have his desire, to spend all his days in that house. Ps 27:4. Zachary
Bogan.
Verse
1. The soul strongly desires acquaintance with God here in his
ordinances. Chrysostom's very rhetorical upon the text, and tells us how that
David, like a lover in absence, must express his affection; as they have their
dainty sighs, and passionate complaints, their loving exclamations, and sundry
discoveries of affection; they can meet with never a tree, but in the bark of
it they must engrave the name of their darling, Denfos d o erws d kittos auton
ek paaes anadeoai profaoews; it will twine upon every opportunity, as the
Moralist speaks. And the true lovers of God, they are always thinking upon him,
sighing for him, panting after him, talking of him, and (if it were possible)
would engrave the name of the Lord Jesus upon the breasts of all the men in the
world. Look upon David, now a banished man, and fled from the presence of Saul,
and see how he behaves himself: not like Themistocles or Camillus, or some of
those brave banished worthies. He does not complain of the ungratefulness of
his country, the malice of his adversaries, and his own unhappy success. No,
instead of murmuring, he falls a panting, and that only after his God. He is
banished from the sanctuary, the palace of God's nearest presence, and chiefest
residence; he cannot enjoy the beauty of holiness, and all other places seem to
him but as the tents of Kedar. He is banished from the temple, and he thinks
himself banished from his God, as it is in the following words, When shall I
come and appear before God? The whole stream of expositors run this way,
that it is meant of his strong longing to visit the Temple, and those amiable
courts of his God, with which his soul was so much taken. Nathanael
Culverwel's "Panting Soul," 1652.
Verses
1-3. are an illustration of the frequent use of the word Elohim in the
second book of Psalms. We give Fry's translation of the first three verses.—
As
the hart looketh for the springs of water,
So my soul looketh for thee, O Elohim.
My soul is athirst for Elohim for the living El:
When shall I go and see the face of Elohim?
My tears have been my meat day and night,
While they say to me continually, Where is thy Elohim?
Verse
3. My tears have been my meat day and night. The psalmist
could eat nothing because of his extreme grief. John Gadsby.
Verse
3. They say unto me. It is not only of me, but to me; they
spake it to his very face, as those who were ready to justify it and make it
good, that God had forsaken him. Backbiting argues more baseness, but open
reproach carries more boldness, and shamelessness, and impudence in it; and
this is that which David's enemies were guilty of here in this place. Thomas
Horton.
Verse
3. Where is thy God? God's children are impatient, as far as
they are men, of reproaches; but so far as they are Christian men, they are
impatient of reproaches in religion; Where is now thy God? They were not
such desperate Atheists as to think there was no God, to call in question
whether there were a God or no, though, indeed, they were little better; but
they rather reproach and upbraid him with his singularity, where is thy
God? You are one of God's darlings; you are one that thought nobody served God
but you; you are one that will go alone—your God! So this is an ordinary
reproach, an ordinary part for wicked men to cast at the best people,
especially when they are in misery. What it become of your profession now? What
is become of your forwardness and strictness now? What is become of your God
that you bragged so of, and thought yourselves so happy in, as if he had been
nobody's God but yours? We may learn hence the disposition of wicked men. It is
a character of a full of poison, cursed disposition to upbraid a man with his
religion. But what is the scope? The scope is worse than the words Where is
thy God? The scope is to shake his faith and his confidence in God, and
this is that which touched him so nearly while they upbraided him. For
the devil knows well enough that as long as God and the soul join together, it
is in vain to trouble any man, therefore he labours to put jealousies, to
accuse God to man, and man to God. He knows there is nothing in the world can
stand against God. As long as we make God our confidence, all his enterprises
are in vain. His scope is, therefore, to shake our affiance in God. Where is
thy God? So he dealt with the head of the church, our blessed Saviour
himself, when he came to tempt him. "If thou be the Son of God, command
these stones to be made bread." Mt 4:3. He comes with an "if,
"he laboured to shake him in his Sonship. The devil, since he was
divided from God himself eternally, is become a spirit of division; he labours
to divide even God the Father from his own Son; "If thou be the Son of
God?" So he labours to sever Christians from their head Christ. Where
is thy God? There was his scope, to breed division if he could, between his
heart and God, that he might call God into jealousy, as if he had not regarded
him: thou hast taken a great deal of pains in serving thy God; thou seest how
he regards thee now; Where is thy God? Richard Sibbes.
Verse
3. How powerfully do the scoffs and reproaches of the ungodly tend
to shake the faith of a mind already dejected! How peculiarly afflictive to the
soul that loves God, is the dishonour cast upon him by his enemies! Henry
March, in "Sabbaths at Home, "1823.
Verse
3. Where is thy God?
"Where
is now thy God!" Oh, sorrow!
Hourly thus to hear him say,
Finding thus the longed for morrow,
Mournful as the dark to day.
Yet not thus my soul would languish,
Would not thus be grieved and shamed,
But for that severer anguish,
When I hear the Lord defamed.
"Where
is now thy God!" Oh, aid me,
Lord of mercy, to reply—
"He is HERE—though foes invade me,
Know his outstretched arm is nigh."
Help me thus to be victorious,
While the shield of faith I take;
Lord, appear, and make thee glorious:
Help me for thy honour's sake.
—Henry March.
Verse
4. When I remember these things, etc. To a person in misery
it is a great increase of misery to have been once happy: it was to David an
occasion of new tears when he remembered his former joys. Time was, says the
poor soul, when I thought of God with comfort, and when I thought of him as my
own God; and to lose a God that I once enjoyed is the loss of all my losses,
and of all my terrors the most terrible. Time was when I could go and pray to
him, and ease myself in prayer; but now I have no boldness, no hope, no success
in prayer. I cannot call him my Father any more. Time was when I could
read the Bible and treasure up the promises, and survey the land of Canaan as
my own inheritance; but now I dare not look into the Word lest I read my own
condemnation there. The Sabbath was formerly to me as one of the days of
heaven, but now it is also, as well as the rest, a sad and mournful day. I
formerly rejoiced in the name of Christ, "I sat under his shadow." So
2:3. I was in his eyes as one that found favour; but now my soul is like the
deserts of Arabia, I am scorched with burning heat. From how great a height
have I fallen! How fair was I once for heaven and for salvation, and now am
like to come short of it! I once was flourishing in the courts of the Lord, and
now all my fruit is blasted and withered away: "his dew lay all night upon
my branches, "but now I am like the mountains of Gilboa, no rain falls
upon me. Had I never heard of heaven I could not have been so miserable as I
now am: had I never known God, the loss of him had not been so terrible as now
it is like to be. Job 29:2-3. Timothy Rogers.
Verse
4. (first clause). The blessedness of even the remembrance of
divine worship is so great, that it can save the soul from despair. J. P.
Lange's Commentary.
Verse
4. I pour out my soul. The very soul of prayer lies in the
pouring out of the soul before God. Thomas Brooks.
Verse
4. I had gone with the multitude, I went with them to the house
of God, with the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept holyday.
The gracious God is pleased to esteem it his glory to have many beggars
thronging at the beautiful gate of his temple, for spiritual and corporal alms.
What an honour is it to our great Landlord that multitudes of tenants flock
together to his house to pay their rent of thanks and worship for their all
which they hold of him! How loud and lovely is the noise of many golden
trumpets! Good Lord, what an echo do they make in heaven's ears! When many
skilful musicians play in concert with well tuned and prepared instruments the
music cannot but be ravishing to God himself. George Swinnock.
Verse
4. Do but consider David's tears and grief for want of, and his
fervent prayers for the fruition of public ordinances even then, when he had
opportunities for private performances; and surely thou wilt esteem the
ministry of the Word no mean mercy. See his sorrow when he was driven from
God's sanctuary. When I remember these things I pour out my soul in me: for
I had gone with the multitude, I went with them to the house of God."
"My soul is poured out; that is, I am overwhelmed with grief, and ever
ready to die when I compare my present condition with my former happiness in
the fruition of religious assemblies. There is an elegancy in the phrase poured
out; the word is applied to water, or any liquid thing, and in Scripture
signifieth abundance. Joe 2:28. My life is ready to be poured out as water upon
the ground, which cannot be gathered up again, when I remember my former
mercies, and consider my present misery...The loss of his father, mother,
wives, children, lands, liberty—nay, of his very life, would not have gone so
near his heart as the loss of public ordinances. As his sorrow was great for
the want, so was his suit most earnest for the enjoyment of them. How many a
prayer doth he put up for the liberty of the tabernacle! Ps 43:3-4 27:4,8. It
is the one thing, the principal thing which he begs of God. Henry Smith.
Verse
4. The bias of the soul is remarkably shown by the objects of
regretful recollection. Henry March.
Verse
4. With a multitude that kept holy day.
Though
private prayer be a brave design
Yet public hath more promises, more love:
And love's a weight to hearts, to eyes a sign.
We all are but cold suitors; let us move
Where it is warmest. Leave thy six and seven;
Pray with the most: for where most pray, is heaven.
—George Herbert, in "The Temple."
Verse
5. WHY art thou cast down, O my soul? Athanasius counselled
his friend, that when any trouble should fall upon him, he should fall
presently to the reading of this Psalm; for there was a way, he thought, of
curing by the like, as well as by the contrary: for it is observed
indeed that when two instruments are tuned to the same unison, if you touch the
strings of the one, the strings of the other will move too, though untouched,
if placed at a convenient distance. That therefore you may try the same
experiments upon yourselves, do but set your affections for a tune in the same
key in which these words were spoken; if really you feel none, imagine
some affliction laid upon you; when you have done so, that you may be the more
fully moved, place your attention at a convenient distance, look narrowly on
this holy prophet, observe how he retires himself, shuts out the world, calls
his sad soul to as sad a reckoning: Quare tam tristis? O my soul! thou
that wert infused to give me life; nay, says Philo the Jew, a spark, a beam of
the divinity, thou, which shouldest be to this dark body of mine as the sun is
to the earth, enlightening, quickening, cheering up my spirits; tell me, why
art thou clouded? why art thou cast down? ...
Think
of this, ye that feel the heaviness of your soul; think of it, ye that do not,
for ye may feel it. Know there is a sorrow "that worketh repentance not to
be repented of." Know again there is a sorrow "that worketh
death." Remember that there were tears that got sinful Mary heaven;
remember again there were tears that got sinful Esau nothing. For as in
martyrdom, it is not the sword, the boiling lead, or fire, not what we
suffer, but why, that makes us martyrs; so in our sorrows, it is not how
deep they wound, but why, that justifies them. Let every one, therefore,
that hath a troubled heart, ask his soul the "Why:" "Why art
thou cast down?" Is it not for thine own sins, or the sins of others?
Take either of them, thine eyes will have a large field to water. Is it for
that thou hast been a child of wrath, a servant of the devil? Is it for that
thou art a candle set in the wind, blown at by several temptations? or is it
for that thou wouldst be freed from them? "Woe is me, that I sojourn in
Mesech, that I dwell in the tents of Kedar!" Ps 120:5. Art thou troubled
as St. Augustine was, when he read that the way to heaven was narrow, the
number small that travelled thither? Or hast thou put on St. Bernard's
resolution, who had made a compact with his soul, never to joy till he had
heard his Saviour call him, "Come ye blessed, "nor never to leave
sorrowing till he had escaped the bitter sentence, "Go, ye cursed?"
If any of these be the Why, the ground of thy sorrows, if such thoughts
have cast thee down; know, that thy Saviour hath already blessed thee,
for "Blessed are they that mourn." The angels are thy servants, they
gather thy tears; God is thy treasurer, he lays them up in his bottle; the Holy
Ghost is thy comforter, he will not leave thee. Fear not, then, to be thus cast
down, fear not to be thus disquieted within thee. Brian Duppa (Bishop),
1588-1662, in a Sermon entitled "The Soule's Soloquie."
Verse
5. Why art thou cast down, O my soul? Why, or what may be the
reason, that this text is three times used in this Psalm and in the next?
whereas you do not find two verses of the same length used in all the Book of
Psalms besides, except in Psalm 107, where is often repeated, "O that men
would praise the Lord, "etc. Now, surely the frequent mention of this text
and words doth argue and note unto us the weightiness of the matter...Wicked men
oppressed David, and the devil tempted him; yet he chides his own heart and
nothing else. David did not chide at Saul, nor chide at Absalom; but he chides
and checks his own heart. "Why art thou cast down, O my soul?" Though
the devil and wicked men, the one do tempt, the other do oppress as instruments
of punishment for sin; yet we with David are to chide our own hearts. Consider,
what though in our translations the words are translated and rendered
passively, Why art thou cast down? yet, in the original, they are
rendered actively; we read it, Why art thou cast down? etc; but in the
original it is read, (yle ymht-hmw yvkn yxxwtvt-hm) "Why bowest (or
pressest) thou down thyself, my soul? and why tumultest thou against
me?" As Arias Montanus, Cur humiliasti te? Cur deprimes te anima
mea? So Lorinus, Pr 12:25. And the words so read, they do not intimate thus
much, that God's own people may be cast down too much for the sense of sin, and
they are most active in their own down casting. It is not God nor the devil
that cast thee down; but Why dost thou cast thyself down? to create more
trouble on thyself than either God doth inflict or the devil tempt thee to. Christopher
Love, in "The Dejected Soul's Cure," 1657.
Verse
5. Why art thou cast down, O my soul? Consider but this, how
much there is of God in the affliction. 1. Came it not without God's
privity? Why art thou troubled, then? Thy Father knowing of it would have
stopped its course if it had been best for thee. 2. Came it not without his
command? Why art thou troubled? It is the cup that thy Father hath given
thee, and wilt thou not drink it? 3. Is it thy Father's will that thou
shouldest suffer, and shall it be thy humour to rebel? 4. Hath God done no
more than he might do? Why dost thou murmur, as if he had done thee wrong?
5. Is it a piece of his wise acting? Why dost thou exalt thy foolish
will above his infinite wisdom? 6. Is his way a way of mercy? Why does
thy mutinous spirits tumble at it, as a rough way? 7. Is the thing good
that is befallen thee? Why dost thou quarrel as if it were evil? 8. Is it less
than men suffer, than his own people, yea, than his own Son hath suffered,
and hast thou cause to complain? 9. Is it but thy merit? and less than
that, too; and shall the living man complain for the punishment of his sin? 10.
Is it in measure, ordered with care? (1) by the physician's hand; and
(2) a little draught, and (3) proportioned to thy strength; (4) measured out
according to the proportion of strength and comfort he intends to measure thee
out, to bear it withal? Why are thou cast down? Why art thou disquieted? Is the
end and fruit of it but to make thee white, and purify thee? to purge thy sin
past, and to prevent it for the time to come? and dost thou find a present
fruit in it? Dost thou find that now thou art turned into a chalk stone; thy
groves and images—those corruptions which did attend thee while thou wert in
prosperity, and which would attend thee if you had those good things which you
want, and are disquieted for; and if those evils which you feel or fear were
far from your sense and fear, would still attend thee—that those do not now
stand up? Lift up thy head, Christian! say to thy soul, Why art thou cast
down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted in me? Meditate what there is
of God in the cause of thy disquietments. John Collinge (1623-1690) in
"A Cordial for a Fainting Soule," 1652.
Verse
5. Why art thou disquieted? more literally, tumultuated,
a word frequently applied to the roaring and tumult and tossing of the sea. See
Isa 17:12 Jer 5:22 6:23 51:55. Henry March.
Verse
5. Hope thou in God. I shall show what powerful influence hope
hath on the Christian in affliction, and how. First, it stills and silences him
under affliction. It keeps the king's peace in the heart, which else would soon
be in an uproar. A hopeless soul is clamorous: one while it charges God,
another while it reviles his instruments. It cannot long rest, and no wonder,
when hope is not there. Hope hath a rare art in stilling a froward spirit, when
nothing else can; as the mother can make the crying child quiet by laying it to
the breast, when the rod makes it cry worse. This way David took, and found it
effectual; when his soul was unquiet by reason of his present affliction, he
lays it to the breast of the promise: "Why art thy cast down O my soul?
and why art thou disquieted in me? hope thou in God." And here his soul
sweetly sleeps, as the child with the breast in his mouth; and that this was
his usual way, we may think by the frequent instances we find; thrice we find
him taking this course in two Psalms, 42 and 43...Secondly, this hope fills the
afflicted soul with such inward joy and consolation, that it can laugh while
tears are in the eye, sigh and sing all in a breath; it is called "the
rejoicing of hope, "Heb 3:6. And hope never affords more joy than in
affliction. It is on a watery cloud that the sun paints those curious colours
in the rainbow...There are two graces, which Christ useth above any other, to
fill the soul with joy—faith and hope, because these two fetch all their wine
of joy without door. Faith tells the soul what Christ hath done for it; and so
comforts it; hope revives the soul with the news of what Christ will do: both
draw at one tap—Christ and his promise. Condensed from William Gurnall.
Verse
5. Hope thou in God. The word which is here rendered, hope
denotes that expectation which is founded on faith in God, and which
leads the soul to wait upon him. The idea is beautifully expressed in Ps
39:7. "And now, Lord, what wait I for? my hope is in thee." Henry
March.
Verse
5. I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance.
When it may be said, "He whom God loveth is sick, "then it may be
said, "This sickness is not unto death; "and though it be to the
first death, yet not to the second. Who would think when Jonah was in the sea
Jon 3:1-10, that he would preach at Nineveh? Who would think when
Nebuchadnezzar was in the forest Da 4:1-37, that he should reign again in
Babel? Who would think when Joseph was banished of his brethren, that his
brethren should seek unto him like his servants? Who would think when Job
scraped his sores upon the dunghill, all his houses were burned, all his cattle
stolen, and all his children dead, that he should be richer than ever he was?
These are the acts of mercy which make the righteous sing, "The Lord hath
triumphed valiantly." Exodus 15-21. Henry Smith.
Verse
5. I shall yet praise him. David's mind is upon the duty
more than upon the mercy; upon the duty, as it is a matter of grace,
more than upon the mercy, as it is a matter of sense. And,
therefore, by a happy mistake, his tongue slips, as men are wont to do in such
cases, and he puts one for the other; when he should say, I shall receive
mercy from God, he says, I shall give praise to him. Thomas Horton.
Verse
5. He is the skilful physician, who at the same time that he
evacuates the disease, doth also comfort and strengthen nature; and he the true
Christian, that doth not content himself with a bare laying aside evil customs
and practices, but labours to walk in the exercise of the contrary graces. Art
thou discomposed with impatience, haunted with a discontented spirit under any
affliction? Think it not enough to silence thy heart from quarrelling with God,
but leave not till thou canst bring it sweetly to rely on God. Holy David drove
it thus far, he did not only chide his soul for being disquieted, but he
charges it to trust in God. William Gurnall.
Verse
5. There was one Alice Benden, who, among others, was imprisoned for
religion in Canterbury Castle; but after awhile, by the bishop's order, she was
let down into a deep dungeon, where none of her friends could come at her.
There she was fed with an halfpenny bread, and a farthing beer a day, neither
would they allow her any more for her money. Her lodging was upon a little
straw, between a pair of stocks and a stone wall. This made her grievously to
bewail and lament her estate, reasoning with herself, why her Lord God did in
so heavy a wise afflict her, and suffered her thus to be sequestered from the
sweet society of her loving prison fellows. In this extremity of misery, and in
the midst of these dolorous mournings she continued, till on a night, repeating
that of the psalmist: "Why art thou so heavy, O my soul? and why art
thou so cast down within me? Still trust in God, "etc.; and, God's
right hand can change all this, etc.; she received comfort in the midst of
her sorrows, and so continued joyful to the time of her release. Samuel
Clarke's "Mirror."
Verses
5, 11. In case thou art at any time oppressed with sorrows, ask thy
heart and soul that question which David did in the like case twice in one
Psalm: Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted within
me? and certainly the soul would return answer, My distress of sadness
springs from my unbelief. You may know the disease by the cure, in the very
next words, O put thy trust in God; hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise
him, who is the health of my countenance, and my God. All sorrow of heart
springs principally from our unbelief, not from the greatness of other evils; I
mean, destructive sorrow, for godly sorrow is a friend to godly joy. It
is not so much the weight of the burden, as the soreness of the back, that
troubles the poor beast: so it is not so much the weight of outward evils, as
the inward soreness of a galled conscience, not purified nor healed by faith,
that vexes and troubles the poor creature. Matthew Lawrence, in "The
Use and Practice of Faith," 1657.
Verses
5, 11. As afflictions do proceed from ourselves, they may be called
troubles, or perturbations; for the best man doth sometimes cause this bad
liquor to boil out of his own bowels. David, not once, but often, hath cried
out, Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thy disquieted in me?
And show me the man that annoys and troubles not himself in vain, because with
patience he doth not tarry the Lord's leisure? The foolish bird, who, being in
a room whose door is locked, and the casements shut, beateth herself against
the wall and windows, breaking her feathers and bruising her body, whereas,
would she stay till the passages were by the keeper opened, she might depart,
being not at all wounded; even so falleth it out with us: for when the Lord
doth shut us up, and straiten our liberty for a time, we would fain make way
for ourselves, having many devices in our hearts to break through the walls of
his providence; whereas, if we would stay his leisure, depend on his promise,
and submit ourselves to be disposed of by his hand, we might with more ease endure
this prison, and with less hurt at the last be set at liberty. For God is in
one mind, and who can change him? He will bring to pass that thing that he hath
decreed upon us. John Barlow's Sermon, 1618.
Verses
5, 11. If you would get assurance, spend more time in strengthening your
evidences for heaven, than in questioning of them. It is the great fault of
many Christians they will spend much time in questioning, and not in
strengthening their comforts. They will reason themselves into unbelief, and say,
Lord, why should I believe? Why should I take hold of a promise that am so
unholy and so unmortified a creature? And so by this they reason themselves to
such a pass that they dare not lay hold upon Christ, whereas it should be your
work to reason yourselves into Christ as much as you can. Labour to strengthen
your comforts, and reason thus, Why should I not believe in Christ? Thus David
did. Psalm 42. "Why art thou troubled, O my soul, and why art thou cast
down within me?" Is not the mercy of God more than sin in the
creature? Is not there free grace where there is guilt? Are not there pardoning
mercies where condemnation is deserved? You should reason up your comforts
rather than reason them down, and spend more time in strengthening than in
questioning of them. You would count him a very unwise man that hath a lease of
so much land, and he himself shall create scruples and doubts, and shall use no
means to make his title good. And truly many Christians are as unwise for
heaven. They have, as I may say, good bond and seal that God will bring them to
heaven, and yet they will question and cavil themselves into unbelief. Beloved,
this should not be, but you ought rather to strengthen your comforts than
question them. Christopher Love.
Verse
6. O my God, my soul is cast down within me: therefore will I
remember thee. "Because I am very low in spirit, am deeply sorrowful, therefore
will I remember thee. I will remember how condescending thou art to thy `poor
and afflicted people; 'how ready to receive them when deserted or cast out by
men; how kind and patient to hear their complaint when they pour out the soul
before thee. I will remember thy lovingkindness to me in seasons past;
how thou hast looked on my distress, hast heard the voice of my supplications,
hast delivered me from my trials, or helped me to bear their burden,
strengthening me with strength in my soul. I will remember all that I have
enjoyed of thy presence when waiting on thee in thy house, or when celebrating
thy praises in company with thy `saints, the excellent of the earth.' I will
remember what thou ART; how meet an object for the trust of a desolate being
like myself! For though I am poor, thou art rich; though I am weak, thou art
mighty; though I am miserable, thou art happy. I will remember that thou art my
God. That thou hast manifested thyself to my soul, that thou hast enabled me to
choose thee for my portion, that I have trusted in thee, and have never been
confounded. I will remember that word of promise on which thou hast caused me
to hope, to which thou hast ever been faithful throughout all the past, and will
be, as I truly believe, even unto the end." Oh, how happy, even in the
midst of their unhappiness, are they, who in their trials, can take shelter in
God! Henry March.
Verse
6. "MY God." Astonishing expression! Who shall dare
to say to the Creator of the ends of the earth, the Majesty in the heavens, "My
God"? An exile, a wanderer, an outcast; a man forsaken, despised,
reviled; a soul cast down and disquieted: he shall dare. By what right?
Of covenant. Henry March.
Verse
6. Therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan, and of
the Hermonites, from the hill Mizar. It is remarkable what course the
psalmist took to regain comfort; he would remember three experiments of his
goodness—"the land of Jordan, "the land "of the Hermonites,
"and "the hill Mizar." First, will I remember the
land Jordan; that is, I will remember the great goodness of God in
drying up the river Jordan, that so the tribes of Israel might pass over to the
promised land: why, God that hath been good, will be good. Then, I will
remember the land of the Hermonites; in that land were Sihon, king of
the Amorites, and Og, king of Bashan, defeated; that you read of in Jos 12:1-2.
"Now these are the kings of the land, which the children of Israel smote,
and possessed their land on the other side Jordan toward the rising of the sun,
from the river Arnon unto Mount Hermon." Mizar, some think to be a
little hill near Mount Sinai, where the law was given. I will remember God's
goodness, in giving a law to his people. Here David would call to remembrance
the goodness of God of old, to regain to him comfort and quietness in his mind.
Christopher Love.
Verse
6. The Hermons, or the peaks or ridges of Hermon, the plural
being used either because of the two peaks of the mountain (Wilson, "Land
of the Bible"), or as I think probably, of the whole range of its
snowy heights. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
6. The Hermons, i.e., as some suppose, Mount Hermon, and the
other mountains upon that side of the river, just as Baalim means Baal, and
other idols worshipped with him; or more probably Mount Hermon considered not
as a single eminence, but a chain or range, like the Alps, the Alleghenies,
etc. J. A. Alexander.
Verse
6. From the hill. He that has a rich life of past experience
is thereby placed upon an eminence from which he may take a happy view of the
path lying before him. J. P Lange's Commentary.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of thy waterspouts.
Here he has conjoined two awful and terrific phenomena of nature. It is a fact
well ascertained by the evidence of travellers, that the falling of waterspouts
is not uncommon on the coast of Judea. It should seem that they are occasioned
by the congregating of great masses of cloud, whose waters concentrating to a
point, pour themselves down in a tremendous column, accompanied with a roaring
noise. Now, the image conceived in the mind of the psalmist seems to be that of
the rushing of this vast waterspout down into the sea, already agitated, and
increasing the turbulence and disorder of its waves. And awful picture!
Especially if there be added to it the ideas of a black tempestuous sky, and
the deafening roar occasioned by the tumult. What would be the situation of a
vessel in the midst of such a tempest, the deluge pouring down from above, and
all around her the furious ocean heaving its tremendous surges—how
ungovernable, how helpless, how next to impossible that she should escape
foundering except by some almost miraculous interference! Yet to such a
situation does David here compare the state of his soul when submersed, as it
were, under a sea of afflictions; "all thy waves and thy billows are gone
over me." How pungent must his sense of grief have been to occasion him to
make use of such a comparison, so strongly expressive of the utmost danger and
terror! Henry March.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep, etc. The abyss above calls on the
abyss below, in the voice of the droppings of thy waterspouts. Targum.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep. So let prayer unto prayer, and
faith unto faith, and one grace to the exercise of another. If we cannot
prevail with God it may be the first time, yet we may the second; or if not
then, the third. Thomas Horton.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep. What's that? Why, it is expressed
in the verse before: "O God, "says he, "my soul is
cast down within me." "Down, "that is deep into the
jaws of distrust and fear. And, Lord, my soul in this depth of sorrow,
calls for help to thy depth of mercy. For though I am sinking and going
down, yet not so low but that thy mercy is yet underneath me. Do, of thy
compassions, open those everlasting arms, and catch him that has no help or
stay in himself. For so it is with one that is falling into a well or a dungeon.
John Bunion.
Verse
7. Here the psalmist feels the spirit of bondage, which is wrath and
fear; and he prays for the joy of God's salvation, and to be upheld by God's
free spirit, which is the Holy Spirit, the spirit of love and power. He complains
of "deep calling unto deep." A soul in the horrible pit hears
little else but the calls of law and justice for vengeance, which are always
answered again by the accusations of Satan and conscience. The storms of Sinai,
like a waterspout at sea, threaten the earthen vessel with a deluge of
wrath, which would soon drown it in destruction and perdition. These waves of
real, and some imaginary, displeasure (no less terrible than real), rolling
over the poor creature, are ready to send the bark to the bottom. This is the
terrible way in which some fallen and backsliding souls are purged and
reclaimed, and especially such as have brought public scandal upon the gospel,
and church of Christ. William Huntington (1744-1813) in
"Contemplations of the God of Israel."
Verse
7. Thy waterspouts. Dr. Boothroyd translates (Kyrwnu), "thy
cataracts." In justification of which translation, he observes that
the situation of David suggested this forcible image. He saw the torrents
falling from the precipices, and heard them resounding, and as if calling to
one another for assistance; so, says he, all thy waves, that is, afflictions
and troubles, come upon me and overwhelm me. John Morison.
Verse
7. Waterspouts. Look at those clouds which hang like a heavy
pall of sackcloth over the sea, along the western horizon. From them, on such
windy days as these, are formed waterspouts, and I have already noticed
several incipient "spouts" lengthening downward from their lower
edge. These remarkable phenomena occur most frequently in spring, but I have
also seen them in autumn. They are not accompanied with much rain; and between
the dark stratum above and the sea, the sky is clear and bright. Here and there
fragments of black vapour, shaped like long funnels, are drawn down from the clouds
towards the sea, and are seen to be in violent agitation, whirling around on
themselves as they are driven along by the wind. Directly beneath them, the
surface of the sea is also in commotion by a whirlwind, which travels on in
concert with the spout above. I have often seen the two actually unite in
midair, and rush toward the mountains, writhing, and twisting, and bending,
like a huge serpent, with its head in the clouds and its tail on the deep. They
make a loud noise, of course, and appear very frightful. Deep calleth unto
deep at the noise of thy waterspouts: all thy waves and thy billows are gone
over me, said David, when his soul was cast down within him. But, though
formidable in appearance, they do very little injury. I have never heard of more
than one instance in which they proved destructive even to boats, though the
sailors are extremely afraid of them. As soon as they approach the shore, they
dissolve and disappear. That kind of waterspout which bursts on the mountains,
generally in the dry months of summer, does immense mischief. In a few minutes
the wadies along its track are swollen into furious rivers, which sweep away
grain, olives, raisins, and every other produce of the farmer. I have
frequently known them to carry off and drown flocks of sheep and goats, and
even cows, horses, and their owners alike. W. M. Thomson.
Verse
7. All thy waves and thy billows.
Deep
to deep incessant calling,
Tossed by furious tempests' roll,
Endless waves and billows falling,
Overwhelm my fainting soul.
Yet
I see a Power presiding
Mid the tumult of the storm,
Ever ruling, ever guiding,
Love's intentions to perform.
Yes,
mid sorrows most distressing,
Faith contemplates thy design,
Humbly bowing, and confessing
All the waves and billows THINE.
—Henry March.
Verse
7. All thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.
Wide
over misfortune's surging tide
Billows succeeding billows spread;
Should one, its fury spent, subside,
Another lifts its boisterous head.
—Agschylus in "The Seven Chief's against Thebes."
Verse
8. Yet the Lord will command his lovingkindness. His
expression is remarkable; he does not say simply that the Lord will bestow, but
command his lovingkindness. As the gift bestowed is grace—free favour to
the unworthy; so the manner of bestowing it is sovereign. It is given by
decree; it is a royal donative. And if he commands the blessing, who
shall hinder its reception? Henry March.
Verse
8. It is all one to a godly man, night or day. For
what night can there be to him who hath God always with him, who is a sun
to comfort him, as well as a shield to protect him Ps 84:11; and the light
of whose countenance, if it be but very little, is more comfortable than
all things else whatsoever that the day can bring with it. He can say,
"When I sit in darkness, the Lord shall be a light unto me" Mic 7:8;
and "the Lord my God will enlighten my darkness." Ps 18:28. To tell
you the truth, I think the night is the merriest time that the godly man
hath, and the saddest for the wicked man (who, though he may make use of darkness
to hide his sin, yet is he afraid, because of that very thing in which his
safety consists). For if a man be merry in good company, he must needs be more
merry when he enjoys it better, and there is less to disturb his mirth. So as
it is with a godly man in the night, when the greatest part of his
hindrances are removed, and he can "delight himself in the Almighty"
without disturbance. Job 27:10. David says that the Lord would indeed command
his lovingkindness in the daytime. but, in the night (says he) his
song shall be with me.—"His song, "as I think, not of thanksgiving,
but of joy and exultation, such as God uses to give at that time. Job
35:10. In the daytime the soul is so taken up with base employments, so
distracted with variety of sensible objects, and so busied with work for the
body, that either she hath no leisure at all to do her own work (such as this
joy is as much as anything) or she cannot do it so well as she would, or so
well as she could in the night, when she hath less to do. I doubt not
but the worldly and carnal man, now that I am talking so much of night,
and sleep, will be ready to say that I do but dream, and to answer me as
the fellow did the hunter, when he bade him hear "what heavenly music his
dogs made." For I know he counts the music and songs that we speak of,
nothing but a frenzy, or a fancy at least, such as mad and diseased people have
in their brain, while they imagine it to be in the air. But, as Peter said of
those upon whom the Holy Ghost fell, "These men are not drunk, as ye
suppose; "so may I reply to such men, No such matter, the godly are not
mad, as ye suppose, for their songs are not works of their own fancy, not made
of their own head, but set for them by God himself, "who giveth songs in
the night." Job 35:10. Zachary Bogan.
Verse
8. And my prayer unto the God of my life. Here may be seen
that David's religion was a religion of prayer after deliverance, as
well as before. The selfish who cry out in trouble will have done with their
prayers, when the trouble is over. With David it was the very reverse.
Deliverance from trouble would strengthen his confidence in God, embolden his
addresses to him, and furnish him with new arguments...There is great need
of prayer after deliverance; for the time of deliverance is often a time of
temptation; the soul being elated, and thrown off its guard. At such seasons
much of the joy that is felt may be merely natural, as David's would probably
be when rescued from that corroding care which injures the body as well as
distresses the soul. There is danger of mistaking; of supposing it to be all
spiritual, and hence of imagining the soul to be in a higher state of grace
than it really is, and so, of being imperceptibly drawn into a state of false
security. There is then especial need of that prayer. "Hold thou me up,
and I shall be safe." And with some peculiarly, who being of a sanguine
constitution of mind, are in times of enjoyment, soon puffed up and brought
into danger. Henry March.
Verse
8. (last clause). Your song and your prayer must be directed
to God as the God of your life. You do not own him as God, except you
own and adore him as your all sufficient good, and that "fulness which
filleth all in all." You detract from the glory of his Godhead, if you
attribute not this to him; and if, accordingly, as one that cannot live without
him, you do not seek union with him, and join yourself to him, and then rejoice
and solace yourself in that blessed conjunction. John Howe.
Verse
9. God my rock. David was a fugitive, with little means of
defence, and continually pursued by enemies who were powerful and numerous. The
country in which he wandered was mountainous, and he often sought and found
shelter on the tops of precipitous rocks, or in their natural hollows or excavated
caves. Thus the idea of shelter and defence being associated in his mind with
that of a rock, how natural that he should apply the term to God, and when
seeking him as his refuge and helper, should address him by that appellation...
Why hast thou forgotten me? Not that he supposed he was literally
forgotten of God, so as to be given up and abandoned by him; because he had
still sufficient trust in his faithfulness to seek him for a refuge, and to
hope in his mercy. His expression is to be regarded as the language of feeling,
not of judgment. He felt, he seemed, as one forgotten by God. Those visits of
love, those manifestations of favour with which he had formerly been indulged,
and which then seemed to him to be so many tokens of the divine remembrance, were
now withheld, now when, on account of his distress, they appeared so
unspeakably more needful and desirable; whence it was that he felt as one
forgotten. Henry March.
Verse
10. Mine enemies. It is strange that he should have
enemies, that was so harmless a man that when they were sick and distressed, he
prayed for them, and put on sackcloth for them, as it is, Ps 35:1-28. This
compassionate sweet natured man, yet, notwithstanding, you see he had enemies,
and enemies that would discover themselves to reproach him, and that bitterly;
in the bitterest manner, they reproach him in his religion. We may be armed by
this observation against the scandal of opposition—that if we meet with enemies
in the world, we should not be much offended at it; grieve we may, but wonder
we need not. Was there ever any that did more good than our Saviour Christ?
"He went about doing good." Ac 10:38. He did never a miracle that was
harmful (but only of the swine that were drowned in the sea, and that was their
own fault), but he went about doing all the good he could; yet,
notwithstanding, we see what malicious opposites he had. That that is true of
the head must be true in the members. Therefore we should rejoice in our
conformity to Christ, if it be in a good cause, that we find enemies and
opposition. The devil is not made a Christian yet, and he will never be made
good, for his is in termino, as we say, he is in his bounds, his nature
is immovable; he is in hell in regard of his estate, though he be loose to do
mischief. Now, until the devil be good, God's children shall never want
enemies; and he will never be good; therefore, though there were good kings and
good governors over all the world, yet good men shall never want enemies as
long as the devil is alive, as long as he hath anything to do in the world.
Enemies, therefore, we must look for, and such enemies as will not conceal
their malice neither; for that were something, if they would suffer their
malice to boil and concoct in their own hearts, but that will not be, but
"out of the abundance of the heart the mouth will speak." Richard
Sibbes.
Verse
10. They say daily unto me. Here's their constancy and
perseverance in this their carriage and language, it is daily, or all
the day, (Mwyh-lk) It is not only for a fit and away, but it is their
frequent and continual practice; it's every, and it's all the day; they begin
in the morning, and they hold out still till night as unquiet persons use to
do; and they begin the week with it, and so they continue till the end; he could
never come into their company or near them, but he had such language from them.
Thomas Horton.
Verse
10. Where is thy God? David might rather have said to them,
Where are your eyes? where is your sight? for God is not only in heaven, but in
me. Though David was shut out from the sanctuary, yet David's soul was a
sanctuary for God; for God is not tied to a sanctuary made with hands. God hath
two sanctuaries, he hath two heavens—the heaven of heavens and a broken spirit.
God dwelt in David as in his temple. God was with David and in him; and he was
never more with him, nor never more in him than in his greatest afflictions.
They wanted eyes, he wanted not God. Though sometimes God hide himself, not
only from the world but from his own children, yet he is there; howsoever their
sorrow is such that it dims their sight (as we see in Hagar), so that they
cannot see him for the present, he sometimes looks in their face, as we see in
Mary's case. She could not see Christ distinctly, but thought him to be the
gardener. There is a kind of concealment awhile in heavenly wisdom, yet
notwithstanding, God is with his children always, and they know it by faith
though not by feeling always...Therefore, it was an ignorant question of them
to ask, Where is thy God? It showed that they were ignorant of the
passages of God's dealing with his children, as indeed none are greater
atheists than your scoffers. Where is thy God? as if God had been only a
God of observation, to be observed outwardly in all his passages towards his
children; whereas, as I said, he is a God hiding himself ofttimes; and he shows
himself in contrary conditions most of all, most comfortably. His work is by
contraries. But these carnal men were ignorant of the mysteries of religion,
and the mysteries of divine providence towards God's children. Therefore, their
question savours of their disposition, Where is now thy God? Richard Sibbes.
Verse
10. Where is thy God? It is the deriding question which
persecutors put to the saints in the time of their trials and troubles, Ubi
Deus? "Where is now your God?" But they may return a bold and
confident answer, Hic Deus, "Our God is here, "our God is nigh
unto us, our God is round about us, our God is in the midst of us, our God has
given us his promise "that he will never leave us nor forsake us."
Heb 13:5. In every trouble, in every danger, in every death, the Lord will be
sure to keep us company. God will bear his children company, not only whilst
they are in a delightful paradise, but also when they are in a howling wilderness.
Ho 2:14. When a company of poor Christians were going into banishment, one
standing by to see them pass along said, that it was a very sad condition that
those poor people were in, to be thus hurried from the society of men, and to
be made companions of the beasts of the fields. True, said another, it were a
sad condition indeed, if they were carried to a place where they should not
find their God; but let them be of good cheer, for God goes along with them,
and will exhibit the comforts of his presence whithersoever they go, his
presence is infinite, and filleth all places. The Rabbins put Makom,
which signifies place, among the names of God; Bythner brings them in
expounding that text Es 4:14, thus: "Deliverance shall arise from another
place, "that is, from God. Now, they called God place, because he
is in every place, filling heaven and earth with his presence. Thomas
Brooks.
Verse
10. Forest flies, small as they are, drive the noble war horse mad;
therefore David says, As with a sword in my bones, mine enemies reproach me;
while they say daily unto me, Where is thy God? Frederick William Robertson,
1851.
Verse
11. Imitate here the example of David, instead of yielding to a vague
grief: cite your soul; enquire of it the particular cause of your
sorrow: different remedies will be requisite according to the different sources
of your distress; and be careful that you trifle not with God, and your
comfort, and your salvation, while you enquire of your soul, Why art thou
cast down, O my soul? Be impartial, there is another and more solemn
judgment to succeed: be persevering, like the psalmist, return, again and again
to the investigation: be prayerful; self love, or the delusion of your heart,
may otherwise deceive you. Pray then to God, to "search you, and see if
there be any wicked way in you." Henry Kollock, D.D., in
"Sermons," etc. 1822.
Verse
11. Hope. Hope is like the sun, which, as we journey towards
it, casts the shadow of our burden behind us. Samuel Smiles, L.L.D.
Verse
11. God...is the health of my countenance. The health of
David's countenance was not in his countenance, but in his God, and this
makes his faith silence his fears, and so peremptorily resolve upon it, that
there is a time coming (how near so ever he now lies to the grave's mouth) when
he shall yet praise him. The health and life of thy grace lie both of
them, not in thy grace, saith faith, but in God, who is thy God,
therefore I shall yet live and praise him. I do not wonder that the weak
Christian is melancholy and sad, when he sees his sickly face in any other
glass than this. William Gurnall.
Verse
11. The health of my countenance. The countenance is often a
true index to the mind. In the present awakening in religion, nothing is more
remarkable than the sad or joyous looks of those whom God has spiritually
exercised. It is easy who are sad, and who happy. There is nothing new in this;
the psalmist says, "My soul is cast down within me." Therefore had he
a dejected countenance; but said he, "Send thy light and thy truth; let
them lead me; then will I go unto God, my exceeding joy...And he shall be the
health of my countenance." In his sorrow, the face of Jesus was marred
more than any man's, and his visage more than the sons of men. The martyr
Stephen was so filled with the sight of Jesus, that in the midst of his
persecutors, with death in prospect, he had a face which "shone as the
face of an angel." My friend, how is it with thee? Is thy countenance sad?
or doth it shine with the joy of the Lord, telling the true tale of thy life
and lot? J. Denham Smith. 1860.
Verse
11. Hast thou seen the sun shine forth in February, and the sky blue,
and the hedgerows bursting into bud, and the primrose peeping beneath the bank,
and the birds singing in the bushes? Thou hast thought that spring was already
come in its beauty and sweet odours. But a few days, and the clouds returned,
and the atmosphere was chilled, and the birds were mute, and snow was on the
ground, and thou hast said that spring would never come. And thus sometimes the
young convert finds his fears removed, and the comforts of the gospel shed
abroad in his heart, and praise and thanksgiving, and a new song put in his
mouth. And he deems unadvisedly that his troubles are past for ever. But
awhile, and his doubts return, and his comforts die away, and his light is
taken from him, and his spirit is overwhelmed, and he is fain to conclude that
salvation and all its blessings are not for him. But the spring, though late,
shall break at last. Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou
disquieted within me? H. G. Salter's "Book of Illustrations,"
1840.
Verse
11. His arguments and motives hereunto are impregnated with very
great sense and strength; and urged upon himself as the just rate thereof. Hope
thou in God. For he is 1. God. 2. Thy God. 3. The health
of thy countenance, and 4. One whom thou shalt (certainly and for
ever) praise as such. And 5. Do it yet, as lamentable and
hopeless as thy case appears at present through seeming difficulties or
unlikelihoods. God and ourselves well understood, deeply considered, and
skilfully urged and improved, give gracious hearts the best encouragements and
supports under the severest accidents of time. And they will very strangely
animate our hopes in God under our sorest troubles and dejections. David had
(1) confidence in God; and (2) reasons for it; and (3) skill and a heart to
urge them. When he reviewed himself, he saw that his soul was gracious; and so
he knew God valued it. It was bent for praising God; and so he knew that he
should have an opportunity and cause to do it, through some signal favours from
him. He had an interest in God; and he would neither lose it nor neglect it,
and he had great experience of God's former mercies, and he would not forget
them. And when he thinks on God, then praises must be thought on too, and
everything relating to it, and all the divine perfections, within the
circumference of his knowledge, must have their fresh remembrances and powerful
sense revived upon his own heart. Matthew Sylvester (1636-1708), in
"Morning Exercises."
Verse
11. The soul, when once greatly disturbed, is often not soon calmed,
on account of infirmities and remaining corruptions. Henry March.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. The longing heart and the panting hart compared.
Verses
1,2. Those who have enjoyed the presence of God in the public
ordinances of religion will greatly desire, if deprived of them, to be favoured
with them again...Prevention from attending the public ordinances of God's
house may be made the means of great benefit to the soul.
1.
By renewing our relish for the provisions of the Lord's house, which so soon
and so often palls.
2.
By making us to prize the means of grace more highly. There is, through human
degeneracy, a proneness to value things less, however excellent in themselves,
because of their being common, or plentiful, or of easy attainment.
3.
By driving us more directly from God. H. March.
Verses
1-3. The home sickness of the soul. What awakens it in the soul? To
what is it directed, or does it point or tend? Wherewith can it be satisfied?
By the bitter, but ofttimes wholesome food of tears. J. P. Lange.
Verses
1-2. Those who have enjoyed the presence of God in the public
ordinances of religion will greatly desire, if deprived of them, to be favoured
with them again...Prevention from attending the public ordinances of God's
house may be
Verse
2.
1.
What thirsts? "my soul."
2. For what? "for God."
3. In what way? "when shall I come."
Or,
the cause, incentives, excellences, and privileges of spiritual thirst.
Verse
2. (last clause). The true view of public worship.
Verse
2. (last clause). Appearance before God here and hereafter. Isaac
Watts, D.D., Two Sermons.
Verses
1-3. The home sickness of the soul. What awakens it in the soul? To
what is it directed, or does it point or tend? Wherewith can it be satisfied?
By the bitter, but ofttimes wholesome food of tears. J. P. Lange.
Verse
3. The believer's Lent, and its salt meats.
1.
What causes the sorrow?
2. What will remove it?
3. What benefit will come of it?
Verses
3, 10. The carriage of David's enemies.
1.
The nature of it, and that was reproach.
2.
The expression of it, They say unto me.
3.
The constancy of it: daily, or, all the day long.
4.
The specification of it, in a scornful and opprobrious question: Where
is (now) thy God? Thomas Horton.
Verse
4.
1.
It is common for the mind, in seasons of sorrow, to seek relief from the
present in recollections of the past.
2.
In recollections of past enjoyments, those that relate to social worship will
be peculiarly dear to the servant of God.
3.
Man is a social being, hence he derives help from united worship.
Verse
4. I pour out my soul in me. The uselessness of mistrustful
introspection.
Verse
4. I had gone with the multitude, etc. Company, if it be that
which is good, is a very blessed and comfortable accommodation in sundry
respects.
1.
It is an exercise of men's faculties, and the powers and abilities of the mind.
2.
It is a fence against danger, and a preservative against sadness and various
temptations.
3.
An opportunity of doing more good. Thomas Horton.
Verse
4. I had gone, etc. Sunny memories, their lessons of
gratitude and hope.
Verse
4. (last clause). Not Chaucer's tales of the Canterbury
pilgrims, but David's tales of the Jerusalem pilgrims.
Verse
4. With the voice, etc. Congregational singing defended,
extolled, discriminated, and urged.
Verse
5. Sorrow put to the question, or the Consolatory Catechism.
Verse
5. The sweetness, safety, and rightness of hope in God. Good
grip for the anchor.
Verse
5. The music of the future, I shall yet praise him.
Verse
5. The help of his countenance, or the sustaining power of
God's presence.
Verse
5. Why art thou cast down?
1.
The mind, even of a holy man, may be unduly cast down and disquieted.
2.
In cases of undue dejection and disquietude, the proper remedy is to
expostulate with the soul, and to direct it to the only true source of
relief.
3.
Expostulation with the soul in times of distress, is then productive of its
proper end, when it leads to an immediate application to God. H. March.
Verse
5. An emphasis of enquiry or examination; David calls himself
to account for his present passion and trouble of mind. An emphasis of reproof
or objurgation; David chides and rebukes himself for his present distemper.
"Why art thou thus?" Thomas Horton.
Verses
5, 11. or help and health.
Verse
6. Remember thee. The consolation derivable from thoughts of
God.
Verse
6. Therefore will I remember thee. There are two ways of understanding
this; each of them instructive and profitable...
1.
It may be considered as an expression of determined remembrance of God
should he ever be found in such places and conditions. Believers can suppose
the worst, and yet hope for the best.
2.
The language may be considered as an expression of encouragement derived
from reflection. He had been in these situations and circumstances, and had
experienced in them displays of divine providence and grace. W. Jay.
Verse
6. Ebenezers, many, varied, remembered, helpful.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep. See Spurgeon's Sermons, No. 865.
Verse
7. Deep calleth unto deep. One evil inviting another.
1.
The variety of evils—one evil to another.
2.
The conjunction of evils—one evil with another.
3.
The connexion of evils, or dependence and mutual reference—one evil upon
another. T. Horton.
Verse
7. The threefold depth which the saints and servants of God are
subject to here in this life.
1.
The depth of temptation.
2.
The depth of desertion.
3.
The depth of affliction and human calamities. T. Horton.
Verses
7, 8. In seasons of affliction the servants of God will be
distinguished from others by their ready perception and acknowledgment of the
hand of God in their trials. H. March.
Verse
8. Daily mercy and nightly song; the mercies of sunshine and shade.
Verse
8. (last clause). The blessed alternation between praise and
prayer.
Verse
8. God of my life. Author, sustainer, comforter, object,
crown, consummation.
Verse
8. The God of my life. There is a threefold life whereof we
partake, and God is the God of each unto us. First, the life of nature;
secondly, the life of grace; thirdly, the life of glory. T. Horton.
Verse
9. God my rock. Appellations of God, suited to circumstances.
Verse
9. My rock. See Keach in his metaphors.
Verse
9.
1.
Why thou?
2.
Why I?
3.
Why he? It is a why to all three. To God, Why has thou
forgotten me? To David himself, Why do I go mourning? To David's adversary,
whoever he was, Why does the enemy oppress me?—T. Horton.
Verse
10. The most grievous of taunts.
Verse
11. My God.
1.
It's a word of interest—My God, as in covenant with him.
2.
A word of compliance—My God, as submitting to him.
3.
A word of affection—My God, as taking delight, and rejoicing in him. T.
Horton.
Verse
11. A catechism, a consolation, a commendation.
Verse
11.
1.
David's experience of God. He is the health, or help of my
countenance.
2.
His relation to God, and interest in him—And my God. T.
Horton.
WORKS UPON THE
FORTY-SECOND PSALM
A
Practical Exposition of the Forty-second Psalm, in ten Sermons, in Choice
and Practical Expositions on four select Psalms. Psalms 4, 42, 51, 63. By
THOMAS HORTON, D.D. 1675. Folio.
Sabbaths
at Home: or, a help to their right improvement; founded on the Forty-second
and Forty-third Psalms. Intended for the use of pious persons when
prevented from attending the public worship of God. By HENRY MARCH. London:
1823.
On
the eleventh verse of this Psalm there are the following works:—Twelve Sermons,
in "A Cordial for a Fainting Soule." By JOHN COLLINGS. 1652.
Part 2, pp. 133-206.
Thirteen
Sermons in the works of WILLIAM BRIDGE (1600-1670), entitled, "A
Lifting Up for the Downcast." Volume 2, of the edition of 1845.
Comfort
and Counsel for Dejected Souls. By JOHN DURANT. 8vo. 1651.
The
Soul's Conflict with Itself. By RICHARD SIBBES. (Numerous old editions). In
Sibbes' Works, Nichol's Puritan Series, vol. I.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》