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Psalm Fifty-three
Psalm 53
Chapter Contents
The corruption of man by nature.
This psalm is almost the same as the 14th. The scope of
it is to convince us of our sins. God, by the psalmist, here shows us how bad
we are, and proves this by his own certain knowledge. He speaks terror to
persecutors, the worst of sinners. He speaks encouragement to God's persecuted
people. How comes it that men are so bad? Because there is no fear of God
before their eyes. Men's bad practices flow from their bad principles; if they
profess to know God, yet in works, because in thoughts, they deny him. See the
folly of sin; he is a fool, in the account of God, whose judgment we are sure
is right, that harbours such corrupt thoughts. And see the fruit of sin; to
what it brings men, when their hearts are hardened through the deceitfulness of
sin. See also the faith of the saints, and their hope and power as to the cure
of this great evil. There will come a Saviour, a great salvation, a salvation
from sin. God will save his church from its enemies. He will save all believers
from their own sins, that they may not be led captive by them, which will be
everlasting joy to them. From this work the Redeemer had his name JESUS, for he
shall save his people from their sins, Matthew 1:21.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 53
Verse 5
[5] There were they in great fear, where no fear was: for
God hath scattered the bones of him that encampeth against thee: thou hast put
them to shame, because God hath despised them.
Scattered — Hath not only broken their bones,
their strength, and force, but also dispersed them hither and thither, so as
there is no hope of a restoration.
Thee — Against my people.
Thou — Thou oh Jerusalem, which they besiege.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
TITLE. To the
Chief Musician. If the leader of the choir is privileged to sing the
jubilates of divine grace, he must not disdain to chant the miseries of human
depravity. This is the second time he has had the same Psalm entrusted to him (see
Psalm 14.), and he must, therefore, be the more careful in singing it. Upon
Mahalath. Here the tune is chosen for the musician, probably some
mournfully solemn air; or perhaps a musical instrument is here indicated, and
the master of the choir is requested to make it the prominent instrument in the
orchestra; at any rate, this is a direction not found in the former copy of the
Psalm, and seems to call for greater care. The word "Mahalath"
appears to signify, in some forms of it, "disease, "and truly this
Psalm is THE SONG OF MAN'S DISEASE— the mortal, hereditary taint of sin.
Maschil. This is a second additional note not found in Psalm 14,
indicating that double attention is to be given to this most instructive song. A
Psalm of David. It is not a copy of the fourteenth Psalm, emended and
revised by a foreign hand; it is another edition by the same author, emphasised
in certain parts, and rewritten for another purpose.
SUBJECT. The evil
nature of man is here brought before our view a second time, in almost the same
inspired words. All repetitions are not vain repetitions. We are slow to learn,
and need line upon line. David after a long life, found men no better than they
were in his youth. Holy Writ never repeats itself needlessly, there is good
cause for the second copy of this Psalm; let us read it with more profound
attention than before. If our age has advanced from fourteen to fifty-three, we
shall find the doctrine of this Psalm more evident than in our youth. The
reader is requested to peruse Psalm 14, "Treasury of David, "Vol. 1.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. And this
he does because he is a fool. Being a fool he speaks according to his nature;
being a great fool he meddles with a great subject, and comes to a wild
conclusion. The atheist is, morally as well as mentally, a fool, a fool in the
heart as well as in the head; a fool in morals as well as in philosophy. With
the denial of God as a starting point, we may well conclude that the fool's
progress is a rapid, riotous, raving, ruinous one. He who begins at impiety is
ready for anything.
No
God, being interpreted, means no law, no order, no restraint to lust, no limit
to passion. Who but a fool would be of this mind? What a Bedlam, or rather what
an Aceldama, would the world become if such lawless principles came to be
universal! He who heartily entertains an irreligious spirit, and follows it out
to its legitimate issues is a son of Belial, dangerous to the commonwealth,
irrational, and despicable. Every natural man is, more or less a denier of God.
Practical atheism is the religion of the race.
Corrupt
are they. They are rotten. It is idle to compliment them as sincere doubters,
and amiable thinkers—they are putrid. There is too much dainty dealing nowadays
with atheism; it is not a harmless error, it is an offensive, putrid sin, and
righteous men should look upon it in that light. All men being more or less
atheistic in spirit, are also in that degree corrupt; their heart is foul,
their moral nature is decayed.
And
have done abominable iniquity. Bad principles soon lead to bad lives. One does
not find virtue promoted by the example of your Voltaires and Tom Paines. Those
who talk so abominably as to deny their Maker will act abominably when it
serves their turn. It is the abounding denial and forgetfulness of God among
men which is the source of the unrighteousness and crime which we see around
us. If all men are not outwardly vicious it is to be accounted for by the power
of other and better principles, but left to itself the "No God"
spirit so universal in mankind would produce nothing but the most loathsome
actions.
There
is none that doeth good. The one typical fool is reproduced in the whole race;
without a single exception men have forgotten the right way. This accusation
twice made in the Psalm, and repeated a third time by the inspired apostle
Paul, is an indictment most solemn and sweeping, but he who makes it cannot
err, he knows what is in man; neither will he lay more to man's charge than he
can prove.
Verse
2. God looked down from heaven upon the children of men. He
did so in ages past, and he has continued his steadfast gaze from his all
surveying observatory. To see if there were any that did understand, that did
seek God. Had there been one understanding man, one true lover of his God, the
divine eye would have discovered him. Those pure heathens and admirable savages
that men talk so much of, do not appear to have been visible to the eye of
Omniscience, the fact being that they live nowhere but in the realm of fiction.
The Lord did not look for great grace, but only for sincerity and right desire,
but these he found not. He saw all nations, and all men in all nations, and all
hearts in all men, and all motions of all hearts, but he saw neither a clear
head nor a clean heart among them all. Where God's eyes see no favourable sign
we may rest assured there is none.
Verse
3. Every one of them is gone back. The whole mass of manhood,
all of it, is gone back. In the fourteenth Psalm it was said to turn aside,
which was bad enough, but here it is described as running in a diametrically
opposite direction. The life of unregenerate manhood is in direct defiance of
the law of God, not merely apart from it but opposed to it. They are altogether
become filthy. The whole lump is soured with an evil leaven, fouled with an all
pervading pollution, made rank with general putrefaction. Thus, in God's sight,
our atheistic nature is not the pardoned thing that we think it to be. Errors
as to God are not the mild diseases which some account them, they are
abominable evils. Fair is the world to blind eyes, but to the all seeing
Jehovah it is otherwise. There is none that doeth good, no, not one. How could
there be, when the whole mass was leavened with so evil a leaven? This puts an
end to the fictions of the innocent savage, the lone patriarch, "the
Indian whose untutored mind, "etc. Pope's verse—
"Father
of all, in every age;
In every clime adored,
By saint, by savage, or by sage,
Jehovah, Jove, or Lord, "
—evaporates
in smoke. The fallen race of man, left to its own energy, has not produced a
single lover of God or doer of holiness, nor will it ever do so. Grace must
interpose, or not one specimen of humanity will be found to follow after the
good and true. This is God's verdict after looking down upon the race. Who
shall gainsay it?
Verse
4. Have the workers of iniquity no knowledge? They have no
wisdom, certainly, but even so common a thing as knowledge might have restrained
them. Can they not see that there is a God? that sin is an evil thing? that
persecution recoils upon a man's own head? Are they such utter fools as not to
know that they are their own enemies, and are ruining themselves? Who eat up my
people as they eat bread. Do they not see that such food will be hard to
digest, and will bring on them a horrible vomit when God deals with them in
justice? Can they imagine that the Lord will allow them to devour his people
with impunity? They must be insane indeed. They have not called upon God. They
carry on their cruel enterprises against the saints, and use every means but
that which is essential to success in every case, namely, the invocation of
God. In this respect persecutors are rather more consistent than Pharisees who
devoured widow's houses, and prayed too. The natural man, like Ishmael, loves
not the spiritual seed, is very jealous of it, and would fain destroy it,
because it is beloved of God; yet the natural man does not seek after the like
favour from God. The carnal mind envies those who obtain mercy, and yet it will
not seek mercy itself. It plays the dog in the manger. Sinners will out of a
malicious jealousy devour those who pray, but yet they will not pray
themselves.
Verse
5. There were they in great fear, where no fear was. David
sees the end of the ungodly, and the ultimate triumph of the spiritual seed.
The rebellious march in fury against the gracious, but suddenly they are seized
with a causeless panic. The once fearless boasters tremble like the leaves of
the aspen, frightened at their own shadows. In this sentence and this verse,
this Psalm differs much from the fourteenth. It is evidently expressive of a
higher state of realisation in the poet, he emphasises the truth by stronger
expressions. Without cause the wicked are alarmed. He who denies God is at
bottom a coward, and in his infidelity he is like the boy in the churchyard who
"whistles to keep his courage up." For God hath scattered the bones
of him that encampeth against thee. When the wicked see the destruction
of their fellows they may well quail. Mighty were the hosts which besieged
Zion, but they were defeated, and their unburied carcasses proved the prowess
of the God whose being they dared to deny. Thou hast put them to shame, because
God hath despised them. God's people may well look with derision upon their
enemies since they are the objects of divine contempt. They scoff at us, but we
may with far greater reason laugh them to scorn, because the Lord our God
considers them as less than nothing and vanity.
Verse
6. Oh that the salvation of Israel were come out of Zion.
Would God the final battle were well over. When will the Lord avenge his own
elect? When will the long oppression of the saints come to its close, and glory
crown their heads? The word salvation is in the plural, to show its
greatness. When God bringeth back the captivity of his people, Jacob shall rejoice,
and Israel shall be glad. Inasmuch as the yoke has been heavy, and the
bondage cruel, the liberty will be happy, and the triumph joyous. The second
advent and the restoration of Israel are our hope and expectation. We have
attempted to throw into rhyme the last two verses of this Psalm:
The
foes of Zion quake for fright.
Where no fear was they quail;
For well they know that sword of might
Which cuts through coats of mail.
The
Lord of old defiled their shields,
And all their spears he scorned;
Their bones lay scattered over the fields,
Unburied and unmourned.
Let
Zion's foes be filled with shame;
Her sons are blessed of God;
Though scoffers now despise their name,
The Lord shall break the rod.
Oh!
would our God to Zion turn,
God with salvation clad;
Then Judah's harps should music learn,
And Israel be glad.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. Probably the two Psalms refer to different periods; the
fourteenth to the earlier portion of the world, or of Jewish history; the
fifty-third to a later, perhaps a still future time. Jehovah, through Christ,
is frequently said to turn to the world to see what its condition is, and
always with the same result. "All flesh had corrupted its way" in the
days of Noah, and, "when the Son of Man cometh" again, it is
intimated that he will scarcely "find faith on the earth." The two
Psalms also apply to different persons. The former refers to the enemies
of God, who tremble when his presence is made known; they are in great fear,
because vengeance is about to be inflicted on them for their sins. Here the
Supreme Being is called Jehovah. In the fifty-third Psalm the interests of
God's people are principally kept in view. The ungodly are regarded as plotting
against the righteous, and it is in this relation their case is considered. The
fear that was just and reasonable in the fourteenth Psalm, because it concerned
the unrighteous under a sense of impending judgment, is said to be unfounded in
the fifty-third, because God was in the midst of his people, scattering the
bones of their enemies, and showing himself, not as Jehovah, but as the
Elohim of his redeemed children. The fourteenth Psalm contemplates judgment;
the fifty-third deliverance; and thus, though seemingly alike, a different
lesson is conveyed in each. The Psalm, then, descriptive of the universal and
continuous corruption of man's nature, very properly occupies an introductory
place in a series intended to represent the enemies of Messiah, who oppose his
church during his absence, and who are to attempt to resist his power when he
comes again. Before entering upon an examination of the character of these
opponents, this Psalm teaches that, until changed by grace, all are gone
astray; "there is none righteous, no, not one, "and that for all
there is but one remedy, the Deliverer coming out of Zion, who shall turn
away ungodliness from Jacob. R. H. Ryland, M.A., in "The Psalms restored
to Messiah," 1853.
Whole
Psalm. The state of earth ought to be deeply felt by us. The world lying
in wickedness should occupy much of our thoughts. The enormous guilt, the
inconceivable pollution, the ineffably provoking Atheism of this fallen
province of God's dominion, might be a theme for our ceaseless meditation and
mourning. To impress it the more on us, therefore, the Psalm repeats what has
been already sung in Psalm 14. It is the same Psalm, with only a few words
varied; it is "line upon line, precept upon precept; "the harp's most
melancholy, most dismal notes again sounded in our ear. Not that the Lord would
detain us always, or disproportionately long, amid scenes of sadness; for
elsewhere he repeats in like manner that most triumphant melody, Ps 40:6-12
108:6-13; but it is good to return now and then to the open field on which we
all were found, cast out in loathsome degradation. Andrew A. Bonar, in
"Christ and his Church in the Book of Psalms," 1859.
Whole
Psalm. A second edition of the fourteenth Psalm, with variations more or
less important, in each verse. That either of these compositions is an
incorrect copy of the other is highly improbable, because two such copies of
the same Psalm would not have been retained in the collection, and because the
variations are too uniform, consistent, and significant, to be the work of
chance or mere traditional corruption. That the changes were deliberately made
by a later writer is improbable, because such a liberty would hardly have been taken
with a Psalm of David, and because the latter form, in that case, would either
have been excluded from the Psalter or substituted for the first form, or
immediately connected with it. The only satisfactory hypothesis is, that the
original author afterwards rewrote it, with such modifications as were
necessary to bring out certain points distinctly, but without any intention to
supersede the use of the original composition, which therefore still retains
its place in the collection. Thus supposition is confirmed by the titles, which
ascribe both Psalms to David... As a general fact, it may be stated, that the
variations in the Psalm before us are such as render the expression stronger,
bolder, and in one or two cases more obscure and difficult. J. A. Alexander,
1850.
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm is a variation of Psalm 14. In each of these two
Psalms the name of God occurs seven times. In Psalm 14, it is three
times Elohim, and four times Jehovah; in the present Psalm it is
seven times Elohim. Christopher Wordsworth, 1868.
Whole
Psalm. God, in this Psalm, "speaketh twice, "for this is the
same almost verbatim with the fourteenth Psalm. The scope of it is to convince
us of our sins, to set us blushing, and to set us trembling because of them:
there is need of "line upon line" to this purpose. God, by the
psalmist, here shows—
1.
The fact of sin. God is a witness to it. He looks down from heaven and
sees all the sinfulness of men's hearts and lives. All this is open and naked
before him.
2.
The fault of sin. It is iniquity (Ps 53:1,4); it is an unrighteous
thing; it is that in which there is no good (Ps 53:1,3); it is going back from
God (Ps 53:3).
3.
The fountain of sin. How comes it that men are so bad? Surely, it is
because there is no fear of God before their eyes; they say in their hearts,
there is no God at all to call us to account, none that we need to stand in awe
of. Men's bad practices flow from their bad principles.
4.
The folly of sin. He is a fool (in the account of God, whose
judgment we are sure is right) who harbours such corrupt thoughts. The
"workers of iniquity, "whatever they pretend to, "have no
knowledge; "they may truly be said to know nothing that do not know God.
Ps 53:4.
5.
The filthiness of sin. Sinners are "corrupt" (Ps 53:1); their
nature is vitiated and spoiled; their iniquity is "abominable; "it is
odious to the holy God, and renders them so; whereas, otherwise he "hates
nothing that he has made." What neatness soever proud sinners pretend to,
it is certain that wickedness is the greatest nastiness in the world.
6.
The fruit of sin. See to what a degree of barbarity it brings men at
last! See their cruelty to their brethren! They "eat them up as they eat
bread." As if they had not only become beasts, but beasts of prey. See
their contempt of God at the same time—they have not called upon him, but scorn
to be beholden to him.
7.
The fear and shame that attends sin (Ps 53:5). "There were they in
great fear" who had made God their enemy; their own guilty consciences
frightened them and filled them with horror. This enables the virgin, the
daughter of Zion, to put them to shame and expose them, "because God hath
despised them."
8.
The faith of the saints, and their hope and power touching this great
evil (Ps 53:6). There will come a Saviour, a great salvation, a salvation from
sin. O that it might be hastened! for it will bring in glorious and joyful
times. There were those in Old Testament times that looked and hoped, that
prayed and waited for this redemption. Such salvations were often wrought, and
all typical of the everlasting triumphs of the glorious church. Condensed
from Matthew Henry, 1662-1714.
Verse
1. The fool hath said in his heart, etc. It is in his heart
he says this; this is the secret desire of every unconverted bosom. If the
breast of God were within the reach of men, it would be stabbed a million of
times in one moment. When God was manifest in the flesh, he was altogether
lovely; he did no sin; he went about continually doing good: and yet they took
him and hung him on a tree; they mocked him and spat upon him. And this is the
way men would do with God again. Learn—First. The fearful depravity of your
heart. I venture to say there is not an unconverted man present, who has the
most distant idea of the monstrous wickedness that is now within his breast.
Stop till you are in hell, and it will break out unrestrained. But still let me
tell you what it is—you have a heart that would kill God if you could. If the
bosom of God were nor within your reach, and one blow would rid the universe of
God, you have a heart fit to do the deed. Second. The amazing love of
Christ—"While we were enemies, Christ died for us." Robert Murray
Macheyne, 1813-1843.
Verse
1. There is no God. ny'is properly a noun, and means
nonentity, or nonexistence: "nothing of God, "or "no such thing
as God." It cannot be explained as a wish—"No God!" i.e.,
O that there were no God!—because ny'in usage always includes the substantive
verb, and denies the existence, or at least the presence, of the person or thing
to which it is prefixed. This is also clear from the use of the same word in
the last clause, where its sense is unambiguous. J. A. Alexander on Psalm
XIV.
Verse
1. There is no God. Thus denying the agency of Providence,
for the word Elohim, here translated God, means judge
(compare Ex 22:28), and has reference not to the essence, but to the providence
of the Deity. Daniel Cresswell, 1776-1844.
Verse
1. It is to be noted that Scripture saith, The fool hath said in
his heart, and not "thought in his heart; "that is to say,
he doth not so fully think it in judgment, as he hath a good will to be of that
belief; for seeing that it makes not for him that there should be a God, he
doth seek by all means accordingly to persuade and resolve himself, and studies
to affirm, prove, and verify it to himself as some theme or position, all which
labour, notwithstanding that sparkle of our creation light, whereby men
acknowledge a Deity, burneth still within; and in vain doth he strive utterly
to alienate it or put it out, so that it is out of the corruption of his heart
and will, and not out of the natural apprehension of his brain and conceit,
that he doth set down his opinion, as the comical poet saith, "Then came
my mind to be of my opinion, "as if himself and his mind had been two
diverse things; therefore, the atheist hath rather said, and held it in his
heart, than thought or believed in his heart that there is no God. Francis
Bacon (1560-1626), in "Thoughts on Holy Scripture".
Verse
2. That did seek God. Although all things are full of God,
yet is he to be sought for of godly men, by reason of the darkness which
compasseth our minds through original sin. For both the flesh, and the senses,
and earthly affections do hinder us from knowing of him, yea, though he be
present. Peter Martyr, 1500-1562.
Verses
2-3. Their sin is described in gradation. They do not understand,
because a true knowledge of things divine forms the basis of proper conduct
towards God; they do not ask for God, because they only care for him whose
clear and sure insight apprehends him as their highest possession; they are gone
aside, because he who cares not for him is sure to get estranged from him,
and to deviate from his paths; and they are altogether become filthy (i.e.,
worthless), because man's proper strength and fitness for virtue must well from
the fountain of communion with God. Agustus F. Tholuck.
Verse
3. They are altogether become filthy. wxlag neelachu.
They are become sour and rancid; a metaphor taken from milk that has
fermented and turned sour, rancid, and worthless. Adam Clarke,
1760-1832.
Verse
3. (second clause). The word wxlag, rendered they are
become filthy, might be read, they have become rotten or putrid. John
Morison, 1829.
Verse
3. (last clause). Evil men are not only guilty of sins of
commission, having done abominable iniquity, but they are guilty of many sins
of omission. In fact, they have never done one holy act. They may be moral,
decent, amiable, they may belong to the church; but there is none that doeth
good, no, not one. William S. Plumer.
Verse
4. Have the workers of iniquity no knowledge? Conscience is a
means to curb and restrain, control and rebuke corrupt nature, and the swelling
forms of it. It is not there as a native inhabitant, but as a garrison planted
in a rebellious town by the great Governor of the world, to keep the rebellion
of the inhabitants within compass, who else would break forth into present
confusion. David, speaking of the corruption of man by nature, after this
question, Whether there be not some knowledge to discover their evil doings to
them? yes, says he, Have they no knowledge, who eat up my people as bread
Yes; and therefore (Ps 53:5) They are often in fear, God having placed
this there to overcome them with fear; and by that to restrain them from many
outrages against God's people, whom in their desires, and sometimes practice,
they eat up as bread Therefore this knowledge is put in as a bridle to corrupt
nature, as a hook was put into Sennacherib's nostrils (Isa 37:29) to rule and
tame men, and overcome them with fear. If they had no knowledge they would eat
up one another, and the church, as bread; but there is their fear, says he,
that is, thence it comes to pass they are kept in awe Thomas Goodwin,
1600-1679.
Verse
4. Who eat up my people as they eat bread C'est, n'en font non
plus de conscience, que de manger un morceau de pain. (That is, they have
no more scruple in doing this than in eating a morsel of bread.) French
Margin.
Verse
4. My people. David may call the serious his people,
because of his regard for them, and because they were his supporters and
friends. They adhered to him in all his afflictions. ("Thy people shall be
my people, and thy God my God, " Ru 1:16.) Benjamin Boothroyd,
1836.
Verse
5. There were they in great fear, where no fear was. There is
a fond and superstitious fear, when men are afraid of their shadows, as
Pisander was afraid of meeting his own soul; and Antenor would never go forth
of the doors, but either in a coach closed upon all sides, or with a target
borne over his head, fearing, I guess, lest the sky should fall down upon it,
according to that in the Psalm, They fear where no fear is. John King,
1559-1621.
Verse
5. There were they in great fear, where no fear was. Behold
how fearful a hell a wounded conscience is! For why is Cain afraid to be
killed, seeing there is none living to perform it, but his father and mother,
and perhaps some women children, which the Scripture nameth not? It is God's
just judgment, that they that will not fear the Lord who is only to be feared,
should stand in fear of them who are justly no cause of fear. He that lately
feared not to kill his brother, is now made a terror to himself. Hereby also we
may consider what is the repentance of the wicked; they see perhaps the fault
together with the punishment, but they admit the fault and lament the
punishment. Nicholas Gibbens, 1602.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
See
the hints on Psalm 14.
Verse
1. The fool's inside and outside.
Verse
1.
1.
The folly of atheism. He who says there is no God is a fool.
(a)
No reason for the assertion.
(b) All reason against it.
2.
The seat of atheism is the heart; it is a moral unbelief not an intellectual,
the language of the will not of the understanding.
3.
Cause of atheism.
(a)
Loving evil.
(b) Hating good. G. R.
Verse
2.
1.
God has not left the world to itself.
2.
He takes particular notice of all that is in it.
3.
The only thing he values in it is the knowledge of himself. G. R.
Verse
4. How far knowledge is and is not a restraint upon ungodliness.
Verse
4. It is a sin not to call upon God.
1.
What is it to call upon God? Three things required in it.
(a)
A drawing near to him.
(b) A speaking to him. 1Sa 1:12-13.
(c) A praying to him.
2.
How should we call upon God?
(a)
Reverently, considering (1) God's holiness and greatness; (2) our own sin and
weakness. Ge 18:27.
(b)
Understandingly. 1Co 14:15. (1) Of what we ask. (2) Of whom we ask it.
(c)
Submissively.
(d)
Believingly. Mr 11:24 Jas 1:6.
(e)
Sincerely. Jas 4:3.
(f)
Constantly. (1) So as to be always in a praying frame. (2) So as to take all
occasions of pouring forth our souls in prayer to God. (3) So as to let no day
slip without prayer.
3.
How it appears to be a sin not to call upon God.
(a)
He hath commanded it. Isa 55:6 1Ti 2:8.
(b)
Because praying is one of the principal parts of worship we owe to God.
4.
Who are guilty of this sin?
(a)
All who pray to any one else but God.
(b)
All who neglect either public, private, or family prayer.
(c)
All who pray, but not aright. William Beveridge (1636-1708), in
"Thesaurus Theologicus."
Verse
5.
1.
What persecutors are to themselves-their own tormentors, full even of
groundless fears.
2.
What they are to one another-though in concert here, their bones are scattered
hereafter.
3.
What they are to those whom they persecute—made ashamed before them.
4.
What they are to God-a contempt and derision. G. R.
Verse
6.
1.
There is salvation for Israel.
2.
That salvation is in Zion.
3.
Their salvation remains there when they are banished from it.
4.
Their joy becomes greater when they return. G. R.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》