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Psalm Fifty-five
Psalm 55
Chapter Contents
Prayer to God to manifest his favour. (1-8) The great
wickedness and treachery of his enemies. (9-15) He is sure that God would in
due time appear for him. (16-23)
Commentary on Psalm 55:1-8
(Read Psalm 55:1-8)
In these verses we have, 1. David praying. Prayer is a
salve for every sore, and a relief to the spirit under every burden. 2. David
weeping. Griefs are thus, in some measure, lessened, while those increase that
have no vent given them. David in great alarm. We may well suppose him to be
so, upon the breaking out of Absalom's conspiracy, and the falling away of the
people. Horror overwhelmed him. Probably the remembrance of his sin in the
matter of Uriah added much to the terror. When under a guilty conscience we
must mourn in our complaint, and even strong believers have for a time been
filled with horror. But none ever was so overwhelmed as the holy Jesus, when it
pleased the Lord to put him to grief, and to make his soul an offering for our
sins. In his agony he prayed more earnestly, and was heard and delivered;
trusting in him, and following him, we shall be supported under, and carried
through all trials. See how David was weary of the treachery and ingratitude of
men, and the cares and disappointments of his high station: he longed to hide
himself in some desert from the fury and fickleness of his people. He aimed not
at victory, but rest; a barren wilderness, so that he might be quiet. The
wisest and best of men most earnestly covet peace and quietness, and the more
when vexed and wearied with noise and clamour. This makes death desirable to a
child of God, that it is a final escape from all the storms and tempests of
this world, to perfect and everlasting rest.
Commentary on Psalm 55:9-15
(Read Psalm 55:9-15)
No wickedness so distresses the believer, as that which
he witnesses in those who profess to be of the church of God. Let us not be
surprised at the corruptions and disorders of the church on earth, but long to
see the New Jerusalem. He complains of one that had been very industrious
against him. God often destroys the enemies of the church by dividing them. And
an interest divided against itself cannot long stand. The true Christian must
expect trials from professed friends, from those with whom he has been united;
this will be very painful; but by looking unto Jesus we shall be enabled to
bear it. Christ was betrayed by a companion, a disciple, an apostle, who
resembled Ahithophel in his crimes and doom. Both were speedily overtaken by
Divine vengeance. And this prayer is a prophecy of the utter, the everlasting
ruin, of all who oppose and rebel against the Messiah.
Commentary on Psalm 55:16-23
(Read Psalm 55:16-23)
In every trial let us call upon the Lord, and he will
save us. He shall hear us, and not blame us for coming too often; the oftener
the more welcome. David had thought all were against him; but now he sees there
were many with him, more than he supposed; and the glory of this he gives to
God, for it is he that raises us up friends, and makes them faithful to us.
There are more true Christians, and believers have more real friends, than in
their gloomy hours they suppose. His enemies should be reckoned with, and
brought down; they could not ease themselves of their fears, as David could, by
faith in God. Mortal men, though ever so high and strong, will easily be
crushed by an eternal God. Those who are not reclaimed by the rod of
affliction, will certainly be brought down to the pit of destruction. The
burden of afflictions is very heavy, especially when attended with the
temptations of Satan; there is also the burden of sin and corruption. The only
relief under it is, to look to Christ, who bore it. Whatever it is that thou
desirest God should give thee, leave it to him to give it in his own way and
time. Care is a burden, it makes the heart stoop. We must commit our ways and
works to the Lord; let him do as seemeth him good, and let us be satisfied. To
cast our burden upon God, is to rest upon his providence and promise. And if we
do so, he will carry us in the arms of his power, as a nurse carries a child;
and will strengthen our spirits by his Spirit, so that they shall sustain the
trial. He will never suffer the righteous to be moved; to be so shaken by any
troubles, as to quit their duty to God, or their comfort in him. He will not
suffer them to be utterly cast down. He, who bore the burden of our sorrows,
desires us to leave to him to bear the burden of our cares, that, as he knows
what is best for us, he may provide it accordingly. Why do not we trust Christ
to govern the world which he redeemed?
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 55
Verse 3
[3]
Because of the voice of the enemy, because of the oppression of the wicked: for
they cast iniquity upon me, and in wrath they hate me.
Voice —
Their clamours and threats, and slanders.
Cast —
They lay many crimes to my charge.
Verse 4
[4] My heart is sore pained within me: and the terrors of death are fallen
upon me.
The terrors —
Deadly terrors; such as seize upon men in the agonies of death.
Verse 8
[8] I
would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest.
Tempest —
From the force and fury of mine enemies.
Verse 9
[9]
Destroy, O Lord, and divide their tongues: for I have seen violence and strife
in the city.
Destroy —
Destroy them by dividing.
Tongues —
Their speech, as thou didst at Babel, Genesis 11:9, their votes, and opinions, and
counsels. Which was eminently done among Absalom's followers, 2 Samuel 17:23.
Strife —
Injustice and fraud, oppression and contention rule here, instead of that
public justice and peace which I established.
City — In
Jerusalem; which in Absalom's time was a sink of all sins.
Verse 10
[10] Day and night they go about it upon the walls thereof: mischief also and
sorrow are in the midst of it.
They —
Violence and strife.
Go about — Do
encompass it, as it were a garrison.
Walls — In
the outward parts, as also in the very midst of it. So that all parts were
horribly corrupted.
Verse 11
[11]
Wickedness is in the midst thereof: deceit and guile depart not from her
streets.
Streets —
The places of buying and selling, and of public commerce.
Verse 12
[12] For
it was not an enemy that reproached me; then I could have borne it: neither was
it he that hated me that did magnify himself against me; then I would have hid
myself from him:
Hated —
With a manifest or old hatred.
Verse 13
[13] But
it was thou, a man mine equal, my guide, and mine acquaintance.
Equal —
Not in power, but in reputation, for wisdom, and influence upon my people.
Guide —
Whose counsel I highly prized, and constantly followed. All which agrees to
Achitophel.
Verse 15
[15] Let
death seize upon them, and let them go down quick into hell: for wickedness is
in their dwellings, and among them.
Them —
All such as pretend to religion, and have manifestly apostatized both from the
profession and practice of it.
The grave —
Cut off by a sudden and violent death.
Among them —
Heb. in their inwards. Wickedness is deeply rooted in their hearts.
Verse 17
[17]
Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and he shall
hear my voice.
Evening, … —
The three stated times of prayer among the Jews.
Verse 18
[18] He
hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle that was against me: for there
were many with me.
He hath — He
speaks of a future deliverance, as a thing done, because of the certainty of
it. He hath restored me to my former peace and tranquility.
For —
For there were more with me than against me; even the holy angels whom God
employed to defend and deliver me.
Verse 19
[19] God
shall hear, and afflict them, even he that abideth of old. /*Selah*/. Because
they have no changes, therefore they fear not God.
Hear — My
prayers.
Eternity —
Who is eternal, and therefore unchangeable, and almighty.
Because —
They meet with no crosses nor disappointments.
Therefore —
Their success makes them go on securely, without any regard to God, or dread of
his judgments.
Verse 20
[20] He
hath put forth his hands against such as be at peace with him: he hath broken
his covenant.
He — They, the persons
last mentioned.
Verse 22
[22] Cast
thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the
righteous to be moved.
Burden —
All thy crosses, and cares, and fears, lay them upon the Almighty, by faith and
prayer. He directs this speech to his own soul, and to all good men in like
circumstances.
Suffer — As
he doth wicked men. Tho' he may for a season suffer them to be shaken, yet not
to be overwhelmed.
Verse 23
[23] But
thou, O God, shalt bring them down into the pit of destruction: bloody and
deceitful men shall not live out half their days; but I will trust in thee.
Them —
The wicked.
Not live —
But shall be cut off by an untimely and violent death.
Trust in thee —
And in this confidence I will quietly wait for deliverance.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. To the
Chief Musician on Neginoth. Another song to be accompanied by stringed
instruments. The strain is at one time mournful, and at another softly sweet.
It needed the chief musician's best care to see that the music was expressive
of the sentiment. Maschil. It is not a mere personal hymn, there is
teaching in it for us all, and where our Lord shines through David, his
personal type, there is a great deep of meaning. Of David. The man of
many conditions, much tried, and much favoured, persecuted but delivered and
exalted, was from experience enabled to write such precious verses in which he
sets forth not only the sorrows of common pilgrims, but of the Lord of the way
himself.
SUBJECT. It would be
idle to fix a time, and find an occasion for this Psalm with any dogmatism. It
reads like a song of the time of Absalom and Ahithophel. It was after David had
enjoyed peaceful worship (Ps 55:14), when he was or had just been a dweller in
a city (Ps 55:9-11), and when he remembered his former roamings in the
wilderness. Altogether it seems to us to relate to that mournful era when the
King was betrayed by his trusted counsellor. The spiritual eye ever and anon
sees the Son of David and Judas, and the chief priests appearing and
disappearing upon the glowing canvas of the Psalm.
DIVISION. From Ps
55:1-8, the suppliant spreads his case in general before his God; in Ps
55:9-11, he portrays his enemies; in Ps 55:12-14, he mentions one special
traitor, and cries for vengeance, or foretells it in Ps 55:15. From Ps 55:16-19
he consoles himself by prayer and faith; in Ps 55:20-21 he again mentions the
deceitful covenant breaker, and closes with a cheering exhortation to the
saints (Ps 55:22), and a denunciation of destruction upon the wicked and
deceitful (Ps 55:22).
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Give ear to my prayer, O God. The fact is so commonly
before us, otherwise we should be surprised to observe how universally and
constantly the saints resort to prayer in seasons of distress. From the Great
Elder Brother down to the very least of the divine family, all of them delight
in prayer. They run as naturally to the mercyseat in time of trouble as the
little chickens to the hen in the hour of danger. But note well that it is
never the bare act of prayer which satisfies the godly, they crave an audience
with heaven, and an answer from the throne, and nothing less will content them.
Hide not thyself from my supplication. Do not stop thine ear, or restrain thy
hand. When a man saw his neighbour in distress, and deliberately passed him by,
he was said to hide himself from him; and the psalmist begs that the Lord would
not so treat him. In that dread hour when Jesus bore our sins upon the tree,
his Father did hide himself, and this was the most dreadful part of all the Son
of David's agony. Well may each of us deprecate such a calamity as that God
should refuse to hear our cries.
Verse
2. Attend unto me, and hear me. This is the third time he
prays the same prayer. He is in earnest, in deep and bitter earnest. If his God
do not hear, he feels that all is over with him. He begs for his God to be a
listener and an answerer. I mourn in my complaint, and make a noise. He gives a
loose to his sorrows, permits his mind to rehearse her griefs, and to pour them
out in such language as suggests itself at the time, whether it be coherent or
not. What a comfort that we may be thus familiar with our God! We may not
complain of him, but we may complain to him. Our rambling
thoughts when we are distracted with grief we may bring before him, and that
too in utterances rather to be called a noise than language. He will attend so
carefully that he will understand us, and he will often fulfil desires which we
ourselves could not have expressed in intelligible words. "Groanings that
cannot be uttered, "are often prayers which cannot be refused. Our Lord
himself used strong crying and tears, and was heard in that he feared.
Verse
3. Because of the voice of the enemy. The enemy was vocal and
voluble enough, and found a voice where his godly victim had nothing better
than a "noise." Slander is seldom short of expression, it prates and
prattles evermore. Neither David, nor our Lord, nor any of the saints were
allowed to escape the attacks of venomous tongues, and this evil was in every
case the cause of acute anguish. Because of the oppression of the wicked: the
unjust pressed and oppressed the righteous; like an intolerable burden they
crushed them down, and brought them to their knees before the Lord. This is a
thrice told story, and to the end of time it will be true; he that is born
after the flesh will persecute him that is born after the Spirit. The great
seed of the woman suffered from a bruised heel. For they cast iniquity upon me,
they black me with their soot bags, throw the dust of their lying over me, cast
the vitriol of their calumny over me. They endeavour to trip me up, and if I do
not fall they say I do. And in wrath they hate me. With a hearty ill will they
detested the holy man. It was no sleeping animosity, but a moral rancour which
reigned in their bosoms. The reader needs not that we show how applicable this
is to our Lord.
Verse
4. My heart is sore pained within me. His spirit writhed in
agony, like a poor worm; he was mentally as much in pain as a woman in travail
physically. His inmost soul was touched; and a wounded spirit who can bear? If
this were written when David was attacked by his own favourite son, and
ignominiously driven from his capital, he had reason enough for using these
expressions. And the terrors of death are fallen upon me. Mortal fears seized
him, he felt like one suddenly surrounded with the glooms of the shadow of
death, upon whom the eternal night suddenly descends. Within and without he was
afflicted, and his chief terror seemed to come from above, for he uses the
expression, "Fallen upon me." He gave himself up for lost. He felt
that he was as good as dead. The inmost centre of his nature was moved with
dismay. Think of our Lord in the garden, with his "soul exceeding
sorrowful even unto death, " and you have a parallel to the griefs of the
psalmist. Perchance, dear reader, if as yet thou hast not trodden this gloomy
way, thou wilt do soon; then be sure to mark the footprints of thy Lord in this
miry part of the road.
Verse
5. Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me. Like house
breakers these robbers were entering his soul. Like one who feels a fainting
fit coming over him, so the oppressed suppliant was falling into a state of
terror. His fear was so great as to make him tremble. He did not know what
would happen next, or how soon the worst should come. The sly, mysterious
whisperings of slander often cause a noble mind more fear than open antagonism;
we can be brave against an open foe, but cowardly, plotting conspiracies
bewilder and distract us. And horror hath overwhelmed me. He was as one
enveloped in a darkness that might be felt. As Jonah went down into the sea, so
did David appear to go down into deeps of horror. He was unmanned, confounded,
brought into a hideous state of suspense and mortal apprehension.
Verse
6. And I said, Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I
fly away, and be at rest. If he could not resist as an eagle, he would
escape as a dove. Swiftly, and unobserved, on strong, untiring pinions would he
h away from the abodes of slander and wickedness. His love of peace made him
sigh for an escape from the scene of strife.
"O
for a lodge in some vast wilderness,
Some boundless contiguity of shade,
Where rumour of oppression and deceit
Might never reach me more."
We
are all too apt to utter this vain desire, for vain it is; no wings of doves or
eagles could bear us away from the sorrows of a trembling heart. Inward grief
knows nothing of place. Moreover, it is cowardly to shun the battle which God
would have us fight. We had better face the danger, for we have no armour for
our backs. He had need of a swifter conveyance than doves' pinions who would
outfly slander; he may be at rest who does not fly, but commends his case to
his God. Even the dove of old found no rest till she returned to her ark, and
we amid all our sorrow may find rest in Jesus. We need not depart; all will be
well if we trust in him.
Verse
7. Lo, then would I wander far off. Yet when David was far
off, he sighed to be once more near Jerusalem; thus, in our ill estate we ever
think the past to be better than the present. We shall be called to fly far
enough away, and perchance we shall be loath to go; we need not indulge vain
notions of premature escape from earth.
And
remain in the wilderness. He found it none such a dear abode when there, yet
resolves now to make it his permanent abode. Had he been condemned to receive
his wish he would ere long have felt like Selkirk, in the poet's verse—
"O
solitude, where are the charms
That sages have found in thy face?
Better dwell in the midst of alarms
Than reign in this horrible place."
Our
Lord, while free from all idle wishes, found much strength in solitude, and
loved the mountain's brow at midnight, and the quiet shade of the olives of
Gethsemane. It is better practically to use retirement than pathetically to
sigh for it. Yet it is natural, when all men do us wrong, to wish to separate
ourselves from their society; nature, however, must yield to grace, and we must
endure the contradiction of sinners against ourselves, and not be weary and faint
in our minds. Selah. After such a flight well may the mind rest. When we are
going too fast, and giving way too freely to regrets, it is well to cry,
"halt, "and pause awhile, till more sober thoughts return.
Verse
8. I would hasten my escape. He tried to pause but could not,
like a horse which when pulled up slips on a little because of the speed at
which he was going. David declares that he would not waste a moment, or stay to
bid adieu to his friends, but up and away at once, for fear he should be too
late, and because he could bear the clamour of his foes no longer. From the
windy storm and tempest. A storm was brewing, and, like a dove, he would outfly
it and reach a calmer region. Swifter than the storm cloud would he fly, to
avoid the deluge of rain, and the flash of the lightning. Alas! poor soul, no
such wings are thine, as yet thou must tarry here and feel the tempest; but be
of good cheer, thou shalt stretch thy wings ere long for a bolder flight,
heaven shall receive thee, and there thy sorrows shall have a finis of felicity
among the birds of paradise.
Verse
9. Destroy, O Lord. Put mine enemies to the rout. Let them be
devoured by the sword, since they have unsheathed it against me. How could we
expect the exiled monarch to offer any other prayer than this against the
rebellious bands of Absalom, and the crafty devices of Ahithophel? Divide their
tongues. Make another Babel in their debates and councils of war. Set them at
cross purposes. Divide the pack that the hunted one may escape. The divisions
of error are the hope of truth. For I have seen violence and strife in the
city. The rabble and their leaders were plotting and planning, raging and
contending against their king, running wild with a thousand mad projects:
anarchy had fermented among them, and the king hoped that now it might come to
pass that the very lawlessness which had exiled him would create weakness among
his foes. Revolution devours its own children. They who are strong through
violence, will sooner or later find that their strength is their death. Absalom
and Ahithophel may raise the mob, but they cannot so easily rule it, nor so
readily settle their own policy as to remain firm friends. The prayer of David
was heard, the rebels were soon divided in their councils; Ahithophel went his
way to be hanged with a rope, and Absalom to be hanged without one.
Verse
10. Day and night they go about it upon the walls thereof. The
city, the holy city had become a den of wickedness; conspirators met in the
dark, and talked in little knots in the streets even in broad daylight.
Meanwhile the country was being roused to revolt, and the traitors without
threatened to environ the city, and act in concert with the rebels within. No
doubt there was a smothered fire of insurrection which Absalom kindled and
fanned, which David perceived with alarm some time before he left Jerusalem;
and when he quitted the city it broke out into an open flame. Mischief also and
sorrow are in the midst of it. Unhappy capital to be thus beset by foes, left
by her monarch, and filled with all those elements of turbulence which breed
evil and trouble. Unhappy king to be thus compelled to see the mischief which
he could not avert laying waste the city which he loved so well. There was
another King whose many tears watered the rebellious city, and who said,
"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered thy children
together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would
not!"
Verse
11. Wickedness is in the midst thereof. The very heart of the
city was base. In her places of authority crime went hand in hand with
calamity. All the wilder and more wicked elements were uppermost; the canaille
were commanders; the scum floated uppermost; justice was at a discount; the
population was utterly demoralized; prosperity had vanished and order with it.
Deceit and guile depart not from her streets. In all the places of concourse
crafty tongues were busy persuading the people with cozening phrases. Crafty
demagogues led the people by the nose. Their good king was defamed in all ways,
and when they saw him go away, they fell to reviling the governors of
their own choosing. The forum was the fortress of fraud, the congress was the
convention of cunning. Alas, poor Jerusalem, to be thus the victim of sin and
shame! Virtue reviled and vice regnant! Her solemn assemblies broken up, her
priests fled, her king banished, and troops of reckless villains parading her
streets, sunning themselves on her walls, and vomiting their blasphemies in her
sacred shrines. Here was cause enough for the sorrow which so plaintively
utters itself in these verses.
Verse
12. The reader will do well to observe how accurately the psalmist
described his own Psalm when he said, "I mourn in my complaint, "or
rather "give loose to my thoughts, "for he proceeds from one point of
his sorrow to another, wandering on like one in a maze, making few pauses, and
giving no distinct intimations that he is changing the subject. Now from the
turbulent city his mind turns to the false hearted councillor. For is was not
an enemy that reproached me; then I could have borne it. It was not an
open foe, but a pretended friend; he went over to the other camp and tried to
prove the reality of his treachery by calumniating his old friend. None are
such real enemies as false friends. Reproaches from those who have been
intimate with us, and trusted by us, cut us to the quick; and they are usually
so well acquainted with our peculiar weaknesses that they know how to touch us
where we are most sensitive, and to speak so as to do us most damage. The
slanders of an avowed antagonist are seldom so mean and dastardly as those of a
traitor, and the absence of the elements of ingratitude and treachery renders
them less hard to bear. We can bear from Shimei what we cannot endure from
Ahithophel. Neither was it he that hated me that did magnify himself against
me; then I would have hid myself from him. We can find a hiding place
from open foes, but who can escape from treachery? If our enemies proudly boast
over us we nerve our souls for resistance, but when those who pretended to love
us leer at us with contempt, whither shall we go? Our blessed Lord had to
endure at its worst the deceit and faithlessness of a favoured disciple; let us
not marvel when we are called to tread the road which is marked by his pierced
feet.
Verse
13. But it was thou. He sees him. The poetic fury is upon him,
he sees the traitor as though he stood before him in flesh and blood. He
singles him out, he points his finger at him, he challenges him to his face.
But thou. Et tu, Brute. And thou, Ahithophel, art thou here? Judas,
betrayest thou the Son of Man? A man mine equal. Treated by me as one of
my own rank, never looked upon as an inferior, but as a trusted friend. My
guide, a counsellor so sage that I trusted thine advice and found it prudent to
do so. And mine acquaintance, with whom I was on most intimate terms, who knew
me even as I knew him by mutual disclosures of heart. No stranger occasionally
conversed with, but a near and dear friend admitted to my secret fellowship. It
was fiendish treason for such a one to prove false hearted. There was no excuse
for such villainy. Judas stood very much in this relation to our Lord, he was
treated as an equal, trusted as treasurer, and in that capacity often consulted
with. He knew the place where the Master was wont to spend his solitude; in
fact, he knew all the Master's movements, and yet he betrayed him to his
remorseless adversaries. How justly might the Lord have pointed at him and
said, But thou; but his gentler spirit warned the son of perdition in the
mildest manner, and had not Iscariot been tenfold a child of hell he would have
relinquished his detestable purpose.
Verse
14. We took sweet counsel together. It was not merely the
counsel which men take together in public or upon common themes, their
fellowship had been tender and confidential. The traitor had been treated
lovingly, and trusted much. Solace, mutual and cheering, had grown out of their
intimate communings. There were secrets between them of no common kind. Soul
had been in converse with soul, at least on David's part. However feigned might
have been the affection of the treacherous one, the betrayed friend had not
dealt with him coldly, or guarded his utterance before him. Shame on the wretch
who could belie such fellowship, and betray such confidence! And walked unto
the house of God in company. Religion had rendered their intercourse sacred,
they had mingled their worship, and communed on heavenly themes. If ever any
bonds ought to be held inviolable, religious connections should be. There is a
measure of impiety, of a detestable sort, in the deceit which debases the union
of men who make profession of godliness. Shall the very altar of God be defiled
with hypocrisy? Shall the gatherings of the temple be polluted by the presence
of treachery? All this was true of Ahithophel, and in a measure of Judas. His
union with the Lord was on the score of faith, they were joined in the holiest
of enterprises, he had been sent on the most gracious of errands. His
cooperation with Jesus to serve his own abominable ends stamped him as the
firstborn of hell. Better had it been for him had he never been born. Let all
deceitful professors be warned by his doom, for like Ahithophel he went to his
own place by his own hand, and retains a horrible preeminence in the calendar
of notorious crime. Here was one source of heart break for the Redeemer, and it
is shared in by his followers. Of the serpent's brood some vipers still remain,
who will sting the hand that cherished them, and sell for silver those who
raised them to the position which rendered it possible for them to be so
abominably treacherous.
Verse
15. Not thus would Jesus pray, but the rough soldier David so poured
out the anguish of his spirit, under treachery and malice seldom equalled and
altogether unprovoked. The soldier, as such, desires the overthrow of his foes,
for this very end he fights; and viewed as a matter of law and justice, David
was right in his wish; he was waging a just, defensive war against men utterly
regardless of truth and justice. Read the words as a warrior's imprecation. Let
death seize upon them. Traitors such as these deserve to die, there is no
living with them, earth is polluted by their tread; if spies are shot, much more
these sneaking villains. Let them go down quick into hell. While in the vigour
of life into sheol let them sink, let them suddenly exchange the
enjoyment of the quick or living for the sepulchre of the dead. There is,
however, no need to read this verse as an imprecation, it is rather a confident
expectation or prophecy: God would, he was sure, desolate them, and cast them
out of the land of the living into the regions of the dead. For wickedness is
in their dwellings, and among them. They are too bad to be spared, for their
houses are dens of infamy, and their hearts fountains of mischief. They are a
pest to the commonwealth, a moral plague, a spiritual pestilence, to be stamped
out by the laws of men and the providence of God. Both Ahithophel and Judas
soon ended their own lives; Absalom was hanged in the oak, and the rebels
perished in the wood in great numbers. There is justice in the universe, love
itself demands it; pity to rebels against God, as such, is no virtue—we pray
for them as creatures, we abhor them as enemies of God. We need in these days
far more to guard against the disguised iniquity which sympathises with evil,
and counts punishment to be cruelty, than against the harshness of a former
age. We have steered so far from Scylla that Charybdis is absorbing us.
Verse
16. As for me, I will call upon God. The psalmist would not
endeavour to meet the plots of his adversaries by counterplots, or imitate
their incessant violence, but in direct opposition to their godless behaviour
would continually resort to his God. Thus Jesus did, and it has been the wisdom
of all believers to do the same. As this exemplifies the contrast of their
character, so it will foretell the contrast of their end—the righteous shall
ascend to their God, the wicked shall sink to ruin. And the Lord shall save me.
Jehovah will fulfil my desire, and glorify himself in my deliverance. The
psalmist is quite sure. He knows that he will pray, and is equally clear that
he will be heard. The covenant name is the pledge of the covenant promise.
Verse
17. Evening and morning, and at noon, will I pray. Often but
none too often. Seasons of great need call for frequent seasons of devotion.
The three periods chosen are most fitting; to begin, continue, and end the day
with God is supreme wisdom. Where time has naturally set up a boundary, there
let us set up an altar stone. The psalmist means that he will always pray; he
will run a line of prayer right along the day, and track the sun with his
petitions. Day and night he saw his enemies busy (Ps 55:10), and therefore he
would meet their activity by continuous prayer. And cry aloud. He would give a
tongue to his complaint; he would be very earnest in his pleas with heaven.
Some cry aloud who never say a word. It is the bell of the heart that rings
loudest in heaven. Some read it, "I will nurse and murmur; "deep
heart thoughts should be attended with inarticulate but vehement utterances of
grief. Blessed be God, moaning is translatable in heaven. A father's heart
reads a child's heart. And he shall hear my voice. He is confident that he will
prevail; he makes no question that he would be heard, he speaks as if already
he were answered. When our window is opened towards heaven, the windows of
heaven are open to us. Have but a pleading heart and God will have a plenteous
hand.
Verse
18. He hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle that was
against me. The deliverance has come. Joab has routed the rebels. The Lord
has justified the cause of his anointed. Faith sees as well as foresees; to her
foresight is sight. He is not only safe but serene, delivered in peace—peace in
his inmost soul. For there were many with me; many contending against me. Or it
may be that he thankfully acknowledges that the Lord raised him up unexpected
allies, fetched him succour when he most needed it, and made the friendless
monarch once more the head of a great army. The Lord can soon change our
condition, and he often does so when our prayers become fervent. The crisis of
life is usually the secret place of wrestling. Jabbok makes Jacob a prevailing
prince. He who stripped us of all friends to make us see himself in their
absence, can give them back again in greater numbers that we may see him more
joyfully in the fact of their presence.
Verse
19. God shall hear, and afflict them. They make a noise as
well as I, and God will hear them. The voice of slander, malice, and pride, is
not alone heard by those whom it grieves, it reaches to heaven, it penetrates
the divine ear, it demands vengeance, and shall have it. God hears and delivers
his people, he hears and destroys the wicked. Their cruel jests, their base
falsehoods, their cowardly insults, their daring blasphemies are heard, and
shall be repaid to them by the eternal judge. Even he that abideth of old. He
sits in eternity, enthroned judge for evermore; all the prayers of saints and
profanities of sinners are before his judgment seat, and he will see that
justice is done. Selah. The singer pauses, overwhelmed with awe in the presence
of the everlasting God. Because they have no changes, therefore they fear not
God. His own reverential feeling causes him to remember the daring godlessness
of the wicked; he feels that his trials have driven him to his God, and he
declares that their uninterrupted prosperity was the cause of their living in
such neglect of the Most High. It is a very manifest fact that long continued
ease and pleasure are sure to produce the worst influences upon graceless men:
though troubles do not convert them, yet the absence of them makes their corrupt
nature more readily develop itself. Stagnant water becomes putrid. Summer heat
breeds noxious insects. He who is without trouble is often without God. It is a
forcible proof of human depravity that man turns the mercy of God into
nutriment for sin: the Lord save us from this.
Verse
20. The psalmist cannot forget the traitor's conduct, and returns
again to consider it. He hath put forth his hands against such as be at peace
with him. He smites those to whom he had given the hand of friendship, he breaks
the bonds of alliance, he is perfidious to those who dwell at ease because of
his friendly profession. He hath broken his covenant. The most solemn league he
has profaned, he is regardless of oaths and promises.
Verse
21. The words of his mouth were smoother than butter. He
lauded and larded the man he hoped to devour. He buttered him with flattery and
then battered him with malice. Beware of a man who has too much honey on his
tongue; a trap is to be suspected where the bait is so tempting. Soft, smooth,
oily words are most plentiful where truth and sincerity are most scarce. But
war was in his heart. He brought forth butter in a lordly dish, but he had a
tent pin ready for the temples of his guest. When heart and lip so widely
differ, the man is a monster, and those whom he assails are afflicted indeed.
His words were softer than oil. Nothing could be more unctuous and fluent,
there were no objectionable syllables, no jars or discords, his words were as
yielding as the best juice of the olive; yet were they drawn swords, rapiers
unsheathed, weapons brandished for the fray. Ah! base wretch, to be cajoling
your victim while intending to devour him! entrapping him as if he were but a
beast of prey; surely, such art thou thyself.
Verse
22. Thy burden, or what thy God lays upon thee, lay thou it
upon the Lord. His wisdom casts it on thee, it is thy wisdom to cast it on him.
He cast thy lot for thee, cast thy lot on him. He gives thee thy portion of
suffering, accept it with cheerful resignation, and then take it back to him by
thine assured confidence. He shall sustain thee. Thy bread shall be given thee,
thy waters shall be sure. Abundant nourishment shall fit thee to bear all thy
labours and trials. As thy days so shall thy strength be. He shall never suffer
the righteous to be moved. He may move like the boughs of a tree in the
tempest, but he shall never be moved like a tree torn up by the roots. He
stands firm who stands in God. Many would destroy the saints, but God has not
suffered it, and never will. Like pillars, the godly stand immoveable, to the
glory of the Great Architect.
Verse
23. For the ungodly a sure, terrible, and fatal overthrow is
appointed. Climb as they may, the pit yawns for them, God himself will
cause them to descend into it, and destruction there shall be their
portion. Bloody and deceitful men, with double iniquity of cruelty and craft
upon them, shall not live out half their days; they shall be cut off in their
quarrels, or being disappointed in their artifices, vexation shall end them.
They were in heart murderers of others, and they became in reality self
murderers. Doubt not that virtue lengthens life, and that vice tends to shorten
it. But I will trust in thee. A very wise, practical conclusion. We can have no
better ground of confidence. The Lord is all, and more than all that faith can
need as the foundation of peaceful dependence. Lord, increase our faith
evermore.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. Maschil. This
is often prefixed to those Psalms in which David speaks of himself as being
chastened by God, inasmuch as the end of chastisement is instruction. Simon
de Muis, 1587-1644.
Whole
Psalm. A prayer of the Man Christ in his humiliation, despised and
rejected of men, when he was made sin for his people, that they might be made
the righteousness of God in him, when he was about to suffer their punishment,
pay their debt, and discharge their ransom. Utter depravity of the inhabitants
of Jerusalem; betrayal of Messiah by one of the twelve whom he had ordained to
the apostolical office, and who was Messiah's constant attendant in all his
ministerial circuits. Premature and punitive death of the traitor Judas, and of
others banded together to crucify the Lord of glory. John Noble Coleman,
M.A., in "A Revision of the authorised English Version of the Book of
Psalms, "1863.
Verse
1. In the first clause he uses the word ytlkt, that he might
indicate that he merely sought justice from God as a Judge; but in the second
he implores the favour of God, that if perchance the prayer for justice
be less becoming to himself as a sinner, God may not deny his grace. Hermann
Venema.
Verse
1. Hide not thyself from my supplication. A figure taken from
the conduct of a king who debars an offender from seeing his face (2Sa 14:24),
or from an enemy, who conceals himself from the ox, etc.; that is, pretends not
to see it, and goes away, leaving it (see De 22:1,3,4 Isa 58:7); or, from a
false friend, or an unkind person, who, foreseeing that he may be entreated by
a miserable and needy man, will not let himself be seen, but seeks to make his
escape. Martin Geier, 1614-1681.
Verse
2. I mourn. As one cast down with sorrow, making a doleful
noise. Henry Ainsworth, 1662.
Verse
2. I mourn, etc. A mourning supplicant shall neither lose his
prayers nor his tears; for, I mourn, is brought for a reason of his hope
that God shall attend and hear him. David Dickson.
Verse
2. I mourn in my complaint. The literal translation of these
words is, I will suffer to wander in my thinking; i.e., I will let my mind
wander, or my thoughts rove as they will. J. A Alexander.
Verse
2. In my complaint. Saints have their complaints on account
of their sins and corruptions, their barrenness and unfruitfulness, and the
decay of vital religion in them, and because of the low estate of Zion, the
declining state of the interest of Christ, and the little success of his
gospel; and they mourn, in these complaints, over their own sins, and the sins
of others, professors and profane, and under afflictions temporal and spiritual,
both their own and the church's. Christ also in the days of his flesh, had his
complaints of the perverseness and faithlessness of the generation of men among
whom he lived; of the frowardness, pride, and contentions of his disciples; of
the reproaches, insult, and injuries of his enemies; and of the dereliction of
his God and Father; and he often mourned on account of one or other of these
things, being a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefs. John Gill.
Verse
2. In my complaint. The word here employed commonly means
discourse, meditation. It here occurs in the sense of complaint, as in
Job 7:13 9:27 21:4 23:2 Ps 142:2 1Sa 1:16. It is not used, however, to denote
complaint in the sense of fault finding, complaining, accusing, or the idea
that we have been dealt with unjustly. This is not the meaning in this place or
in the Scriptures generally. It is the language of a troubled, not of an
injured spirit. Albert Barnes, 1868.
Verse
2. In confession, when the soul melts into a holy shame and sorrow
for the sins he spreads before the Lord, he feels a holy smart and pain within,
and doth not act a tragical part with a comical heart. Chrysostom saith,
"To paint tears is worse than to paint the face." Here is true
fervency, I mourn in my complaint and make a noise. There may be fire in
the pan when there is none in the piece; a loud wind but no rain with it. David
made a noise with his voice, and mourned in his spirit. William Gurnall,
1617-1679.
Verse
3. Because of the voice of the enemy, there is their railing;
because of the oppression of the wicked, there is their violent robbing
him of his estate; they cast iniquity upon me, there are their
slanderous traducings of him, and charging him with faults falsely; in wrath
they hate me, there is their cruel seeking to kill. David Dickson.
Verse
3. For they cast iniquity upon me. They tumble it on me, as
men do stones or anything else upon their besiegers, to endamage them; so did
these sin, shame, anything, upon innocent David, to make him odious. John
Trapp.
Verse
4. Is sore pained, or, trembled with pain, The word
usually meaneth such pains as a woman feels in her travail. Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
4. The terrors of death are fallen upon me. My heart, said
the afflicted psalmist, is sore pained within me: and though I am
repeatedly assured of my interest in the divine love and favour, yet now the
terrors of death are fallen upon me. The case of David is so far from being
peculiar to himself, that it portrays, in the most striking colours, a state of
mind to which many of the most exemplary Christians are frequently, if not
constantly subject. Many, whose hopes are placed on the right foundation, even
Christ Jesus, and whose conduct is uniform and consistent, are ye harassed
almost continually by the tormenting fears of death... It will be an
interesting and useful enquiry to examine into the real causes of a fear, which
cultivates melancholy and despondency on the one hand and destroys our
happiness on the other. To effect this design I shall consider,
1.
The various causes of the fear of death.
2.
The arguments calculated to remove it. There are few, indeed, so hardened in
the slavery of vice, or so utterly regardless of every admonition, as to
consider the awful period of dissolution without some emotions of terror and
dismay. There is something so peculiarly awful in the idea of a change hitherto
unknown, and of a state hitherto untried, that the most hardy veterans have
owned its tremendous aspects.
One
of the first causes of the fear of death is conscious guilt. The most
hardened are conscious of many things which they may not readily confess; and
the most self righteous is conscious of many crimes which he artfully studies
to conceal. Whilst the Christian is looking only to his own habits and temper,
he may and will be always wretched; but if he looks to the great Surety, Christ
Jesus, his gloomy prospect will soon be turned to joy. An attachment to this
world is also a (second) cause of the fear of death. A principal of self
preservation is also a (third) cause of the fear of death. That our bodies,
which are pampered by pride and nourished by indulgence, should be consigned to
the silent grave, and become even the food of worms, is a humbling reflection
to the boasted dignity of man. Besides, nature revolts at the idea of its own
dissolution; hence a desire of preserving life, evidently implanted in us. The
devil is also (fourthly) often permitted to terrify the consciences of men, and
thereby increase at least the fear of death. Unbelief is also a (fifth) cause
of the fear of death. Were our faith more frequently in exercise, we should be
enabled to look beyond the dreary mansions of the grave with a hope full of
immortality. Our fears of death may be often caused by looking for that
perfection in ourselves, which we shall never easily discover.
Consider
the arguments calculated to remove the fear of death. It may be necessary to
premise that the consolations of religion belong only to real Christians; for
the wicked have just reason to dread the approach of death. But to such as are
humbled under a sense of their own unworthiness, and who have fled to Christ
for pardon and salvation, they have no cause to apprehend either the pain or
the consequences of death; because first, the sting of death is taken away. Secondly,
because death is no longer an enemy but a friend. Instead of threatening us
with misery, it invites us to happiness. Thirdly, the safety of our state is
founded on the oath, the purpose, and the promises of God. A fourth argument
calculated to remove the fear of death, is the consideration of the benefits
resulting from it. The benefits which believers receive from Christ at the
resurrection also, is a fifth argument calculated to remove the fear of death. Condensed
from a Sermon by John Grove, M.A., F.A.S., 1802.
Verses
4-5. In the version of the Psalter used in the Prayer book, this verse
stands with a more homely and expressive simplicity, "My heart is
disquieted within me, and the fear of death is fallen upon me. Fearfulness and
trembling are come upon me, and an horrible dread hath overwhelmed me."
The fear of death is upon all flesh. It is no sign of manhood to be without it.
To overcome it in the way of duty is courage; to meet death with patience is
faith; but not to fear it is either a gift of special grace, or a dangerous
insensibility. No doubt great saints have been able to say, "I have a
desire to depart." And many have rushed to martyrdom as to the love and
bosom of their Lord; but for the rest, the multitude of his flock, who are
neither wilful sinners nor to be numbered among the saints, the thought of
death is a thought of fear. We see that, on the first feeling of their having
so much as set foot in the path leading to the grave, even good men feel
"the terror of death, ""a horrible dread, "which makes
every pulse to beat with a hurried and vehement speed. Their whole nature, both
in body and in soul, trembles to its very centre; and their heart is
"disquieted, ""sore pained, "within them. Let us see what
are the causes or reasons of this "fear of death." The first must
needs be a consciousness of personal sinfulness. A sense of unfitness to meet
God, our unreadiness to die, a multitude of personal faults, evil tempers,
thoughts, and inclinations; the recollection of innumerable sins, of great
omissions and lukewarmness in all religious duties, the little love or
gratitude we have to God, and the great imperfections of our repentance; all
these make us tremble at the thought of going to give up our account. We feel
as if it were impossible we could be saved. Shame, fear, and a "horrible
dread" fall upon us. Henry Edward Manning, M.A., 1850.
Verse
5. Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me. In this
pitiful condition of mind, learn, that it is not a thing inconsistent with
godliness to be much moved with fear in time of danger; natural affections are
not taken away in conversion, but sanctified and moderated. David Dickson.
Verse
5. Fearfulness. How natural is this description! He is in
distress, he mourns, makes a noise, sobs and sighs, his heart
is wounded, he expects nothing but death; this produces fear,
this produces tremor, which terminates in that deep apprehension
of approaching and inevitable ruin that overwhelms him
with horror. No man ever described a wounded heart like David. Adam
Clarke.
Verse
6. And I said, Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I
fly away, and be at rest. Wherever the psalmist cast his eye, the
inscription was vanity and vexation. A deluge of sin and misery covered the
world, so that like Noah's dove he could find no rest for the sole of his foot
below, therefore does he direct his course toward heaven, and say, Oh that I
had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be at rest; but rest
is not a denizen of this world, nothing but the heaven of heavens is at rest,
and here does he fix only. Thomas Sharp (1630-1693), in "Divine
Comforts."
Verse
6. Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away,
and be at rest. King David, though for innocency not only a dove,
but the phoenix of doves, and so a notable type of Christ, upon whom the Holy
Ghost descended in the shape of a dove, yet was his whole life nothing else but
bellum sine induciis, a perpetual persecution without intermission. Such
was also the portion of Christ the Lord of David; and such to the world's end
will ever be the lot of those that are the heritage of Christ. My text imports
no less; which, taken historically, is the voice of David pursued by his
enemies; prophetically, the voice of Christ at his passion; mystically,
the voice of that mystical dove, the innocent soul, surrounded and environed
with the snares of death; even generalis quoendam querela (saith
Pellican), a general complaint of the malice of the wicked persecuting the
righteous. For (alas that it should be! yet so it is)—
"Non
rete accipitri tenditur, neque milvio,
Qui male facinunt nobis; illis qui nil faciunt tenditur." Terence.
"The
net is not pitched for ravenous birds, as are the hawk and the kite; but for
poor harmless birds, that never meditate mischief." And
"Dat
veniam corvis, vexat censura columbas."
"The
dove shall surely be shot at, when the carrion crow shall go shot free." Juvenal.
It
will then be no news unto you, that here the faithful soul, the spouse, the
dove of Christ, when trouble and heaviness take hold upon her, and the floods
of Belial compass her about, Tanquam avis e cave liberari cupit as St.
Austin speaks of the cloistered monks in his time), "Desireth like a bird
to be loosed out of her cage." Or, that as Jonas (by interpretation a
dove, after three days' and three nights' imprisonment in the whale's
belly, could not but long after his enlargement. So the dove like soul of man,
when not three, but many days, and months, and years, she hath been imprisoned
in the body, hath a longing desire to be enlarged, and to fly unto God that
made her; and so mourning like a dove in devout supplication, and
mounting like a dove in divine speculation, breaks forth into
these sad elegies: "Oh that I had wings!" and "Alas, that I have
not wings! Woe is me that I am constrained to dwell with Mesech, and to have
mine habitation among the tents of Kedar. Like as the hart desires the water
brook, so longeth my soul to be with thee, O God. I desire to be dissolved and
to be with Christ. Who will give me wings?" etc. Which is as if the poor
distressed soul, pathetically bemoaning her forlorn estate of pilgrimage,
should thus more plentifully enlarge herself. "My spouse is already
ascended higher than the winds, than the clouds, than the highest heavens, and
I, poor soul, as a husbandless widow, as a tutorless orphan, as a comfortless
exile, am left desolate and disconsolate in this valley of tears; none to care
for me, none to comfort me, till I have regained him whom I love, and in whom I
live. Nay (which worse is), this mine own familiar friend, this nearest and
dearest companion of mine, my body, is even a burden unto me. The weight
of it, and oft the sins that hang so fast on it, doth so clog and shackle me,
so glue and nail me to the earth, that I cannot raise or rear up myself towards
heaven. Or let him therefore descend to relieve me, being fila, sponsa,
soror, his daughter, and spouse, and sister; or let him give me wings
wherewith I may ascend to him, under the shadow of whose wings I shall surely
rest in safety." Ps 16:4. "I must confess it was the very bitterness
of extremity that first compelled me to love him, though of himself no less
lovely than love itself. It was the sharp sauce of affliction that gave edge to
mine affections, and sharpened mine appetite to that `sweet meat that endureth
to everlasting life.' But now, having had some little foretaste of him, I am
even in an holy ecstasy, so ravished, so transported with a fervent desire of
him and of his presence, that ubi sum, ibi non sum; ubi non sum, ibi animus
est:" "where I am, there I am not; and where I am not, there am
I." For, anima est ubi amat, non ubi animat: (Erasmus). "The
soul is where it loveth, not where it liveth." Now sigh I not so much for
the present dangers, I would decline, as because of my absent love, whom I most
desire. Who will give me wings? etc. In the scanning of which verse, ye
will observe with me,
1.
The efficient or author of these wings—God. Who will give me?
Who? that it, who but God?
2.
The matter of the wish—wings. "Who will give me wings?"
3.
The form of those wings—dove like. Who will give me wings like
unto a dove?
4.
The end mediate—flying. Then would I fly away.
5.
The end ultimate—resting. And be at rest.
(a)
"Who will give me?" There's Christian humility.
(b)
"Who will give me wings?" There's prudent celerity.
(c)
"Wings like unto a dove." There's innocent simplicity.
(d)
"Then would I fly away." There's devout sublimity.
(e)
"And be at rest." There's permanent security.
John
Rawlinson, in "The Dove like Soule. A Sermon preached before the
Prince's Highness at Whitehall, "Feb. 19, 1618.
Verse
6. Oh that I had wings, etc. Some of the most astounding
sermons ever delivered have been preached on this text, which was a very
favourite one with the old divines. They ransacked Pliny and Aldrovandus for
the most outrageous fables about doves, their eyes, their livers, their crops,
and even their dung, and then went on to find emblems of Christians in every
fact and fable. Griffith Williams, at considerable length, enlarges upon the
fact that David did not desire wings like a grasshopper to hop from flower to
flower, as those hasty souls who leap in religion, but do not run with
perseverance; nor like an ostrich which keeps to the earth, though it be a
bird, as hypocrites do who never mount towards heavenly things; nor like an
eagle, or a peacock, or a beetle, or a crow, or a kite, or a bat; and after
that he has shown in many ways the similarity between the godly and doves, he
refers us to Hugo Cardinalis, and others, for more. We do not think it would be
to edification to load these pages with such eccentricities and conceits. This
one single sentence, from Bishop Patrick is worth them all, "He rather
wished than hoped to escape." He saw no way of escape except by some
improbable or impossible means. C. H. S.
Verse
6. When the Gauls had tasted the wine of Italy, they asked where the
grapes grew, and would never be quiet till they came there. Thus may you cry, Oh
that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be at rest. A
believer is willing to lose the world for the enjoyment of grace; and he is
willing to leave the world for the fruition of glory. William Secker.
Verse
6. Wings like a dove. The pigeon, or dove, is one of the
swiftest of birds. The Religious Tract Society's "Book of Psalms, with
Preface and Explanatory Notes."
Verse
6. An old writer tells us that it would have been more honourable
for him to have asked for the strength of an ox to bear his trials, than for
the wings of a dove to flee from them. William Jay, 1769-1853.
Verse
6. Dove. The reference is to the turtle dove, I suppose.
Their low, sad complaint may be heard all day long at certain seasons in the
olive groves, and in the solitary and shady valleys among these mountains; I
have, however, been more affected by it in the vast orchards round Damascus
than anywhere else—so subdued, so very sorrowful among the trees, where the air
sighs softly, and little rills roll their melting murmurs down the flowery
aisles. These birds can never be tamed. Confined in a cage they droop, and like
Cowper, sigh for
"A
lodge in some vast wilderness—some boundless contiguity of shade."
and
no sooner are they set at liberty than they flee, as a bird, to their mountain.
Ps 11:1. David refers to their habits in this respect when his heart was sore
pained within him: Oh that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly
away, and be at rest. Lo, then would I wander far off, and remain in the
wilderness. And there you will meet these timid birds far away from the
haunts of cruel hunters, of whose society they are peculiarly suspicious. W.
M. Thomson, in "The Land and the Book," 1859.
Verse
6. Oh that I had wings, etc.—
At
first her mother earth she holdeth dear,
And doth embrace the world and worldly things;
She flies close by the ground, and hovers there,
And mounts not up with her celestial wings.
Yet under heaven she cannot light on ought
That with heavenly nature doth agree;
She cannot rest, she cannot fix her thought,
She cannot in this world contented be:
Then as a bee which among weeds doth fall,
Which seem sweet flowers, with lustre fresh and gay;
She lights on that, and this, and tasteth all,
But pleased with none, doth rise and soar away;
So when the Soul finds here no true content;
And like Noah's dove, can no sure footing take,
She doth return from whence she first was sent,
And flies to him that first her wings did make.
—Sir John Davies, 1569-1626.
Verse
7. Lo, then would I wander far off, etc. A passage in the
"Octavia" of Seneca has been referred to as being parallel to this of
David. It is in the answer of Octavia to the Chorus, act 5., ver. 914-923.
My
woes who enough can bewail?
O what notes can my sorrows express?
Sweet Philomel's self even would fail
To respond with her plaintive distress.
O had I her wings, I would fly
To where sorrows I never should feel more,
Upborne on her plumes through the sky,
Regions far from mankind would explore.
In a grove where sad silence should reign,
On a spray would I seat me alone;
In shrill lamentations complain.
And in wailings would pour forth my moan.
—J. B. Clarke (From Adam Clarke, in loc.)
Verse
8. I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest.
There was a windy storm and tempest without, and which is worse, a tumult and
combustion within in his thoughts. A man may escape from external confusions,
but how shall he fly from himself? If he be out of the reach of all the blood
suckers on earth, and all the furies in hell, yet be dogged and haunted with
his own turbulent, ungovernable cogitations, he needs no other tormentors. This
holy man was thus doubly distressed, a storm abroad and an earthquake at home
rendered his condition most dolorous; but for both he hath en mega he
goes not about with the foxes of this world to relieve himself with subtle
stratagems and wiles, by carnal shifts and policies, a vanity tosses to and
from by them that seek death. No, his one great refuge is to get aloft, to
ascend to God. Thomas Sharp.
Verse
9. Destroy, O Lord, and divide their tongues. In the first
place, their tongues were truly destroyed and they themselves divided, when the
testimony of the two false witnesses agreed not so together. Then secondly, by
the contradictory account of the soldiers that kept watch at the sepulchre. Michael
Ayguan (1416) in J. M. Neal's Commentary, 1860.
Verse
9. Divide their tongues: i.e., cause them to give conflicting
opinions. French and Skinner, 1842
Verse
10. Mischief also and sorrow are in the midst of it. The city,
as Abenezra observes, was like a circle; violence and strife were as a line
round about it, and mischief and sorrow the centre of it; and these two
commonly go together: where mischief is, sorrow soon follows. John Gill.
Verse
12. Then I could have borne it. It is remarkable that the
Lord, who endured the other unspeakable sorrows and agonies of his passion in
perfect and marvellous silence, allowed his grief at this one alone to escape
him, bewailing himself to his disciples that one of them should betray him, and
addressing that one, when he was taken, in these words of reproach—"Judas,
betrayest thou the Son of Man with a kiss?" Frau Thome de Jesu, 1582.
Verse
12. Then I would have hid myself from him. It is generally
easy to get out of the way of an avowed enemy, but how can one be on his guard
against a treacherous friend? A. R. Fausset, in "A Commentary,
Critical, Experimental, and Practical, "1866.
Verse
13. A man mine equal. The LXX here not badly, isoquce
(of equal soul), Jerome, unanimus mens (of one mind). Hermann Venema.
Verse
14. We took sweet counsel. From qtx to be sweet, and
the ordinary notion of dwo for secret, the phrase dwo qytmg will
literally be read, we made our secret sweet. And so it may be an
elegance, to signify the pleasure of his friendship, or of communicating
secrets to him. Henry Hammond.
Verse
14. The first clause speaks of private intimacy, the next of
association in public acts, and especially in the great festivals and
processions of the temple. J. J. Stewart Perowne, 1864.
Verse
14. In company. In the end of the verse vgrk may be rendered with
a noise: and so the Chaldee seems to have taken it, which reads with
haste; and to that agree the Jewish doctors, who tell us men are to go in haste
and with speed to the synagogue, but return thence very leisurely.
Henry Hammond.
Verse
15. Let death seize upon them, and let them go down quick into
hell. The last part and end of sinners' lives is worst with them. They have
in their lives been busily trading in the world, buying and selling, and
getting gain and ruffling it in the world, but meanwhile by their sins they run
deep in debt with God, and for want of interest in Christ to be their surety at
death (it may be on the sudden) it comes to that of the psalmist, Let death
seize upon them, and let them go down quick into hell. Death seizes on them
unawares, as a sergeant or pursevant, casts them into prison, which is
expressed by their going down quick into hell (as it is said Nu 16:32-33), that
Korah and his company did. Anthony Tuckney, 1599-1670.
Verse
15. Let death seize upon them by divine warrant, and let them
go quick into hell; let them be dead and buried, and damned in a moment; for
wickedness is wherever they are, it is in the midst of them. The souls of
impenitent sinners go down quick, or alive, into hell; for they have a perfect
sense of their miseries, and shall therefore live still, that they may be still
miserable. This prayer is a prophecy of the utter, the final, the everlasting
ruin of all those who, whether secretly or openly, oppose and rebel against the
Lord's Messiah. Matthew Henry.
Verse
15. Quick, that is alive, like Korah, Dathan and
Abiram. From "The Psalms chronologically arranged, By Four
Friends," 1867.
Verse
15. Throughout this series of Psalms, there appears to be a peculiar penalty
attached to each class of transgressions, or, each variety of opposition
against God meets a suitable end. The ungodly, that is, the irreligious and
indifferent, lay up for themselves an evil recompense when the wrath of God
shall be revealed (Ps 54:5): but an instant punishment falls upon false and
treacherous professors; as Paul denounced "anathema" against any who
perverted the gospel of Christ in the churches of Galatia; so in this Psalm, Let
death seize upon them, and let them go down quick into hell, announces the
awful judgment of Jehovah, as once it was shown upon Dathan and Abiram; a
punishment that will by its suddenness and notoriety at the same time expose
the guilt, and make manifest the displeasure of the Almighty against it. R.
H. Ryland, in "The Psalms restored to Messiah," 1853.
Verse
17. Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray. This was
the custom of the pious Hebrews. See Da 6:10. The Hebrews began their day in
the evening, and hence David mentions the evening first. The rabbins
say, men should pray three times each day because the day changes three times.
This was observed in the primitive church; but the times in different places
were various. The old Psalter gives this a curious turn: "At even I
sall tell his louing (praise) what the Christ was on the Crosse; and at morn
I sall schew his louing, what tim he ros fra dede. And sua he sall here my
voice at midday, that is sitand at the right hand of his fader, wheder
he stegh (ascended) at midday." Adam Clarke.
Verse
17. Evening and morning, etc. The three principle parts of the
day are mentioned, not as marking special times set apart for prayer, but as a
poetical expression for "the whole day, ""at all times,
""without ceasing." J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
17. If our poor, frail bodies need refreshment from food three times
a day, who, that knows his own weakness, will say that we need not as frequent
refreshment for our poor frail spirits? William S. Plumer, 1867.
Verse
17. I can no more believe him to be frequent and spiritual in
ejaculatory prayer, who neglects the season of solemn prayer, than I can
believe that he keeps every day in the week a Sabbath, who neglects to keep
that one which God hath appointed. William Gurnall, 1617-1679.
Verse
17. There is no limited time in the court of heaven for hearing
petitions. It is not like the court of earthly princes, for there is a free
access any day of the week, any hour of the day, or the night, any minute of
the hour. As the lawyer saith of the king, for having his due, Nullum tempus
occurrit regi: so may I say of the godly, for making his prayers and
granting his requests, Nullum tempus occurrit fidelibus, no time
unseasonable, so the heart be seasoned with faith; no non term in God's
court of requests. He keeps continually open house for all comers and goers;
and indeed, most for comers, then goers. His eyes are always open to behold our
tears; his ears are always open to hear our groans; his heart also and his
bowels are always open, and never shut up so fast, but they will yearn and turn
within him, if our misery be never so little. For as we have not an High Priest
to pray by "that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities;
"so neither have we a God to pray to, that shall see us in distress, and
hear us call and cry, and never be moved. Zachary Bogan (1625-1659), in
"Meditations of the Mirth of a Christian Life."
Verse
17. And cry aloud. The word here employed properly means to
murmur; to make a humming sound; to sigh; to growl; to groan. Here the language
means that he would give utterance to his deep feelings in appropriate
tones—whether words, sighs, or groans. Albert Barnes.
Verse
17. And he shall hear. And what will this loud cry obtain? A
hearing without doubt, so he assures himself, He shall hear me. Not that
God hears any prayers whether he will or no (as men sometimes do that upon
importunity which they have no mind to), but he hath no will, no mind not to
hear such prayers, the prayers of those who cry aloud to him. Joseph Caryl,
1602-1673.
Verse
18. He hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle. In the
midst of war the Lord can keep a man as safe as in the time of peace, and in
extreme perils preserve him from danger. He that depends upon God in the time
of trouble, albeit he had an host against him, yet hath he more with him when
God is with him, than can be against him. David Dickson.
Verse
18. For. The for implies the reason why God interposed
to deliver him; namely, because of the general principle that God ministers
relief when his people come to an extremity. A. R. Fausset.
Verse
18. There were many with me. This is doubtful whether it be
meant of foes or friends. If of foes, it may be resolved
thus: for with many (with a great multitude) they were fighters with
me. If of friends, it may be understood of God's angels, that
in a great number were with him, pitching camp for his aid (Ps 34:7); as
Elisha said, "Many more are with us than with them." 2Ki 6:16-17. The
Chaldee explains it, "For in many afflictions his word was for my
help." Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
19. Even he that abideth of old. The deeds by which God had
already showed himself from of old as the righteous King and Judge, the
judgments, for example, upon the wicked in the land of Shinar (Ps 55:9), the
company of Korah (Ps 55:9,18), the cities of the plain (Ps 55:15), pledge his
still ready interposition. He who had already so long held the throne, must now
also show himself as King and Judge; he cannot now, at so late a period, be
another. E. W. Hengstenberg, 1845.
Verse
19. Because they have no changes, therefore they fear not God.
That is, there is no new thing among them, no extraordinary providential turns,
no judiciary changes, their prosperity keeps a settled course, and because they
find all things going on in the old course of providence, therefore they go on
in their old course of sinfulness, they fear not God; intimating, that
as such changes always should, so usually they do, awaken fear; and
that, if the Lord would but change, and toss, and tumble them about, by various
troublesome dispensations, surely they would fear him. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
19. Because they have no changes, etc. Or, with whom also
there be no changes, yet they fear not God. If changes be referred
to their temporal estates and welfare, as Job 10:17 (it is the same word there
as here, twkylx), "changes and war are against me:" then, according
to the first translation, because etc., a reason is given of their
perseverance in wickedness, and contempt of God; to wit, their constant and
uninterrupted worldly prosperity. Or, according to the second, With whom
there are no changes, yet, etc.; it is a great aggravation of their
impenitency, that notwithstanding so much goodness vouchsafed unto them, they
should continue so unthankful as to requite so ill, or so stupid and insensible
as not to acknowledge the author. But if changes be referred, as by many, to
the soul, then the meaning is—that through long use and continuance of sinning,
they are, through God's just judgment, become altogether obdurate and inflexible;
and therefore, no wonder if nothing work upon them to their conversion.
"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" etc. Jer 13:23. But this changes
might also have another meaning. The Grecians used to say, streptai esylwn,
that the minds or hearts of good men are changeable; their meaning is, that
good men are merciful. Quos quisque est major, magis est placabilis ira: et
faciles motus mens generosa capit, as the Latin proverb expresses it. He
may therefore say, that they show by their cruel unmercifulness, that they have
no fear or sense of God at all; else they would fear him, of whose mercy
themselves stood in so much need, and consider that they whom they so fiercely
persecute are his creatures as well as they. Westminster Assembly's
Annotations.
Verse
19. They have no changes, etc. Who are they who have no
changes? Apparently those whom God is said to humble or chastise. And what is
the meaning of the word, changes as here used? Many understand it of a
moral change; "who are without change of heart or reformation." But
the word never occurs in this sense. It means, properly, "a
change" in the sense of succession; as of garments, of troops
relieving guard, servants leaving work, and the like. Hence it would rather
mean in a moral sense: "They who have no cessation in their course (by
being relieved guard, for instance), who always continue, and persevere in
their evil life." Calvin and others understand it of change of fortune,
i.e., "who are always prosperous; "but this again is not
supported by usage. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
19. They fear not God. The fear required here, is to fear him
as God, and as God presented in this name, Elohim; which though it be a
name primarily rooted in power and strength (for El is Deus fortis, The
powerful God; and as there is no love without fear, so there is no fear without
power), yet properly it signifies his judgment, and order, and providence, and
dispensations and government of his creatures. It is that name which goes
through all God's whole work of the creation, and disposition of all creatures
in the first of Genesis: in all that he is called by no other name than this,
the name God; not by Jehovah, to present an infinite majesty; nor by Adonai, to
present an absolute power; nor by Tzebaoth, to present a force, or conquest;
but only the name of God, his name of government. All ends in this; to fear God
is to adhere to him, in his way, as he hath dispensed and notified himself to
us; that is, as God is manifested in Christ, in the Scriptures, and applied to
us out of those Scriptures, by the church: not to rest in nature without God,
nor in God without Christ. John Donne, 1573-1631.
Verse
21. The words of his mouth were smoother than butter, etc. Of
this complexion are the cant of hypocrites, the charity of bigots and fanatics,
the benevolence of atheists, the professions of the world, the allurements of
the flesh, and the temptations of Satan, when he thinks proper to appear in the
character of an angel of light. George Horne, 1730-1792.
Verse
21. Butter. The Eastern butter is by no means like the solid
substance, which is known by that name in these colder climates; but is liquid
and flowing as appears from different passages in Scripture, particularly Job
29:6 20:17; and as is confirmed by the accounts of modern travellers; so that
in fact it more resembles "cream, "which Vitringa says is the genuine
sense of the word here used. Richard Mant, 1776-1849.
Verse
21. To avoid all difficulties, the readiest expedient is to receive
the Septuagint rendering of wqlx diemerisyhsan, they were, or are
divided, viz., the members of the wicked man there spoken of, they
are at great distance one from the other; wyk tamxm, butter their mouth,
or their mouth is butter, wklkrqw and war their heart, or their
heart is war; and this seems to be the fairest rendering of it. Henry
Hammond, 1605-1660.
Verse
21. A feigned friend is much like a crocodile who, when he smiles,
poisons; and when he weepeth, devoureth; or the hyaena, having the voice of a
man and the mind of a wolf, speaking like a friend and devouring like a fiend;
or the flattering sirens that sweetly sing the sailor's wreck; or the fowler's
pipe that pleasantly playeth the bird's death; or the bee, who carrieth honey
in her mouth and a sting in her tail; or the box tree, whose leaves are always
green, but the seeds poison. So his countenance is friendly and his words
pleasant, but his intent dangerous, and his deeds unwholesome.
His
fetch is to flatter, to catch what he can;
His purpose obtained, a fig for his man.
—L. Wright, 1616.
Verse
21. The words of his mouth were smoother than butter, but war was
in his heart: his words were softer than oil, yet were they drawn swords.
Well, when I came to the justice again, there was Mr. Foster, of Bedford, who
coming out of another room, and seeing me by the light of the candle, for it
was dark night when I came thither, he said unto me, "Who is there? John
Bunyan?" with much seeming affection, as if he would have leaped in my
neck and kissed me, (A right Judas.), which made me somewhat wonder that such a
man as he, with whom I had so little acquaintance, and, besides, that had ever
been a close opposer of the ways of God, should carry himself so full of love
to me, but afterwards when I saw what he did, it caused me to remember those
sayings, Their tongues were softer than oil, yet were they drawn swords,
and again, "Beware of men, "etc. When I had answered him that,
blessed be God, I was well, he said, "What is the occasion of your being
here?" or to that purpose. To whom I answered that I was at a meeting of
people a little way off, intending to speak a word of exhortation to them; but
the justice hearing thereof (said I) was pleased to send his warrant to fetch
me before him, etc.—John Bunyan. In relation to J.B.'s imprisonment: written by
himself. Offor's edit., Vol. 1. p. 52.
Verse
21. (first clause).—
Smooth
are his words, his voice as honey sweet,
Yet war was in his heart, and dark deceit. Moschus (B.C. 250.)
Verse
22. Cast thy burden upon the Lord, etc. The remedy which the
Psalm suggests, and, perhaps, the only resource in a difficulty of the kind,
where the enemies of true religion are fighting under the semblance of
friendship, is announced in an oracular voice from God: "Cast thy care
upon Jehovah, for he will sustain thee; he will not suffer the just one to be
tossed about for ever." R. H. Ryland.
Verse
22. Cast thy burden upon the Lord, etc. The best way to ease
thyself is to lay thy load upon God; he will take it up and also carry thee.
There is many a man would be willing to go of himself if another would but
carry his burden for him; but if you throw your burden upon God he will not
only carry that, but will also carry you. He cares not how much weight a
Christian layeth on his back; a true Israelite may ease himself, and best
please his God at once. God delights not to see tears in thine eyes, or
paleness in thy countenance; thy groans and sighs make no music in his ears. He
had rather that thou wouldst free thyself of thy burden by casting it upon him,
that he might rejoice in thy joy and comfort. Now, true confidence in God, and
resting upon God, will both free thee of thy burden and also bring in the
strength of God to sustain and bear thee up from falling. Wouldst thou,
therefore, own God as thy strength, and fetch strength from God to thy soul?
rest upon God, roll thyself upon him, and that
1.
In time of greatest weakness.
2. In time of greatest service.
3. In times of greatest trials.
—Samuel Blackerby, 1674.
Verse
22. Cast thy burden upon him in the same way that the ship in
a storm casts her burden on the anchor, which anchor holds on to its sure
fixing place. And to my mind, that is the more beautiful sense of the two—a
sense which once entered into, may be followed out in these glorious verses:
And
I see the good ship riding, all in a perilous road; The low reef booming on her
lee; the swell of ocean poured Sea after sea, from stem to stern; the mainmast
by the board; The bulwarks down; the rudder gone; the boats stove by the
chains. But courage still, brave mariners, the ANCHOR yet remains: And he will
flinch—no, never an inch—until ye pitch sky high; Then he moves his head, as if
he said, "Fear nought; for here am I!" —J. M. Neale's Commentary.
Verse
23. Shalt bring them down. Indicating a violent death, like
that of the slain ox, which is said to descend, when it falls under the
stroke. The pit of putrefaction is meant, in which the corpse
decays, nor does it here merely denote the sepulchre, but the ignominious
condition of a corpse cast forth, as when it is thrown into a pit. Hermann
Venema.
Verse
23. Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days.
A wicked man never lives out half his days; for either he is cut off before he
hath lived half the course of nature, or he is cut off before he hath lived a
quarter of the course of his desires; either he lives not half so long as he
would; and therefore let him die when he will, his death is full of terror,
trouble, and confusion, because he dies out of season. He never kept time or
season with God, and surely God will not keep or regard his time or season. Joseph
Caryl.
Verse
23. Half their days. In the Jewish account threescore years
was the age of a man, and death at any time before that was looked upon as
untimely, and deemed and styled trd excision, of which they made thirty-six
degrees; so that not to live out half one's days, is in their style to
die before thirty years old. Henry Hammond.
Verse
23. (second clause). The more sins we do commit, the more we
hasten our own death; because as the wise man saith, "The fear of the Lord
prolongeth days, but the years of the wicked shall be shortened" (Pr
10:27); and the prophet David saith, Bloody and deceitful men shall not live
out half their days; for sin is an epitomiser or shortener of everything:
it consumes our wealth, it confines our liberty, it impeaches our health, and
it abbreviates our life, and brings us speedily unto our grave. Griffith
Williams, 1636.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. (second clause).
1.
An evil to be dreaded: Hide not thyself, etc.
(a)
By long delay in an urgent case.
(b)
In the sinner's case by refusing to hear altogether.
2.
Causes which may produce it.
(a)
In the man.
(b)
In the prayer itself.
(c)
In the manner of the prayer.
3.
Evils which will follow a list which the preacher can readily think of.
4.
Remedies for the evil. There is none of it should continue; but heart
searching, repentance, importunity, pleading the name of Jesus, etc., will lead
to its removal.
Verse
2. The Great Hearer.
1.
What address shall we present to him?
2.
What sort of attention do we desire?
3.
How shall we secure it?
4.
What is the reflex duty on our part? To attend and hear him.
Verse
2. (second clause). Allowable complaining.
1.
Not of God but to God.
2.
Mainly of ourselves.
3.
Of the world as against God and right.
4.
Ever with holy grief, and not selfish vexation.
Verse
4. The terrors of death. See Sermon by Grove in the Notes.
Verse
7. Solitude.
1.
Its fancied benefits.
2. Its sore temptations.
3. Its occasional benefits.
4. Its sweet solaces.
Verse
8. Too hasty a flight from trial.
1.
Would show rebellion against God.
2.
Would manifest cowardly want of faith.
3.
Would involve loss of useful experience.
4.
Would land us in other and worse trials.
5.
Would prevent our glorifying God.
6.
Would mar our conformity to Christ and fellowship with his people.
7.
Would lessen the value of heaven.
Verse
9. (first clause). The Babel of heresies. Essential,
for truth is one. Inevitable, for the motives of heretics clash. Providential,
for so they weaken each other. Judicial, for so they torment each other.
Verse
10. (first clause). The activity of evil.
Verse
10. (second clause). The diabolical twins, or cause and
effect.
Verse
14. The social companionships which grow out of religion.
1.
They are on a good foundation.
2. They yield profit—counsel.
3. They yield pleasure—sweet.
4. They lead to enthusiasm—walked in company.
5. They ought to be sacredly maintained.
6. But they need to be carefully watched.
Verse
16. The contrast.
1.
A child of God will not wrong others as they do him.
2.
He will call upon God as they do not.
3.
God will hear him as he does not the wicked.
4.
God will deal with him at last otherwise than with them.
Verse
17.
1.
David will pray fervently; I will pray and cry aloud.
2.
He will pray frequently; every day, and three times a day, evening, and
morning, and at noon. Matthew Henry.
Verse
18. Our battles, our almost rout, our helper, our deliverances, our
praise.
Verse
19. The eternal government of God a threat to the ungodly.
Verse
19. (second part). Prosperity creating atheism. This involves—
1.
Ingratitude—they ought to be the more devout.
2.
Impudence—they think themselves as God.
3.
Forgetfulness—they forget that changes will come.
4.
Ignorance—they know not that unbroken prosperity is often for awhile the
portion of the accursed.
5.
Insanity—for there is no reason in their conduct.
6.
Rottenness—preparing them to be cast away for ever.
Verse
21. The hypocrite's mouth.
1.
It has many words.
2. They are only from his mouth.
3. They are very smooth.
4. They conceal rather than reveal his purpose.
5. They are cutting and killing.
6. They will kill himself.
Verse
22. (first clause). Here we see the believer has—
1.
A burden to try him.
2.
A duty to engage him, "Cast thy burden, "etc.
3.
A promise to encourage him, "He shall sustain, "etc. Ebenezer
Temple, 1850.
Verse
22. (last clause). Who are the righteous? What is meant by
their being moved? Whose permission is needful to accomplish it? Will he give
it? "Never." Why not?
Verse
23. (last clause). The grand "I WILL." Sum up the
Psalm.—
1.
When I pray, Ps 55:1-3.
2. When I faint, Ps 55:4-7.
3. When I am sore beset, Ps 55:9-11.
4. When I am betrayed, Ps 55:12-14,20-21.
5. When others perish, Ps 55:15.
6. After I am delivered, Ps 55:18.
7. In every condition, Ps 55:22.
WORK UPON THE
FIFTY-FIFTH PSALM
In
CHANDLER'S "Life of David," Vol. 2., pp. 305-315, there is an
Exposition of this Psalm.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》