| Back to Home Page | Back to Book Index
|
Psalm Sixty-three
Psalm 63
Chapter Contents
David's desire toward God. (1,2) His satisfaction in God.
(3-6) His dependence upon God, and assurance of safety. (7-11)
Commentary on Psalm 63:1,2
(Read Psalm 63:1,2)
Early will I seek thee. The true Christian devotes to God
the morning hour. He opens the eyes of his understanding with those of his
body, and awakes each morning to righteousness. He arises with a thirst after
those comforts which the world cannot give, and has immediate recourse by
prayer to the Fountain of the water of life. The true believer is convinced,
that nothing in this sinful world can satisfy the wants and desires of his
immortal soul; he expects his happiness from God, as his portion. When faith
and hope are most in exercise, the world appears a weary desert, and the
believer longs for the joys of heaven, of which he has some foretastes in the
ordinances of God upon earth.
Commentary on Psalm 63:3-6
(Read Psalm 63:3-6)
Even in affliction we need not want matter for praise.
When this is the regular frame of a believer's mind, he values the
loving-kindness of God more than life. God's loving-kindness is our spiritual
life, and that is better than temporal life. We must praise God with joyful
lips; we must address ourselves to the duties of religion with cheerfulness,
and speak forth the praises of God from a principle of holy joy. Praising lips
must be joyful lips. David was in continual danger; care and fear held his eyes
waking, and gave him wearisome nights; but he comforted himself with thoughts
of God. The mercies of God, when called to mind in the night watches, support
the soul, making darkness cheerful. How happy will be that last morning, when
the believer, awaking up after the Divine likeness, shall be satisfied with all
the fulness of God, and praise him with joyful lips, where there is no night,
and where sorrow and sighing flee away!
Commentary on Psalm 63:7-11
(Read Psalm 63:7-11)
True Christians can, in some measure, and at some times,
make use of the strong language of David, but too commonly our souls cleave to
the dust. Having committed ourselves to God, we must be easy and pleased, and
quiet from the fear of evil. Those that follow hard after God, would soon fail,
if God's right hand did not uphold them. It is he that strengthens us and
comforts us. The psalmist doubts not but that though now sowing in tears, he
should reap in joy. Messiah the Prince shall rejoice in God; he is already
entered into the joy set before him, and his glory will be completed at his
second coming. Blessed Lord, let our desire towards thee increase every hour;
let our love be always upon thee; let all our enjoyment be in thee, and all our
satisfaction from thee. Be thou all in all to us while we remain in the present
wilderness state, and bring us home to the everlasting enjoyment of thee for
ever.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 63
Verse 1
[1] O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee: my soul
thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land, where
no water is;
Early — Heb. in the morning, Which implies the doing it with
diligence and speed.
Thirsteth — For the enjoyment of thee in thy
house and ordinances.
Flesh — The desire of my soul, is so vehement, that my very
body feels the effects of it.
No water — In a land where I want the refreshing waters of the
sanctuary.
Verse 2
[2] To see thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen thee
in the sanctuary.
To see — To enjoy.
Power — The powerful and glorious effects of thy gracious
presence.
Verse 5
[5] My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness;
and my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips:
Satisfied — When thou shalt fulfil my earnest
desire of enjoying thee in the sanctuary.
Verse 9
[9] But those that seek my soul, to destroy it, shall go
into the lower parts of the earth.
Shall go — Into the grave.
Verse 10
[10] They shall fall by the sword: they shall be a portion
for foxes.
Foxes — Their carcases shall become a prey to wild and
ravenous creatures.
Verse 11
[11] But the king shall rejoice in God; every one that
sweareth by him shall glory: but the mouth of them that speak lies shall be
stopped.
The king — I who am already anointed king.
Every one — That sweareth by the name of God,
in truth, and judgment, and righteousness. Every sincere servant and worshipper
of God.
Shall glory — Shall rejoice in my deliverance.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. A Psalm of
David, when he was in the wilderness of Judah. This was probably written
while David was fleeing from Absalom; certainly at the time he wrote it he was
king (Ps 63:11), and hard pressed by those who sought his life. David did not
leave off singing because he was in the wilderness, neither did he in slovenly
idleness go on repeating Psalms intended for other occasions; but he carefully
made his worship suitable to his circumstances, and presented to his God a
wilderness hymn when he was in the wilderness. There was no desert in his
heart, though there was a desert around him. We too may expect to be cast into
rough places ere we go hence. In such seasons, may the Eternal Comforter abide
with us, and cause us to bless the Lord at all times, making even the solitary
place to become a temple for Jehovah. The distinguishing word of this Psalm is EARLY.
When the bed is the softest we are most tempted to rise at lazy hours; but when
comfort is gone, and the couch is hard, if we rise the earlier to seek the
Lord, we have much for which to thank the wilderness.
DIVISION. In Ps 63:1-8
verses the writer expresses his holy desires after God, and his confidence in
him, and then in Ps 63:9-11 remaining three verses he prophesies the overthrow
of all his enemies. This Psalm is peculiarly suitable for the bed of sickness,
or in any constrained absence from public worship.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. O God, thou art my God; or, O God, thou art my Mighty One.
The last Psalm left the echo of power ringing in the ear, and it is here
remembered. Strong affiance bids the fugitive poet confess his allegiance to
the only living God; and firm faith enables him to claim him as his own. He has
no doubts about his possession of his God; and why should other believers have
any? The straightforward, clear language of this opening sentence would be far
more becoming in Christians than the timorous and doubtful expressions so usual
among professors. How sweet is such language! Is there any other word
comparable to it for delights? Meus Deus. Can angels say more? Early
will I seek thee. Possession breeds desire. Full assurance is no hindrance to
diligence, but is the mainspring of it. How can I seek another man's God? but
it is with ardent desire that I seek after him whom I know to be my own.
Observe the eagerness implied in the time mentioned; he will not wait for noon
or the cool eventide; he is up at cockcrowing to meet his God. Communion with
God is so sweet that the chill of the morning is forgotten, and the luxury of
the couch is despised. The morning is the time for dew and freshness, and the
psalmist consecrates it to prayer and devout fellowship. The best of men have
been betimes on their knees. The word early has not only the sense of
early in the morning, but that of eagerness, immediateness. He who truly longs
for God longs for him now. Holy desires are among the most powerful influences
that stir our inner nature; hence the next sentence,
My
soul thirsteth for thee. Thirst is an insatiable longing after that which is
one of the most essential supports of life; there is no reasoning with it, no
forgetting it, no despising it, no overcoming it by stoical indifference.
Thirst will be heard; the whole man must yield to its power; even thus is it
with that divine desire which the grace of God creates in regenerate men; only
God himself can satisfy the craving of a soul really aroused by the Holy
Spirit. My flesh longeth for thee; by the two words soul and flesh,
he denotes the whole of his being. The flesh, in the New Testament sense
of it, never longs after the Lord, but rather it lusteth against the spirit;
David only refers to that sympathy which is sometimes created in our bodily
frame by vehement emotions of the soul. Our corporeal nature usually tugs in
the other direction, but the spirit when ardent can compel it to throw in what
power it has upon the other side. When the wilderness caused David weariness,
discomfort, and thirst, his flesh cried out in unison with the desire of his
soul. In a dry and thirsty land, where no water is. A weary place and a weary
heart make the presence of God the more desirable: if there be nothing below
and nothing within to cheer, it is a thousand mercies that we may look up and
find all we need. How frequently have believers traversed in their experience
this dry and thirsty land, where spiritual joys are things forgotten!
and how truly can they testify that the only true necessity of that country is
the near presence of their God! The absence of outward comforts can be borne
with serenity when we walk with God; and the most lavish multiplication of them
avails not when he withdraws. Only after God, therefore, let us pant. Let all
desires be gathered into one. Seeking first the kingdom of God—all else shall
be added unto us.
Verse
2. To see thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the
sanctuary. He longed not so much to see the sanctuary as to see his God; he
looked through the veil of ceremonies to the invisible One. Often had his heart
been gladdened by communion with God in the outward ordinances, and for this
great blessing he sighs again; as well he might, for it is the weightiest of
all earth's sorrows for a Christian man to lose the conscious presence of his
covenant God. He remembers and mentions the two attributes which had most
impressed themselves upon his mind when he had been rapt in adoration in the
holy place; upon these his mind had dwelt in the preceding Psalm, and the
savour of that contemplation is evidently upon his heart when in the
wilderness: these he desires to behold again in the place of his banishment. It
is a precious thought that the divine power and glory are not confined in their
manifestation to any places or localities; they are to be heard above the
roaring of the sea, seen amid the glare of the tempest, felt in the forest and
the prairie, and enjoyed wherever there is a heart that longs and thirsts to
behold them. Our misery is that we thirst so little for these sublime things,
and so much for the mocking trifles of time and sense. We are in very truth
always in a weary land, for this is not our rest; and it is marvellous that
believers do not more continuously thirst after their portion far beyond the
river where they shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more; but shall see
the face of their God, and his name shall be in their foreheads. David did not
thirst for water or any earthly thing, but only for spiritual manifestations.
The sight of God was enough for him, but nothing short of that would content
him. How great a friend is he, the very sight of whom is consolation. Oh, my
soul, imitate the psalmist, and let all thy desires ascend towards the highest
good; longing here to see God, and having no higher joy even for eternity.
Verse
3. Because thy lovingkindness is better than life. A reason
for that which went before, as well as for that which follows. Life is dear,
but God's love is dearer. To dwell with God is better than life at its best;
life at ease, in a palace, in health, in honour, in wealth, in pleasure; yea, a
thousand lives are not equal to the eternal life which abides in Jehovah's
smile. In him we truly live, and move, and have our being; the withdrawal of
the light of his countenance is as the shadow of death to us: hence we cannot
but long after the Lord's gracious appearing. Life is to many men a doubtful
good: lovingkindness is an unquestioned boon: life is but transient, mercy is
everlasting: life is shared in by the lowest animals, but the lovingkindness of
the Lord is the peculiar portion of the chosen. My lips shall praise thee.
Openly, so that thy glory shall be made known, I will tell of thy goodness.
Even when our heart is rather desiring than enjoying we should still continue
to magnify the Most High, for his love is truly precious; even if we do not
personally, for the time being, happen to be rejoicing in it. We ought not to
make our praises of God to depend upon our own personal reception of benefits;
this would be mere selfishness; even publicans and sinners have a good word for
those whose hands are enriching them with gifts; it is the true believer only
who will bless the Lord when he takes away his gifts or hides his face.
Verse
4. Thus will I bless thee while I live. As I now bless thee
so will I ever do; or rather, so as thou shalt reveal thy lovingkindness
to me, I will in return continue to extol thee. While we live we will love. If
we see no cause to rejoice in our estate, we shall always have reason for
rejoicing in the Lord. If none others bless God, yet his people will; his very
nature, as being the infinitely good God, is a sufficient argument for our
praising him as long as we exist. I will lift up my hands in thy name. For
worship the hands were uplifted, as also in joy, in thanksgiving, in labour, in
confidence; in all these senses we would lift up our hands in Jehovah's name
alone. No hands need hang down when God draws near in love. The name of Jesus
has often made lame men leap as a hart, and it has made sad men clap their
hands for joy.
Verse
5. My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness.
Though unable to feast on the sacrifice at thine altar, my soul shall even here
be filled with spiritual joys, and shall possess a complete, a double
contentment. There is in the love of God a richness, a sumptuousness, a fulness
of soul filling joy, comparable to the richest food with which the body can be
nourished. The Hebrews were more fond of fat than we are, and their highest
idea of festive provision is embodied in the two words, marrow and fatness:
a soul hopeful in God and full of his favour is thus represented as feeding
upon the best of the best, the dainties of a royal banquet. And my mouth shall
praise thee with joyful lips. More joy, more praise. When the mouth is full of
mercy, is should also be full of thanksgiving. When God gives us the marrow of
his love, we must present to him the marrow of our hearts. Vocal praise should
be rendered to God as well as mental adoration; others see our mercies, let
them also hear our thanks.
Verse
6. When I remember thee upon my bed. Lying awake, the good
man betook himself to meditation, and then began to sing. He had a feast in the
night, and a song in the night. He turned his bedchamber into an oratory, he
consecrated his pillow, his praise anticipated the place of which it is
written, "There is no night there." Perhaps the wilderness helped to
keep him awake, and if so, all the ages are debtors to it for this delightful
hymn. If day's cares tempt us to forget God, it is well that night's quiet
should lead us to remember him. We see best in the dark if we there see God
best. And meditate on thee in the night watches. Keeping up sacred worship in
my heart as the priests and Levites celebrated it in the sanctuary. Perhaps
David had formerly united with those "who by night stand in the house of
the Lord, "and now as he could not be with them in person, he remembers
the hours as they pass, and unites with the choristers in spirit, blessing
Jehovah as they did. It may be, moreover, that the king heard the voices of the
sentries as they relieved guard, and each time he returned with renewed
solemnity to his meditations upon his God. Night is congenial, in its silence
and darkness, to a soul which would forget the world, and rise into a higher
sphere. Absorption in the most hallowed of all themes makes watches, which else
would be weary, glide away all too rapidly; it causes the lonely and hard couch
to yield the most delightful repose—repose more restful than even sleep itself.
We read of beds of ivory, but beds of piety are better far. Some revel in the
night, but they are not a tithe so happy as those who meditate in God.
Verse
7. Because thou hast been my help. Meditation had refreshed
his memory and recalled to him his past deliverances. It were well if we
oftener read our own diaries, especially noting the hand of the Lord in helping
us in suffering, want, labour, or dilemma. This is the grand use of memory, to
furnish us with proofs of the Lord's faithfulness, and lead us onward to a
growing confidence in him. Therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice.
The very shade of God is sweet to a believer. Under the eagle wings of Jehovah
we hide from all fear, and we do this naturally and at once, because we have
aforetime tried and proved both his love and his power. We are not only safe,
but happy in God: we rejoice as well as repose.
Verse
8. My soul followeth hard after thee, or is glued to thee. We
follow close at the Lord's heels, because we are one with him. Who shall divide
us from his love? If we cannot walk with him with equal footsteps, we will at
least follow after with all the strength he lends us, earnestly panting to
reach him and abide in his fellowship. When professors follow hard after the
world, they will fall into the ditch; but none are ever too eager after
communion with the Lord. Thy right hand upholdeth me. Else he would not have
followed the Lord with constancy, or even have longed after him. The divine
power, which has so often been dwelt upon in this and the preceding Psalms, is
here mentioned as the source of man's attachment to God. How strong are we when
the Lord works in us by his own right hand, and how utterly helpless if he
withhold his aid!
Verse
9. As David earnestly sought for God, so there were men of another
order who as eagerly sought after his blood; of these he speaks: But those that
seek my soul, to destroy it. At his life they aimed, at his honour, his best
welfare; and this they would not merely injure but utterly ruin. The devil is a
destroyer, and all his seed are greedy to do the same mischief; and as he has
ruined himself by his crafty devices, so also shall they. Destroyers shall be
destroyed. Those who hunt souls shall be themselves the victims. Shall go into
the lower parts of the earth. Into the pits which they digged for others they
shall fall themselves. The slayers shall be slain, and the grave shall cover
them. The hell which they in their curse invoked for others shall shut its
mouth upon them. Every blow aimed against the godly will recoil on the
persecutor; he who smites a believer drives a nail in his own coffin.
Verse
10. They shall fall by the sword. So David's enemies did. They
that take the sword shall perish with the sword; bloody men shall feel their
own life gushing forth from them, when their evil day shall at last come, and
they shall be given up to feel in their own persons the horrors of death. They
shall be a portion for foxes. Too mean to be fit food for the lions, the foxes
shall sniff around their corpses, and the jackals shall hold carnival over
their carcases. Unburied and unhonoured they shall be meat for the dogs of war.
Frequently have malicious men met with a fate so dire as to be evidently the
award of retributive justice. Although the great assize is reserved for another
world, yet even here, at the common sessions of providence, justice often bares
her avenging sword in the eyes of all the people.
Verse
11. But the king shall rejoice in God. Usurpers shall fade,
but he shall flourish; and his prosperity shall be publicly acknowledged as the
gift of God. The Lord's anointed shall not fail to offer his joyful
thanksgiving: his well established throne shall own the superior lordship of
the King of kings; his rejoicing shall be alone in God. When his subjects sing,
"Io triumphe, "he will bid them chant, "Te Deum."
Every one that sweareth by him shall glory. His faithful followers shall have
occasion for triumph; they shall never need to blush for the oath of their
allegiance. Or, "swearing by him, "may signify adherence to God,
and worship paid to him. The heathen swore by their gods, and the Israelite
called Jehovah to witness to his asseveration; those, therefore, who owned the
Lord as their God should have reason to glory when he proved himself the
defender of the king's righteous cause, and the destroyer of traitors. But the
mouth of them that speak lies shall be stopped. And the sooner the better. If
shame will not do it, nor fear, nor reason, then let them be stopped with the
sexton's shovelful of earth; for a liar is a human devil, he is the curse of
men, and accursed of God, who has comprehensively said, "all liars shall
have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone." See
the difference between the mouth that praises God, and the mouth that forges
lies: the first shall never be stopped, but shall sing on for ever; the second
shall be made speechless at the bar of God. O Lord, we seek thee and thy truth;
deliver us from all malice and slander, and reveal to us thine own self, for
Jesus' sake. Amen.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. When he was
in the wilderness of Judah. Even in Canaan, though a fruitful land, and the
people numerous, yet there were wildernesses... It will be so in the world, in
the church, but not in heaven... All the straits and difficulties of a
wilderness must not put us out of tune for sacred songs; but even then it is
our duty and interest to keep up a cheerful communion with God. There are
Psalms proper for a wilderness; and we have reason to thank God it is the
wilderness of Judah we are in, not the wilderness of Sin. Matthew Henry.
Title. The
Wilderness of Judah is the whole wilderness towards the east of the tribe
of Judah, bounded on the north by the tribe of Benjamin, stretching southward
to the south west end of the Dead Sea; westward, to the Dead Sea and the
Jordan; and eastward to the mountains of Judah. E. W. Hengstenberg.
Title. The term
wilderness rkdm, as distinguished from hdre, (a steppe) was given to
a district which was not regularly cultivated and inhabited, but used for
pasturage (from rbd, to drive), being generally without wood and
defective in water, but not entirely destitute of vegetation. J. P. Lange.
Title. Hagar saw God
in the wilderness, and called a well by the name derived from that vision, Beerlahairoi.
Ge 16:13-14. Moses saw God in the wilderness. Ex 3:1-4. Elijah saw God in the
wilderness. 1Ki 19:4-18. David saw God in the wilderness. The Christian church
will see God in the wilderness. Re 12:6-14. Every devout soul which has loved
to see God in his house will be refreshed by visions of God in the wilderness
of solitude, sorrow, sickness, and death. Christopher Wordsworth.
Whole
Psalm. This is unquestionably one of the most beautiful and touching
Psalms in the whole Psalter. Donne says of it: "As the whole Book of
Psalms is, oleum offusun (as the spouse speaks of the name of Christ),
an ointment poured out upon all sort of sores, a cerecloth that supplies all
bruises, a balm that searches all wounds; so are there some certain Psalms that
are imperial Psalms, that command over all affections and spread themselves
over all occasions—catholic, universal Psalms, that apply themselves to all
necessities. This is one of these; for of those constitutions which are called
apostolical, one is that the church should meet every day to sing this Psalm.
And, accordingly, St. Chrysostom testifies, `That it was decreed and ordained
by the primitive Fathers, that no day should pass without the public singing of
this Psalm.'" J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm is aptly described by Clauss as "A precious
confession of a soul thirsting after God and his grace, and finding itself
quickened through inward communion with him, and which knows how to commit its
outward lot also into his hand." Its lesson is, that the consciousness of
communion with God in trouble is the sure pledge of deliverance. This is the
peculiar fountain of consolation which is opened up to the sufferer in the
Psalm. The Berleb Bible describes it as a Psalm "which proceeds from a
spirit really in earnest. It was the favourite Psalm of M. Schade, the famous
preacher in Berlin, which he daily prayed with such earnestness and appropriation
to himself, that it was impossible to hear it without emotion." E. W.
Hengstenberg.
Verse
1. O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee (or, I will
diligently seek thee, as merchants precious stones that are of greatest value):
my soul thirsteth for thee. He doth not say my soul thirsteth for water,
but my soul thirsteth for thee; nor he doth say my soul thirsteth for
the blood of my enemies, but my soul thirsteth for thee; nor he doth not
say my soul thirsteth for deliverance out of this dry and thirsty land, where
no water is; nor he doth not say my soul thirsteth for a crown, a kingdom, but
my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee. These
words are a notable metaphor, taken from women with child, to note his earnest,
ardent, and strong affections towards God. Thomas Brooks.
Verse
1. O God. This is a serious word; pity it should ever be used
as a byword. Matthew Henry.
Verse
1. My God in Hebrew is the same word with which the Lord
cried out upon the cross to the Father about the ninth hour: "My God, my
God, why hast thou forsaken me?" For in Hebrew, this Psalm begins Elohim,
Eli. Now, Elohim is plural, and Eli is singular, to
express the mystery of the Trinity, the mystery of the Unity, the distinct
subsistence of the (three) hypostases, and their consubstantiality. Psalterium
Quin. Fabri stapulensis, 1513.
Verse
1. (first clause). In David we have a notable example of a
sensitive, tender, self analysing soul, living in sustained communion with God,
while deeply sensible of the claims of the civil and religious polity of
Israel, and, moreover, while externally devoted to a large round of exacting
public duties. And in this Psalm public misfortunes do but force him back upon
the central strength of the life of his spirit. For the time his crown, his
palace, his honours, the hearts of his people, the love of his child, whom he
loved, as we know, with such passing tenderness, are forfeited. The psalmist is
alone with God. In his hour of desolation he looks up from the desert to
heaven. O God, he cried, thou art my God. In the original
language he does not repeat the word which is translated God. In Elohim,
the true idea of the root is that of awe, while the adjectival form implies
permanency. In Eli, the second word employed, the etymological idea is
that of might, strength. We might paraphrase, "O thou Ever awful One, my
Strength, or my Strong God art thou." But the second word, Eli, is
in itself nothing less than a separate revelation of an entire aspect of the
Being of God. It is, indeed, used as a proper and distinct name of God. The
pronomial suffixes for the second and third persons are, as Gesenius has
remarked, never once found with this name El; whereas Eli, the
first person, occurs very frequently in the Psalter alone. We all of us remember
it in the words actually uttered by our Lord upon the cross, and which he took
from their Syriacised version of Psalm 22. The word unveils a truth unknown
beyond the precincts of revelation. It teaches us that the Almighty and Eternal
gives himself in the fulness of his Being to the soul that seeks him.
Heathenism, indeed, in its cultus of domestic and local deities, of its
penates, of its Oeoi epicwrioi, bore witness by these superstitions to
the deep yearning of the human heart for the individualizing love of a higher
power. To know the true God was to know that such a craving was satisfied. My
God. The word represents not a human impression, or desire, or conceit, but
an aspect, a truth, a necessity of the divine nature. Man can, indeed, give
himself by halves; he can bestow a little of his thought, of his heart, of his
endeavour, upon his brother man. In other words, man can be imperfect in his
acts as he is imperfect and finite in his nature. But when God, the Perfect
Being, loves the creature of his hand, he cannot thus divide his love. He must
perforce love with the whole directness, and strength, and intensity of his
Being; for he is God, and therefore incapable of partial and imperfect action.
He must give himself to the single soul with as absolute a completeness as if
there were no other being besides it, and, on his side, man knows that this
gift of himself by God is thus entire; and in no narrow spirit of ambitious
egotism, but as grasping and representing the literal fact, he cries, "My
God." Therefore does this word enter so largely into the composition
of Hebrew names. Men loved to dwell upon that wondrous relation of the Creator
to their personal life which is so strikingly manifested. Therefore, when God
had "so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life,
"we find St. Paul writing to the Galatians as if his own single soul had
been redeemed by the sacrifice of Calvary: "He loved me, and gave himself
for me." Henry Parry Liddon, in "Some Words for God: being Sermons
preached before the University of Oxford, 1863-1865."
Verse
1. (first clause). There is a great deal more in it than men
of the world are aware of; to say, O God, thou art my God, in this
connection and conjunction: there is more in it in regard of excellency, and
there is more in it in regard of difficulty likewise. It is not an unfruitful
thing to say it, and it is not am easy thing to say it neither. It confers a
great deal of benefit, and requires a great deal of grace, which belongs unto
it, in the truth and reality of it. The benefit of it, first, is very great;
yea, in effect all things else. To say God is ours, is to say the whole world
is ours, and a great deal more; it is to give us title to everything which may
be requisite or convenient for us. Whatever we can desire or stand in need of,
it is all wrapped up in this, Thou art my God. But then, again, it is a
matter of difficulty (as those things which are excellent are). It is a thing
which is not so easily said as the world imagines it and thinks it to be.
Indeed, it is easy to the mouth, but it is not easy to the heart. It is easy to
have a fancy to say it, but it is not to have a faith to say it: this carries
some kind of hardship with it, and is not presently attained unto; but the mind
of man withdraws from it. There are two states and conditions in which it is
very difficult to say, O God, thou art my God: the one is the state of
nature and unregeneracy; and the other is the state of desertion, and the
hiding of God's face from the soul. Thomas Horton (1673).
Verse
1. (second clause). The relations of God to his people are
not bare and empty titles, but they carry some activity with them, both from
him towards them, and from them also answerably towards him. Those whom God is
a God to, he bestows special favours upon them; and those to whom God is a God,
they return special services to him. And so we shall find it to be all along in
Scripture, as this David in another place: "Thou art my God, and I will
praise thee; thou art my Lord, I will exalt thee." Ps 118:28. And so here:
Thou art my God; early will I seek thee. While the servants of God have
claimed any interest in him, they have also exhibited duty to him. The text is
an expression not only of faith, but likewise of obedience, and so to be looked
upon by us. Thomas Horton.
Verse
1. Early; in the morning, before all things, God is to be
sought, otherwise he is sought in vain: as the manna, unless collected at early
dawn, dissolves. Simon de Muis.
Verse
1. My soul thirsteth for thee. Oh that Christ would come
near, and stand still, and give me leave to look upon him! for to look seemeth
the poor man's privilege, since he may, for nothing and without hire, behold
the sun. I should have a king's life, if I had no other thing to do than for
evermore to behold and eye my fair Lord Jesus: nay, suppose I were holden out
at heaven's fair entry, I should be happy for evermore, to look through a hole
in the door, and see my dearest and fairest Lord's face. O great King! why
standest thou aloof? Why remainest thou beyond the mountains? O Well beloved,
why dost thou pain a poor soul with delays? A long time out of thy glorious
presence is two deaths and two hells to me. We must meet. I must see him, I dow
(Am not able to do without him.) not want him. Hunger and longing for Christ
hath brought on such a necessity of enjoying Christ that I will not, I dow not
want him; for I cannot master nor command Christ's love. Samuel Rutherford
(1600-1661).
Verse
1. My flesh, that is, my bodily sensitive appetite, which
thirsts, ardently longs for consolation, which it receives from the abounding
of spiritual consolation to the soul. This meaning greatly pleases me. God
giveth the upper and the nether springs. Rebekah, after drawing water in her
pitcher, for Eliezer, Abraham's servant, added, "I will draw water for
thy camels also, until they have done drinking, "Ge 24:19. Jacob dug a
well near to Sychar, which was afterwards called Samaria, and as the woman of
Samaria said, "drank thereof himself, and his children, and his cattle,
" Joh 4:12. When Moses with the rod smote the rock twice, "the
water came out abundantly, and the congregation drank, and their beasts also,
"Nu 20:11. So God satisfies with this consolation both our higher and
lower nature. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
1. My flesh longeth for thee. The verb hmk is used only in
this place, and therefore signification of it is rather uncertain, but it will
receive light from the Arabic dialect. In Golius's Lexicon it signifies caligavit
oculus, alteratus colore, et mente debilitatus fuit. His eye grew dim, his
colour was changed, and his mind was weakened; and therefore, as used by the
psalmist, implies the utmost intenseness of fervency of desire, as though it
almost impaired his sight, altered the very hue of his body, and even injured
his understanding; effects sometimes of eager and unsatisfied desires. Samuel
Chandler.
Verse
1. In a dry. Here we must read uyrak (Keeretz), instead of
nyrak (Beeretz), for it is, like this, and not, in this (which
has no force), even like this dry, wearied, and waterless region; so am I for
seeing thee in the sanctuary, for beholding thy power and thy glory. Benjamin
Weiss, in a "New Translation of the Book of the Psalms, with Critical
Notes, "etc. 1858. Weiss appears to have the authority of several MSS
for this, but he seldom errs in the direction of too little dogmatism. C. H.
S.
Verses
1-2. O God, thou art my God. He embraces him at first word, as we used
to do friends at first meeting. Early will I seek thee, says he: my
soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh (that is, myself) longeth for thee in
a dry and thirsty land, where no water is. Surely, David had some
extraordinary business now with God to be done for himself, as it follows (Ps
63:2): To see thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen thee in the
sanctuary; where God had met him, and manifested himself to him... The very
sight of a friend rejoiceth a man (Pr 27:17): "As iron sharpeneth iron, so
doth a man the face of his friend." It alone whets up joy by a sympathy of
spirits; and in answer hereunto it is characteristically to God's people called
the seeking of God's face, that is, himself, for so his face is taken:
"Thou shalt have no other gods before my face; "that is, thou shalt
have myself, or none but myself. Personal communion with God is the end of our
graces; for as reason and the intercourse of it makes men sociable one with
another, so the divine nature makes us sociable with God himself: and the life
we live by is but an engine, a glass to bring God down to us. Thomas
Goodwin.
Verses
1-2. O God, thou art my God. See Psalms on "Ps 63:1"
for further information.
Verse
2. To see thy power, etc.
1.
It is, or should be, the desire of every Christian to see and enjoy more and
more of the glory of God.
2.
That the accomplishment of this design is to be sought by a devout and diligent
attendance upon the worship of the sanctuary. How is God's character in the
sanctuary manifested to believers?
(a)
By the ministry of reconciliation—by the exhibition of gospel truth.
(b)
Believers grow in their knowledge of the divine character in the sanctuary, by
observing and feeling the application of those great doctrines to the souls of
men, by the power and influence of the Holy Spirit.
3.
The effects that result to the believer in his history and experience, from an
increasing knowledge of the power and glory of God. The effects of this
knowledge are great and manifold.
(a)
The believer, by fresh displays of the divine glory, is disenchanted from the
fascination of the world.
(b)
Another effect of an increasing acquaintance with God, and of every view of the
divine glory we obtain, is that the mind is disentangled from the
embarrassments into which it is sometimes thrown by the aspect of providence.
(c)
By seeing the divine power and glory in the sanctuary, we shall have our
strength renewed to go on our Christian course afresh.
4.
A view of the divine glory crucifies our lusts, and puts the corruptions of our
heart to death.
5.
Fresh views of the divine power and glory nourish our humility.
6.
These views of the divine glory in the sanctuary arm us for our conflict with
the last enemy.
Concluding
remarks:
1.
That it is a characteristic of every good man, that he is devoutly attached to
the solemnities of public worship.
2.
That his object in going to the sanctuary is definite and distinct. John
Angell James.
Verse
2. So as I have seen thee in the sanctuary. To converse with
ordinances, and not to converse with God; to have to do with ordinances, and
not to have to do with God, alas! they are but dry breasts, and a miscarrying
womb that will never bring forth the fruits of holiness. Ordinances without God
are but like bones that have no marrow in them; they are but like shells
without a kernel. Your hearing will be in vain; and your praying will be in
vain; there will be no spirit moving, no voice answering, no heart warnings, no
soul refreshing, no God meetings. William Strong (1654), in the
"Saints' Communion."
Verse
2. God's glory is in the firmament, in all the creatures, but more
especially and fully in the church. Ps 29:9, "In his temple doth every one
speak of his glory; "there it is most visible, affecting, and provoking of
every one to speak. In the world few take notice of it, but in the temple every
one sees it, and speaks of it. The world is God opened, and so glorious; the
church is Christ opened, and so very glorious. This made David long to be in
the sanctuary when he was in the wilderness; and why so? To see thy power
and thy glory. Could not David see them in the heavens, in the mountains,
in the goodly cedars, and other works of God? Yes, but not as in the sanctuary;
and therefore he saith, To see thy power and thy glory, so as I have seen
thee in the sanctuary; there I have seen thee otherwise than ever
elsewhere; there he saw the king upon his throne and in his glory. William
Greenhill.
Verse
3. Thy lovingkindness is better than life; or, better than
lives, as the Hebrew hath it (chaiim). Divine favour is better than life;
it is better than life with all its revenues, with all its appurtenances, as
honours, riches, pleasures, applause, etc.; yea, it is better than many lives
put together. Now you know at what a high rate men value their lives; they will
bleed, sweat, vomit, purge, part with an estate, yea, with a limb, yea, limbs,
to preserve their lives. As he cried out, "Give me any deformity, any
torment, any misery, so you spare my life." Now, though life be so dear
and precious to a man, yet a deserted soul prizes the returnings of divine
favour upon him above life, yea, above many lives. Many men have been weary of
their lives, as is evident in Scripture and history; but no man was ever yet
found that was weary of the love and favour of God. No man sets so high a price
upon the sun as he that hath long lain in a dark dungeon, etc. Thomas
Brooks.
Verse
3. Thy lovingkindness is better than life. The love of life
is a very frequent and pernicious snare, which a sense of God's love must
deliver us from being entangled by. What so desirable as life, if a man have no
place in the heart of God? This is the greatest temporal blessing, and nothing
can outdo it, but the favour of the God of our life; and this excels indeed.
What comparison is there between the breath in our nostrils, and the favour of
an eternal God? any more than there is between an everlasting light and a poor
vanishing vapour. Compare Isa 60:19, with Jas 4:14. Who would not, therefore,
hate his own life, which hangs in doubt continually before him, and of which he
can have no assurance, when he knows that the living God is his certain
portion? Who would not freely yield up and part with ten thousand such lives,
one after another (if he had so many), rather than the wrath of God should be kindled
but a little. Timothy Cruso (1657-1697).
Verse
3. (first clause). God's mercy is better than lives.
What lives? Those which for themselves men have chosen. One hath chosen for
himself a life of business, another a country life, another a life of usury,
another a military life; one this, another that. Divers are the lives, but better
is thy life than our lives. Better is that which thou givest
to men amended, than that which perverse men choose? One life thou givest,
which should be preferred to all our lives, whatsoever in the world we might
have chosen. Augustine.
Verse
3. Life is an impure good. It is a good which is
implicated and involved with abundance of evils. There are many crosses, and
troubles, and calamities, which the life of man is subject unto; which, though
it have some comfort in it, yet that comfort is much troubled and mixed yea,
but now the favour of God it is good, and nothing but good. As it is said of
his blessing, it adds no sorrow with it, nor has it any inconvenience in it, nor
has it any evil attendant upon it. Thomas Horton.
Verse
3. My lips shall praise thee. Is it possible that any man
should love another and not commend him, nor speak of him? If thou hast but a
hawk or a hound that thou lovest, thou wilt commend it; and can it stand with
love to Christ, yet seldom or never to speak of him nor of his love, never to
commend him unto others, that they may fall in love with him also? You shall
see the Spouse (Canticles 5:9, 16) when she was asked, what her beloved was
above others? she sets him out in every part of him, and concludes with
this: "he is altogether lovely:" because thy lovingkindness
(saith David) is better than life, my lips shall praise thee, and I will
bless thee while I live. Can it stand with this life of love, to be always
speaking about worldly affairs, or news at the best; both weekday and Sabbath
day, in bed and at board, in good company and in bad, at home and abroad? I
tell you, it will be one main reason why you desire to live, that you may make
the Lord Jesus known to your children, friends, acquittance, that so in the
ages to come his name might ring, and his memorial might be of sweet odour,
from generation to generation. Ps 71:18. If before thy conversion, especially,
thou hast poisoned others by thy vain and corrupt speeches, after thy
conversion thou wilt seek to season the hearts of others by a gracious, sweet,
and wise communication of savoury and blessed speeches; what the Lord hath
taught thee thou wilt talk of it unto others, for the sake of him whom thou
lovest. Thomas Sheppard (1605-1649), in "The Sound Believer."
Verses
3-6. David exalts lovingkindness as a queen above all other,
even the most precious, blessings bestowed upon him, because thy
lovingkindness is better than (above) life. Around her throne he places
seven members of his body and faculties of his mind, as the seven chief
angels... who stand before the Lord, that they may praise and admire her; these
are his lips, his tongue, his hands, his will, his mouth, his memory, and his intellect.
For first, he extols the lovingkindness of God with his lips (Ps 63:3): My
lips shall praise thee. Secondly, with his tongue (Ps 63:4): Thus will I
bless thee while I live. Thirdly, with his hands: I will lift up my
hands in thy name. Fourthly, with his will (Ps 63:5): MY soul shall be
satisfied as with marrow and fatness. Fifthly, with his mouth: And my
mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips. Sixthly, with his memory (Ps
63:6): When I remember thee upon my bed. Seventhly, and lastly, with his
intellect: And meditate on thee in the night watches. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
6. When I remember thee upon my bed, (and) meditate on thee in
the night watches. Thus the English version connects this verse with Ps
63:5. But the division of the strophes renders the following translation
preferable, which, moreover, obviates the need of supplying "and:" Whenever
I remember thee upon my bed, I meditate on thee in the night watches. The
remembrance of thee on my bed so engrosses me, that I cannot draw my mind off the
thought, so as to fall into the obliviousness of sleep; I often meditate on
thee through the whole night watches. So Ps 119:55,148 1:2. The Hebrew is beds;
probably alluding to the fact that in his unsettled life in exile, he seldom
slept for many nights in the same bed, but through fear of adversaries slept in
different places. There were three night watches: the first (La 2:19); the
middle (Jud 7:19); the third, or morning watch (Ex 19:24 1Sa
2:11). In the New Testament, the Roman usage of four prevails. A. R.
Faussett.
Verse
6. Remember—and meditate. The meditation of anything
hath more sweetness in it than bare remembrance. The memory is the chest to lay
up a truth, but meditation is the palate to feed upon it. The memory is like
the ark in which the manna was laid up; meditation is like Israel's eating of
the manna. When David began to meditate upon God, it was sweet to him as
marrow. There is as much difference between a truth remembered and a truth
meditated, as between a cordial in the glass and a cordial drunk down. John
Wells (1668), in "Sabbath Holiness."
Verse
6. Upon my bed. The bed may be looked upon as a place
for the remembrance of God in it, according to a threefold notion.
1.
As a place of choice. In the bed, of choice, rather than anywhere else,
where I am left to my liberty. David when he had a mind to remember God, he
would make choice of his bed for it, as most suitable and agreeable to it. In
case of excessive weariness contracted to the body from some occasion (this is
often put accidentally in Scripture), "To commune with our hearts upon our
bed, "etc., the occasion of it here; it may fall out that the bed may be
the fittest place for such a duty as this. Ps 4:4.
2.
As it is a place of necessity. In my bed at least, when I cannot anywhere
else, as having restraints upon me. David, when (as now it was with him) he was
detained from the public ordinances, whether by sickness, or any other
impediment which he could not withstand, yet he would not now wholly forget
God; he would remember him even in his bed. This is another notion in which we
may take it.
3.
As a place of indifference; that is, there as well as anywhere besides.
I will not only remember thee when I am up, when I shall make it my business to
remember thee, but even in my bed too. I will take an occasion and opportunity
to remember thee there. By commending myself to thee, when I lie down to rest,
and acknowledging and owning of thee when I first awake. Thomas Horton.
Verse
6. There were night watches kept in the tabernacle, for
praising God (Ps 134:1), which it is probable David, when he had liberty,
joined with the Levites in: but now he could not keep place with them, he kept
time with them, and wished himself among them. Matthew Henry.
Verse
8. My soul followeth hard after thee. This is the language of
a good man in his worst frames; for when he has lost his nearness to God, he
will be uneasy till he has again obtained it, and will follow after it with all
his might. It is also his language in his best frames; for when he knows and
enjoys most of God, he wants to know and enjoy more. But it may especially be
considered as the language of an afflicted and seeking soul, not sinking under
its burden, but earnestly breathing after deliverance, and supported by the
prospect of obtaining it. Hence it follows, Thy right hand upholdeth me...
I
shall consider what is implied in the soul's following hard after God, and then
enquire the reason of it.
1.
Following hard after God supposes,
(a)
A previous acquaintance with him. An unknown good, be it ever so desirable in
itself, cannot be the object of desire. Hence, when God shines into the heart,
it is to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus Christ, as the foundation of all gracious exercises, and especially as
the source of all fervent desires after him.
(b)
Following hard after God is expressive of ardent and intense desires. It does
not consist in cold and languid wishes, but insatiable longings after communion
with God and conformity to his will.
(c)
It implies laborious exertion. My soul followeth, it followeth hard after
thee. Not earth nor heaven merely is the object of pursuit, but God
himself. And the desires of a truly renewed soul are not sluggish and
ineffectual; they lead him to the use of all appointed means, and to the
exertion of his utmost endeavours till the object be attained.
(d)
Perseverance in seeking. To follow implies this, and to follow hard
implies it more strongly. It is as if the psalmist had said, "Does God
retire? I will pursue. Does he withhold the blessing? I will wrestle with him
till I obtain it. He long waited to be gracious, and I will now wait till he is
so."
2.
We are to enquire the reason why David thus followed hard after God.
(a)
Guilt and distress followed hard after him.
(b)
His enemies also followed hard after him. Satan did so, and once and again
caused him to stumble and fall.
(c)
He had followed hard after other things to no purpose.
(d)
We may add the powerful attractions of divine grace. Condensed from Benjamin
Beddome's Sermon, "The Christian's Pursuit, " in "Short
Discourses," 1809.
Verse
8. My soul followeth hard after thee. kyrha hqbd The primary
sense of qbd is agglutinavit, to glue together; from thence it signifies
figuratively to associate, to adhere to, to be united with; and
particularly to be firmly united with strong affection. "Therefore shall a
man leave his father and mother, wyvak qbdw, and cleave to his wife;
"properly, be closely united and compacted with his wife, with the most
permanent affection. Ge 2:24. The psalmist, therefore, means that his soul
adhered to God with the warmest affection, and longed to offer up his sacrifice
of praise in his sanctuary. Samuel Chandler.
Verse
8. My soul followeth hard after thee. tqkd, adhaesit,
adherescit anima mea post te: My soul cleaves after thee, as do things
which hang by another; the root is of so great frequency in Scripture, as of
enquiry amongst critics; it imports here the posture of David's spirit, and
speaketh it close to God; and so depending upon him, as nothing could loosen it
from him: Satan's subtlety, Saul's cruelty, his own personal loss and
indemnity, are not all of them of any force or dexterity, to cut asunder or
untie the Gordian knot of this unity. The cleaving of David's spirit was a
gluing of the Lord's spirit: a marriage of the Lord's making is altogether
incapable of the devil's breaking. It is no wonder David's words report him so
much devoted to God, seeing with the same breath they speak him supported by God;
Thy right hand upholdeth me, saith he. Alexander Pringle, in "A
Stay in Trouble; or the Saint's Rest in the Evil Day," 1657.
Verse
8. My soul followeth hard after thee. The original is kyrxa
yvkg My soul cleaves after thee. As if he had said, Go, lead on, my God!
Behold, I follow as near, as close, as I can; e vestigio; I would not
leave any distance, but pursue thy footsteps, step by step, leaning upon thine
everlasting arms, that are underneath me, and following thy manuduction. John
Gibbon, in "The Morning Exercises," 1661.
Verse
8. The soul's following, and following hard after
God—what means this? Surely it intends much more than a languid, inert
inclination; or "the desire of the slothful which killeth him, because his
hands refuse to labour." It evinces an intenseness of concern that
quickens and rouses the man into life and earnestness; that draws his very soul
along with it; that reconciles him to every needful exertion and sacrifice,
however trying; and urges him to persevere, whatever difficulties or
discouragements he meets with in his course. And sometimes the distance is
long, and the progress up hill, and the road rough, and the weather unfriendly,
and enemies would thrust us back; and sometimes we lose sight of him, and ask
those we meet: "Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?" and when we spy him
again, he seems to advance as we advance, and when we gain upon him and get
nearer, he seems to look back and frown, and tell us to retire. The exercises
and feelings of Christians in the divine life will enable them to explain these
allusions. Who among them all has not, like the Jews, been sometimes
"discouraged because of the way?" Who has not resembled Barak's
adherents—"Faith, yet pursuing?" Who has not frequently said, My
soul followeth hard after thee? William Jay.
Verses
9-10. If the psalmist's divine longing was unquenched, so also was his
faith; and in the latter part of the psalm he foretells with full assurance the
final overthrow of his enemies. Nor did his denunciations fail to meet with a
certain accuracy of fulfilment even in the battle by which his own deliverance
was effected. The armies encountered in the wood of Ephraim, across the Jordan;
there was "a greater slaughter that day of twenty thousand men;
""and the wood devoured more people that day than the sword
devoured." That David's words concerning the lower parts of the earth,
and the sword, and the foxes, had not been idly spoken: the
pitfalls of the forest, and the swords of the royal pursuers, and the wild
beasts that had there made their lairs, all effectually did their work; and the
fate of the rebel army was shared by their leader, who, caught in the thick
boughs of the oak, pierced through the heart by Joab, and cut down by his
attendants, received no further funeral honours than to be cast "into a
great pit in the wood, "and have "a very great heap of stones"
laid upon him to cover him. Joseph Francis Thrupp, in "An Introduction
to the Study and Use of the Psalms," 1860.
Verse
10. They shall fall. The word is ordinarily applied to water.
2Sa 14:14 La 3:49. But here, by the immediate mention of the sword, it
is restrained to the effusion of blood, and being in the third person
plural, in the active sense, it is after the Hebrew idiom to be interpreted in
the passive sense, they shall pour out by the hand of the sword, i.e., they
shall be poured out by the sword, the hand of the sword being
no more than the edge of the sword. Henry Hammond.
Verse
10. They shall be a portion for foxes. Beasts were given to
men for their food, but here men are given to beasts for a prey. A lamentable
spectacle to see the vilest of all creatures ravenously feast themselves with
the flesh of the noblest, and irrespectively hale and tear in pieces the
caskets which whilome enclosed the richest jewel in the world. Is it not
against the law of nature that men should become beasts' meat; yea, the meat of
such beasts as are carrion, and not man's meat? Questionless it is, yet nature
giveth her consent to this kind of punishment of unnatural crimes. For it is
consonant to reason, that the law of nature should be broken in their
punishment who brake it in their sin; that they who devoured men like beasts
should be devoured of beasts like men, that they who with their hands offered
unnatural violence to their sovereign should suffer the like by the claws and
teeth of wild beasts, their slaves; that they who bear a fox in their breast in
their life, should be entombed in the belly of a fox at their death. St.
Austin, expounding this whole prophecy of Christ, yieldeth a special reason of
this judgment of God by which the Jews were condemned to foxes. The Jews, saith
he, therefore killed Christ that they might not lose their country; but,
indeed, they therefore lost their country because they killed Christ; because they
refused the Lamb, and chose Herod the fox before him, therefore by the just
retribution of the Almighty, they were allotted to the foxes for their portion.
Notwithstanding this allusion of St. Austin to foxes in special, Jansenius and
other expositors extend this grant in my text to all wild beasts and fowls,
which are, as it were, impatient with the fox, and have full power and liberty
given them to seize upon the corpses of traitors to God and their country; but
foxes bear the name because they abound in those parts where was such store of
them, that Samson in a short time, with a wet finger, caught three hundred. Daniel
Featley, D.D., in "Clavis Mystica," 1636.
Verse
10. They shall be a portion for foxes. If the body of a human
being were to be left on the ground, the jackals would certainly leave
but little traces of it; and in the olden times of warfare, they must have held
high revelry in the battle fields after the armies had retired. It is to this
propensity of the jackal that David refers—himself a man of war, who had
fought on many a battle field, and must have seen the carcases of the slain
mangled by those nocturnal prowlers. J. G. Wood.
Verse
10. What a doom is that which David pronounces upon those who seek
the soul of the righteous to destroy it: They shall be a portion for foxes;
by which jackals are meant, as I suppose. These sinister, guilty,
woebegone brutes, when pressed with hunger, gather in gangs among the graves,
and yell in rage, and fight like fiends over their midnight orgies; but on the
battle field is their great carnival. Oh! let me never even dream that any one
dear to me has fallen by the sword, and lies there to be torn, and
gnawed at, and dragged about by these hideous howlers. W. M. Thomson, D.D.,
in "The Land and the Book," 1861.
Verse
11. Every one that sweareth by him, i.e., to David, that comes
into his interest, and takes an oath of allegiance to him, shall glory in his
success. Or, that swears by him, i.e., by the blessed name of God, and
not by any idol. De 6:15. And then it means all good people that make a sincere
and open profession of God's name: they shall glory in God; they shall glory in
David's advancement: "They that fear thee will be glad when they see
me." They that heartily espouse the cause of Christ, shall glory in its
victory at last. "If we suffer with him, we shall reign with him." Matthew
Henry.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. (first clause). While the Atheist says, "No God,
"and the heathen worship "gods many, "the true believer says,
"O God, thou art my God." He is so,
1.
By choice.
2. By covenant.
3. By confession.
Verse
1. (second clause). Seeking God early.
1.
Early in respect of life.
2. Early in respect of diligence.
3. Early in respect of (fervour.)
4. Early in respect of times or continuance. Alexander Shanks.
Verse
1. (second clause). Earnest seeking. That which is
longed for will be eagerly sought.
1.
The soul is resolute. I will seek.
2. The soul is reasonable. I will seek.
3. The soul is ready. Early will I.
4. The soul is persevering.
Let
this be the resolution of both saved and unsaved. G. J. K.
Verse
3.
1. Love's
resolution. My lips shall praise thee.
(a)
To praise. This is congenial to the renewed nature. It delights not in
grumbling, reproaching, or scolding. Praise expresses appreciation, gratitude,
happiness, affection.
(b)
To praise God.
(c)
To praise God practically. My lips. By speaking well to him; by
speaking well of him; of his wisdom, justice, love, grace, etc.
(d)
To praise God continually. As long as I live, etc.
2. Love's
reason. Because thy lovingkindness. Love must praise God because—
(a)
It owes its existence to him. "We love him because he first loved
us."
(b)
Because it is fostered by him. "The love of God is shed abroad, "etc.
(c)
Because the expressions of his love demand praise. "Kindness" to
needy, helpless, lost. Lovingkindness, not wounding our natures. Better
than life; either the principle, pleasures, or pursuits of life. G. J.
K.
Verse
3. Thy lovingkindness is better than life.
1. Love
enjoyed with life.
2. Love compared with life.
3. Love preferred to life. G. J. K.
Verses
5-6.
1. The
empty vessel filled. How? By meditation. With what? God's goodness as
marrow and fatness. To what extent? Satisfaction.
2. The
full vessel running over. My mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips. The
soul overflows with praise—joyful praise. G. J. K.
Verses
5-6. Describe the nature of, and show the intimate connection between
1. the believer's employments and 2. his enjoyments. J. S. Bruce.
Verse
7. A well founded resolve.
1.
Upon what based.
2. How expressed. J. S. B.
Verse
8.
1. The
soul's pursuit after God. It follows, (a) In desire. (b) In action. (c)
Earnestly. (d) Quickly. (e) Closely.
2. The
soul's support. Thy right hand upholdeth me, the arm of strength. In doing
and bearing. G. J. K.
Verse
8. "A mighty hunter before the Lord."
1.
The object of pursuit: Thee.
2. The manner of pursuit: Hard after.
3. The dangers encountered. J. S. B.
Verse
8. (second clause). God's right hand upholds his people three
ways.
1.
As to sin; lest they should fall by it.
2. As to suffering; lest they should sink under it.
3. As to duty; lest they should decline from it. W. Jay.
Verses
9-10.
1.
The enemies of the Christian. Evil spirits, evil men, evil habits, etc., etc.
2.
Their intent. To destroy the soul.
3.
Their fall. Certain, shameful, destructive.
4.
Their future. Hell is reserved for them G. J. K.
Verse
11. Three topics.
1.
Royal rejoicing.
2. Lawful swearing.
3. Evil speaking.
WORKS UPON THE
SIXTY-THIRD PSALM
CHANDLER'S
"Life of David" contains an Exposition of this Psalm. Vol. 1,
pp. 130-4.
"An
Exposition of the 63 Psalm, "in eight Sermons, in "Choice and
Practical Expositions on four Select Psalms... By THOMAS HORTON, D.D., 1675."
(Folio.)
Twelve
Sermons (on Ps 63:1-8) in "Sermons on various Practical Subjects.
By ALEXANDER SHANKS (1731-1799), late Minister of the Associate Congregation of
Jedburgh, Edinburgh, 1081."
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》