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Psalm Sixty-five
Psalm 65
Chapter Contents
God is to be praised in the kingdom of grace. (1-5) In
the kingdom of providence. (6-13)
Commentary on Psalm 65:1-5
(Read Psalm 65:1-5)
All the praise the Lord receives from this earth is from
Zion, being the fruit of the Spirit of Christ, and acceptable through him.
Praise is silent unto thee, as wanting words to express the great goodness of
God. He reveals himself upon a mercy-seat, ready to hear and answer the prayers
of all who come unto him by faith in Jesus Christ. Our sins prevail against us;
we cannot pretend to balance them with any righteousness of our own: yet, as
for our transgressions, of thine own free mercy, and for the sake of a
righteousness of thine own providing, we shall not come into condemnation for
them. Observe what it is to come into communion with God in order to
blessedness. It is to converse with him as one we love and value; it is to
apply ourselves closely to religion as to the business of our dwelling-place.
Observe how we come into communion with God; only by God's free choice. There
is abundance of goodness in God's house, and what is satisfying to the soul;
there is enough for all, enough for each: it is always ready; and all without
money and without price. By faith and prayer we may keep up communion with God,
and bring in comfort from him, wherever we are. But it is only through that
blessed One, who approaches the Father as our Advocate and Surety, that sinners
may expect or can find this happiness.
Commentary on Psalm 65:6-13
(Read Psalm 65:6-13)
That Almighty strength which sets fast the mountains,
upholds the believer. That word which stills the stormy ocean, and speaks it
into a calm, can silence our enemies. How contrary soever light and darkness are
to each other, it is hard to say which is most welcome. Does the watchman wait
for the morning? so does the labourer earnestly desire the shades of evening.
Some understand it of the morning and evening sacrifices. We are to look upon
daily worship, both alone and with our families, to be the most needful of our
daily occupations, the most delightful of our daily comforts. How much the
fruitfulness of this lower part of the creation depends upon the influence of
the upper, is easy to observe; every good and perfect gift is from above. He
who enriches the earth, which is filled with man's sins, by his abundant and
varied bounty, can neither want power nor will to feed the souls of his people.
Temporal mercies to us unworthy creatures, shadow forth more important
blessings. The rising of the Sun of righteousness, and the pouring forth of the
influences of the Holy Spirit, that river of God, full of the waters of life
and salvation, render the hard, barren, worthless hearts of sinners fruitful in
every good work, and change the face of nations more than the sun and rain
change the face of nature. Wherever the Lord passes, by his preached gospel,
attended by his Holy Spirit, his paths drop fatness, and numbers are taught to
rejoice in and praise him. They will descend upon the pastures of the
wilderness, all the earth shall hear and embrace the gospel, and bring forth
abundantly the fruits of righteousness which are, through Jesus Christ, to the
glory of the Father. Manifold and marvellous, O Lord, are thy works, whether of
nature or of grace; surely in loving-kindness hast thou made them all.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 65
Verse 4
[4] Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and causest to
approach unto thee, that he may dwell in thy courts: we shall be satisfied with
the goodness of thy house, even of thy holy temple.
Approach — To draw near to God in his house and ordinance, by
prayer and praise, and other acts of communion with him.
Satisfied — With the blessings there
conferred upon thy people, the favour and fellowship of God, remission of sins,
renovation of heart and life, joy and peace, and well-grounded assurance of
eternal life.
Verse 5
[5] By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us,
O God of our salvation; who art the confidence of all the ends of the earth,
and of them that are afar off upon the sea:
Righteousness — By virtue of thy faithfulness,
and goodness.
Wilt thou — Thou wilt graciously answer our
prayers.
The confidence — Thou art the stay and support of
all mankind, by thy powerful and gracious providence.
Verse 7
[7] Which stilleth the noise of the seas, the noise of their
waves, and the tumult of the people.
Tumult — No less wild and impetuous.
Verse 8
[8] They also that dwell in the uttermost parts are afraid
at thy tokens: thou makest the outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice.
Thy tokens — Terrible thunders and lightnings,
and earthquakes, and comets or other strange meteors, or works of God in the
air.
Morning — The successive courses of the morning and evening; or
of the sun and moon which go forth at those times. Thus the whole verse speaks
of the natural works of God, the former clause, of such as are extraordinary
and terrible, the latter of such as are ordinary and delightful.
Verse 9
[9] Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it: thou greatly
enrichest it with the river of God, which is full of water: thou preparest them
corn, when thou hast so provided for it.
River — With rain, which he very significantly calls a river
for its plenty, and the river of God, of God's immediate providing.
Them — The inhabitants of the earth.
Provided — Or, disposed, the earth, which without this would be
hard and barren.
Verse 10
[10] Thou waterest the ridges thereof abundantly: thou
settlest the furrows thereof: thou makest it soft with showers: thou blessest
the springing thereof.
Bringest down — For the rain dissolves the high
and hard clods of earth.
Verse 12
[12] They drop upon the pastures of the wilderness: and the
little hills rejoice on every side.
Wilderness — Which though neglected by men,
are furnished with food for beasts.
Verse 13
[13] The pastures are clothed with flocks; the valleys also
are covered over with corn; they shout for joy, they also sing.
Sing — They are abundantly satisfied with thy goodness, and
in their manner sing forth the praise of their benefactor.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
TITLE. This title is
very similar to many we have before studied. To the Chief Musician. It
is consigned to the care of the usual overseer of song. When a man does his
work well, there is no use in calling in others for novelty's sake. A Psalm
and song of David. The Hebrew calls it a Shur and Mizmor, a
combination of psalm and song, which may be best described by the term, "A
Lyrical Poem." In this case the Psalm may be said or sung, and be equally
suitable. We have had two such Psalms before, Psalms 30 and 48, and we have now
the first of a little series of four following each other. It was meant that
Psalms of pleading and longing should be followed by hymns of praise.
SUBJECT
AND DIVISION. David sings of the glory of God in his church, and in the fields
of nature: here is the song both of grace and providence. It may be that he
intended hereby to commemorate a remarkably plentiful harvest, or to compose a
harvest hymn for all ages. It appears to have been written after a violent
rebellion had been quelled, Ps 65:7, and foreign enemies had been subdued by
signal victory, Ps 65:8. It is one of the most delightful hymns in any
language. We shall view in Ps 65:1-4 the way of approach to God, then from Ps
65:5-8 we shall see the Lord in answer to prayer performing wonders for which
he is praised, and then from Ps 65:9-13 we shall sing the special harvest song.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Praise waiteth for thee, O God, in Sion. Though Babylon
adores Antichrist, Zion remains faithful to her King; to him, and to him only,
she brings her perpetual oblation of worship. Those who have seen in Zion the
blood of sprinkling, and know themselves to belong to the church of the
firstborn, can never think of her without presenting humble praise to Zion's
God; his mercies are too numerous and precious to be forgotten. The praises of
the saints wait for a signal from the divine Lord, and when he shows his face
they burst forth at once. Like a company of musicians gathered to welcome and
honour a prince, who wait till he makes his appearance, so do we reserve our
best praises till the Lord reveals himself in the assembly of his saints; and,
indeed, till he shall descend from heaven in the day of his appearing. Praise
also waits like a servant or courtier in the royal halls—gratitude is humble
and obedient. Praise attends the Lord's pleasure, and continues to bless him,
whether he shows tokens of present favour or no; she is not soon wearied, but
all through the night she sings on in sure hope that the morning cometh. We
shall continue to wait on, tuning our harps, amid the tears of earth; but O
what harmonies will those be which we will pour forth, when the home bringing
is come, and the King shall appear in his glory. The passage may be rendered
"praise is silent for thee; "it is calm, peaceful, and ready to adore
thee in quietness. Or, it may mean, our praise is but silence compared with thy
deservings, O God. Or, in solemn silence we worship thee, because our praise
cannot be uttered; accept, therefore, our silence as praise. Or, we are so
engrossed in thy praise, that to all other things we are dumb; we have no
tongue for anything but thee. Perhaps the poet best expressed the thought of
the psalmist when he said—
"A
sacred reverence checks our songs,
And praise sits silent on our tongues."
Certainly,
when the soul is most filled with adoring awe, she is least content with her
own expressions, and feels most deeply how inadequate are all mortal songs to
proclaim the divine goodness. A church, bowed in silent adoration by a profound
sense of divine mercy, would certainly offer more real praise than the sweetest
voices aided by pipes and strings; yet, vocal music is not to be neglected, for
this sacred hymn was meant to be sung. It is well before singing to have the
soul placed in a waiting attitude, and to be humbly conscious that our best
praise is but silence compared with Jehovah's glory. And unto thee shall the
vow be performed. Perhaps a special vow made during a season of drought and
political danger. Nations and churches must be honest and prompt in redeeming
their promises to the Lord, who cannot be mocked with impunity. So, too, must
individuals. We are not to forget our vows, or to redeem them to be seen of
men—unto God alone must they be performed, with a single eye to his
acceptance. Believers are all under covenant, which they made at conversion,
and have renewed upon being baptised, joining the church, and coming to the
table, and some of them are under special pledges which they entered into under
peculiar circumstances; these are to be piously and punctually fulfilled. We
ought to be very deliberate in promising, and very punctilious in performing. A
vow unkept will burn the conscience like a hot iron. Vows of service, of
donation, of praise, or whatever the may be, are no trifles; and in the day of
grateful praise they should, without fail, be fulfilled to the utmost of our
power.
Verse
2. O thou that hearest prayer. This is thy name, thy nature,
thy glory. God not only has heard, but is now hearing prayer, and always must
hear prayer, since he is an immutable being and never changes in his
attributes. What a delightful title for the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ! Every right and sincere prayer is as surely heard as it is offered.
Here the psalmist brings in the personal pronoun thou, and we beg the
reader to notice how often "thou, ""thee, "and "thy,
"occur in this hymn; David evidently believed in a personal God, and did
not adore a mere idea or abstraction. Unto thee shall all flesh come. This
shall encourage men of all nations to become suppliants to the one and only
God, who proves his Deity by answering those who seek his face. Flesh they are,
and therefore weak; frail and sinful, they need to pray; and thou art such a
God as they need, for thou art touched with compassion, and dost condescend to
hear the cries of poor flesh and blood. Many come to thee now in humble faith,
and are filled with good, but more shall be drawn to thee by the attractiveness
of thy love, and at length the whole earth shall bow at thy feet. To come to
God is the life of true religion; we come weeping in conversion, hoping in supplication,
rejoicing in praise, and delighting in service. False gods must in due time
lose their deluded votaries, for man when enlightened will not be longer be
fooled; but each one who tries the true God is encouraged by his own success to
persuade others also, and so the kingdom of God comes to men, and men come to
it.
Verse
3. Iniquities prevail against me. Others accuse and slander
me, and in addition to my own sins rise up and would beset me to my confusion,
were it not for the remembrance of the atonement which covers every one of my
iniquities. Our sins would, but for grace, prevail against us in the court of
divine justice, in the court of conscience, and in the battle of life. Unhappy
is the man who despises these enemies, and worse still is he who counts them
his friends! He is best instructed who knows their deadly power, and flees for
refuge to him who pardons iniquity. As for our transgressions, thou shalt purge
them away. Thou dost cover them all, for thou hast provided a covering
propitiation, a mercyseat which wholly covers thy law. Note the word our,
the faith of the one penitent who speaks for himself in the first clause, here
embraces all the faithful in Zion; and he is so persuaded of the largeness of
forgiving love that he leads all the saints to sing of the blessing. What a
comfort that iniquities that prevail against us, do not prevail against God.
They would keep us away from God, but he sweeps them away from before himself
and us; they are too strong for us, but not for our Redeemer, who is mighty,
yea, and almighty to save. It is worthy of note that as the priest washed in
the laver before he sacrificed, so David leads us to obtain purification from
sin before we enter upon the service of song. When we have washed our robes and
made them white in his blood, then shall we acceptably sing, "Worthy is
the Lamb that was slain."
Verse
4. Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and causest to approach
unto thee. After cleansing comes benediction, and truly this is a very rich
one. It comprehends both election, effectual calling, access, acceptance, and
sonship. First, we are chosen of God, according to the good pleasure of his
will, and this alone is blessedness. Then, since we cannot and will not come to
God of ourselves, he works graciously in us, and attracts us powerfully; he
subdues our unwillingness, and removes our inability by the almighty workings
of his transforming grace. This also is no slight blessedness. Furthermore, we,
by his divine drawings, are made nigh by the blood of his Son, and brought near
by his spirit, into intimate fellowship; so that we have access with boldness,
and are no longer as those who are afar off by wicked works: here also is
unrivalled blessedness. To crown all, we do not come nigh in peril of dire destruction,
as Nadab and Abihu did, but we approach as chosen and accepted ones, to become
dwellers in the divine household: this is heaped up blessedness, vast beyond
conception. But dwelling in the house we are treated as sons, for the servant
abideth not in the house for ever, but the son abideth ever. Behold what manner
of love and blessedness the Father has bestowed upon us that we may dwell in
his house, and go no more out for ever. Happy men who dwell at home with God.
May both writer and reader be such men. That he may dwell in thy courts.
Acceptance leads to abiding: God does not make a temporary choice, or give and
take; his gifts and calling are without repentance. He who is once admitted to
God's courts shall inhabit them for ever; he shall be
"No
more a stranger or a guest,
But like a child at home."
Permanence
gives preciousness. Terminating blessings are but half blessings. To dwell in
the courts of the Great King is to be ennobled; to dwell there for ever is to
be emparadised: yet such is the portion of every man whom God has chosen and
caused to approach unto him, though once his iniquities prevailed against him.
Verse
5. By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us, O God
of our salvation. God's memorial is that he hears prayer, and his glory is
that he answers it in a manner fitted to inspire awe in the hearts of his
people. The saints, in the commencement of the Psalm, offered praise in
reverential silence; and now, in the like awe stricken spirit, they receive
answers to their prayers. The direct allusion here is, no doubt, to the Lord's
overthrow of the enemies of his people in ways calculated to strike terror into
all beholders; his judgments in their severe righteousness were calculated to
excite fear both among friends and foes. Who would not fear a God whose blows
are so crushing? We do not always know what we are asking for when we pray;
when the answer comes, the veritable answer, it is possible that we may be
terrified by it. We seek sanctification, and trial will be the reply: we ask
for more faith, and more affliction is the result: we pray for the spread of
the gospel, and persecution scatters us. Nevertheless, it is good to ask on,
for nothing which the Lord grants in his love can do us any harm. Terrible
things will turn out to be blessed things after all, where they come in answer
to prayer. See in this verse how righteousness and salvation are united, the
terrible things with the gracious answers. Where but in Jesus could they be
blended? The God who saves may answer our prayers in a way which puts unbelief
into a flutter; but when faith spies the Saviour, she remembers that
"things are not what they seem, "and she is of good courage. He who
is terrible is also our refuge from terror when we see him in the Well beloved.
Who
art the confidence of all the ends of the earth. The dwellers in the far off
isles trust in God; those most remote from Zion yet confide in the ever living
Jehovah. Even those who dwell in countries, frozen or torrid, where nature puts
on her varied terrors, and those who see dread wonders on the deep, yet fly
from the terrors of God and place their confidence in the God of terrors. His
arm is strong to smite, but also strong to save. And of them that are afar off
upon the sea. Both elements have their elect band of believers. If the land
gave Moses elders, the sea gave Jesus apostles. Noah, when all was ocean, was
as calm with God as Abraham in his tent. All men are equally dependent upon
God: the seafaring man is usually most conscious of this, but in reality he is
not more so than the husbandman, nor the husbandman than anyone else. There is
no room for self confidence on land or sea, since God is the only true
confidence of men on earth or ocean. Faith is a plant of universal growth, it
is a tree of life on shore and a plant of renown at sea; and, blessed be God,
those who exercise faith in him anywhere shall find that he is swift and strong
to answer their prayers. A remembrance of this should quicken our devotions
when we approach unto the Lord our God.
Verse
6. Which by his strength setteth fast the mountains. He, as
it were, fixed them in their sockets, and preserved them from falling by
earthquake or storm. The firmest owe their stability to him. Philosophers of
the forget God school are too much engrossed with their laws of upheaval to
think of the Upheaver. Their theories of volcanic action and glacier action,
etc., etc., are frequently used as bolts and bars to shut the Lord out of his
own world. Our poet is of another mind, and sees God's hand settling Alps and
Andes on their bases, and therefore he sings in his praise. Let me for ever be
just such an unphilosophical simpleton as David was, for he was nearer akin to
Solomon than any of our modern theorists. Being girded with power. The Lord is
so himself, and he therefore casts a girdle of strength around the hills, and
there they stand, braced, belted, and bulwarked with his might. The poetry is
such as would naturally suggest itself to one familiar with mountain scenery;
power everywhere meets you, sublimity, massive grandeur, and stupendous force
are all around you; and God is there, the author and source of all. Let us
learn that we poor puny ones, if we wish for true establishment, must go to the
strong for strength. Without him, the everlasting hills would crumble; how much
more shall all our plans, projects, and labours come to decay. Repose, O
believer, where the mountains find their bases—viz., in the undiminished might
of the Lord God.
Verse
7. Which stilleth the noise of the seas. His soft breath
smooths the sea into a glass, and the mountainous waves into ripples. God does
this. Calms are of the God of peace; it needs not that we look for a hurricane
when it is said that he cometh. He walked of old in the garden in the cool of
the day; he is resting even now, for his great seventh day is not yet over, and
he is always "the Lord and giver of peace." Let mariners magnify the
God who rules the waves. The noise of their waves. Each separate brawler amid
the riot of the storm is quieted by the divine voice. And the tumult of the
people. Nations are as difficult to rule as the sea itself, they are as fitful,
treacherous, restless, and furious; they will not brook the bridle nor be
restrained by laws. Canute had not a more perilous seat by the rising billows
than many a king and emperor has had when the multitude have been set on
mischief, and have grown weary of their lords. God alone is King of nations.
The sea obeys him, and the yet more tumultuous nations are kept in check by
him. Human society owes its preservation to the continued power of God: evil
passions would secure its instant dissolution; envy, ambition, and cruelty
would create anarchy tomorrow if God did not prevent; whereof we have had clear
proof in the various French revolutions. Glory be unto God who maintains the
fabric of social order, and checks the wicked, who would fain overthrow all
things. The child of God is seasons of trouble should fly at once to him who
stills the seas: nothing is too hard for him.
Verse
8. They also that dwell in the uttermost parts are afraid of thy
tokens. Signs of God's presence are not few, nor confined to any one
region. Zembla sees them as well as Zion, and Terra del Fuego as surely as the
Terra Sacra. These tokens are sometimes terrible phenomena in nature—such as
earthquakes, pestilence, tornado, or storm; and when these are seen, even the
most barbarous people tremble before God. At other times they are dread works
of providence—such as the overthrow of Sodom, and the destruction of Pharaoh. The
rumour of these judgments travels to earth's utmost verge, and impresses all
people with a fear and trembling at such a just and holy God. We bless God that
we are not afraid but rejoice at his tokens; with solemn awe we are glad when
we behold his mighty acts. We fear, but not with slavish fear. Thou makest the
outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice. East and west are made happy
by God's favour to the dwellers therein. Our rising hours are bright with hope,
and our evening moments mellow with thanksgiving. Whether the sun go forth or
come in we bless God and rejoice in the gates of the day. When the fair morning
blushes with the rosy dawn we rejoice; and when the calm evening smiles
restfully we rejoice still. We do not believe that the dew weeps the death of
the day; we only see jewels bequeathed by the departing day for its successor
to gather up from the earth. Faith, when she sees God, rounds the day with joy.
She cannot fast, because the bridegroom is with her. Night and day are alike to
her, for the same God made them and blessed them. She would have no rejoicing
if God did not make her glad; but, blessed be his name, he never ceases to make
joy for those who find their joy in him.
Verse
9. Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it. God's visits
leave a blessing behind; this is more than can be said of every visitor. When
the Lord goes on visitations of mercy, he has abundance of necessary things for
all his needy creatures. He is represented here as going round the earth, as a
gardener surveys his garden, and as giving water to every plant that requires
it, and that not in small quantities, but until the earth is drenched and
soaked with a rich supply of refreshment. O Lord, in this manner visit thy
church, and my poor, parched, and withering piety. Make thy grace to overflow
towards my graces; water me, for no plant of thy garden needs it more.
"My
stock lies dead and no increase
Doth my dull husbandry improve;
O let thy graces without cease
Drop from above."
Thou
greatly enrichest it. Millions of money could not so much enrich mankind as the
showers do. The soil is made rich by the rain, and then yields its riches to
man; but God is the first giver of all. How truly rich are those who are
enriched with grace; this is great riches. With the river of God, which is full
of water. The brooks of earth are soon dried up, and all human resources, being
finite, are liable to failure; but God's provision for the supply of rain is
inexhaustible; there is no bottom or shore to his river. The deluge poured from
the clouds of yesterday may be succeeded by another tomorrow, and yet the
waters above the firmament shall not fail. How true this is in the realm of
grace; there the river of God is full of water, and "of his fulness
have we all received, and grace for grace." The ancients in their fables
spake of Pactolus, which flowed over sands of gold; but this river of God,
which flows above and from which the rain is poured, is far more enriching;
for, after all, the wealth of men lies mainly in the harvest of their fields,
without which even gold would be of no value whatever.
Thou
preparest them corn. Corn is specially set apart to be the food of man. In its
various species it is a divine provision for the nutriment of our race, and is
truly called the staff of life. We hear in commerce of "prepared corn
flour, "but God prepared it long before man touched it. As surely as the
manna was prepared of God for the tribes, so certainly is corn made and sent by
God for our daily use. What is the difference whether we gather wheat ears or
manna, and what matters it if the first come upward to us, and the second
downward? God is as much present beneath as above; it is as great a marvel that
food should rise out of the dust, as that it should fall from the skies. When
thou hast so provided for it. When all is prepared to produce corn, the Lord
puts the finishing stroke, and the grain is forthcoming; not even, when all the
material is prepared, will the wheat be perfected without the continuous and
perfecting operation of the Most High. Blessed be the Great Householder; he
does not suffer the harvest to fail, he supplies the teeming myriads of earth
with bread enough from year to year. Even thus does he vouchsafe heavenly food
to his redeemed ones: "He hath given meat unto them that fear him; he is
ever mindful of his covenant."
Verse
10. Thou waterest the ridges thereof abundantly: thou settlest the
furrows thereof. Ridge and furrow are drenched. The ridges beaten down and
settled, and the furrows made to stand like gutters flooded to the full. Thou
makest it soft with showers. The drought turned the clods into iron, but the
plenteous showers dissolve and loosen the soil. Thou blessest the springing
thereof. Vegetation enlivened by the moisture leaps into vigour, the seed
germinates and sends forth its green shoot, and the smell is that as of a field
which the Lord has blessed. All this may furnish us with a figure of the
operations of the Holy Spirit in beating down high thoughts, filling our lowly
desires, softening the soul, and causing every holy thing to increase and
spread.
Verse
11. Thou crownest the year with thy goodness. The harvest is
the plainest display of the divine bounty, and the crown of the year. The Lord
himself conducts the coronation, and sets the golden coronal upon the brow of
the year. Or we may understand the expression to mean that God's love encircles
the year as with a crown; each month has its gems, each day its pearl.
Unceasing kindness girdles all time with a belt of love. The providence of God
in its visitations makes a complete circuit, and surrounds the year. And thy
paths drop fatness. The footsteps of God, when he visits the land with rain,
create fertility. It was said of the Tartar hordes, that grass grew no more
where their horses' feet had trodden; so, on the contrary, it may be said that
the march of Jehovah, the Fertiliser, may be traced by the abundance which he
creates. For spiritual harvests we must look to him, for he alone can give
"times of refreshing" and feasts of Pentecost.
Verse
12. They drop upon the pastures of the wilderness. Not alone
where man is found do the showers descend, but away in the lone places, where
only wild animals have their haunt, there the bountiful Lord makes the
refreshing rain to drop. Ten thousand oases smile while the Lord of mercy
passes by. The birds of the air, the wild goats, and the fleet stags rejoice as
they drink from the pools, new filled from heaven. The most lonely and solitary
souls God will visit in love. And the little hills rejoice on every side. On
all hands the eminences are girt with gladness. Soon they languish under the
effects of drought, but after a season of rain they laugh again with verdure.
Verse
13. The pastures are clothed with flocks. The clothing of man
first clothes the fields. Pastures appear to be quite covered with numerous
flocks when the grass is abundant. The valleys also are covered over with corn.
The arable as well as the pasture land is rendered fruitful. God's clouds, like
ravens, bring us both bread and flesh. Grazing flocks and waving crops are
equally the gifts of the Preserver of men, and for both praise should be
rendered. Sheep shearing and harvest should both be holiness unto the Lord.
They shout for joy. The bounty of God makes the earth vocal with his praise,
and in opened ears it lifts up a joyous shout. The cattle low out the divine
praises, and the rustling ears of grain sing a soft sweet melody unto the Lord.
"Ye
forests bend, ye harvests wave to him;
Breathe your still song into the reaper's heart,
As home he goes beneath the joyous moon.
Bleat out afresh, ye hills; ye mossy rocks
Retain the sound; the broad responsive low
Ye valleys raise; for the GREAT SHEPHERD reigns,
And his unsuffering kingdom yet will come."
They
also sing. The voice of nature is articulate to God; it is not only a shout,
but a song. Well ordered are the sounds of animate creation as they combine
with the equally well tuned ripple of the waters, and sighings of the wind.
Nature has no discords. Her airs are melodious, her chorus is full of harmony.
All, all is for the Lord; the world is a hymn to the Eternal, blessed is he
who, hearing, joins in it, and makes one singer in the mighty chorus.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
From
Psalm 65 onwards we find ourselves in the midst of a series of Psalms which,
with a varying arrangement of the words, are inscribed both kwmzm and wyv
(65-68.) The two words signify a Psalm song. This series, as is
universally the case, is arranged according to the community of prominent watch
words. In Ps 65:2 we read: To thee is the vow paid; and in Ps 66:13: I
will pay thee my vows; in Ps 66:20: Blessed be Elohim; and in Ps
67:8: Elohim shall bless us. Besides Psalm 66 and 67 have this feature
in common, that tugml, which occurs fifty-five times in the Psalter, is
accompanied by the name of the poet in every instance, with the exception of
these two anonymous Psalms. The frequently occurring Sela of both Psalms
also indicates that they were intended to have a musical accompaniment. Franz
Delitzsch.
Title. A Psalm of
Jeremiah and Ezekiel. The Psalm is assigned to them, not as being its
authors, but because it is supposed that it was often rehearsed by them at the
beginning of the return from captivity, to teach us that those things ought
especially to be sung concerning that happy restoration which these prophets
were wont to sing about. But this inscription is not in the Hebrew text, nor in
some translations, but only in certain versions. Jeremiah was not carried away
to Babylon; see Jer 39:11, etc. Moreover, both he and Ezekiel died before the
return. Poole's Synopsis.
Whole
Psalm. The author of the Psalm is mentioned, but not the date of its
composition; but from an examination of its contents, it would seem to have
been intended as a song for the "day of atonement, " and for the
"feast of tabernacles, "which followed immediately after. Nu 29:7,12.
The sins of the year were then "covered over, "and a thorough
purification of the sanctuary was made by a special service of expiation. The
labours of the year were all by that time concluded, and its fruits secured;
and Israel could look on the goodness of God towards them, through its entire
extent; and this Psalm was penned to serve as a fitting expression of their
feelings. It opens with a reference to the "silence" that reigned in
the sanctuary; to the profound, unbroken, solemn stillness that reigned within
it; while, in deep abasement, the people without waited in hushed expectation
the return of their high priest from the immediate presence of God, Le 16:17.
It goes on to a statement of the blessedness of those who are accepted of God,
and admitted to fellowship with One so unspeakably great; and concludes with a
description of the various processes by which the Almighty had fitted the earth
to yield a year's supplies for his people. Dalman Hapstone, in "The
Ancient Psalms in appropriate Meters... with Notes." 1867.
Whole
Psalm. We have here a psalm of thanksgiving to be sung in the Temple
during a public festivity, at which the sacrifices were to be offered which had
been vowed during a long and protracted drought (Ps 65:1-2). To the
thanksgiving, however, for a gracious rain, and the hope of an abundant harvest
(Ps 65:9-14), is added gratitude for a signal deliverance during a time of
distress and commotion affecting all the nations around (Ps 65:7-8). Thus the
Psalm becomes a song of praise to Jehovah as the God of history and the God of
nature, alike. From the "Psalms Chronologically Arranged. By Four
Friends." 1867.
Whole
Psalm. This is a charming psalm. Coming after the previous sad ones, it
seems like the morning after the darkness of night. There is a dewy freshness
about it, and from the ninth verse to the end there is a sweet succession of
landscape pictures that remind one of the loveliness of spring; and truly it is
a description, in natural figures, of that happy state of men's minds which
will be the result of the "Day spring's visiting us from on high." Lu
1:7-8. O. Prescott Hiller.
Verse
1. Praise waiteth for thee, O God, in Sion. The believer
sometimes seems to want words to exalt God, and stops, as it were, in the
middle; his thoughts want words. Thus praise waits, or is silent for God; it is
silent to other things, and it waits to be employed about him. The soul is
often put to a nonplus in crying up the grace of God, and wants words to
express its greatness; yea, to answer the elevation of the thoughts; the heart
indites a song of praise, but it cannot tune it. The psalmist is stopped, as it
were, through admiration (which is silentium intellectus), for when the
mind can rise no higher, it falls admiringly; hence some say, God is most
exalted with fewest words. Alexander Carmichael.
Verse
1. Praise waiteth for thee, O God. Mercy is not yet come, we
expect it; whilst thou art preparing the mercy, we are preparing the praise. Edward
Leigh in "Annotations on the Five Poetical Books of the Old Testament,
"1657.
Verse
1. Praise waiteth on thee. As a servant, whose duty it is to
do what thou commandest; or, for thee; is ready to be offered in thy
courts for special favours. I think there is an allusion to the daily service
in which God was praised. Benjamin Boothroyd.
Verse
1. Praise waiteth for thee, O God. Te decet hymnus, so the
vulgar edition reads this place. To thee, O Lord, belong our hymns, our psalms,
our praises, our cheerful acclamations, and conformable to that, we translate
it, Praise waiteth for thee, O God. But if we take it according to the
original, it must be tibi, silentium laus est, Thy praise, O Lord,
consists in silence. That man praises God best that says least of him; of his
mysterious essence, of his unrevealed will and secret purposes. Abraham
Wright.
Verse
1. "To thee is silence and praise." Piscator.
Verse
1. The Hebrew may be rendered, Praise is silent for thee. As
if the holy man had said, "Lord, I quietly wait for a time to praise thee;
my soul is not in an uproar because you stay. I am not murmuring, but rather
stringing my harp and tuning my instrument with much patience and confidence,
that I may be ready to strike up when the joyful news of my deliverance
come." William Gurnall.
Verse
1. To thee belongeth silence praise. Praise without any
tumult. (Alexander.) It has been said, "The most intense feeling is the
most calm, being condensed by repression." And Hooker says of prayer,
"The very silence which our unworthiness putteth us unto doth itself make
request for us, and that in the confidence of his grace. Looking inward, we are
stricken dumb; looking upward, we speak and prevail." Horsley renders it, "Upon
thee is the repose of prayer." Andrew A. Bonar.
Verse
1. Praise is silent for thee. The Chaldee interpretation is,
that our praise is not sufficiently worthy that we should praise God. The very
praises of angels are esteemed as nothing before him. For so its rendering is: "Before
thee, O God, whose Majesty dwells in Zion, the praise of angels is regarded as
silence."... Jerome's version here is, "To thee silence is
praise, O God, in Zion." Atheneus says, silence is a divine thing; and
Thomas a Kempis calls silence the nutriment of devotion. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
1. To thee belong submission, praise, O God, in Sion.
(Version of the American Bible Union.) Thou hast a claim for submission in
times of sorrow, for praise in seasons of joy. Thomas J. Conant, in
"The Psalms... with occasional notes." 1871.
Verse
1. Vow. A vow is a voluntary and deliberate promise made unto
God in an extraordinary case. "It is a religious promise made unto God in
a holy manner:" so a modern writer defines it. (Szegedinus.) It is a
"holy and religious promise, advisedly and freely made unto God,
concerning something which to do or to omit appeareth to be grateful and well
pleasing unto him:" so Bucanus. I forbear Aquinas's definition of a vow.
If these which I have given satisfy not, then view it in the words of Peter
Martyr, a man of repute, and well known to our own nation in the days of Edward
VI., of ever blessed memory: "It is a holy promise, whereby we bind
ourselves to offer somewhat unto God." There is one more who defines it,
and he is a man whose judgment, learning, and holiness hath perfumed his name;
it is learned Perkins, in his "Cases of Conscience." "A vow,
" saith he, "is a promise made unto God of things lawful and
possible." Henry Hurst(—1690), in "The Morning Exercises."
Verse
1. (last clause). The reference here is to the vows or
promises which the people had made in view of the manifested judgments of God,
and the proofs of his goodness. Those vows they were now ready to carry out in
expressions of praise. Albert Barnes.
Verse
2. O thou that hearest prayer, etc. This is one of his titles
of honour, he is a God that hears prayer; and it is as truly ascribed to him as
mercy or justice. He hears all prayer, therefore, unto thee shall all flesh
come. He never rejects any that deserves the name of prayer, how weak, how
unworthy soever the petitioner be. All flesh! And will he (may faith
say) reject mine only? Ro 10:12, "He is rich unto all that call upon him;
" Ps 86:5, "Thou art plenteous in mercy to all that call upon thee;
"Heb 11:6, "A rewarder of them that diligently seek him." This
must be believed as certainly as we believe that God is. As sure as God is the
true God, so sure is it that none who sought him diligently departed from him
without a reward. He rewards all seekers, for indefinita in materia
necessaria aequipollet universali. And if all, why not me? You may as well
doubt that he is God, as doubt that he will not reward, not hear prayer; so Jas
1:5, "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all
men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." David
Clarkson.
Verse
2. O thou that hearest prayer, unto thee shall all flesh come.
What avails prayer, if it be not heard? But God's people need not lay it aside
on that score. Our text bears two things with respect to that matter.
1.
A comfortable title ascribed to God, with the unanimous consent of all the sons
of Zion, who are all praying persons: O thou that hearest prayer. He
speaks to God in Zion, or Zion's God, that is in New Testament language,
to God in Christ. An absolute God thundereth on sinners from Sinai, there can
be no comfortable intercourse betwixt God and them, by the law: but in Zion,
from the mercyseat, in Christ, he is the hearer of prayer; they give in their
supplications, and he graciously hears them. Such faith of it they have, that
praise waits there for the prayer hearing God.
2.
The effect of the savour of this title of God, spread abroad in the world: Unto
thee shall all flesh come: not only Jews, but Gentiles. The poor Gentiles
who have long in vain implored the aid of their idols, hearing and believing
that God is the hearer of prayer, will flock to him, and present their
petitions. They will throng in about his door, where by the gospel they understand
beggars are so well served. They will come in even unto thee, Hebrew.
They will come in even to thy seat, thy throne of grace, even unto thyself
through the Mediator... That God is the hearer of prayer, and will hear the
prayers of his people, is evident from these considerations:
First.
The supernatural instinct of praying that is found in all that are born of God,
Ga 4:6. It is as natural for them to fall a praying when the grace of God has
touched their hearts, as for children when they are born into the world to cry,
or to desire the breasts. Zec 12:10, compared with Ac 9:11, where in the
account that is given of Paul, at his conversion, it is particularly noticed,
"Behold, he prayeth." Hence the whole saving change on a soul comes under
the character of this instinct. Jer 3:4,19.
Secondly.
The intercession of Christ, Ro 8:34. It is a great part of the work of Christ's
intercession to present the prayers of his people before his Father, Re 8:4, to
take their causes in hand, contained in their supplications. 1Jo 2:1.
Thirdly.
The promises of the covenant, whereby God's faithfulness is impawned for the
hearing of prayer, as Mt 7:7: see also Isa 65:24.
Fourthly.
The many encouragements given in the Word to the people of God, to come with
their cases unto the Lord by prayer. He invites them to his throne of grace
with their petitions for supply of their needs. So 2:14. He sends afflictions
to press them to come. Ho 5:15. He gives them ground of hope of success, Ps
50:15, whatever extremity their case is brought to. Isa 41:17. He shows them
that however long he may delay their trial, yet praying and not fainting shall
be successful at length. Lu 18:8.
Fifthly.
The gracious nature of God, with the endearing relations he stands in to his
people. Ex 22:27. He wants not power and ability to fulfil the holy desires of
his people; he is gracious, and will withhold no good from them that they
really need. He has the bowels of a father to pity them, the bowels of a mother
to her sucking child. He has a most tender sympathy with them in all their
afflictions, the touches on them are as on the apple of his eye; and he never
refuses them a request, but for their good. Ro 8:28.
Sixthly.
The experiences which the saints of all ages have had of the answer of prayer.
The faith of it brings them to God at conversion, as the text intimates: and
they that believe cannot be disappointed. Lastly. The present ease and relief
that prayer sometimes gives to the saints, while yet the full answer of prayer
is not come. Ps 138:3. Thomas Boston (1676-1732).
Verse
2. O thou that hearest prayer. Observe
1.
That God is called the hearer of prayers, since he hears, without distinction
of persons, the prayers of every one poured forth with piety, not only of the
Jews, but also of the Gentiles; as in Ac 10:34-35... It follows, therefore, as
a necessary consequence, that all flesh should come to him.
2. To
come to God, is not indeed simply tantamount to saying, to draw near to
God, to adore, call upon, and worship him, but to come to Zion for
the purpose of adoring God; for it was just now said, that God must be praised
in Zion, and to this the phrase, to come to God, must be referred. On
this account also la is not used, but de, whose proper force is right up to
God, or to the place of the habitation of God to render adoration to God. Hermann
Venema.
Verse
2. To thee shall all flesh come. To Christ "all flesh
comes, "that is (1.) every sinner and carnal man. He himself says, Mt
9:13 "I came not to call the righteous, but sinners." The Grecian
priest in olden times, when approaching to receive the sacrifice, used to
exclaim, Who comes there? and the reply was, Many and good. But
God received publicans and sinners, and invites them to his banquet, and eateth
with them; but for the purpose of delivering them from sin. "All flesh
shall see the salvation of God." (2.) All flesh may be taken
for the whole flesh, the whole body; all the senses and members of the body
shall come to God that they may pay him tribute as their King. Thomas Le
Blanc.
Verse
2. All flesh. By flesh is meant man in his weakness
and need. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
3. Iniquities prevail against me. There are two ways in which
iniquities may prevail against the Christian—the first is in the growing sense
of his guilt, the second is in the power of their acting. This prevalence
cannot be entire, for sin shall not have dominion over them; but it may be
occasional and partial. There are two ways, according to Scripture, in which
God purges our transgressions; and they always go together. The one is by
pardoning mercy. Thus David prays: "Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be
clean." Thus the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin. The
other is by sanctifying grace: "I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and
ye shall be clean." And this is as much the work of God as the former. He
subdues our iniquities as well as forgives them. William Jay.
Verse
3. Iniquities. Literally, Words of iniquities, by some
regarded as a pleonastic phrase for iniquities themselves. More probably,
however, the phrase means the charge or accusation of iniquity. Joseph
Addison Alexander.
Verse
3. The deeds of iniquity are said To prevail against us, in
so far as they are too strong and powerful for us to deny or refute, and to
subject us to a demand of those penalties which the sin merits; hence there
remains no other refuge than the clemency and grace of God, the Judge. See Ps
143:2 130:3-4. Hermann Venema.
Verse
3. As for our transgressions, thou shalt purge them away. In
the Hebrew it is, Thou shalt hide them. It alludes to the mercy seat which was
covered with the wings of the Cherubim; so are the sins of the godly, when
repented of, covered with the wings of mercy and favour. Thomas Watson.
Verse
3. Thou shalt purge them away; or, Thou coverest them.
The pronoun is emphatic, as though to express the conviction that God and God
alone could do this. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
3. The holy prophets, and penmen of Scripture, have no grounds of
hope for pardon of sin, save those which are common to the meanest of God's
people; for David, in his confession, cometh in by himself alone, aggravating
his own sins most: Iniquities prevail against me, saith he. But in hope
of pardon, he joins with the rest of God's people, saying, As for our
transgressions, thou shalt purge them away. David Dickson.
Verses
3-4. Now, soul, thou art molested with many lusts that infect thee,
and obstruct thy commerce with heaven; yea, thou hast complained to thy God,
what loss thou hast suffered by them; is it now presumption to expect relief
from him, that he will rescue thee from them, that thou mayest serve him
without fear, who is thy liege Lord? You have the saints for your precedents;
who, when they have been in combat with their corruptions, yea, been foiled by them,
have even then exercised their faith on God, and expected the ruin of those
enemies, which, for the present, have overrun them. Iniquities prevail
against me; he means his own sins; but see his faith; at the same time that
they prevailed over him, he beholds God destroying them, as appears in the very
next words, As for our transgressions, thou shalt purge them away. See
here, poor Christian, who thinkest that thou shalt never get above deck, holy
David has a faith, not only for himself, but also for all believers, of whose
number I suppose thee one. And mark the ground he hath for this his confidence,
taken from God's choosing act: Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, and
causest to approach unto thee, that he may dwell in thy courts. As if he
had said, Surely he will not let them be under the power of sin, or in want of
his gracious succour, whom he sets so near himself. This is Christ's own
argument against Satan, in the behalf of his people. "The Lord said
unto Satan, the Lord rebuke thee." Zec 3:2. William Gurnall.
Verse
4. Blessed is the man whom thou choosest. The benedictions of
the Psalter advance in spirituality and indicate a growth. The first blessed
the godly reader of the word. Ps 1:1. The second described the pardoned child.
Ps 32:1. The third pronounced a blessing upon faith. Ps 34:8 40:4. The fourth
commended the active and generous believer, abundant in deeds of charity (Ps
41:1); and this last mounting to the fountain head of all benediction, blesses
the elect of God. C. H. S.
Verse
4. The man whom thou choosest. Christ, whom God chose, and of
whom he said, "This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased, "
is, indeed, "over all, God blessed for ever; "but in him his elect
are blessed too. For his sake, not for our own, are we chosen; in him, not in
ourselves, are we received by God, being accepted in the Beloved; and,
therefore, in him are we blessed: he is our blessing. With that High Priest who
has ascended into the holy place and entered within the vail, we enter into the
house of God; we learn to dwell therein; we are filled with its spiritual joys;
we partake of its holy mysteries and sacraments of grace and love. From
"A Plain Commentary on the Book of Psalms." 1859.
Verse
4. We shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house, even of
thy holy temple. We shall be so filled, that nothing can be said to be
wanting, we shall have nothing to look for outside. What can be wanting in the
house of him who made everything, who is the master of everything, who will be
all unto all, in whom is an inexhaustible treasure of good. Of him is said in
Psalm 103, "Who satisfieth thy mouth with thy likeness." Robert
Bellarmine (1542-1621).
Verse
4. Satisfied with the goodness of thy house. There is an
allusion here to the oblations which were devoted to God, of which, also,
sacred persons partook. Hermann Venema.
Verse
5. By terrible things in righteousness wilt thou answer us.
The reason why he answers thus is, because what God doth for his people, take
one thing with another, is still in order to the crucifying of the flesh; and
what more terrible than such a death? We pray for pleasing
things, as we imagine, but as we are flesh as well as spirit; so the flesh hath
still a part in every prayer, and what we beg is partly carnal, and upon the matter,
in part, we beg we know not what. Now, the answer as it comes from God, take
all together, is spiritual, which is a crucifying thing to sinful flesh; hence
comes all the terror... You pray for pardon; that is a pleasing thing, yet
rightly understand not pleasing to the flesh; it mortifies corruption, breaks
the heart, engages to a holy life: every answer from our God to us, one way or
the other, first or last, shall tend that way. God useth so to give good things
unto his children, as withal to give himself, and show to them his heavenly
glory in what is done... Now God is terrible to sinful flesh: so far as
he appears, it dies. Jacob, therefore, whilst he conquered God in prayer,
himself was overcome, signified by that touch upon his thigh put out of joint,
where the chiefest stress in wrestling lies. When we are weak, then are we
strong; because, as God appears, we die unto ourselves and live in him. William
Carter, in a Fast Sermon entitled, "Light in Darkness." 1648.
Verse
5. God's judgments are these terribilia, terrible, fearful
things; and he is faithful in his covenant; and by terrible judgments he will
answer, that is, satisfy our expectation: and that is a convenient sense of
these words. But the word which we translate righteousness here, is tzadok,
and tzadok is not faithfulness, but holiness; and these terrible
things are reverend things; and so Tremellius translates it, and well. Per
res reverendas, by reverend things, things to which there belongs a
reverence—thou shalt answer us. And thus, the sense of this place will
be, that the God of our salvation (that is, God working in the Christian
church) calls us to holiness, to righteousness, by terrible things; not
terrible in the way and nature of revenge, but terrible, that is, stupendous, reverend,
mysterious; so that we should not make religion too homely a thing, but come
always to all acts and exercises of religion with reverence, with fear, and
trembling, and make a difference between religious and civil actions. John
Donne.
Verse
5. God's deliverance of his church and people by terrible things
is in righteousness. The meaning of the point is this: God in all the
deliverances of his people by terrible things, doth therein manifest his
righteousness. He doth therein nothing but what is according to righteousness
and justice. To clear this, consider that there is a double righteousness, the
righteousness of his word, which is the righteousness of his faithfulness, and
the righteousness of his works, or his just acts of righteousness. And God doth
manifest both these in his deliverance of his people by terrible things. John
Bewick. 1644.
Verse
5. But what is the meaning when they say, wilt thou answer us?
Us, who are inhabitants of Zion, who are constituted thy people, and truly
worship Thee; us, moreover, in contact with enemies, who stirred up
strife against us, and wished us ill; us, lastly, who aim at and seek
the stability of the Kingdom and Church, and every kind of felicity and safety;
with such things wilt thou answer us, it says, that is, for our
advantage and benefit, and according to our vows, and therefore by pleading our
cause, and deciding in our favour, and satisfying our desires; and in this way
rendering us happy and establishing us, and subduing and confounding our foes. Hermann
Venema.
Verse
5. Who art the confidence of all the ends of the earth. How
could God be the confidence of all the ends of the earth, if he does not reign
and constantly work? The stability of the mountains is ascribed not to certain
physical laws, but to the power of God. The noise of the seas is stilled not by
laws without a powerful agent, but by the immediate influence of the Almighty
Ruler. Human laws also may be the means of restraining persecution, but they
are only means; and it is God who stilleth the tumult of the people. It is God
who maketh the outgoings of the morning and evening to sing. The Scriptures, in
viewing the works which God does through means, never lose sight of God
himself. God visits and waters the earth: God prepares the corn. Without his
own immediate power, the laws of nature could not produce their effect. How
consoling and satisfactory is this view of Divine Providence, compared with
that of an infidel philosophy, that forbids us to go further back than to the
power of certain physical laws, which it grants, indeed, were at first
established by God, but which can now perform their office without him. Alexander
Carson. (1776-1844.)
Verse
5. All the ends of the earth. God is in himself
potentially, The confidence of all the ends of the earth. Hereafter he will
be recognised by all to be so (Ps 23:27-28), of which the Queen of Sheba's
coming to Solomon "from the uttermost parts of the earth" is a type.
Mt 12:42. A. R. Faussett.
Verse
5. And of them that are afar off upon the sea. We must
beseech God in the words of this Psalm, that since He stands upon the shore,
and beholds our perils, he would make us, who are tossed on the turbulent sea,
secure for his name's sake, and enable us to hold between Scylla and Charybdis,
the middle course, and escaping the danger on either hand, with a sound vessel
and safe merchandise, reach the port. Lorinus (from Augustine).
Verses
5-8. The divine watering of the earth is obviously symbolical of the
descent of the Holy Spirit after Christ's ascension; and when on the great day
of Pentecost the devout Jews, "out of every nation under heaven,
"heard the apostle speaking in their several tongues the wonderful works
of God, it was a testimony that God was beginning spiritually to make the
outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice. To God, which stilleth
the noise of the waves and the tumult of the people, the apostles betook
themselves in prayer after their first conflict with Jewish authorities, the
first conflict of the infant Christian community with the powers of this world:
the language of the Psalm (Ps 65:5), O God of our salvation; who art the
confidence of all the ends of the earth, and of them that are afar off upon the
sea, is reflected in the opening words of their prayer on that occasion (Ac
4:24), "Lord, thou art God, which hast made heaven, and earth, and the
sea, and all that in them is; "and if, when they prayed, "the place
was shaken where they were assembled together, and they were all filled with
the Holy Ghost, "it was no idle sign that by terrible things in
righteousness were they being answered by the God of their salvation. These
are, of course, mere illustrations of the inner harmony of Scripture; but, as
such, they may not be without their value. Joseph Francis Thrupp.
Verse
6. Setteth fast the mountains. It is by thy strength they
have been raised, and by thy power they are girded about and preserved. He
represents the mountains as being formed and pitched into their proper places
by the mighty hand of God; and shows that they are preserved from splitting,
falling down, or moulding away, as it were, by a girdle by which they are
surrounded. The image is very fine. They were hooped about by the divine power.
Adam Clarke.
Verse
8. Thou makest the outgoings of the morning and evening to rejoice.
That is, thou makest men to rejoice, they are glad, they rejoice in, or at, the
outgoings in the morning. And at the evening men rejoice too, for then they go
to their rest, being wearied with the labour of the day. Or, we may thus expound
it: Thou makest men who live at the outgoings of the morning, and at the
outgoings of the evening, to rejoice. As if it had been said, Thou makest the
eastern people and the western people, all people from east to west, rejoice.
And that which makes all people to rejoice, naturally, is the rising of light
with them in the east, and the coming of light towards them in the west. Joseph
Caryl.
Verse
8. Thou makest the outgoings of the morning and evening to
rejoice. How contrary soever light and darkness are to each other, and how
inviolable soever the partition between them (Ge 1:4), both are equally welcome
to the world in their season; it is hard to say which is more welcome to us,
the light of the morning which befriends the business of the day, or the
shadows of the evening which befriend the repose of the night. Doth the
watchman wait for the morning? so doth the hireling earnestly desire the
shadow. Some understand it of the morning and evening sacrifice, which good
people greatly rejoiced in, and in which God was constantly honoured. Thou
makest them to sing, so the word is; for every morning and every evening songs
of praise were sung by the Levites; it was that which the duty of every day
required. And we are to look upon our daily worship alone, and with our
families, to be both the most needful of our daily business, and the most
delightful of our daily comforts; and if therein we keep up our communion with
God, the outgoings both of the morning and of the evening are thereby made
truly to rejoice. Matthew Henry.
Verse
8. Lyranus, Dionysius Carthusianus, Cajetanus, Placidus Parmensis,
(who treads in the footsteps of Cajetanus though he does not mention him) take
the first clause to refer to the wonder of all mankind at the wonderful works
of God on the land and the sea; and explain the second respecting the
sacrifices which were wont to be offered in the morning and evening; that God
made these acceptable to himself and delightful to those who offered them,
especially after the return from captivity. In the beginning of the Psalm
sacrifices are hinted at by praise and vows, as we have seen, and
in the history of Esdra it is recorded, that the morning and evening
sacrifice were offered unto the Lord by those who had returned; and that
those who approached, when they entered, and others who had made their
offerings, when they departed, gave praises to God. Hence it is here said, that
the outgoings of the morning and of the evening, that is to say, when they who
praise God go forth from either sacrifice, God will be well pleased, he will
receive delight from that praise, and it will be grateful to him. Lorinus.
Verse
8. Figuratively, the outgoings of the morning, or dawn, is
the light of grace in the beginning of conversion; "the outgoing of the
evening" is the final light of grace in the hour of death. Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
9. Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it, etc. How
beautiful are the words of the inspired poet, read in this month of harvest,
nearly three thousand years after they were written! For nearly three thousand
years since the royal poet looked over the plains of Judea covered with the
bounty of God, and broke forth into his magnificent hymn of praise, has the
earth rolled on in her course, and the hand of God has blessed her, and all her
children, with seed time and harvest, with joy and abundance. The very
steadfastness of the Almighty's liberality, flowing like a mighty ocean through
the infinite vast of the universe, makes his creatures forget to wonder at its
wonderfulness, to feel true thankfulness at its immeasurable goodness. The sun
rises and sets so surely; the seasons run on amid all their changes with such
inimitable truth, that we take as a matter of course that which is amazing
beyond all stretch of imagination, and good beyond the wildest expansion of the
noblest human heart. The poor man, with his half a dozen children, toils, and
often dies, under the vain labour of winning bread for them. God feeds his
family of countless myriads swarming over the surface of all countless worlds,
and none know need but through the follies of themselves, or the cruelty of
their fellows. God pours his light from innumerable suns on innumerable
rejoicing planets; he waters them everywhere in the fittest moment; he ripens
the food of globes and of nations, and gives them fair weather to garner it.
And from age to age, amid his endless creatures of endless forms and powers, in
the beauty and the sunshine, and the magnificence of nature, he seems to sing
throughout creation the glorious song of his own divine joy, in the immortality
of his youth, in the omnipotence of his nature, in the eternity of his
patience, and the abounding boundlessness of his love. What a family hangs on
his sustaining arm! The life and soul of infinite ages, and of uncounted
worlds! Let a moment's failure of his power, of his watchfulness, or of his
will to do good, occur, and what a sweep of death and annihilation through the
universe! How stars would reel, planets expire, and nations perish! But from
age to age, no such catastrophe occurs, even in the midst of national crimes,
and of atheism that denies the hand that made and feeds it. Life springs with a
power ever new; food springs up as plentiful to sustain it, and sunshine and
joy are poured over all from the invisible throne of God, as the poetry of the
existence which he has given. If there come seasons of dearth, or of failure,
they come but as warnings to proud and tyrannic man. The potato is smitten that
a nation may not be oppressed for ever; and the harvest is diminished that the
laws of man's unnatural avarice may be rent asunder. And then, again, the sun
shines, the rain falls, and the earth rejoices in a renewed beauty, and in a
redoubled plenty. William Howitt, in "The Year Book of the
Country." 1850.
Verse
9. Thou visitest the earth. God seems to come with the coming
in of each of the seasons. In some respects, during winter, God seems like a
man travelling into a far country. Darkness, and barrenness, and coldness,
suggest absence on the part of God. The spring looks like his return. The great
change it involves cheerily whispers, "He is not far from any one of
us." In longer days, and a warmer atmosphere, and a revived earth, God
comes to us. These things are not of necessity, but of providence. There are
second causes, but above all these is the First Cause, intelligent, loving, and
free, God rules in all, over all, and above all. He is not displaced or
supplanted by the forces and agencies which he employs, he is not absorbed by
care of other worlds, he is not indifferent toward the earth. A personal
superintendence and providence are not beneath his dignity, or in anywise
distasteful to him. As Maker, and Life giver, and Father, Thou visitest the
earth, and waterest it. Samuel Martin, in "Rain upon the Mown Grass, and
other Sermons." 1871.
Verse
9. The psalmist is here foretelling the gracious outpouring of the
Holy Spirit, and the conversion of the nations of the earth to Christ. Origen.
Verse
9. The chiefs of Hebrew theology attribute four keys to God, which
he never entrusted to any angel or seraph, and as the first of these they place
the key of rain. He himself is said, in Job 28:26, to give a law to the
rain, and in chapter Job 26:8, to bind up the waters in the clouds. Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
9. With the river of God, which is full of water. That is,
the clouds figuratively described. Edward Leigh (1602-3-1671).
Verse
9. The river of God, as opposed to earthly streams. However
these may fail, the divine resources are exhaustless. Joseph Addison
Alexander.
Verse
9. The river of God. The Chaldee paraphrase is, From the
fountain of God which is in the heavens, which is full of the rainstorms of
blessing, thou wilt prepare their cornfields. Lorinus.
Verse
9. Thou preparest their grain; for so dost thou prepare the
earth. (Version of American Bible Union.) So, namely, with this
design, and for this end. In the Hebrew, "for so dost thou prepare her;
"referring to "the earth, "which in Hebrew is fem., while
grain is masc. The meaning can be expressed in English only by using the
word (earth) which the Hebrew pronoun represents. The English pronoun (it)
would necessarily refer to "grain, "and would represent neither the
meaning of the Hebrew nor its form. Thomas J. Conant.
Verse
9. Thou preparest them corn, etc. Corn is the special gift of
God to man. There are several interesting and instructive ideas connected with
this view of it. All the other plants we use as food are unfit for his purpose
in their natural condition, and require to have their nutritious qualities
developed, and their natures and forms to a certain extent changed by a gradual
process of cultivation. There is not a single useful plant grown in our gardens
and fields, but is utterly worthless for food in its normal or wild state; and man
has been left to himself to find out, slowly and painfully, how to convert
these crudities of nature into nutritious vegetables. But it is not so with
corn. It has from the very beginning been an abnormal production. God gave it
to Adam, we have every reason to believe, in the same perfect state of
preparation for food in which we find it at the present day, It was made
expressly for man, and given directly into his hands. "Behold, "says
the Creator, "I have given you every herb bearing seed which is upon the
face of all the earth; "that is, all the cereal plants—such as corn,
wheat, barley, rice, maize, etc., whose peculiar characteristic it is to
produce seed... There is another proof that corn was created expressly for
man's use, in the fact that it has never been found in a wild state. The
primitive types from which all our other esculent plants were derived are still
to be found in a state of nature in this or other countries. The wild beet and
cabbage still grow on our seashores; the crab apple and the sloe, the savage
parents of our luscious pippins and plums, are still found among the trees of
the wood; but where are the original types of our corn plants? Where are the
wild grasses, which, according to some authors, the cumulative process of agriculture
carried on through successive ages, have developed into corn, wheat, and
barley? Much has been written, and many experiments have been tried, to
determine the natural origin of these cereals, but every effort has hitherto
proved in vain. Reports have again and again been circulated that corn and
wheat have been found growing wild in some parts of Persia and the steppes of
Tartary, apparently far from the influence of cultivation; but when tested by
botanical data, these reports have turned out, in every instance, to be
unfounded. Corn has never been known as anything else than a cultivated plant.
History and observation prove that it cannot grow spontaneously. It is never,
like other plants, self sown and self diffused. Neglected of men, it speedily disappears
and becomes extinct. It does not return, as do all other cultivated varieties
of plants, to a natural condition, and so become worthless as food, but utterly
perishes, being constitutionally unfitted to maintain the struggle for
existence with the aboriginal vegetation of the soil. All this proves that it
must have been produced miraculously; or, in other words, given by God to man
directly, in the same abnormal condition in which it now appears; for nature
never could have developed or preserved it. In the mythologies of all the
ancient nations it was confidently affirmed to have had a supernatural origin.
The Greeks and Romans believed it to be the gift of the goddess Ceres, who
taught her son, Triptolemus, to cultivate and distribute it over the earth; and
from her, the whole class of plants received the name of cereals, which they
now bear. And we only express the same truth when we say to him, whom these
pagans ignorantly worshipped, Thou preparest them corn, when thou hast
provided for it. Let me bring forth one more proof of special design,
enabling us to recognise the hand of God in this mercy. Corn is universally
diffused. It is almost the only species of plant which is capable of growing
everywhere, in almost every soil, in almost any situation. In some form or
other, adapted to the various modifications of climate and physical conditions,
which occur in different countries, it is spread over an area of the earth's
surface as extensive as the occupancy of the human race... Rice is grown in tropical
countries where periodical rains and inundations, followed by excessive heat,
occur, and furnishes the chief article of diet for the largest proportion of
the human race. Wheat will not thrive in hot climates, but flourishes all over
the temperate zone, at various ranges of elevation, and is admirably adapted to
the wants of highly civilized communities. Maize spreads over an immense
geographical area in the new world, where it has been known from time
immemorial, and formed a principal element of that Indian civilisation which
surprised the Spaniards in Mexico and Peru. Barley is cultivated in those parts
of Europe and Asia where the soil and climate are not adapted for wheat; while
oats and rye extend far into the bleak north, and disappear only from those
desolate Arctic regions where man cannot exist in his social capacity. By these
striking adaptations of different varieties of grain, containing the same
essential ingredients, to different soils and climates, Providence has
furnished the indispensable food for the sustenance of the human race
throughout the whole habitable globe; and all nations, and tribes, and tongues
can rejoice together, as one great family, with the joy of harvest. Hugh
Macmillan, in "Bible Teachings in Nature." 1868.
Verses
9-13. I do not know any picture of rural life that in any measure comes
up to the exquisite description here brought before us, and which every one's
heart at once recognises as so true to nature in all its branches. In the brief
compass of five verses we have the whole scene vividly sketched, from the first
preparation of the earth or soil; the provision of the corn seed for the sower;
the rain in its season, the former and the latter rain, watering the ridges,
settling the furrows, and causing the seed to swell and to spring forth, and
bud and blossom; then the crowning of the whole year in the appointed weeks of
harvest, and men's hearts rejoicing before God according to the joy in harvest,
the very foot paths dropping with fatness, and the valleys shouting and singing
for joy. Our harvest homes are times of rejoicing too, but I would that our
tillers and reapers of the soil would as piously refer all to God as the
psalmist did. Thou waterest the earth, Thou greatly enrichest it, Thou
preparest the corn, Thou waterest the ridges, Thou settlest the furrows, Thou
makest it soft with showers, Thou blessest the springing thereof, Thou crownest
the year with thy goodness. Not one word of man, of man's skill, or of
man's labour, not one thought of self. How different from him whose grounds
brought forth abundantly, and whose only thought was, "I will say to my
soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease,
drink, and be merry." Barton Bouchier.
Verse
13. The phrase, the pastures are clothed with flocks, cannot
be regarded as the vulgar language of poetry. It appears peculiarly beautiful
and appropriate, when we consider the numerous flocks which whitened the plains
of Syria and Canaan. In the eastern countries, sheep are much more prolific
than with us, and they derive their name from their great fruitfulness;
bringing forth, as they are said to do, "thousands and ten thousands in
their streets, " Ps 144:13. They, therefore, formed no mean part of the
wealth of the East. James Anderson, in editorial Note to Calvin in loc.
Verse
13. The hills, where not tilled, were bushy and green, and sprinkled
with numerous flocks; the valleys broad and covered with a rich crop of wheat;
the fields full of reapers and gleaners in the midst of the harvest, with asses
and camels receiving their loads of sheaves, and feeding unmuzzled and
undisturbed upon the ripe grain. Edward Robinson.
Verse
13. It may seem strange, that he should first tell us, that they
shout for joy, and then add the feebler expression, that they sing;
interposing, too, the insensitive particle, pa, aph, they shout for joy,
YEA, they also sing. The verb, however, admits of being taken in the future
tense, they shall sing; and this denotes a continuation of joy, that
they would rejoice, not only one year, but through the endless succession of
the seasons. I may add, what is well known, that in Hebrew the order of
expression is frequently inverted in this way. John Calvin.
Verse
13. They also sing. They ardently sing: such is the real meaning
of pa; primarily "heat" or "warmth, "thence "ardour,
passion, anger, "and thence again "the nostrils, "as the
supposed seat of this feeling. John Mason Good.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. The fitness, place, use, and power of silence in worship.
Verse
1. The limitations, advantages, and obligations of vows.
Verse
2. (first clause). The hearing and granting of prayer is the
Lord's property, his usual practice, his pleasure, his nature, and his glory. David
Dickson.
Verse
3.
1. The
humble confession. Sins prevail against us.
(a)
When we are not alert, or go into temptation, and even after most sacred
engagements.
(b)
How. Through our inbred corruption, natural constitution, suddenness of
temptation, neglect of means of grace, and want of fellowship.
(c)
In whom. In the best of men: David says, against me. Let us take
home the caution.
2. The
reassuring confidence. Sin is forgiven.
(a)
By God: Thou.
(b) By atonement: covering all.
(c) Effectually: purge away.
(d) Comprehensively: our transgressions.
Verse
3.
1. A
cry of distress. Man soul besieged: Iniquities prevail against me.
2. A
shout of delight. Man soul relieved: Thou shalt purge them away. E. G.
Gange.
Verse
4. Nearness to God is the foundation of a creature's happiness. This
doctrine appears in full evidence, while we consider the three chief
ingredients of true felicity, viz., the contemplation of the noblest
object, to satisfy all the powers of the understanding; the love of the supreme
good, to answer the utmost propensities of the will, and the sweet and
everlasting sensation and assurance of the love of an Almighty Friend, who will
free us from all the evils which our nature can fear, and confer upon us all
the good which a wise and innocent creature can desire. Thus all the capacities
of man are employed in their highest and sweetest exercises and enjoyments. Isaac
Watts.
Verse
4. Election, effectual calling, access, adoption, final
perseverance, satisfaction. This verse is a body of divinity in miniature.
Verse
5. Treat the first clause experimentally, and show how prayers for
our own sanctification are answered by trial; for God's glory, by our
persecution; for our babes' salvation, by their death; for the good of others,
by their sickness, etc.
Verse
7. The Lord, the giver, creator, and preserver of peace.
Verse
8. Tokens of God's presence; those causing terror, and those
inspiring joy.
Verse
8. (last clause). The peculiar joys of morning and evening.
Verse
9. The river of God. John Bunyan's treatise on "The
Water of Life" would be suggestive on this topic.
Verse
9. Divine visits and their consequences.
Verses
9-13. A Harvest Sermon.
1. The
general goodness of God, Visiting the earth in rotation of seasons:
"Seed time and harvest, "etc.
2. The
greatness of his resources: The river of God, which is full of water; not
like Elijah's brook, which dried up.
3. The
variety of his benefactions: Corn; Water; Blessest the springing thereof,
etc.
4. The
perpetuity of his blessings; Crownest the year. E. G. G.
Verse
13. The song of nature and the ear which hears it.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》