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Psalm Sixty-six
Psalm 66
Chapter Contents
Praise for God's sovereign power in the creation. (1-7)
For his favour to his church. (8-12) And the psalmist's praise for his
experience of God's goodness. (13-20)
Commentary on Psalm 66:1-7
(Read Psalm 66:1-7)
The holy church throughout all the world lifts up her
voice, to laud that Name which is above every name, to make the praise of Jesus
glorious, both by word and deed; that others may be led to glorify him also.
But nothing can bring men to do this aright, unless his effectual grace create
their hearts anew unto holiness; and in the redemption by the death of Christ,
and the glorious deliverances it effects, are more wondrous works than Israel's
deliverance from Egyptian bondage.
Commentary on Psalm 66:8-12
(Read Psalm 66:8-12)
The Lord not only preserves our temporal life, but
maintains the spiritual life which he has given to believers. By afflictions we
are proved, as silver in the fire. The troubles of the church will certainly end
well. Through various conflicts and troubles, the slave of Satan escapes from
his yoke, and obtains joy and peace in believing: through much tribulation the
believer must enter into the kingdom of God.
Commentary on Psalm 66:13-20
(Read Psalm 66:13-20)
We should declare unto those that fear God, what he has
done for our souls, and how he has heard and answered our prayers, inviting
them to join us in prayer and praise; this will turn to our mutual comfort, and
to the glory of God. We cannot share these spiritual privileges, if we retain
the love of sin in our hearts, though we refrain from the gross practice, Sin,
regarded in the heart, will spoil the comfort and success of prayer; for the
sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination of the Lord. But if the feeling of
sin in the heart causes desires to be rid of it; if it be the presence of one
urging a demand we know we must not, cannot comply with, this is an argument of
sincerity. And when we pray in simplicity and godly sincerity, our prayers will
be answered. This will excite gratitude to Him who hath not turned away our
prayer nor his mercy from us. It was not prayer that fetched the deliverance,
but his mercy that sent it. That is the foundation of our hopes, the fountain
of our comforts; and ought to be the matter of our praises.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 66
Verse 1
[1] Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands:
All lands — Ye people of all nations. He
invites the Gentile world, to the contemplation and celebration of God's works.
Verse 6
[6] He turned the sea into dry land: they went through the
flood on foot: there did we rejoice in him.
We — Our nation, or our ancestors, in whose loins we then
were.
Verse 10
[10] For thou, O God, hast proved us: thou hast tried us, as
silver is tried.
Proved us — As it were in a burning furnace;
and with a design to purge out our dross.
Verse 11
[11] Thou broughtest us into the net; thou laidst affliction
upon our loins.
Net — Which our enemies laid for us.
Verse 12
[12] Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads; we went
through fire and through water: but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy
place.
To ride — To use us like slaves.
Verse 15
[15] I will offer unto thee burnt sacrifices of fatlings,
with the incense of rams; I will offer bullocks with goats. /*Selah*/.
I will go — One speaks in the name of all the
rest.
Incense — With the fat of rams, which is no less pleasing to God
than incense.
Verse 18
[18] If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear
me:
Iniquity — Any sin.
In heart — If my heart had been false to God, although I might
have forborne outward acts. If I had been guilty of that, by heart was set upon
sin, or I desired only that which I resolved in my heart to spend upon my
lusts.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. To the
Chief Musician. He had need be a man of great skill, worthily to sing such a
Psalm as this: the best music in the world would be honoured by marriage with
such expressions. A Song or Psalm, or a Song and Psalm. It
may be either said or sung; it is a marvellous poem if it be but read; but set
to suitable music, it must have been one of the noblest strains ever heard by
the Jewish people. We do not know who is its author, but we see no reason to
doubt that David wrote it. It is in the Davidic style, and has nothing in it
unsuited to his times. It is true the "house" of God is mentioned,
but the tabernacle was entitled to that designation as well as the temple.
SUBJECT
AND DIVISION. Praise is the topic, and the subjects for song are the Lord's
great works, his gracious benefits, his faithful deliverances, and all his
dealings with his people, brought to a close by a personal testimony to special
kindness received by the prophet bard himself. Ps 66:1-4 are a kind of
introductory hymn, calling upon all nations to praise God, and dictating to
them the words of a suitable song. Ps 66:5-7 invite the beholder to "Come
and see" the works of the Lord, pointing attention to the Red Sea, and
perhaps the passage of Jordan. This suggests the similar position of the
afflicted people which is described, and its joyful issue predicted, Ps
66:8-12. The singer then becomes personal, and confesses his own obligations to
the Lord (Ps 66:13-15); and, bursting forth with a vehement "Come and
hear, "declares with thanksgiving the special favour of the Lord to
himself, Ps 66:16-20.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Make a joyful noise unto God. "In Zion, "where
the more instructed saints were accustomed to profound meditation, the song was
silent unto God, and was accepted of him; but in the great popular assemblies a
joyful noise was more appropriate and natural, and it would be equally
acceptable. If praise is to be wide spread, it must be vocal; exulting sounds
stir the soul and cause a sacred contagion of thanksgiving. Composers of tunes
for the congregation should see to it that their airs are cheerful; we need not
so much noise, as joyful noise. God is to be praised with the voice, and
the heart should go therewith in holy exultation. All praise from all nations
should be rendered unto the Lord. Happy the day when no shouts shall be
presented to Juggernaut or Boodh, but all the earth shall adore the Creator
thereof. All ye lands. Ye heathen nations, ye who have not known Jehovah
hitherto, with one consent let the whole earth rejoice before God. The
languages of the lands are many, but their praises should be one, addressed to
one only God.
Verse
2. Sing forth the honour of his name. The noise is to be
modulated with tune and time, and fashioned into singing, for we adore the God
of order and harmony. The honour of God should be our subject, and to honour
him our object when we sing. To give glory to God is but to restore to him his
own. It is our glory to be able to give God glory; and all our true glory
should be ascribed unto God, for it is his glory. "All worship be to God
only, "should be the motto of all true believers. The name, nature, and
person of God are worthy of the highest honour. Make his praise glorious. Let
not his praise be mean and grovelling: let it arise with grandeur and solemnity
before him. The pomp of the ancient festivals is not to be imitated by us,
under this dispensation of the Spirit, but we are to throw so much of heart and
holy reverence into all our worship that it shall be the best we can render.
Heart worship and spiritual joy render praise more glorious than vestments,
incense, and music could do.
Verse
3. Say unto God. Turn all your praises to him. Devotion,
unless it be resolutely directed to the Lord, is no better than whistling to
the wind. How terrible art thou in thy works. The mind is usually first
arrested by those attributes which cause fear and trembling; and, even when the
heart has come to love God, and rest in him, there is an increase of worship
when the soul is awed by an extraordinary display of the more dreadful of the
divine characteristics. Looking upon the convulsions which have shaken
continents, the hurricanes which have devastated nations, the plagues which
have desolated cities, and other great and amazing displays of divine working,
men may well say: How terrible art thou in thy works. Till we see God in
Christ, the terrible predominates in all our apprehensions of him. Through the
greatness of thy power shall thine enemies submit themselves unto thee;
but, as the Hebrew clearly intimates, it will be a forced and false submission.
Power brings a man to his knee, but love alone wins his heart. Pharaoh said he
would let Israel go, but he lied unto God; he submitted in word but not in
deed. Tens of thousands, both in earth and hell, are rendering this constrained
homage to the Almighty; they only submit because they cannot do otherwise; it
is not their loyalty, but his power, which keeps them subjects of his boundless
dominion.
Verse
4. All the earth shall worship thee, and shall sing unto thee.
All men must even now prostrate themselves before thee, but a time will come
when they shall do this cheerfully; to the worship of fear shall be added the
singing of love. What a change shall have taken place when singing shall
displace sighing, and music shall thrust out misery! They shall sing to thy
name. The nature and works of God will be the theme of earth's universal song,
and he himself shall be the object of the joyful adoration of our emancipated
race. Acceptable worship not only praises God as the mysterious Lord, but it is
rendered fragrant by some measure of knowledge of his name or character. God
would not be worshipped as an unknown God, nor have it said of his people,
"Ye worship ye know not what." May the knowledge of the Lord soon
cover the earth, that so the universality of intelligent worship may be
possible: such a consummation was evidently expected by the writer of this
Psalm; and, indeed, throughout all Old Testament writings, there are
intimations of the future general spread of the worship of God. It was an
instance of wilful ignorance and bigotry when the Jews raged against the
preaching of the gospel to the Gentiles. Perverted Judaism may be exclusive,
but the religion of Moses, and David, and Isaiah was not so. Selah. A little
pause for holy expectation is well inserted after so great a prophecy, and the
uplifting of the heart is also a seasonable direction. No meditation can be
more joyous that excited by the prospect of a world reconciled to its Creator.
Verse
5. Come and see the works of God. Such glorious events, as
the cleaving of the Red Sea and the overthrow of Pharaoh, are standing wonders,
and throughout all time a voice sounds forth concerning them—"Come and
see." Even till the close of all things, the marvellous works of God at
the Red Sea will be the subject of meditation and praise; for, standing on the
sea of glass mingled with fire, the triumphal armies of heaven sing the song of
Moses, the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb. It has always been the
favourite subject of the inspired bards, and their choice was most natural. He
is terrible in his doing toward the children of men. For the defence of his
church and the overthrow of her foes he deals terrific blows, and strikes the
mighty with fear. O thou enemy, wherefore dost thou vaunt thyself? Speak no
more so exceeding proudly, but remember the plagues which bowed the will of
Pharaoh, the drowning of Egypt's chariots in the Red Sea, the overthrow of Og
and Sihon, the scattering of the Canaanites before the tribes. This same God
still liveth, and is to be worshipped with trembling reverence.
Verse
6. He turned the sea into dry land. It was no slight miracle
to divide a pathway through such a sea, and to make it fit for the traffic of a
whole nation. He who did this can do anything, and must be God, the worthy
object of adoration. The Christian's inference is that no obstacle in his
journey heavenward need hinder him, for the sea could not hinder Israel, and
even death itself shall be as life; the sea shall be dry land when God's
presence is felt. They went through the flood on foot. Through the river the
tribes passed dry shod, Jordan was afraid because of them.
"What
ailed thee, O thou mighty sea?
Why rolled thy waves in dread?
What bade thy tide, O Jordan, flee
And bare its deepest bed?"
"O
earth, before the Lord, the God
Of Jacob, tremble still;
Who makes the waste a watered sod,
The flint a gushing rill."
There
did we rejoice in him. We participate this day in that ancient joy. The scene
is so vividly before us that it seems as if we were there personally, singing
unto the Lord because he hath triumphed gloriously. Faith casts herself bodily
into the past joys of the saints, and realises them for herself in much the
same fashion in which she projects herself into the bliss of the future, and
becomes the substance of things hoped for. It is to be remarked that Israel's
joy was in her God, and there let ours be. It is not so much what he has done,
as what he is, that should excite in us a sacred rejoicing. "He is my God,
and I will prepare him an habitation; my father's God, and I will exalt
him."
Verse
7. He ruleth by his power for ever. He has not deceased, nor
abdicated, nor suffered defeat. The prowess displayed at the Red Sea is
undiminished: the divine dominion endures throughout eternity. His eyes behold
the nations. Even as he looked out of the cloud upon the Egyptians and
discomfited them, so does he spy out his enemies, and mark their conspiracies.
His hand rules and his eye observes, his hand has not waxed weak, nor his eye
dim. As so many grasshoppers he sees the people and tribes, at one glance he
takes in all their ways. He oversees all and overlooks none. Let not the
rebellious exalt themselves. The proudest have no cause to be proud. Could they
see themselves as God sees them they would shrivel into nothing. Where rebellion
reaches to a great head, and hopes most confidently for success, it is a
sufficient reason for abating our fears, that the Omnipotent ruler is also an
Omniscient observer. O proud rebels, remember that the Lord aims his arrows at
the high soaring eagles and brings them down from their nest among the stars.
"He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low
degree." After a survey of the Red Sea and Jordan, rebels, if they were in
their senses, would have no more stomach for the fight, but would humble
themselves at the Conqueror's feet. Selah. Pause again, and take time to bow
low before the throne of the Eternal.
Verse
8. O bless our God, ye people. Ye chosen seed, peculiarly
beloved, it is yours to bless your covenant God as other nations cannot. Ye
should lead the strain, for he is peculiarly your God. First visited by his
love, ye should be foremost in his praise. And make the voice of his praise to
be heard. Whoever else may sing with bated breath, do you be sure to give full
tongue and volume to the song. Compel unwilling ears to hear the praises of
your covenant God. Make rocks, and hills, and earth, and sea, and heaven itself
to echo with your joyful shouts.
Verse
9. Which holdeth our soul in life. At any time the
preservation of life, and especially the soul's life, is a great reason for
gratitude but much more when we are called to undergo extreme trials, which of
themselves would crush our being. Blessed be God, who, having put our souls
into possession of life, has been pleased to preserve that heaven given life
from the destroying power of the enemy. And suffereth not our feet to be moved.
This is another and precious boon. If God has enabled us not only to keep our
life, but our position, we are bound to give him double praise. Living and
standing is the saint's condition through divine grace. Immortal and immoveable
are those whom God preserves. Satan is put to shame, for instead of being able
to slay the saints, as he hoped, he is not even able to trip them up. God is
able to make the weakest to stand fast, and he will do so.
Verse
10. For thou, O God, hast proved us. He proved his Israel with
sore trials. David had his temptations. All the saints must go to the proving
house; God had one Son without sin, but he never had a son without trial. Why
ought we to complain if we are subjected to the rule which is common to all the
family, and from which so much benefit has flowed to them? The Lord himself
proves us, who then shall raise a question as to the wisdom and the love which
are displayed in the operation? The day may come when, as in this case, we
shall make hymns out of our griefs, and sing all the more sweetly because our
mouths have been purified with bitter draughts. Thou hast tried us, as silver
is tried. Searching and repeated, severe and thorough, has been the test; the
same result has followed us as in the case of precious metal, for the dross and
tin have been consumed, and the pure ore has been discovered. Since trial is
sanctified to so desirable an end, ought we not to submit to it with abounding
resignation.
Verse
11. Thou broughtest us into the net. The people of God in the
olden time were often enclosed by the power of their enemies, like fishes or
birds entangled in a net; there seemed no way of escape for them. The only
comfort was that God himself had brought them there, but even this was not
readily available, since they knew that he had led them there in anger as a
punishment for their transgressions; Israel in Egypt was much like a bird in
the fowler's net. Thou laidest affliction upon our loins. They were pressed
even to anguish by their burdens and pains. Not on their backs alone was the
load, but their loins were pressed and squeezed with the straits and weights of
adversity. God's people and affliction are intimate companions. As in Egypt
every Israelite was a burden bearer, so is every believer while he is in this
foreign land. As Israel cried to God by reason of their sore bondage, so also
do the saints. We too often forget that God lays our afflictions upon us; if we
remembered this fact, we should more patiently submit to the pressure which now
pains us. The time will come when, for every ounce of present burden, we shall
receive a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
Verse
12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads. They stormed,
and hectored, and treated us like the mire of the street. Riding the high
horse, in their arrogance, they, who were in themselves mean men, treated the
Lord's people as if they were the meanest of mankind. They even turned their
captives into beasts of burden, and rode upon their heads, as some read the
Hebrew. Nothing is too bad for the servants of God when they fall into the
hands of proud persecutors. We went through fire and through water. Trials many
and varied were endured by Israel in Egypt, and are still the portion of the
saints. The fires of the brick kiln and the waters of the Nile did their worst
to destroy the chosen race; hard labour and child murder were both tried by the
tyrant, but Israel went through both ordeals unharmed, and even thus the church
of God has outlived, and will outlive, all the artifices and cruelties of man.
Fire and water are pitiless and devouring, but a divine fiat stays their fury,
and forbids these or any other agents from utterly destroying the chosen seed.
Many an heir of heaven has had a dire experience of tribulation; the fire
through which he has passed has been more terrible than that which chars the
bones, for it has fed upon the marrow of his spirit, and burned into the core
of his heart; while the waterfloods of affliction have been even more to be
feared than the remorseless sea, for they have gone in even unto the soul, and
carried the inner nature down into deeps horrible, and not to be imagined
without trembling. Yet each saint has been more than conqueror hitherto, and,
as it has been, so it shall be. The fire is not kindled which can burn the
woman's seed, neither does the dragon know how to vomit a flood which shall
suffice to drown it. But thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place. A blessed
issue to a mournful story. Canaan was indeed a broad and royal domain for the
once enslaved tribes: God, who took them into Egypt, also brought them into the
land which flowed with milk and honey, and Egypt was in his purposes en
route to Canaan. The way to heaven is via tribulation.
"The
path of sorrow and that path alone,
Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown."
How
wealthy is the place of every believer, and how doubly does he feel it to be so
in contrast with his former slavery: what songs shall suffice to set forth our
joy and gratitude for such a glorious deliverance and such a bountiful
heritage. More awaits us. The depth of our griefs bears no proportion to the
height of our bliss. For our shame we have double, and more than double. Like
Joseph we shall rise from the prison to the palace, like Mordecai we shall
escape the gallows prepared by malignity, and ride the white horse and wear the
royal robe appointed by benignity. Instead of the net, liberty; instead of a
burden on the loins, a crown on our heads; instead of men riding over us, we
shall rule over the nations: fire shall no more try us, for we shall stand in
glory on the sea of glass mingled with fire; and water shall not harm us, for
there shall be no more sea. O the splendour of this brilliant conclusion to a
gloomy history. Glory be unto him who saw in the apparent evil the true way to
the real good. With patience we will endure the present gloom, for the morning
cometh. Over the hills faith sees the daybreak, in whose light we shall enter
into the wealthy place.
Verse
13. I will. The child of God is so sensible of his own
personal indebtedness to grace, that he feels that he must utter a song of his
own. He joins in the common thanksgiving, but since the best public form must
fail to meet each individual case, he makes sure that the special mercies
received by him shall not be forgotten, for he records them with his own pen,
and sings of theme with his own lips. I will go into thy house with burnt offerings;
the usual sacrifices of godly men. Even the thankful heart dares not come to
God without a victim of grateful praise; of this as well as of every other form
of worship, we may say, "the blood is the life thereof." Reader,
never attempt to come before God without Jesus, the divinely promised, given,
and accepted burnt offering. I will pay thee my vows. He would not appear
before the Lord empty, but at the same time he would not boast of what he
offered, seeing it was all due on account of former vows. After all, our
largest gifts are but payments; when we have given all, we must confess,
"O Lord, of thine own have we given unto thee." We should be slow in
making vows, but prompt in discharging them. When we are released from trouble,
and can once more go up to the house of the Lord, we should take immediate
occasion to fulfil our promises. How can we hope for help another time, if we
prove faithless to covenants voluntarily entered upon in hours of need.
Verse
15. I will offer unto thee burnt sacrifices of fatlings. The
good man will give his best things to God. No starveling goat upon the hills
will he present at the altar, but the well fed bullocks of the luxuriant
pastures shall ascend in smoke from the sacred fire. He who is miserly with God
is a wretch indeed. Few devise liberal things, but those few find a rich reward
in so doing. With the incense of rams. The smoke of burning rams should also
rise from the altar; he would offer the strength and prime of his flocks as
well as his herds. Of all we have we should give the Lord his portion, and that
should be the choicest we can select. It was no waste to burn the fat upon
Jehovah's altar, nor to pour the precious ointment upon Jesus' head; neither
are large gifts and bountiful offerings to the church of God any diminution to
a man's estate: such money is put to good interest and placed where it cannot
be stolen by thieves nor corroded by rust. I will offer bullocks with goats. A
perfect sacrifice, completing the circle of offerings, should show forth the
intense love of his heart. We should magnify the Lord with the great and the
little. None of his ordinances should be disregarded; we must not omit either
the bullocks or the goats. In these three verses we have gratitude in action,
not content with words, but proving its own sincerity by deeds of obedient
sacrifice. Selah. It is most fit that we should suspend the song while the
smoke of the victims ascends the heavens; let the burnt offerings stand for
praises while we meditate upon the infinitely greater sacrifice of Calvary.
Verse
16. Come and hear. Before, they were bidden to come and see.
Hearing is faith's seeing. Mercy comes to us by way of ear gate. "Hear,
and your soul shall live." They saw how terrible God was, but they heard
how gracious he was. All ye that fear God. These are a fit audience when a good
man is about to relate his experience; and it is well to select our hearers
when inward soul matters are our theme. It is forbidden us to throw pearls
before swine. We do not want to furnish wanton minds with subjects for their
comedies, and therefore it is wise to speak of personal spiritual matters where
they can be understood, and not where they will be burlesqued. All God fearing
men may hear us, but far hence ye profane. And I will declare what he hath done
for my soul. I will count and recount the mercies of God to me, to my soul, my
best part, my most real self. Testimonies ought to be borne by all experienced
Christians, in order that the younger and feebler sort may be encouraged by the
recital to put their trust in the Lord. To declare man's doings is needless;
they are too trivial, and, besides, there are trumpeters enough of man's
trumpery deeds; but to declare the gracious acts of God is instructive,
consoling, inspiriting, and beneficial in many respects. Let each man speak for
himself, for a personal witness is the surest and most forcible; second hand
experience is like "cauld kale het again; "it lacks the flavour of
first hand interest. Let no mock modesty restrain the grateful believer from
speaking of himself, or rather of God's dealings to himself, for it is justly
due to God; neither let him shun the individual use of the first person, which
is most correct in detailing the Lord's ways of love. We must not be egotists,
but we must be egotists when we bear witness for the Lord.
Verse
17. I cried unto him with my mouth, and he was extolled with my
tongue. It is well when prayer and praise go together, like the horses in
Pharaoh's chariot. Some cry who do not sing, and some sing who do not cry: both
together are best. Since the Lord's answers so frequently follow close at the
heels of our petitions, and even overtake them, it becomes us to let our
grateful praises keep pace with our humble prayers. Observe that the psalmist
did both cry and speak; the Lord has cast the dumb devil out of his children,
and those of them who are least fluent with their tongues are often the most
eloquent with their hearts.
Verse
18. If I regard iniquity in my heart. If, having seen it to be
there, I continue to gaze upon it without aversion; if I cherish it, have a
side glance of love toward it, excuse it, and palliate it; The Lord will not
hear me. How can he? Can I desire him to connive at my sin, and accept me while
I wilfully cling to any evil way? Nothing hinders prayer like iniquity
harboured in the breast; as with Cain, so with us, sin lieth at the door, and
blocks the passage. If thou listen to the devil, God will not listen to thee.
If you refuse to hear God's commands, he will surely refuse to hear thy
prayers. An imperfect petition God will hear for Christ's sake, but not one
which is wilfully miswritten by a traitor's hand. For God to accept our
devotions, while we are delighting in sin, would be to make himself the God of
hypocrites, which is a fitter name for Satan than for the Holy One of Israel.
Verse
19. But verily God hath heard me. Sure sign this that the
petitioner was no secret lover of sin. The answer to his prayer was a fresh
assurance that his heart was sincere before the Lord. See how sure the psalmist
is that he has been heard; it is with him no hope, surmise, or fancy, but he
seals it with a verily. Facts are blessed things when they reveal both
God's heart as loving, and our own heart as sincere. He hath attended to the
voice of my prayer. He gave his mind to consider my cries, interpreted them,
accepted them, and replied to them; and therein proved his grace and also my
uprightness of heart. Love of sin is a plague spot, a condemning mark, a
killing sign, but those prayers, which evidently live and prevail with God,
most clearly arise from a heart which is free from dalliance with evil. Let the
reader see to it, that his inmost soul be rid of all alliance with iniquity,
all toleration of secret lust, or hidden wrong.
Verse
20. Blessed be God. Be his name honoured and loved. Which
hath not turned away my prayer, nor his mercy from me. He has neither
withdrawn his love nor my liberty to pray. He has neither cast out my prayer
nor me. His mercy and my cries still meet each other. The psalm ends on its key
note. Praise all through is its spirit and design. Lord enable us to enter into
it. Amen.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm is said to be recited on Easter day, by the Greek
church: it is described in the Greek Bible as A Psalm of the Resurrection,
and may be understood to refer, in a prophetic sense, to the regeneration of
the world, through the conversion of the Gentiles. Daniel Cresswell.
Verse
1. Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands: Hebrew, all
the earth; shout aloud for joy, as the people did at the return of the ark,
so that the earth rang again. God shall show himself to be the God not of Jews
only, but of Gentiles also; these shall as well cry Christ, as
those Jesus; these say, Father, as those Abba. And, as
there was great joy in Samaria when the gospel was there received (Ac 8:8), so
shall there be the like in all other parts of the earth. John Trapp.
Verse
1. All ye lands. Where, consider, that he does not sing
praises well, who desires to sing alone. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
2. Make his praise glorious. Another meaning is, give
or place glory, that is, your glory to his praise, be fully
persuaded when you praise him that it will redound to your own glory, regard
this as your own glory; praise him in such a way that all your praises may be
given to glorify God; or, let your glory tend in this direction that he may be
praised. Desire not the glory of eternal blessedness, unless for the praise of
God, as the blessed spirits in that temple do nothing but say glory to God, and
sing the hymn of his glory without end, "Holy, holy, holy." Lorinus.
Verse
3. Say. Dicite, say, says David, delight to speak of God; Dicite,
say something. There was more required than to think of God. Consideration, meditation,
contemplation upon God and divine objects, have their place and their season;
but this is more than that, and more than admiration too; for all these may
come to an end in ecstasies, and in stupidities, and in useless and frivolous
imaginations. John Donne.
Verse
3. Unto God. To God, not concerning God, as some
interpret, but to God himself; to his praises, and with minds raised to
God, as it is in Ps 66:4, sing to himself; Gejerus also correctly
remarks, that the following discourse is addressed to God. Besides, it is to our
God, as in Ps 66:8, O bless our God, ye people: he is called God
absolutely, because he alone is the true God. Hermann Venema.
Verse
3. How terrible. Take from the Bible its awful doctrines, and
from providence its terrible acts, and the whole system, under which God
has placed us, would be emasculated. William S. Plumer.
Verse
3. Thine enemies shall submit themselves unto thee. In this,
our first consideration is, that God himself hath enemies; and then, how
should we hope to be, nay, why should we wish to be, without them. God had
good, that is, glory from his enemies; and we may have good, that is, advantage
in the way to glory, by the exercise of our patience, from enemies too. Those
for whom God had done most, the angels, turned enemies first; vex not thou
thyself, if those whom thou hast loved best hate thee deadliest... God himself
hath enemies. Thine enemies shall submit, says the text, to God; there
thou hast one comfort, though thou have enemies too; but the greater comfort
is, that God calls thine enemies his. Nolite tangere Christus meos (Ps
105:15), says God of all holy people; you were as good touch me, as touch any
of them, for, "they are the apple of mine eye" (Ps 17:8). Our Saviour
Christ never expostulated for himself; never said, Why scourge you me? why spit
you upon me? why crucify you me? As long as their rage determined in his
person, he opened not his mouth; when Saul extended the violence to the church,
to his servants, then Christ came to that, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest
thou me?" ...Here is a holy league, defensive and offensive; God shall not
only protect us from others, but he shall fight for us against them; our
enemies are his enemies. Condensed from John Donne.
Verse
3. Thine enemies submit themselves. Literally, lie unto
thee. This was remarkably the case with Pharaoh and the Egyptians.
They promised again and again to let the people go, when the hand of the Lord
was upon them; and they as frequently falsified their word. Adam Clarke.
Verse
3. (second clause). In times of affliction every
hypocrite—all tag and rag—will be ready to come in to God in an outward
profession; but usually this submission to God at this time is not out of
truth. Hence it is said, Through the greatness of thy power shall thine
enemies submit themselves unto thee: in the original it is, they shall
lie unto thee, and so it is translated by Arias Montanus, and some others,
noting hereby that a forced submission to God is seldom in truth. Jeremiah
Burroughs.
Verse
3. The earthquakes in New England occasioned a kind of religious
panic. A writer, who was then one of the ministers of Boston, informs us, that
immediately after the great earthquake, as it was called, a great number of his
flock came and expressed a wish to unite themselves with the church. But, on
conversing with them, he could find no evidence of improvement in their
religious views or feelings, no convictions of their own sinfulness; nothing,
in short, but a kind of superstitious fear, occasioned by a belief that the end
of the world was at hand. All their replies proved that they had not found God,
though they had seen the greatness of his power in the earthquake. Edward
Payson, D.D.
Verse
5. Come and see the works of God. An indirect censure is here
passed upon that almost universal thoughtlessness which leads men to neglect
the praises of God. John Calvin.
Verse
5. Come and see. The church at all times appeals to the
world, Come and see, as Jesus said to the two disciples of John the
Baptist, and Philip to Nathanael. Joh 1:39,46. God's marvels are to be seen by
all, and seeing them is the first step towards believing in their
divine author. A. R. Faussett.
Verse
6. He turned the sea into dry land. The psalmist refers to
the passage through the Red Sea and the Jordan, not as to transactions which
took place and were concluded at a given period of time, but as happening
really in every age. God's guidance of his people is a constant drying up of
the sea and of the Jordan, and the joy over his mighty deeds is always
receiving new materials. E. W. Hengstenberg.
Verse
6. There did we rejoice in him; where those things have been
done, there have we rejoiced in him, not taking any credit to ourselves as if
they were our acts, but rejoicing and glorying in God, and have praised him, as
may be seen in Exodus 15 and Joshua 3. The prophet uses the future for the
past, unless, perhaps, he meant to insinuate that these miracles would be
succeeded by much greater ones, of which they were only the types and figures.
A much greater miracle is that men should pass over the bitter sea of this
life, and cross the river of mortality, that never ceases to run, and which
swallows up and drowns so many, and still come safe and alive to the land of
eternal promise, and there rejoice in God himself, beholding him face to face;
and yet this greater miracle is so accomplished by God, that many pass through
this sea as if it were dry land, and cross this river with dry feet; that is to
say, having no difficulty in despising all things temporal, be they good or be
they bad; that is to say, being neither attached to the good things, nor
fearing the evil things, of this world, that they may arrive in security at the
heavenly Jerusalem, where we will rejoice in him, not in hope, but in complete
possession for eternity. Robert Bellarmine.
Verse
7. His eyes behold the nations. The radical meaning of the
word hku is augazein, to shine, and metonymically to examine with a
bright eye; to inspect with a piercing glance, and thence to behold,
for either good or evil, as Pr 15:3: "The eyes of the Lord are in every
place, beholding the evil and the good." Here it is taken in an
adverse sense, and means, to watch from a watch tower, to threaten from a lofty
place. Ps 37:32: "The wicked watcheth the righteous; "and Job
15:22: He is waited for "from the watch tower for the sword; "that
is to say, the sword is drawn above the head of the wicked, as if it
threatened him from the watch tower of God. But, at the same time, there is
also a reference to God's looking from the pillar of fire, and of cloud, upon
the host of Pharaoh in the Red Sea. Ex 14:24. Hermann Venema.
Verse
7. His eyes behold the nations. This should give check to
much iniquity. Can a man's conscience easily and delightedly swallow that which
he is sensible falls under the cognizance of God, when it is hateful to the eye
of his holiness, and renders the action odious to him? "Doth not he see my
ways, and count all my steps?" saith Job, (Job 31:4)... The consideration
of this attribute should make us humble. How dejected would a person be if he
were sure all the angels in heaven, and men upon earth, did perfectly know his
crimes, with all their aggravations! But what is created knowledge to an
infinite and just censuring understanding? When we consider that he knows our
actions, whereof there are multitudes, and our thoughts, whereof there are
millions; that he views all the blessings bestowed upon us; all the injuries we
have returned to him; that he exactly knows his own bounty, and our ingratitude;
all the idolatry, blasphemy, and secret enmity in every man's heart against
him; all tyrannical oppressions, hidden lusts, omissions of necessary duties,
violations of plain precepts, every foolish imagination, with all the
circumstances of them, and that perfectly in all their full anatomy, every mite
of unworthiness and wickedness in every circumstance... should not the
consideration of this melt our hearts into humiliation before him, and make us
earnest in begging pardon and forgiveness of him. Stephen Charnock.
Verse
9. Which holdeth our soul in life. As the works of creation
at first, and upholding all by his power and providence, are yoked together as
works of a like wonder, vouchsafed the creation in common, Heb 1:2-3; so just
in the like manner we find regeneration and perseverance joined, as the sum of
all other works in this life. Thus "begotten again, "and "kept
by the power of God to salvation, "are joined by the Apostle, 1Pe 1:3,5,
"Called and preserved in Christ Jesus; "so in Jude 1:1... "Blessed
be God, "says Peter, "who, according to his abundant mercy, hath
begotten us again." And, O bless our God, ye people, which holdeth our
souls in life, says the psalmist. Yea, if we do narrowly eye the words in
either, both Peter and the psalmist do bless God for both at once. Blessed be
God for "begetting us," who are also "kept by the power of
God;" so it follows in Peter. In the psalmist both are comprehended in
this one word:
1. Which
putteth our souls in life (so the margin, out of the Hebrew), that is, who
puts life into your soul at the first, as he did into Adam when he made him a
living soul;
2.
And then which holdeth, that is, continueth our souls in that life. So
the translators render it also, according to the psalmist's scope, and O
bless the Lord, saith the psalmist, for these and both these. Thomas
Goodwin.
Verse
9. Which holdest our soul in life. It is truth, that all we
have is in the hand of God; but God keeps our life in his hand last of all, and
he hath that in his hand in a special manner. Though the soul continue, life
may not continue; there is the soul when there is not life: life is that which
is the union of soul and body. Thou holdest our soul in life; that is,
thou holdest soul and body together. So Daniel describes God to Belshazzar, Da
5:23, "The God in whose hand thy breath is, and whose are all thy ways,
hast thou not glorified." The breath of princes is in the hand of God, and
the same hand holds the breath of the meanest subject. This may be matter of
comfort to us in times of danger, and times of death: when the hand of man is
lifted up to take thy life, remember thy life is held in the hand of God; and
as God said to Satan (Job 2:6): Afflict the body of Job, but save his life; so
God saith still to bloody wretches, who are as the limbs of Satan: The bodies
of such and such are in your hands, the estates of such and such are in your
hands, but save their lives. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
9. Putteth our soul in life. An elegant and emphatic
expression, only to be understood by observing the exact force of the words.
The soul is the life, as is well known, the word Myv is to
place, to place upon, to press in, the word Myyx signifies properly joinings,
fastenings together, and hence those faculties and powers by which nature
is held together and made firm. Hermann Venema.
Verse
9. Which holdeth our soul in life. He holdeth our soul in
life, that it may not drop away of itself; for being continually in our hands,
it is apt to slip through our fingers. Matthew Henry.
Verse
9. And suffereth not our feet to be moved. It is a great
mercy to be kept from desperate courses in the time of sad calamities, to be
supported under burdens, that we sink not; and to be prevented from denying
God, or his truth, in time of persecution. David Dickson.
Verse
10. Thou, O God, hast proved us. It is not known what corn
will yield, till it come to the flail; nor what grapes, till they come to the
press. Grace is hid in nature, as sweet water in rose leaves; the fire of
affliction fetcheth it out.—Thou hast tried us as silver. The wicked
also are tried (Re 3:10), but they prove reprobate silver (Jer 6:28), or at
best, as alchemy gold, that will not bear the seventh fire, as Job did (Job
23:10). John Trapp.
Verse
10. As silver is tried. Convinced from the frequent use of
this illustration, that there was something more than usually instructive in
the process of assaying and purifying silver, I have collected some few facts
upon the subject. The hackneyed story of the refiner seeing his image in the
molten silver while in the fire, has so charmed most of us, that we have not
looked further; yet, with more careful study, much could be brought out. To
assay silver requires great personal care in the operator. "The
principle of assaying gold and silver is very simple theoretically, but in
practice great experience is necessary to insure accuracy; and there is no
branch of business which demands more personal and undivided attention. The
result is liable to the influence of so many contingencies, that no assayer who
regards his reputation will delegate the principal process to one not equally
skilled with himself. Besides the result ascertainable by weight, there are
allowances and compensations to be made, which are known only to an experienced
assayer, and if these were disregarded, as might be the case with the mere
novice, the report would be wide from the truth." (Encyclopaedia
Britannica.) Pagnini's version reads: "Thou hast melted us by blowing upon
us, "and in the monuments of Egypt, artificers are seen with the blowpipe
operating with small fire places, with cheeks to confine and reflect the heat;
the worker evidently paying personal attention, which is evident also in Mal
3:3, "He shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver." To assay
silver requires a skilfully constructed furnace. The description of this
furnace would only weary the reader, but it is evidently a work of art in
itself. Even the trial of our faith is much more precious than that of gold
which perisheth. He has refined us, but not with silver, he would not trust us
there, the furnace of affliction is far more skilfully arranged than that. To
assay silver the heat must be nicely regulated. "During the operation,
the assayer's attention should be directed to the heat of the furnace, which
must be neither too hot nor too cold: if too hot, minute portions of silver
will be carried off with the lead, and so vitiate the assay; moreover, the
pores of the cupel being more open, greater absorption will ensue, and there is
liability to loss from that cause. One indication of an excess of heat in the
furnace, is the rapid and perpendicular rising of the fumes to the ceiling of
the muffle, the mode of checking and controlling which has been pointed out in
the description of the improved furnace. When the fumes are observed to fall to
the bottom of the muffle, the furnace is then too cold; and if left unaltered,
it will be found that the cupellation has been imperfectly performed, and the
silver will not have entirely freed itself from the base metals. (Encyclopaedia
Britannica.) The assayer repeats his trying process. Usually two or more
trials of the same piece are made, so that great accuracy may be secured. Seven
times silver is said to be purified, and the saints through varied trials reach
the promised rest." C. H. S.
Verse
11. Thou broughtest us into the net, etc. Our enemies have
pursued us (like to wild beasts taken by the hunter) into most grievous straits
(1Sa 13:6). They have used us like beasts of burden, and laid sore loads upon
us, which they have fast bound upon our backs. Thou laidest affliction upon
our loins. Coarctationenem in lumbis; we are not only hampered, as in a
net, but fettered, as with chains; as if we had been in the jailor's or
hangman's hands. John Trapp.
Verse
12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads. The agents
are men. Man is a sociable living creature, and should converse with man
in love and tranquillity. Man should be a supporter of man; is he become an
overthrower? He should help and keep him up; doth he ride over him and tread
him under foot? O apostasy, not only from religion, but even from humanity! Quid
homini inimicissimum? Homo. (Seneca.) The greatest danger that befalls man
comes whence it should least come, from man himself. Caetera animantia,
says Pliny, in suo genere, probe degunt, &c. Lions fight not with
lions; serpents spend not their venom on serpents; but man is the main suborner
of mischief to his own kind...
1. They
ride. What need they mount themselves upon beasts, that have feet malicious
enough to trample on us? They have a "foot of pride, "Ps 36:11, from
which David prayed to be delivered; a presumptuous heel, which they dare lift
up against God; and, therefore, a tyrannous toe, to spurn dejected men. They
need not horses and mules, that can kick with the foot of a revengeful malice,
Ps 32:9.
2. Over
us. The way is broad enough wherein they travel, for it is the devil's
road. They might well miss the poor, there is room enough besides; they need
not ride over us. It were more brave for them to justle with champions that
will not give them the way. We never contend for their path; they have it
without our envy, not without our pity. Why should they ride over us?
3. Over
our heads. Is it not contentment enough to their pride to ride, to
their malice to ride over us, but must they delight in bloodiness to
ride over our heads? Will not the breaking of our arms and legs, and
such inferior limbs, satisfy their indignation? Is it not enough to rack our
strength, to mock our innocence, to prey on our estates, but must they thirst
after our bloods and lives? Quo tendit saeva libido? Whither will their
madness run? But we must not tie ourselves to the letter. Here is a mystical or
metamorphical gradation of their cruelty. Their riding is proud; their riding
over us is malicious; and their riding over our heads is bloody oppression. Thomas
Adams.
Verse
12. (first clause). The time was when the Bonners and butchers
rode over the faces of God's saints, and madefied (Madefy, to moisten, to make
wet) the earth with their bloods, every drop whereof begot a new believer. Thomas
Adams.
Verse
12. Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads. This verse is
like that sea (Mt 8:24) so tempestuous at first, that the vessel was covered
with waves; but Christ's rebuke quieted all, and there followed a great calm.
Here are cruel Nimrods riding over innocent heads, as they would over fallow
lands; and dangerous passages through fire and water; but the storm is soon
ended, or rather the passengers are landed. Thou broughtest us out into a
wealthy place. So that this strain of David's music, or psalmody, consists
of two notes—one mournful, the other mirthful; the one a touch of distress, the
other of redress: which directs our course to an observation of misery
and of mercy; of grievous misery, of gracious mercy. There is desolation
and consolation in one verse: a deep dejection, as laid under the feet of
beasts; a happy deliverance, broughtest us out into a wealthy place. In
both these strains God hath his stroke; he is a principal in this concert. He
is brought in for an actor, and for an author; and actor in the
persecution, and author in the deliverance. Thou causest, etc; Thou
broughtest, etc. In the one he is a causing worker; in the other a sole
working cause. In the one he is joined with company: in the other he works
alone. He hath a finger in the former; his whole hand is in the latter. We must
begin with misery before we come to mercy. If there were no
trouble, we should not know the worth of a deliverance. The passion of the
saints is given, by the hearty and ponderous description, for very grievous;
yet it is written in the forehead of the text, "The Lord caused it." Thou
causest men to ride, etc. Hereupon, some wicked libertine may offer to rub
his filthiness upon God's purity, and to plead an authentic derivation of all
his villainy against the saints from the Lord's warrant: He caused it.
We answer, to the justification of truth itself, that God doth ordain and order
every persecution that striketh his children, without any allowance to the
instrument that gives the blow. God works in the same action with others, not
after the same manner. In the affliction of Job were three agents—God, Satan,
and the Sabeans. The devil works on his body, the Sabeans on his goods; yet Job
confessed a third party: "The Lord gives, and the Lord takes away."
Here oppressors trample on the godly, and God is said to cause it. He causeth
affliction for trial (so Ps 66:10-11: Thou hast tried us, etc.); they
work it for malice; neither can God be accused nor they excused. Thomas
Adams.
Verse
12. Thou hast placed men over our heads. Thus Jerome renders,
although the Hebrew noun vwga, is in the singular, the word itself denotes an
obscure, mean man, who is mentioned with indignity, but ought to be buried
in oblivion. The singular noun is taken collectively, and so also is wgvar,
with the affix. Such were the Egyptian and Babylonish idolaters, whom the
Hebrew served. To place any one over the head of another, or, as the
Hebrew word tbkrh means, to ride, to be superior to, to subdue to
oneself and subject, and to sit upon and insult, just as the horseman rules
with the rein, and spur, and whip the beast which he rides. Lorinus.
Verse
12. To ride over our heads. This is an allusion to beasts of
burden, and particularly to camels, whose heads the rider almost sits over, and
so domineers over them as he pleases. Thomas Fenton, in "Annotations on
the Book of Job, and the Psalms." 1732.
Verse
12. We went through fire and through water. The children of Israel
when they had escaped the Red Sea, and seen their enemies the Egyptians dead,
they thought all was cocksure, and therefore sang Epicinia, songs of
rejoicing for the victory. But what followed within a while? The Lord stirred
up another enemy against them from out their bowels, as it were, which was
hunger, and this pinched them sorer, they thought, than the Egyptian. But was
this the last? No; after the hunger came thirst, and this made them to murmur
as much as the former; and after the thirst came fiery serpents, and fire and
pestilence, and Amalekites, and Midianites, and what not? Thus hath it been
with the church not only under the law, but also under Christ, as it might be
easily declared unto you. Neither hath it been better with the several members
thereof; they likewise have been made conformable to the body and to the Head.
What a sight of temptations did Abraham endure? So Jacob, so Joseph, so the
patriarchs, so the prophets? Yea, and all they that would live godly in Christ
Jesus, though their sorrow in the end were turned to joy, yet they wept and
lamented first. Though they were brought at the length to a wealthy place, yet
they passed through fire and water first. Miles Smith, 1624.
Verse
12. We went through fire and through water. There was a great
variety of such perils; and not only of several, but of contrary sorts: We
went through fire and through water, either of which singly and alone
denotes an extremity of evils. Thus, through water (Ps 69:1-2): "Save me,
O God; for the waters are come in unto my soul. I sink in deep mire, where
there is no standing: I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow
me." Or, through fire (Eze 15:7): "And I will set my face against
them; they shall go out from one fire, and another fire shall devour them; and
ye shall know that I am the Lord, when I set my face against them." But
when through both successively, one after the other, this denotes an
accumulation of miseries, or trials, indeed: as we read Isa 43:2, with God's
promise to his people in such conditions: "When thou passest through the
waters I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow
thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither
shall the flame kindle upon thee." Which promise is here, you see,
acknowledged by the psalmist to have been performed: God was with the three
children when they walked through the fire, in the very letter of Isaiah's
speech; and with the children of Israel when they went through the water of the
Red Sea. Thomas Goodwin.
Verse
12. We went through fire and through water. In allusion,
probably, to the ordeal by fire and water, which is of great antiquity. On the
question who had interred the body of Polynices:
"All
denied:
Offering, in proof of innocence, to grasp
The burning steel, to walk through fire, and take
Their solemn oath they knew not of the deed."
Sophocles.
From T. S. Millington's "Testimony of the Heathen to the Truths of Holy
Writ." 1863.
Verse
12. Fire and water. The Jewish law required both these for
purification of spoil in war, where they could be borne. Nu 31:23:
"Everything that may abide the fire, ye shall make it go through the fire,
and it shall be clean: nevertheless it shall be purified through the water of
separation." God's saints are, therefore, subject to both ordeals. C.
H. S.
Verse
12. But thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place. Every
word is sweetly significant, and amplifies God's mercy to us. Four especially
are remarkable:—
1.
The deliverer;
2. The deliverance;
3. The delivered; and,
4. Their felicity or blessed advancement.
So
there is the deliverer, aliquid celsitudinis, Thou; in the delivery, certitudinis,
broughtest out, in the delivered, solitudinis, us; in the happiness,
plenitudinis, into a wealthy place. There is highness and lowness,
sureness and fulness. The deliverer is great, the deliverance is certain, the
distress grievous, the exaltation glorious. There is yet a first word, that
like a key unlocks this golden gate of mercy, a veruntamen:—BUT. This is
vox respirationis, a gasp that fetcheth back again the very life of
comfort. But thou broughtest, etc. We were fearfully endangered into the
hands of our enemies; they rode and trod upon us, and drove us through hard
perplexities. But thou, etc. If there had been a full point or period at
our misery, if those gulfs of persecution had quite swallowed us, and all our
light of comfort had been thus smothered and extinguished we might have cried, Periit
spes nostra, yea, periit salus nostra.—Our hope, our help is quite
gone. He had mocked us that would have spoken, Be of good cheer. This same but
is like a happy oar, that turns our vessel from the rocks of despair, and lands
it at the haven of comfort. Thomas Adams.
Verse
12. (second and third clause).
1.
The outlet of the trouble is happy. They are in fire and water, yet they get
through them; we went through fire and water, and did not perish in the flames
or floods. Whatever the troubles of the saints are, blessed be God there is a
way through them.
2.
The inlet to a better state is much more happy. Thou broughtest us out into
a wealthy place, into a well watered place; for the word is, like the
gardens of the Lord, and therefore fruitful. Matthew Henry.
Verse
12. (last clause). Thou, O God, with the temptation hast given
the issue. Thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place.
1.
Thou hast proved, and thou hast brought.
2.
Thou laidest the trouble, and thou tookest it off; yea, and hast made us an
ample recompense, for thou hast brought us to a moist, pleasant, lovely,
fertile, rich place, a happy condition, a flourishing condition of things, so
that thou hast made us to forget all our trouble. William Nicholson, in
"David's Harp strung and tuned." 1662.
Verse
12. A wealthy place. The hand of God led them in that fire and
water of affliction through which they went; but who led them out? The psalmist
tells us in the next words: Thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place;
the margin saith, into a moist place. They were in fire and water
before. Fire is the extremity of heat and dryness; water is the
extremity of moistness and coldness. A moist place notes a due
temperament of heat and cold, of dryness and moistness, and therefore elegantly
shadows that comfortable and contented condition into which the good hand of
God had brought them, which is significantly expressed in our translation by a
wealthy place; those places flourishing most in fruitfulness, and so in
wealth, which are neither over hot nor over cold, neither over dry not over
moist. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
13. You see all the parts of this song; the whole concert or harmony
of all is praising God. You see quo loco, in his house; quo modo,
with burnt offering; quo animo, paying our vows. Thomas Adams.
Verse
13. Burnt offerings. For ourselves, be we sure that the best
sacrifice we can give to God is obedience; not a dead beast, but a living soul.
The Lord takes not delight in the blood of brutish creatures. It is the mind,
the life, the soul, the obedience, that he requires: 1Sa 15:22, "To obey
is better than sacrifice." Let this be our burnt offering, our holocaust,
a sanctified body and mind given up to the Lord, Ro 12:1-2. First, the heart:
"My son, give me thy heart." Is not the heart enough? No, the hand
also: Isa 1:16, Wash the hands from blood and pollution. Is not the hand
enough? No, the foot also: "Remove thy foot from evil." Is not the
foot enough? No, the lips also: "Guard the doors of thy mouth; " Ps
34:13, "Refrain thy tongue from evil." Is not thy tongue enough? No,
the ear also: "Let him that hath ears to hear, hear." Is not the ear
enough? No, the eye also: "Let thine eyes be towards the Lord." Is
not all this sufficient? No, give body and spirit: 1Co 6:20, "Ye are
bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit,
which are God's." When the eyes abhor lustful objects, the ear slanders,
the foot erring paths, the hands wrong and violence, the tongue flattery and
blasphemy, the heart pride and hypocrisy; this is thy holocaust, thy whole
burnt offering. Thomas Adams.
Verses
13, 15. In the burnt offerings, we see his approach to the altar
with the common and general sacrifice; and next, in his paying vows, we
see he has brought his peace offerings with him. Again, therefore, he
says at the altar: I will offer unto thee burnt sacrifices of fatlings
(Ps 66:15). This is the general offering, brought from the best of his flock
and herd. Then follow the peace offerings: With the incense (trjq, fuming
smoke) of rams; I will offer bullocks with goats. Selah. Having brought his
offerings, he is in no haste to depart, notwithstanding; for his heart is full.
Ere, therefore, he leaves the sanctuary, he utters the language of a soul at
peace with God: Ps 66:16-20. This, truly, is one whom the very God of peace
has sanctified, and whose whole spirit, and body, and soul he will preserve
blameless unto the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. 1Th 5:23. Andrew A.
Bonar.
Verses
13-15. He tells what were the vows he promised in his troubles, and says
he promised the richest sacrifice of cattle that could be made according to the
law. These were three—rams, cows, and goats. Rams included lambs; cows included
heifers; and goats, kids. Robert Bellarmine.
Verse
14. Which my lips have uttered. Hebrew, have opened;
that is which I have uttered, diductis labiis, with lips wide open. Videmus
qualiter vota nuncupari soleant, saith Vatablus. Here we see after what
sort vows used to be made, when we are under any pressing affliction; but when
once delivered, how heavily many come off in point of payment. John Trapp.
Verse
14. Express mention is made of opened lips to indicate that
the vows were made with great vehemence of mind, and in a state of need
and pressure; so that his lips were broken through and widely
opened. For the root, huk contains the idea of opening anything with
violence; to break open, as the Latin expression is, rumpere
labia. Hermann Venema.
Verse
15. I will offer, etc. Thou shalt have the best of the herd
and of the fold. Adam Clarke.
Verse
15. Fatlings. For as I will not come empty into thy house, so
I will not bring thee a niggardly present; but offer sacrifices of all sorts,
and the best and choicest in every kind. Symon Patrick.
Verse
15. Bullocks with goats. That is, I will liberally provide for
every part of the service at the tabernacle. Thomas Scott.
Verse
16. Come and hear, all ye that fear God. One reason why the
saints are so often inviting all that fear God to come unto them is, because
the saints see and know the great good that they shall get by those that fear
God. The children of darkness are so wise in their generation as to desire most
familiarity and acquaintance with those persons whom they conceive may prove
most profitable and advantageous to them, and to pretend much friendship there
where is hope of most benefit. And shall not the saints, the children of light,
upon the same account wish and long for the society of those that fear God,
because they see what great good they shall gain by them? It is no wonder that
the company of those that fear God is so much in request, since it is
altogether gainful and commodious; it's no wonder they have many invitations,
since they are guests by which something is still gotten; and, indeed, among
all persons living, those that fear God are the most useful and enriching. Samuel
Heskins, in "Soul Mercies Precious in the Eyes of Saints... set forth in a
little Treatise on Ps 66:16." 1654.
Verse
16. All ye that fear God. For such only will hear to good
purpose; others either cannot, or care not. And I will declare, etc.
Communicate unto you my soul secrets and experiments. There is no small good to
be gotten by such declarations. Bilney, perceiving Latimer to be zealous
without knowledge, came to him in his study and desired him for God's sake to
hear his confession. "I did so, "saith Latimer, "and, to say the
truth, by this confession I learned more than afore in many years. So from that
time forward I began to smell the word of God, and forsake the school doctors,
and such fooleries." John Trapp.
Verse
16. Ye that fear God. Observe the invitation given to those
only who fear God, because "the fear of the Lord is the beginning
of wisdom; "he loosens the feet to come, opens the ears to hear;
and therefore, he who has no fear of God will be called to no purpose, either
to come or to hear. Robert Bellarmine.
Verse
16. I will declare. Consider the ends which a believer should
purpose in the discharge of this duty ("of communicating Christian
experience"). The principal end he should have in view when he declares
his experience is the glory of that God, who hath dealt so bountifully with
him. He would surely have the Lord exalted for his faithfulness and goodness to
him; he would have it published that the name of the Lord might be great; that
sinners might know that his God is faithful to his word; that he hath not only
engaged to be "a present help in time of need, "but that he hath
found him in reality to be so. As he knows the enemies of God are ready enough
to charge him with neglect of his people, because of the trials and afflictions
they are exercised with; so he would, in contradiction to them, declare what he
hath found in his own experience, that in very faithfulness he afflicts those
that are dearest to him. And with what lustre doth the glory of God shine, when
his children are ready to acknowledge that he never called them out to any duty
but his grace was sufficient for them; that he never laid his hand upon them in
any afflictive exercise, but he, at the same time, supplied them with all those
supports which they stood in need of? I say, for Christians thus to stand up,
on proper occasions, and bear their experimental testimony to the faithfulness
and goodness of God, what a tendency hath it to make the name of the Lord, who
hath been their strong tower, glorious in the midst of the earth... How may we
blush and be ashamed, that we have so much conversation in the world and so
little about what God hath done for our souls? It is a very bad sign upon us,
in our day, that the things of God are generally postponed; while either the
affairs of state, or the circumstances of outward life, or other things,
perhaps, of a more trifling nature, are the general subjects of our
conversation. What! are we ashamed of the noblest, the most interesting
subject? It is but a poor sign that we have felt anything of it, if we think it
unnecessary to declare it to our fellow Christians. What think you? Suppose any
two of us were cast upon a barbarous shore, where we neither understood the
language, nor the customs of the inhabitants, and were treated by them with
reproach and cruelty; do you think we should not esteem it a happiness that we
could unburden ourselves to each other, and communicate our griefs and
troubles? And shall we think it less so, while we are in such a world as this,
in a strange land, and at a distance from our Father's house? Shall we neglect
conversing with each other? No; let our conversation not only be in heaven, but
about spiritual and heavenly things. Samuel Wilson (1703-1750), in
"Sermons on Various Subjects."
Verse
16. I will declare. After we are delivered from the dreadful
apprehensions of the wrath of God, it is our duty to be publicly thankful. It
is for the glory of our Healer to speak of the miserable wounds that once
pained us; and of that kind hand that saved us when we were brought very low.
It is for the glory of our Pilot to tell of the rocks and of the sands; the
many dangers and threatening calamities that he, by his wise conduct, made us
to escape: and to see us safe on the shore, may cause others that are yet
afflicted, and tossed with tempests, to look to him for help; for he is able
and ready to save them as well as us. We must, like soldiers, when a tedious
war is over, relate our combats, our fears, our dangers, with delight; and make
known our experiences to doubting, troubled Christians, and to those that have
not yet been under such long and severe trials as we have been. Timothy
Rogers (1660-1729), in "A Discourse on Trouble of Mind."
Verse
17. This verse may be rendered thus:—I cried unto him with my
mouth, and his exaltation was under my tongue; that is, I was considering
and meditating how I might lift up and exalt the name of God, and make his
praise glorious. Holy thoughts are said to be under the tongue when we are in a
preparation to bring them forth. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
17. He was extolled with my tongue. It is a proof that prayer
has proceeded from unworthy motives, when the blessings which succeed it are
not acknowledged with as much fervency as when they were originally implored.
The ten lepers all cried for mercy, and all obtained it, but only one returned
to render thanks. John Morison.
Verse
17. He was extolled with my tongue: literally an extolling (of Him
was) under my tongue, implying fulness of praise (Ps 10:7). A store
of praise being conceived as under the tongue, whence a portion might be
taken on all occasions. The sense is, scarcely had I cried unto him when, by
delivering me, he gave me abundant reason to extol him. (Ps 34:6.) A. R.
Faussett.
Verse
17. With my tongue. Let the praise of God be in thy tongue,
under thy tongue, and upon thy tongue, that it may shine before all men, and
that they may see that thy heart is good. The fish lucerna has a shining
tongue, (A reviewer condemns us for quoting false natural history, but no intelligent
reader will be misled thereby.—Editor.) from which it takes its name; and in
the depths of the sea the light of its tongue reveals it: if thy heart has a
tongue, shining with the praises of God, it will sufficiently show itself of
what sort it is. Hence the old saying, "Speak, that I may see thee." Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
18. If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.
The very supposition that "if he regarded iniquity in his heart, the Lord
would not hear him, "implies the possibility that such may be the state
even of believers; and there is abundant reason to fear that it is in this way
their prayers are so often hindered, and their supplications so frequently
remain unanswered. Nor is it difficult to conceive how believers may be
chargeable with regarding iniquity in their heart, even amidst all the
solemnity of coming into the immediate presence of God, and directly addressing
him in the language of prayer and supplication. It is possible that they may
put themselves into such a situation, in a state of mind but little fitted for
engaging in that holy exercise; the world, in one form or another, may for the
time have the ascendancy in their hearts; and there may have been so much
formality in their confessions, and so much indifference in their
supplications, that when the exercise is over, they could not honestly declare
that they really meant what they acknowledged, or seriously desired what they
prayed for. A Christian, it is true, could not be contented to remain in a state
like this; and, when he is awakened from it, as he sooner or later will be, he
cannot fail to look back upon it with humiliation and shame. But we fear there
are seasons in which believers themselves may make a very near approach to such
a state; and what then is the true interpretation of prayers offered up at such
a moment? It is in fact saying, that there is something which, for the time,
they prefer to what they are formally asking of God; that, though the blessing
which they do ask may be for a time withheld, yet they would find a
compensation in the enjoyment of the worldly things which do at the moment
engross their affections; and that, in reality, they would not choose to have
at that instant such an abundant communication of spiritual influence imparted
to them, as would render these worldly objects less valuable in their
estimation, and would turn the whole tide of their affections towards spiritual
things... The Christian may sometimes betake himself to prayer, to ask counsel
of God in some perplexity regarding divine truth, or to seek direction in some
doubtful point of duty; but, instead of being prepared fairly to exercise his
judgment in the hope that, while doing so, the considerations that lie of the
side of truth will be made to his mind clear and convincing; he may have
allowed his inclinations so to influence and bias his judgment towards the side
of error, or in favour of the line of conduct which he wishes to pursue, that
when he asks counsel it may only be in the hope that his previous opinion will
be confirmed, and when he seeks direction it is in reality on a point about
which he was previously determined... Another case is, I fear, but too common,
and in which the believer may be still more directly chargeable with regarding
iniquity in his heart. It is possible that there may be in his heart or life
something which he is conscious is not altogether as it should be—some earthly
attachment which he cannot easily justify—or some point of conformity to the
maxims and practices of the world, which he finds it difficult to reconcile
with christian principle; and yet all the struggle which these have from time
to time cost him, may only have been an effort of ingenuity on his part to
retain them without doing direct violence to conscience—a laborious getting up
of arguments whereby to show how they may be defended, or in what way they may
lawfully be gone into; while the true and simple reason of his going into them,
namely, the love of the world, is all the while kept out of view. And, as an experimental
proof of how weak and inconclusive all these arguments are, and at the same
time how unwilling he still is to relinquish his favourite objects, he may be
conscious that in confessing his sins he leaves them out of the enumeration,
rather because he would willingly pass them over, than because he is convinced
that they need not be there; he may feel that he cannot and dare not make them
the immediate subject of solemn and deliberate communing with God; and, after
all his multiplied and ingenuous defences, he may be reconciled to them at
last, only by ceasing to agitate the question whether they are lawful or not. Robert
Gordon, D.D., 1825.
Verse
18. Whence is it that a man's regarding or loving sin in his heart
hinders his prayers from acceptance with God?
1.
The first reason is, because in this case he cannot pray by the Spirit. All
prayers that are acceptable with God are the breathings of his own Spirit with
us. Ro 8:26. As without the intercession of Christ we cannot have our prayers
accepted, so without the intercession of the Spirit we cannot pray...
2.
The second reason is, because as long as a man regards iniquity in his heart he
cannot pray in faith; that is, he cannot build a rational confidence upon any
promise that God will accept him. Now, faith always respects the promise, and
promise of acceptance is made only to the upright: so long, therefore, as men
cherish a love of sin in their heart, they either understand not the promises,
and so they pray without understanding, or they understand them, and yet
misapply them to themselves, and so they pray in presumption: in neither case,
they have little cause to hope for acceptance...
3.
The third reason is, because while we regard iniquity in our hearts we cannot
pray with fervency; which, next to sincerity, is the great qualification of
prayer, to which God has annexed a promise of acceptance (Mt 11:12): "The
kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force."
Mt 7:7: those only that seek are like to find, and those that knock to have
admittance; all which expressions denote vehemence and importunity. Now, the
cause of vehemence, in our prosecution of any good, is our love of it; for
proportionable to the affection we bear to anything is the earnestness of our
desires and the diligence of our pursuit after it. So long, therefore, as the
love of sin possesses our hearts, our love to spiritual things is dull, heavy,
inactive, and our prayers for them must needs be answerable. O the wretched
fallacy that the soul will here put upon itself! At the same time it will love
its sin and pray against it; at the same time it will entreat for grace, with a
desire not to prevail: as a father confesses of himself, that before his
conversion he would pray for chastity, with a secret reserve in his wishes that
God would not grant his prayer. Such are the mysterious, intricate treacheries
by which the love of sin will make a soul deceive and circumvent itself. How
languidly and faintly will it pray for spiritual mercies; conscience, in the
meanwhile, giving the lie to every such petition! The soul, in this case,
cannot pray against sin in earnest; it fights against it, but neither with hope
nor intent to conquer; as lovers, usually, in a game one against another, with
a desire to lose. So, then, while we regard iniquity, how is it possible for us
to regard spiritual things, the only lawful object of our prayers? and, if we
regard them not, how can we be urgent with God for the giving of them? And
where there is no fervency on our part, no wonder if there is no answer on
God's. Robert South, 1633-1716.
Verse
18. If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.
Though the subject matter of a saint's prayer be founded on the word, yet if
the end he aims at be not levelled right, this is a door at which his prayer
will be stopped: "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye
may consume it upon your lusts." Jas 4:3. Take, I confess, a Christian in
his right temper, and he aims at the glory of God; yet, as a needle that is touched
with a loadstone may be removed from its point to which nature hath espoused
it, though trembling till it again recovers it; so a gracious soul may in a
particular act and request vary from this end, being jogged by Satan, yea,
disturbed by an enemy nearer home—his own unmortified corruption. Do you not
think it possible for a saint, in distress of body and spirit, to pray for
health in the one, and comfort in the other, with too selfish a respect to his
own ease and quiet? Yes, surely; and to pray for gifts and assistance in some
eminent service, with an eye to his own credit and applause; to pray for a
child with too inordinate a desire that the honour of his house may be built up
in him. And this may be understood as the sense, in part, of that expression, If
I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me. For though to
desire our own health, peace, and reputation, be not an iniquity, when
contained within the limits that God hath set; yet, when they overflow at such
a height, as to overtop the glory of God, yea, to stand but in a level with it,
they are a great abomination. That which in the first or second degree is
wholesome food, would be rank poison in the fourth or fifth: therefore,
Christian, catechize thyself, before thou prayest: O, my soul, what sends thee
on this errand? Know but thy own mind what thou prayest for, and thou mayest
soon know God's mind how thou shalt speed. Secure God his glory, and thou
mayest soon know God's mind how thou shalt speed. William Gurnall.
Verse
18. If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.
1.
They regard iniquity in their heart, who practise it secretly, who are under
restraint from the world, but are not possessed of an habitual fear of the
omniscient God, the searcher of all hearts, and from whose eyes there is no
covering of thick darkness where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves.
Jer 23:24.
2.
They regard iniquity in the heart, who entertain and indulge the desire of sin,
although in the course of providence they may be restrained from the actual
commission of it. I am persuaded the instances are not rare, of men feeding
upon sinful desires, even when through want of opportunity, through the fear of
man, or through some partial restraint of conscience, they dare not carry them
into execution.
3.
They regard iniquity in their heart, who reflect upon past sins with delight,
or without sincere humiliation of mind. Perhaps our real disposition, both
towards sin and duty, may be as certainly discovered by the state of our minds
after, as in the time of action. The strength and suddenness of temptation may
betray even a good man into the commission of sin; the backwardness of heart
and power of inward corruption may make duty burdensome and occasion many
defects in the performance; but every real Christian remembers his past sins
with unfeigned contrition of spirit, and a deep sense of unworthiness before
God; and the discharge of his duty, however difficult it may have been at the
time, affords him the utmost pleasure on reflection. It is otherwise with many;
they can remember their sins without sorrow, they can speak of them without
shame, and sometimes even with a mixture of boasting and vain glory. Did you
never hear them recall their past follies, and speak of them with such relish,
that it seems to be more to renew the pleasure than to regret the sin? Even
supposing such persons to have forsaken the practice of some sin, if they can
thus look upon them with inward complacency, their seeming reformation must be
owing to a very different cause from renovation of heart.
4.
They regard iniquity in their heart, who look upon the sins of others with
approbation; or, indeed, who can behold them without grief. Sin is so
abominable a thing, so dishonouring to God, and so destructive to the souls of
men, that no real Christian can witness it without concern. Hence it is so
frequently taken notice of in Scripture, as the character of a servant of God,
that he mourns for the sins of others. Ps 119:136,158.
5.
In the last place, I suspect that they regard sin in the heart, who are
backward to bring themselves to the trial, and who are not truly willing that
God himself would search and try them. If any, therefore, are unwilling to be
tried, if they are backward to self examination, it is an evidence of a strong
and powerful attachment to sin. It can proceed from nothing but from a secret
dread of some disagreeable discovery, or the detection of some lust which they
cannot consent to forsake... There are but too many who though they live in the
practice of sin, and regard iniquity in their hearts, do yet continue their
outward attendance on the ordinances of divine institution, and at stated times
lay hold of the seals of God's covenant. Shall they find any acceptance with
him? No. He counts it a profane mockery; he counts it a sacrilegious
usurpation. Ps 50:16-17. Shall they have any comfort in it? No: unless in so
far as in righteous judgment he suffers them to be deceived; and they are
deceived, and they are most unhappy, who lie longest under the delusion. Ps
50:21. Shall they have any benefit by it? No: instead of appeasing his wrath,
it provokes his vengeance; instead of enlightening their minds, it blinds their
eyes; instead of sanctifying their nature, it hardens their hearts. See a description
of those who had been long favoured with outward privileges and gloried in
them. Joh 12:39-40. So that nothing is more essential to an acceptable approach
to God in the duties of his worship in general, and particularly to receiving
the seals of his covenant, than a thorough and universal separation from all
known sin. Job 11:13-14. John Witherspoon (1722-1749), in a Sermon entitled
"The Petitions of the Insincere Unavailing."
Verses
18-20. Lord, I find David making a syllogism, in mood and figure, two
propositions he perfected. If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will
not hear me; but verily God hath heard me; he hath attended to the voice of my
prayer. Now I expected that David should have concluded thus:
"Therefore I regard not wickedness in my heart; but far otherwise he
concludes": Blessed be God, which hath not turned away my prayer, nor
his mercy from me. Thus David had deceived, but not wronged me. I looked
that he should have clapped the crown on his own, and he puts it on God's head.
I will learn this excellent logic; for I like David's better than Aristotle's
syllogisms, that whatsoever the premise be, I make God's glory the conclusion. Thomas
Fuller.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
3. The terrible in God's works of nature and providence.
Verse
4.
1. Who?
All the earth.
(a)
All, collectively, all classes and tribes.
(b) All numerically.
(c) All harmoniously.
2. What?
Shall worship and sing.
(a)
Humiliation; then,
(b) Exultation.
3. When?
Shall, &c. Denotes
(a)
Futurity.
(b) Certainty. God has spoken it. All things are tending towards it. G. R.
Verse
5. Here is—
1.
A subject for general study: the Works of God.
2.
For particular study: his doings towards, etc.
(a)
These are the most wonderful.
(b) In these we are most concerned.
Verse
7. Sovereignty, immutability ("for ever"), and
omniscience,—the enemies of proud rebels.
Verse
8. (last clause). To get a hearing for the gospel—difficult,
necessary, and possible. Ways and means for so doing.
Verses
8-9.
1.
Praise to.
(a)
As God.
(b) As our God.
2.
Praise for. Preservation.
(a)
Of natural life.
(b) Of spiritual life.
3.
Praise by, ye people.
(a)
On your own account.
(b) On account of others.
Or
(a) Individually.
(b) Unitedly. G. R.
Verse
9. Perseverance the subject of gratitude.
1.
The maintenance of the inner life.
2.
The integrity of the outward character.
Verse
10. The assaying of the saints.
Verse
10.
1.
The design of the afflictions.
(a)
To prove them.
(b) To reprove them.
2.
The illustration of that design. As silver, etc.
3.
The issue of the trial.
Verses
11-12. The hand of God should be acknowledged.
1.
In our temptations: Thou broughtest us.
2. In our bodily afflictions: Thou laidest, etc.
3. In our persecutions: Thou hast caused, etc.
4. In our deliverances: Thou broughtest us out, etc. G. R.
Verse
12. Fire and water. Varied trials.
1.
Discover different evils.
2. Test all parts of manhood.
3. Educate varied graces.
4. Endear many promises.
5. Illustrate divine attributes.
6. Afford extensive knowledge.
7. Create capacity for the varied joys of heaven.
Verse
12. (first clause). The rage of oppression. Thomas Adam's
Sermon.
Verse
12. (last clause). A plentiful place, free from penury; a
pleasant place, void of sorrow; a safe place, free from dangers and distresses.
Daniel Wilcocks.
Verse
12. (last clause). The victory of patience, with the
expiration of malice. Thomas Adams' Sermon.
Verse
12. (last clause). The wealth of a soul whom God has tried and
delivered. Among other riches he has the wealth of experience, of strengthened
graces, of confirmed faith, and of sympathy for others.
Verse
13. God's house; or, the place of praises. Thomas Adams' Sermon.
Verses
13-15.
1.
Resolutions made (Ps 66:13).
(a)
What? To offer praise.
(b) Why? For deliverance.
(c) Where? In thy house.
2.
Resolutions uttered (Ps 66:14).
(a)
To God.
(b) Before men.
3.
Resolutions fulfilled.
(a)
In public acknowledgment.
(b) In heartfelt gratitude.
(c) In more frequent attendance at the house of God.
(d) The renewed self dedication.
(e) In increased liberality. G. R.
Verse
16.
1.
What has God done for the soul of every Christian?
2.
Why does the Christian wish to declare what God has done for his soul?
3.
Why does he wish to make this declaration to those who only fear God?
(a)
Because they alone can understand such a declaration.
(b)
They alone will really believe him.
(c)
They only will listen with interest, or join with him in praising his
Benefactor. E. Payson.
Verse
16.
1.
Religious teaching should be simple: I will declare.
2. Earnest: Come and hear.
3. Seasonable: All ye that.
4. Discriminating: Fear God.
5. Experimental: What he hath, etc.
Verse
17.
1.
The two principal parts of devotion. Prayer and praise.
2.
Their degree. In prayer, crying. In praise, extolling.
3.
Their order.
(a)
Prayer.
(b)
Then praise. What is won by prayer is worn in praise.
Verses
18-19.
1.
The test admitted.
2. The test applied.
3. The test approved.
Verse
19. The fact that God has heard prayer.
Verse
20. The mercy of God.
1.
In permitting prayer.
2. In inclining to prayer.
3. In hearing prayer.
WORK UPON THE
SIXTY-SIXTH PSALM
"A
fourth Proceeding in the Harmony of King David's Harp. That is to say; A
Godly and learned Exposition of six Psalms more of the princely Prophet David,
beginning with the 62, and ending with the 67, Psalm." Done in Latin
by the reverend Doctor VICTORINUS STRIGELIUS, Professor of Diunitie in the
university of Lypsia in Germany, Anno 1562. Translated into English by Richard
Robinson, Citizen of London. 1596... London... 1596.
(The
above is the "fourth, "and, as far as we have been able to
discover, the last part of R. Robinson's Translation of Strigelius. The
four parts, separately titled and paged, contain Expositions of Psalms 1-67.
Dates: 1591-3-5-6.)
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》