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Psalm Seventy-eight
Psalm 78
Chapter Contents
Attention called for. (1-8) The history of Israel. (9-39)
Their settlement in Canaan. (40-55) The mercies of God to Israel contrasted
with their ingratitude. (56-72)
Commentary on Psalm 78:1-8
(Read Psalm 78:1-8)
These are called dark and deep sayings, because they are
carefully to be looked into. The law of God was given with a particular charge
to teach it diligently to their children, that the church may abide for ever.
Also, that the providences of God, both in mercy and in judgment, might
encourage them to conform to the will of God. The works of God much strengthen
our resolution to keep his commandments. Hypocrisy is the high road to
apostacy; those that do not set their hearts right, will not be stedfast with
God. Many parents, by negligence and wickedness, become murderers of their
children. But young persons, though they are bound to submit in all things
lawful, must not obey sinful orders, or copy sinful examples.
Commentary on Psalm 78:9-39.
(Read Psalm 78:9-39.)
Sin dispirits men, and takes away the heart.
Forgetfulness of God's works is the cause of disobedience to his laws. This
narrative relates a struggle between God's goodness and man's badness. The Lord
hears all our murmurings and distrusts, and is much displeased. Those that will
not believe the power of God's mercy, shall feel the fire of his indignation.
Those cannot be said to trust in God's salvation as their happiness at last,
who can not trust his providence in the way to it. To all that by faith and
prayer, ask, seek, and knock, these doors of heaven shall at any time be
opened; and our distrust of God is a great aggravation of our sins. He
expressed his resentment of their provocation; not in denying what they
sinfully lusted after, but in granting it to them. Lust is contented with
nothing. Those that indulge their lust, will never be estranged from it. Those
hearts are hard indeed, that will neither be melted by the mercies of the Lord,
nor broken by his judgments. Those that sin still, must expect to be in trouble
still. And the reason why we live with so little comfort, and to so little
purpose, is, because we do not live by faith. Under these rebukes they
professed repentance, but they were not sincere, for they were not constant. In
Israel's history we have a picture of our own hearts and lives. God's patience,
and warnings, and mercies, imbolden them to harden their hearts against his
word. And the history of kingdoms is much the same. Judgments and mercies have
been little attended to, until the measure of their sins has been full. And
higher advantages have not kept churches from declining from the commandments
of God. Even true believers recollect, that for many a year they abused the
kindness of Providence. When they come to heaven, how will they admire the
Lord's patience and mercy in bringing them to his kingdom!
Commentary on Psalm 78:40-55.
(Read Psalm 78:40-55.)
Let not those that receive mercy from God, be thereby
made bold to sin, for the mercies they receive will hasten its punishment; yet
let not those who are under Divine rebukes for sin, be discouraged from
repentance. The Holy One of Israel will do what is most for his own glory, and
what is most for their good. Their forgetting former favours, led them to limit
God for the future. God made his own people to go forth like sheep; and guided
them in the wilderness, as a shepherd his flock, with all care and tenderness.
Thus the true Joshua, even Jesus, brings his church out of the wilderness; but
no earthly Canaan, no worldly advantages, should make us forget that the church
is in the wilderness while in this world, and that there remaineth a far more
glorious rest for the people of God.
Commentary on Psalm 78:56-72
(Read Psalm 78:56-72)
After the Israelites were settled in Canaan, the children
were like their fathers. God gave them his testimonies, but they turned back.
Presumptuous sins render even Israelites hateful to God's holiness, and exposed
to his justice. Those whom the Lord forsakes become an easy prey to the
destroyer. And sooner or later, God will disgrace his enemies. He set a good government
over his people; a monarch after his own heart. With good reason does the
psalmist make this finishing, crowning instance of God's favour to Israel; for
David was a type of Christ, the great and good Shepherd, who was humbled first,
and then exalted; and of whom it was foretold, that he should be filled with
the Spirit of wisdom and understanding. On the uprightness of his heart, and
the skilfulness of his hands, all his subjects may rely; and of the increase of
his government and peace there shall be no end. Every trial of human nature
hitherto, confirms the testimony of Scripture, that the heart is deceitful
above all things, and desperately wicked, and nothing but being created anew by
the Holy Ghost can cure the ungodliness of any.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Psalms¡n
Psalm 78
Verse 1
[1] Give
ear, O my people, to my law: incline your ears to the words of my mouth.
My law ¡X
The doctrine which I am about to deliver.
Verse 2
[2] I will open my mouth in a parable: I will utter dark sayings of old:
Parable ¡X
Weighty sentences.
Dark sayings ¡X
Not that the words are hard to be understood, but the things, God's
transcendent goodness, their unparallel'd ingratitude; and their stupid
ignorance and insensibleness, under such excellent teachings of God's word and
works, are prodigious and hard to be believed.
Of old ¡X Of
things done in ancient times.
Verse 5
[5] For
he established a testimony in Jacob, and appointed a law in Israel, which he
commanded our fathers, that they should make them known to their children:
Established ¡X
This is justly put in first place, as the chief of all his mercies.
A testimony ¡X
His law, called a testimony, because it is a witness between God and men,
declaring the duties which God expects from man, and the blessings which man
may expect from God.
Verse 9
[9] The
children of Ephraim, being armed, and carrying bows, turned back in the day of
battle.
Ephraim ¡X
That Ephraim is here put for all Israel seems evident from the following
verses, wherein the sins, upon which this overthrow is charged, are manifestly
the sins of all the children of Israel, and they who are here called Ephraim
are called Jacob and Israel, verse 21, and this passage may refer to that dreadful
overthrow related, 1 Samuel 4:10,11, which is particularly named,
because as the ark, so the flight was in that tribe. And the psalmist having
related this amazing providence, falls into a large discourse of the causes of
it, namely, the manifold sins of that and the former generations, which having
prosecuted from hence to verse 60, he there returns to this history, and
relates the sad consequence of that disaster, the captivity of the ark, and
God's forsaking of Shiloh and Ephraim, and removing thence to the tribe of
Judah and mount Zion. Bows - These are put for all arms.
Verse 12
[12] Marvellous things did he in the sight of their fathers, in the land of
Egypt, in the field of Zoan.
Field ¡X In
the territory.
Zoan ¡X An
ancient and eminent city of Egypt.
Verse 15
[15] He
clave the rocks in the wilderness, and gave them drink as out of the great depths.
Wilderness ¡X In
Rephidim, and again in Kadesh.
Verse 16
[16] He
brought streams also out of the rock, and caused waters to run down like
rivers.
Streams ¡X
Which miraculously followed them in all their travels, even to the borders of
Canaan.
Verse 17
[17] And
they sinned yet more against him by provoking the most High in the wilderness.
Wilderness ¡X
Where they had such singular obligations to obedience. This was a great
aggravation of their sins.
Verse 18
[18] And
they tempted God in their heart by asking meat for their lust.
Tempted ¡X
Desired a proof of God's power.
Lust ¡X
Not for their necessary subsistence, but out of an inordinate and luxurious
appetite.
Verse 22
[22]
Because they believed not in God, and trusted not in his salvation:
Trusted not ¡X That
he both could, and would save them from the famine which they feared.
Verse 23
[23]
Though he had commanded the clouds from above, and opened the doors of heaven,
Heaven ¡X
Which he compares to a store-house, whereof God shuts or opens the doors, as he
sees fit.
Verse 25
[25] Man
did eat angels' food: he sent them meat to the full.
Angels food ¡X
Manna, so called, because it was made by the ministry of angels.
Verse 26
[26] He
caused an east wind to blow in the heaven: and by his power he brought in the south
wind.
South wind ¡X
First an eastern, and afterwards a southern wind.
Verse 27
[27] He
rained flesh also upon them as dust, and feathered fowls like as the sand of
the sea:
Fowl ¡X
But God took away from them the use of their wings, and made them to fall into
the hands of the Israelites.
Verse 31
[31] The
wrath of God came upon them, and slew the fattest of them, and smote down the
chosen men of Israel.
Mightiest ¡X
The most healthy and strong, who probably were most desirous of this food, and
fed most eagerly upon it.
Verse 33
[33]
Therefore their days did he consume in vanity, and their years in trouble.
Vanity ¡X In
tedious and fruitless marches hither and thither.
Trouble ¡X In
manifold diseases, dangers, and perplexities.
Verse 34
[34] When
he slew them, then they sought him: and they returned and enquired early after
God.
Returned ¡X
From their idols.
Enquired ¡X
Speedily sought to God for ease and safety.
Verse 35
[35] And
they remembered that God was their rock, and the high God their redeemer.
Redeemer ¡X
That God alone had preserved them in all their former exigencies, and that he
only could help them.
Verse 36
[36]
Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth, and they lied unto him with
their tongues.
Lied ¡X
They made but false protestations of their sincere resolutions of future
obedience.
Verse 42
[42] They
remembered not his hand, nor the day when he delivered them from the enemy.
Hand ¡X
The glorious works of his hand.
Enemy ¡X
That remarkable day, in which God delivered them from their greatest enemy,
Pharaoh.
Verse 45
[45] He
sent divers sorts of flies among them, which devoured them; and frogs, which
destroyed them.
Flies ¡X
These flies were doubtless extraordinary in their nature, and hurtful
qualities. And the like is to be thought concerning the frogs.
Verse 46
[46] He
gave also their increase unto the caterpiller, and their labour unto the
locust.
Labour ¡X
The herbs which were come up by their care and labour.
Verse 47
[47] He
destroyed their vines with hail, and their sycomore trees with frost.
Sycamore-trees ¡X
Under these and the vines, all other trees are comprehended. This hail and
frost destroyed the fruit of the trees, and sometimes the trees themselves.
Verse 49
[49] He
cast upon them the fierceness of his anger, wrath, and indignation, and
trouble, by sending evil angels among them.
Evil angels ¡X
Whom God employed in producing these plagues.
Verse 51
[51] And
smote all the firstborn in Egypt; the chief of their strength in the
tabernacles of Ham:
Ham ¡X Of
the Egyptians, the posterity of Ham, the cursed children of a cursed parent.
Verse 54
[54] And
he brought them to the border of his sanctuary, even to this mountain, which
his right hand had purchased.
Holy place ¡X
The land of Canaan, separated by God from all other lands.
Mountain ¡X The
mountainous country of Canaan; the word mountain is often used in scripture for
a mountainous country.
Verse 57
[57] But
turned back, and dealt unfaithfully like their fathers: they were turned aside
like a deceitful bow.
Deceitful bow ¡X
Which either breaks when it is drawn, or shoots awry, and frustrates the
archer's expectation.
Verse 59
[59] When
God heard this, he was wroth, and greatly abhorred Israel:
Heard ¡X
Perceived or understood, it is spoken of God after the manner of men.
Verse 60
[60] So
that he forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh, the tent which he placed among men;
Shiloh ¡X
Which was placed in Shiloh.
Among men ¡X
Whereby he insinuates both God's wonderful condescension, and their stupendous
folly in despising so glorious a privilege.
Verse 61
[61] And
delivered his strength into captivity, and his glory into the enemy's hand.
His strength ¡X
The ark, called God's strength, 1 Chronicles 16:11, because it was the sign and
pledge of his strength put forth on his people's behalf.
Glory ¡X So
the ark is called, as being the monument and seat of God's glorious presence.
Enemies ¡X
The Philistines.
Verse 64
[64]
Their priests fell by the sword; and their widows made no lamentation.
Priests ¡X
Hophni and Phinehas.
No lamentation ¡X No
funeral solemnities; either because they were prevented by their own death, as
the wife of Phinehas was, or disturbed by the invasion of the enemy.
Verse 66
[66] And
he smote his enemies in the hinder parts: he put them to a perpetual reproach.
Smote ¡X
Them with the piles.
Reproach ¡X He
caused them to perpetuate their own reproach by sending back the ark of God
with their golden emrods, the lasting monuments of their shame.
Verse 67
[67]
Moreover he refused the tabernacle of Joseph, and chose not the tribe of
Ephraim:
Refused ¡X He
would not have his ark to abide any longer in the tabernacle of Shiloh, which
was in the tribe of Joseph or Ephraim.
Verse 68
[68] But
chose the tribe of Judah, the mount Zion which he loved.
Chose ¡X
For the seat of the ark and of God's worship.
Verse 69
[69] And
he built his sanctuary like high palaces, like the earth which he hath
established for ever.
Sanctuary ¡X
The temple of Solomon.
Palaces ¡X
Magnificent and gloriously.
Established ¡X
Not now to be moved from place to place, as the tabernacle was, but as a fixed
place for the ark's perpetual residence.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Psalms¡n
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. Maschil of
Asaph. This is rightly entitled an instructive Psalm. It is not a mere
recapitulation of important events in Israelitish history, but is intended to
be viewed as a parable setting forth the conduct and experience of believers in
all ages. It is a singular proof of the obtuseness of mind of many professors
that they will object to sermons and expositions upon the historical parts of
Scripture, as if they contained no instruction in spiritual matters: were such
persons truly enlightened by the Spirit of God, they would perceive that all
Scripture is profitable, and would blush at their own folly in undervaluing any
portion of the inspired volume.
DIVISION. The unity is
well maintained throughout, but for the sake of the reader's convenience, we
may note that Ps 78:1-8 may be viewed as a preface, setting forth the
psalmist's object in the epic which he is composing. From Ps 78:9-41 the theme
is Israel in the wilderness; then intervenes an account of the Lord's preceding
goodness towards his people in bringing them out of Egypt by plagues and
wonders, Ps 78:42-52. The history of the tribes is resumed at Ps 78:53, and
continued to Ps 78:66, where we reach the time of the removal of the ark to
Zion and the transference of the leadership of Israel from Ephraim to Judah,
which is rehearsed in song from Ps 78:67-72.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Give ear, O my people, to my law. The inspired bard calls
on his countrymen to give heed to his patriotic teaching. We naturally expect
God's chosen nation to be first in hearkening to his voice. When God gives his
truth a tongue, and sends forth his messengers trained to declare his word with
power, it is the least we can do to give them our ears and the earnest
obedience of our hearts. Shall God speak, and his children refuse to hear? His
teaching has the force of law, let us yield both ear and heart to it. Incline
your ears to the words of my mouth. Give earnest attention, bow your stiff
necks, lean forward to catch every syllable. We are at this day, as readers of
the sacred records, bound to study them deeply, exploring their meaning, and
labouring to practice their teaching. As the officer of an army commences his
drill by calling for "Attention, "even so every trained soldier of
Christ is called upon to give ear to his words. Men lend their ears to music,
how much more then should they listen to the harmonies of the gospel; they sit
enthralled in the presence of an orator, how much rather should they yield to
the eloquence of heaven.
Verse
2. I will open my mouth in a parable. Analogies are not only
to be imagined, but are intended by God to be traced between the story of
Israel and the lives of believers. Israel was ordained to be a type; the tribes
and their marchings are living allegories traced by the hand of an all wise
providence. Unspiritual persons may sneer about fancies and mysticisms, but
Paul spake well when he said "which things are an allegory, "and
Asaph in the present case spake to the point when he called his narrative
"a parable." That such was his meaning is clear from the quotation,
"All these things spake Jesus unto the multitude in parables; and without
a parable spake he not unto them: that it might be fulfilled which was spoken
by the prophet, saying, I will open my mouth in parables; I will utter things
which have been kept secret from the foundation of the world." Mt
13:34-35. I will utter dark sayings of old;¡Xenigmas of antiquity, riddles of
yore. The mind of the poet prophet was so full of ancient lore that he poured
it forth in a copious stream of song, while beneath the gushing flood lay
pearls and gems of spiritual truth, capable of enriching those who could dive
into the depths and bring them up. The letter of this song is precious, but the
inner sense is beyond all price. Whereas the first verse called for attention,
the second justifies the demand by hinting that the outer sense conceals an
inner and hidden meaning, which only the thoughtful will be able to perceive.
Verse
3. Which we have heard and known, and our fathers have told us.
Tradition was of the utmost service to the people of God in the olden time,
before the more sure word of prophecy had become complete and generally
accessible. The receipt of truth from the lips of others laid the instructed
believer under solemn obligation to pass on the truth to the next generation.
Truth, endeared to us by its fond associations with godly parents and venerable
friends, deserves of us our best exertions to preserve and propagate it. Our
fathers told us, we hear them, and we know personally what they taught; it
remains for us in our turn to hand it on. Blessed be God we have now the less
mutable testimony of written revelation, but this by no means lessens our
obligation to instruct our children in divine truth by word of mouth: rather,
with such a gracious help, we ought to teach them far more fully the things of
God. Dr. Doddridge owed much to the Dutch tiles and his mother's explanations
of the Bible narratives. The more of parental teaching the better; ministers
and Sabbath school teachers were never meant to be substitutes for mother's
tears and father's prayers.
Verse
4. We will not hide them from their children. Our negligent
silence shall not deprive our own and our father's offspring of the precious
truth of God, it would be shameful indeed if we did so. Shewing to the
generation to come the praises of the Lord. We will look forward to future
generations, and endeavour to provide for their godly education. It is the duty
of the church of God to maintain, in fullest vigour, every agency intended for
the religious education of the young; to them we must look for the church of
the future, and as we sow towards them so shall we reap. Children are to be
taught to magnify the Lord; they ought to be well informed as to his wonderful
doings in ages past, and should be made to know his strength and his wonderful
works that he hath done. The best education is education in the best things.
The first lesson for a child should be concerning his mother's God. Teach him
what you will, if he learn not the fear of the Lord, he will perish for lack of
knowledge. Grammar is poor food for the soul if it be not flavoured with grace.
Every satchel should have a Bible in it. The world may teach secular knowledge
alone, it is all she has a heart to know, but the church must not deal so with
her offspring; she should look well to every Timothy, and see to it that from a
child he knows the Holy Scriptures. Around the fireside fathers should repeat
not only the Bible records, but the deeds of the martyrs and reformers, and
moreover the dealings of the Lord with themselves both in providence and grace.
We dare not follow the vain and vicious traditions of the apostate church of
Rome, neither would we compare the fallible record of the best human memories
with the infallible written word, yet would we fain see oral tradition
practised by every Christian in his family, and children taught cheerfully by
word of mouth by their own mothers and fathers, as well as by the printed pages
of what they too often regard as dull, dry task books. What happy hours and
pleasant evenings have children had at their parents knees as they have
listened to some "sweet story of old." Reader, if you have children,
mind you do not fail in this duty.
Verse
5. For he established a testimony in Jacob. The favoured
nation existed for the very purpose of maintaining God's truth in the midst of
surrounding idolatry. Theirs were the oracles, they were the conservators and
guardians of the truth. And appointed a law in Israel, which he commanded our
fathers, that they should make them known to their children. The
testimony for the true God was to be transmitted from generation to generation
by the careful instruction of succeeding families. We have the command for this
oral transmission very frequently given in the Pentateuch, and it may suffice
to quote one instance from De 6:7: "And thou shalt teach them diligently
unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and
when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest
up." Reader, if you are a parent, have you conscientiously discharged this
duty?
Verse
6. That the generation to come might know them, even the children
which should be born. As far on as our brief life allows us to arrange, we
must industriously provide for the godly nurture of youth. The narratives,
commands, and doctrines of the word of God are not worn out; they are
calculated to exert an influence as long as our race shall exist. Who should
arise and declare them to their children. The one object aimed at is
transmission; the testimony is only given that it may be passed on to
succeeding generations.
Verse
7. That they might set their hope in God. Faith cometh by
hearing. Those who know the name of the Lord will set their hope in him, and
that they may be led to do so is the main end of all spiritual teaching. And
not forget the works of God. Grace cures bad memories; those who soon forget
the merciful works of the Lord have need of teaching; they require to learn the
divine art of holy memory. But keep his commandments. Those who forget God's
works are sure to fail in their own. He who does not keep God's love in memory
is not likely to remember his law. The design of teaching is practical;
holiness towards God is the end we aim at, and not the filling of the head with
speculative notions.
Verse
8. And might not be as their fathers, a stubborn and rebellious
generation. There was room for improvement. Fathers stubborn in their own
way, and rebellious against God's way, are sorry examples for their children;
and it is earnestly desired that better instruction may bring forth a better
race. It is common in some regions for men to count their family custom as the
very best rule; but disobedience is not to be excused because it is hereditary.
The leprosy was none the less loathsome because it had been long in the family.
If our fathers were rebellious we must be better than they were, or else we
shall perish as they did. A generation that set not their heart aright. They
had no decision for righteousness and truth. In them there was no preparedness,
or willingness of heart, to entertain the Saviour; neither judgments, nor
mercies could bind their affections to their God; they were fickle as the winds,
and changeful as the waves. And whose spirit was not steadfast with God. The
tribes in the wilderness were constant only in their inconstancy; there was no
depending upon them. It was, indeed, needful that their descendants should be
warned, so that they might not blindly imitate them. How blessed it would be if
each age improved upon its predecessor; but, alas! it is to be feared that
decline is more general than progress, and too often the heirs of true saints
are far more rebellious than even their fathers were in their unregeneracy. May
the reading of this patriotic and divine song move many to labour after the
elevation of themselves and their posterity.
Verse
9. The children of Ephraim, being armed, and carrying bows,
turned back in the day of battle. Well equipped and furnished with the best
weapons of the times, the leading tribe failed in faith and courage and
retreated before the foe. There were several particular instances of this, but
probably the psalmist refers to the general failure of Ephraim to lead the
tribes to the conquest of Canaan. How often have we also, although supplied
with every gracious weapon, failed to wage successful war against our sins, we
have marched onward gallantly enough till the testing hour has come, and then "in
the day of battle "we have proved false to good resolutions and holy
obligations. How altogether vain is unregenerate man! Array him in the best
that nature and grace can supply, he still remains a helpless coward in the
holy war, so long as he lacks a loyal faith in his God.
Verse
10. They kept not the covenant of God. Vows and promises were
broken, idols were set up, and the living God was forsaken. They were brought
out of Egypt in order to be a people separated unto the Lord, but they fell
into the sins of other nations, and did not maintain a pure testimony for the
one only true God. And refused to walk in his law. They gave way to
fornication, and idolatry, and other violations of the decalogue, and were
often in a state of rebellion against the benign theocracy under which they
lived. They had pledged themselves at Sinai to keep the law, and then they
wilfully disobeyed it, and so became covenant breakers.
Verse
11. And forgat his works, and his wonders that he had shewed them.
Had they remembered them they would have been filled with gratitude and
inspired with holy awe: but the memory of God's mercies to them was as soon
effaced as if written upon water. Scarcely could one generation retain the
sense of the divine presence in miraculous power, the succeeding race needed a
renewal of the extraordinary manifestations, and even then was not satisfied
without many displays thereof. Ere we condemn them, let us repent of our own
wicked forgetfulness, and confess the many occasions upon which we also have been
unmindful of past favours.
Verse
12. Egypt, here called the field of Zoan, was the scene of
marvellous things which were done in open day in the sight of Israel.
These were extraordinary, upon a vast scale, astounding, indisputable, and such
as ought to have rendered it impossible for an Israelite to be disloyal to
Jehovah, Israel's God.
Verse
13. He divided the sea, and caused them to pass through. A
double wonder, for when the waters were divided the bottom of the sea would
naturally be in a very unfit state for the passage of so vast a host as that of
Israel; it would in fact have been impassable, had not the Lord made the road
for his people. Who else has ever led a nation through a sea? Yet the Lord has
done this full often for his saints in providential deliverances, making a
highway for them where nothing short of an almighty arm could have done so. And
he made the waters to stand as an heap. He forbade a drop to fall upon his
chosen, they felt no spray from the crystal walls on either hand. Fire will
descend and water stand upright at the bidding of the Lord of all. The nature
of creatures is not their own intrinsically, but is retained or altered at the
will of him who first created them. The Lord can cause those evils which
threaten to overwhelm us to suspend their ordinary actions, and become
innocuous to us.
Verse
14. In the daytime also he led them with a cloud. HE did it
all. He alone. He brought them into the wilderness, and he led them
through it; it is not the Lord's manner to begin a work, and then cease from it
while it is incomplete. The cloud both led and shadowed the tribes. It was by
day a vast sun screen, rendering the fierce heat of the sun and the glare of
the desert sand bearable. And all the night with a light of fire. So constant
was the care of the Great Shepherd that all night and every night the token of
his presence was with his people. That cloud which was a shade by day was as a
sun by night. Even thus the grace which cools and calms our joys, soothes and
solaces our sorrows. What a mercy to have a light of fire with us amid the
lonely horrors of the wilderness of affliction. Our God has been all this to
us, and shall we prove unfaithful to him? We have felt him to be both shade and
light, according as our changing circumstances have required.
"He
hath been our joy in woe,
Cheered our heart when it was low,
And, with warnings softly sad,
Calmed our heart when it was glad."
May
this frequently renewed experience knit our hearts to him in firmest bonds.
Verse
15. He clave the rocks in the wilderness. Moses was the
instrument, but the Lord did it all. Twice he made the flint a gushing rill.
What can he not do? And gave them drink as out of the great depths,¡Xas though
it gushed from earth's innermost reservoirs. The streams were so fresh, so
copious, so constant, that they seemed to well up from the earth's primeval
fountains, and to leap at once from "the deep which coucheth
beneath." Here was a divine supply for Israel's urgent need, and such an
one as ought to have held them for ever in unwavering fidelity to their wonder
working God.
Verse
16. The supply of water was as plenteous in quantity as it was
miraculous in origin. Torrents, not driblets came from the rocks. Streams
followed the camp; the supply was not for an hour or a day. This was a marvel
of goodness. If we contemplate the abounding of divine grace we shall be lost
in admiration. Mighty rivers of love have flowed for us in the wilderness.
Alas, great God! our return has not been commensurate therewith, but far otherwise.
Verse
17. And they sinned yet more against him. Outdoing their
former sins, going into greater deeps of evil: the more they had the more
loudly they clamoured for more, and murmured because they had not every luxury
that pampered appetites could desire. It was bad enough to mistrust their God
for necessaries, but to revolt against him in a greedy rage for superfluities
was far worse. Ever is it the nature of the disease of sin to proceed from bad
to worse; men never weary of sinning, but rather increase their speed in the
race of iniquity. In the case before us the goodness of God was abused into a
reason for greater sin. Had not the Lord been so good they would not have been
so bad. If he had wrought fewer miracles before, they would not have been so
inexcusable in their unbelief, so wanton in their idolatry. By provoking the
most High in the wilderness. Although they were in a position of obvious
dependence upon God for everything, being in a desert where the soil could
yield them no support, yet they were graceless enough to provoke their
benefactor. At one time they provoked his jealousy by their hankering after
false gods, anon they excited his wrath by their challenges of his power, their
slanders against his love, their rebellions against his will. He was all bounty
of love, and they all superfluity of naughtiness. They were favoured above all
nations, and yet none were more ill favoured. For them the heavens dropped
manna, and they returned murmurs; the rocks gave them rivers, and they replied
with floods of wickedness. Herein, as in a mirror, we see ourselves. Israel in
the wilderness acted out, as in a drama, all the story of man's conduct towards
his God.
Verse
18. And they tempted God in their heart. He was not tempted,
for he cannot be tempted by any, but they acted in a manner calculated to tempt
him, and it always just to charge that upon men which is the obvious tendency
of their conduct. Christ cannot die again, and yet many crucify him afresh,
because such would be the legitimate result of their behaviour if its effects
were not prevented by other forces. The sinners in the wilderness would have
had the Lord change his wise proceedings to humour their whims, hence they are
said to tempt him. By asking meat for their lust. Would they have God become
purveyor for their greediness? Was there nothing for it but that he must give
them whatever their diseased appetites might crave? The sin began in their
hearts, but it soon reached their tongues. What they at first silently wished
for, they soon loudly demanded with menaces, insinuations, and upbraidings.
Verse
19. From this verse we learn that unbelief of God is a slander
against him. Yea, they spake against God. But how? The answer is, They said,
Can God furnish a table in the wilderness? To question the ability of one who
is manifestly Almighty, is to speak against him. These people were base enough
to say that although their God had given them bread and water, yet he could not
properly order or furnish a table. He could give them coarse food, but could
not prepare a feast properly arranged, so they were ungrateful enough to
declare. As if the manna was a mere makeshift, and the flowing rock stream a
temporary expedient, they ask to have a regularly furnished table, such as they
had been accustomed to in Egypt. Alas, how have we also quarrelled with our
mercies, and querulously pined for some imaginary good, counting our actual
enjoyments to be nothing because they did not happen to be exactly conformed to
our foolish fancies. They who will not be content will speak against providence
even when it daily loadeth them with benefits.
Verse
20. Behold, he smote the rock, that the waters gushed out, and the
streams overflowed. They admit what he had done, and yet, with
superabundant folly and insolence, demand further proofs of his omnipotence.
Can he give bread also? can he provide flesh for his people? As if the manna
were nothing, as if animal food alone was true nourishment for men. If they had
argued, "can he not give flesh?" the argument would have been
reasonable, but they ran into insanity; when, having seen many marvels of
omnipotence, they dared to insinuate that other things were beyond the divine
power. Yet, in this also, we have imitated their senseless conduct. Each new
difficulty has excited fresh incredulity. We are still fools and slow of heart
to believe our God, and this is a fault to be bemoaned with deepest penitence.
For this cause the Lord is often wroth with us and chastens us sorely; for
unbelief has in it a degree of provocation of the highest kind.
Verse
21. Therefore the Lord heard this, and was wroth. He was not
indifferent to what they said. He dwelt among them in the holy place, and,
therefore, they insulted him to his face. He did not hear a report of it, but
the language itself came into his ears. So a fire was kindled against Jacob.
The fire of his anger which was also attended with literal burnings. And anger
also came up against Israel. Whether he viewed them in the lower or higher
light, as Jacob or as Israel, he was angry with them: even as mere men they
ought to have believed him; and as chosen tribes, their wicked unbelief was
without excuse. The Lord doeth well to be angry at so ungrateful, gratuitous
and dastardly an insult as the questioning of his power.
Verse
22. Because they believed not in God, and trusted not in his
salvation. This is the master sin, the crying sin. Like Jeroboam, the son
of Nebat, it sins and makes Israel to sin; it is in itself evil and the parent
of evils. It was this sin which shut Israel out of Canaan, and it shuts myriads
out of heaven. God is ready to save, combining power with willingness, but
rebellious man will not trust his Saviour, and therefore is condemned already.
In the text it appears as if all Israel's other sins were as nothing compared
with this; this is the peculiar spot which the Lord points at, the special
provocation which angered him. From this let every unbeliever learn to tremble
more at his unbelief than at anything else. If he be no fornicator, or thief,
or liar, let him reflect that it is quite enough to condemn him that he trusts
not in God's salvation.
Verse
23. Though he had commanded the clouds from above. Such a
marvel ought to have rendered unbelief impossible: when clouds become
granaries, seeing should be believing, and doubts should dissolve. And opened
the doors of heaven. The great storehouse doors were set wide open, and the
corn of heaven poured out in heaps. Those who would not believe in such a case
were hardened indeed; and yet our own position is very similar, for the Lord
has wrought for us great deliverances, quite as memorable and undeniable, and
yet suspicions and forebodings haunt us. He might have shut the gates of hell
upon us, instead of which he has opened the doors of heaven; shall we not both
believe in him and magnify him for this?
Verse
24. And had rained down manna upon them to eat. There was so
much of it, the skies poured with food, the clouds burst with provender. It was
fit food, proper not for looking at but for eating; they could eat it as they
gathered it. Mysterious though it was, so that they called it manna, or
"what is it?" yet it was eminently adapted for human nourishment; and
it was both abundant and adapted, so also was it available! They had not far to
fetch it, it was nigh them, and they had only to gather it up. O Lord Jesus,
thou blessed manna of heaven, how all this agrees with Thee! We will even now
feed on Thee as our spiritual meat, and will pray Thee to chase away all wicked
unbelief from us. Our fathers ate manna and doubted; we feed upon Thee and are
filled with assurance. And had given them of the corn of heaven. It was all a
gift without money and without price. Food which dropped from above, and was of
the best quality, so as to be called heavenly corn, was freely granted them.
The manna was round, like a coriander seed, and hence was rightly called corn;
it did not rise from the earth, but descended from the clouds, and hence the
words of the verse are literally accurate. The point to be noted is that this
wonder of wonders left the beholders, and the feasters, as prone as ever to
mistrust their Lord.
Verse
25. Man did eat angel's food. The delicacies of kings were
outdone, for the dainties of angels were supplied. Bread of the mighty ones
fell on feeble man. Those who are lower than the angels fared as well. It was
not for the priests, or the princes, that the manna fell; but for all the
nation, for every man, woman, and child in the camp: and there was sufficient
for them all, for he sent them meat to the full. God's banquets are never
stinted; he gives the best diet, and plenty of it. Gospel provisions deserve
every praise that we can heap upon them; they are free, full, and preeminent;
they are of God's preparing, sending, and bestowing. He is well fed whom God
feeds; heaven's meat is nourishing and plentiful. If we have ever fed upon
Jesus we have tasted better than angel's food; for
"Never
did angels taste above
Redeeming grace and dying love."
It
will be our wisdom to eat to the full of it, for God has so sent it that we are
not straitened in him, but in our own bowels. Happy pilgrims who in the desert
have their meat sent from the Lord's own palace above; let them eat abundantly
of the celestial banquet, and magnify the all sufficient grace which supplies
all their needs, according to His riches in glory, by Christ Jesus.
Verse
26. He caused an east wind to blow in the heaven. He is Lord
Paramount, above the prince of the power of the air: storms arise and tempests
blow at his command. Winds sleep till God arouses them, and then, like Samuel,
each one answers, "Here am I, for thou didst call me." And by his
power he brought in the south wind. Either these winds followed each other, and
so blew the birds in the desired direction, or else they combined to form a
south east wind; in either case they fulfilled the design of the Lord, and
illustrated his supreme and universal power. If one wind will not serve,
another shall; and if need be, they shall both blow at once. We speak of fickle
winds, but their obedience to their Lord is such that they deserve a better
word. If we ourselves were half as obedient as the winds, we should be far
superior to what we are now.
Verse
27. He rained flesh also upon them as dust. First he rained
bread and then flesh, when he might have rained fire and brimstone. The words
indicate the speed, and the abundance of the descending quails. And feathered
fowls like as the sand of the sea; there was no counting them. By a remarkable
providence, if not by miracle, enormous numbers of migratory birds were caused
to alight around the tents of the tribes. It was, however, a doubtful blessing,
as easily acquired and super abounding riches generally are. The Lord save us
from meat which is seasoned with divine wrath.
Verse
28. And he let it fall in the midst of their camp. They had no
journey to make; they had clamoured for flesh, and it almost flew into their
mouths, round about their habitations. This made them glad for the moment, but
they knew not that mercies can be sent in anger, else they had trembled at
sight of the good things which they had lusted after.
Verse
29. So they did eat, and were well filled. They greedily
devoured the birds, even to repletion. The Lord shewed them that he could
"provide flesh for his people, "even enough and to spare. He also
shewed them that when lust wins its desire it is disappointed, and by the way
of satiety arrive at distaste. First the food satiates, then it nauseates. For
he gave them their own desire. They were filled with their own ways. The flesh
meat was unhealthy for them, but as they cried for it they had it, and a curse
with it. O my God, deny me my most urgent prayers sooner than answer them in
displeasure. Better hunger and thirst after righteousness than to be well
filled with sin's dainties.
Verses
30-31. They were not estranged from their lust. Lust grows upon that
which it feeds on. If sick of too much flesh, yet men grow not weary of lust,
they change the object, and go on lusting still. When one sin is proved to be a
bitterness, men do not desist, but pursue another iniquity. If, like Jehu, they
turn from Baal, they fall to worshipping the calves of Bethel. But while their
meat was yet in their mouths, before they could digest their coveted meat, it
turned to their destruction. The wrath of God came upon them before they could
swallow their first meal of flesh. Short was the pleasure, sudden was the doom.
The festival ended in a funeral. And slew the fattest of them, and smote down
the chosen men of Israel. Perhaps these were the ringleaders in the
lusting; they are first in the punishment. God's justice has no respect of
persons, the strong and the valiant fall as well as the weak and the mean. What
they ate on earth they digested in hell, as many have done since. How soon they
died, though they felt not the edge of the sword! How terrible was the havoc,
though not amid the din of battle! My soul, see here the danger of gratified
passions; they are the janitors of hell. When the Lord's people hunger God
loves them; Lazarus is his beloved, though he pines upon crumbs; but when he
fattens the wicked he abhors them; Dives is hated of heaven when he fares
sumptuously every day. We must never dare to judge men's happiness by their
tables, the heart is the place to look at. The poorest starveling believer is
more to be envied than the most full fleshed of the favourites of the world.
Better be God's dog than the devil's darling.
Verse
32. For all this they sinned still. Judgments moved them no
more than mercies. They defied the wrath of God. Though death was in the cup of
their iniquity, yet they would not put it away, but continued to quaff it as if
it were a healthful potion. How truly might these words be applied to ungodly
men who have been often afflicted, laid upon a sick bed, broken in spirit, and
impoverished in estate, and yet have persevered in their evil ways, unmoved by
terrors, unswayed by threatenings. And believed not for his wondrous works.
Their unbelief was chronic and incurable. Miracles both of mercy and judgment
were unavailing. They might be made to wonder, but they could not be taught to
believe. Continuance in sin and in unbelief go together. Had they believed they
would not have sinned, had they not have been blinded by sin they would have
believed. There is a reflex action between faith and character. How can the
lover of sin believe? How, on the other hand, can the unbeliever cease from
sin? God's ways with us in providence are in themselves both convincing and
converting, but unrenewed nature refuses to be either convicted or converted by
them.
Verse
33. Therefore their days did he consume in vanity. Apart from
faith life is vanity. To wander up and down in the wilderness was a vain thing
indeed, when unbelief had shut them out of the promised land. It was meet that
those who would not live to answer the divine purpose by believing and obeying
their God should be made to live to no purpose, and to die before their time,
unsatisfied, unblessed. Those who wasted their days in sin had little cause to
wonder when the Lord cut short their lives, and sware that they should never
enter the rest which they had despised. And their years in trouble. Weary
marches were their trouble, and to come to no resting place was their vanity.
Innumerable graves were left all along the track of Israel, and if any ask,
"Who slew all these?" the answer must be, "They could not enter
in because of unbelief." Doubtless much of the vexation and failure of
many lives results from their being sapped by unbelief, and honeycombed by evil
passions. None live so fruitlessly and so wretchedly as those who allow sense
and sight to override faith, and their reason and appetite to domineer over
their fear of God. Our days go fast enough according to the ordinary lapse of
time, but the Lord can make them rust away at a bitterer rate, till we feel as
if sorrow actually ate out the heart of our life, and like a canker devoured
our existence. Such was the punishment of rebellious Israel, the Lord grant it
may not be ours.
Verse
34. When he slew them, then they sought him. Like whipped
curs, they licked their Master's feet. They obeyed only so long as they felt
the whip about their loins. Hard are the hearts which only death can move.
While thousands died around them, the people of Israel became suddenly religious,
and repaired to the tabernacle door, like sheep who run in a mass while the
black dog drives them, but scatter and wander when the shepherd whistles him
off. And they returned and enquired early after God. They could not be too
zealous, they were in hot haste to prove their loyalty to their divine King.
"The devil was sick and the devil a monk would be." Who would not be
pious while the plague is abroad? Doors, which were never so sanctified before,
put on the white cross then. Even reprobates send for the minister when they
lie a dying. Thus sinners pay involuntary homage to the power of right and the
supremacy of God, but their hypocritical homage is of small value in the sight
of the Great Judge.
Verse
35. And they remember that God was their rock. Sharp strokes
awoke their sleepy memories. Reflection followed infliction. They were led to
see that all their dependence must be placed upon their God; for he alone had
been their shelter, their foundation, their fountain of supply, and their
unchangeable friend. What could have made them forget this? Was it that their
stomachs were so full of flesh that thy had no space for ruminating upon
spiritual things? And the high God their redeemer. They had forgotten this
also. The high hand and outstretched arm which redeemed them out of bondage had
both faded from their mental vision. Alas, poor man, how readily dost thou
forget thy God! Shame on thee, ungrateful worm, to have no sense of favours a
few days after they have been received. Will nothing make thee keep in memory
the mercy of thy God except the utter withdrawal of it?
Verse
36. Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth. Bad were they
at their best. False on their knees, liars in their prayers. Mouth worship must
be very detestable to God when dissociated from the heart: other kings love
flattery, but the King of kings abhors it. Since the sharpest afflictions only
extort from carnal men a feigned submission to God, there is proof positive
that the heart is desperately set on mischief, and that sin is ingrained in our
very nature. If you beat a tiger with many stripes you cannot turn him into a
sheep. The devil cannot be whipped out of human nature, though another devil,
namely, hypocrisy may be whipped into it. Piety produced by the damps of sorrow
and the heats of terror is of mushroom growth; it is rapid in its springing
up¡X"they enquired early after God"¡Xbut it is a mere unsubstantial
fungus of unabiding excitement. And they lied unto him with their tongues.
Their godly speech was cant, their praise mere wind, their prayer a fraud.
Their skin deep repentance was a film too thin to conceal the deadly wound of
sin. This teaches us to place small reliance upon professions of repentance
made by dying men, or upon such even when the basis is evidently slavish fear,
and nothing more. Any thief will whine out repentance if he thinks the judge
will thereby be moved to let him go scot free.
Verse
37. For their heart was not right with him. There was no depth
in their repentance, it was not heart work. They were fickle as a weathercock,
every wind turned them, their mind was not settled upon God. Neither were they
stedfast in his covenant. Their promises were no sooner made than broken, as if
only made in mockery. Good resolutions called at their hearts as men do at
inns; they tarried awhile, and then took their leave. They were hot today for
holiness, but cold towards it tomorrow. Variable as the hues of the dolphin,
they changed from reverence to rebellion, from thankfulness to murmuring. One
day they gave their gold to build a tabernacle for Jehovah, and the next they
plucked off their earrings to make a golden calf. Surely the heart is a
chameleon. Proteus had not so many changes. As in the ague we both burn and
freeze, so do inconstant natures in their religion.
Verse
38. But he, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity, and
destroyed them not. Though they were full of flattery, he was full of
mercy, and for this cause he had pity on them. Not because of their pitiful and
hypocritical pretensions to penitence, but because of his own real compassion
for them he overlooked their provocations. Yea, many a time turned he his anger
away. When he had grown angry with them he withdrew his displeasure. Even unto
seventy times seven did he forgive their offences. He was slow, very slow, to
anger. The sword was uplifted and flashed in midair, but it was sheathed again,
and the nation yet lived. Though not mentioned in the text, we know from the
history that a mediator interposed, the man Moses stood in the gap; even so at
this hour the Lord Jesus pleads for sinners, and averts the divine wrath. Many
a barren tree is left standing because the dresser of the vineyard cries,
"let it alone this year also." And did not stir up all his wrath. Had
he done so they must have perished in a moment. When his wrath is kindled but a
little men are burned up as chaff; but were he to let loose his indignation,
the solid earth itself would melt, and hell would engulf every rebel. Who
knoweth the power of thine anger, O Lord? We see the fulness of God's
compassion, but we never see all his wrath.
Verse
39. For he remembered that they were but flesh. They were
forgetful of God, but he was mindful of them. He knew that they were made of
earthy, frail, corruptible material, and therefore he dealt leniently with
them. Though in this he saw no excuse for their sin, yet he constrained it into
a reason for mercy; the Lord is ever ready to discover some plea or other upon
which he may have compassion. A wind that passeth away, and cometh not again.
Man is but a breath, gone never to return. Spirit and wind are in this alike,
so far as our humanity is concerned; they pass and cannot be recalled. What a
nothing is our life. How gracious on the Lord's part to make man's
insignificance an argument for staying his wrath.
Verse
40. How oft did they provoke him in the wilderness. Times
enough did they rebel: they were as constant in provocation as he was in his
patience. In our own case, who can count his errors? In what book could all our
perverse rebellions be recorded? The wilderness was a place of manifest
dependence, where the tribes were helpless without divine supplies, yet they
wounded the hand which fed them while it was in the act of feeding them. Is
there no likeness between us and them? Does it bring no tears into our eyes,
while as in a glass, we see our own selves? And grieve him in the desert. Their
provocations had an effect; God was not insensible to them, he is said to have
been grieved. His holiness could not find pleasure in their sin, his justice in
their unjust treatment, or his truth in their falsehood. What must it be to
grieve the Lord of love! Yet we also have vexed the Holy Spirit, and he would
long ago have withdrawn himself from us, were it not that he is God and not
man. We are in the desert where we need our God, let us not make it a
wilderness of sin by grieving him.
Verses
41. Yea, they turned back. Their hearts sighed for Egypt and its
fleshpots. They turned to their old ways again and again, after they had been
scourged out of them. Full of twists and turns, they never kept the straight
path. And tempted God. As far as in them lay they tempted him. His ways were
good, and they in desiring to have them altered tempted God. Before they would
believe in him they demanded signs, defying the Lord to do this and that, and
acting as if he could be cajoled into being the minion of their lusts. What
blasphemy was this! Yet let us not tempt Christ lest we also be destroyed by
the destroyer. And limited the Holy One of Israel. Doubted his power and so
limited him, dictated to his wisdom and so did the same. To chalk out a path
for God is arrogant impiety. The Holy One must do right, the covenant God of
Israel must be true, it is profanity itself to say unto him thou shalt do this
or that, or otherwise I will not worship thee. Not thus is the Eternal God to
be led by a string by his impotent creature. He is the Lord and he will do as
seemeth him good.
Verse
42. They remembered not his hand. Yet it must have been
difficult to forget it. Such displays of divine power as those which smote
Egypt with astonishment, it must have needed some more than usual effort to
blot it from the tablets of memory. It is probably meant that they practically,
rather than actually, forgot. He who forgets the natural returns of gratitude,
may justly be charged with not remembering the obligation. Nor the days when he
delivered them from the enemy. The day itself was erased from their calendar,
so far as any due result from it or return for it. Strange is the faculty of
memory in its oblivion as well as its records. Sin perverts man's powers, makes
them forceful only in wrong directions, and practically dead for righteous
ends.
Verse
43. How he had wrought his signs in Egypt. The plagues were
ensigns of Jehovah's presence and proofs of his hatred of idols; these
instructive acts of power were wrought in the open view of all, as signals are
set up to be observed by those far and near. And his wonders in the field of
Zoan. In the whole land were miracles wrought, not in cities alone, but in the
broad territory, in the most select and ancient regions of the proud nation.
This the Israelites ought not to have forgotten, for they were the favoured
people for whom these memorable deeds were wrought.
Verse
44. And had turned their rivers into blood. The waters had
been made the means of the destruction of Israel's newborn infants, and now
they do as it were betray the crime¡Xthey blush for it, they avenge it on the
murderers. The Nile was the vitality of Egypt, its true life blood, but at
God's command it became a flowing curse; every drop of it was a horror, poison
to drink, and terror to gaze on. How soon might the Almighty One do this with
the Thames or the Seine. Sometimes he has allowed men, who were his rod, to
make rivers crimson with gore, and this is a severe judgment; but the event now
before us was more mysterious, more general, more complete, and must,
therefore, have been a plague of the first magnitude. And their floods, that
they could not drink. Lesser streams partook in the curse, reservoirs and
canals felt the evil; God does nothing by halves. All Egypt boasted of the
sweet waters of their river, but they were made to loathe it more than they had
ever loved it. Our mercies may soon become our miseries if the Lord shall deal
with us in wrath.
Verse
45. He sent diverse sorts of flies among them, which devoured
them. Small creatures become great tormentors. When they swarm they can
sting a man till they threaten to eat him up. In this case, various orders of
insects fought under the same banner; lice and beetles, gnats and hornets,
wasps and gadflies dashed forward in fierce battalions, and worried the sinners
of Egypt without mercy. The tiniest plagues are the greatest. What sword or
spear could fight with these innumerable bands? Vain were the monarch's armour
and robes of majesty, the little cannibals were no more lenient towards royal
flesh than any other; it had the same blood in it, and the same sin upon it.
How great is that God who thus by the minute can crush the magnificent. And
frogs, which destroyed them. These creatures swarmed everywhere when they were
alive, until the people felt ready to die at the sight; and when the reptiles
died, the heaps of their bodies made the land to stink so foully, that a
pestilence was imminent. Thus not only did earth and air send forth armies of
horrible life, but the water also added its legions of loathsomeness. It seemed
as if the Nile was first made nauseous and then caused to leave its bed
altogether, crawling and leaping in the form of frogs. Those who contend with
the Almighty, little know what arrows are in his quiver; surprising sin shall
be visited with surprising punishment.
Verse
46. He gave also their increase unto the caterpillar, and their labour
unto the locust. Different sorts of devourers ate up every green herb and
tree. What one would not eat another did. What they expected from the natural
fertility of the soil, and what they looked for from their own toil, they saw
devoured before their eyes by an insatiable multitude against whose depredation
no defense could be found. Observe in the text that the Lord did it
all¡X"he sent, " "he gave, ""he destroyed,
""he gave up, "etc.; whatever the second agent may be, the
direct hand of the Lord is in every national visitation.
Verse
47. He destroyed their vines with hail. No more shall thy
butler press the clusters into thy cup, O Pharaoh! The young fruit bearing
shoots were broken off, the vintage failed. And their sycomore trees with
frost. Frost was not usual, but Jehovah regards no laws of nature when men
regard not his moral laws. The sycomore fig was perhaps more the fruit of the
many than was the vine, therefore this judgment was meant to smite the poor,
while the former fell most heavily upon the rich. Mark how the heavens obey
their Lord and yield their stores of hail, and note how the fickle weather is
equally subservient to the divine will.
Verse
48. He gave up their cattle also to the hail. What hail it
must have been to have force enough to batter down bullocks and other great
beasts. God usually protects animals from such destruction, but here he
withdraws his safeguards and gave them up: may the Lord never give us
up. Some read, "shut up, "and the idea of being abandoned to
destructive influences is then before us in another shape. And their flocks to
hot thunderbolts. Fire was mingled with the hail, the fire ran along upon the
ground, it smote the smaller cattle. What a storm must that have been: its
effects were terrible enough upon plants, but to see the poor dumb creatures
stricken must have been heartbreaking. Adamantine was that heart which quailed
not under such plagues as these, harder than adamant those hearts which in
after years forgot all that the Lord had done, and broke off from their
allegiance to him.
Verse
49. He cast upon them the fierceness of his anger, wrath, and
indignation, and trouble. His last arrow was the sharpest. He reserved the
strong wine of his indignation to the last. Note how the psalmist piles up the
words, and well he might; for blow followed blow, each one more staggering than
its predecessor, and then the crushing stroke was reserved for the end. By
sending evil angels among them. Messengers of evil entered their houses at
midnight, and smote the dearest objects of their love. The angels were evil to
them, though good enough in themselves; those who to the heirs of salvation are
ministers of grace, are to the heirs of wrath executioners of judgment. When
God sends angels, they are sure to come, and if he bids them slay they will not
spare. See how sin sets all the powers of heaven in array against man; he has
no friend left in the universe when God is his enemy.
Verse
50. He made a way to his anger, coming to the point with them
by slow degrees; assailing their outworks first by destroying their property,
and then coming in upon their persons as through an open breach in the walls.
He broke down all the comforts of their life, and then advanced against their
life itself. Nothing could stand in his way; he cleared a space in which to do
execution upon his adversaries. He spared not their soul from death, but gave
their life over to the pestilence. In their soul was the origin of the
sin, and he followed it to its source and smote it there. A fierce disease
filled the land with countless funerals; Jehovah dealt out myriads of blows,
and multitudes of spirits failed before him.
Verse
51. And smote all the firstborn in Egypt. No exceptions were
made, the monarch bewailed his heir as did the menial at the mill. They smote
the Lord's firstborn, even Israel, and he smites theirs. The chief of their
strength in the tabernacles of Ham. Swinging his scythe over the field, death
topped off the highest flowers. The tents of Ham knew each one its own peculiar
sorrow, and were made to sympathise with the sorrows which had been ruthlessly
inflicted upon the habitations of Israel. Thus curses come home to roost.
Oppressors are repaid in their own coin, without the discount of a penny.
Verse
52. But made his own people to go forth like sheep. The
contrast is striking, and ought never to have been forgotten by the people. The
wolves were slain in heaps, the sheep were carefully gathered, and triumphantly
delivered. The tables were turned, and the poor serfs became the honoured
people, while their oppressors were humbled before them. Israel went out in a
compact body like a flock; they were defenceless in themselves as sheep, but
they were safe under their Great Shepherd; they left Egypt as easily as a flock
leaves one pasture for another. And guided them in the wilderness like a flock.
Knowing nothing of the way by their own understanding or experience, they were,
nevertheless, rightly directed, for the All wise God knew every spot of the
wilderness. To the sea, through the sea, and from the sea, the Lord led his
chosen; while their former taskmasters were too cowed in spirit, and broken in
power, to dare to molest them.
Verse
53. And he led them on safely, so that they feared not. After
the first little alarm, natural enough when they found themselves pursued by
their old taskmasters, they plucked up courage and ventured forth boldly into
the sea, and afterwards into the desert where no man dwelt. But the sea
overwhelmed their enemies. They were gone, gone for ever, never to disturb the
fugitives again. That tremendous blow effectually defended the tribes for forty
years from any further attempt to drive them back. Egypt found the stone too
heavy and was glad to let it alone. Let the Lord be praised who thus
effectually freed his elect nation. What a grand narrative have we been
considering. Well might the mightiest master of sacred song select "Israel
in Egypt" as a choice theme for his genius; and well may every believing
mind linger over every item of the amazing transaction. The marvel is that the
favoured nation should live as if unmindful of it all, and yet such is human
nature. Alas, poor man! Rather, alas, base heart! We now, after a pause, follow
again the chain of events, the narration of which had been interrupted by a
retrospect, and we find Israel entering into the promised land, there to repeat
her follies and enlarge her crimes.
Verse
54. And he brought them to the border of his sanctuary. He
conducted them to the frontier of the Holy Land, where he intended the tabernacle
to become the permanent symbol of his abode among his people. He did not leave
them halfway upon their journey to their heritage; his power and wisdom
preserved the nation till the palm trees of Jericho were within sight on the
other side of the river. Even to this mountain, which his right hand had
purchased. Nor did he leave them then, but still conducted them till they were
in the region round about Zion, which was to be the central seat of his
worship. This the Lord had purchased in type of old by the sacrifice of Isaac,
fit symbol of the greater sacrifice which was in due season to be presented
there: that mountain was also redeemed by power, when the Lord's right hand
enabled his valiant men to smite the Jebusites, and take the sacred hill from
the insulting Canaanite. Thus shall the elect of God enjoy the sure protection
of the Lord of hosts, even to the border land of death, and through the river,
up to the hill of the Lord in glory. The purchased people shall safely reach
the purchased inheritance.
Verse
55. He cast out the heathen also before them, or "he
drove out the nations." Not only were armies routed, but whole peoples
displaced. The iniquity of the Canaanites was full; their vices made them rot
above ground; therefore, the land ate up its inhabitants, the hornets vexed
them, the pestilence destroyed them, and the sword of the tribes completed the
execution to which the justice of long provoked heaven had at length appointed
them. The Lord was the true conqueror of Canaan; he cast out the nations as men
cast out filth from their habitations, he uprooted them as noxious weeds are
extirpated by the husbandman. And divided them an inheritance by line. He
divided the land of the nations among the tribes by lot and measure, assigning
Hivite, Perizzite, and Jebusite territory to Simeon, Judah, or Ephraim, as the
case might be. Among those condemned nations were not only giants in stature,
but also giants in crime: those monsters of iniquity had too long defiled the
earth; it was time that they should no more indulge the unnatural crimes for
which they were infamous; they were, therefore, doomed to forfeit life and
lands by the hands of the tribes of Israel. The distribution of the forfeited
country was made by divine appointment; it was no scramble, but a judicial
appointment of lands which had fallen to the crown by the attainder of the
former holders. And made the tribes of Israel to dwell in their tents. The
favoured people entered upon a furnished house: they found the larder supplied,
for they fed upon the old corn of the land, and the dwellings were already
builded in which they could dwell. Thus does another race often enter into the
lot of a former people, and it is sad indeed when the change which judgment
decrees does not turn out to be much for the better, because the incomers
inherit the evils as well as the goods of the ejected. Such a case of judicial
visitation ought to have had a salutary influence upon the tribes; but, alas,
they were incorrigible, and would not learn even from examples so near at home
and so terribly suggestive.
Verse
56. Yet they tempted and provoked the most high God. Change of
condition had not altered their manners. They left their nomadic habits, but
not their tendencies to wander from their God. Though every divine promise had
been fulfilled to the letter, and the land flowing with milk and honey was
actually their own, yet they tried the Lord again with unbelief, and provoked
him with other sins. He is not only high and glorious, but most High, yea, the
most High, the only being who deserves to be so highly had in honour; yet,
instead of honouring him, Israel grieved him with rebellion. And kept not his
testimonies. They were true to nothing but hereditary treachery; steadfast in
nothing but in falsehood. They knew his truth and forgot it, his will and
disobeyed it, his grace and perverted it to an occasion for greater
transgression. Reader, dost thou need a looking glass? See here is one which
suits the present expositor well; does it not also reflect thine image?
Verse
57. But turned back. Turned over the old leaf, repeated the
same offences, started aside like an ill made bow, were false and faithless to
their best promises. And dealt unfaithfully like their fathers, proving
themselves legitimate by manifesting the treachery of their sires. They were a
new generation, but not a new nation¡Xanother race yet not another. Evil
propensities are transmitted; the birth follows the progenitor; the wild ass
breeds wild asses; the children of the raven fly to the carrion. Human nature
does not improve, the new editions contain all the errata of the first, and
sometimes fresh errors are imported. They were turned aside like a deceitful
bow, which not only fails to send the arrow towards the mark in a direct line,
but springs back to the archer's hurt, and perhaps sends the shaft among his
friends to their serious jeopardy. Israel boasted of the bow as the national
weapon, they sang the song of the bow, and hence a deceitful bow is made to be
the type and symbol of their own unsteadfastness; God can make men's glory the
very ensign of their shame, he draws a bar sinister across the escutcheon of
traitors.
Verse
58. For they provoked him to anger with their high places.
This was their first error¡Xwill worship, or the worship of God, otherwise than
according to his command. Many think lightly of this, but it was no mean sin;
and its tendencies to further offence are very powerful. The Lord would have
his holy place remain as the only spot for sacrifice; and Israel, in wilful
rebellion, (no doubt glossed over by the plea of great devotion,)determined to
have many altars upon many hills. If they might have but one God, they insisted
upon it that they would not be restricted to one sacred place of sacrifice. How
much of the worship of the present day is neither more nor less than sheer will
worship! Nobody dare plead a divine appointment for a tithe of the offices,
festivals, ceremonies, and observances of certain churches. Doubtless God, so
far from being honoured by worship which he has not commanded, is greatly
angered at it. And moved him to jealousy with their graven images. This was but
one more step; they manufactured symbols of the invisible God, for they lusted
after something tangible and visible to which they could shew reverence. This
also is the crying sin of modern times. Do we not hear and see superstition
abounding? Images, pictures, crucifixes, and a host of visible things are had
in religious honour, and worst of all men now a days worship what they eat, and
call that a God which passes into their belly, and thence into baser places
still. Surely the Lord is very patient, or he would visit the earth for this
worst and basest of idolatry. He is a jealous God, and abhors to see himself
dishonoured by any form of representation which can come from man's hands.
Verse
59. When God heard this, he was wroth. The mere report of it
filled him with indignation; he could not bear it, he was incensed to the
uttermost, and most justly so. And greatly abhorred Israel. He cast his
idolatrous people from his favour, and left them to themselves, and their own
devices. How could he have fellowship with idols? What concord hath Christ with
Belial? Sin is in itself so offensive that it makes the sinner offensive too.
Idols of any sort are highly abhorrent to God, and we must see to it that we
keep ourselves from them through divine grace, for rest assured idolatry is not
consistent with true grace in the heart. If Dagon sit aloft in any soul, the
ark of God is not there. Where the Lord dwells no image of jealousy will be
tolerated. A visible church will soon become a visible curse if idols be set up
in it, and then the pruning knife will remove it as a dead branch from the
vine. Note that God did not utterly cast away his people Israel even when he
greatly abhorred them, for he returned in mercy to them, so the subsequent
verses tell us: so now the seed of Abraham, though for awhile under a heavy
cloud, will be gathered yet again, for the covenant of salt shall not be
broken. As for the spiritual seed, the Lord hath not despised nor abhorred
them; they are his peculiar treasure and lie for ever near his heart.
Verse
60. So that he forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh, the tent which he
placed among men. His glory would no more reveal itself there, he left
Shiloh to become a complete ruin. At the door of that tent shameless sin had
been perpetrated, and all around it idols had been adored, and therefore the
glory departed and Ichabod was sounded as a word of dread concerning Shiloh and
the tribe of Ephraim. Thus may the candlestick be removed though the candle is
not quenched. Erring churches become apostate, but a true church still remains;
if Shiloh be profaned Zion is consecrated. Yet is it ever a solemn caution to
all the assemblies of the saints, admonishing them to walk humbly with their
God, when we read such words as those of the prophet Jeremiah in is seventh
chapter, "Trust ye not in lying words, saying, The temple of the Lord, The
temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord, are these. Go ye now unto my place
which was in Shiloh, where I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it
for the wickedness of my people Israel." Let us take heed, lest as the ark
never returned to Shiloh after its capture by the Philistines, so the gospel
may be taken from us in judgment, never to be restored to the same church
again.
Verse
61. And delivered his strength into captivity. The ark was
captured by the Philistines in battle, only because the Lord for the punishment
of Israel chose to deliver it into their hands, otherwise they could have had
no power at all against it. The token of the divine presence is here poetically
called "his strength; ", and, indeed, the presence of the Lord is his
strength among his people. It was a black day when the mercyseat was removed,
when the cherubim took flight, and Israel's palladium was carried away. And his
glory into the enemy's hand. The ark was the place for the revealed glory of
God, and his enemies exulted greatly when they bore it away into their own cities.
Nothing could more clearly have shown the divine displeasure. It seemed to say
that Jehovah would sooner dwell among his avowed adversaries than among so
false a people as Israel; he would sooner bear the insults of Philistia than
the treacheries of Ephraim. This was a fearful downfall for the favoured
nation, and it was followed by dire judgments of most appalling nature. When
God is gone all is gone. No calamity can equal the withdrawal of the divine
presence from a people. O Israel, how art thou brought low! Who shall help thee
now that thy God has left thee!
Verse
62. He gave his people over also unto the sword. They fell in
battle because they were no longer aided by the divine strength. Sharp was the
sword, but sharper still the cause of its being unsheathed. And was wroth with
his inheritance. They were his still, and twice in this verse they are
called so; yet his regard for them did not prevent his chastening them, even
with a rod of steel. Where the love is most fervent, the jealousy is most cruel.
Sin cannot be tolerated in those who are a people near unto God.
Verse
63. The fire consumed their young men. As fire slew Nadab and
Abihu literally, so the fire of divine wrath fell on the sons of Eli, who
defiled the sanctuary of the Lord, and the like fire, in the form of war,
consumed the flower of the people. And their maidens were not given to
marriage. No nuptial hymn were sung, the bride lacked her bridegroom, the edge
of the sword had cut the bands of their espousals, and left unmarried those who
else had been extolled in hymns and congratulations. Thus Israel was brought
very low, she could not find husbands for her maids, and therefore her state
was not replenished; no young children clustered around parental knees. The
nation had failed in its solemn task of instructing the young in the fear of
Jehovah, and it was a fitting judgment that the very production of a posterity
should be endangered.
Verse
64. Their priests fell by the sword. Hophni and Phineas were
slain; they were among the chief in sin, and, therefore, they perished with the
rest. Priesthood is no shelter for transgressors; the jewelled breastplate
cannot turn aside the arrows of judgment. And their widows made no lamentation.
Their private griefs were swallowed up in the greater national agony, because
the ark of God was taken. As the maidens had no heart for the marriage song, so
the widows had no spirit, even to utter the funeral wail. The dead were buried
too often and too hurriedly to allow of the usual rites of lamentation. This
was the lowest depth; from this point things will take a gracious turn.
Verse
65. The Lord awaked as one out of sleep. Justly inactive, he
had suffered the enemy to triumph, his ark to be captured, and his people to be
slain; but now he arouses himself, his heart is full of pity for his chosen,
and anger against the insulting foe. Woe to thee, O Philistia, now thou shalt
feel the weight of his right hand! Waking and putting forth strength like a man
who has taken a refreshing draught, the Lord is said to be, like a mighty man
that shouteth by reason of wine. Strong and full of energy the Lord dashed upon
his foes, and made them stagger beneath his blows. His ark from city to city
went as an avenger rather than as a trophy, and in every place the false gods
fell helplessly before it.
Verse
66. He smote his enemies in the hinder parts. The emerods
rendered them ridiculous, and their numerous defeats made them yet more so.
They fled but were overtaken and wounded in the back to their eternal disgrace.
He put them to a perpetual reproach. Orientals are not very refined, and we can
well believe that the haemorrhoids were the subject of many a taunt against the
Philistines, as also were their frequent defeats by Israel until at last they
were crushed under, never to exist again as a distinct nation.
Verse
67. Moreover he refused the tabernacle of Joseph. God had
honoured Ephraim, for to that tribe belonged Joshua the great conqueror, and
Gideon the great judge, and within its borders was Shiloh the place of the ark
and the sanctuary; but now the Lord would change all this and set up other
rulers. He would no longer leave matters to the leadership of Ephraim, since
that tribe had been tried and found wanting. And chose not the tribe of
Ephraim. Sin had been found in them, folly and instability, and therefore they
were set aside as unfit to lead.
Verse
68. But chose the tribe of Judah. To give the nation another
trial this tribe was elected to supremacy. This was according to Jacob's dying
prophecy. Our Lord sprang out of Judah, and he it is whom his brethren shall
praise. The Mount Zion which he loved. The tabernacle and ark were removed to
Zion during the reign of David; no honour was left to the wayward Ephraimites.
Hard by this mountain the Father of the Faithful had offered up his only son,
and there in future days the great gatherings of his chosen seed would be, and
therefore Zion is said to be lovely unto God.
Verse
69. And he built his sanctuary like high palaces. The
tabernacle was placed on high, literally and spiritually it was a mountain of
beauty. True religion was exalted in the land. For sanctity it was a temple,
for majesty it was a palace. Like the earth which he hath established for ever.
Stability was well as stateliness were seen in the temple, and so also in the
church of God. The prophets saw both in vision.
Verse
70. He chose David also his servant. It was an election of a
sovereignly gracious kind, and it operated practically by making the chosen man
a willing servant of the Lord. He was not chosen because he was a servant, but
in order that he might be so. David always esteemed it to be a high honour that
he was both elect of God, and a servant of God. And took him from the
sheepfolds. A shepherd of sheep he had been, and this was a fit school for a
shepherd of men. Lowliness of occupation will debar no man from such honours as
the Lord's election confers, the Lord seeth not as man seeth. He delights to
bless those who are of low estate.
Verse
71. From following the ewes great with young he brought him to
feed Jacob his people, and Israel his inheritance. Exercising the care and
art of those who watch for the young lambs, David followed the ewes in their
wanderings; the tenderness and patience thus acquired would tend to the
development of characteristics most becoming in a king. To the man thus
prepared, the office and dignity which God had appointed for him, came in due
season, and he was enabled worthily to wear them. It is wonderful how often
divine wisdom so arranges the early and obscure portion of a choice life, so as
to make it a preparatory school for a more active and noble future.
Verse
72. So he fed them according to the integrity of his heart.
David was upright before God, and never swerved in heart from the obedient
worship of Jehovah. Whatever faults he had, he was unfeignedly sincere in his
allegiance to Israel's superior king; he shepherded for God with honest heart.
And guided them by the skilfulness of his hands. He was a sagacious ruler, and
the psalmist magnifies the Lord for having appointed him. Under David, the
Jewish kingdom rose to an honourable position among the nations, and exercised
an influence over its neighbours. In closing the Psalm which has described the
varying conditions of the chosen nation, we are glad to end so peacefully; with
all noise of tumult or of sinful rites hushed into silence. After a long voyage
over a stormy sea, the ark of the Jewish state rested on its Ararat, beneath a
wise and gentle reign, to be wafted no more hither and thither by floods and
gales. The psalmist had all along intended to make this his last stanza, and we
too may be content to finish all our songs of love with the reign of the Lord's
anointed. Only we may eagerly enquire, when will it come? When shall we end
these desert roamings, these rebellions, and chastenings, and enter into the
rest of a settled kingdom, with the Lord Jesus reigning as "the Prince of
the house of David?" Thus have we ended this lengthy parable, may we in
our life parable have less of sin, and as much of grace as are displayed in
Israel's history, and may we close it under the safe guidance of "that
great Shepherd of the sheep." AMEN.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm appears to have been occasioned by the removal of the
sanctuary from Shiloh in the tribe of Ephraim to Judah, and the coincident
transfer of preeminence in Israel from the former to the latter tribe, as
clearly evinced by David's settlement as the head of the church and nation.
Though this was the execution of God's purpose, the writer here shows that it
also proceeded from the divine judgment on Ephraim, under whose leadership the
people had manifested the same sinful and rebellious character which had
distinguished their ancestors in Egypt. B. M. Smith, in "The Critical
and Explanatory Pocket Bible." 1867.
Verse
1. Give ear, O my people, to my law: incline your ears.
Inclining the ears does not denote any ordinary sort of hearing, but such as a
disciple renders to the words of his master, with submission and reverence of
mind, silent and earnest, that whatever is enunciated for the purpose of
instruction may be heard and properly understood, and nothing be allowed to
escape. He is a hearer of a different stamp, who hears carelessly, not for the
purpose of learning or imitation, but to criticise, to make merry, to indulge
animosity, or to kill time. Musculus.
Verse
1. Incline your ears. Lay them close to my lips, that no
parcel of this sacred language fall to the ground by your default. John
Trapp.
Verse
1. To the words of my mouth. Was it not sufficient for the
parallelism to say, To my words? Obviously. Why then is there any notice
taken of the mouth? Because those who can prescribe laws to their
subjects are also those who scorn to address them with their mouth. Such is the
custom of kings, princes, pontiffs, both Roman and others. For the higher every
one rises in dignity, the less he considers it becoming to him to speak to the
people, to teach and instruct them by word of mouth. They think they owe nothing
to the people, but are altogether taken up with this, that they may be looked
up to as princes, and so retain a certain secular majesty of command. But, with
one's own mouth to teach the ignorant, is a singular proof of love and paternal
affection, such as becomes the preceptor, pastor and teacher. This Christ most
constantly employed, because he was touched with paternal affection towards the
lost sheep, and came as a shepherd to seek them. The manner of earthly princes
he therefore rejected, and clothed himself with that paternal custom which
becomes the shepherd and teacher, going about and opening his mouth in order to
give instruction. See Matthew 5. Rightly, therefore, was the prophet not
content with saying, Give ear, O my people, to my law: he adds, Incline
your ears to the words of my mouth. Thus he indicates that he was about to
address and instruct them with paternal affection. Musculus.
Verse
2. Parable. Dark sayings. lvm, an authoritative weighty
speech or saying. The Hebrew term very nearly answers to the Greek, kuriai
doxai, i.e., authoritative sentences or maxims, or weighty sayings,
expressing or implying a comparison, as such sayings frequently do. hdyx
an enigma, a parable, which penetrates the mind, and when understood
makes a deep impression of what is intended or represented by it. Here twdyx
seems to refer to the historical facts mentioned in the subsequent part of the
Psalm, considered as enigmas of spiritual concern. John Parkhurst.
Verse
2. Parable. Parables are the speeches of wise men, yea, they
are the extracts and spirits of wisdom. The Hebrew word signifies to rule, or
have authority, because such speeches come upon us with authority, and subdue
our reason by the weight of theirs. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
2. I will utter. The metaphor in this word is taken from a
fountain which pours forth water abundantly. For ebg properly means to gush
forth, or bubble up. The heart of teachers in the Church ought to be full, and
ready to pour forth those streams by which the Church is watered. Their spring
ought not to become exhausted, and fail in the summer. Mollerus.
Verse
3. Which we have heard and known. We have heard the law
and known the facts. Adam Clarke.
Verse
3. Fathers. Those are worthy of the name of fathers in
the church, in relation to posterity, who transmit to posterity the truth of
God contained in Scripture, such as here is set down in this Psalm: and this is
the only infallible sort of tradition, which delivereth to posterity what God
delivered to the prophets or their predecessors by Scripture, such as is the
doctrine delivered in this Psalm. David Dickson.
Verse
4. We will not hide from their children, etc. Thou must not
only praise God thyself, but endeavour to transmit the memorial of his goodness
to posterity. Children are their parent's heirs; it were unnatural for a
father, before he dies, to bury up his treasure in the earth where his children
should not find or enjoy it; now the mercies of God are not the least part of a
good man's treasure, nor the least of his children's inheritance, being both
helps to their faith, matter for their praise, and spurs to their obedience.
"Our fathers have told us what works thou didst in their days, how thou
didst drive out the heathen" etc., Ps 44:1-2; from this they ground their
confidence, Ps 44:4, "Thou art my King, O God; command deliverances for
Jacob, " and excite their thankfulness, Ps 44:8, "In God we boast all
the day long, and praise thy name for ever." Indeed, as children are their
parents heirs, so they become in justice liable to pay their parents' debts:
now the great debt which the saint at death stands charged with, is that which
he owes to God for his mercies, and, therefore, it is but reason he should tie
his posterity to the payment thereof. Thus mayest thou be praising God in
heaven and earth at the same time. William Gurnall.
Verses
4-6. The cloth that is dyed in the wool will keep colour best.
Disciples in youth will prove angels in age. Use and experience strengthen and
confirm in any art or science. The longer thy child hath been brought up in
Christ's school, the more able he will be to find out Satan's wiles and
fallacies, and to avoid them. The longer he hath been at the trade the more
skill and delight will he have in worshipping and enjoying the blessed God. The
tree when it is old stands strongly against the wind, just as it was set when
it was young. The children of Merindal so answered one another in the matters
of religion, before the persecuting Bishop of Cavailon, that a bystander said
unto the bishop, I must needs confess I have often been at the disputations of
the doctors in the Sorbonne, but I never learned so much as by these children.
Seven children at one time suffered martyrdom with Symphrosia, a godly matron,
their mother. Such a blessing doth often accompany religious breeding;
therefore Julian the apostate, to hinder the growth and increase of
Christianity, would not suffer children to be taught either human or divine
learning.
Philip
was glad that Alexander was born whilst Aristotle lived, that he might be
instructed by Aristotle in philosophy. It is no mean mercy that thy children
are born in the days of the gospel, and in a valley of vision, a land of light,
where they may be instructed in Christianity. Oh, do not fail, therefore, to
acquaint thy children with the nature of God, the natures and offices of
Christ, their own natural sinfulness and misery, the way and means of their
recovery, the end and errand for which they were sent into the world, the
necessity of regeneration and a holy life, if ever they would escape eternal
death! Alas! how is it possible they should ever arrive at heaven if they know
not the way thither? The inhabitants of Mitylene, sometime the lords of the
seas, if any of their neighbours revolted, did inflict this punishment,¡Xthey
forbade them to instruct their children, esteeming this a sufficient revenge.¡X(Aelian.)
Reader, if thou art careless of this duty, I would ask thee what wrong thy
children have done thee that thou shouldest revenge thyself by denying them
that which is their due. I mean pious instruction. The Jewish rabbis speak of a
very strict custom and method for the instruction of their children, according
to their age and capacity. At five years old they were filii legis, sons
of the law, to read it. At thirteen they were filli praecepti, sons of
the precept, to understand the law. At fifteen they were Talmudistae,
and went to deeper points of the law, even to Talmudic doubts. As thy children
grow up, so do thou go on to instruct them in God's will. They are "born
like the wild ass's colt, "Job 11:12¡Xthat is, unruly, foolish, and
ignorant. We often call a fool an ass, but here it is a "wild ass's colt,
"which is most rude, unruly, and foolish. How, then, shall thy ignorant
children come to know God or themselves without instruction?
Thy
duty is to acquaint thy children with the works of God. Teach them his doings
as well as his sayings. "Take heed to thyself, lest thou forget the things
which thine eyes have seen: but teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons,
"De 4:9. God's wonders should be had in everlasting remembrance. "He
hath made his wonderful works to be remembered, "Ps 109:4. Now, one
special way to do this is by writing them in our children's memories, hereby
they are transmitted to posterity. This was the godly practice of the
patriarchs, to instruct their children concerning the creation of the world,
transgression of man, destruction of the old world, God's providence, the
Messiah to be revealed, and the like. The parents' mouths were large books, in
which their children did read the noble acts of the Lord. The precept is here
urged (Ps 78:2-7) upon a double ground, partly for God's praise, in the
perpetuity of his worthy deeds: his words are of great weight, and therefore,
as curious pictures or precious jewels, must in memory of him be bequeathed
from father to son whilst the world continueth. If they are written on paper or
parchment they may perish (and is it not a thousand pities that such excellent
records should be lost?); but if they be written by fathers successfully on
their children's hearts, no time shall blot or wear them out, Ex 12:26-27.
Therefore, as the rabbis observe, the night before the passover the Jews (to
keep God's mercies in memory to his honour) were wont to confer with their
children on this wise. The child said, Why is it called the passover? The
father said, Because the angel passed over us when it slew the Egyptians, and
destroyed us not. The child said, Why do we eat unleavened bread? The father
answered, Because we were forced to hasten out of Egypt. The child said, Why do
we eat bitter herbs? The father answered, To mind us of our afflictions in
Egypt.
But
the duty is also urged, partly for their own profit, Ps 78:7, That
they might set their hope in God, etc. Acquaintance with God's favour will
encourage their faith; knowledge of his power will help them to believe his
promise. Reader, obedience to this precept may tend much to thy own and thy
children's profit. By teaching thy children God's actions, thou wilt fix them
the faster, and they will make the greater impression, upon thy own spirit. A
frequent mention of things is the best art of memory: what the mouth preacheth
often the mind will ponder much. Besides, it may work for thy children's weal;
the more they be acquainted with the goodness, wisdom, power, and faithfulness
of God which appear in his works, the more they will fear, love, and trust him.
George Swinnock.
Verses
5-6. Five generations appear to be mentioned:
1. Fathers;
2. Their children;
3. The generation to come;
4. And their children;
5. And their children.
¡XAdam Clarke.
Verse
6. Children should earnestly hearken to the instruction of their
parents that they themselves may afterwards be able to tell the same to their
sons, and so a golden chain be formed, wherewith being bound together, the
whole family may seek the skies. Whilst the father draws the son, the son the
grandson, the grandson his children to Christ, as the magnet of them all, that
they all may be made one. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
7. Set their hope in God. Their hope was to be set not in the
law which punishes, but in grace freely given which redeems; therefore is it
added and not forget the works of God. Johannes De Turrecremata. 1476.
Verse
8. And might not be as their fathers. The warning is taken
from an example at home. He does not say, That they might not be as the
nations, which know not God: but, That they might not be as their fathers.
Domestic examples of vice are much more pernicious than foreign ones. Hence one
says: Sic natura jubet, velocius et citius nos corrumpunt vitiorum exempla
domestica. Let us learn from this place, that it is not safe in all things
to cleave to the footsteps of our fathers. He speaks of those fathers who
perished in the wilderness: of whom, see Numbers 14; Deuteronomy 1, and Ps
68:6. Musculus.
Verse
8. As their fathers, a stubborn and rebellious generation.
Forasmuch as this bad emulation of their ancestors is with difficulty plucked
from the minds of men, because of our innate reverence for our fathers, the
prophet heaps up words in the description of the crimes of their fathers. He
says they were hrm rwd, that is, a generation detracting from the authority of
God, and continually breaking the bonds of the law, and in their petulance
shaking off the yoke, as a violent and refractory horse, or an untamed bullock,
enduring not the rein, or refusing to yield its neck to the yoke, but
constantly drawing back and rejecting the bridle. Mollerus.
Verses
8-9. Look carefully to the ground of thy active obedience, that it be
sound and sincere. The same right principles whereby the sincere soul acts for
Christ, will carry him to suffer for Christ, when a call from God comes with
such an errand. "The children of Ephraim, being armed, and carrying bows,
turned back in the day of battle." Why? what is the matter? so well armed,
and yet so cowardly? This seems strange: read the preceding verse and you will
cease wondering; they are called there, A generation that set not their
heart aright, and whose spirit was not steadfast with God. Let the armour
be what it will, yea, if soldiers were in a castle, whose foundations were
rock, and walls brass; yet if their hearts be not right to their prince, an
easy storm will drive them from the walls, and a little scare open their gate,
which hath not this bolt of sincerity on it to hold it fast. In our late wars
we have seen that the honest hearts within thin and weak works have held the
town, when no walls could defend treachery from betraying trust. William
Gurnall.
Verse
9. The children of Ephraim, being armed, etc. "When ye
had girded on every man is weapons of war, ye were ready to go up into the
hill. And the Lord said unto me, Say unto them, Go not up, neither fight; for I
am not among you; lest ye be smitten before your enemies. So I spake unto you;
and ye would not hear, but rebelled against the commandment of the Lord, and
went presumptuously up into the hill. And the Amorites, which dwelt in that
mountain, came out against you, and chased you, as bees do, and destroyed you
in Seir, even unto Hormah." De 1:41-44.
Verse
9. Many person suppose the passage to refer to the event recorded in
1Ch 7:21-22, where are mentioned the sons of Ephraim, "whom the men of
Gath that were born in the land slew, because they came down to take away their
cattle. And Ephraim their father mourned many days, and his brethren came to
comfort him." The manner of the relation shows that the slaughter must
have been great; and this flight and defeat, and their not acknowledging their
dependence upon God, it is supposed the psalmist has in view in this place. But
the objection to this interpretation is, that the event referred to in the book
of Chronicles, evidently occurred at a time anterior to that of the Israelitish
exodus from Egypt; whilst Ps 78:11 speaks of these same Ephraimites being
forgetful of God's doings and wonderful works which he did at the time of their
exit from Egypt. It is, therefore, more probable that Myrka ygk may designate
the Israelitish people generally, which Mendelssohn thinks to be the case. He
observes that "the meaning of the noun Ephraim was that of a general term
for Israel before the reigning of the house of David, because that Joshua the
son of Nun, the first judge, was of this tribe; also because the territory
assigned to this tribe was in the region of Shiloh: and it is possible that
because of the reputation of this tribe in those days, all those who were in
high esteem were also called Ephraimites." He might have added another and
stronger reason than any of the preceding for this application of the term to
Israel, and it is, that Jeroboam, who may be regarded as the founder of the
Israelitish monarchy, is said, in 1Ki 11:26, to have been a descendant of
Ephraim. The war alluded to may have been one of those which were waged between
the ten tribes and the people of Judah. George Phillips.
Verse
10. Walk in his law. Note, we must walk in the law of God,
this is that narrow and sacred way which Christ traces before us. At Athens
there was iera odov, the sacred way, by which, as Harpocratio relates, the
priests of the mysteries travelled to Elusin. At Rome also there was a way
which was called Via Sacra. To us also there is a way to the skies,
consecrated by the footsteps of the saints. It behooves us therefore not to loiter,
but to be ever on the march. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
12. Zoan. The name of a city in Egypt (Nu 13:22), though it be
not set down in the story in Exodus, is twice specified by the writer of this
psalm, here, and Ps 78:43, as the scene wherein the wondrous works were wrought
on Pharaoh by Moses; either because really the first and principal of the
miracles were shewed Pharaoh there, this city being the seat of the king, and a
most ancient city, as appears by the expression used of Hebron, in Nu 13:22,
where to set out the antiquity of that city, where Abraham, the tenth from Noah
dwelt, it is said, that "it was built seven years before Zoan in Egypt;
"or perhaps only in poetical style, as "the field" or country of
Zoan, is all one with the "land of Egypt" foregoing. Thus, in other
prophetic writings, when judgments are threatened, instead of "Egypt"
sometimes we find "Zoan" alone, Isa 19:11, where the "princes of
Zoan" are all one with the counsellors of Pharaoh; sometimes "the
princes of Zoan, "with the addition of some other city, as Isa 19:13,
"the princes of Zoan, the princes of Noph, "i.e., again, the
counsellors of that kingdom, which as it follows, "have seduced Egypt,
"¡Xbrought the whole nation to ruin. So Isa 30:4, where they sent to Egypt
for relief, it is said, their "princes were at Zoan, their ambassadors at
Hanes." Henry Hammond.
Verse
12. In the field of Zoan. We see in this passage that it was
not without reason that God most powerfully displayed his wondrous works, his
virtue and his glory in the more famous cities: not that he despised the
humbler and obscure, but that he might more conveniently in this way scatter
abroad the knowledge and renown of his name. For this cause he desired Moses to
perform his miracles in the royal city, and in its field; for the same
reason he afterwards fixed his dwelling place in the most famous city of
Canaan, in which he decreed also that Christ his Son should be crucified and
the foundation of his heavenly kingdom laid. Musculus.
Verse
13. He made the waters to stand as an heap. The original word
imports, those great heaps which are made use of as dykes or banks to restrain
the waters. But the Jews have not only understood these expressions literally,
but have likewise taken upon them to add particular circumstances, as if the
history had been so concise, that it wanted to be supplied therewith. They say,
that the sea had formed, as it were, twelve roads or causeways, according to
the number of the tribes of the Israelites. James Saurin.
Verse
13. He made the waters to stand as an heap. God did not wish
altogether to take the sea from the gaze of the Hebrews, but to interrupt and
divide it, that like a wall it might stand firm on either side of the way. This
was done, first, that the miracle might be evident, for in that sea there is no
tidal rise or fall of the waters. Secondly, that the people might have greater
joy at the sight of so great a miracle. Thirdly, that in their whole passage
they might depend more upon the providence of God, who, in a single moment,
could allow the sea to return to its bed and drown all of them. It is God's
will than we should flee to him the more ardently as the aspect of present
danger. Fourthly and lastly, that the people might pass over the more rapidly,
since they knew not how long God wished the miracle to last. Thomas Le
Blanc.
Verse
14. That there was a mystery in this pillar of cloud and fire
is clear from Isa 4:5-6, for there never was a literal cloud and fire
upon Mount Zion. This fiery pillar did cease when they were entered into
Canaan; Isaiah therefore intends a spiritual thing under those
expressions. So it is represented by the Apostle as representing a gospel
mystery: 1Co 10:2. It signified and shadowed forth, 1. Something of Christ
himself; 2. The benefits of Christ; 3. The ordinances of
Christ.
1. Christ
himself. Some have noted a shadow both of his Deity and humanity.
There was a fiery brightness in the clouds, which yet was but a dark
shadow of the glory of his Deity, which was often in vision so represented; but
his divine nature was veiled and over clouded by his human, as in this shadow
there was a pillar of cloud as well as fire. In Re 10:1 Christ is
represented as clothed with a cloud, and his feet as pillars of fire;
expressions notably answering this ancient type and shadow.
2.
It holds forth something of the benefits of Christ. What benefits had
they from this pillar of fire and cloud? They had three: (1) Light and
direction. (2) Defence and protection. (3) Ornament and glory. All which we
have in a higher manner in Christ by the gospel.
3.
It figured also the ordinances, and his presence in and with them; for
the ordinances are the outward and visible tokens of God's presence with his
people, as this fiery pillar was of old. And, therefore, when the Tabernacle
was made and set up, it rested upon the Tabernacle, Ex 40:38. There be
some duties are secret, which the world sees not, nor may see; as alms deeds
and personal and secret prayer. But the ordinances of institution are
things that ought to be practised with all the publickness that may be: they
are outward and visible tokens of God's presence, particularly that great
ordinance of baptism, as in 1Co 10:2. The cloud, it seems, had a
refreshing moisture in it, to shade, refresh, and cool them from the burning
heat; and they were bedewed (Rather "baptised" in it, as Paul
puts it in 1Co 10:2) with it, as we are with the water of baptism; whereby this
legal cloud became a type of gospel baptism. And so you see how it represented
something of Christ himself, and something of his benefits, and
something of all his ordinances under the New Testament. ¡XSamuel
Mather.
Verse
14. All the night. We need not dwell long upon the thought of
what this all was to the Israelites. In night marchings, and
night restings, it was very precious; whether they were in motion or at rest,
it was alike needed, alike good. This light of fire, unless continuous, would
have been of comparatively little worth. Were it suddenly extinguished as they
marched, all Israel would have been plunged into confusion and dismay; the
quenching of the light would have changed into a disordered rabble, the
marshalled host. Philip Bennett Power, in "Breviates: or Short Texts
and Their Teachings."
Verse
15. The rocks. They were typical of Christ, 1Co 10:4; who is
frequently compared to one for height, strength, and duration, shade, shelter,
and protection; and is called the "Rock of Israel, " the "Rock
of offence to both houses of Israel, "the "Rock of salvation,
"the "Rock of refuge, "the "Rock of strength, "the
"Rock that is higher than, "the saints, and on which the church is
built, and who is "the shadow of a great rock in a weary land." John
Gill.
Verse
15. Gave them drink as out of the great depths. As if he had
formed a lake or an ocean, furnishing an inexhaustible supply. Albert
Barnes.
Verse
16. He brought streams also out of the rock, etc. "Where
sin abounded, grace did much more abound." The second murmuring for water
at Kadesh seems to have been a more aggravated act of rebellion than the
former, and yet the water is given in greater abundance. Oh, the freeness of
the sovereign grace of God! W. Wilson.
Verse
17. And they sinned yet more against him. He does not say that
they sinned only, but that they sinned against God. And they sinned yet more
against him, namely, God. Against what God? Against him who had
delivered them by great and unheard of wonders out of Egypt, who had led them
as free men across the Red Sea with a dry foot, who had continued to lead and
to protect them will pillars of cloud and fire by day and night, and had given
them to drink abundantly of water drawn from the arid rock. Against this God
they had added sin to sin. Simply to sin is human, and happens to the saints
even after they have received grace: but to sin against God argues a singular
degree of impiety. To sin against God is to injure and dishonour him in things
immediately pertaining to himself. So they sinned against God, because after so
many distinguished proofs and testimonies of his care made manifest to them,
they continued to think and speak evil against him. All sins indeed, of
whatever class they may be, are done against God, because they are opposed to
his will; but those which are committed peculiarly against God, are certainly
greater than others. Such are those wrought against his name, goodness,
providence, power, truth, and worship, and against those things which specially
concern him, whatever they may be. So we read of the sins of the sons of Eli,
1Sa 2:24-25: "It is no good report that I hear: ye make the Lord's people
to transgress. If one man sin against another, the judge shall judge him; but
if a man sin against the Lord, who shall intreat for him?" Musculus.
Verse
17. They sinned yet more. Their sin was not murmuring only,
sinful as that is, but uncontrolled desire. And for what was that
desire? It was for meat. They had grown so weary of the bread of heaven which
God so mercifully provided; and they wanted something in addition¡Xsomething,
too, which was not absolutely necessary to their existence. When they murmured
for water at Massah, they murmured for something needful. Their sin then
was in murmuring, instead of praying. But here they lusted for
something unnecessary, and this was an aggravation of their sin. And
thus the psalmist, evidently comparing this sin with the murmuring at Massah,
says, "They sinned yet more against him." George Wagner, in
"The Wanderings of the Children of Israel."
Verse
18. They tempted God. We know that, although "God cannot
be tempted with evil, "he may justly be said to be tempted, whensoever
men, by being dissatisfied with his dealings, virtually ask that he will alter
those dealings, and proceed in a way more congenial with their feelings. If you
reflect a little, you can hardly fail to perceive, that in a very strict sense,
this and the like may be said to be a tempting of God. Suppose a man to be
discontented with the appointments of Providence; suppose him to murmur and
repine at what the Almighty allots him to do or to bear: is he not to be charged
with provoking God to change his purpose? and what is this if it be not
"tempting" God¡Xa striving to induce him to swerve from his plans,
though every one of those plans has been settled by infinite wisdom? Or, again,
if any one of us, notwithstanding multiplied proofs of the Divine
lovingkindness, doubt or question whether God do indeed love him; of what is he
guilty, if not of tempting the Lord, seeing that he solicits God to give
additional evidence, as though there were deficiency, and challenges him to
fresh demonstrations of what he has already abundantly displayed? This would be
called tempting amongst men. If a child were to show by his actions that
he doubted or disbelieved the affection of his parents, he would be considered
as thereby striving to extort from them fresh proofs of that affection, though
they had already done as much as either in justice or in wisdom they ought to
have done; this would be a clear tempting of them, and that too in the ordinary
sense of the term. In short, unbelief of every kind and degree may be said to
be a tempting of God; for not to believe on the evidence which he has seen fit
to give, is to tempt him to give more than he has already given¡Xoffering our
possible assent, if proof were increased, as an inducement to him to go beyond
what his wisdom has prescribed... You cannot distrust God, and not accuse him
of a want either of power or of goodness; you cannot repine¡Xno, not even in
thought¡Xwithout virtually telling him that his plans are not the best, nor his
dispensations the wisest, which might have been appointed in respect of
yourselves. So that your fear, or your despondency, or your anxiety in
circumstances of perplexity, or of peril, is nothing less than a call upon God
to depart from his fixed course,¡Xa suspicion, or rather an assertion, that he
might proceed in a manner more worthy of himself, and therefore a challenge to
him to alter his dealings, if he would prove that he possesses the attributes
which he claims. You may not intend thus to accuse, or provoke God, whenever
you murmur; but your murmuring does all this, and cannot fail to do it. You
cannot be dissatisfied, without virtually saying that God might order things
better; you cannot say that he might order things better, without virtually
demanding that he change his course of acting, and give other proofs of his
infinite perfections. And thus you tempt him, tempt him even as did the
Israelites in the wilderness. Henry Melvill.
Verse
18. Asking meat for their lusts. God had given them meat for
their hunger in the manna, wholesome, pleasant food, and in abundance; he had
given them meat for their faith, out of the heads of Leviathan which he brake
in pieces, Ps 74:14. But all this would not serve, they must have meat for
their lust; dainties and varieties to gratify a luxurious appetite. Nothing
is more provoking to God, than our quarrelling with our allotment, and
indulging the desires of the flesh. Matthew Henry.
Verse
19. It is particularly to be observed, that the sin of which the
children of Israel were on this occasion guilty, was not in wishing for bread
and water, but in thinking for one moment, that after the Lord had brought them
out of Egypt, he would suffer them, for the lack of any needful thing, to come
short of Canaan. It was no sin to be hungry and thirsty; it was a necessity of
their nature. There is nothing living that does not desire and require food:
when we do not we are dead, and that they did so was no sin. Their sin was to
doubt either that God could or would support them in the wilderness, or allow
those who followed his leading to lack any good thing. This was their sin.
It is just the same with the Christian now. These Israelites did not more
literally require a supply of daily food for their bodies, than does the
Christian for his soul. Not to do so is a sign of death, and the living soul
would soon die without it. And so far from its being a sin, our Lord has
pronounced that man blessed who hungers and thirsts after righteousness, adding
the most precious promise, that all such shall be satisfied. But it is a sin,
and a very great sin, should this food not be perceptibly, and to the evidence
of our senses, immediately supplied, to murmur and be fearful. It was for the
trial of their faith that these things happened to the Israelites, as do
the trials of all Christians in all ages: and it is "after we have
suffered a while" that we may expect to be established, strengthened,
settled. Brownlow North, in "Ourselves. A Picture sketched from the
History of the Children of Israel." (1865.)
Verses
19-20. After all their experience, they doubted the divine omnipotence,
as if it were to be regarded as nothing, when it refused to gratify their
lusts. Unbelief is so deeply rooted in the human heart, that when God performs
miracles on earth, unbelief doubts whether he can perform them in heaven,
and when he does them in heaven, whether he can do them on earth?
Augustus F. Tholuck.
Verse
20. Can he give bread also? They should have said, "Will
he serve our lusts?" but that they were ashamed to say. John Trapp.
Verse
20. Who will say that a man is thankful to his friend for a past
kindness, if he nourishes an ill opinion of him for the future? This was all
that ungrateful Israel returned to God, for his miraculous broaching of the
rock to quench their thirst: Behold, he smote the rock,¡XCan he give bread
also? This, indeed, was their trade all the time they were in the
wilderness. Wherefore, God gives them their character, not by what they seemed
to be while his mercies were before them; then they could say, "God was
their rock, and the High God their Redeemer; "but by their temper and
carriage in straits; when the cloth was drawn, and the feast taken out of their
sight, what opinion then had they of God? Could they satisfy his name so far as
to trust him for their dinner tomorrow who had feasted them yesterday? Truly
no, as soon as they feel their hunger return, like froward children, they are
crying, as if God meant to starve them. Wherefore God rejects their praises,
and owns not their hypocritical acknowledgments, but sets their ingratitude
upon record; they forgot his works, and waited not for his counsel. O how sad
is this, that after God had entertained a soul at his table with choice mercies
and deliverances, these should be so ill husbanded, that not a bit of them
should be left to give faith a meal, to keep the heart from fainting, when God
comes not so fast to deliver as desired. He is the most thankful man that
treasures up the mercies of God in his memory, and can feed his faith with what
God hath done for him, so as to walk in the strength thereof in present
straits. William Gurnall.
Verse
23. Opened the doors of heaven. There is an allusion here to
the flood, as in Ps 78:15. A. R. Fausset.
Verse
23. Opened the doors of heaven. God, who has the key of the
clouds, opened the doors of heaven, that is more than opening the
windows, which yet is spoken of as a great blessing, Mal 3:19. Matthew
Henry.
Verse
23. Opened the doors of heaven. This is a metaphor taken from
a granary, from which corn is brought; and by opening the doors is
signified, that the manna fell very plentifully. Compare Ge 7:11. Thomas
Fenton.
Verse
24-25. Manna. The prophet celebrates this miracle, first, because
of the unusual place whence the manna was sent. For he did not produce fruits
from the earth wherewith to feed them, but rained down this food from the
clouds, and from the depths of the skies. Secondly, because of the
facility of the distribution. By the command of God alone, without any labour
of men, yea, while they slept, this food was prepared. Therefore is it said, He
gave, etc. Thirdly, he celebrates its great abundance which sufficed
to supply so great a multitude. Fourthly, the excellence of the food. He
calls it the food of the excellent or the strong, such as was not pleasant
merely to the common multitude, but to the princes also, and to the heroes, for
it was the food of the mighty ones. Mollerus.
Verse
25. Man. Rather, as Ex 16:6, every man. Not one of them
was left without it. A. R. Fausset.
Verse
25. Man did eat angel's food. It is called angel's food,
not because the angels do daily feed upon it, but because it was both made and
ministered by the ministry of angels, and that phrase sets forth the excellency
of it. Christopher Ness (1621-1705), in "The Sacred History and Mystery
of the Old Testament."
Verse
25. Angels food. Mann is called the bread of angels
because it was brought down by their ministry; and it was so pleasant in taste,
that if the angels had eaten bread, it might have served them. John Weemse.
Verse
25. Angel's food. So their manna was called, either,
1.
Because it was provided and sent by the ministry of angels; or,
2.
Because it seemed to come down from heaven, the dwelling place of the angels;
or,
3.
To set forth the excellency of this bread, that it was meat, as one would say,
fit for angels, if angels needed meat.
And
so, indeed, the exceeding glory of Stephen's countenance is set forth by this,
that they "saw his face as it had been the face of an angel, "Ac
6:15; and Paul calls an excellent tongue, "the tongue of angels, "1Co
13:1. Arthur Jackson.
Verse
25. The more excellent the benefit is which God giveth, the greater
is the ingratitude of him who doth not esteem of it and make use of it as
becometh; as we see in Israel's sin, who did not esteem of manna as they should
have done. Had the Lord fed them with dust of earth, or roots of grass, or any
other mean thing, they should have had no reason to complain: but when he
giveth them a new food, created every morning for their sakes, sent down from
heaven as fresh furniture every day, of such excellent colour, taste, smell and
wholesomeness; what a provocation of God was it, not to be content now; in
special, when he gave them abundantly of it? He sent them meat to the full.
David Dickson.
Verse
26. He caused an east wind to blow in the heaven: and by his power
he brought in the south wind. Here, on examining the geographical position
of the Israelites, we see exactly how the south east wind would bring the quails.
The Israelites had just passed by the Red Sea, and had began to experience a
foretaste of the privations which they were to expect in the desert, through
which they had to pass. Passing northwards in their usual migrations, the birds
would come to the coast of the Red Sea, and there would wait until a favourable
wind enabled them to cross the water. The south east wind afforded them just
the very assistance which they needed, and they would naturally take advantage
of it. J. G. Wood, in "Bible Animals." 1869.
Verse
27. As dust. The amazing clouds of fine dust or sand, which a
violent wind raises in the deserts of the East, constitute the point of
comparison. William Keatinge Clay.
Verse
27. Feathered fowls. Hebrew, "fowl of wing; "i.e.,
flying fowls, in distinction from domestic poultry. Williams, in Notes to
Calvin in loc.
Verse
27, 31. If the cemetery on Sarbut el Khadem be, what all the antecedent
evidences combine to indicate, the workmanship of the Israelites, (a chief
burial ground of their fatal encampment at Kibroth Hattaayah), it may most
reasonably be expected that its monuments shall contain symbolic
representations of the miracle of the "feathered fowls, "and of the
awful plague which followed it. Now Niebuhr happily enables us to meet this just
expectation, by his copies of the hieroglyphics on three of those tombstones,
published in the 45th and 46th plates of his first volume, and prefaced plate
44, by a plan of the cemetery itself, which is of more value than any or
all subsequent descriptions. It was discovered by the present writer (as stated
in a former work), ("The Voice of Israel") on the evidence of no less
than four Sinaitic inscriptions, that the birds of the miracle, named by Moses,
generically, wlv, salu, and by the psalmist, still more generally, Pgk
Pwe, winged fowls, or more correctly, "long winged fowls,
"were not (as rendered by all our versions, ancient and modern) quails,
but a crane like red bird resembling a goose, named in the Arabic nuham.
The discovery received subsequently a singular and signal corroboration from
the further discovery, by Dean Stanley, and previously by Schubert, of immense
flocks of these very nuhams on the reputed scene of the miracle at Kibroth
Hattaavah. With these antecedents in his mind, the reader will now turn to the
three monuments copied by Niebuhr in the cemetery of Sarbut el Khadem. He will
at once see that a crane like bird resembling a goose, with slender body and
long legs, is the leading hieroglyphic symbol in all three tablets. No fewer
than twenty-five of these symbolic birds occur in the first, ten in the second,
and fifteen in the third tablet. The goose appears occasionally, but the
principal specimens have the air of the goose, but the form of the crane. In a
word, they are the very species of birds seen by Dean Stanley, both at this
point of Sinai, and at the first cataract of the Nile; and which constantly
occur also in Egyptian monuments: as though the very food of Egypt, after which
the Israelites lusted, was sent to be at once their prey and their plague.
"And the children of Israel said unto them, Would to God we had died by
the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh
pots." Ex 16:3. The reader has here before him the irrefragable fact
that the very birds which by every kind of evidence stand identified with the salus,
or long legged and long winged fowls of the miracle, are the very birds
depicted on the tombstones of Sarbut el Khadem, both standing, flying, and
apparently even trussed and cooked... The inevitable inference is... that these
tombstones record the miracle of the "feathered fowls, "and stand
over the graves of the gluttons who consumed them. Charles Forster, in
"Israel in the Wilderness." 1865. Mr. Forster thus deciphers by
his alphabet some of the mixed legends and devices:¡X
"From
the sea the cranes congregate to one spot;
The archers shoot at the cranes passing over the plain.
Evil stomached they rush after the prey¡X
The sepulchre their doom¡Xtheir marrow corrupted by God,
The sleepy owl, emblem of death, God sends destruction among them."
"The
mother of sepulchres¡Xthe black and white geese,
A sudden death, greedily lusting after flesh, die the gluttons.
The mountain top ascend the Hebrews,
They eat, devour, consume, till nothing is left, exceeding all bounds,
Their bodies corrupted, by gluttony they die."
Verse
29. Note: The prophet in this Psalm institutes, as it were, a
conflict between God and man. God contends with blessings, man with sins. God
exerts his power for the benefit of undeserving man, Ps 78:12, Marvellous
things did he in the sight of their fathers: man repays the divine power
with infidelity, Ps 78:17, And they sinned yet more against him. And
farther on, in Ps 78:19, Can God furnish a table in the wilderness?
Secondly, God showers down his bounty to overwhelm ungrateful sinners with
his gifts, Ps 78:23, He commanded the clouds from above, &c., and rained
down manna upon them. These less than men (homunciones) oppose their
gluttony to the liberality of God, and abuse the gifts conferred, Ps 78:29, They
did eat, and were well filled. Thirdly, divine justice renews the conflict
to scourge at once stupidity out of them, Ps 78:30-31, While their meat was
yet in their mouths, the wrath of God came upon them. Still obdurate they
kick against the goad, Ps 78:33, For all this they sinned still. Fourthly,
mercy flies down from heaven, to invite them to peace, Ps 78:38, But he
being full of compassion. Men are but emboldened by his compassion, and the
more easily relapse into sin, Ps 78:40, How oft did they provoke him in the
wilderness? Fifthly, and lastly, when all seems lost, love draws
nigh, and performs unheard of wonders, to touch their hardness, and to deliver
them from the dangers by which they were pressed, Ps 78:43, How he set his
signs in Egypt. To these shafts of his love sinners oppose a forgetfulness
of all his benefits, Ps 78:42, They remembered not his hand nor the day when
he delivered them from the enemy. And all this took place before they
entered the land of promise. The conflict that happened between the Hebrews and
God in the land of promise is related in the next section of the Psalm. Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
29-31. Dangerous prayers. When lust dictates, wrath may answer. Let
grace dictate, and mercy will answer. C. D.
Verse
30. They were not estranged from their lust. This implies,
that they were still burning with their lust. If it is objected that this does
not agree with the preceding sentence, where it is said, that "they did
eat, and were thoroughly filled, "I would answer, that if, as is well
known, the minds of men are not kept within the bounds of reason and
temperance, they become insatiable; and, therefore, a great abundance will not
extinguish the fire of a depraved appetite. John Calvin.
Verse
30. They were not estranged from their lust. Satiated they
were, but not satisfied. It is as easy to quench the fire of Etna, as the
thoughts set on fire by lust. John Trapp.
Verse
30. They were not estranged from their lust. Consider that
there is more real satisfaction in mortifying lusts than in making provision
for them or in fulfilling them: there's more true pleasure in crossing and
pinching our flesh than in gratifying it; were there any true pleasure in sin,
hell would not be hell, for the more sin, the more joy. You cannot satisfy one
lust if you would do your utmost, and make yourself never so absolute a slave
to it; you think if you had your heart's desire you would be at rest: you much
mistake; they had it. Alexander Carmichael.
Verse
31. The wrath of God came upon them, and slew the fattest of them.
Two things are here worthy of notice. 1. One, Why he gave them abundance and
sufficiency of quails, and afterward punished the murmuring and unbelieving. If
he had punished them before, he would have appeared to have had greater ability
to destroy them, than to give them flesh. Therefore, that he might first
declare his power, and so make the unbelief of the people the more plain, and
show how deserving they were of punishment, he first showed he could give,
because they believed he could not, and then punished them for their
unbelief... 2. The other, that he destroyed the fat and the chosen men among
the people, although they all are said to have murmured. Without a doubt, they
were first in the crime, and therefore they are specially mentioned in the
punishment. Musculus.
Verse
31. Slew the fattest of them. They were fed as sheep for the
slaughter. The butcher takes the fattest first. We may suppose there were some
pious and contented Israelites that did eat moderately of the quails, and were
never the worse; for it was not the meat that poisoned them, but their own
lust, Let epicures and sensualists here read their doom; they who make "a
god of their belly, their end is destruction, "Php 3:19. Matthew
Henry.
Verses
31-34. The Christian has more true pleasure from the creature than the
wicked, as it comes more refined to him than to the other. The unholy wretch
sucks dregs and all, dregs of sin and dregs of wrath, whereas the Christian's
cup is not thus spiced. First, dregs of sin; the more he hath of the
creature's delights given him, the more he sins with them. Oh, it is sad to
think what work they make in his naughty heart! they are but fuel for his lust
to kindle upon; away they run with their enjoyments, as the prodigal with his
bags, or like hogs in shaking time; no sight is to be had of them, or thought
of their return as long as they can get anything abroad, among the delights of
the world. None so prodigiously wicked as those who are fed high with carnal
pleasures. They are to the ungodly as the dung and ordure is to the swine which
grows fat by lying in it; so their hearts grow gross and fat; their consciences
more stupid and senseless in sin by them; whereas the comforts and delights
that God gives unto a holy soul by the creature, turn to spiritual nourishment
to his graces, and draw these forth into exercise, as they do others' lusts. Secondly,
dregs of wrath. The Israelites had little pleasure from their dainties, when
the wrath of God fell upon them, before they could get them down their throats.
The sinner's feast is no sooner served in but divine justice is preparing to
send up a reckoning after it, and the fearful expectation of this cannot but
spoil the taste of the other. William Gurnall.
Verse
33. Their days did he consume in vanity. He says with great
significance, In vanity their days were consumed, because they were plainly
deprived of their hope, and endured all their sufferings in vain. They did not
attain what they had hoped for, but only their children entered the land. Mollerus.
Verse
33. Days are put in the first place, and then years; by
which it is intimated, that the duration of their life was cut short by the
curse of God, and that it was quite apparent that they failed in the midst of
their course. John Calvin.
Verses
34-36. There are some if they come under afflictions, or if they fall in
sickness, or a fever, and God shake death over their head; or if they be at
some solemn ordinances, they will be at resolving and purposing, and readily
bringing vows upon themselves, of personal covenanting with God; but as they
are easily gotten, so they easily vanish: When he slew them, they sought
him: and they returned and inquired early after God. Several times our
afflictions are like a gutter; when there is a great shower we will be running
over with purposes after God. Nevertheless they did flatter him with their
mouth, and they lied unto him with their tongues. For their heart was not right
with him, neither were they steadfast in his covenant: and yet when he slew
them, they sought after him, and they early enquired after him: so that in
deliberate actions and covenanting with God, as they are hastily begotten, they
no less suddenly vanish; the action ought then to be deliberate when we
indenture with the Cautioner, and oblige ourselves to more watchfulness, and
more tenderness, or else it will soon vanish. Alexander Wedderburn, in
"David's Testament, opened up in Forty Sermons." 1701.
Verses
34-37. In these words you see plainly that these people are very early
and earnest in seeking God to take off his hand, to remove judgments that were
upon them, but not that God would cure them of those sins that provoked him to
draw his sword, and to make it drunk with their blood; for, notwithstanding the
sad slaughters that divine justice had made among them, they did but flatter
and lie, and play the hypocrites with God; they would fain be rid of their
sufferings, but did not care to be rid of their sins. Ah! but a gracious soul
cries out, Lord, do but take away my sins, and it will satisfy me and cheer me,
though thou shouldest never take off thy heavy hand. A true Nathanael sighs it
out under his greatest affliction, as that good man did, A me, me salva,
Domine, (Augustine) deliver me, O Lord, from that evil man myself. No
burden to the burden of sin. Lord! says the believing soul; deliver me from my
inward burden, and lay upon me what outward burden you please. Thomas
Brooks.
Verses
34-37. There are a sort of men that lie in the enmity of their natures,
and in an unreconciled state, living in the visible church, who are not only
much restrained, and bite their enmity in, but who, by means of an inferior
work of the word and Spirit of God upon their hearts, are brought to seek unto
God for friendship, yea, and do much for him in outward actions, and side and
take part with his friends; and yet their hearts being unchanged, the cursed
enmity of their nature remaining alive and not taken away, they lie still in
the gall of bitterness. For instance, look to these in Ps 78:34-37. It is said
that they `sought the Lord early as their Redeemer, 'whilst he was slaying of
them; yet they did but flatter him with their mouths, etc. A flatterer,
you know, differs from a friend, in that he pretends much kindness, yet wants
inward good will, doing it for his own ends. And so do many seek God, that yet
he accounts as enemies; for they seek him whilst they are themselves in his
lurch. Now, it is hard to discover these, because they pretend much friendship,
and externally (it may be) do as many outward kindnesses as the true friends;
as flatterers will abound in outward kindnesses as much as true friends, nay,
often exceed them, because they may not be discovered. Now, if none of the
former signs reach to them, nor touch them, then there is no better way left
than to search unto the grounds of all they do, and to examine whether it
proceeds from true, inward, pure, and constant good will, yea or no, or self
respects? As now, when we see an ape do many things that a man doth, how do we
therefore distinguish those actions in the one and in the other? Why, by the
inward principles from whence they spring, by saying that they proceed from
reason in the one, but not so in the other. If, therefore, it can be evinced,
that all that any man seems to do for God, comes not from good will to him, it
is enough to convince them to be persons unreconciled; for whereas all outward
kindnesses and expressions of friendship proceed not from friend like
dispositions and pure good will, but altogether from self respects, it is but
feigned flattery, even among men; and when discovered once, it breeds double
hatred. And there is much more reason it should do so with God, because he
being a God that knows the heart, to flatter him is the greatest mockery; for
that is it which chiefly provoketh men to hate such as dissemble friendship,
because there is mockery joined with it. Now, that God accounts every one that
doth not turn to him out of pure goodwill a flatterer is plain by these words
in Ps 78:36-37: Notwithstanding, they did but flatter him, and dealt falsely
in his covenant. If men's hearts be not inwardly for God, and with him, as
a friend would be to a friend, in their actions he esteems them against him.
"Thy heart, "says Peter to Simon Magus, "is not right before the
Lord, "Ac 8:22, and therefore he tells him he was "still in the gall
of bitterness." Thomas Goodwin.
Verse
36. Flattery of God.
1.
A common sin.
2. A hateful sin.
3. A dangerous sin. B. D.
Verses
36-38. There is no disputing the fact which gives accuracy to the text,
that God was moved by a repentance which had not in it even the elements of
godly sorrow for sin; which could not even, by a casual observer, much less by
him who searches the heart, have been mistaken for that penitence which
supposes an inward and radical change, and, nevertheless, even such a
repentance as this sufficed to procure a recompense at the hands of God. Though
the sackcloth was on the body and not on the soul; though it was the punishment
of the sin and not the sin itself which led to this outward humiliation, God
did not turn away from the forced supplication, but vouchsafed the deliverance
which was sought at his hands. Yes, God, who never expresses greater abhorrence
of any character than that of the hypocrite; God, who rejects nothing more
indignantly than outward homage when it is not the index of inward
prostration¡XGod may be said to have removed the humiliation of the people as
though he could not read their hearts, or as though, having read them, and noted
their unsubdued rebellion, he still thought the apparent contrition deserving
of some recompense...
If
God would not leave the show and semblance of contrition without a recompense,
will he be unmindful of real penitence? If many a time turned he his anger
away from those who did but flatter him with their mouths, and lied unto
him with their tongues, has he nothing in store for those who are humble in
spirit, and who come to him with the sacrifice of a broken heart? Oh! the
turning away of temporal wrath because idols were outwardly abandoned, this is
a mighty pledge that eternal wrath will be averted if we are inwardly stricken,
and flee for refuge to the Saviour. God must have eternal good in store for his
friends, if even his enemies are recompensed with temporal good. Yes, as I mark
the Philistines and the Ammonites oppressing the idolatrous Israelites, and
then see the oppressors driven back in return even for heartless service, Oh! I
learn that true penitence for sin and true faith in the sacrifice of Jesus
Christ will cause all enemies to be scattered; I return from the contemplation
of the backsliding people, emancipated notwithstanding the known hollowness of
their vows, I return assured that a kingdom which neither Philistine nor
Ammonite can invade, shall be the portion of all who seek deliverance through
Christ. Henry Melvill.
Verse
37. Their heart was not right with him. God pleases them when
he replenishes themselves with food, not their heart with his graces; therefore
they repay him with the mouth, and not with the heart. They are altogether
mouth and tongue: but God is all heart and breast. They give words; God gives
milk and perfect love. Love does not reach the inner nature of many men, it
sticks in the entrance. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
37. Their heart was not right with him, neither were they
steadfast, etc. This is the ever repeated complain, see Ps 78:8,22. There
is no permanence, no stability in the reformation which has been produced.
Compare Ho 6:4. J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
38. According to B. Kiddushin 30a, this verse is the middle
one of the 5896 Nyqymk, sticoi, of the Psalter. According to B. Maccoth 22b,
Ps 78:38, and previously De 28:58-59 29:9, were recited when the forty strokes
of the lash save one, which, according to 2Co 11:24, Paul received five times,
were being counted out to the culprit. Franz Delitzsch.
Verse
38. He, being full of compassion, etc. When his hand was up,
and he giving the blow, he called it back again, as one that could not find it
in his heart to do it; and when he did it, he did not stir up all his wrath;
he let fall some drops of it, but would not shed the whole shower of it; and he
giveth the reason of both, for they are but flesh; and, indeed, his
primary scope is to show mercy; and that he afflicts is but upon occasions; and
therefore he is provoked, and provoked much before he doth it. As it is natural
for the bee to give honey, but it stings; but it stings but by occasion when it
is provoked; and this we see to be true in God by experience, who suffers men,
and suffers them long; they continue in their sins, and yet he continues in his
mercies, and withholds his judgments. John Preston (1587-1628), in "The
Golden Sceptre held forth to the Humble."
Verse
38. Forgave is a very inadequate translation of the Hebrew
word, which necessarily suggests the idea of expiation as the ground of pardon.
Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verse
38. Many a time turned he his anger away. God is provoked
every day, yet is he slow to anger. Yea, sometimes when he has determined to
bring evil upon a people, and has put himself into a posture of judgment, drawn
out the sword, and smitten them; though they cease not to provoke him, he
ceaseth to punish them; as a tender father in correcting a rebellious and
graceless child, holds his hand sometimes, before the child begs for mercy, and
of mere grace forbears: so God did with Israel. Notwithstanding their
dissembling with their flattering tongues, and covenant breaking hearts, He
forgave their iniquity, and destroyed them not: yea, many a time turned he his
anger away, and did not stir up his wrath. The words are, He multiplied
to turn away his anger: as they multiplied to provoke it, he multiplied to
turn it away; and so at length outnumbered their sins with his mercies, that they
were not destroyed. John Strickland, in "A Sermon preached before the
House of Commons, " entitled "Mercy rejoicing against Judgment."
1645.
Verse
38. He did not stir up all his wrath. His patience is manifest
in moderating his judgments when he sends them. Doth he empty his quiver of his
arrows, or exhaust his magazine of thunder? No; he could roll one thunderbolt
successively upon all mankind; it is as easy with him to create a perpetual
motion of lightning and thunder, as of the sun and stars, and make the world as
terrible by the one as it is delightful by the other. He opens not all his
store; he sends out a light party to skirmish with men, and puts not in array
his whole army. He stirs not up all his wrath; he doth but pinch, where
he might have torn asunder; when he takes away much, he leaves enough to
support us. If he had stirred up all his anger, he had taken away all, and our
lives to boot. He rakes up but a few sparks, takes but one firebrand to fling
upon men, when he might discharge the whole furnace upon them; he sends but a
few drops out of the cloud, which he might make to break in the gross, and fall
down upon our heads to overwhelm us; he abates much of what he might do. Stephen
Charnock.
Verse
39. A wind that passeth away.
"The
secret wheels of hurrying time do give
So short a warning, and so fast they drive,
That I am dead before I seem to live.
And
what's a life? a weary pilgrimage,
Whose glory in one day doth fill thy stage
With childhood, manhood, and decrepid age.
And
what's a life? the flourishing army
Of the proud summer meadow, which today
Wears her green plush, and is tomorrow hay.
And
what's a life? a blast sustained with clothing,
Maintained with food, retained with vile self loathing,
Then weary of itself, again to nothing." Francis Quarles.
Verse
40. How oft did they provoke, etc. They provoked God at least
ten times (Nu 14:22) during the first two years of their journey through the
wilderness: (1) at the Red Sea (Ex 14:11-12): (2) at the waters of Marah (Ex
15:24): (3) in the wilderness of Sin (Ex 16:2): (4) when they kept the manna
until the following day (Ex 16:10): (5) when the manna was collected on the
Sabbath (Ex 16:27): (6) in Rephidim, where there was no water (Nu 20:2,13): (7)
at Horeb when a molten calf was made (Ex 22:1 &c.): (8) at Taberah (Nu
11:1-3): (9) when they lusted for flesh (Nu 11:4): (10) when they murmured at
the news brought by the men, who had been sent to search the land (Nu 14:1,
&c.) Daniel Cresswell.
Verse
40. How oft. God kept an account how oft they provoked him,
though they did not, Nu 14:22: "They have tempted me these ten
times." Matthew Henry.
Verse
41. They turned back. As for that expression, wbwvyw, which we
translate, and they turned back; that is, say some, to go back again
into Egypt, or as others, returned back to their old wont of
rebellion; I say, it hath no such meaning here; it is a Hebraism, and should be
rendered, they returned and tempted, that is, saepius tentaverunt,
they oftentimes tempted him, or they tempted him again. Thomas
Froysel, in "Sermons concerning Grace and Temptation." 1678.
Verse
41. Tempted God. This only expresses the fact that men act
towards him as if he could be tempted, or in a way fitted to put him to the
proof, to provoke his righteous displeasure, and make him proceed against them,
as it were just for him actually to do because of their offences. It is not in
the least degree opposed to the statement of James¡X"God cannot be tempted
with evil, "which is the the effect that he cannot be influenced by evil,
so as to be drawn into it, turned toward it¡Xso as to feel its power or
experience its contamination. He is infinitely far removed from it, raised
above it, under all its forms. He is so because of the absolute perfection of
his being and blessedness. John Adam, in "Exposition of the Epistle of
James." 1867.
Verse
41. Limited the Holy One of Israel. They limited either
1.
God's power, as above, Ps 78:19-20. Or,
2.
God's will, directing and prescribing to him what to do, and when, and in what
manner; and murmuring at him if he did not always grant their particular and
various desires. Matthew Poole.
Verse
41. They limited the Holy One of Israel. Here, then, is an
awful charge, and mysterious it seems to us as awful. How dreadful that
man, the worm, should arrogate to himself that, to say to him that made
him, "Thus far shalt thou go and no farther." Amazing, I say,
the charge! to contract the dimensions and operations of the Deity. Amazing
insolence, to draw a boundary line, beyond which the Creator himself must not
pass, to define and prescribe to the Lawgiver of nature himself the pathway of
his providence! The turpitude is immense. But we know, my friends, that the
crime is not uncommon; and one of the natural results of sin seem to be
this,¡Xthat the sinful spirit, whether of man or of the lost archangel, unable
to shake the firm foundations of the Eternal Throne, amuses its
malignity, and seeks a temporary cessation from its withering cares, in putting
up barriers on the outskirts and frontiers of the Almighty empire, vainly
hoping to annoy the Possessor of the throne they cannot disturb. Affecting
words! Do they affect you as they affect me? They turned back and tempted
God, and limited the Holy One of Israel. Somehow, it seems no combination
of words could have been so affecting. They limited God. They
limited the Almighty. They limited the Infinite. No! These words
have an awful and affecting surge of meaning in them; for wile they describe Him,
awful and self contained Being whose essence is eternity and power; whose self
existence is declared by the amazing marvels of nature; whose life was
essential being. They limited Him¡XThe One in whose being all being was
swallowed up and absorbed¡XThe One before whose glance mountains and
hills fled away and were not found¡XThe One from everlasting, God; high
over all, blessed for ever more. The One to whom all the nations were as
the drop of a bucket, and who took up the isles as a very little thing,¡XHim, they
limited. They had known his character as The Holy One; it was all
they knew of his character; but it was surrounded with an awfulness more dread
than even the solitary power and self repose of Deity. In awful words and
meanings they had heard his character proclaimed¡XThe Holy One. Him they limited.
Him, whose throne was curtained with the dreadful wings of sinless
archangels, crying through the darkness of that ineffable brightness, Holy,
holy, holy, Lord God Almighty! and whose holiness was asserted even by the
disorders of the rolling world. They limited him. More personal, and
therefore more wonderful, became the enormity. The generation of their race had
testified for Him, the Holy One of Israel; they had beheld the marvels of his
holiness and power in Egypt, in the Red Sea; they had heard of the God of
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob; they had heard of him who had spoken to their
Captain in the bush burning with fire; they beheld his pillar of fire and
cloud; they knew themselves divinely selected and chosen; and him who chose they
limited! That which should have ensured their faith became only the
fountain of their criminality. E. Paxton Hood.
Verse
41. They limited the Holy One of Israel. God cannot bear it
with patience, that we should limit him, either to the time, or manner,
or means of help. He complains of the Jews for this presumption, they
limited the Holy One of Israel. It is insufferable to circumscribe an
infinite wisdom and power. He will work, but when he pleases, and how he
pleases, and by what instruments he pleases, and if he please, without
instruments, and if he please by weak and improbable, by despised and exploded
instruments. Joseph Caryl, in a "Sermon before the House of Commons,
"entitled, "The Works of Ephesus."
Verse
41. (last clause). This was Israel's sin, and has it not often
been ours? Our God is the "Holy One, "and will do what is most for
His glory; he is the Holy One of Israel, and will therefore consult his
people's welfare. We must not limit his wisdom, for it is infinite; we
must not limit his power, for it is omnipotent; we must not limit him to
time, for he will display his sovereignty: he will not be tied to walk
by our rules, or be bound to keep our time; but he will perform his word,
honour our faith, and reward them that diligently seek him. James Smith.
Verse
41. Limited. In the only other place where the Hebrew word
occurs (Ezr 9:4), it means to set a mark upon a person, which some apply
here, in the figurative sense of stigmatising or insulting. Joseph Addison
Alexander.
Verse
41. Limited the Holy One of Israel, or signed him;
signed him with a sign, so the Targum; they tempted him by asking a sign of
him, as Jarchi interprets it; insisting that a miracle be wrought, by which it
might be known whether the Lord was among them or not, Ex 17:7; with
which compare Mt 15:1: or they set bounds, so Kimchi, to his power and
goodness, saying, this he could do, and the other he could not; see Ps
78:19-20; and so men limit the Lord when they fix on a blessing they would
have, even that, and not another; and the measure of it, to what degree it
should be bestowed on them, as well as the set time when they would have it;
whereas the blessing itself, and the degree of it, and the time of giving it,
should be all left with the Lord who knows which and what of it is most convenient
for us, and when is the best time to bestow it on us. John Gill.
Verse
41. Limited the Holy One of Israel¡Xmistrust of God's power to
effectuate all his graces, to do what is needed in any case for his people, and
carry out his purposes for them. The moment I suppose anything cannot be for
blessing, I limit God. This is a great sin¡Xdoubly, when we think of all he has
done for us. The Holy Ghost ever reasons from God's revealed, infinite love to
all its consequences. He reconciled; surely he will save to the end. He did not
spare his Son; how shall he not give all things? J. N. Darby.
Verse
42. They remembered not his hand, etc. God hates forgetfulness
of his blessings. First, because he has commanded that we should not forget
them, De 4:9 8:14. Secondly, because forgetfulness is a sign of
contempt. Thirdly, it is the peculiarity of singular carelessness. Fourthly, it
springs from unbelief. Fifthly, it is the greatest mark of ingratitude. Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
42. They remembered not his hand, etc. The rallying point of
faith in time of trial is the primary manifestation of grace. To an
Israelite a remembrance of the deliverance from Egypt is the test of active
faith. In like manner, to the tried believer now it is the CROSS that furnishes
the outlet of deliverance from the misty darkness with which Satan sometimes is
permitted to envelope our conscience, when the Lord had not been kept
watchfully before our face. Because Israel forgot that first deliverance, they
went on frowardly in the way of evil. Because a Christian sometimes stops short
of the Cross in his spiritual conflicts, he fails to defeat the enemy and
remains unfruitful and unhappy, until by some special intervention of the great
Restorer, he is again brought, in spirit, to that place where God first met
him, and welcomed him in Jesus in the fulness of forgiveness and of peace. No
intermediate experience, how truthful soever in its character, will meet his
case. It is at the cross alone that we regain a thorough right mindedness about
ourselves as well as about God. If we would glorify him, we must "hold
fast the beginning of our confidence stedfast unto the end, "Heb
3:14. Arthur Pridham.
Verse
42. They remembered not his hand, etc. Eaten bread is soon
forgotten. Nihil citius senescit quam gratia. Nothing so soon grows
stale as a favour. John Trapp.
Verse
43. Zoan, or San, seems to have been one of the
principal capitals, or royal abodes, of the Pharaohs (Isa 19:11,13 Isa 30:4):
and accordingly the field of Zoan, or the fine alluvial plain around the
city, is described as the scene of the marvellous works which God wrought in
the time of Moses. John Kitto.
Verses
43-51. Moses wrought wonders destructive, Christ wonders preservative:
he turned water into blood, Christ water into wine; he brought flies and frogs
and locusts and caterpillars, destroying the fruits of the earth, and annoying
it; Christ increased a little of these fruits, five loaves and a few fishes, by
blessing them, so that he herewith fed five thousand men: Moses smote both men
and cattle with hail, and thunder and lightning, that they died, Christ made
some alive that were dead, and saved from death the diseased and sick; Moses
was an instrument to bring all manner of wrath and evil angels amongst them,
Christ cast out devils and did all manner of good, giving sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, speech to the dumb, limbs to the lame, and cleansing to
the leper, and when the sea was tempestuous appeasing it; Moses slew their
firstborn, thus causing an horrible cry in all the land of Egypt; Christ saveth
all the firstborn, or by saving makes them so; for thus they are called, Heb
12:23. John Mayer.
Verse
46. Caterpillar. (>lyox), chasil, is rendered
broucos by the LXX, in 2Ch 6:28, and by Aquila here, and also by the
Vulgate in Chronicles and in Isa 33:4, and is rendered by Jerome here, bruchas,
"the chaffer, "which everyone knows to be a great devourer of the
leaves of trees. The Syriac in Joe 1:4 2:25, renders it (arwuru) tzartzooro,
which Michaelis, from the Arabic (ruru) tzartzar, a cricket, interprets
the mole cricket, which in its grub state, is also very destructive to
corn, grass, and other vegetables, by cankering the roots on which it feeds. Editorial
note to Calvin in loc.
Verse
46. Caterpillar, In former times, any destructive, crawling
creature occurring in cultivated places was thus called; now, by general
consent, we restrict the term to the second stage of insects of the
Lepidopterous order, namely, butterflies and moths. These caterpillars, by the
voracity with which they attack the leaves, the fruit, and sometimes the solid
wood of plants and trees, are made conspicuous even to those who are little
acquainted with natural history. "Biblical Treasury."
Verse
46. Locust. Their quantity is incredible to all who have not
themselves witnessed their astonishing numbers; the whole earth is covered with
them for the space of several leagues. The noise they make in browsing on the
trees and herbage may be heard at a great distance, and resembles that of an
army plundering in secret. The Tartars themselves are a less destructive enemy
than these little animals. One would imagine that fire had followed their
progress. Wherever their myriads spread, the verdure of the country disappears;
trees and plants stripped of their leaves and reduced to their naked boughs and
stems, cause the dreary image of winter to succeed in an instant to the rich
scenery of spring. When these clouds of locusts take their flight, to surmount
any obstacles, or to traverse more rapidly a desert soil, the heavens may
literally be said to be obscured with them. F. C., Comte de Volney.
Verse
47. He destroyed their vines with hail, and their sycomore trees
with frost. The grape vine for the rich, and the sycomore fig for the poor,
were cut off by the just judgment of God upon the nation. W. Wilson.
Verse
47. The sycomore (not sycamore, for this is altogether
different, though, in consequence of a typographical error, often confounded
with it in our Bibles) was the name of a tree, common in Egypt, Am 7:14 Lu
19:4. This tree resembled the mulberry in its leaves, and the fig in its
fruit; and on its produce the inferior ranks of people, for the most part,
lived. The psalmist refers to but one sort, still he clearly means every kind,
of valuable tree. William Keatinge Clay.
Verse
49. By sending evil angels. Evils come uncalled, but not
unsent. Are they nor here called angels? they are sent; the word angel
means a messenger. Not things only without life, but not living creatures
neither, brute, nor men, nor Satan's self can hurt unless God bid. The three
days' darkness in Egypt, how came it? "He sent darkness, "saith
David. Ps 105:28. So the hail, thunder, and lightning, the Lord sent
them, saith Moses. The frogs, flies, lice, grasshoppers, and caterpillars, that
infected Egypt, and the lions that slew the idolaters in Samaria (2Ki
17:1-41), the text saith of them all, Dominus immisit, the Lord sent
them. And for men¡X"Am I come" (saith Rabshakeh) "without the
Lord?" He bade me go. Yea, the devil, the arch evil angel, who seeks to
devour, yet must be sent ere he can do ought. The lying spirit in the
mouths of the false prophets longed to seduce Ahab; God must first bid; Egredere,
go forth, and do so. The use of this is easy without my help: not to fear,
doing well; not man, fiend, any creature, can hurt you, God not sending them.
But sinning, to fear everything. The weakest creature can quell the mightiest
man, if God bid, go. A mouse (saith the poet) will bite a wicked man. Be it
proud Herod, great Antiochus; if God but ask the creatures, Quem mittam,
which of you shall I send? the worm will answer, Ecce me, send me; I
will devour him. And such poor, silly, despicable creatures are some of these evil
angels in my text. He sent: what sent he? evil angels, the
next thing in this Scripture.
Evil
angels? Par dispar, a pair of words which seem not well matched. The
latter may say to the former, Quid mihi et tibi, what have I to do with
thee? Angels were the best and holiest of God's creatures. They all were good,
very good, Moses saith; but angels kat exochn, excellently good. Then is evil
here an evil epithet for angels. And is never read but here, and here (some
think) not well translated. But the phrase of evil angels hath other
meaning here: evil angels, i.e., the angels, i.e., the messengers
of evil. It is in the Hebrew, not (Mykalm), but (ykalm); insomuch that some
expositors think the psalmist means the words of Moses and Aaron; that they
were sent from God to be the messengers of evil, i.e., all of the
plagues that God would bring on Egypt. That sense I censure not, but follow
not. The Greek Fathers have another¡Xthat by the evil angels, are meant
the evil spirits. Christ calls them angels too, thee devil's angels.
Augustine likes not that sense. The most current exposition is as a Jewish
writer speaks: the "evil angels" are the ten several plagues. Richard
Clerke. (¡X1634.)
Verse
49. By sending evil angels among them. That the devil and his
angels are so very evil, that for them everlasting fire is prepared, no believer
is ignorant: but that there should be sent by means of them an infliction from
the Lord God upon certain whom he judgeth to be deserving of this punishment,
seemeth to be a hard thing to those who are little prone to consider how the
perfect justice of God doth use well even evil things. For these indeed, as far
as regardeth their substance, what other person but himself hath made? But evil
he hath not made them; yet he doth use them, inasmuch as he is good,
conveniently and justly; just as on the other hand unrighteous men do use his
good creatures in evil manner: God therefore doth use evil angels not only to
punish evil men, as in the case of all those concerning whom the Psalm doth
speak, as in the case of king Ahab, whom a spirit of lying by the will of God
did beguile, in order that he might fall in war; but also to prove and make
manifest good men, as he did in the case of Job. Augustine.
Verse
50. He made a way to his anger. Literally¡X"weighed a
way:" implying that God, in punishing the Egyptians so severely, did
nothing but what was just and equitable, when weighed in the balance of
right. Pr 4:26. A. R. Fausset.
Verse
50. He made a way to his anger. As if the psalmist had said,
If there were not a way for his anger, that is, for the execution of his
anger, he forced his way; though he did not find a way, yet he made
one, and fought himself through all difficulties which seemed to oppose the
destruction of his enemies. We put in the margin, he weighed a path, he
made the path as exact as if he had put it into a balance; the way was fitted
to the largeness of his own anger, and it was fitted to the dimensions of their
wickedness. Thus he made a way to his anger, both by suiting the way to
his anger and by removing all impediments out of the way of his anger. If God
will work to save, who shall let it? and if God will work to destroy, who will
or what shall let it? Joseph Caryl.
Verse
51. The chief of their strength in the tabernacles of Ham. The
sun of the last day of the sojourn of Israel in Egypt had set. It was the
fourth day after the interview with Moses. Pharaoh, his princes, and the
priests of his idols would doubtless take courage from this unwonted delay.
Jehovah and his ministers are beaten at length, for now the gods of Egypt
prevail against them. The triumph would be celebrated in pomps and sacrifices,
in feasts and dances. Nothing is more likely than that the banquet halls of
Pharaoh at Rameses were blazing with lamps, and that he and his princes were
pouring forth libations of wine to their gods, and concerting schemes amid
their revelry, for the perpetuation of the thraldom of Israel... Pharaoh Sethos
started from his couch that night yelling in fierce and bitter agony, and
gnawing at the sharp arrow that was rankling in his vitals, like a wounded
lion. His son, his firstborn, his only son, just arrived at man's estate, just
crowned king of Egypt, and associated with his father in the care of
sovereignty, writhed before him in mortal throes, and died. His transports of
grief were reechoed, and with no feigned voice, by the princes, the
councillors, and the priest that partook of his revelry. Each one rends his
garments and clasps to his bosom the quivering corpse of his firstborn son. On
that fearful night "there was a great cry throughout the land of Egypt,
"but if we have rightly read its history, the loudest, wildest wail of
remorseful anguish would arise from Pharaoh's banquet hall! William Osburn,
in "Israel in Egypt." 1856.
Verse
52. But made his own people to go forth like sheep. It is not
said that they went forth like sheep; but that he made them go forth like
sheep. It is not a description of the character of the people, but a
commendation of the providence and goodness of God, by which, after the manner
of a good shepherd, he led forth from Egypt his own people with all security,
like sheep snatched from the midst of wolves. Musculus.
Verse
53. They feared not. First, they had no cause for fear, in
their departure from Egypt. Though they saw the Egyptians slain, yet
against them not even a dog moved its tongue. 2. They were all in sound health.
3. They were enriched with the spoils of the Egyptians. 4. They went forth a
great multitude. 5. They supplied themselves with arms. Secondly, they
feared not to enter the Red Sea, for the fear started by the approach of
Pharaoh was swiftly suppressed. Thirdly, they feared not to wander in the
desert for forty years, God going before his pillar. Fourthly, they
feared not, though enemies attacked them. Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
54. He brought them to the border of his sanctuary, or holiness;
that is, to the holy land; so called in diverse respects, but especially
because of his sanctuary, the place of his residence; to which he makes all the
land to be but as bounds and limits, because of the eminency of that place, the
holiness whereof did, as it were, spread to all other parts of the land, as if
the whole had been a sanctuary, and consecrated ground. It is therefore to the
honour of the whole land, as well as of the sanctuary, that he calleth it, the
holy border, a border of his sanctuary. Westminster Assembly's
Annotations.
Verse
57. They were turned aside like a deceitful bow. The eastern
bow, which when at rest is in the form of a (1), must be recurved, or turned
the contrary way, in order to be what is called bent and strung.
If a person who is unskilful or weak attempt to recurve and string one
of these bows, if he take not great heed it will spring back and regain its
quiescent position, and perhaps break his arm. And sometimes I have known it,
when bent, to start aside, and regain its quiescent position, to my no
small danger, and in one or two cases to my injury. This image is frequently
used in the sacred writings; but no person has understood it, not being
acquainted with the eastern bow, which must be recurved or bent
the contrary way (1), in order to be proper for use. If not well made, they
will fly back in discharging the arrow. It is said of the bow of
Jonathan, "it turned not back, "2Sa 1:22, (rwxa gwsn al), lo
nasog achor, "did not twist itself backward." It was a good bow,
one on which he could depend. Hosea, Ho 7:16, compares the unfaithful
Israelites to a deceitful bow; in that, when bent, would suddenly start
aside and recover its former position. We may find the same passage in Jer
9:3. And this is precisely the kind of bow mentioned by Homer,
Odyss. 21, which none of Penelope's suitors could bend, called toxon palinonon,
the crooked bow, in the state of rest; but toxon palintonon, the recurved
bow when prepared for use. And of his trial of strength and skill
in the bending of the bow of Ulysses, none of the critics and commentators have
been able to make anything, because they knew not the instrument in question.
On the toxon yhsiv of Homer I have written a dissertation elsewhere. The image
is very correct; these Israelites, when brought out of their natural bent, soon
recoiled, and relapsed into their former state. Adam Clarke.
Verse
57. Starting aside like a broken bow (English Prayer Book):
but if a bow breaks, it will not start aside, for the elasticity which should
make it start aside would be destroyed. Stephen Street.
Verse
57. They were turned aside like a deceitful bow. When the bow
is unbent the rift it hath may be undiscerned, but go to use it by drawing the
arrow to the head, and it flies in pieces; thus doth a false heart when put to
the trial. As the ape in the fable, dressed like a man, when nuts are thrown
before her, cannot then dissemble her nature any longer, but shows herself as
ape indeed; a false heart betrays itself before it is aware, when a fair
occasion is presented for its lust; whereas sincerity keeps the soul pure in
the face of temptation. William Gurnall.
Verses
57. The fourth thing is the deceitful bow, (hymr tvq), a slack
or warping bow arcus doli vel dolosus seu fallax (Hebrew) will be sure
to deceive the archer that shoots in it; it will turn back into belly, as the
archer's phrase is; and though he level both his eye and his arrow never so
directly to the mark and think confidently with himself to hit it; yet, in the
event, the arrow, through the warping of the bow, flies a quite contrary way,
yea, and sometimes reflects upon the archer himself. Non semper feriet,
quodcunque minabitur arcus, the bow smites not all it threatens, and the
ill fashioned or casting bow will turn in the shooter's hand, and send the
arrow sometimes one way and sometimes another way; yea, and sometimes it
rebounds into his own sides; or if it be a rotten bow (though otherwise fair to
look upon), when an arrow is drawn to the head it breaks in the hand, and
deceives the archer. The same thing happeneth when the string of the bow is
naughty, and breaks when the arrow is drawn. This is no less than a divine
Scripture allegory. Behold, such a fallacious, warping, and rotten bow is man's
deceitful heart; his purposes and promises are the arrows that he puts upon the
string, the mark he aims at is repentance, to the which (in affliction
especially) he looketh with an accurate and intent eye, as though he would
repent indeed; but, alas! his heart deceives him, as being unsound in God's
statutes, Ps 119:80; and hence it is that his promises and pretences do
fall at his foot, or vanish in the air as smoke. Thus a deceiving, as
well as a deceived, heart, turns him aside, Isa 64:20, as it did
those false Israelites: oh, then, look to the secret warping of your own heart,
and seeing you are God's bow, you must be bent by him, and stand bent for him, Zec
9:13; thereby you shall be like Jonathan's bow that "never returned
empty, "2Sa 1:22. Christopher Ness, in "A Crystal
Mirror." 1679.
Verses
57-59. Not to be settled in the faith, is provoking to God. To espouse
the truth, and then to fall away, brings an ill report upon the gospel, which
will not go unpunished. They turned back, and dealt unfaithfully. When God
heard this, he was wroth, and greatly abhorred Israel. The apostate drops
as a windfall into the devil's mouth. Thomas Watson.
Verse
58. High places. Or, altars, chapels, and such like places, to
celebrate divine service in, out of the only place which was by him
consecrated, and was alone acceptable unto him; or peradventure also dedicated
to idols; and were so called, because that they chose out the choicest hills
and hillocks for those purposes. John Diodati.
Verse
59. When God heard this. The psalmist represents the noise of
the ill deeds of the people ascending to the ears of the Eternal. Armand de
Mestral, in "Commentaire sur le Livre de Psaumes." 1856.
Verse
60. It is a heathenish delusion and false confidence to suppose that
God is bound to any place or spot, as the Trojans thought because they had the
temple of Pallas in their city it could not be taken, and in the present day
the manner of the Papists is to bind Christ to Rome and the chair of Peter, and
then defiantly maintain "I shall never be moved" Ps 10:6. For,
they say, the ship of Peter may sink a little, but not altogether. Then the
only point that is deficient is this, that they are not the ship of Peter, but
rather an East Indiaman with a cargo of Italian apes and such like foreign
merchandise, pearls, purple, silk, brass, iron, silver, gold, incense, lead,
that they may carry on simony and make merchandise of religion, and deceive the
whole world Re 18:11-24. Johann Andreas Cramer. 1723-1788.
Verse
61. And delivered his strength into captivity, etc. He calls
the ark the strength of God, not because the virtue of God was shut up
therein, or was so bound to it that he could not, unless through it, be
powerful and strong: but because his presence, whose symbol the ark was, had
always revealed its virtue and might to Israel, in the perpetual defence and
various deliverances of that people. After the same manner he calls it the
beauty or glory of God, because God by his own presence declared his glory
among the people, and desired that it should be conspicuous by this external
symbol. Mollerus.
Verse
63. The fire consumed their young men. Fire here may be
regarded as an image of destructive war, as in Nu 21:28. "For there
is a fire gone out of Heshbon, a flame from the city of Sihon: it hath consumed
Ar of Moab, "etc. Albert Barnes.
Verse
63 (first clause). When religion is overthrown among God's
people, let not the commonwealth think to stand: when God gave his glory unto
the enemies' hand, "He gave his people over also unto the sword, and the fire
consumed their young men." David Dickson.
Verse
63. Not given in marriage. Not praised: viz. they had not been
honoured with nuptial songs according to the custom of those times; see Jer
7:34 16:9 25:10. The meaning is, they had not been honourably married,
because men were grown scarce by reason of the wars, Isa 4:1 Jer 21:22.
Or, they had been married without any solemnity like poor bondwomen; or
privately, as in the time of public calamities. John Diodati.
Verse
64. Their widows made no lamentation. This implies the extent
of the destruction, and is full of meaning to one who has been in an Oriental
city, during a plague or other devastating calamity. At first the cry of
wailing, which always follows a death in ordinary circumstances, is loud and
frequent: but such cries do not increase, but subside, with the increase of the
calamity and desolation. Death becomes a familiar object in every house; and
every one, absorbed in his own losses, has little sympathy to spare for others.
Hence the loudest lamentations cease to be noticed, or to draw consoling
friends to the house of mourning; and therefore, as well as from the
stupefaction of feeling which scenes of continual horror never fail to produce,
a new death is received in silence, or only with sighs and tears. In fact, all
the usual observances are suspended. The dead are carried out and buried
without mourning ceremonies, and without the presence of surviving friends, by
men who make it an employment to take away the dead on the backs of mules or
asses, from the homes they leave desolate. We have seen this. Kitto's
"Pictorial Bible." 1856.
Verse
64. Their widows made no lamentation. The meaning is, either
1. That being overwhelmed with sorrow they could not weep; or, 2. That being in
captivity amongst the Philistines they were not suffered to lament the death of
their husbands; or, 3. That dying with grief they lived not to make any
lamentations for them at their funerals; or, 4. That they were so taken up and
oppressed with their own miseries, and especially with the miseries of the
church and people of God in general, that they had not leisure to bewail their
husbands; of both which last we have a clear instance in the wife of Phinehas
in particular, 1Sa 4:19-20, who dying, made no mention of her husband. Arthus
Jackson.
Verse
64. The daughter-in-law of Eli, when she was at once travailing, and
in that travail dying, to make up the full sum of God's judgment upon that
wicked house, as one insensible of the death of her father, of her husband, of
herself, in comparison of this loss, calls her (then unseasonable) son Ichabod,
and with her last breath says, "The glory is departed from Israel, the ark
is taken." Joseph Hall.
HINTS
TO THE VILLAGE PREACHER
Verses
59-72.
1. A
gloomy sunset, Ps 78:59-60.
2.
A baleful might, Ps 78:60-64.
3.
A blessed sunrise, Ps 78:65-72. C. D.
Verse
65. Then the Lord awaked. Know how to understand this and
similar passages in Scripture, as to the Lord's sleeping and forgetting his
people, Ps 13:1 44:33 77:9. These are not to be understood as to an
universal and absolute forgetting and sleep of providence; for God hath not his
vacation time: he still holds the reins of government in his hand, all the
world over. Neither do they infer an absolute cessation of providence in
reference to that object matter which the Lord to our apprehension seems to
forget, and lies dormant; for there is a promoting work of providence, which we
see not, and are not so sensible of for the present, as hath been shewed.
Besides, such forgetting and sleep of providence, as it is such, bespeaks the
beauty of providence in the way of bringing things to pass. It is so far from
inferring an interrgnum, or letting fall the sceptre of government, as
that it is a glorious demonstration that God orders matters, and that wisely,
whilst he seems to forget, and be as one asleep. As the night, as night, falls
under the providence of God, as well as the day, for there are the ordinances
of heaven for the night season, Jer 31:35: so the dark night, when as to
matters the Lord seems to sleep, is part and parcel of his all wise model of
government. The seventy years captivity was a long night for the church's
distress; and yet thus it must be according to the ordinance of providence. Jer
29:10. Thomas Crane.
Verse
65. Like a mighty man that shouteth by reason of wine: whose
spirit and courage is revived and inflamed by a liberal draught of generous
wine; which comparison is no more injurious to the Divine Majesty than that of
a thief's coming in the night, to which Christ's second coming is compared. 1Th
5:2. Matthew Poole.
Verse
66. He smote his enemies in the hinder parts. This has
reference to the Philistines being smitten with haemorrhoids, or piles, whilst
the ark was retained a captive by them, 1Sa 5:6,12 ...The Greek version,
as quoted by Suidas, is, he smote his enemies on the back parts of the seat;
signifying, he says, a disease modestly expressed. John Gill.
Verse
67. The moving of the ark is not the removing of it; Shiloh has lost
it, but Israel has not. God will have a church in the world, and a kingdom
among men, though this or that place may have its candlestick removed; nay, the
rejection of Shiloh is the election of Sion. Matthew Henry.
Verses
67-68. Refused. Chose not. Chose. As God's love is set out to us, as not
independently pitched, but as having all the persons in his eye and having them
all in view; so by this also, that he hath not pitched it upon everybody. This
is distinct from the former; for an indefinite is not knowing whom he pitched
it upon. Now, as he knew whom he pitched upon, so he hath pitched but upon
some, not on every one...If God would love, it was fit he should be free. It is
a strange thing that you will not allow God that which kings and princes have
the prerogative of, and you will allow it them. They will have favourites whom
they will love, and will not love others; and yet men will not allow God that
liberty, but he must either love all mankind, or he must be cruel and unjust.
The specialness of his love, increases it, endears it to us. You shall find
almost all along the Bible, that when God would express his love, he doth it
with a speciality to his own elect, which he illustrates by the contrary done
to others...And you shall find frequently in the Scripture, when he mentions
his choice of some persons, he holdeth up likewise on purpose his refusing of
others...When he speaks of an election out of the tribes, he contents not
himself to say he chose Judah, but he puts in the rejection, the preterition at
least, of Joseph. He refused the tabernacle of Joseph, and chose not the
tribe of Ephraim: But chose the tribe of Judah, the mount Zion which he loved.
...He speaks of the times of the judges. The rejection of the ten tribes began
to show itself soon; he says, he refused the tabernacle of Ephraim, but he
chose Judah. After Solomon's time, they fell to worshipping of calves (let me
tell you, it is the declining of election that undoes a nation, when election
grows low, and ceases in an age), till at last the ten tribes were cast off, as
they are at this day; but the tribe of Judah had election among them...
Though
at the first, and for a long time, both were alike his people, yet at last
election began to pass a discontinuation. Ephraim, or the ten tribes, had at
first the advantage of Judah in spirituals; for the ark, the token of God's
presence, was committed unto their keeping at Shiloh; the seal of God's worship
and ordinances was entrusted to them, and Judah must come up thither, if they would
seek the Lord. But Ephraim, for their sinning against that worship, forfeited
and lost it, and should therefore have the keeping of it no longer, no, not for
ever any more; but Judah had it at Bethlehem, till at last it was fixedly
seated in Sion, as "the earth is established" Ps 78:69; and
this for no other reason than that he had loved them, and out of love had
chosen them Ps 78:67-69. For otherwise Judah was, as well as Ephraim,
alike involved in the same guilt of sin which had forfeited it, as Ps 78:56-60
of the Psalm plainly show. "Yet they tempted and provoked the most high
God, and kept not his testimonies, "etc. He speaks it of the whole in
those verses, and yet takes the occasion against Ephraim to remove it for ever.
Thus, the first are last, and the last first; and those whom God's presence is
with for a while, upon some eminent sin God begins to withdraw from them, and
by degrees as he did by that people of the ten tribes, till at last he cast
them off from being a people; but dealt not so with Judah, though these made a
forfeiture of their temple, and worship, and nation, in the captivity of
Babylon, yet God restored all again to greater glory at last. The ground was
that in Ps 78:68, Zion which he loved. Thomas Goodwin.
Verses
67-68. Refused. Chose not. Chose.
Verse
70. He took him from the sheepfolds. The art of feeding
cattle, and the art of ruling men are sisters, saith Basil. John Trapp.
Verse
71. From following the ewes great with young. A good and
steady lamber is of great value to a grazier, but I would advise all graziers
to attend to this operation themselves, as few servants will be found to pay
that attention which is necessary, or which a master himself would do, and the
slightest neglect, is, in many cases, followed with the greatest disadvantage.
I have attended to the practice of lambing for several years, therefore, trust
I am not a novice in it, or incompetent to give a description of it. Many lambs
may be lost without its being possible to charge the lamber with neglect or ignorance,
though greater attention on his part might have saved many that otherwise
perish...The practice of lambing is at times very intricate, and is apt to
exhaust the patience of a lamber. Sheep are obstinate, and lambing presents a
scene of confusion, disorder, and trouble, which it is the lamber's business to
rectify, and for which he ought always to be prepared: some of the ewes perhaps
leave their lambs, or the lambs get intermixed, and the ewes which have lost
their lambs run about bleating, while others want assistance. These are only a
few of the various occurrences which call for the immediate attention of the
lamber. Daniel Price, in "A System of Sheep grazing and
Management." 1809.
Verse
71. From following the ewes great with young. It hath been
reported that a learned doctor of Oxford hung up his leathern breeches in his
study for a memorial to visitors of his mean original; the truth I avouch not,
but history tells us of Agathocles who arose from a potter to be king of
Sicily, and would be served in no other plate at his table but earthenware, to
mind him of his former drudgery. It were well if some would remember whose
shoes they have cleaned, whose coals they have carried, and whose money they
have borrowed, and deal gratefully with their creditors, as the good Lord
Cromwell did by the Florentine merchant in the time of Henry the Eighth, when
Wolsey (Foxe's Martyrology) like a butcher forgot the king his master. It was
otherwise with holy David, who being in kingly dignity, graciously calls to
mind his following the ewes great with young, when now feeding the sheep of
Israel. His golden sceptre points at his wooden hook, and he plays the old
lessons of his oaten pipe upon his Algum harp, and spreads his Bethlehem tent
within his marble palace on Mount Zion. Samuel Lee.
Verse
71. To feed Jacob his people. (This is a curious specimen of
medieval spiritualising, and is here inserted as such. It is amusing to note
that a Tractarian expositor quotes the passage with evidently intense
admiration. C. H. S.) Observe, a good shepherd must be humble and faithful, he
ought to have bread in a wallet, a dog by a string, a staff with a rod, and a
tuneful horn. The bread is the word of God, the wallet is the memory of the
word; the dog is zeal, wherewith the shepherd glows for the house of God, casts
out the wolves with pious barking, following preaching and unwearied prayer:
the string by which the dog is held is the moderation of zeal, and discretion,
whereby the zeal of the shepherd is tempered by the spirit of piety and
knowledge. The staff is the consolation of pious exhortation by which the too
timid are sustained and refreshed, lest they fail in the time of tribulation;
but the rod is the authority and power by which the turbulent are restrained.
The tuneful horn, which sounds so sweetly, signifies the sweetness of eternal
blessedness, which the faithful shepherd gently and often instils into the ears
of his flock. Johannes Paulus Palanterius. 1600.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. The duty of attending to God's word. Modes of neglecting the
duty; ways of fulfilment; reasons for obedience; evils of inattention.
Verse
2. (first clause). Preach on the "Parable of the
Prodigal Nation, "as given in the whole Psalm. C. A. Davies, of
Chesterfield.
Verses
2-3.
1.
Truths are none the worse for being old: sayings of old. "Old wood,
"says Lord Bacon, "is best to burn; old books are best to read; and
old friends are best to trust."
2.
Truths are none the worse for being concealed under metaphors: I will open,
etc., in a parable; dark sayings.
3.
Truths are none the worse for being often repeated.
(a)
They are more tested.
(b) They are better testified. G. R.
Verse
3. The connection between what we have "heard, "and what
we have personally "known" in religion.
Verse
4. A good resolution, and a blessed result. C. D.
Verse
4.
1.
What is to be made known? The praises of the Lord; his strength and his
wonderful works.
2.
To whom are they to be made known? To the generations to come.
3.
By whom? Parents¡Xone generation to another.
4.
How made known?
(a)
By hiding nothing.
(b) By declaring everything God has done. G. R.
Verse
5. Scriptural tradition, or the heirloom of the gospel.
Verses
5-8. Family religion.
1.
The fathers' knowledge the children's heritage¡XPs 78:5-6.
2. The fathers' fall the children's preservation¡XPs 78:7-8.
Verses
5-8.
1.
Truth once started can never be arrested¡XPs 78:5-6.
2. Truth received binds the soul to God¡XPs 78:7.
3. Truth rejected lights up beacons for others¡XPs 78:8.
Verses
7-8. On the deceitfulness of the heart, in disregarding providential
dispensations in general. John Jamieson's "Sermons on the Heart,
"I. 430.
Verse
8. Stubbornness not steadfastness, or the difference between a
natural vice and a gracious quality.
Verse
8. The false heart (middle clause), with its left hand,
"Stubbornness in the wrong" (first clause), and its right
hand, "Fickleness in the right" (last clause). C. D.
Verse
9. Who were they? What had they? What did they? When did they do it?
Verses
9, 67. The backsliding of prominent believers.
1.
The Lord's soldiers: who they were; belonging to God's chosen people; were
distinguished by grace. Ge 48:17-20. Strong by God's blessing. De 33:17.
Honourable place among their brethren. Favoured with the tabernacle at
Shiloh¡XPs 78:60.
2.
Their equipment: armour defensive and offensive; like that of others who
triumphed.
3.
Their behaviour in battle: to turn back was traitorous, cowardly, dangerous,
disastrous, dishonourable.
4.
Their punishment¡XPs 78:57. Deprived of their special honour. Re 3:11. C. D.
Verses
10-11. The gradations of sin: neglecting, rejecting, forgetting God. C.
D.
Verses
12-16. God revealed in his deeds. The wonder working God¡XPs 78:12-16.
The avenging God¡XPs 78:12. The interposing God¡XPs 78:13. The guiding God¡XPs
78:14. The Father God¡XPs 78:14-16. C. D.
Verses
12-17. Obstinacy of unbelief. It makes head against God's majesty¡XPs
78:17; his gracious providence¡XPs 78:14-16; his interposing care¡XPs 78:13; his
avenging justice¡XPs 78:12; his distinguishing grace¡XPs 78:12-16. C. D.
Verses
12-17. Prodigies cannot convert the soul. Lu 16:31. C. D.
Verses
15-16. Divine supplies seasonable, plentiful, of the best, marvellous.
Verse
16. Streams from the Rock Christ Jesus.
I.
Their source.
2. Their variety.
3. Their abundance.
¡XB. Davies, of Greenwich.
Verses
12-17. Obstinacy of unbelief. It makes head against God's majesty¡XPs
78:17; his gracious providence¡XPs 78:14-16; his interposing care¡XPs 78:13; his
avenging justice¡XPs 78:12; his distinguishing grace¡XPs 78:12-16. C. D.
Verses
12-17. Prodigies cannot convert the soul. Lu 16:31. C. D.
Verse
17. Sin in its progress feeds upon divine mercies to aid its advance,
as also every other surrounding circumstance.
Verses
17-21.
1.
They tempted God's patience; Ps 78:17.
2. They tempted God's wisdom; Ps 78:18.
3. They tempted God's power; Ps 78:19-20.
4. They tempted God's wrath; Ps 78:21.
¡XE. G. Gange, of Bristol.
Verses
18-21. The progress of evil.
1.
They are drawn away by their lust: Ps 78:18.
2. Lust having conceived bringeth forth sin: Ps 78:19-20.
3. Sin being finished bringeth forth death: Ps 78:21.
"Their
carcases fell." C. D.
Verses
21-22. Evil consequences of unbelief.
1.
The sin itself: they doubted the ultimate certainty, completeness, and reality
of God's salvation from Egypt.
2.
The aggravation of it: the object of it was God; they who entertained it were
God's people: The aids to faith were overlooked: "though."
3.
What it led them to; inward sin¡XPs 78:18; outward sin¡XPs 78:19, etc.
4.
What it brought upon them; Ps 78:21. Fiery serpents, etc. C. D.
Verse
25. Different kinds of food. Beast's food, Lu 15:16. Sinners' food,
Ho 4:8. Formalists' food, Ho 12:1. Saints' food, Jer 15:16 Joh 6:53-57. Angels'
food. Christ's food, Joh 4:34. C. D.
Verse
29-31. Dangerous prayers. When lust dictates, wrath may answer. Let
grace dictate, and mercy will answer. C. D.
Verses
34-37. The hypocrite's feet, Ps 78:34. The hypocrite's memory, Ps 78:35.
The hypocrite's tongue, Ps 78:36. The hypocrite's heart, Ps 78:37. Or, the
hypocrite's cloak and the hypocrite's heart. C. D.
Verse
38. (last clause) and Ps 78:50 (first clause). God's
anger as exercised against his people and against his foes. C. D.
Verses
39, 35. God's memory of his people and their memory of God.
Verse
42. The day of days.
1.
The enemy encountered on that day.
2. The conflict endured.
3. The deliverance accomplished.
4. The joy experienced. B. D.
Verse
45. The power of little things when commissioned to plague us.
Verse
47. (last clause). Sometimes it will not shoot. Sometimes it
will. And when it does, it misses the mark.
Verse
52.
1.
God has a people in the world.
2. He brings them away from others.
3. He brings them into fellowship with himself.
4. He brings them into fellowship with each other.
5. He guides them to their rest.
Verse
55. Divine supplanting. He supplants the fallen angels in heaven. One
nation of earth by another (see all history). The thoughts and affections of
the heart in regeneration, etc.¡XIsa 55:13. C. D.
Verses
56-57. On the deceitfulness of the heart, with respect to the
performance of duty. J. Jamieson. I. 326. On the deceitfulness of the
heart, with respect to the omission of duty. J. Jamieson. I. 353.
Verses
59-72.
1.
A gloomy sunset, Ps 78:59-60.
2. A baleful might, Ps 78:60-64.
3. A blessed sunrise, Ps 78:65-72. C. D.
Verses
9, 67. The backsliding of prominent believers.
1.
The Lord's soldiers: who they were; belonging to God's chosen people; were
distinguished by grace. Ge 48:17-20. Strong by God's blessing. De
33:17. Honourable place among their brethren. Favoured with the tabernacle
at Shiloh¡XPs 78:60.
2.
Their equipment: armour defensive and offensive; like that of others who
triumphed.
3.
Their behaviour in battle: to turn back was traitorous, cowardly, dangerous,
disastrous, dishonourable.
4.
Their punishment¡XPs 78:57. Deprived of their special honour. Re 3:11.
C. D.
Verses
70-72. Spiritual promotions.
Verses
72. In spite of his transgressions, which he always bitterly repented
of and which were therefore blotted out of the Book of God, he remains to all
princes and rulers of the earth as the noblest pattern. In perfect inward truth
he knew and felt himself to be "King by the grace of God." The
crown and sceptre he bore merely in trust from the King of all kings; and to
his latest breath he endeavoured with all his earnestness to be found as a
genuine theocratic king, who in everything must conduct his earthly government
according to the ordinances and directions of God. Therefore the Lord made all
that he took in hand prosper, and nothing was clearer to the people than that
the Lord was truly with the king. Frederick William Krummacher, in
"David, the King of Israel." 1867.
WORKS UPON THE
SEVENTY-EIGHTH PSALM
Valuable
information upon THE PLAGUES OF EGYPT will be found in the following works:¡X
"Observations
upon the Plagues inflicted upon the Egyptians: in which is shewn the
peculiarity of those Judgments, and their correspondence with the Rites and
Idolatry of that People... By JACOB BRYANT. 1794."
"Israel
in Egypt; or the Books of Genesis and Exodus illustrated by existing
Monuments. By WILLIAM OSBURN. 1856."
UPON
ISRAEL IN THE WILDERNESS
"The
wanderings of the Children of Israel." By the late Rev. GEORGE WAGNER,
1862.
"The
Church in the Wilderness." By WILLIAM SEATON. In two vols. 1821.
¢w¢w C.H. Spurgeon¡mThe Treasury of David¡n