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Psalm One
Hundred Twenty-four
Psalm 124
Chapter Contents
The deliverance of the church. (1-5) Thankfulness for the
deliverance. (6-8)
Commentary on Psalm 124:1-5
(Read Psalm 124:1-5)
God suffers the enemies of his people sometimes to
prevail very far against them, that his power may be seen the more in their
deliverance. Happy the people whose God is Jehovah, a God all-sufficient.
Besides applying this to any particular deliverance wrought in our days and the
ancient times, we should have in our thoughts the great work of redemption by
Jesus Christ, by which believers were rescued from Satan.
Commentary on Psalm 124:6-8
(Read Psalm 124:6-8)
God is the Author of all our deliverances, and he must
have the glory. The enemies lay snares for God's people, to bring them into sin
and trouble, and to hold them there. Sometimes they seem to prevail; but in the
Lord let us put our trust, and we shall not be put to confusion. The believer
will ascribe all the honour of his salvation, to the power, mercy, and truth of
God, and look back with wonder and thanksgiving on the way in which the Lord
has led him. Let us rejoice that our help for the time to come is in him who
made heaven and earth.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 124
Verse 5
[5] Then the proud waters had gone over our soul.
The proud — Our enemies, compared to proud
waters, for their great multitude and swelling rage.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. A Song of
degrees of David. Of course the superfine critics have pounced upon this title
as inaccurate, but we are at liberty to believe as much or as little of their
assertions as we may please. They declare that there are certain ornaments of
language in this little ode which were unknown in the Davidic period. It may be
so; but in their superlative wisdom they have ventured upon so many other
questionable statements that we are not bound to receive this dictum. Assuredly
the manner of the song is very like to David's, and we are unable to see why he
should be excluded from the authorship. Whether it be his composition or no, it
breathes the same spirit as that which animates the unchallenged songs of the
royal composer.
DIVISION. This short
Psalm contains an acknowledgement of favour received by way of special
deliverance (1-5), then a grateful act of worship in blessing Jehovah (6, 7),
and, lastly, a declaration of confidence in the Lord for all future time of
trial. May our experience lead us to the same conclusion as the saints of
David's time. From all confidence in man may we be rescued by a holy reliance
upon our God.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. If it had not been the Lord who was on our side, now may
Israel say. The opening sentence is abrupt, and remains a fragment. By such
a commencement attention was aroused as well as feeling expressed: and this is
ever the way of poetic fire—to break forth in uncontrollable flame. The many
words in italics in our authorized version will show the reader that the
translators did their best to patch up the passage, which, perhaps, had better
have been left in its broken grandeur, and it would then have run
thus:—"Had it not been Jehovah! He was for us, oh let Israel say! Had it
not been Jehovah! He who was for us when men rose against us." The
glorious Lord became our ally; he took our part, and entered into treaty with
us. If Jehovah were not our protector where should we be Nothing but his power
and wisdom could have guarded us from the cunning and malice of our
adversaries; therefore, let all his people say so, and openly give him the
honour of his preserving goodness. Here are two "ifs, "and yet there
is no "if" in the matter. The Lord was on our side, and is still our
defender, and will be so from henceforth, even for ever. Let us with holy
confidence exult in this joyful fact: We are far too slow in declaring our
gratitude, hence the exclamation which should be rendered, "O let Israel
say." We murmur without being stirred up to it, but our thanksgiving needs
a spur, and it is well when some warm hearted friend bids us say what we feel.
Imagine what would have happened if the Lord had left us, and then see what has
happened because he has been faithful to us. Are not all the materials of a
song spread before us? Let us sing unto the Lord.
Verse
2. If it had not been the Lord who was on our side, when men rose
up against us. When all men combined, and the whole race of men seemed set
upon stamping out the house of Israel, what must have happened if the covenant
Lord had not interposed? When they stirred themselves, and combined to make an
assault upon our quietude and safety, what should we have done in their rising
if the Lord had not also risen? No one who could or would help was near, but
the bare arm of the Lord sufficed to preserve his own against all the leagued
hosts of adversaries. There is no doubt as to our deliverer, we cannot ascribe
our salvation to any second cause, for it would not have been equal to the
emergency; nothing less than omnipotence and omniscience could have wrought our
rescue. We set every other claimant on one side, and rejoice because the Lord
was on our side.
Verse
3. Then they had swallowed us up quick, when their wrath was
kindled against us. They were so eager for our destruction that they would
have made only one morsel of us, and have swallowed us up alive and whole in a
single instant. The fury of the enemies of the church is raised to the highest
pitch, nothing will content them but the total annihilation of God's chosen.
Their wrath is like a fire which is kindled, and has taken such firm hold upon
the fuel that there is no quenching it. Anger is never more fiery than when the
people of God are its objects. Sparks become flames, and the furnace is heated
seven times hotter when God's elect are to be thrust into the blaze. The cruel
world would make a full end of the godly seed were it not that Jehovah bars the
way. When the Lord appears, the cruel throats cannot swallow, and the consuming
fires cannot destroy. Ah, if it were not Jehovah, if our help came from all the
creatures united, there would be no way of escape for us: it is only because
the Lord liveth that his people are alive.
Verse
4. Then the waters had overwhelmed us. Rising irresistibly,
like the Nile, the flood of opposition would soon have rolled over our heads.
Across the mighty waste of waters we should have cast an anxious eye, but
looked in vain for escape. The motto of a royal house is, "Tossed about
but not submerged": we should have needed an epitaph rather than an
epigram, for we should have been driven by the torrent and sunken, never to
rise again. The stream had gone over our soul. The rushing torrent would have
drowned our soul, our hope, our life. The figures seem to be the steadily
rising flood, and the hurriedly rushing stream. Who can stand against two such
mighty powers? Everything is destroyed by these unconquerable forces, either by
being submerged or swept away. When the world's enmity obtains a vent it both
rises and rushes, it rages and rolls along, and spares nothing. In the great
water floods of persecution and affliction who can help but Jehovah? But for
him where would we be at this very hour? We have experienced seasons in which
the combined forces of earth and hell must have made an end of us had not
omnipotent grace interfered for our rescue.
Verse
5. Then the proud waters had gone over our soul. The figure
represents the waves as proud, and so they seem to be when they overleap the
bulwarks of a frail bark, and threaten every moment to sink her. The opposition
of men is usually embittered by a haughty scorn which derides all our godly
efforts as mere fanaticism or obstinate ignorance. In all the persecutions of
the church a cruel contempt has largely mingled with the oppression, and this
is overpowering to the soul. Had not God been with us our disdainful enemies
would have made nothing of us, and dashed over us as a mountain torrent sweeps
down the side of a hill, driving everything before it. Not only would our goods
and possessions have been carried off, but our soul, our courage, our hope
would have been borne away by the impetuous assault, and buried beneath the insults
of our antagonists. Let us pause here, and as we see what might have been, let
us adore the guardian power which has kept us in the flood, and yet above the
flood. In our hours of dire peril we must have perished had not our Preserver
prevailed for our safe keeping.
Verse
6. Blessed be the Lord, who hath not given us as a prey to their
teeth. Leaving the metaphor of a boiling flood, he compares the adversaries
of Israel to wild beasts who desired to make the godly their prey. Their teeth
are prepared to tear, and they regard the godly as their victims. The Lord is
heartily praised for not permitting his servants to be devoured when they were
between the jaws of the raging ones. It implies that none can harm us till the
Lord permits: we cannot be their prey unless the Lord gives us up to them, and
that our loving Lord will never do. Hitherto he has refused permission to any
foe to destroy us, blessed be his name. The more imminent the danger the more
eminent the mercy which would not permit the soul to perish in it. God be
blessed for ever for keeping us from the curse. Jehovah be praised for checking
the fury of the foe, and saving his own. The verse reads like a merely negative
blessing, but no boon can be more positively precious. He has given us to his
Son Jesus, and he will never give us to our enemies.
Verse
7. Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers.
Our soul is like a bird for many reasons; but in this case the point of
likeness is weakness, folly, and the ease with which it is enticed into the
snare. Fowlers have many methods of taking small birds, and Satan has many
methods of entrapping souls. Some are decoyed by evil companions, others are
enticed by the love of dainties; hunger drives many into the trap, and fright
impels numbers to fly into the net. Fowlers know their birds, and how to take
them; but the birds see not the snare so as to avoid it, and they cannot break
it so as to escape from it. Happy is the bird that hath a deliverer strong, and
mighty, and ready in the moment of peril: happier still is the soul over which
tim Lord watches day and night to pluck its feet out of the net. What joy there
is in this song, "our soul is escaped." How the emancipated one sings
and soars, and soars and sings again. Blessed be God, many of us can make
joyous music with these notes, "our soul is escaped." Escaped from
our natural slavery; escaped from the guilt, the degradation, the habit, the
dominion of sin; escaped from the vain deceits and fascinations of Satan; escaped
from all that can destroy; we do indeed experience delight. What a wonder of
grace it is! What a miraculous escape that we who are so easily misled should
not have been permitted to die by the dread fowler's hand. The Lord has heard
the prayer which he taught us to pray, and he hath delivered us from evil.
The
snare is broken, and we are escaped. The song is worth repeating; it is well to
dwell upon so great a mercy. The snare may be false doctrine, pride, lust, or a
temptation to indulge in policy, or to despair, or to presume; what a high
favour it is to have it broken before our eyes, so that it has no more power
over us. We see not the mercy while we are in the snare; perhaps we are so
foolish as to deplore the breaking of the Satanic charm; the gratitude comes when
the escape is seen, and when we perceive what we have escaped from, and by what
hand we have been set free. Then our Lord has a song from our mouths and hearts
as we make heaven and earth ring with the notes, "the snare is broken, and
we are escaped." We have been tempted, but not taken; cast down, but not
destroyed; perplexed, but not in despair; in deaths oft, but still alive:
blessed be Jehovah! This song might well have suited our whole nation at the
time of the Spanish Armada, the church in the days of the Jesuits, and each
believer among us in seasons of strong personal temptation.
Verse
8. Our help, our hope for the future, our ground of
confidence in all trials present and to come. Is in the name of the Lord.
Jehovah's revealed character is our foundation of confidence, his person is our
sure fountain of strength. Who made heaven and earth. Our Creator is our
preserver. He is immensely great in his creating work; he has not fashioned a
few little things alone, but all heaven and the whole round earth are the works
of his hands. When we worship the Creator let us increase our trust in our
Comforter. Did he create all that we see, and can he not preserve us from evils
which we cannot see Blessed be his name, he that has fashioned us will watch over
us; yea, he has done so, and rendered us help in the moment of jeopardy. He is
our help and our shield, even he alone. He will to the end break every snare.
He made heaven for us, and he will keep us for heaven; he made the earth, and
he will succour us ripen it until the hour cometh for our departure. Every work
of his hand preaches to us the duty and the delight of reposing upon him only.
All nature cries, "Trust ye in the Lord for ever, for in the Lord Jehovah
there is everlasting strength." "Wherefore comfort one another with
these words." The following versification of the sense rather than the
words of this psalm is presented to the reader with much diffidence:
Had
not the Lord, my soul may cry,
Had not the Lord been on my bide;
Had he not brought deliverance nigh,
Then must my helpless soul have died.
Had
not the Lord been on my side,
My soul had been by Satan slain;
And Tophet, opening large and wide,
Would not have gaped for me in vain.
Lo,
floods of wrath, and floods of hell,
In fierce impetuous torrents roll;
Had not the Lord defended well,
The waters had o'erwhelm'd my soul.
As
when the fowler's snare is broke,
The bird escapes on cheerful wings;
My soul, set free from Satan's yoke,
With joy bursts forth, and mounts, and sings.
She
sings the Lord her Saviour's praise;
Sings forth his praise with joy and mirth;
To him her song in heaven she'll raise,
To him that made both heaven and earth.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. The title
informs us that this sacred march was composed by king David; and we learn very
clearly from the subject, that the progression referred to was the triumphant
return of the king and his loyal army to Jerusalem, upon the overthrow of the
dangerous rebellion to which the great mass of the people had been excited by
Absalom and his powerful band of confederates.—John Mason Good.
Whole
Psalm. This psalm is ascribed to David. No reference is made to any
specific danger and deliverance. There is a delightful universality in the
language, which suits it admirably for an anthem of the redeemed, in every age
and in every clime. The people of God still live in a hostile territory.
Traitors are in the camp, and there are numerous foes without. And the church
would soon be exterminated, if the malice and might of her adversaries were not
restrained and defeated by a higher power. Hence this ode of praise has never
become obsolete. How frequently have its strains of adoring gratitude floated
on the breeze! What land is there, in which its outbursting gladness has not been
heard! It has been sung upon the banks of the Jordan and the Nile, the
Euphrates and the Tigris. It has been sung upon the banks of the Tiber and the
Rhine, the Thames and the Forth. It has been sung upon the banks of the Ganges
and the Indus, the Mississippi and the Irrawady. And we anticipate a period
when the church, surmounting all her difficulties, and victory waving over her
banners, shall sing this psalm of praise in every island and continent of our
globe. The year of God's redeemed must come. The salvation of Christ shall
extend to the utmost extremities of earth. And when this final emancipation
takes place, the nations will shout for joy, and praise their Deliverer in
psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs.—N. McMichael.
Whole
Psalm. In the year 1582, this psalm was sung on a remarkable occasion in
Edinburgh. An imprisoned minister, John Durie, had been set free, and was met
and welcomed on entering the town by two hundred of his friends. The number
increased till he found himself in the midst of a company of two thousand, who
began to sing as they moved up the long High Street, "Now Israel may say,
"etc. They sang in four parts with deep solemnity, all joining in the well
known tune and psalm. They were much moved themselves, and so were all who
heard; and one of the chief persecutors is said to have been more alarmed at
this sight and song than at anything he had seen in Scotland.—Andrew A.
Bonar, in "Christ and His Church in the Book of Psalms,"
1859.
Verse
1. The Lord...on our side. Jehovah is on the side of his
people in a spiritual sense, or otherwise it would be bad for them. God the
Father is on their side; his love and relation to them engage him to be so;
hence all those good things that are provided for them and bestowed on them;
nor will he suffer any to do them hurt, they being as dear to him as the apple
of his eye; hence he grants them his gracious presence, supports them under all
their trials and exercises, supplies all their wants, and keeps them by his
power, and preserves them from all their enemies; so that they have nothing to
fear from any quarter. Christ is on their side; he is the Surety for them, the
Saviour of them; has taken their part against all their spiritual enemies, sin,
Satan, the world, and death; has engaged with them and conquered them: he is
the Captain of their salvation, their King at the head of them, that protects
and defends them here, and is their friend in the court of heaven; their
Advocate and interceding High priest there, who pleads their cause against
Satan, and obtains every blessing for them. The Spirit of Jehovah is on their
side, to carry on his work in them; to assist them in their prayers and
supplications; to secure them from Satan's temptations; to set up a standard
for them when the enemy comes in like a flood upon them; and to comfort them in
all their castings down; and to work them up for, and bring them safe to
heaven: but were this not the case, what would become of them!—John Gill.
Verse
1. Israel. The "Israel" spoken of in this psalm may
be Israel in the house of Laban, in whose person the Midrash Tehillim imagines
the Psalm to be said. There are certainly some of its phrases which acquire an
appropriate meaning from being interpreted in this connection.—H.T.
Armfield.
Verses
1-4. Such abrupt and unfinished expressions in the beginning of the
psalm indicate the great joy and exultation that will not suffer the speaker to
finish his sentences.—Robert Bellarmine.
Verses
1-2. The somewhat paraphrastic rendering of these verses (with the unnecessary
interpolation of the words in italics in the Authorised Version) greatly weaken
their force and obscure their meaning. There is far more meant and expressed
than simply that God gave the Israelites the victory over their enemies. The
psalm is typico prophetic. It sets forth the condition of the church in this
world, surrounded by enemies, implacable in their hatred, maddened by rage, and
bent on her destruction. It gives assurance of her preservation, and continuous
triumph, because Jehovah is her God. It foretells the future, full, and final
destruction of all her enemies. It reechoes the song sung on the shores of the
Red Sea. In it are heard the notes of the New Song before the great white
throne. The praise and thanksgiving are to hwhy, the revealed oyhla, whose
"eternal power and Godhead are understood by the things that are
made:"—to, hwhy, the revealed ydvla, whom the fathers knew as the
Almighty, from the great things which he did for them:—to hwhy, the God who has
made a covenant with his people, the Redeemer. It is ladvy, the chosen people
of God, the holy nation, the peculiar treasure to him above all peoples, and
thus become, as the Rabbins say, "Odium generis gumant, "against whom
oda (not men, but man collectively) rose up and sought to destroy. It is ladvy,
God's chosen, the people of the covenant, that with the full delight of a
personal "my, "joy in God and sings, "But that Jehovah, was zgl,
ours!" Tame and frigid is the rendering—"was on our side." Jehovah
was theirs; that, their safety: that, their blessedness: that, their joy.—Edward
Thomas Gibson, 1818-1880.
Verses
1,2.
1.
God was on our side; he took our part, espoused our cause, and appeared for us.
He was our helper, and a very present help, a help on our side, nigh at hand.
He was with us; not only for us, but among us, and commander-in-chief of our
forces.
2.
That God was Jehovah; there the emphasis lies. If it had not been Jehovah
himself, a God of infinite power and perfection, that had undertaken our
deliverance, our enemies would have overpowered us. Happy the people therefore
whose God is Jehovah, a God all sufficient. Let Israel say this to his honour,
and resolve never to forsake him.—Matthew Henry.
Verses
1, 2, 8. These three things will I bear on my heart, O Lord: "The
Lord was on our side, "this for the past: "The snare is broken,
" for the present; "Our help is in the name of the Lord, "this
for the future. I will not and I cannot be fainthearted, whether in my contest
with Satan, in my intercourse with the world, or in the upheavings of my wicked
heart, so long as I hold this "threefold cord" in my hand, or rather,
am held by it.—Alfred Edersheim.
Verse
2. If it had not been the LORD, etc. This repetition is not
in vain. For whilst we are in danger, our fear is without measure; but when it
is once past, we imagine it to have been less than it was indeed. And this is
the delusion of Satan to diminish and obscure the grace of God. David therefore
with this repetition stirreth up the people to more thankfulness unto God for
his gracious deliverance, and amplifies the dangers which they had passed.
Whereby we are taught how to think of our troubles and afflictions past, lest
the sense and feeling of God's grace vanish out of our minds.—Martin Luther.
Verse
2. Men rose up against us. It may seem strange that these
wicked and wretched enemies, monsters rather than men, should be thus
moderately spoken of, and have no other name than this of men given them, which
of all others they least deserved, as having in them nothing of man but outward
show and shape, being rather beasts, yea, devils in the form and fashion of
men, than right men. But hereby the church would show that she did leave the
further censuring of them unto God their righteous Judge; and would also further
amplify their wickedness, who being men, did yet in their desires and
dispositions bewray a more than beastly immanity and inhumanity.—Daniel Dyke
(—1614?) in "Comfortable Sermons upon the 124th Psalme," 1617.
Verse
3. Then they had swallowed us up quick. The metaphor may be
taken from famished wild beasts attacking and devouring men (comp. v. 5); or
the reference may be to the case of a man shut up alive in a sepulchre (Pr
1:12) and left there to perish, or (Nu 16:80) swallowed up by an earthquake.—Daniel
Cresswell.
Verse
3. Then they had swallowed us up. The word implies eating with
insatiable appetite; every man that eateth must also swallow; but a glutton is
rather a swallower than an eater. He throws his meat whole down his throat, and
eats (as we may say) without chewing. The rod of Moses, turned into a serpent,
"swallowed up" the rods of the Egyptian sorcerers. The word is often
applied to express oppression (Ps 35:25): "Let them not say in their
hearts, Ah, so would we have it: let them not say, We have swallowed him
up": that is, we have made clear riddance of him; he is now a gone man for
ever. The ravenous rage of the adversary is described in this language.—Joseph
Caryl.
Verse
3. Quick. Not an adverb, "quickly, "but an
adjective, alive. As greedy monsters, both of the land and of the deep,
sometimes swallow their food before the life is out of it, so would the enemies
of the Church have destroyed her as in a moment, but for divine interposition.—William
S. Plumer.
Verse
3. Objection. But what may the reason thereof be? May a man say,
that thus the godly shall always prevail and be never overthrown by their
enemies, but overcome them rather? Experience doth teach us that they are fewer
in number than the wicked are, that they are weaker for power and strength,
that they are more simple for wit and policy, and that they are more careless
for, diligence and watchfulness than their adversaries be: how, then, comes it
to pass that they have the upper hand? Answer. The Prophet Ezra doth declare it
unto us in the 8th chapter of his prophecy, and the 10th verse thereof, it is
in few words "because the Lord is with them and for them."
For,
first, he is stronger than all, being able to resist all power that is devised
against him and his, and to do whatsoever he will both in heaven and earth.
2.
He is wiser than all, knowing how to prevent them in all their ways, and also
how to bring matters to pass for the good of his people.
3.
He is more diligent than all, to stand, as it were, upon the watch, and to take
his advantage when it is offered him, for "He that keepeth Israel doth
neither slumber nor sleep."
4.
Lastly, he is happier then all to have good success in all his enterprises, for
he doth prosper still in all things which he doth take in hand and none can
resist a thought of his; yea, the very "word which goeth out of his mouth
doth accomplish that which he wills, and prosper in the thing where unto he
doth send it." In war, all these four things are respected in a captain
that will still overcome: first, that he be strong; secondly, that he be wise;
thirdly, that he be diligent; and, lastly, that he be fortunate; for the
victory goeth not always with the strong, nor always with the wise, nor always
with the diligent, nor always with the fortunate; but sometimes with the one of
them, and sometimes with the other: Out look, where all four do concur together
there is always the victory, and therefore seeing all of them are in God, it is
no marvel though those whose battles he doth fight, do always overcome and get
the victory.—Thomas Stint, 1621.
Verses
4, 5. A familiar, but exceedingly apt and most significant figure.
Horrible is the sight of a raging conflagration; but far more destructive is a
river overflowing its banks and rushing violently on: for it is not possible to
restrain it by any strength or power. As, then, he says, a river is carried
along with great impetuosity, and carries away and destroys whatever it meets
with in its course; thus also is the rage of the enemies of the church, not to
be withstood by human strength. Hence, we should learn to avail ourselves of
the protection and help of God. For what else is the church but a little boat
fastened to the bank, which is carried away by the force of the waters? or a
shrub growing on the bank, which without effort the flood roots up? Such was
the people of Israel in the days of David compared with the surrounding
nations. Such in the present day is the church compared with her enemies. Such
is each one of us compared with the power of the malignant spirit. We are as a
little shrub, of recent growth and having no firm hold: but he is like the
Elbe, overflowing, and with great force overthrowing all things far and wide.
We are like a withered leaf, lightly holding to the tree; he is like the north
wind, with great force rooting up and throwing down the trees. How, then, can
we withstand or defend ourselves by out' own power?—Martin Luther.
Verses
4, 5. First the "waters"; then "the stream" or
torrent; then "the proud waters, "lifting up their heads on high.
First the waters overwhelm us; then the torrent goes over our soul; and then
the proud waters go over our soul. What power can resist the rapid floods of
waters, when they overspread their boundaries, and rush over a country? Onward
they sweep with resistless force, and men and cattle, and crops and houses, are
destroyed. Let the impetuous waters break loose, and, in a few minutes, the
scene of life, and industry, and happiness, is made a scene of desolation and
woe. Perhaps there is an allusion here to the destruction of the Egyptians in
the Red Sea. The floods fell upon them, the depths covered them: they sank into
the bottom as a stone. Had God not stretched forth his hand to rescue the
Israelites, their enemies would have overwhelmed them. Happy they who, in
seasons of danger, have Jehovah for a hiding place.—N. McMichael.
Verse
5. Then the proud waters had gone over our soul. The same
again, to note the greatness both of the danger and of the deliverance. And it
may teach us not lightly to pass over God's great blessings, but to make the
most of them.—John Trapp.
Verse
5.
"When
winds and seas do rage,
And threaten to undo? me,
Thou dost their wrath assuage,
If I but call unto thee.
A
mighty storm last night
Did seek my soul to swallow;
But by the peep of light
A gentle calm did follow.
What
need I then despair
Though ills stand round about me;
Since mischiefs neither dare
To bark or bite without thee?"
—Robert Herrick, 1591-1674.
Verses
6, 7. Two figures are again employed, in order to show how imminent was
the destruction, had there been no divine interposition. The first is that of a
savage beast which was formerly used. But an addition is made, to describe the
urgency of the danger. The wild beast was not only lying in wait for them; he
was not merely ready to spring upon his prey; he had already leaped upon it: he
had actually seized it: it was even now between his teeth. What a graphic
description! A moment's delay, and all help would have been in vain. But
Jehovah appears on the ground. He goes up to the ferocious beast, and takes out
the trembling prey from between his bloody jaws. The danger is imminent; but
nothing is too hard for the Lord. "My soul is among lions."
"What time I am afraid I will trust in thee." "He shall send
from heaven, and save me from the reproach of him that would swallow me
up." The second figure is that of a fowler. The fowler has prepared his
snare in a skilful manner. The bird enters it, unconscious of danger: the net
is thrown over it; and in an instant its liberty is lost. There it lies, the
poor bird, its little heart throbbing wildly, and its little wings beating
vainly against the net. It is completely at the mercy of the fowler, and escape
is impossible. But again the Lord appears, and his presence is safety He goes
up to the net, lifts it from the ground; the bird flies out, lights on a
neighbouring tree, and sings among the branches. "Surely he shall deliver
thee from the snare of the fowler." God rescues his people from the craft
and subtlety of their enemies, as he does from their open violence.—N.
McMichael.
Verses
6, 7. We were delivered,
1.
Like a lamb out of the very jaws of a beast of prey: God "hath not given
us as a prey to their teeth"; intimating that they had no power against
God's people, but what was given them from above. They could not be a prey to
their teeth unless God gave them up, and therefore they were rescued, because
God would not suffer them to be ruined.
2.
Like "a bird, "a little bird, the word signifies a sparrow, "out
of the snare of the fowler." The enemies are very subtle and spiteful,
they lay snares for God's people, to bring them into sin and trouble, and to
hold them there. Sometimes they seem to have prevailed so far as to gain their
point, the children of God are taken in the snare, and are as unable to help
themselves out as any weak and silly bird is; and then is God's time to appear
for their relief; when all other friends fail, then God breaks the snare, and
turns the counsel of the enemies into foolishness: "The snare is broken,
and so we are delivered."—Matthew Henry.
Verse
7. Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers,
etc. Various snares are placed for birds, by traps, birdlime, guns, etc.: who
can enumerate all the dangers of the godly, threatening them from Satan, and
from the world? Ps 91:3: Ho 5:1.—"We are delivered, "not by our own
skill or cunning, but by the grace and power of God only: so that every device
is made vain, and freedom is preserved.—Martin Geier.
Verse
7. Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers,
etc. I am quite sure that there is not a day of our lives in which Satan does
not lay some snare for our souls, the more perilous because unseen; and if
seen, because perhaps unheeded and despised. And of this, too, I am equally
sure, that if any one brings home with him at night a conscience void of
offence towards God and man, it is in no might nor strength of his own, and
that if the Lord had not been his guide and preserver he would have been given
over, nay, he would have given himself over, as a prey to the devourer's teeth.
I believe there are few even of God's saints who have not had occasion, in some
season of sore temptation, when Satan has let loose all his malice and might,
and poured in suggestion upon suggestion and trial upon trial, as he did on
Job, and they have been ready to faint, if not to fall by the ways then,
perhaps, in a moment when they looked not for it, Satan has departed, foiled
and discomfited, and with his prey snatched out of his hands, and they, too,
have had gratefully to own, "Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the
snare of the fowlers; tie snare is broken, and we are escaped." Yes!
depend upon it, our best and only hope, "is in the name of the Lord, who
made heaven and earth."—Barton Bouchier.
Verse
7. Our soul is escaped as a bird. The snare of the fowler was
the lime-twigs of this world; our soul was caught in them by the feathers, our
affections: now, indeed, we are escaped; but the Lord delivered us.—Thomas
Adams.
Verse
7. As a bird out of the snare of the fowlers. The soul is
surrounded by many dangers.
1.
It is ensnared by worldliness. One of the most gigantic dangers against which
God's people have specially to guard—an enemy to all spirituality of thought
and feeling.
2.
It is ensnared by selfishness—a foe to all simple-hearted charity, to all
expansive generosity and Christian philanthropy.
3.
It is ensnared by unbelief—the enemy of prayer, of ingenuous confidence, of all
personal Christian effort. These are not imaginary dangers. We meet them in
everyday life. They threaten us at every point, and often have we to lament
over the havoc they make in our hearts.—George Barlow, in a "Homiletic
Commentary on the Book of Psalms," 1879.
Verse
7. The snare is broken. It is as easy for God to deliver his
people out of their enemies' hands, even when they have the godly in their
power, as to break a net made of thread or yarn, wherewith birds are taken.—David
Dickson.
Verse
7. The snare is broken, and we are escaped. Our life lieth
open always to the snares of Satan, and we as silly birds are like at every
moment to be carried away, notwithstanding the Lord maketh a way for us to
escape; yea, when Satan seemeth to be most sure of us, by the mighty power of
God the snares are broken and we are delivered. Experience we have hereof in
those who are inwardly afflicted and with heaviness of spirit grievously
oppressed, that when they seem to be in utter despair, and ready now, as you
would say, to perish, yet even at the last pinch, and in the uttermost
extremity cometh the sweet comfort of God's Holy Spirit and raiseth them up
again. When we are most ready to perish, then is God most ready to help.
"Except the Lord had holpen me, "saith David, "my soul had
almost dwelt in silence." And this again do we mark for the comfort of the
weak conscience. It is Satan's subtlety whereby commonly he disquiets many,
that because carnal corruption is in them he would therefore bear them in hand
that they are none of Christ's. In this he plays the deceiver; he tries us by
the wrong rule of perfect sanctification; this is the square that ought to be
laid to Christ's members triumphant in heaven, and not to those who are
militant on earth. Sin remaining in me will not prove that therefore I am not
in Christ, otherwise Christ should have no members upon earth; but grace
working that new disposition which nature could never effect proves undoubtedly
that we are in Christ Jesus.—Thomas Stint.
Verse
8. Our help is in the name of the LORD, who made heaven and
earth. He hath made the earth where the snare lies, so that he can
rightfully destroy the snare as laid unlawfully in his domain; he hath made the
heaven, the true sphere of the soaring wings of those souls which he has
delivered, so that they may fly upwards from their late prison, rejoicing. He
came down to earth himself, the Lord Jesus in whose name is our help, that lie
might break the snare; be returned to heaven, that we might fly "as the
doves to their windows" (Isa 60:8), following where lie showed the way.—Richard
Rolle, of Hampole (1340), in "Neale and Littledale."
Verse
8. Our help is in the name of the Lord. The fairest fruits of
our by past experience is to glorify God by confidence in him for time to come,
as here.—David Dickson.
Verse
8. The Lord who made heaven and earth. As if the Psalmist had
said, As long as I see heaven and earth I will never distrust. I hope in that
God which made all these things out of nothing; and therefore as long as I see
those two great standing monuments of his power before me, heaven and earth, I
will never be discouraged. So the apostle: 1Pe 4:19, "Commit the keeping
of your souls to him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator." O
Christian! remember when you trust God you trust an almighty Creator, who is
able to help, let your case be never so desperate. God could create when he had
nothing to work upon, which made one wonder; aud he could create when he had
nothing to work with, which is another wonder. What is become of the tools
wherewith he made the world? Where is the trowel wherewith he arched the
heaven? and the spade wherewith he digged the sea? What had God to work upon,
or work withal when he made the world? He made it out of nothing. Now you
commit your souls to the same faithful Creator.—Thomas Manton.
Verse
8. The Romans in a great distress were put so hard to it, that they
were fain to take the weapons out of the temples of their gods to fight with
them; and so they overcame. And this ought to be the course of every good
Christian, in times of public distress, to fly to the weapons of the church,
prayers and tears. The Spartans' walls were their spears, the Christian's walls
are his prayers. His help standeth in the name of the Lord who hath made both
heaven and earth.—Edmund Calamy.
Verse
8. The French Protestants always begin their public worship with the
last verse of this Psalm, and there is no thought more encouraging and
comfortable.—Job Orton, 1717-1783.
Verse
8. Our help is in the name of the Lord, etc. These are the
words of a triumphing and victorious faith, "Our help standeth in the name
of the Lord, which made heaven and earth": as if he said, the Maker of
heaven and earth is my God, and my helper. We see whither he flieth in his
great distress. He despairs not, but cries unto the Lord, as one yet hoping
assuredly to find relief and comfort. Rest thou also in this hope, and do as he
did. David was not tempted to the end he Should despair; think not thou,
therefore, that thy temptations are sent unto thee that thou shouldest be swallowed
up with sorrow and desperation: if thou be brought down to the very gates of
hell, believe that the Lord will surely raise thee up again. If so thou be
bruised and broken, know it is the Lord that will help thee again. If thy heart
be full of sorrow and heaviness, look for comfort from him, who said, that a
troubled spirit is a sacrifice unto him: (Ps 51:17) Thus he setteth the eternal
God, the Maker of heaven and earth, against all troubles and dangers, against
the floods and overflowings of all temptations, and swalloweth up, as it were
with one breath all the raging furies of the whole world, and of hell itself,
even as a little drop of water is swallowed up by a mighty flaming fire: and
what is the world with all its force and power, in respect of him that made
heaven and earth!—Thomas Stint.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. The LORD who was on our side. Who is he? Why on our side?
How does he prove it? What are we bound to do?
Verses
1-3. Regard the text,
1.
From the life of Jacob or Israel.
2. From the history of the nation.
3. From the annals of the church.
4. From our personal biography.
Verses
1-5.
1.
What might have been.
2.
Why it has not been.
Verses
1-5.
1.
What the people of God would have been if the Lord had not been on their side.
(a)
What if left to their enemies? Ps 124:2,3. Israel left to Pharaoh and his host
in the time of Moses: left to the Caananites in the time of Joshua: to the
Midianites in the time of Gideon: Judah to the Assyrians in the time of
Hezekiah: "Then they had swallowed us up," etc.
(b)
What if left to themselves? "The stream had gone over our soul": Ps
124:4, 5.
2.
What the people of God are with the Lord on their side.
(a)
All the designs of their enemies against them are frustrated.
(b)
Their inward sorrow is turned into joy.
(c)
Both their inward and then outward troubles work together for their good.—G.
R.
Verse
2, 3.
1.
To swallow us alive—the desire of our wrathful enemies.
2. To save us alive—the work of our faithful God.
Verse
6.
1.
The Lamb.
2. The Lion.
3. The Lord.
Verse
6.
1.
They would gladly devour us.
2. They cannot devour unless the Lord will.
3. God is to be praised since he does not permit them to injure us.
Verse
6.
1.
The ill will of men against the righteous.
(a)
For their spoliation.
(b) For their destruction: "As a prey to their teeth."
2.
The goodwill of God. "Blessed be the Lord, "etc.
(a)
What it supposes—that good men, in a measure and for a time, may be given into
the hands of the wicked.
(b)
What it affirms—that they are not given entirely into their hands:—G.R.
Verse
7.
1.
The soul ensnared.
(a)
By whom? Wicked men are fowlers. By Satan. "Satan, the fowler, who betrays
Unguarded souls a thousand ways."
(b)
How? By temptations—to pride, worldliness, drunkenness, error, or lust,
according to the tastes and habits of the individual.
2.
The soul escaped: "Our soul is escaped, "etc. "The snare is
broken, "not by ourselves, but by the hand of God.—G.R.
Verse
7.
1.
A bird.
2. A snare.
3. A capture.
4. An escape.
Verse
8. Our Creator, our Helper. Special comfort to be drawn from
creation in this matter.
Verse
8.
1.
The Helper: "The Lord, who made heaven and earth, "who in his works
has given ample proofs of what he can do.
2.
The helped. "Our help" is,
(a)
Promise in his name.
(b) Sought in his name: these make it ours.—G.R.
Verse
8.
1.
We have help. As troubled sinners, as dull scholars, as trembling professors,
as inexperienced travellers, as feeble workers.
2.
We have help in God's name. In his perfections—"They shall put my name
upon the children of Israel." In his Gospel—"A chosen vessel to bear
my name." In his authority—"In the name of Jesus Christ rise up,
"etc.
3.
Therefore we exert ourselves.—W.J.
WORKS UPON THE
HUNDRED TWENTY FOURTH PSALM
Comfortable
sermons upon the 124 psalme. Being thankfull Remembrances for God's wonderfull deliverance of
us from the late gunpowder treason. Preached before the Lady Elizabeth Her
Grace, at Combe. By Daniel, Dike, Bachelor in Divinity... London; ...1635 also
1617. Quarto. Of no value whatever.
An
Exposition on the 124, 125, 126. Psalmes called the Psalmes of
Degrees, or The Churches Deliverance. Plainly set forth for the benefit of
God's Church. By Thomas Stint.... London: 1621. 8vo.
Excessively rare.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》