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Psalm One
Hundred Twenty-six
Psalm 126
Chapter Contents
Those returned out of captivity are to be thankful. (1-3)
Those yet in captivity are encouraged. (4-6)
Commentary on Psalm 126:1-3
(Read Psalm 126:1-3)
It is good to observe how God's deliverances of the
church are for us, that we may rejoice in them. And how ought redemption from
the wrath to come, from the power of sin and of Satan, to be valued! The sinner
convinced of his guilt and danger, when by looking to a crucified Saviour he
receives peace to his conscience, and power to break off his sins, often can
scarcely believe that the prospect which opens to him is a reality.
Commentary on Psalm 126:4-6
(Read Psalm 126:4-6)
The beginnings of mercies encourage us to pray for the
completion of them. And while we are in this world there will be matter for
prayer, even when we are most furnished with matter for praise. Suffering
saints are often in tears; they share the calamities of human life, and
commonly have a greater share than others. But they sow in tears; they do the
duty of an afflicted state. Weeping must not hinder sowing; we must get good
from times of affliction. And they that sow, in the tears of godly sorrow, to
the Spirit, shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting; and that will be a
joyful harvest indeed. Blessed are those that mourn, for they shall be for ever
comforted. When we mourn for our sins, or suffer for Christ's sake, we are
sowing in tears, to reap in joy. And remember that God is not mocked; for whatever
a man soweth that shall he reap, Galatians 6:7-9. Here, O disciple of Jesus,
behold an emblem of thy present labour and future reward; the day is coming
when thou shalt reap in joy, plentiful shall be thy harvest, and great shall be
thy joy in the Lord.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 126
Verse 1
[1] When the LORD turned again the captivity of Zion, we
were like them that dream.
Turned — Brought the captive Israelites out of Babylon into
their own land.
Dream — We were so surprized and astonished.
Verse 4
[4] Turn again our captivity, O LORD, as the streams in the
south.
Turn — As thou hast brought us home, bring also the rest of
our brethren.
As — As thou art pleased sometimes to send floods of water
into dry and barren grounds, such as the southern parts of Canaan were.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. A Song of
Degrees. This is the seventh Step, and we may therefore expect to meet with
some special perfection of joy in it; nor shall we look in vain. We see here
not only that Zion abides, but that her joy returns after sorrow. Abiding is
not enough, fruitfulness is added. The pilgrims went from blessing to blessing
in their psalmody as they proceeded on their holy way. Happy people to whom
ever ascent was a song, every halt a hymn. Here the trustor becomes a sower:
faith works by love, obtains a present bliss, and secures a harvest of delight.
There
is nothing in this psalm by which we can decide its date, further than
this,—that it is a song after a great deliverance from oppression.
"Turning captivity" by no means requires an actual removal into
banishment to fill out the idea; rescue from any dire affliction or crushing
tyranny would be fitly described as "captivity turned." Indeed, the
passage is not applicable to captives in Babylon, for it is Zion itself which
is in captivity and not a part of her citizens: the holy city was in sorrow and
distress; though it could not be removed, the prosperity could be diminished.
Some dark cloud lowered over the beloved capital, and its citizens prayed
"Turn again our captivity. O Lord."
This
psalm is in its right place and most fittingly follows its predecessor, for as
in Ps 125:1-5, we read that the rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot
of the righteous, we here see it removed from them to their great joy. The word
"turn" would seem to be the keynote of the song: it is a Psalm of
conversion—conversion from captivity; and it may well be used to set forth the
rapture of a pardoned soul when the anger of the Lord is turned away from it.
We will call it, "Leading captivity captive."
DIVISIONS. The Psalm
divides itself into a narrative (Ps 126:1-2), a song (Ps 126:3), a prayer (Ps
126:4), and a promise (Ps 126:5-6).
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. When the Lord turned again the captivity of Zion, we were like
them that dream. Being in trouble, the gracious pilgrims remember for their
comfort times of national woe which were succeeded by remarkable deliverances.
Then sorrow was gone like a dream, and the joy which followed was so great that
it seemed too good to be true, and they feared that it must be the vision of an
idle brain. So sudden and so overwhelming was their joy that they felt like men
out of themselves, ecstatic, or in a trance. The captivity had been great, and
great was the deliverance; for the great God himself had wrought it: it seemed
too good o be actually true: each man said to himself,
"Is
this a dream? O if it be a dream,
Let me sleep on, and do not wake me yet."
It
was not the freedom of an individual which the Lord in mercy had wrought, but
of all Zion, of the whole nation; and this was reason enough for overflowing
gladness. We need not instance the histories which illustrate this verse in
connection with literal Israel; but it is well to remember how often it has
been true to ourselves. Let us look to the prison houses from which we have
been set free. Ah, me, what captives we have been! At our first conversion what
a turning again of captivity we experienced. Never shall that hour be
forgotten. Joy! Joy! Joy! Since then, from multiplied troubles, from depression
of spirit, from miserable backsliding, from grievous doubt, we have been
emancipated, and we are not able to describe the bliss which followed each
emancipation.
"When
God reveal'd his gracious name
And changed our mournful state,
Our rapture seem'd, a pleasing dream,
The grace appeared so great."
This
verse will have a higher fulfilment in the day of the final overthrow of the
powers of darkness when the Lord shall come forth for the salvation and
glorification of his redeemed. Then in a fuller sense than even at Pentecost
our old men shall see visions, and our young men shall dream dreams: yea, all
things shall be so wonderful, so far beyond all expectation, that those who
behold them shall ask themselves whether it be not all a dream. The past is
ever a sure prognostic of the future; the thing which has been is the thing
that shall be: we shall again and again find ourselves amazed at the wonderful
goodness of the Lord. Let our hearts gratefully remember the former loving
kindnesses of the Lord: we were sadly low, sorely distressed, and completely
past hope, but when Jehovah appeared he did not merely lift us out of despondency,
he raised us into wondering happiness. The Lord who alone turns our captivity
does nothing by halves: those whom he saves from hell he brings to heaven. He
turns exile into ecstasy, and banishment into bliss.
Verse
2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter, and our tongue with
singing. So full were they of joy that they could not contain themselves.
They must express their joy and yet they could not find expression for it.
Irrepressible mirth could do no other than laugh, for speech was far too dull a
thing for it. The mercy was so unexpected, so amazing, so singular that they
could not do less than laugh; and they laughed much, so that their mouths were
full of it, and that because their hearts were full too. When at last the
tongue could move articulately, it could not be content simply to talk, but it
must needs sing; and sing heartily too, for it was full of singing. Doubtless
the former pain added to the zest of the pleasure; the captivity threw a
brighter colour into the emancipation. The people remembered this joy flood for
years after, and here is the record of it turned into a song. Note the when and
the then. God's when is our then. At the moment when he turns our captivity,
the heart turns from its sorrow; when he fills us with grace we are filled with
gratitude. We were made to be as them that dream, but we both laughed and sang
in our sleep. We are wide awake now, and though we can scarcely realize the
blessing, yet we rejoice in it exceedingly. Then said they among the heathen,
the Load hath done great things for them. The heathen heard the songs of
Israel, and the better sort among them soon guessed the cause of their joy.
Jehovah was known to be their God, and to him the other nations ascribed the
emancipation of his people, reckoning it to be no small thing which the Lord
had thus done; for those who carried away the nations had never in any other
instance restored a people to their ancient dwelling place. These foreigners
were no dreamers; though they were only lookers on, and not partakers in the
surprising mercy, they plainly saw what had been done, and rightly ascribed it
to the great Giver of all good. It is a blessed thing when saints set sinners
talking about the lovingkindness of the Lord: and it is equally blessed when
the saints who are hidden away in the world hear of what the Lord has done for
his church, and themselves resolve to come out from their captivity and unite
with the Lord's people. Ah, dear reader, Jehovah has indeed done marvellous
things for his chosen, and these "great things" shall be themes for
eternal praise among all intelligent creatures.
Verse
3. The LORD hath done great things for us; whereof we are glad.
They did not deny the statement which reflected so much glory upon Jehovah:
with exultation they admitted and repeated the statement of Jehovah's notable
dealings with them. To themselves they appropriated the joyful assertion; they
said "The Lord hath done great things for us", and they
declared their gladness at the fact. It is a poor modesty which is ashamed to
own its joys in the Lord. Call it rather a robbery of God. There is so little
of happiness abroad that if we possess a full share of it we ought not to hide
our light under a bushel, but let it shine on all that are in the house. Let us
avow our joy, and the reason of it, stating the "whereof" as well as
the fact. None are so happy as those who arc newly turned and returned from
captivity; none can more promptly and satisfactorily give a reason for the
gladness that is in them, the Lord himself has blessed us, blessed us greatly,
blessed us individually, blessed assuredly; and because of this we sing unto
his name. I heard one say the other day in prayer "whereof we desire to be
glad." Strange dilution and defilement of Scriptural language! Surely if
God has done great things for us we are glad, and cannot be otherwise. No doubt
such language is meant to be lowly, but in truth it is loathsome.
Verse
4. Turn again our captivity, O LORD. Remembering the former
joy of a past rescue they cry to Jehovah for a repetition of it. When we pray
for the turning of our captivity, it is wise to recall former instances
thereof: nothing strengthens faith more effectually than the memory of a
previous experience. "The Lord hath done" harmonizes well with the
prayer, "Turn again." The text shows us how wise it is to resort anew
to the Lord, who in former times has been so good to us. Where else should we
go but to him who has done such great things for us? Who can turn again our
captivity but he who turned it before? As the streams in the south. Even as the
Lord sends floods down on the dry beds of southern torrents after long
droughts, so can he fill our wasted and wearied spirits with floods of holy
delight. This the Lord can do for any of us, and he can do it at once, for
nothing is too hard for the Lord. It is well for us thus to pray, and to bring
our suit before him who is able to bless us exceeding abundantly. Do not let us
forget the past, but in the presence of our present difficulty let us resort
unto the Lord, and beseech him to do that for us which we cannot possibly do
for ourselves,—that which no other power can perform on our behalf. Israel did
return from the captivity in Babylon, and it was even as though a flood of
people hastened to Zion. Suddenly and plenteously the people filled again the
temple courts. In streams they shall also in the latter days return to their
own land, and replenish it yet again. Like mighty torrents shall the nations
flow unto the Lord in the day of his grace. May the Lord hasten it in his own
time.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. Hence, present
distress must not be viewed as if it would last for ever; it is not the end, by
any means, but only a means to the end. Sorrow is our sowing, rejoicing shall
be our reaping. If there were no sowing in tears there would be no reaping in
joy. If we were never captives we could never lead our captivity captive. Our
mouth had never been filled with holy laughter if it had not been first filled
with the bitterness of grief. We must sow: we may have to sow in the wet
weather of sorrow; but we shall reap, and reap in the bright summer season of
joy. Let us keep to the work of this present sowing time, and find strength in
the promise which is here so positively given us. Here is one of the Lord's
shalls and wills; it is freely given both to workers, waiters, and weepers, and
they may rest assured that it will not fail: "in due season they shall
reap." This sentence may well pass current in the church as an inspired
proverb. It is not every sowing which is thus insured against all danger, and
guaranteed a harvest; but the promise specially belongs to sowing in tears.
When a man's heart is so stirred that he weeps over the sins of others, he is
elect to usefulness. Winners of souls are first weepers for souls. As there is
no birth without travail, so is there no spiritual harvest without painful
tillage. When our own hearts are broken with grief at man's transgression we
shall break other men's hearts: tears of earnestness beget tears of repentance:
"deep calleth unto deep."
Verse
6. He. The general assurance is applied to each one in
particular. That which is spoken in the previous verse in the
plural—"they", is here repeated in the singular—"he." He
that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed shall doubtless come again
with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him. He leaves his couch to go
forth into the frosty air and tread the heavy soil; and as he goes he weeps
because of past failures, or because the ground is so sterile, or the weather
so unseasonable, or his corn so scarce, and his enemies so plentiful and so
eager to rob him of his reward. He drops a seed and a tear, a seed and a tear,
and so goes on his way. In his basket he has seed which is precious to him, for
he has little of it, and it is his hope for the next year. Each grain leaves
his hand with anxious prayer that it may not be lost: he thinks little of
himself, but much of his seed, and he eagerly asks, "Will it prosper?
shall I receive a reward for my labour?" Yes, good husbandman, doubtless
you will gather sheaves from your sowing. Because the Lord has written
doubtless, take heed that you do not doubt. No reason for doubt can remain
after the Lord has spoken. You will return to this field—not to sow, but to
reap; not to weep, but to rejoice; and after awhile you will go home again with
nimbler step than today, though with a heavier load, for you shall have sheaves
to bear with you. Your handful shall be so greatly multiplied that many sheaves
shall spring from it; and you shall have the pleasure of reaping them and
bringing them home to the place from which you went out weeping. This is a
figurative description of that which was literally described in the first three
verses. It is the turning of the worker's captivity, when, instead of seed
buried beneath black earth, he sees the waving crops inviting him to a golden
harvest. It is somewhat singular to find this promise of fruitfulness in close
contact with ret urn from captivity; and yet it is so in our own experience,
for when our own soul is revived the souls of others are blessed by our
labours. If any of us, having been once lonesome and lingering captives, have
now returned home, and have become longing and labouring sowers, may the Lord,
who has already delivered us, soon transform us into glad hearted reapers, and
to him shall be praise for ever and ever. Amen.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. Augustine
interprets the title, "A Song of Degrees, i.e. a Song of drawing
upwards", of the drawing (going) up to the heavenly Jerusalem. This is
right, inasmuch as the deliverance from the captivity of sin and death should
in an increased measure excite those feelings of gratitude which Israel must
have felt on being delivered from their corporeal captivity; in this respect
again is the history of the outward theocracy a type of the history of the
church.—Augustus F. Tholuck, 1856.
Whole
Psalm. In its Christian aspect the psalm represents the seventh of the
"degrees" in our ascent to the Jerusalem that is above. The
Christian's exultation at his deliverance from the spiritual captivity of sin.—H.
T. Armfield.
Whole
Psalm. In mine opinion they go near to the sense and true meaning of the
Psalm who do refer it to that great and general captivity of mankind under sin,
death and the devil, and to the redemption purchased by the death and blood
shedding of Christ, and published in the Gospel. For this kind of speech which
the Prophet useth here is of greater importance than that it may be applied only
to Jewish particular captivities. For what great matter was it for these people
of the Jews, being, as it were, a little handful, to be delivered out of
temporal captivity, in comparison of the exceeding and incomparable deliverance
whereby mankind was set at liberty from the power of their enemies, not
temporal, but eternal, even from death, Satan and hell itself? Wherefore we
take this Psalm to be a prophecy of the redemption that should come by Jesus
Christ, and the publishing of the gospel, whereby the kingdom of Christ is
advanced, and death and the devil with all the powers of darkness are
vanquished.—Thomos Stint, in An Exposition on Psalms 124-126, 1621.
Whole
Psalm. I believe this psalm is yet once more to be sung in still more
joyous strain; once more will the glad tidings of Israel's restoration break
upon her scattered tribes, like the unreal shadow of a dream; once more will
the inhabitants of the various lands from among whom they come forth exclaim in
adoring wonder, "The Lord hath done great things for them", when they
see Israelite after Israelite and Jew after Jew, as on that wondrous night of
Egypt, with their loins girded, their shoes on their feet, and their staff in
their hand, hasting to obey the summons that recalls them to their own loved
land!—Barton Bouchier (1794-1865), in "Manna in the Heart."
Whole
Psalm
When,
her sons from bonds redeeming,
God to Zion led the way,
We were like to people dreaming
Thoughts of bliss too bright to stay.
Fill'd
with laughter, stood we gazing,
Loud our tongues in rapture sang;
Quickly with the news amazing
All the startled nations rang.
"See
Jehovah's works of glory!
Mark what love for them he had!"
"Yes, FOR US! Go tell the story.
This was done, and we are glad."
Lord!
thy work of grace completing
All our exiled hosts restore,
As in thirsty channels meeting
Southern streams refreshing pour.
They
that now in sorrow weeping
Tears and seed commingled sow,
Soon, the fruitful harvest reaping,
Shall with joyful bosoms glow.
Tho'
the sower's heart is breaking,
Bearing forth the seed to shed,
He shall come, the echoes waking,
Laden with his sheaves instead.
—William Digby Seymour, in "The Hebrew Psalter. A New Metrical
Translation," 1882.
Verse
1. When the Lord turned again the captivity. As by the Lord's
permission they were led into captivity, so only by his power they were set at
liberty. When the Israelites had served in a strange land four hundred years,
it was not Moses, but Jehovah, that brought them out of the land of Egypt, and
out of the house of bondage. In like manner it was he and not Deborah that
freed them for Jabin after they had been vexed twenty years under the
Canaanites. It was he and not Gideon that brought them out of the hands of the
Midianites, after seven years' servitude. It was he and not Jephthah that
delivered them from the Philistines and Amorites after eighteen years'
oppression. Although in all these he did employ Moses and Deborah, Gideon and
Jephthah, as instruments for their deliverance; and so it was not Cyrus's
valour, but the Lord's power; not his policy, but God's wisdom, that,
overthrowing the enemies, gave to Cyrus the victory, and put it into his heart
to set his people at liberty; for he upheld his hands to subdue nations. He did
weaken the loins of kings, and did open the doors before him, he did go before
him, and made the crooked places straight; and he did break the brazen doors,
and burst the iron bars. Isa 45:1-2.—John Hume, in "The Jewes
Deliverance," 1628.
Verse
1. In Jehovah's turning (to) the turning of Zion. Meaning to
return to the, or meet those returning, as it were, half way. The Hebrew noun
denotes conversion, in its spiritual sense, and the verb God's gracious
condescension in accepting or responding to it.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verse
1. The captivity of Zion. I ask, first, Why of Zion?
why not the captivity of Jerusalem, Judah, Israel? Jerusalem, Judah, Israel,
were led away captives, no less than Zion. They, the greater and more general;
why not the captivity of them, but of Zion? It should seem there is more in
Zion's captivity than in the rest, that choice is made of it before the rest.
Why? what was Zion? We know it was but a hill in Jerusalem, on the north side.
Why is that hill so honoured? No reason in the world but this,—that upon it the
Temple was built; and so, that Zion is much spoken of, and much made of, it is
only for the Temple's sake. For whose sake it is (even for his church), that
"the Lord loveth the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of
Jacob" (Ps 87:2); loveth her more, and so her captivity goeth nearer him,
and her deliverance better pleaseth him, than all Jacob besides. This maketh Zion's
captivity to be mentioned chiefly, as chiefly regarded by God, and to be
regarded by his people. As we see it was: when they sat by the waters of
Babylon, that which made them weep was, "When we remembered thee, O
Zion"; that was their greatest grief. That their greatest grief, and this
their greatest joy; Loetati sumus, when news came (not, saith the Psalm,
in domos nostras, We shall go everyone to his own house, but) in domun
Domini ibimus, "We shall go to the house of the Lord, we shall appear
before the God of gods in Zion."—Lancelot Andrews, 1555-1626.
Verse
1. We were like them that dream. That is, they thought it was
but mere fantasy and imagination.—Sydraeh Simpson, 1658.
Verse
1. We were like them that dream. Here you may observe that
God doth often send succour and deliverance to the godly in the time of their
affliction, distress, and adversity; that many times they themselves do doubt
of the truth thereof, and think that in very deed they are not delivered, but
rather that they have dreamed. Peter, being imprisoned by Herod, when he was
delivered by an angel, for all the light that did shine in the prison; though
the angel did smite him on the side and raised him up; though he caused the
chains to fall off his hands; though he spake to him three several times, Surge,
einge, circunda;"Arise quickly, gird thyself, and cast thy garment
about thee"; though he conducted him safely by the watches; and though he
caused the iron gates to open willingly; yet for all this he was like unto them
that dream. "For he wist not that it was true which was done by the angel;
but thought he saw a vision": Ac 11:9. When old Jacob was told by his sons
that his son Joseph was alive, his heart failed, and he believed them not; but
when he had heard all that Joseph had said, and when he saw the chariots that
Joseph had sent, then, as it were, raised from a sleep, and awakened from a
dream, his spirit revived, and, rejoicing, he cried out, "I have enough;
Joseph my son is yet alive." Lorinus seems to excuse this their distrust,
because they were so over ravished with joy, that they misdoubted the true
cause of their joy: like the Apostles, who having Christ after his resurrection
standing before them, they were so exceedingly joyed, that rejoicing they
wondered and doubted; and like the two Marys, when the angel told them of our
Saviour Christ's resurrection, they returned from the sepulchre rejoicing, and
yet withal fearing. It may be they feared the truth of so glad news, and
doubted lest they were deceived by some apparition.—John Hume
Verse
1. We were like them that dream. We thought that we were
dreaming; we could hardly believe our eyes, when at the command of Cyrus, king
of the Persians, we had returned to our own land. The same thing happened to
the Greeks, when they heard that their country, being conquered by the Romans,
had been made free by the Roman consul, P. Quinctius Flaminius. Livy says that
when the herald had finished there was more good news than the people could
receive all at once. They could scarcely believe that they had heard aright.
They were looking on each other wonderingly, like sleepers on an empty dream.—John
Le Clerc Clericus, 1657-1736.
Verse
1. We were like them that dream, etc. In the lapse of seventy
years the hope of restoration to their land, so long deferred, had mostly gone
out in despair, save as it rested (in some minds) on their faith in God's
promise. The policy of those great powers in the East had long been settled,
viz., to break up the old tribes and kingdoms of Western Asia; take the people
into far eastern countries, and never let them return. No nation known
to history, except the Jews, ever did return to rebuild their ancient cities
and homes. Hence this joyous surprise.—Henry Cowles, in "The Psalms;
with Notes," 1872.
Verse
1. Like them that dream. It was no dream; it was Jacob's
dream become a reality. It was the promise, "I will bring thee back into
this land" (Ge 28:15), fulfilled beyond all their hope.—William Kay, in
"The Psalms, with Notes, chiefly exegetical," 1871.
Verse
1. We were like them that dream. The words should rather be
translated, "We are like unto those that are restored to health."
The Hebrew word signifies to recover, or, to be restored to health. And so the
same word is translated in Isa 38:1-22, when Hezekiah recovered, he made a
psalm of praise, and said, "O Lord, by these things men live, and in all
these things is the life of my spirit: so wilt thou recover me, and make me to
live." It is the same word that is used here. Thus Cajetan, Shindior, and
others would have it translated here; and it suits best with the following
words, "Then were our mouths filled with laughter, and our tongues with
praise." When a man is in a good dream, his mouth is not filled with
laughter, nor his tongue with praise: if a man be in a bad dream, his mouth is
not filled with laughter, nor his tongue with praise; but when a man is
restored to health after a great sickness, it is so.—William Bridge,
1600-1670.
Verse
2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter, etc. We must
earnestly endeavour to learn this practice, or at the least to attain to some
knowledge thereof; and we must raise up ourselves with this consideration—that
the gospel is nothing else but laughter and joy. This joy properly pertaineth
to captives, that is, to those that feel the captivity of sin and death; to the
fleshy and tender hearts, terrified with the feeling of the wrath and judgment
of God. These are the disciples in whose hearts should be planted laughter and
joy, and that by the authority of the Holy Ghost, which this verse setteth
forth. This people was in Zion, and, after the outward show of the kingdom and
priesthood, did mightily flourish; but if a man consider them according to the
spirit, he shall see them to be in miserable captivity, and that their tongue
is full of heaviness and mourning, because their heart is terrified with the
sense of sin and death. This is Moses' tongue or Moses' mouth, full of wormwood
and of the bitterness of death; wherewith he designs to kill none but those
which are too lively and full of security. But they who feel their captivity
shall have their mouths filled with laughter and joy: that is, redemption and
deliverance from sin and death shall be preached unto them. This is the sense
and meaning of the Holy Ghost, that the mouth of such shall be filled with
laughter, that is, their mouth shall show forth nothing else but great gladness
through the inestimable consolations of the gospel, with voices of triumph and
victory by Christ, overcoming Satan, destroying death, and taking away sins.
This was first spoken unto the Jews; for this laughter was first offered to
that people, then having the promises. Now he turneth to the Gentiles, whom he
calleth to the partaking of this laughter.—Martin Luther.
Verse
2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter, etc. It was thus
in the valley of Elah, where Goliath fell, and Philistia fled. It was thus at
Baal Perazim. It was thus when one morning, after many nights of gloom,
Jerusalem arose at dawn of day, and found Sennacherib's thousands a camp of the
dead. And it has all along been the manner of our God.
"The
Lord has wrought mightily
In what he has done for us;
And we have been made glad."
Ever
do this till conflict is over! Just as thou dost with the streams of the south,
year by year, so do with us—with all, with each. And we are confident thou
wilt; we are sure that we make no vain boast when we sing this psalm as
descriptive of the experience of all thy pilgrims and worshippers.—Andrew A.
Bonar, in "Christ and his Church in the Book of Psalms," 1859.
Verse
2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter. They that were
laughed at, now laugh, and a new song is put into their mouths. It was a
laughter of joy in God, not scorn of their enemies.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
2. Mouth, tongue. Lorinus, the Jesuit, hath observed that the
Psalmist nominates the mouth and tongue in the singular, not mouths and tongues
in the plural; because all the faithful and the whole congregation of the Jews univoce,
with one voice, with one consent, and, as it were, with one mouth, did praise
and glorify the Lord.—John Hume.
Verse
2. And our tongue with singing. Out of the abundance of the
heart the mouth speaks; and if the heart be glad the tongue is glib. Joy cannot
be suppressed in the heart, but it must be expressed with the tongue.—John
Hume.
Verse
2. Then said they among the heathen. And what is it they
said? It is to the purpose. In this (as in many others) the heathens' saying
cannot be mended. This they say: 1. That they were no quotidian, or common
things; but "great". 2. Then, these great things they ascribe
not to chance;that they happened not, but were "done".
3. Then, "done" by God himself:they see God in them. 4. Then,
not done by God at random, without any particular aim; but purposely
done for them. 5. And yet, there is more in magnificavit facere
(if we look well). For, magna fecit would have served all this; but in
saying "magnificavit facere", they say magnifecit illos, ut magna
faceret pro illis. He magnified them, or set greatly by them, tor whom he
would bring to pass so great a work. This said they among the
"heathen." And it is pity the "heathen" said it, and
that the Jew's themselves spake not these words first. But now, finding the "heathen"
so saying; and finding it was all true that they said, they must needs find
themselves bound to say at least as much; and more they could not say; for more
cannot be said. So much then, and no less than they. And this addeth a degree
to the dicebant,—that the sound of it was so great among the heathen
that it made an echo even in Jewry itself.—Lancelot Andrews.
Verse
2. The Lord hath done great things. He multiplied to do great
things;so the Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic versions render it; and the
history of this deliverance makes it good.—Thomas Hodges, in a Sermon
entitled "Sion's Hallelujah," 1660.
Verses
2-3. There is this great difference between the praise which the
heathen are forced to give to God, and that which the Lord's people heartily
offer unto him: the one doth speak as having no interest nor share in the
mercy; the other do speak as they to whom the mercy is intended, and wherein
they have their portion with others: He hath done great things for them,
say the heathen: but, he hath done great things for us, say the Lord's
people.—David Dickson, 1583-1662.
Verse
3. The Lord hath done great things for us, etc. This verse is
the marrow of the whole psalm, occasioned by the return of God's people out of
Babel's captivity into their own country. Their deliverance was so great and
incredible that when God brought it to pass they were as men in a dream,
thinking it rather a dream, and a vain imagination, than a real truth. 1.
Because it was so great a deliverance from so great and lasting a bondage, it
seemed too good to be true. 2. It was sudden and unexpected, when they little
thought or hoped for it...3. All things seemed desperate, nothing more
unlikely, or impossible rather. 4. The manner was so admirable (without the
counsel, help, or strength of man: nay, it was beyond and against all human
means); that they doubt whether these things be not the dreams of men that are
awake.—Thomas Taylor (1576-1632), in "A Mappe of Pwme."
Verse
3. For us. What were we, might Sion say (who were glad to
lick the dust of the feet of our enemies), that the Lord of heaven and earth
should look so graciously upon us? The meanness of the receiver argues the
magnificence of the giver. "Who am I, that the mother of my Lord should
visit me?" this was a true and religious compliment of devout Elizabeth.
The best of men are but the children of dust, and grandchildren of nothing. And
yet for the Lord to do great things for us! this yet greatens those
"great things". Was it because we were his church? It
was his super abounding grace to select us out of others, as it was our greater
gracelessness, above all others, so to provoke him, as to force him to throw us
into captivity. Or was it because our humiliation, in that disconsolate
condition, did move him to so great compassion? Alas! there was a choice of
nations whom he might have taken in our room, that might have proved far more
faithful than we have been for the one half of those favours we have enjoyed.
Or was it for his covenant's sake with our forefathers? Alas! we had
forfeited that long since, again and again, we know not how often. Wherefore,
when we remember ourselves, we cannot but make this an aggravation of God's "great
things", that he should do them for us, FOR US, so very, very
unworthy.—Malachiah or Matthew Harris, in a Sermon entitled
"Brittaines Hallelujah," 1639.
Verse
4. Turn again our captivity, O LORD. A prayer for the
perfecting of their deliverance. Let those that are returned to their own land
be eased of their burdens which they are yet groaning under. Let those that
remain in Babylon have their hearts stirred up, as ours were, to take the
benefit of the liberty granted. The beginnings of mercy are encouragements to
us to pray for the completing of it. While we are here in this world, there
will still be matter for prayer, even when we are most furnished with matter
for praise. When we are free, and in prosperity ourselves, we must not be
unmindful of our brethren that are in trouble and under restraint.—Matthew
Henry.
Verse
4. Turn again our captivity. As Israel of old prayed that he
would bring all their brethren scattered abroad in captivity back to their own
land in one full stream, multitudinous, joyous, mighty, like the waters of Nile
or Euphrates pouring over the parching fields of the south in the hot, dry
summertime; so now should the members of Christ's church ever pray that all
that profess and call themselves Christians may be led into the way of truth,
and hold the faith in unity of spirit, in the bond of peace, and in
righteousness of life.—J. W. Burgon, in "A Plain Commentary,"
1859.
Verse
4. The Psalmist cries—
"Turn
our captivity, O Jehovah,
As aqueducts in the Negeb."
This
Negeb, or South Country, the region stretching below Hebron, being
comparatively dry and without water, was doubtless irrigated by a system of
small artificial channels. The words of the Psalmist imply that it is as easy
for God to turn Israel back from Babylonian bondage to their own land, as for
the horticulturist to direct the waters of the spring to any part of the land
he chooses along the channels of the aqueducts.—James Neil.
Verse
4. As the streams in the south. Then shall our captivity be
perfectly changed, even as the rivers or waters in the south, which by
the mighty work of God were dried up and utterly consumed. Whether ye
understand here the Red Sea, or else the river of Jordan, it matters little.
The similitude is this: Like as by the mighty hand thou broughtest to pass miraculously
that the waters were dried up and consumed, so dry up, O Lord, and bring to
nothing all our captivity. Some do interpret this verse otherwise; that is,
Turn our captivity, O Lord, as the rivers in the south, which in the summer are
dried up in the desert places by the heat of the sun, but in the winter are
filled up again with plenty of water.—Martin Luther.
Verse
4. Streams. The Hebrew word for "streams"
means strictly a river's bed, the channel which holds water when water is
there, but is often dry. Naturally there is joy for the husbandman when those
valley beds are filled again with flowing waters. So, the prayer is, let thy
people return joyfully to their fatherland.—Henry Cowles.
Verse
4. As the streams in the south. Some render it, As the mighty
waters in the south. Why would they have their captivity turned like those
mighty floods in the south? The reason is this, because the south is a dry
country, where there are few springs, scarce a fountain to be found in a whole
desert. What, then, are the waters they have in the south, in those parched
countries? They are these mighty strong torrents, which are caused by the
showers of heaven: so the meaning of that prayer in the psalm is, that God
would suddenly turn their captivity. Rivers come suddenly in the south: where
no spring appears, nor any sign of a river, yet in an hour the water is up and
the streams overflow. As when Elijah sent his servant toward the sea, in the
time of Ahab, he went and looked, and said, "there is nothing"; that
is, no show of rain, not the least cloud to be seen; yet presently the heavens
grew black, and there was a great rain: 1Ki 18:44. Thus let our captivity be
turned thus speedily and suddenly, though there be no appearance of salvation,
no more than there is of a fountain in the sandy desert, or of rain in the
clearest of heavens, yet bring salvation for us. We use to say of things beyond
our supply, Have we a spring of them? or can we fetch them out of the clouds?
So though no ground appears whence such rivers should flow, yet let our
salvation be as rivers in the south, as rivers fetched out of the clouds, and
dropped in an instant immediately from the heavens.—Joseph Caryl,
1602-1673.
Verses
4-6. The saints are oft feeding their hopes on the carcases of their slain
fears. The time which God chose and the instrument he used to give the captive
Jews their gaol delivery and liberty to return home were so incredible to them
when it came to pass (like Peter whom the angel had carried out of prison, Ac
12:1-25), it was some time before they could come to themselves and resolve
whether it was a real truth, or but a pleasing dream. Now see, what effect this
strange disappointment of their fears had upon their hope for afterward. It
sends them to the throne of grace for the accomplishment of what was so
marvellously begun. "The Lord hath done great things for us; whereof we
are glad. Turn again our captivity, O Lord": Ps 126:3-4. They have got a
handhold by this experiment of his power and mercy, and they will not now let
him go till they have more; yea, their hope is raised to such a pitch of
confidence, that they draw a general conclusion from this particular experience
for the comfort of themselves or others in any future distress: "They that
sow in tears shall reap in joy", etc., Ps 126:5-6.—William Gumall,
1617-1679.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears. I never saw people sowing in tears
exactly, but have often known them to do it in fear and distress sufficient to
draw them from any eye. In seasons of great scarcity, the poor peasants part in
sorrow with every measure of precious seed cast into the ground. It is like
taking bread out of the mouths of their children; and in such times many bitter
tears are actually shed over it. The distress is frequently so great that government
is obliged to furnish seed, or none would be sown. Ibrahim Pasha did this more
than once within my remembrance, copying the example, perhaps, of his great
predecessor in Egypt when the seven years famine was ended. The thoughts of
this psalm may likewise have been suggested by the extreme danger which
frequently attends the farmer in his ploughing and sowing. The calamity which
fell upon the husbandmen of Job when the oxen were ploughing, and the asses
feeding beside them, and the Sabeans fell upon them and took them away, and
slew the servants with the edge of the sword (Job 1:14-15), is often repeated
in our day. To understand this you must remember what I have just told you
about the situation of the arable lands in the open country; and here again we
meet that verbal accuracy: the sower "goes forth"—that is,
from the village. The people of Ibel and Khiem, in Merj' Aiyun, for example,
have their best grain growing fields down in the 'Ard Hfileh, six or eight
miles from their homes, and just that much nearer the lawless border of the
desert. When the country is disturbed, or the government weak, they cannot sow
these lands except at the risk of their lives. Indeed, they always go forth
in large companies, and completely armed, ready to drop the plough and seize
the musket at a moment's warning; and yet, with all this care, many sad and
fatal calamities overtake the men who must thus sow in tears. And still another
origin may be found for the thoughts of the psalm in the extreme difficulty of
the work itself in many places. The soil is rocky, impracticable, overgrown
with sharp thorns; and it costs much painful toil to break up and gather out
the rock, cut and burn the briars, and to subdue the stubborn soil, especially
with their feeble oxen and insignificant ploughs. Join all these together, and
the sentiment is very forcibly brought out, that he who labours hard, in cold
and rain, in fear and danger, in poverty and in want, casting his precious seed
into the ground, will surely come again, at harvest time, with rejoicing, and
bearing his sheaves with him.—W.M. Thomson.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears shalt reap in joy, etc. This
promise is conveyed under images borrowed from the instructive scenes of
agriculture. In the sweat of his brow the husbandman tills his land, and casts
the seed into the ground, where for a time it lies dead and buried. A dark and
dreary winter succeeds, and all seems to be lost; but at the return of spring
universal nature revives, and the once desolate fields are covered with corn
which, when matured by the sun's heat, the cheerful reapers cut down, and it is
brought home with triumphant shouts of joy. Here, O disciple of Jesus, behold
an emblem of lily present labour and thy future reward! Thou
"sowest", perhaps, in "tears"; thou doest thy duty amidst
persecution, and affliction, sickness, pain, and sorrow; you labour in the
Church, and no account is made of thy labours, no profit seems likely to arise
from them. Say, thou must thyself drop into the dust of death, and all the storms
of that winter must pass over thee, until thy form shall be perished, and thou
shalt see corruption. Yet the day is coming when thou shalt "reap in
joy", and plentiful shall be thy harvest. For thus thy blessed Master
"went forth weeping", a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,
"bearing precious seed" and sowing it around him, till at length his
own body was buried, like a grain of wheat, in the furrow of the grave. But he
arose, and is now in heaven, from whence he shall "doubtless come again with
rejoicing", with the voice of the archangel and the trump of God,
"bringing his sheaves with him". Then shall every man receive the
fruit of his works, and have praise of God.—George Horne (1730-1792), in
"A Commentary on the Psalms."
Verse
5. They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. They sow in
faith;and God will bless that seed: it shall grow up to heaven, for it is
sown in the side of Jesus Christ who is in heaven. "He that believeth on
God", this is the seed; "shall have everlasting life" (Joh 5:24);
this is the harvest. Qui credit quod non videt, videbit quod credit, —he
that believes what he doth not see; this is the seed: shall one day see what he
hath believed; this is the harvest.
They
sow in obedience:this is also a blessed seed, that will not fail to
prosper Wheresoever it is cast. "If ye keep my commandments"; this is
the seed: "ye shall abide in my love" (Joh 15:10); this is the
harvest. (Ro 6:22), "Ye are become servants to God, and have your fruit
unto holiness"; this is the sowing: "and the end everlasting
life"; this is the reaping. Obedientia in tetris, regnabit in coelis,—he
that serves God on earth, and sows the seed of obedience, shall in heaven reap
the harvest of a kingdom.
They
sow in repentance;and this seed must needs grow up to blessedness...Many
saints have now reaped their crop in heaven, that sowed their seed in tears.
David, Mary Magdalene, Peter: as if they had made good the proverb, "No
coming to heaven with dry eyes." Thus nature and God differ in their proceedings.
To have a good crop on earth, we desire a fair seedtime; but here a wet time of
sowing shall bring the best harvest in the barn of heaven. "Blessed are
they that mourn"; this is the seeding: "for they shall be
comforted" (Mt 5:4); this is the harvest.
They
sow in renouncing the world, and adherence to Christ; and they reap a great
harvest. "Behold", saith Peter to Christ, "we have forsaken all,
and followed thee" (Mt 19:27); this is the seeding. "What shall we
have therefore?" What? "You shall sit on twelve thrones, judging the
twelve tribes of Israel" (Mt 19:28-29); all that you have lost shall be
centupled to you: "and you shall inherit everlasting life"; this is
the harvest. "Sow to yourselves in righteousness, and reap in mercy":
Ho 10:12.
They
sow in charity. He that sows this seed shall be sure of a plentiful
crop. "Whosoever shall give to drink to one of these little ones a cup of
cold water only"—a little refreshing—"in the name of a disciple;
verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward": Mt 10:42. But
if he that giveth a little shall be thus recompensed, then "he that soweth
bountifully shall reap bountifully": 2Co 9:6. Therefore sparse abroad with
a full hand, like a seeds man in a broad field, without fear. Doth any think he
shall lose by his charity? No worldling, when he sows his seed, thinks he shall
lose his seed; he hopes for increase at harvest. Do you dare trust the ground
and not God? Sure God is a better paymaster than the earth: grace doth give a
larger recompense than nature. Below thou mayest receive forty grains for one;
but in heaven, (by the promise of Christ,)a hundred fold: a "measure
heapen, and shaken, and thrust together, and yet running over."
"Blessed is he that considereth the poor"; this is the seeding:
"the Lord shall deliver him in the time of trouble" (Ps 41:1); this
is the harvest.—Thomas Adams.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears, etc. Observe two things here.
1.
That the afflictions of God's people are as sowing in tears.
(a)
In sowing ye know there is great pains. The land must be first tilled and
dressed; and there is pains in casting the seed into it; and then it takes a
great dressing all the year, before it be set in the barnyard.
(b)
It requires great charges, too, and therefore it is called "precious seed."
For ye know that seed corn is aye dearest.
(c)
There is also great hazard; for corn, after it is sown, is subject to many
dangers. And so it is with the children of God in a good cause.
2.
Then after the seed time follows the harvest, and that comes with joy. There be
three degrees of the happiness of God's children, in reaping of fruits.
(a)
In the first fruits. Even when they are enduring anything for the Gospel of
Christ, it carries contentment and fruit with it.
(b)
After the first fruits, then come sheaves to refresh the husbandman, and to
assure him that the full harvest is coming. The Lord now and then gives
testimony of a full deliverance to his own people, especially of the
deliverance of Sion, and lets them taste of the sheaves which they have reaped.
(c)
And lastly, they get the full harvest; and that is gotten at the great and last
day. Then we get peace without trouble, joy without grief, profit without loss,
pleasure without pain; and then we have a full sight of the face of God.—Alexander
Henderson.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. Gospel tears are
not lost; they are seeds of comfort: while the penitent doth pour out tears,
God pours in joy. If thou wouldst be cheerful, saith Chrysostom, be sad. It was
the end of Christ's anointing and coming into the world, that he might comfort
them that mourn: Isa 61:3. Christ had the oil of gladness poured on him, as
Chrysostom saith, that he might pour it on the mourner; well then might the
apostle call it "a repentance not to be repented of": 2Co 7:10
...Here is sweet fruit from a bitter stock: Christ caused the earthen vessels
to be filled with water, and then turned the water into wine: Joh 2:9. So when
the eye, that earthen vessel, hath been filled with water brim full, then Christ
will turn the water of tears into the wine of joy. Holy mourning, saith St.
Basil, is the seed out of which the flower of eternal joy doth grow.—Thomas
Watson (-1690?), in "The Beatitudes."
Verse
5. They that sow in tears shall reap. We must take notice of
the reapers: "They shall reap." Which they? They that did sow;
they shall, and none but they shall. They shall; and good reason they should,
because it was they that did sow. And though some that have sown in tears do
complain of the lateness or thinness of the harvest, that they have not reaped
in joy, as is here promised; know that some grounds are later than others, and
in some years the harvest falleth later than in others, and that God, who is
the Lord of the harvest, in his good time will ripen thy joy, and thou shalt
reap it: and in the meantime, if we try it narrowly, we shall find the cause in
ourselves, both of the lateness of our joy, because we were too late in sowing
our tears; and of the thinness of our joy, because we did sow our tears too
thin. And if after our sowing of tears we find no harvest of joy at all, we may
be well assured that either our seed was not good, or else some of the
mischances are come upon them, which came upon the seed that came to no good in
the thirteenth of Matthew.—Walter Balcanqual, in "a Sermon preached at
St. Marice Spittle," 1623.
Verse
5. They that sow in tears, etc. I saw in seedtime a
husbandman at plough in a very rainy day. Asking him the reason why he would
not rather leave off than labour in such foul weather, his answer was returned
me in their country rhythm:—
"Sow
beans in the mud,
And they'll come up like a wood."
This
could not but remind me of David's expression, "They that sow in tears
shall reap in joy", etc.—Thomas Fuller (1608-1661), in "Good
Thoughts in Worse Times."
Verse
5. Sow in tears. There are tears which are themselves the
seed that we must sow; tears of sorrow for sin, our own and others; tears of
sympathy with the afflicted church; and tears of tenderness in prayer and under
the word.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
5. Shall reap in joy. This spiritual harvest comes not alike
soon to all, no more than the other which is outward doth. But here the
comfort, whoever hath a seed time of grace pass over his soul shall have his
harvest time also of joy: this law God hath bound himself to as strongly as to
the other, which "is not to cease while the earth remaineth" (Ge
8:22); yea, more strongly; for that was to the world in general, not to every
country, town, or field in particular, for some of these may want a harvest,
and yet God may keep his word: but God cannot perform his promise if any one
particular saint should everlastingly go without his reaping time. And
therefore you who think so basely of the gospel and the professors of it, because
at present their peace and comfort are not come, should know that it is on the
way to them, and comes to stay everlastingly with them; whereas your peace is
going from you every moment, and is sure to leave you without any hope of
returning to you again. Look not how the Christian begins, but ends. The Spirit
of God by his convictions comes into the soul with some terrors, but it closes
with peace and joy. As we say of the month of March, it enters like a lion, but
goes out like a lamb. "Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright: for
the end of that man is peace": Ps 37:37.—William Gumall.
Verses
5-6. In my little reading and small experience, I have found that corn
sown in dear years and times of scarcity hath yielded much more increase than
at other times; so that presently after much want, there hath followed great
plenty of grain, even beyond expectation.—Humphrey Hardwick, in a Sermon
entitled "The Difficulty of Sion's Deliverance and Reformation,"
1644.
Verses
5-6. Mind we the undoubted certainty of our harvest verified by divers
absolute positive asseverations in the text: "he shall reap"; "he
shall come again"; "he shall bring his sheaves with him."
Here's no item of contingency or possibility, but all absolute affirmations;
and you know heaven and earth shall pass away, but a jot of God's word shall
not fail. Nothing shall prevent the harvest of a labourer in Sion's vineyard.—Humphrey
Hardwick.
Verses
5-6. In a fuller, deeper sense, the sower in tears is the Man of
sorrows himself. Believers know him thus. He has accomplished, in the sore
travail of his soul, the seed time of affliction which is to bear its
satisfying harvest when he shall again appear as the reaper of his own reward.
He will fill his bosom with sheaves in that day of joy. The garner of his
gladness will be filled to overflowing. By how much his affliction surpassed
the natural measure of human grief, when he underwent for our sakes the dread
realities of death and judgment; by so much shall the fulness of his pure
delight as the eternal blesser of his people excel their joy (yet what a
measure, too, is there!) whose sum of blessedness is to be for ever with the
Lord.—Arthur Pridham, in "Notes and Reflections on the Psalms,"
1869.
Verse
6. He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed,
etc. This is very expressive of a gospel minister's life; he goeth forth with
the everlasting gospel which he preaches; he sows it as precious seed in the
church of God; he waters it with tears and prayers; the Lord's blessing
accompanies it; the Lord crowns his labours with success; he has seals to his
ministry; and at the last day he shall doubtless come again with joy from the
grave of death bringing his sheaves with him; and will, in the new
Jerusalem state, be addressed by his Lord with, "Well done, good and
faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."—Samuel Eyles
Pierce (1746-1829?), in "The Book of Psalms, an Epitome of the Old
Testament Scripture."
Verse
6. He may go forth, he may go forth, and weep, bearing (his) load
of seed. He shall come, he shall come with singing, bearing sheaves. The
emphatic combination of the finite tense with the infinitive is altogether
foreign from our idiom, and very imperfectly represented, in the ancient and
some modern versions, by the active participle (venientes venient,
coming they shall come), which conveys neither the peculiar form nor the
precise sense of the Hebrew phrase. The best approximation to the force of the
original is Luther's repetition of the finite tense, he shall come, he shall
come, because in all such cases the infinitive is really defined or
determined by the term which follows, and in sense, though not in form,
assimilated to it.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verse
6.
"Though
he go, though he go, and be weeping,
While bearing some handfuls of seed;
He shall come, he shall come with bright singing,
While bearing his plentiful sheaves."
—Ben Tehillim, in "The Book of Psalms, in English Blank Verse,"
1883.
Verse
6. Goeth forth. The church must not only keep this seed in
the store house, for such as come to enquire for it; but must send her sowers
forth to cast it among those who are ignorant of its value, or too indifferent
to ask it at her hands. She must not sit weeping because men will not apply to
her, but must go forth and bear the precious seed to the unwilling, the
careless, the prejudiced, and the profligate.—Edwin Sidney, in "The
Pulpit," 1840.
Verse
6. Weeping must not hinder sowing: when we suffer ill we must
be doing well.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
6. Precious seed. Seed corn is always dearest; and when other
corn is dear, then it is very dear; yet though never so dear, the husbandman
resolves that he must have it; and he will deprive his own belly, and his wife
and children of it, and will sow it, going out "weeping" with
it. There is also great hazard; for corn, after it is sown, is subject to many
dangers. And so is it, indeed, with the children of God in a good cause. Ye
must resolve to undergo hazards also, in life, lands, movables, or whatsoever
else ye have in this world: rather hazard all these before either religion be
in hazard, or your own souls.—Alexander Henderson.
Verse
6. Precious seed. Aben Ezra, by the words rendered precious
seed, or, as they may be, a draught of seed, understands the vessel
in which the sower carries his seed, the seed basket, from whence he draws and
takes out the seed, and scatters it; see Am 9:13: so the Targum, "bearing
a tray of sowing corn."—John Gill.
Verse
6. Precious seed. Faith is called "precious
seed": quod tatum est charurn est. Seed was accounted precious
when all countries came unto Egypt to buy corn of Joseph, and truly faith must
needs be precious, seeing that when Christ comes he shall hardly "find
faith upon the earth": Lu 18:8. The necessity of faith is such, that therefore
it must need be precious; for as the material seed is the only instrumental
means to preserve the life of man; for all the spices, honey, myrrh, nuts, and
almonds, gold and silver, that were in Canaan, were not sufficient for Jacob
and his children's sustenance; but they were forced to repair unto Egypt for
corn, that they might live and not die; even so, without faith the soul is
starved; it is the food of it; for, "the just man liveth by his
faith": Ga 3:11.—John Hume.
Verse
6. Sheaves. The psalm which begins with "dream" and
ends with "sheaves" invites us to think of Joseph; Joseph, "in
whom", according to S. Ambrose's beautiful application, "there was
revealed the future resurrection of the Lord Jesus, to whom both his eleven
disciples did obeisance when they saw him gone into Galilee, and to whom all
the saints shall on their resurrection do obeisance, bringing forth the fruit
of good works, as it is written, "He shall doubtless come again with
rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him."—H. T. Armfield.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1.
1.
Sunny memories of what the Lord did, "he turned again the captivity",
etc.
2. Singular impressions,—we could not believe it to be true.
3. Special discoveries—it was true, abiding, etc.
Verse
1. A comparison and a contrast.
1.
The saved like them that dream.
a)
In the strangeness of their experience.
b) In the ecstasy of their joy.
2.
The saved unlike them that dream.
a)
In the reality of their experience. Dreams are unsubstantial things, but
"the Lord turned"—an actual fact.
b) In their freedom from disappointment. No awakening to find it "but a
dream": see Isa 29:8.
3.
In the endurance of their joy. The joy of dreams is soon forgotten, but this is
"everlasting joy."—W. H. J. P.
Verse
2. Saintly laughter. What creates it, and how it is justified.
Verse
2. Recipe for holy laughter.
1.
Lie in prison a few weeks.
2. Hear the Lord turning the key.
3. Follow him into the high road.
4. Your sky will burst with sunshine, and your heart with song and laughter.
5. If this recipe is thought too expensive, try keeping in the high road.—W.
B. H.
Verses
2-3.
1.
Reports of God's doings.
2. Experience of God's doings.
Verses
2-3.
1.
The Lord does great things for his people.
2. These great things command the attention of the world.
3. They inspire the joyful devotion of the saints.—W. H. J. P.
Verse
3. The LORD hath done great things for us. In this
acknowledgment and confession there are three noteworthy points of
thankfulness.
1.
That they were "great things" which were done.
2. Who it was who did them: "the Lord."
3. That they are done: not against us, but "for us."
—Alexander Henderson, 1583-1646.
Verse
4. Believers, rejoicing in their own deliverance, solicitous for a
flood of prosperity to overflow the church. See the connection, Ps 126:1-3.
Remark,
1.
The doubting and despondent are too concerned about themselves, and too busy
seeking comfort, to have either solicitude or energy to spare for the church's
welfare; but the joyful heart is free to be earnest for the church's good.
2.
Joyful believers, other things being equal, know more of the constraining power
of Christ's love, which makes them anxious for his glory and the success of his
cause.
3.
The joyful can appreciate more fully the contrast of their condition to that of
the undelivered, and for their sake cannot fail to be anxious for the church
through whose ministry their deliverance comes.
4.
The joyful are, in general, the most believing and the most hopeful; their
expectation of success leads them to prayer, and impels them to effort.—J.
F.
Verse
4.
1.
The dried up Christian.
2. His unhappy condition.
3. His one hope.
4. Result when realized.
Verse
5. The Christian Husbandman.
1.
Illustrate the metaphor. The husbandman has a great variety of work before him;
every season and every day brings its proper business. So the Christian has
duties in the closet, in the family, in the church, in the world, etc., etc.
2.
Whence it is that many Christians sow in tears.
a)
It may be owing to the badness of the soil.
b) The inclemency of the season.
c) The malice and opposition of enemies.
d) Past disappointments.
3.
What connection there is between sowing in tears and reaping in joy.
a)
A joyful harvest, by God's blessing, is the natural consequence of a dripping
seed time.
b) God, who cannot lie, hath promised it.
4.
When this joyful harvest may be expected. It must not be expected in our wintry
world, for there is not sun enough to ripen it. Heaven is the Christian's
summer. When you come to reap the fruits of your present trials, you will bless
God, who made you sow in tears. Improvement.
a)
How greatly are they to blame who in this busy time stand all the day idle!
b)
How greatly have Christians the advantage of the rest of the world!
c) Let
the hope and prospect of this joyful harvest support us under all the glooms
and distresses of this vale of tears.—Outline of a Sermon by Samuel
Lavington, 1726-1807.
Verse
5. Two pictures. The connecting "shall."
Verse
5.
1.
There must be sowing before reaping.
2.
What men sow they will reap. If they sow precious seed, they will reap precious
seed.
3.
In proportion as they sow they will reap. "He that soweth sparingly",
etc.
4.
The sowing may be with sorrow, but the reaping will be with joy.
5. In
proportion to the sorrow of sowing will be the joy of reaping.—G. R.
Verse
6. In the two parts of this verse we may behold a threefold
antithesis or opposition; in the progress,
1.
A sojourning: "He that now goeth on his way."
2.
A sorrowing: "weeping."
3.
A sowing: "and beareth forth good seed." In the regress there are
three opposites unto these.
1.
Returning: "He shall doubtless come again."
2. A Rejoicing: "with joy."
3. A Reaping: "and bring his sheaves with him."
—John Hume.
Verse
6. "Doubtless." Or the reasons why our labour
cannot be in vain in the Lord.
Verse
6. Bringing his sheaves with him. The faithful sower's return
to his Lord. Successful, knowing it, personally honoured, abundantly
recompensed.
Verse
6. See "Spurgeon's Sermons" No. 867: "Tearful Sowing
and Joyful Reaping."
Verse
6.
1.
The sorrowful sower.
a)
His activity—"he goeth forth."
b) His humility—"and weepeth."
c) His fidelity—"bearing precious seed."
2.
The joyful reaper.
a)
His certain harvest time—"shall doubtless come again."
b) His abundant joy—"with rejoicing."
c) His rich rewards—"bringing his sheaves with him."
—W. H. J. P.
WORK UPON THE
HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIXTH PSALM
The
Jews' deliverance out of Babylon, and the mystery of our Redemption: Plainely
demonstrated in ten Sermons upon the 126. Psalme. ...Preached in Yorkshire,
By John Hume, Minister of the Word ... London...1628 4to.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》