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Psalm One
Hundred Thirty-nine
Psalm 139
Chapter Contents
God knows all things. (1-6) He is every where present.
(7-16) The psalmist's hatred to sin, and desire to be led aright. (17-24)
Commentary on Psalm 139:1-6
(Read Psalm 139:1-6)
God has perfect knowledge of us, and all our thoughts and
actions are open before him. It is more profitable to meditate on Divine
truths, applying them to our own cases, and with hearts lifted to God in
prayer, than with a curious or disputing frame of mind. That God knows all
things, is omniscient; that he is every where, is omnipresent; are truths
acknowledged by all, yet they are seldom rightly believed in by mankind. God
takes strict notice of every step we take, every right step and every by step.
He knows what rule we walk by, what end we walk toward, what company we walk
with. When I am withdrawn from all company, thou knowest what I have in my
heart. There is not a vain word, not a good word, but thou knowest from what
thought it came, and with what design it was uttered. Wherever we are, we are
under the eye and hand of God. We cannot by searching find how God searches us
out; nor do we know how we are known. Such thoughts should restrain us from
sin.
Commentary on Psalm 139:7-16
(Read Psalm 139:7-16)
We cannot see God, but he can see us. The psalmist did
not desire to go from the Lord. Whither can I go? In the most distant corners
of the world, in heaven, or in hell, I cannot go out of thy reach. No veil can
hide us from God; not the thickest darkness. No disguise can save any person or
action from being seen in the true light by him. Secret haunts of sin are as
open before God as the most open villanies. On the other hand, the believer
cannot be removed from the supporting, comforting presence of his Almighty
Friend. Should the persecutor take his life, his soul will the sooner ascend to
heaven. The grave cannot separate his body from the love of his Saviour, who
will raise it a glorious body. No outward circumstances can separate him from his
Lord. While in the path of duty, he may be happy in any situation, by the
exercise of faith, hope, and prayer.
Commentary on Psalm 139:17-24
(Read Psalm 139:17-24)
God's counsels concerning us and our welfare are deep,
such as cannot be known. We cannot think how many mercies we have received from
him. It would help to keep us in the fear of the Lord all the day long, if,
when we wake in the morning, our first thoughts were of him: and how shall we
admire and bless our God for his precious salvation, when we awake in the world
of glory! Surely we ought not to use our members and senses, which are so
curiously fashioned, as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin. But our
immortal and rational souls are a still more noble work and gift of God. Yet if
it were not for his precious thoughts of love to us, our reason and our living
for ever would, through our sins, prove the occasion of our eternal misery. How
should we then delight to meditate on God's love to sinners in Jesus Christ,
the sum of which exceeds all reckoning! Sin is hated, and sinners lamented, by
all who fear the Lord. Yet while we shun them we should pray for them; with God
their conversion and salvation are possible. As the Lord knows us thoroughly,
and we are strangers to ourselves, we should earnestly desire and pray to be
searched and proved by his word and Spirit. if there be any wicked way in me,
let me see it; and do thou root it out of me. The way of godliness is pleasing
to God, and profitable to us; and will end in everlasting life. It is the good
old way. All the saints desire to be kept and led in this way, that they may
not miss it, turn out of it, or tire in it.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 139
Verse 2
[2] Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou
understandest my thought afar off.
Afar off — Thou knowest what my thoughts will be in such and such
circumstances, long before I know it, yea from all eternity.
Verse 3
[3] Thou compassest my path and my lying down, and art
acquainted with all my ways.
Compassest — Thou discernest every step I
take. It is a metaphor from soldiers besieging their enemies, and setting
watches round about them.
Verse 5
[5] Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid thine
hand upon me.
Beset me — With thy all-seeing providence.
And laid — Thou keepest me, as it were with a strong hand, in thy
sight and under thy power.
Verse 6
[6] Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I
cannot attain unto it.
I cannot — Apprehend in what manner thou dost so presently know
all things.
Verse 8
[8] If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my
bed in hell, behold, thou art there.
Hell — If I could hide myself in the lowest parts of the
earth.
Verse 9
[9] If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the
uttermost parts of the sea;
The wings — If I should flee from east to
west: for the sea being the western border of Canaan, is often put for the west
in scripture. And wings are poetically ascribed to the morning here, as they
are elsewhere to the sun, and to the winds.
Verse 16
[16] Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect;
and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were
fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.
Imperfect — When I was first conceived.
Book — In thy counsel and providence, by which thou didst
contrive and effect this great work, according to that model which thou hadst
appointed.
Verse 17
[17] How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! how
great is the sum of them!
Thoughts — Thy counsels on my behalf. Thou didst not only form me
at first, but ever since my conception and birth, thy thoughts have been
employed for me.
Verse 18
[18] If I should count them, they are more in number than the
sand: when I awake, I am still with thee.
Them — Thy wonderful counsels and works on my behalf come
constantly into my mind.
Verse 22
[22] I hate them with perfect hatred: I count them mine
enemies.
Perfect hatred — See the difference between the
Jewish and the Christian spirit!
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
One of the most
notable of the sacred hymns. It sings the omniscience and omnipresence of God,
inferring from these the overthrow of the powers of wickedness, since he who
sees and hears the abominable deeds and words of the rebellious will surely
deal with them according to his justice. The brightness of this Psalm is like
unto a sapphire stone, or Ezekiel's "terrible crystal"; it flames out
with such flashes of light as to turn night into day. Like a Pharos, this holy
song casts a clear light even to the uttermost parts of the sea, and warns us
against that practical atheism which ignores the presence of God, and so makes
shipwreck of the soul.
TITLE. To the Chief
Musician. The last time this title occurred was in Ps 109:1-31. This sacred
song is worthy of the most excellent of the singers, and is fitly dedicated to
the leader of the Temple Psalmody, that he might set it to music, and see that
it was devoutly sung in the solemn worship of the Most High. A Psalm of David.
It bears the image and superscription of King David, and could have come from
no other mint than that of the son of Jesse. Of course the critics take this
composition away from David, on account of certain Aramaic expressions in it.
We believe that upon the principles of criticism now in vogue it would be
extremely easy to prove that Milton did not write Paradise Lost. We have yet to
learn that David could not have used expressions belonging to "the
language of the patriarchal ancestral house." Who knows how much of the
antique speech may have been purposely retained among those nobler minds who
rejoiced in remembering the descent of their race? Knowing to what wild
inferences the critics have run in other matters, we have lost nearly all faith
in them, and prefer to believe David to be the author of this Psalm, from
internal evidences of style and matter, rather than to accept the determination
of men whose modes of judgment are manifestly unreliable.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me. He invokes in
adoration Jehovah the all knowing God, and he proceeds to adore him by
proclaiming one of his peculiar attributes. If we would praise God aright we
must draw the matter of our praise from himself—"O Jehovah, thou
hast." No pretended god knows aught of us; but the true God, Jehovah,
understands us, and is most intimately acquainted with our persons, nature, and
character. How well it is for us to know the God who knows us! The divine
knowledge is extremely thorough and searching; it is as if he had searched us,
as officers search a man for contraband goods, or as pillagers ransack a house
for plunder. Yet we must not let the figure run upon all fours, and lead us
further than it is meant to do: the Lord knows all things naturally and as a
matter of course, and not by any effort on his part. Searching ordinarily
implies a measure of ignorance which is removed by observation; of course this
is not the case with the Lord; but the meaning of the Psalmist is, that the
Lord knows us as thoroughly as if he had examined us minutely, and had pried
into the most secret corners of our being. This infallible knowledge has always
existed—"Thou hast searched me"; and it continues unto this day,
since God cannot forget that which he has once known. There never was a time in
which we were unknown to God, and there never will be a moment in which we
shall be beyond his observation. Note how the Psalmist makes his doctrine
personal: he saith not, "O God, thou knowest all things"; but,
"thou hast known me." It is ever our wisdom to lay truth home
to ourselves. How wonderful the contrast between the observer and the observed!
Jehovah and me! Yet this most intimate connection exists, and therein lies our
hope. Let the reader sit still a while and try to realize the two poles of this
statement,—the Lord and poor puny man—and he will see much to admire and wonder
at.
Verse
2. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising. Me thou
knowest, and all that comes of me. I am observed when I quietly sit down, and
marked when I resolutely rise up. My most common and casual acts, my most
needful and necessary movements, are noted by time, and thou knowest the inward
thoughts which regulate them. Whether I sink in lowly self renunciation, or
ascend in pride, thou seest the motions of my mind, as well as those of my
body. This is a fact to be remembered every moment: sitting down to consider, or
rising up to act, we are still seen, known, and read by Jehovah our Lord. Thou
understandest my thought afar off. Before it is my own it is foreknown and
comprehended by thee. Though my thought be invisible to the sight, though as
yet I be not myself cognizant of the shape it is assuming, yet thou hast it
under thy consideration, and thou perceivest its nature, its source, its drift,
its result. Never dost thou misjudge or wrongly interpret me: my inmost thought
is perfectly understood by thine impartial mind. Though thou shouldest give but
a glance at my heart, and see me as one sees a passing meteor moving afar, yet
thou wouldst by that glimpse sum up all the meanings of my soul, so transparent
is everything to thy piercing glance.
Verse
3. Thou compassest my path and my lying down. My path and my
pallet, my running and my resting, are alike within the circle of thine
observation. Thou dost surround me even as the air continually surrounds all
creatures that live. I am shut up within the wall of thy being; I am encircled
within the bounds of thy knowledge. Waking or sleeping I am still observed of
thee. I may leave thy path, but you never leave mine. I may sleep and forget
thee, but thou dost never slumber, nor fall into oblivion concerning thy
creature. The original signifies not only surrounding, but winnowing and
sifting. The Lord judges our active life and our quiet life; he discriminates
our action and our repose, and marks that in them which is good and also that
which is evil. There is chaff in all our wheat, and the Lord divides them with
unerring precision. And art acquainted with all my ways. Thou art familiar with
all I do; nothing is concealed from thee, nor surprising to thee, nor
misunderstood by thee. Our paths may be habitual or accidental, open or secret,
but with them all the Most Holy One is well acquainted. This should fill us
with awe, so that we sin not; with courage, so that we fear not; with delight,
so that we mourn not.
Verse
4. For there is not a word in my tongue, but lo, O LORD, thou
knowest it altogether. The unformed word, which lies within the tongue like
a seed in the soil, is certainly and completely known to the Great Searcher of
hearts. A negative expression is used to make the positive statement all the
stronger: not a word is unknown is a forcible way of saying that every word is
well known. Divine knowledge is perfect, since not a single word is unknown,
nay, not even an unspoken word, and each one is "altogether" or
wholly known. What hope of concealment can remain when the speech with which
too many conceal their thoughts is itself transparent before the Lord? O
Jehovah, how great art thou! If thine eye hath such power, what must be the
united force of thine whole nature!
Verse
5. Thou hast beset me behind and before. As though we were
caught in an ambush, or besieged by an army which has wholly beleaguered the
city walls, we are surrounded by the Lord. God has set us where we be, and
beset us wherever we be. Behind us there is God recording our sins, or in grace
blotting out the remembrance of them; and before us there is God foreknowing
all our deeds, and providing for all our wants. We cannot turn back and so
escape him, for he is behind; we cannot go forward and outmarch him, for he is
before. He not only beholds us, but he besets us; and lest there should seem
any chance of escape, or lest we should imagine that the surrounding presence
is yet a distant one, it is added,—And laid thine hand upon me. The prisoner
marches along surrounded by a guard, and gripped by an officer. God is very
near; we are wholly in his power; from that power there is no escape. It is not
said that God will thus beset us and arrest us, but it is
done—"Thou hast beset me." Shall we not alter the figure, and say
that our heavenly Father has folded his arms around us, and caressed us with
his hand It is even so with those who are by faith the children of the Most
High.
Verse
6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me. I cannot grasp it.
I can hardly endure to think of it. The theme overwhelms me. I am amazed and
astounded at it. Such knowledge not only surpasses my comprehension, but even
my imagination. It is high, I cannot attain unto it. Mount as I may, this truth
is too lofty for my mind. It seems to be always above me, even when I soar into
the loftiest regions of spiritual thought. Is it not so with every attribute of
God? Can we attain to any idea of his power, his wisdom, his holiness? Our mind
has no line with which to measure the Infinite. Do we therefore question? Say,
rather, that we therefore believe and adore. We are not surprised that the Most
Glorious God should in his knowledge be high above all the knowledge to which
we can attain: it must of necessity be so, since we are such poor limited
beings; and when we stand a tip toe we cannot reach to the lowest step of the
throne of the Eternal.
Verse
7. Here omnipresence is the theme,—a truth to which omniscience
naturally leads up. Whither shall I go from thy spirit? Not that the Psalmist
wished to go from God, or to avoid the power of the divine life; but he asks
this question to set forth the fact that no one can escape from the all
pervading being and observation of the Great Invisible Spirit. Observe how the
writer makes the matter personal to himself—"Whither shall I
go?" It were well if we all thus applied truth to our own cases. It were
wise for each one to say—The spirit of the Lord is ever around me:
Jehovah is omnipresent to me. Or whither spirit I flee from thy
presence? If, full of dread, I hastened to escape from that nearness of God
which had become my terror, which way could I turn? "Whither?"
"Whither?" He repeats his cry. No answer comes back to him. The reply
to his first "Whither?" is its echo,—a second "Whither?"
From the sight of God he cannot be hidden, but that is not all,—from the
immediate, actual, constant presence of God he cannot be withdrawn. We must be,
whether we will it or not, as near to God as our soul is to our body. This
makes it dreadful work to sin; for we offend the Almighty to his face, and
commit acts of treason at the very foot of his throne. Go from him, or flee
from him we cannot: neither by patient travel nor by hasty flight can we
withdraw from the all surrounding Deity. His mind is in our mind; himself
within ourselves. His spirit is over our spirit; our presence is ever in his
presence.
Verse
8. If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there. Filling the
loftiest region with his yet loftier presence, Jehovah is in the heavenly
place, at home, upon his throne. The ascent, if it were possible, would be
unavailing for purposes of escape; it would, in fact, be a flying into the
centre of the fire to avoid the heat. There would he be immediately confronted
by the terrible personality of God. Note the abrupt words—"THOU,
THERE." If I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. Descending into
the lowest imaginable depths among the dead, there should we find the Lord.
THOU! says the Psalmist, as if he felt that God was the one great Existence in
all places. Whatever Hades may be, or whoever may be there, one thing is
certain, Thou, O Jehovah, art there. Two regions, the one of glory and
the other of darkness, are set in contrast, and this one fact is asserted of
both—"thou art there." Whether we rise up or lie down, take our wing
or make our bed, we shall find God near us. A "behold" is
added to the second clause, since it seems more a wonder to meet with God in
hell than in heaven, in Hades than in Paradise. Of course the presence of God
produces very different effects in these places, but it is unquestionably in
each; the bliss of one, the terror of the other. What an awful thought, that
some men seem resolved to take up their night's abode in hell, a night which
shall know no morning.
Verse
9. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost
parts of the sea. If I could fly with all swiftness, and find a habitation
where the mariner has not yet ploughed the deep, yet I could not reach the
boundaries of the divine presence. Light flies with inconceivable rapidity, and
it flashes far afield beyond all human ken; it illuminates the great and wide
sea, and sets its waves gleaming afar; but its speed would utterly fail if
employed in flying from the Lord. Were we to speed on the wings of the morning
breeze, and break into oceans unknown to chart and map, yet there we should
find the Lord already present. He who saves to the uttermost would be with us
in the uttermost parts of the sea.
Verse
10. Even there shall thy hand lead me. We could only fly from
God by his own power. The Lord would be leading, covering, preserving,
sustaining us even when we were fugitives from him. And thy right hand shall
hold me. In the uttermost parts of the sea my arrest would be as certain as at
home: God's right hand would there seize and detain the runaway. Should we be
commanded on the most distant errand, we may assuredly depend upon the
upholding right hand of God as with us in all mercy, wisdom, and power. The
exploring missionary in his lonely wanderings is led, in his solitary
feebleness he is held. Both the hands of God are with his own servants to
sustain them, and against rebels to overthrow them; and in this respect it
matters not to what realms they resort, the active energy of God is around them
still.
Verse
11. If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me. Dense
darkness may oppress me, but it cannot shut me out from thee, or thee from me.
Thou seest as well without the light as with it, since thou art not dependent
upon light which is thine own creature, for the full exercise of thy
perceptions. Moreover, thou art present with me whatever may be the hour; and
being present you discover all that I think, or feel, or do. Men are still so
foolish as to prefer night and darkness for their evil deeds; but so impossible
is it for anything to be hidden from the Lord that they might just as well
transgress in broad daylight.
Darkness
and light in this agree;
Great God, they're both alike to thee.
Thine hand can pierce thy foes as soon
Through midnight shades as blazing noon.
A
good man will not wish to be hidden by the darkness, a wise man will not expect
any such thing. If we were so foolish as to make sure of concealment because
the place was shrouded in midnight, we might well be alarmed out of our
security by the fact that, as far as God is concerned, we always dwell in the
light; for even the night itself glows with a revealing force,—even the night
shall be light about me. Let us think of this if ever we are tempted to take
license from the dark—it is light about us. If the darkness be light, how great
is that light in which we dwell! Note well how David keeps his song in the
first person; let us mind that we do the same as we cry with Hagar, "Thou
God seest me."
Verse
12. Yea, of a surety, beyond all denial. The darkness hideth
not from thee; it veils nothing, it is not the medium of concealment in any
degree what ever. It hides from men, but not from God. But the night shineth as
the day: it is but another form of day: it shines, revealing all; it
"shineth as the day,"—quite as clearly and distinctly manifesting all
that is done. The darkness and the light are both alike to thee. This sentence
seems to sum up all that went before, and most emphatically puts the negative
upon the faintest idea of hiding under the cover of night. Men cling to this
notion, because it is easier and less expensive to hide under darkness than to
journey to remote places; and therefore the foolish thought is here beaten to
pieces by statements which in their varied forms effectually batter it. Yet the
ungodly are still duped by their grovelling notions of God, and enquire,
"How doth God know?" They must fancy that he is as limited in his
powers of observation as they are, and yet if they would but consider for a
moment they would conclude that he who could not see in the dark could not be
God, and he who is not present everywhere could not be the Almighty Creator.
Assuredly God is in all places, at all times, and nothing can by any
possibility be kept away from his all observing, all comprehending mind. The
Great Spirit comprehends within himself all time and space, and yet he is
infinitely greater than these, or aught else that he has made.
Verse
13. For thou hast possessed my reins. Thou art the owner of my
inmost parts and passions: not the indweller and observer only, but the acknowledged
lord and possessor of my most secret self. The word "reins" signifies
the kidneys, which by the Hebrews were supposed to be the seat of the desires
and longings; but perhaps it indicates here the most hidden and vital portion
of the man; this God doth not only inspect, and visit, but it is his own; he is
as much at home there as a landlord on his own estate, or a proprietor in his
own house. Thou hast covered me in my mother's womb. There I lay hidden—covered
by thee. Before I could know thee, or aught else, thou hadst a care for me, and
didst hide me away as a treasure till thou shouldest see fit to bring me to the
light. Thus the Psalmist describes the intimacy which God had with him. In his
most secret part—his reins, and in his most secret condition—yet unborn, he was
under the control and guardianship of God.
Verse
14. I will praise thee: a good resolve, and one which he was
even now carrying out. Those who are praising God are the very men who will
praise him. Those who wish to praise have subjects for adoration ready to hand.
We too seldom remember our creation, and all the skill and kindness bestowed
upon our frame: but the sweet singer of Israel was better instructed, and
therefore he prepares for the chief musician a song concerning our nativity and
all the fashioning which precedes it. We cannot begin too soon to bless our
Maker, who began so soon to bless us: even in the act of creation he created
reasons for our praising his name, For I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Who
can gaze even upon a model of our anatomy without wonder and awe? Who could
dissect a portion of the human frame without marvelling at its delicacy, and
trembling at its frailty? The Psalmist had scarcely peered within the veil
which hides the nerves, sinews, and blood vessels from common inspection; the
science of anatomy was quite unknown to him; and yet he had seen enough to
arouse his admiration of the work and his reverence for the Worker.
Marvellous
are thy works. These parts of my frame are all thy works; and though
they be home works, close under my own eye, yet are they wonderful to the last
degree. They are works within my own self, yet are they beyond my
understanding, and appear to me as so many miracles of skill and power. We need
not go to the ends of the earth for marvels, nor even across our own threshold;
they abound in our own bodies. And that my soul knoweth right well. He was no
agnostic—he knew; he was no doubter—his soul knew; he was no dupe—his soul knew
right well. Those know indeed and of a truth who first know the Lord, and then
know all things in him. He was made to know the marvellous nature of God's work
with assurance and accuracy, for he had found by experience that the Lord is a
master worker, performing inimitable wonders when accomplishing his kind
designs. If we are marvellously wrought upon even before we are born, what
shall we say of the Lord's dealings with us after we quit his secret workshop,
and he directs our pathway through the pilgrimage of life? What shall we not
say of that new birth which is even more mysterious than the first, and
exhibits even more the love and wisdom of the Lord.
Verse
15. My substance was not hid from thee. The substantial part
of my being was before thine all seeing eye; the bones which make my frame were
put together by thine hand. The essential materials of my being before they
were arranged were all within the range of thine eye. I was hidden from all
human knowledge, but not from thee: thou hast ever been intimately acquainted
with me. When I was made in secret. Most chastely and beautifully is here
described the formation of our being before the time of our birth. A great
artist will often labour alone in his studio, and not suffer his work to be
seen until it is finished; even so did the Lord fashion us where no eye beheld
as, and the veil was not lifted till every member was complete. Much of the
formation of our inner man still proceeds in secret: hence the more of solitude
the better for us. The true church also is being fashioned in secret, so that none
may cry, "Lo, here!" or "Lo, there!" as if that which is
visible could ever be identical with the invisibly growing body of Christ.
And
curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. "Embroidered with
great skill", is an accurate poetical description of the creation of
veins, sinews, muscles, nerves, etc. What tapestry can equal the human fabric?
This work is wrought as much in private as if it had been accomplished in the
grave, or in the darkness of the abyss. The expressions are poetical, beautifully
veiling, though not absolutely concealing, the real meaning. God's intimate
knowledge of us from our beginning, and even before it, is here most charmingly
set forth. Cannot he who made us thus wondrously when we were not, still carry
on his work of power till he has perfected us, though we feel unable to aid in
the process, and are lying in great sorrow and self loathing, as though cast
into the lowest parts of the earth?
Verse
16. Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect.
While as yet the vessel was upon the wheel the Potter saw it all. The Lord
knows not only our shape, but our substance: this is substantial knowledge
indeed. The Lord's observation of us is intent and intentional,—"Thine
eyes did see." Moreover, the divine mind discerns all things as clearly
and certainly as men perceive by actual eye sight. His is not hearsay
acquaintance, but the knowledge which comes of sight. And in thy book all my
members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there
was none of them. An architect draws his plans, and makes out his
specifications; even so did the great Maker of our frame write down all our
members in the book of his purposes. That we have eyes, and ears, and hands,
and feet, is all due to the wise and gracious purpose of heaven: it was so
ordered in the secret decree by which all things are as they are. God's
purposes concern our limbs and faculties. Their form, and shape, and everything
about them were appointed of God long before they had any existence. God saw us
when we could not be seen, and he wrote about us when there was nothing of us
to write about. When as yet there were none of our members in existence, all
those members were before the eye of God in the sketch book of his
foreknowledge and predestination.
This
verse is an exceedingly difficult one to translate, but we do not think that
any of the proposed amendments are better than the rendering afforded us by the
Authorized Version. The large number of words in italics will warn the English
reader that the sense is hard to come at, and difficult to express, and that it
would be unwise to found any doctrine upon the English words; happily
there is no temptation to do so. The great truth expressed in these lines has
by many been referred to the formation of the mystical body of our Lord Jesus.
Of course, what is true of man, as man, is emphatically true of Him who is the
representative man. The great Lord knows who belong to Christ; his eye
perceives the chosen members who shall yet be made one with the living person
of the mystical Christ. Those of the elect who are as yet unborn, or unrenewed,
are nevertheless written in the Lord's book. As the form of Eve grew up in
silence and secrecy under the fashioning hand of the Maker, so at this hour is
the Bride being fashioned for the Lord Jesus; or, to change the figure,—a body
is being prepared in which the life and glory of the indwelling Lord shall for
ever be displayed. The Lord knoweth them that are his: he has a specially
familiar acquaintance with the members of the body of Christ; he sees their
substance, unperfect though they be.
Verse
17. How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! He is
not alarmed at the fact that God knows all about him; on the contrary, he is
comforted, and even feels himself to be enriched, as with a casket of precious
jewels. That God should think upon him is the believer's treasure and pleasure.
He cries, "How costly, how valued are thy thoughts, how dear to me is thy
perpetual attention!" He thinks upon God's thoughts with delight; the more
of them the better is he pleased. It is a joy worth worlds that the Lord should
think upon us who are so poor and needy: it is a joy which fills our whole
nature to think upon God; returning love for love, thought for thought, after our
poor fashion. How great is the sum of them! When we remember that God thought
upon us from old eternity, continues to think upon us every moment, and will
think of us when time shall be no more, we may well exclaim, "How great is
the sum!" Thoughts such as are natural to the Creator, the Preserver, the
Redeemer, the Father, the Friend, are evermore flowing from the heart of the
Lord. Thoughts of our pardon, renewal, upholding, supplying, educating,
perfecting, and a thousand more kinds perpetually well up in the mind of the
Most High. It should fill us with adoring wonder and reverent surprise that the
infinite mind of God should turn so many thoughts towards us who are so
insignificant and so unworthy! What a contrast is all this to the notion of
those who deny the existence of a personal, conscious God! Imagine a world
without a thinking, personal God! Conceive of a grim providence of machinery!—a
fatherhood of law! Such philosophy is hard and cold. As well might a man pillow
his head upon a razor edge as seek rest in such a fancy. But a God always
thinking of us makes a happy world, a rich life, a heavenly hereafter.
Verse
18. If I should count them, they are more in number than the sand.
This figure shows the thoughts of God to be altogether innumerable; for nothing
can surpass in number the grains of sand which belt the main ocean and all the
minor seas. The task of counting God's thoughts of love would be a never ending
one. If we should attempt the reckoning we must necessarily fail, for the infinite
falls not within the line of our feeble intellect. Even could we count the
sands on the seashore, we should not then be able to number God's thoughts, for
they are "more in number than the sand." This is not the hyperbole of
poetry, but the solid fact of inspired statement: God thinks upon us
infinitely: there is a limit to the act of creation, but not to the might of
divine love. When I awake, I am still with thee. Thy thoughts of love are so
many that my mind never gets away from them, they surround me at all hours. I
go to my bed, and God is my last thought; and when I wake I find my mind still
hovering about his palace gates; God is ever with me, and I am ever with him.
This is life indeed. If during sleep my mind wanders away into dreams, yet it
only wanders upon holy ground, and the moment I wake my heart is back with its
Lord. The Psalmist does not say, "When I awake, I return to thee",
but, "I am still with thee"; as if his meditations were continuous,
and his communion unbroken. Soon we shall lie down to sleep for the last time:
God grant that when the trumpet of the archangel shall waken us we may find
ourselves still with him.
Verse
19. Surely thou wilt slay the wicked, O God. There can be no
doubt upon that head, for thou hast seen all their transgressions, which indeed
have been done in thy presence; and thou hast long enough endured their
provocations, which have been so openly manifest before thee. Crimes committed
before the face of the Judge are not likely to go unpunished. If the eye of God
is grieved with the presence of evil, it is but natural to expect that he will
remove the offending object. God who sees all evil will slay all evil. With
earthly sovereigns sin may go unpunished for lack of evidence, or the law may
be left without execution from lack of vigour in the judge; but this cannot
happen in the case of God, the living God. He beareth not the sword in vain.
Such is his love of holiness and hatred of wrong, that he will carry on war to
the death with those whose hearts and lives are wicked. God will not always
suffer his lovely creation to be defaced and defiled by the presence of
wickedness: if anything is sure, this is sure, that he will ease him of his
adversaries. Depart from me therefore, ye bloody men. Men who delight in cruelty
and war are not fit companions for those who walk with God. David chases the
men of blood from his court, for he is weary of those of whom God is weary. He
seems to say—If God will not let you live with him I will not have you live
with me. You would destroy others, and therefore I want you not in my society.
You will be destroyed yourselves, I desire you not in my service. Depart from
me, for you depart from God. As we delight to have the holy God always near us,
so would we eagerly desire to have wicked men removed as far as possible from
us. We tremble in the society of the ungodly lest their doom should fall upon
them suddenly, and we should see them lie dead at our feet. We do not wish to
have our place of intercourse turned into a gallows of execution, therefore let
the condemned be removed out of our company.
Verse
20. For they speak against thee wickedly. Why should I bear
their company when their talk sickens me? They vent their treasons and
blasphemies as often as they please, doing so without the slightest excuse or
provocation; let them therefore be gone, where they may find a more congenial
associate than I can be. When men speak against God they will be sure to speak
against us, if they find it serve their turn; hence godless men are not the stuff
out of which true friends can ever be made. God gave these men their tongues,
and they turn them against their Benefactor, wickedly, from sheer malice, and
with great perverseness. And thine enemies take thy name in vain. This is their
sport: to insult Jehovah's glorious name is their amusement. To blaspheme the
name of the Lord is a gratuitous wickedness in which there can be no pleasure,
and from which there can be no profit. This is a sure mark of the
"enemies" of the Lord, that they have the impudence to assail his
honour, and treat his glory with irreverence. How can God do other than slay
them? How can we do other than withdraw from every sort of association with
them? What a wonder of sin it is that men should rail against so good a Being
as the Lord our God! The impudence of those who talk wickedly is a singular
fact, and it is the more singular when we reflect that the Lord against whom
they speak is all around them, and lays to heart every dishonour which they
render to his holy name. We ought not to wonder that men slander and deride us,
for they do the same with the Most High God.
Verse
21. Do not I hate them, O LORD, that hate thee? He was a good
hater, for he hated only those who hated good. Of this hatred he is not
ashamed, but he sets it forth as a virtue to which he would have the Lord bear
testimony. To love all men with benevolence is our duty; but to love any wicked
man with complacency would be a crime. To hate a man for his own sake, or for
any evil done to us, would be wrong; but to hate a man because he is the foe of
all goodness and the enemy of all righteousness, is nothing more nor less than
an obligation. The more we love God the more indignant shall we grow with those
who refuse him their affection. "If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ
let him be Anathema Maranatha." Truly, "jealousy is cruel as the
grave." The loyal subject must not be friendly to the traitor. And am not
I grieved with those that rise up against thee? He appeals to heaven that he
took no pleasure in those who rebelled against the Lord; but, on the contrary,
he was made to mourn by a sight of their ill behaviour. Since God is
everywhere, he knows our feelings towards the profane and ungodly, and he knows
that so far from approving such characters the very sight of them is grievous
to our eyes.
Verse
22. I hate them with perfect hatred. He does not leave it a
matter of question. He does not occupy a neutral position. His hatred to bad,
vicious, blasphemous men is intense, complete, energetic. He is as whole
hearted in his hate of wickedness as in his love of goodness. I count them mine
enemies. He makes a personal matter of it. They may have done him no ill, but
if they are doing despite to God, to his laws, and to the great principles of
truth and righteousness, David proclaims war against them. Wickedness passes
men into favour with unrighteous spirits; but it excludes them from the
communion of the just. We pull up the drawbridge and man the walls when a man
of Belial goes by our castle. His character is a casus belli; we cannot
do otherwise than contend with those who contend with God.
Verse
23. Search me, O God, and know my heart. David is no
accomplice with traitors. He has disowned them in set form, and now he appeals
to God that he does not harbour a trace of fellowship with them. He will have
God himself search him, and search him thoroughly, till every point of his
being is known, and read, and understood; for he is sure that even by such an
investigation there will be found in him no complicity with wicked men. He
challenges the fullest investigation, the innermost search: he had need be a
true man who can put himself deliberately into such a crucible. Yet we may each
one desire such searching; for it would be a terrible calamity to us for sin to
remain in our hearts unknown and undiscovered. Try me, and know my thoughts.
Exercise any and every test upon me. By fire and by water let me be examined.
Read not alone the desires of my heart, but the fugitive thoughts of my head.
Know with all penetrating knowledge all that is or has been in the chambers of
my mind. What a mercy that there is one being who can know us to perfection! He
is intimately at home with us. He is graciously inclined towards us, and is
willing to bend his omniscience to serve the end of our sanctification. Let us
pray as David did, and let us be as honest as he. We cannot hide our sin:
salvation lies the other way, in a plain discovery of evil, and an effectual
severance from it.
Verse
24. And see if there be any wicked way in me. See whether
there be in my heart, or in my life, any evil habit unknown to myself. If there
be such an evil way, take me from it, take it from me. No matter how dear the
wrong may have become, nor how deeply prejudiced I may have been in its favour,
be pleased to deliver me therefrom altogether, effectually, and at once, that I
may tolerate nothing which is contrary to thy mind. As I hate the wicked in
their way, so would I hate every wicked way in myself. And lead me in the way
everlasting. If thou hast introduced me already to the good old way, be pleased
to keep me in it, and conduct me further and further along it. It is a way
which thou hast set up of old, it is based upon everlasting principles, and it
is the way in which immortal spirits will gladly run for ever and ever. There
will be no end to it world without end. It lasts for ever, and they who are in
it last for ever. Conduct me into it, O Lord, and conduct me throughout the
whole length of it. By thy providence, by thy word, by thy grace, and by thy
Spirit, lead me evermore.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. Aben Ezra observes, that this is the most glorious and excellent
Psalm in all the book: a very excellent one it is; but whether the most
excellent, it is hard to say.—John Gill.
Whole
Psalm. There is one Psalm which it were well if Christians would do by
it as Pythagoras by his Golden Precepts,—every morning and evening repeat it.
It is David's appeal of a good conscience unto God, against the malicious
suspicions and calumnies of men, in Ps 139:1-24.—Samuel Annesley
(1620-1696), in "The Morning Exercises."
Whole
Psalm. This Psalm is one of the most sublime compositions in the world.
How came a shepherd boy to conceive so sublime a theme, and to write in so
sublime a strain? Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.
What themes are more sublime than the Divine attributes? And which of these
attributes is more sublime than Omnipresence? Omniscience, spirituality,
infinity, immutability and eternity are necessarily included in it.—George
Rogers.
Whole
Psalm. Let the modern wits, after this, look upon the honest shepherds
of Palestine as a company of rude and unpolished clowns; let them, if
they can, produce from profane authors thoughts that are more sublime, more
delicate, or better turned; not to mention the sound divinity and solid piety
which are apparent under these expressions.—Claude Fleury, 1640-1723.
Whole
Psalm. Here the poet inverts his gaze, from the blaze of suns, to the
strange atoms composing his own frame. He stands shuddering over the precipice
of himself. Above is the All encompassing Spirit, from whom the morning wings
cannot save; and below, at a deep distance, appears amid the branching forest
of his animal frame, so fearfully and wonderfully made, the abyss of his
spiritual existence, lying like a dark lake in the midst. How, between mystery
and mystery, his mind, his wonder, his very reason, seem to rock like a little
boat between the sea and sky. But speedily does he regain his serenity; when he
throws himself, with childlike haste and confidence, into the arms of that
Fatherly Spirit, and murmurs in his bosom, "How precious also are thy
thoughts unto me, O God; how great is the sum of them"; and looking
up at last in his face, cries—"Search me, O Lord. I cannot search thee; I
cannot search myself; I am overwhelmed by those dreadful depths; but search me
as thou only canst; see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the
way everlasting."—George Gilfillan (1813-1878), in "The
Bards of the Bible."
Whole
Psalm. The Psalm has an immediately practical aim, which is unfolded
near the close. It is not an abstract description of the Divine attributes,
with a mere indirect purpose in view. If God is such a being, if his vital
agency reaches over all his creation, pervades all objects, illumines the
deepest and darkest recesses; if his knowledge has no limits, piercing into the
mysterious processes of creation, into the smallest and most elemental germs of
life; if his eye can discern the still more subtle and recondite processes of
mind, comprehending the half formed conception, the germinating desire
"afar off"; if, anterior to all finite existence, his predetermining
decree went forth; if in those ancient records of eternity man's framework,
with all its countless elements and organs, in all the ages of his duration,
were inscribed—then for his servant, his worshipper on earth, two consequences
follow, most practical and momentous: first, the ceasing to have or feel
any complacency with the wicked, any sympathy with their evil ways, any
communion with them as such; and, secondly, the earnest desire that God
would search the Psalmist's soul, lest in its unsounded depths there might be
some lurking iniquity, lest there might be, beyond the present jurisdiction of
his conscience, some dark realm which the Omniscient eye only could explore.—Bela
B. Edwards (1802-1852), in H.C. Fish's "Masterpieces of Pulpit
Eloquence."
Whole
Psalm.
Searcher
of hearts! to thee are known
The inmost secrets of my breast;
At home, abroad, in crowds, alone,
Thou mark'st my rising and my rest,
My thoughts far off, through every maze,
Source, stream, and issue—all my ways.
How
from thy presence should I go,
Or whither from thy Spirit flee,
Since all above, around, below,
Exist in thine immensity?
If up to heaven I take my way,
I meet thee in eternal day.
If
in the grave I make my bed
With worms and dust, lo! thou art there!
If, on the wings of morning sped,
Beyond the ocean I repair,
I feel thine all controlling will,
And thy right hand upholds me still.
"Let
darkness hide me", if I say,
Darkness can no concealment be;
Night, on thy rising, shines like day;
Darkness and light are one with thee:
For thou mine embryo form didst view,
Ere her own babe my mother knew.
In me
thy workmanship display'd,
A miracle of power I stand:
Fearfully, wonderfully made,
And framed in secret by thine hand;
I lived, ere into being brought,
Through thine eternity of thought.
How
precious are thy thoughts of peace,
O God, to me! how great the sum!
New every morn, they never cease:
They were, they are, and yet shall come,
In number and in compass more
Than ocean's sands or ocean's shore.
Search
me, O God! and know my heart;
Try me, my inmost soul survey;
And warn thy servant to depart
From every false and evil way:
So shall thy truth my guidance be
To life and immortality.
—James
Montgomery.
Whole
Psalm. The Psalm may be thus summarized Ps 139:1. O LORD, thou hast
searched me, and known me.—As though he said, "O LORD, thou art the
heart searching God, who perfectly knowest all the thoughts, counsels, studies,
endeavours, and actions of all men, and therefore mine." Ps 139:2. Thou
knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar
off.—As if he had said, "Thou knowest my rest and motion, and my
plodding thoughts of both" Ps 139:3. Thou compassest my path and my
lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways.—As if he had said,
"You fan and winnow me", that is, "You discuss and try me to the
utmost." Ps 139:4. For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O
LORD, thou knowest it altogether.—As if he had said, "I cannot speak a
word, though never so secret, obscure, or subtle, but thou knowest what, and
why, and with what mind it was uttered" Ps 139:5. Thou hast beset me
behind and before, and laid thine hand upon me.—As if he had said,
"Thou keepest me within the compass of thy knowledge, like a man that will
not let his servant go out of his sight. I cannot break away from thee" Ps
139:6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain
unto it. As if he had said, "The knowledge of thy great and glorious
majesty and infiniteness is utterly past all human comprehension." Ps
139:7. Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy
presence?—As if he had said, "Whither can I flee from thee, whose
essence, presence, and power is everywhere?" Ps 139:8. If I ascend up
into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there.—As
if he had said, "There is no height above thee, there is no depth below
thee." Ps 139:9. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the
uttermost parts of the sea.—As if he had said, "If I had wings to fly
as swift as the morning light, from the east to the west, that I could in a
moment get to the furthest parts of the world." Ps 139:10. Even there
shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me.—As if he had
said, "Thence shall thy hand lead me back, and hold me fast like a
fugitive." Ps 139:11. If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me;
even the night shall be light about me.—As if he had said, "Though
darkness hinders man's sight, it doth not thine." In a word, look which
way you will, there is no hiding place from God. "For his eyes are upon
the ways of man, and he seeth all his goings. There is no darkness nor shadow
of death, where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves": Job
34:21-22. Therefore, Christians, do nothing but what you are willing God should
take notice of; and judge in yourselves whether this be not the way to have a
good and quiet conscience.—Samuel Annesley.
Whole
Psalm. In this Aramaizing Psalm what the preceding Psalm says (Ps 138:6)
comes to be carried into effect, viz.: For Jahve is exalted and he seeth the
lowly, and the proud he knoweth from afar. This Psalm has manifold points
of contact with its predecessor.—Franz Delitzsch.
To
the Chief Musician. As a later writer could have no motive for prefixing the title, "To
the Chief Musician", it affords an incidental proof of antiquity and
genuineness.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
A
Psalm of David. How any critic can assign this Psalm to other than David I cannot
understand. Every line, every thought, every turn of expression and transition,
is his, and his only. As for the arguments drawn from the two Chaldaisms which
occur, this is really nugatory. These Chaldaisms consist merely in the
substitution of one letter for another, very like it in shape, and easily to be
mistaken by a transcriber, particularly by one who had been used to the Chaldee
idiom; but the moral arguments for David's authorship are so strong as to
overwhelm any such verbal, or rather literal criticism, were even the
objections more formidable than they actually are.—John Jebb.
Verse
1. O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known (me). There is no
"me" after "known" in the Hebrew; therefore
it is better to take the object after "known" in a wider
sense. The omission is intentional, that the believing heart of all who use
this Psalm may supply the ellipsis. Thou hast known and knowest all that
concerns the matter in question, as well whether I and mine are guilty or
innocent (Ps 44:21); also my exact circumstances, my needs, my sorrows, and the
precise time when to relieve me.—A.R. Fausset.
Verse
1. O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me. The godly may
sometimes be so overclouded with calumnies and reproaches as not to be able to
find a way to clear themselves before men, but must content and comfort
themselves with the testimony of a good conscience and with God's approbation
of their integrity, as here David doth.—David Dickson.
Verse
1. O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me. David here
lays down the great doctrine, that God has a perfect knowledge of us, First, in
the way of an address to God: he saith it to him, acknowledging it to him,
and giving him the glory of it. Divine truths look full as well when they are
prayed over as when they are preached over: and much better than when they are
disputed over. When we speak of God to him himself, we find ourselves concerned
to speak with the utmost degree both of sincerity and reverence, which will be
likely to make the impressions the deeper. Secondly, he lays it down in a
way of application to himself: not thou hast known all, but "thou hast
known me"; that is it which I am most concerned to believe, and
which it will be most profitable for me to consider. Then we know things for
our good when we know them for ourselves. Job 5:27 ... David was a king, and
"the hearts of kings are unsearchable" to their subjects (Pr 25:3),
but they are not so to their sovereign.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
1. O LORD, thou hast searched me. I would have you observe
how thoroughly in the very first verse he brings home the truth to his own
heart and his own conscience: "O LORD, thou hast searched me."
He does not slur it over as a general truth, in which such numbers shared that
he might hope to escape or evade its solemn appeal to himself; but it is,
"Thou hast searched me."—Barton Bouchier.
Verse
1. Searched. The Hebrew word originally means to dig,
and is applied to the search for precious metals (Job 28:3), but metaphorically
to a moral inquisition into guilt.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verses
1-5. God knows everything that passes in our inmost souls better than
we do ourselves: he reads our most secret thoughts: all the cogitations of our
hearts pass in review before him; and he is as perfectly and entirely employed
in the scrutiny of the thoughts and actions of an individual, as in the
regulation of the most important concerns of the universe. This is what we
cannot comprehend; but it is what, according to the light of reason, must be
true, and, according to revelation, is indeed true. God can do nothing
imperfectly; and we may form some idea of his superintending knowledge, by
conceiving what is indeed the truth, that all the powers of the Godhead are
employed, and solely employed, in the observation and examination of the
conduct of one individual. I say, this is indeed the case, because all the
powers of the Godhead are employed upon the least as well as upon the greatest
concerns of the universe; and the whole mind and power of the Creator are as
exclusively employed upon the formation of a grub as of a world. God knows
everything perfectly, and he knows everything perfectly at once. This, to a
human understanding, would breed confusion; but there can be no confusion in
the Divine understanding, because confusion arises from imperfection. Thus God,
without confusion, beholds as distinctly the actions of every man, as if that
man were the only created being, and the Godhead were solely employed in
observing him. Let this thought fill your mind with awe and with remorse.—Henry
Kirke White, 1785-1806.
Verses
1-12.
O
Lord, in me there lieth nought
But to thy search revealed lies;
For when I sit
Thou markest it;
No less thou notest when I rise;
Yea, closest closet of my thought
Hath open windows to thine eyes.
Thou
walkest with me when I walk,
When to my bed for rest I go,
I find thee there,
And everywhere:
Not youngest thought in me doth grow,
No, not one word I cast to talk
But, yet unuttered, thou dost know.
If
forth I march, thou goest before;
If back I turn, thou com'st behind:
So forth nor back
Thy guard I lack;
Nay, on me, too, thy hand I find.
Well, I thy wisdom may adore,
But never reach with earthly mind.
To
shun thy notice, leave thine eye,
O whither might I take my way?
To starry sphere?
Thy throne is there.
To dead men's undelightsome stay?
There is thy walk, and there to lie
Unknown, in vain I should assay.
O
sun, whom light nor flight can match!
Suppose thy lightful flightful wings
Thou lend to me,
And I could flee
As far as thee the evening brings:
Ev'n led to west he would me catch,
Nor should I lurk with western things.
Do
thou thy best. O secret night,
In sable veil to cover me:
Thy sable veil
Shall vainly fail:
With day unmasked my night shall be;
For night is day, and darkness light,
O Father of all lights, to thee.
—Sir
Philip Sidney, 1554-1586.
Verse
2. Thou. David makes the personal pronoun the very
frontispiece of the verse, and so says expressly and distinctively to Jehovah, "Thou
knowest"; thus marking the difference between God and all others, as
though he said, "Thou, and thou alone, O God, in all the universe, knowest
altogether all that can be known concerning me, even to my inmost thought, as
well as outward act."—Martin Geier.
Verse
2. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising. Does God
care? Is he our Friend? Even in such little matters as these, does he
watch over us "to do us good"? ...When we "sit down" he
sees; when we rise up he is there. Not an action is lost or a thought
overlooked. No wonder that, as these tiny miracles of care are related by
David, he adds the words, Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is
high, I cannot attain unto it. We get accustomed to the thought that God
made the sun and sky, the "moon and stars which he hath ordained",
and we bow to the fact that they are "the work of his fingers." Let
us go further! The coming in and going out of the Christian is
mentioned several times in Scripture as though it were very important. So much
hinges on these little words. "David went out and came in before the
people. And David behaved himself wisely in all his ways; and the Lord was with
him": 1Sa 18:13-14. "The LORD shall preserve thy going out and thy
coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore": Ps 121:8. David
was given both preservation and wisdom in his "goings
out" and "comings in." Perhaps the latter was both cause and
effect of the first. It was needed, for many eyes were upon him, and many eyes
are upon us: are they not? Perhaps more than we think.—Lady Hope, in
"Between Times," 1884.
Verse
2. Downsitting and uprising. "Uprising" following "downsitting"
is in the order of right sequence; for action ought to follow meditation. Jacob
saw the angels ascending to God before they descended to service among mortals.
Hence we are taught first to join ourselves to God by meditation, and
afterwards to repair to the aid of our fellows.—Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
2. Uprising may respect either rising from bed, when
the Lord knows whether the heart is still with him (Ps 139:18); what sense is
had of the Divine protection and sustentation, and what thankfulness there is
for the mercies of the night past; and whether the voice of prayer and praise
is directed to him in the morning, as it should be (Ps 3:5 5:3); or else rising
from the table, when the Lord knows whether a man's table has been his
snare, and with what thankfulness he rises from it for the favours he has
received. The Targum interprets this of rising up to go to war; which David
did, in the name and strength, and by the direction of the Lord.—John Gill.
Verse
2. Thou understandest my thought afar off. "My
thought": that is, every thought, though innumerable thoughts pass
through me in a day. The divine knowledge reaches to their source and fountain,
before they are our thoughts. If the Lord knows them before their existence,
before they can be properly called ours, much more doth he know them when they
actually spring up in us; he knows the tendency of them, where the bird will
alight when it is in flight; he knows them exactly; he is therefore called a
"discerner" or criticizer of the heart: Heb 4:2.—Stephen Charnock.
Verse
2. Thou understandest my thought afar off. Not that God is at
a distance from our thoughts; but he understands them while they are far off
from us, from our knowledge, while they are potential, as gardeners know what
weeds such ground will bring forth, when nothing appears. De 31:21. "I
know their imagination which they go about, even now, before I have brought
them into the land which I sware": God knew their thoughts before they
came into Canaan, what they would be there. And how can it be, but that God
should know all our thoughts, seeing he made the heart, and it is in his hand
(Pr 21:1), seeing, "we live, and move, and have our being" in God (Ac
17:28); seeing he is through us all, and in us all (Eph 4:6). Look well to your
hearts, thoughts, risings, whatever comes into your mind; let no secret sins,
or corruptions, lodge there; think not to conceal anything from the eye of
God.—William Greenhill.
Verse
2. Thou understandest my thought afar off. Though my thoughts
be never so foreign and distant from one another, thou understandest the chain
of them, and canst make out their connexion, when so many of them slip my
notice that I myself cannot.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
2. My thought. The er, rea, which we have rendered "thought",
signifies also a friend or companion, on which account some read—thou
knowest what is nearest me afar off, a meaning more to the point than any
other, if it could be supported by example. The reference would then be very
appropriately to the fact that the most distant objects are contemplated as
near by God. Some for "afar off" read beforehand, in which
signification the Hebrew word is elsewhere taken; as if he had said, O Lord,
every thought which I conceive in my heart is already known to thee
beforehand.—John Calvin.
Verse
2. Thought. In all affliction, in all business, a man's best
comfort is this, that all he does and even all he thinks, God knows. In the
Septuagint we read dialogiomous, that is, "reasonings." God knows all
our inner ratiocination, all the dialogues, all the colloquies of the soul with
itself.—Thomas Le Blanc.
Verse
2. Thou understandest my thought. Before men we stand as
opaque beehives. They can see the thoughts go in and out of us, but what work
they do inside of a man they cannot tell. Before God we are as glass beehives,
and all that our thoughts are doing within us he perfectly sees and
understands.—Henry Ward Beecher.
Verse
2. Thou understandest my thought afar off.
"Man
may not see thee do an impious deed;
But God thy very inmost thought can read."
—Plutarch.
Verse
2. Afar off. This expression is, as in Ps 138:6, to be
understood as contradicting the delusion (Job 22:12-14) that God's dwelling in
heaven prevents him from observing mundane things.—Lange's Commentary.
Verse
2. Afar off. Both in distance, however far off a man may seek
to hide his thoughts from God; and in time, for God knows the human thought
before man conceives it in his heart, in his eternal prescience. The Egyptians
called God the "eye of the world."—Thomas Le Blanc.
Verses
2-4. Do not fancy that your demeanour, posture, dress, or deportment
are not under God's providence. You deceive yourself. Do not think that your
thoughts pass free from inspection. The Lord understands them afar off. Think
not that your words are dissipated in the air before God can hear. Oh, no! He
knows them even when still upon your tongue. Do not think that your ways are so
private and concealed that there is none to know or censure them. You mistake.
God knows all your ways.—Johann David Frisch, 1731.
Verse
3. Thou compassest my path and my lying down, etc. The words
that I have read unto you, seem to be a metaphor, taken from soldiers
surrounding the ways with an ambush, or placing scouts and spies in every
corner, to discover the enemy in his march; "Thou compassest my
path": thou hast (as it were) thy spies over me, wheresoever I go. By "path"
is meant the outward actions and carriage of his ordinary conversation. By "lying
down" is signified to us the private and close actions of his life;
such as were attended only by darkness and solitude. In Ps 36:4, it is said of
the wicked that "he deviseth mischief upon his bed", to denote not
only his perverse diligence, but also his secrecy in it: and God is said to
"hide his children in the secret of his pavilion", so that these
places of rest and lying down are designed for secrecy and withdrawing. When a
man retires into his chamber, he does in a manner, for a while, shut himself
out of the world. And that this is the fine sense of that expression of lying
down appears from the next words, "Thou art acquainted with all my
ways"; where he collects in one word what he had before said in two;
or, it may come in by way of entrance and deduction, from the former. As if he
should say, Thou knowest what I do in my ordinary converse with men, and also
how I behave myself when I am retired from them; therefore thou knowest all
my actions, since a man's actions may be reduced either to his public or
private deportment. By the other expression of "my ways" is
here meant the total of a man's behaviour before God, whether in thoughts,
words, or deeds, as is manifest by comparing this with other verses.—Robert
South.
Verse
3. Thou compassest my path. This is a metaphor either from
huntsmen watching all the motions and lurking places of wild beasts, that they
may catch them; or from soldiers besieging their enemies in a city, and setting
round about them.—Matthew Pool.
Verse
3. Thou compassest, or feignest, or wannest, my
path; that is, discuss or try out to the utmost, even tracing the
footsteps, as the Greek signifieth. Compare Job 31:4.—Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
3. Thou art acquainted with all my ways. God takes notice of
every step we take, every right step, and every by step. He knows what rule we
walk by, what end we walk toward, what company we walk with.—Religious Tract
Society's Commentary.
Verse
3. Art acquainted, as by most familiar intercourse, as if
thou hadst always lived with me Hebrew and thus become entirely familiar
with my ways.—Henry Cowles.
Verse
3. The Psalmist mentions four modes of human existence; stationis,
sessionis, itionis, cubationis; because man never stayeth long in one mood,
but in every change the eyes of the Lord cease not to watch him.—Geier.
Verse
4. For there is not a word in my tongue, etc. The words admit
a double meaning. Accordingly some understand them to imply that God knows what
we are about to say before the words are formed on our tongue; others, that
though we speak not a word, and try by silence to conceal our secret
intentions, we cannot elude his notice. Either rendering amounts to the same
thing, and it is of no consequence which we adopt. The idea meant to be
conveyed is, that while the tongue is the index of thought to man, being the
great medium of communication, God, who knows the heart, is independent of
words. And use is made of the demonstrative particle lo! to indicate
emphatically that the innermost recesses of our spirit stand present to his
view.—John Calvin.
Verse
4. For there is not a word in my tongue, etc. How needful it
is to set a watch before the doors of our mouth, to hold that unruly member of
ours, the tongue, as with bit and bridle. Some of you feel at times that you
can scarcely say a word, and the less you say the better. Well, it way be as
well; for great talkers are almost sure to make slips with their tongue. It may
be a good thing that you cannot speak much; for in the multitude of words there
lacketh not sin. Wherever you go, what light, vain, and foolish conversations
you hear! I am glad not to be thrown into circumstances where I can hear it.
But with you it may be different. You may often repent of speaking, you will
rarely repent of silence. How soon angry words are spoken! How soon foolish
expressions drop from the mouth! The Lord knows it all, marks it all, and did
you carry about with you a more solemn recollection of it you would be more
watchful than you are.—Joseph C. Philpot.
Verse
4. When there is not a word in my tongue, O LORD, thou knowest
all; so some read it; for thoughts are words to God.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
4. Thou knowest it. The gods know what passes in our minds
without the aid of eyes, ears, or tongues; on which divine omniscience is
founded the feeling of men that, when they wish in silence, or offer up a
prayer for anything, the gods hear them.—Cicero.
Verse
5. Thou hast beset me behind and before, etc. There is here
an insensible transition from God's omniscience to his omnipresence, out of
which the Scriptures represent it as arising. "Behind and before",
i.e., on all sides. The idea of above and below is suggested by
the last clause. "Beset", besiege, hem in, or closely
surround. "Thy hand", or the palm of thy hand, as the Hebrew
word strictly denotes.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verse
5. Thou hast beset me behind and before. What would you say
if, wherever you turned, whatever you were doing, whatever thinking, whether in
public or private, with a confidential friend telling your secrets, or alone
planning them—if, I say, you saw an eye constantly fixed on you, from whose
watching, though you strove ever so much, you could never escape...that could perceive
your every thought? The supposition is awful enough. There is such an Eye.—De
Vere.
Verse
5. Thou hast beset me behind and before. One who finds the
way blocked up turns back; but David found himself hedged in behind as well as
before.—John Calvin.
Verse
5. Thou hast...laid thine hand upon me. As by an arrest; so
that I am thy prisoner, and cannot stir a foot from thee.—John Trapp.
Verse
5. And laid thine hand upon me. To make of me one acceptable
to thyself. To rule me, to lead me, to uphold me, to protect me; to restore me;
in my growth, in my walk, in my failures, in my affliction, in my despair.—Thomas
Le Blanc.
Verse
6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me, etc. When we are
about to look upon God's perfections, we should observe our own imperfections,
and thereby learn to be the more modest in our searching of God's unsearchable
perfection: Such knowledge, saith David, is too high for me, I cannot
attain unto it. Then do we see most of God, when we see him
incomprehensible, and do see ourselves swallowed up in the thoughts of his
perfection, and are forced to fall in admiration of God, as here. "Such
knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto it."—David
Dickson.
Verse
6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me. Compared with our
stinted knowledge, how amazing is the knowledge of God! As he made all things,
he must be intimately acquainted, not only with their properties, but with
their very essence. His eye, at the same instant, surveys all the works of his
immeasurable creation. He observes, not only the complicated system of the
universe, but the slightest motion of the most microscopic insect;—not only the
most sublime conception of angels, but the meanest propensity of the most
worthless of his creatures. At this moment he is listening to the praises
breathed by grateful hearts in distant worlds, and reading every grovelling
thought which passes though the polluted minds of the fallen race of Adam...At
one view, he surveys the past, the present, and the future. No inattention
prevents him from observing; no defect of memory or of judgment obscures his
comprehension. In his remembrance are stored not only the transactions of this
world, but of all the worlds in the universe;—not only the events of the six
thousand years which have passed since the earth was created, but of a duration
without beginning. Nay, things to come extending to a duration without end, are
also before him. An eternity past and an eternity to come are, at the same
moment, in his eye; and with that eternal eye he surveys infinity. How amazing!
How inconceivable!—Henry Duncan (1774-1846), in "Sacred Philosophy of
the Seasons."
Verse
6. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me. There is a mystery
about the Divine Omnipresence, which we do not learn to solve, after years of
meditation. As God is a simple spirit, without dimensions, parts, or
susceptibility of division, he is equally, that is, fully, present at all times
in all places. At any given moment he is not present partly here and partly in
the utmost skirt of the furthest system which revolves about the dimmest
telescopic star, as if like a galaxy of perfection he stretched a sublime
magnificence through universal space, which admitted of separation and
partition; but he is present, with the totality of his glorious properties in
every point of space. This results undeniably from the simple spirituality of
the Great Supreme. All that God is in one place he is in all places. All there
is of God is in every place. Indeed, his presence has no dependence on space or
matter. His attribute of essential presence were the same if universal matter
were blotted out. Only by a figure can God be said to be in the universe; for
the universe is comprehended by him. All the boundless glory of the Godhead is
essentially present at every spot in his creation, however various may be the
manifestations of this glory at different times and places. Here we have a case
which ought to instruct and sober those, who, in their shallow philosophy,
demand a religion without mystery. It would be a religion without God; for
"who by searching can find out God?"—James W. Alexander, in
"The (American) National Preacher", 1860.
Verse
7. Wither shall I go from thy spirit? By the "spirit of
God" we are not here, as in several other parts of Scripture, to conceive
of his power merely, but his understanding and knowledge. In man the spirit is
the seat of intelligence, and so it is here in reference to God, as is plain
from the second part of the sentence, where by "the face of God"
is meant his knowledge or inspection.—John Calvin.
Verse
7. Whither shall I go from thy spirit? That is, either from
thee, who art a spirit, and so canst pierce and penetrate me; be as truly and
essentially in the very bowels and marrow of my soul, as my soul is intimately
and essentially in my body: "from thy spirit"; that is, from
thy knowledge and thy power; thy knowledge to detect and observe me, thy power
to uphold or crush me.—Ezekiel Hopkins, 1633-1690.
Verse
7. We may elude the vigilance of a human enemy and place ourselves
beyond his reach. God fills all space—there is not a spot in which his piercing
eye is not on us, and his uplifted hand cannot find us out. Man must strike
soon if he would strike at all; for opportunities pass away from him, and his
victim may escape his vengeance by death. There is no passing of opportunity
with God, and it is this which makes his long suffering a solemn thing. God can
wait, for he has a whole eternity before him in which he may strike. "All
things are open and naked to him with whom we have to do."—Frederick
William Robertson, 1816-1853.
Verse
7. Whither shall I go, etc. A heathen philosopher once asked,
"Where is God?" The Christian answered, "Let me first ask you,
Where is he not?"—John Arrowsmith, 1602-1659.
Verse
7. Whither shall I flee from thy presence? That exile would
be strange that could separate us from God. I speak not of those poor and
common comforts, that in all lands and coasts it is his sun that shines, his
elements of earth or water that bear us, his air we breathe; but of that
special privilege, that his gracious presence is ever with us; that no sea is
so broad as to divide us from his favour; that wheresoever we feed, he is our
host; wheresoever we rest, the wings of his blessed providence are stretched
over us. Let my soul be sure of this, though the whole world be traitors to
me.—Thomas Adams.
Verse
7. Whither shall I flee? etc. Surely no whither: they that
attempt it, do but as the fish which swimmeth to the length of the line, with a
hook in the mouth.—John Trapp.
Verse
7. Thy presence. The presence of God's glory is in heaven;
the presence of his power on earth; the presence of his justice in hell; and
the presence of his grace with his people. If he deny us his powerful presence,
we fall into nothing; if he deny us his gracious presence, we fall into sin; if
he deny us his merciful presence, we fall into hell.—John Mason.
Verse
7. Thy presence. The celebrated Linnaeus testified in his
conversation, writings, and actions, the greatest sense of God's presence. So
strongly indeed was he impressed with the idea, that he wrote over the door of
his library: "Innocue vivite, Numen adest—Live innocently: God
is present."—George Seaton Bowes, in "Information and
Illustration, "1884.
Verses
7-11. You will never be neglected by the Deity, though you were so
small as to sink into the depths of the earth, or so lofty as to fly up to
heaven; but you will suffer from the gods the punishment due to you, whether
you abide here, or depart to Hades, or are carried to a place still more wild
than these.—Plato.
Verses
7-12. The Psalm was not written by a Pantheist. The Psalmist speaks of
God as a Person everywhere present in creation, yet distinct from creation. In
these verses he says, "Thy spirit...thy presence...thou
art there...thy hand...thy right hand...darkness hideth not from thee."
God is everywhere, but he is not everything.—William Jones, in "A
Homiletic Commentary on the Book of Psalms," 1879.
Verse
8. If I make my bed. Properly, "If I strew or spread my
couch." If I should seek that as a place to lie down.—Albert Barnes.
Verse
8. Hell in some places in Scripture signifies the lower parts
of the earth, without relation to punishment: If I ascend up into heaven,
thou art there; if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. By "heaven"
he means the upper region of the world, without any respect to the state of
blessedness; and "hell" is the most opposite and remote in
distance, without respect to misery. As if he had said, Let me go whither I
will, thy presence finds me out.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse
8. Thou art there. Or, more emphatically and impressively in
the original, "Thou!" That is, the Psalmist imagines himself
in the highest heaven, or in the deepest abodes of the dead,—and lo! God is
there also; he has not gone from him! he is still in the presence of the
same God!—Albert Barnes.
Verse
8. Thou art there. This is not meant of his knowledge, for
that the Psalmist had spoken of before: Ps 139:2-3, "Thou understandest my
thought afar off: thou art acquainted with all my ways." Besides,
"thou art there"; not thy wisdom or knowledge, but thou, thy
essence, not only thy virtue. For having before spoken of his omniscience, he
proves that such knowledge could not be in God unless he were present in his essence
in all places, so as to be excluded from none. He fills the depths of hell, the
extension of the earth, and the heights of the heavens. When the Scripture
mentions the power of God only, it expresses it by hand or arm; but when it
mentions the spirit of God, and doth not intend the third person of the
Trinity, it signifies the nature and essence of God; and so here, when he
saith, "Whither shall I go from thy spirit?" he adds
exegetically, "whither shall I flee from thy presence?" or
Hebrew, "face"; and the face of God in Scripture signifies the
essence of God: Ex 33:20,23, "Thou canst not see my face", and
"my face shall not be seen"; the effects of his power, wisdom,
providence, are seen, which are his back parts, but not his face. The effects
of his power and wisdom are seen in the world, but his essence is invisible,
and this the Psalmist elegantly expresses.—Stephen Charnook.
Verse
9. The wings of the morning, is an elegant metaphor; and by
them we may conjecture is meant the sunbeams, called "wings"
because of their swift and speedy motion, making their passage so sudden and
instantaneous, as that they do prevent the observation of the eye; called "the
wings of the morning" because the dawn of the morning comes flying in
upon these wings of the sun, and brings light along with it; and, by beating
and fanning of these wings, scatters the darkness before it. "Now",
saith the Psalmist, "if I could pluck these wings of the morning",
the sunbeams, if I could imp (graft) my own shoulders with them; if I should
fly as far and as swift as light, even in an instant, to the uttermost parts of
the sea; yea, if in my flight I could spy out some solitary rock, so formidable
and dismal as if we might almost call in question whether ever a Providence had
been there; if I could pitch there on the top of it, where never anything had
made its abode, but coldness, thunders, and tempests; yet there shall thy hand
lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me."—Ezekiel Hopkins.
Verse
9. The wings of the morning. This figure to a Western is not
a little obscure. For my part, I cannot doubt that we are to understand certain
beautiful light clouds as thus poetically described. I have observed
invariably, that in the late spring time, in summer, and yet more especially in
the autumn, white clouds are to be seen in Palestine. They only occur at the
earliest hours of morning, just previous to and at the time of sunrise. It is
the total absence of clouds at all other parts of the day, except during the
short period of the winter rains, that lends such striking solemnity and force
to those descriptions of the Second Advent where our Lord is represented as
coming in the clouds. This feature of his majesty loses all its meaning in
lands like ours, in which clouds are of such common occurrence that they are
rarely absent from the sky. The morning clouds of summer and autumn are always
of a brilliant silvery white, save at such times as they are dyed with the
delicate opal tints of dawn. They hang low upon the mountains of Judah, and produce
effects of undescribable beauty, as they float far down in the valleys, or rise
to wrap themselves around the summit of the hills. In almost every instance, by
about seven o'clock the heat has dissipated these fleecy clouds, and to the
vivid Eastern imagination morn has faded her outstretched wings.—James Neil.
Verse
9. If I take the wings of the morning. The point of
comparison appears to be the incalculable velocity of light.—Joseph Addison
Alexander.
Verses
9-10. When we think that we fly from God, in running out of one place
into another, we do but run from one hand to the other; for there is no place
where God is not, and whithersoever a rebellious sinner doth run, the hand of
God will meet with him to cross him, and hinder his hoped for good success,
although he securely prophesieth never so much good unto himself in his
journey. What! had Jonah offended the winds or the waters, that they bear him
such enmity? The winds and the waters and all God's creatures are wont to take
God's part against Jonah, or any rebellious sinner. For though God in the
beginning gave power to man over all creatures to rule them, yet when man sins,
God giveth power and strength to his creatures to rule and bridle man.
Therefore even he that now was lord over the waters, now the waters are lord
over him.—Henry Smith.
Verses
9-10.
Should
fate command me to the farthest verge
Of the green earth, to distant barbarous climes,
Rivers unknown to song; where first the sun
Gilds Indian mountains, or his setting beam
Flames on the Atlantic isles; 'tis nought to me:
Since GOD is ever present, ever felt,
In the void waste as in the city full;
And where he vital breathes, there must be joy,
When e'en at last the solemn hour shall come,
And wing my mystic flight to future worlds,
I cheerful will obey; there with new powers,
Will rising wonders sing: I cannot go
Where universal love smiles not around,
Sustaining all yon orbs, and all their sons:
From seeming evil still deducing good,
And better thence again, and better still,
In infinite progression.
—James
Thomson, 1700-1748.
Verse
11. If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me, etc. The
foulest enormities of human conduct have always striven to cover themselves
with the shroud of night. The thief, the counterfeiter, the assassin, the
robber, the murderer, and the seducer, feel comparatively safe in the midnight
darkness, because no human eye can scrutinize their actions. But what if it
should turn out that sable night, to speak paradoxically, is an unerring
photographer! What if wicked men, as they open their eyes from the sleep of
death, in another world, should find the universe hung round with faithful
pictures of their earthly enormities, which they had supposed for ever lost in
the oblivion of night! What scenes for them to gaze at for ever! They may now,
indeed, smile incredulously at such a suggestion; but the disclosures of
chemistry may well make them tremble. Analogy does make it a scientific
probability that every action of man, however deep the darkness in which it was
performed, has imprinted its image on nature, and that there may be tests which
shall draw it into daylight, and make it permanent so long as materialism
endures.—Edward Hitchcock, in "The Religion of Geology," 1851.
Verse
12. The darkness hideth not from thee. Though the place where
we sin be to men as dark as Egypt, yet to God it is as light as Goshen.—William
Secker.
Verse
13. Thou hast possessed my reins. From the sensitiveness to
pain of this part of the body, it was regarded by the Hebrews as the seat of
sensation and feeling, as also of desire and longing (Ps 72:21 Job 16:13
19:27). It is sometimes used of the inner nature generally (Ps 16:7 Jer 20:12),
and specially of the judgment or direction of reason (Jer 11:20 12:2).—William
Lindsay Alexander, in Kitto's Cyclopaedia.
Verse
13. Thou hast possessed my reins. The reins are made
specially prominent in order to mark them, the seat of the most tender, most
secret emotions, as the work of him who trieth the heart and the reins.—Franz
Delitzsch.
Verse
13. Thou hast covered me in my mother's womb. The word here
rendered cover means properly to interweave; to weave; to knit together,
and the literal translation would be, "Thou hast woven me in my mother's
womb", meaning that God had put his parts together, as one who weaves
cloth, or who makes a basket. So it is rendered by De Wette and by Gesenius (Lex.).
The original word has, however, also the idea of protecting, as in a booth or
hut, woven or knit together,—to wit, of boughs and branches. The former signification
best suits the connection; and then the sense would be, that as God had made
him—as he had formed his members, and united them in a bodily frame and form
before he was born—he must be able to understand all his thoughts and feelings.
As he was not concealed from God before he saw the light, so he could not be
anywhere.—Albert Barnes.
Verse
14. I will praise thee, etc. All God's works are admirable,
man wonderfully wonderful. "Marvellous are thy works; and that my soul
knoweth right well." What infers he on all this? Therefore "I will
praise thee." If we will not praise him that made us, will he not
repent that he made us? Oh that we knew what the saints do in heaven, and how
the sweetness of that doth swallow up all earthly pleasures! They sing honour
and glory to the Lord. Why? Because he hath created all things: Re 4:11. When
we behold an exquisite piece of work, we presently enquire after him that made
it, purposely to commend his skill: and there is no greater disgrace to an
artist, than having perfected a famous work, to find it neglected, no man
minding it, or so much as casting an eye upon it. All the works of God are
considerable, and man is bound to this contemplation. "When I consider the
heavens", etc., I say, "What is man?." Ps 8:3-4. He admires the
heavens, but his admiration reflects upon man. Quis homo? There is no
workman but would have his instruments used, and used to that purpose for which
they were made...Man is set like a little world in the midst of the great, to
glorify God; this is the scope and end of his creation.—Thomas Adams.
Verse
14. I am fearfully and wonderfully made. The term "fearful"
is sometimes to be taken subjectively, far our being possessed of fear. In this
sense it signifies the same as timid. Thus the prophet was directed to say to
them that were of a "fearful heart, be strong." At other times it is
taken objectively, for that property in an object the contemplation of which
excites fear in the beholder. Thus it is said of God that he is "fearful
in praises", and that it is a "fearful thing to fall into the hands
of the living God." In this sense it is manifestly to be understood in the
passage now under consideration. The human frame is so admirably constructed,
so delicately combined, and so much in danger of being dissolved by innumerable
causes, that the more we think of it the more we tremble, and wonder at our own
continued existence.
"How
poor, how rich, how abject, how august,
How complicate, how wonderful is man!
How passing wonder he who made him such,
Who mingled in our make such strange extremes
Of different natures, marvellously mixed!
Helpless immortal, insect infinite,
A worm, a god—I tremble at myself!"
To
do justice to the subject, it would be necessary to be well acquainted with
anatomy. I have no doubt that a thorough examination of that "substance
which God hath curiously wrought" (Ps 139:15), would furnish abundant
evidence of the justness of the Psalmist's words; but even those things which
are manifest to common observation may be sufficient for this purpose. In
general it is observable that the human frame abounds with avenues at which
enter every thing conducive to preservation and comfort, and every thing that
can excite alarm. Perhaps there is not one of these avenues but what may become
an inlet to death, nor one of the blessings of life but what may be the means
of accomplishing it. We live by inhalation, but we also die by it. Diseases and
death in innumerable forms are conveyed by the very air we breathe. God hath
given us a relish for divers aliments, and rendered them necessary to our
subsistence: yet, from the abuse of them, what a train of disorders and
premature deaths are found amongst men! And, when there is no abuse, a single
delicious morsel may, by the evil design of another, or even by mere accident,
convey poison through all our veins, and in one hour reduce the most athletic
form to a corpse.
The
elements of fire and water, without which we could not subsist, contain
properties which in a few moments would be able to destroy us; nor can the
utmost circumspection at all times preserve us from their destructive power. A
single stroke on the head may divest us of reason or of life. A wound or a
bruise of the spine may instantly deprive the lower extremities of all sensation.
If the vital parts be injured, so as to suspend the performance of their
mysterious functions, how soon is the constitution broken up! By means of the
circulation of the blood, how easily and suddenly are deadly substances
diffused throughout the frame! The putridity of a morbid subject has been
imparted to the very hand stretched out to save it. The poisoned arrow, the
envenomed fang, the hydrophobic saliva, derive from hence their fearful
efficacy. Even the pores of the skin, necessary as they are to life, may be the
means of death. Not only are poisonous substances hereby admitted, but, when
obstructed by surrounding damps, the noxious humours of the body, instead of
being emitted, are retained in the system, and become productive of numerous
diseases, always afflictive, and often fatal to life. Instead of wondering at
the number of premature deaths that are constantly witnessed, there is far
greater reason to wonder that there are no more, and that any of us survive to
seventy or eighty years of age.
"Our
life contains a thousand springs,
And dies if one be gone:
Strange that a harp of thousand strings
Should keep in tune so long."
Nor
is this all. If we are "fearfully made" as to our animal
frame, it will be found that we are much more so considered as moral and
accountable beings. In what relates to our animal nature, we are in most
instances constructed like other animals; but, in what relates to us as moral
agents, we stand distinguished from all the lower creation. We are made for
eternity. The present life is only the introductory part of our existence. It
is that, however, which stamps a character on all that follows. How fearful is
our situation! What innumerable influences is the mind exposed to from the
temptations which surround us! Not more dangerous to the body is the pestilence
that walketh in darkness than these are to the soul. Such is the construction
of our nature that the very word of life, if heard without regard becomes a
savour of death unto death. What consequences hang upon the small and
apparently trifling beginnings of evil! A wicked thought may issue in a wicked
purpose, this purpose in a wicked action, this action in a course of conduct,
this course may draw into its vortex millions of our fellow creatures, and
terminate in perdition, both to ourselves and them. The whole of this process
was exemplified in the case of Jeroboam, the son of Nebat. When placed over the
ten tribes, he first said in his heart, "If this people go up to
sacrifice at Jerusalem, their hearts will turn to Rehoboam; and thus shall the
kingdom return to the house of David." 1Ki 12:26-30. On this he took
counsel, and made the calves of Dan and Bethel. This engaged him in a course of
wickedness, from which no remonstrances could reclaim him. Nor was it confined
to himself; for he "made all Israel to sin." The issue was, not only
their destruction as a nation, but, to all appearance, the eternal ruin of
himself and great numbers of Iris followers. Such were the fruits of an evil
thought! Oh, my soul, tremble at thyself! Tremble at the fearfulness of thy
situation; and commit thine immortal all into his hands "who is able to
keep thee from falling, and to present thee faultless before the presence of
his glory with exceeding joy."—Andrew Fuller.
Verse
14. I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Never was so terse
and expressive a description of the physical conformation of man given by any
human being. So "fearfully" are we made, that there is not an
action or gesture of our bodies, which does not, apparently, endanger some
muscle, vein, or sinew, the rupture of which would destroy either life or
health. We are so "wonderfully" made, that our organization
infinitely surpasses, in skill, contrivance, design, and adaptation of means to
ends, the most curious and complicated piece of mechanism, not only ever
executed "by art and man's device", but ever conceived by human
imagination.—Richard Warner, 1828.
Verse
14. I am wonderfully made. Take notice of the curious frame of
the body. David saith, "I am wonderfully made"; acu pictus sum,
so the Vulgate rendereth it, "painted as with a needle", like a
garment of needlework, of divers colours, richly embroidered with nerves and
veins. What shall I speak of the eye, wherein there is such curious
workmanship, that many upon the first sight of it have been driven to
acknowledge God? Of the hand, made to open and shut, and to serve the labours
and ministries of nature without wasting and decay for many years? If they
should be of marble or iron, with such constant use they would soon wear out;
and yet now they are of flesh they last so long as life lasts. Of the head?
fitly placed to be the seat of the senses, to command and direct the rest of
the members. Of the lungs? a frail piece of flesh, yet, though in continual
action, of a long use. It were easy to enlarge upon this occasion; but I am to
preach a sermon, not to read an anatomy lecture. In short, therefore, every
part is so placed and framed, as if God had employed his whole wisdom about it.
But as yet we have spoken but of the casket wherein the jewel lieth. The soul,
that divine spark and blast, how quick, nimble, various, and indefatigable in
its motions! how comprehensive in its capacities! how it animates the body, and
is like God himself, all in every part! Who can trace the flights of reason?
What a value hath God set upon the soul! He made it after his image, he
redeemed it with Christ's blood.—Thomas Manton.
Verse
14. What is meant by saying that the soul is in the body, any
more than saying that a thought or a hope is in a stone or a tree? How
is it joined to the body? what keeps it one with the body? what keeps it in the
body? what prevents it any moment from separating from the body? When two
things which we see are united, they are united by some connection which we can
understand. A chain or cable keeps a ship in its place; we lay the foundation
of a building in the earth, and the building endures. But what is it which
unites soul and body how do they touch how do they keep together? how is it we
do not wander to the stars or the depths of the sea, or to and fro as chance
may carry us, while our body remains where it was on earth? So far from its
being wonderful that the body one day dies, how is it that it is made to live
and move at all? how is it that it keeps from dying a single hour? Certainly it
is as uncomprehensible as anything can be, how soul and body can make up one
man; and, unless we had the instance before our eyes, we should seem in saying
so to be using words without meaning. For instance, would it not be extravagant
and idle to speak of time as deep or high, or of space as quick or slow? Not
less idle, surely, it perhaps seems to some races of spirits to say that
thought and mind have a body, which in the case of man they have, according to
God's marvellous will.—John Henry Newman, in Parochial Sermons, 1839.
Verse
14. Moses describes the creation of man (Ge 2:7): "The Lord God
formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath
of life; and man became a living soul." Now what God did then immediately,
he doth still by means. Do not think that God made man at first, and that ever
since men have made one another. No (saith Job), "he that made me in the
womb made him": Job 31:15. David will inform us: "I am fearfully
and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works", etc. As if he had
said, Lord, I am wonderfully made, and thou hast made me. I am a part or parcel
of thy marvellous works, yea, the breviate or compendium of them all. The frame
of the body (much more the frame of the soul, most of all the frame of the new
creature in the soul) is God's work, and it is a wonderful work of God. And
therefore David could not satisfy himself in the bare affirmation of this, but
enlargeth in the explication of it in Ps 139:15-16. David took no notice of
father or mother but ascribed the whole efficiency of himself to God. And
indeed David was as much made by God as Adam; and so is every son of Adam.
Though we are begotten and born of our earthly parents, yet God is the chief
parent and the only fashioner of us all. Thus graciously spake Jacob to his
brother Esau, demanding, "Who are those with thee? And he said, The
children which God hath graciously given thy servant": Ge 33:5. Therefore,
as the Spirit of God warns, "Know ye that the Lord he is God: it is he
that hath made us, and not we ourselves" (Ps 100:3); which as it is true
especially of our spiritual making, so 'tis true also of our natural.—Joseph
Caryl.
Verse
14. Those who were skilful in Anatomy among the ancients, concluded,
from the outward and inward make of a human body, that it was the work of a
Being transcendently wise and powerful. As the world grew more enlightened in
this art, their discoveries gave them fresh opportunities of admiring the
conduct of Providence in the formation of a human body. Galen was converted by
his dissections, and could not but own a Supreme Being upon a survey of this
his handiwork. There are, indeed, many parts, of which the old anatomists did
not know the certain use; but as they saw that most of those which they
examined were adapted with admirable art to their several functions, they did
not question but those whose uses they could not determine, were contrived with
the same wisdom for respective ends and purposes. Since the circulation of the
blood has been found out, and many other great discoveries have been made by
our modern anatomists, we see new wonders in the human frame, and discern
several important uses for those parts, which uses the ancients knew nothing
of. In short, the body of man is such a subject as stands the utmost test of
examination. Though it appears formed with the nicest wisdom upon the most
superficial survey of it, it still mends upon the search, and produces our
surprise and amazement in proportion as we pry into it.—The Spectator.
Verses
14-16. The subject, from Ps 139:14 and Ps 139:16 inclusive, might have
been much more particularly illustrated; but we are taught, by the peculiar
delicacy of expression in the Sacred Writings, to avoid, as in this case, the
entering too minutely into anatomical details.—Adam Clarke.
Verse
15. My substance was not hid from thee, etc. What deeper
solitude, what state of concealment more complete, than that of the babe as yet
unborn Yet the Psalmist represents the Almighty as present even there. "My
substance was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously
wrought in the lowest parts of the earth." The whole image and train
of thought is one of striking beauty. We see the wonderful work of the human
body, with all its complex tissue of bones, and joints, and nerves, and veins,
and arteries growing up, and fashioned, as it had been a piece of rich and
curious embroidery under the hand of the manufacturer. But it is not the work
itself that we are now called on to admire. The contexture is indeed fearful
and wonderful; but how much more when we reflect that the divine Artificer
wrought within the dark and narrow confines of the womb. Surely the darkness is
no darkness with him who could thus work. Surely the blackest night, the
closest and most artificial recess, the most subtle disguises and hypocrisies
are all seen through, are all naked and bare before him whose "eyes did
see our substance yet being imperfect." The night is as clear as the
day; and secret sins are set in the light of his countenance, no less than
those which are open and scandalous, committed before the sun or on the house
top. And if "in his book all our members are written, which day by day
were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them", surely the actions of
these members, now that they are grown, or growing, to maturity, and called
upon to fulfil the functions for which they were created, shall be all noted
down; and none be contrived so secretly, but that when the books are opened at
the last day, it shall be found written therein to justify or to condemn us.
Such is the main lesson which David himself would teach us in this Psalm,—the omnipresence
and omniscience of Almighty God. My brethren, let us reflect for a
little upon this deep mystery; that he, "the High and Lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity" is about our path and about our bed, and spies out
all our ways; that go whither we will he is there; that say what we will, there
is not a word on our tongue but he knoweth it altogether. The reflection is,
indeed, mysterious, but it is also most profitable.—Charles Wordsworth, in
"Christian Boyhood," 1846.
Verse
15. My substance was not hid from thee. Should an artisan
intend commencing a work in some dark cave where there was no light to assist
him, how would he set his hand to it? in what way would he proceed? and what
kind of workmanship would it prove? But God makes the most perfect work of all
in the dark, for he fashions man in the mother's womb.—John Calvin.
Verse
15. When I was made in secret, etc. The author uses a metaphor
derived from the most subtle art of the Phrygian workman:
"When
I was formed in the secret place,
When I was wrought with a needle in the depths of the earth."
Whoever
observes this (in truth he will not be able to observe it in the common
translations), and at the same time reflects upon the wonderful mechanism of
the human body; the various implications of the veins, arteries, fibres, and
membranes; the "undescribable texture" of the whole fabric—may,
indeed, feel the beauty and gracefulness of this well adapted metaphor, but
will miss much of its force and sublimity, unless he be apprised that the art
of designing in needlework was wholly dedicated to the use of the sanctuary,
and, by a direct precept of the divine law, chiefly employed in furnishing a
part of the sacerdotal habit, and the vails for the entrance of the Tabernacle.
Ex 28:39 26:36 27:16. Thus the poet compares the wisdom of the divine Artificer
with the most estimable of human arts—that art which was dignified by being
consecrated altogether to the use of religion; and the workmanship of which was
so exquisite, that even the sacred writings seem to attribute it to a
supernatural guidance. See Ex 35:30-35.—Robert Lowth (1710-1787), in
"Lectures on the Sacred Poetry of the Hebrews."
Verse
15. Curiously wrought in the lowest part, of the earth, that
is, in the womb: as curious workmen, when they have some choice piece in hand,
they perfect it in private, and then bring it forth to light for men to gaze
at. What a wonderful piece of work is man's head (God's masterpiece in this
little world), the chief seat of the soul, that cura Divini ingenii, as
Favorinus calls it. Many locks and keys argue the value of the jewel that they
keep, and many papers wrapping the token within them, the price of the token.
The tables of the testament, first laid up in the ark, secondly, the ark bound
about with pure gold; thirdly, overshadowed with cherubim's wings; fourthly,
enclosed within the vail of the Tabernacle; fifthly, with the compass of the
Tabernacle; sixthly, with a court about all; seventhly, with a treble covering
of goats', rams', and badgers' skins above all; they must needs be precious
tables. So when the Almighty made man's head (the seat of the reasonable soul),
and overlaid it with hair, skin, and flesh, like the threefold covering of the
Tabernacle, and encompassed it with a skull and bones like boards of cedar, and
afterwards with divers skins like silken curtains; and lastly, enclosed it with
the yellow skin that covers the brain (like the purple veil), he would
doubtless have us to know it was made for some great treasure to be put
therein. How and when the reasonable soul is put into this curious cabinet
philosophers dispute many things, but can affirm nothing of certainty.—Abraham
Wright.
Verse
15. In the lowest parts of the earth. From this remarkable
expression, which, in the original, and as elsewhere used, denotes the region
of the dead—Sheol, or Hades—it would appear that it is not only
his formation in the womb the Psalmist here contemplates, but also—regarding
the region of the dead as the womb of resurrection life—the refashioning of the
body hereafter, and its new birth to the life immortal, which will be no less
"marvellous" a work, but rather more so, than the first fashioning of
man's "substance." Confirmed by the words of Ps 139:18—"When I
awake, I am still with thee"—the same language before employed to express
the resurrection hope, Ps 17:15; when there shall be purposes and "precious
counsels" with respect to his redeemed, in anticipation of which they may
repeat this Psalm with renewed feelings of wonder and admiration.—William De
Burgh.
Verse
15-16. The word substance represents different words in these
verses. In Ps 139:15 it is "my strength", or "my bones"; in
Ps 139:16 the word is usually rendered "embryo": but "clew"
(life a ball yet to be unwound) finds favour with great scholars. In the lowest
parts of the earth denotes no subterranean limbo or workshop; but is a poetical
parallel to "in secret." Which in continuance were fashioned is
wrong. The margin, though also wrong, indicates the right way: "my days
were determined before one of them was."—David M`laren, in "The
Book of Psalms in Metre," 1883.
Verse
16. Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect, etc.
From whence we may learn, first, not to be proud of what we are; all's the work
of God. How beautiful or comely, how wise or holy soever you are, 'tis not of
yourselves. What hath any man, either in naturals or supernaturals, which he
hath not received? Secondly, despise not what others are or have, though they
are not such exact pieces, though they have not such excellent endowments as
yourselves; yet they are what God hath made them. Thirdly, despise not what
yourselves are. Many are ashamed to be seen as God made them; few ale ashamed
to be seen what the devil hath made them. Many are troubled at small defects in
the outward man; few are troubled at the greatest deformities of the inward
man: many buy artificial beauty to supply the natural; few spiritual, to supply
the defects of the supernatural beauty of the soul.—Abraham Wright.
Verse
16. My substance yet being unperfect. One word in the
original, which means strictly anything rolled together as a ball, and
hence is generally supposed to mean here the foetus or embryo. Hupfeld,
however, prefers to understand it of the ball of life, as consisting of a
number of different threads ("the days" of Ps 139:16—see margin)
which are first a compact mass as it were, and which are then unwound as life
runs on.—J.J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
16. A skilful architect before he builds draws a model, or gives a
draught of the building in his book, or upon a table; there he will show you
every room and contrivance: in his book are all the parts of the building
written, while as yet there are none of them, or before any of them are framed
and set up. In allusion to architects and other artisans, David speaks of God, In
thy book all my members were written; that is, Thou hast made me as exactly
as if thou hadst drawn my several members and my whole proportion with a pen or
pencil in a book, before thou wouldst adventure to form me up. The Lord uses no
book, no pen to decipher his work. He had the perfect idea of all things in
himself from everlasting; but he may well be said to work as by pattern, whose
work is the most perfect pattern.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse
17. How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, etc. So far
from thinking it a hardship to be subject to this scrutiny, he counts it a most
valuable privilege. However others may regard this truth, "to me",
my judgment and my feelings, "how costly" valuable "are
thy thoughts", i.e. thy perpetual attention to me.—Joseph Addison
Alexander.
Verse
17. How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! How
cold and poor are our warmest thoughts towards God! How unspeakably
loving and gloriously rich are his thoughts towards us! Compare Eph
1:18: "The riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints."—A.R.
Fausset.
Verse
17. How precious...how great is the sum of them? Our comforts
vie with the number of our sorrows, and win the game. The mercies of God passed
over in a gross sum breed no admiration; but cast up the particulars, and then
arithmetic is too dull an art to number them. As many dusts as a man's hands
can hold, is but his handful of so many dusts; but tell them one by one, and
they exceed all numeration. It was but a crown which king Solomon wore; but
weigh the gold, tell the precious stones, value the richness of them, and what
was it then?—Thomas Adams.
Verses
17-18. Behold David's love to God; sleeping and waking his mind runs
upon him. There needs no arguments to bring those to our remembrance whom we
love. We neglect ourselves to think upon them. A man in love wastes his
spirits, vexes his mind, neglects his meat, regards not his business, his mind
still feels on that he loves. When men love that they should not, there is more
need of a bridle to keep them from thinking of it, than of spurs to keep them
to it. Try thy love of God by this. If thou thinkest not often of God, thou
lovest him not. If thou canst not satisfy thyself with profits, pleasures,
friends, and other worldly objects, but thou must turn other businesses aside,
that thou mayest daily think of God, then thou lovest him.—Francis Taylor,
in "God's Glory in Man's Happiness," 1654.
Verses
17-18. Mercies are either ordinary or extraordinary—our common
necessaries, or the remarkable supplies which we receive now and then at the
hand of God. Thou must not only praise him for some extraordinary mercy, that
comes with such pomp and observation that all thy neighbours take notice of it
with thee, as the mercy which Zacharias and Elizabeth had in their son, that
was noised about all the country (Lu 1:65); but also for ordinary every day
mercies: for first, we are unworthy of the least mercy (Ge 32:10), and
therefore God is worthy of praise for the least, because it is more than he
owes us. Secondly, these common, ordinary mercies are many. Thus David enhances
the mercies of this kind,—O God, how great is the sum of them. "If
I should count them, they are more in number than the sand; when I wake I am
still with thee." As if he had said, There is not a point of time wherein
thou art not doing me good; as soon as I open my eyes in the morning I have a
new theme, in some fresh mercies given since I closed them over night, to
employ my meditations that are full of praise. Many little items make together
a great sum. What is lighter than a grain of sand, yet what is heavier than the
sand upon the seashore? As little sins (such as vain thoughts and idle words),
because of their multitude, arise to a great guilt, and will bring in a long
bill, a heavy reckoning at last; so, ordinary mercies, what they want in their
size of some other great mercies, have compensated it in their number. Who will
not say that a man shows greater kindness in maintaining one at his table with
ordinary fare all the year than in entertaining him at a great feast twice or
thrice in the same time?—William Gurnall.
Verse
18. They are more in number than the sand. Pindar says, that
sand flies number (Olymp. Ode 2). The Pythian oracle indeed boastingly
said, I know the number of the sand, and the measure of the sea (Herodot.
Clio. l. i. c. 47). It is to this that Lucan may refer when he says,
measure is not wanting to the ocean, or number to the sand (Pharsal. l.
5, v. 182).—Samuel Burder.
Verse
18. If I should count them, they are more in number than the sand.
If
all his glorious deeds my song would tell,
The shore's unnumbered stones I might recount as well.
—Pindar, B.C. 518-442.
Verse
18. When I awake, I am still with thee. It is the great
advantage of a Christian, which he has above other men, that he has his friends
always about him, and (if the fault be not his own) need never to be absent
from them. In the friendship and converse of the world, we use to say,
"Friends must part", and those who have delight and satisfaction in
one another's society must be content to leave it, and to be taken off from it.
But this is the privilege of a believer that undertakes communion with God,
that it is possible for him always to be with him. Again, in human converse and
society we know it is ordinary for friends to dream that they are in company
with one another; but when they awake they are a great way off. But a Christian
that converses with God, and has his thoughts fastened upon him, when he awakes
he is still with him, which is that which is here exhibited to us in the
example of the prophet David. A godly soul should fall asleep in God's arms,
like a child in the mother's lap; it should be sung and lulled to sleep with
"songs of the night." And this will make him the fitter for converse
with God the next day after. This is the happiness of a Christian that is careful
to lie down with God, that he finds his work still as he left it, and is in the
same disposition when he rises as he was at night when he lay down to rest. As
a man that winds up his watch over night, he finds it going the next morning;
so is it also, as I may say, with a Christian that winds up his heart. This is
a good observation to be remembered, especially in the evening afore the
Sabbath.—Thomas Horton, —1673.
Verse
18. When I awake, I am still with thee. It is no small
advantage to the holy life to "begin the day with God." The saints
are wont to leave their hearts with him over night, that they may find them
with him in the morning. Before earthly things break in upon us, and we receive
impressions from abroad, it is good to season the heart with thoughts of God,
and to consecrate the early and virgin operations of the mind before they are
prostituted to baser objects. When the world gets the start of religion in the
morning, it can hardly overtake it all the day; and so the heart is habituated
to vanity all the day long. But when we begin with God, we take him along with
us to all the business and comforts of the day; which, being seasoned with his
love and fear, are the more sweet and savoury to us.—Thomas Case
(1598-1682), in the Epistle Dedicatory to "The Morning Exercise."
Verse
18. When I awake. Accustom yourself to a serious meditation
every morning. Fresh airing our souls in heaven will engender in us a purer
spirit and nobler thoughts. A morning seasoning will secure us for all the day.
Though other necessary thoughts about our calling will and must come in, yet
when we have dispatched them, let us attend to our morning theme as our chief
companion. As a man that is going with another about some considerable
business, suppose to Westminster, though he meets with several friends on the
way, and salutes some, and with others with whom he has some affairs he spends
some little time, yet he quickly returns to his companion, and both together go
to their intended stage. Do thus in the present case. Our minds are active and
will be doing something, though to little purpose; and if they be not fixed
upon some noble object, they will, like madmen and fools, be mightily pleased
in playing with straws. The thoughts of God were the first visitors David had
in the morning. God and his heart met together as soon as he was awake, and
kept company all the day after.—Stephen Charnock.
Verse
19. Depart from me therefore, ye bloody men. The expression, "bloody
men", or "men of blood", includes not only homicides,
who shed human blood, but all other wicked and evil doers, who injure, or seek
to injure others, or who slay their own souls by sin, or the souls of others by
scandal; all of whom may be truly called homicides; for hatred may be called
the mainspring of homicide, and thus St. John says, "Whoso hateth his
brother is a homicide."—Robert Bellarmine.
Verse
19. Therefore. When we have a controversy with the wicked we
should take heed that private spleen do not rule us, but that only our interest
in God's quarrel with them doth move us, as the Psalmist doth here.—David
Dickson.
Verse
20. Thine enemies take thy name in vain. In every action three
things are considerable,—the end, the agent, the work.
These three duly weighed, we shall soon see what it is to take God's name in
vain.
1.
That which hath no end proposed or is done to no end, may truly be said to be
done in vain. As the sowing of seed without reaping the fruit, the planting a
vineyard without a vintage, or feeding a flock without eating the milk of it.
These are labours in vain. So he that taketh the name of God to no end, neither
to God's glory, nor the private or public good, taketh it in vain. Cui bono?
is a question in all undertakings. If to no good, as good and better not
undertaken at all; it is to no end, it is in vain. If a man have well fashioned
legs, and they be lame, frustra pulchras habet tibia claudus, the lame
man hath them in vain. The chief end, therefore, in taking this name must be,
a)
The glory of God, otherwise we open our mouths in vain, as it is in Job. God is
willing to impart all his blessings to us, and requires nothing of as again but
glory, which if we return not, he may say, as David did of Nabal, for whom he
had done many good turns, in securing his shepherds and flocks, etc.; and when
he desired nothing but a little meat for the young men he denied it: All that I
have done for this fellow is in vain; in vain have I kept all he hath. So, God
having done so much for us, and expecting nothing but the glory of his name, if
we be defective herein, he may well say all that he hath done for us is in
vain.
b)
Next to God's glory is the good of ourselves and others; and so to take God's
name without reference to this end, if we neither promote our own good nor the
good of others, it is in vain, ex privatione finis, because it wants a
right end; therefore Saint Paul rejoiced, having by his preaching laboured for
the saving of souls,
c)
rejoice, saith he, that I have not run in vain, neither laboured in vain.
2.
In the agent the heart and soul is to be considered, which in the person
acting is the chief mover. If the soul be Rachah, vain and light, as
when we take God's name without due advice and reverence, though we propound a
right end, yet we take his name in vain. Therefore the wise man advises
"not to be rash with our mouth" (Ec 5:2); and the Psalmist professes
that his heart was fixed when he praised God (Ps 57:7): the heart ought to be
fixed and stablished by a due consideration of God's greatness when we speak of
him. This is opposed to rashness, inconstancy, and lightness, such as are in
chaff and smoke, which are apt to be carried away with every blast, and such as
are so qualified do take God's name in vain.
3.
In the work itself may be a twofold vanity, which must be avoided. Firstly,
Falsehood. Secondly, Injustice.
a)
If it be false, then is it also vain, as theirs in Isa 28:15: "We
have made a covenant with death, and with hell are we at agreement; when the
overflowing scourge shall pass through, it shall not come unto us: for we have
made lies our refuge, and under falsehood have we hid ourselves." And this
is that actio erroris, work of error, of which Jeremiah speaketh. Vanitas
opponitur veritati, vanity is opposed to verity and truth; therefore a
thing is said to be vain when it is false or erroneous. "They are vanity,
the work of errors", saith the prophet (Jer 10:15); and as there is truth
in natural things, so is there a truth in moral things, which if it be wanting,
our speech is vain.
b)
If unjust it is vain too. "If I be wicked, why then labour I in
vain?" saith holy Job 9:29; and, "The very hope of unjust men
perisheth", saith the wise man (Pr 11:7); and, "They walk in a vain
shadow, and disquiet themselves in vain" (Ps 39:6). If justice be wanting
in our actions, or truth in our assertions and promises, they are vain; and to
use God's name in either is to take his name in vain. So that if either we take
the name of God to no end, but make it common, and take it up as a custom till
it come to a habit, not for any good end; or if our hearts be not stable or
fixed, but light and inconstant when we take it; or if we take it to colour or
bolster up any falsehood or any unjust act, we take it in vain, and break the
commandment.—Lancelot Andrews.
Verse
21. Do not I hate them, O Lord, that hate thee? The simple
future in the first clause comprehends several distinct shades of meaning. Do I
not, may I not, must I not, hate those hating thee? Hate them, not as man
hates, but as God hates.—Joseph Addison Alexander.
Verse
21. Do not I hate them, O LORD, that hate thee? Can he who
thinks good faith the holiest thing in life, avoid being an enemy to that man
who, as quaestor, dared to despoil, desert, and betray? Can he who wishes to
pay due honours to the immortal gods, by any means avoid being an enemy to that
man who has plundered all their temples?—Cicero.
Verse
21. And am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee?
The expression here—"grieved"—explains the meaning of the word
"hate" in the former member of the verse. It is not that
hatred which is followed by malignity or ill will; it is that which is
accompanied with grief, pain of heart, pity, sorrow. So the Saviour looked on
men: Mr 3:5:—"And when he had looked round about on them with anger,
being grieved for the hardness of their hearts." The Hebrew word
used here, however, contains also the idea of being disgusted with; of
loathing; of nauseating. The feeling referred to is anger—conscious disgust—at
such conduct; grief, pain, sorrow, that men should evince such feelings towards
their Maker.—Albert Barnes.
Verse
21. Am not I grieved? etc. Acted upon by mingled feelings of
sorrow for them, and loathing at their evil practices. Thus our Lord
"looked round about on them with anger, being grieved for
the hardness of their hearts": Mr 3:5.—French and Skinner.
Verse
21. It is said that Adam Smith disliked nothing more than that moral
apathy—that obtuseness of moral perception—which prevents man from not only
seeing clearly, but feeling strongly, the broad distinction between virtue and
vice, and which, under the pretext of liberality, is all indulgent even to the
blackest crimes. At a party at Dalkeith Palace, where Mr.——, in his mawkish
way, was finding palliations for some villainous transactions, the doctor
waited in patient silence until he was gone, then exclaimed: "Now I can
breathe more freely. I cannot bear that man; he has no indignation in
him."
Verses
21-22. A faithful servant hath the same interests, the same friends, the
same enemies, with his master, whose cause and honour he is, upon all
occasions, in duty bound to support and maintain. A good man hates, as God
himself doth; he hates not the persons of men, but their sins; not what God
made them, but what they have made themselves. We are neither to hate the men,
on account of the vices they practise; nor to love the vices, for the sake of
the men who practise them. He who observeth invariably this distinction,
fulfils the perfect law of charity, and hath the love of God and of his
neighbour abiding in him.—George Horne.
Verses
21-22. First, we must hate the company and society of manifest and
obstinate sinners, who will not be reclaimed. Secondly, all their sins, not
communicating with any man in his sin, we must have no fellowship (as with the
workers so) with the unfruitful works of darkness. Thirdly, all occasions and
inducements unto these sins. Fourthly, all appearances of wickedness (1Th
5:22), that is, which men in common judgment account evil; and all this must
proceed from a good ground, even from a good heart hating sin perfectly, that
is all sin, as David, "I hate them with perfect hatred", and
not as some, who can hate some sin, but cleave to some other: as many can hate
pride, but love covetousness or some other darling sin: but we must attain to
the hatred of all, before we can come to the practice of this precept (Jude
1:23); besides that, all sins are hateful even in themselves.—William
Perkins, 1558-1602.
Verse
21, 24. The temper of mourning for public sins, for the sins of others,
is the greatest note of sincerity. When all other signs of righteousness may
have their exceptions, this temper is the utmost term, which we cannot go
beyond in our self examination. The utmost prospect David had of his sincerity,
when he was upon a diligent enquiry after it, was his anger and grief for the
sin of others. When he had reached so far, he was at a stand, and knew not what
more to add "Am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee? I hate
them with perfect hatred: I count them mine enemies. Search me, O God, and know
my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked way in
me." If there be anything that better can evidence my sincerity than this,
Lord, acquaint me with it; "know my heart", i.e., make me to
know it. He whose sorrow is only for matter confined within his own breast, or
streams with it in his life, has reason many times to question the truth of it;
but when a man cannot behold sin as sin in another without sensible regret, it
is a sign he hath savingly felt the bitterness of it in his own soul. It is a
high pitch and growth, and a consent between the Spirit of God and the soul of
a Christian, when he can lament those sins in others whereby the Spirit is
grieved; when he can rejoice with the Spirit rejoicing, and mourn with the
Spirit mourning. This is a clear testimony that we have not self ends in the
service of God; that we take not up religion to serve a turn; that God is our
aim, and Christ our beloved.—Stephen Charnock.
Verse
22. I hate them with perfect hatred. What is "with a
perfect hatred"? I hated in them their iniquities, I loved thy
creation. This it is to hate with a perfect hatred, that neither on account of
the vices thou hate the men, nor on account of the men love the vices. For see
what he addeth, "They became my enemies." Not only as God's
enemies, but as his own too doth he now describe them. How then will he fulfil
in them both his own saying, "Have not I hated those that hated thee,
Lord", and the Lord's command, "Love your enemies"?
How will he fulfil this, save with that perfect hatred, that he hate in them
that they are wicked, and love that they are men? For in the time even of the
Old Testament, when the carnal people was restrained by visible punishments,
how did Moses, the servant of God, who by understanding belonged to the New
Testament, how did he hate sinners when he prayed for them, or how did he not
hate them when he slew them, save that he "hated them with a perfect
hatred"? For with such perfection did he hate the iniquity which he punished,
as to love the manhood for which he prayed.—Augustine.
Verse
23. Try me. True faith is precious; it is like gold, it will
endure a trial. Presumption is but a counterfeit, and cannot abide to be tried:
1Pe 1:7. A true believer fears no trial. He is willing to be tried by God. He
is willing to have his faith tried by others, he shuns not the touchstone. He
is much in testing himself. He would not take anything upon trust, especially
that which is of such moment. He is willing to hear the worst as well as the
best. That preaching pleases him best which is most searching and
distinguishing: Heb 4:12. He is loath to be deluded with vain hopes. He would
not be flattered into a false conceit of his spiritual state. When trials are
offered, he complies with the apostle's advice, 2Co 13:5.—David Clarkson.
Verse
23. What fearful dilemma have we here? The Holiest changeth not, when
he comes a visitant to a human heart. He is the same there that he is in the
highest heaven. He cannot look upon sin; and how can a human heart welcome him
into its secret chambers? How can the blazing fire welcome the quenching water?
It is easy to commit to memory the seemly prayer of an ancient penitent, Search
me, O God, and know my heart; try me, and know my thoughts. The dead
letters, worn smooth by frequent use, may drop freely from callous lips,
leaving no sense of scalding on the conscience; and yet, truth of God though
they are, they may be turned into a lie in the act of utterance. The prayer is
not true, although it is borrowed from the Bible, if the suppliant invite the
All seeing in, and yet would give a thousand worlds, if he had them, to keep
him out for ever.
Christ
has declared the difficulty, and solved it: "I am the way, the truth, and
the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me." When the Son has made
the sinner free, he is free indeed. The dear child, pardoned and reconciled,
loves and longs for the Father's presence. What! is there neither spot nor
wrinkle now upon the man, that he dares to challenge inspection by the
Omniscient, and to offer his heart as Jehovah's dwelling place? He is not yet
so pure; and well he knows it. The groan is bursting yet from his broken heart:
"O wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?" Many stains defile him yet; but he loathes them now, and longs to
be free. The difference between an unconverted and a converted man is not that
the one has sins, and the other has none; but that the one takes part with his
cherished sins against a dreaded God, and the other takes part with a
reconciled God against his hated sins. He is out with his former friends, and
in with his former adversary. Conversion is a turning, and it is one turning
only; but it produces simultaneously and necessarily two distinct effects.
Whereas his face was formerly turned away from God, and toward his own sins; it
is now turned away from his own sins, and toward God. This one turning, with
its twofold result, is in Christ the Mediator, and through the work of the
Spirit. As long as God is my enemy, I am his. I have no more power to change
that condition than the polished surface has to refrain from reflecting the
sunshine that falls upon it. It is God's love, from the face of Jesus shining
into my dark heart, that makes my heart open to him, and delight to be his
dwelling place. The eyes of the just Avenger I cannot endure to be in this
place of sin; but the eye of the compassionate Physician I shall gladly admit
into this place of disease; for he comes from heaven to earth that he may heal
such sin sick souls as mine. When a disciple desires to be searched by the
living God, he does not thereby intimate that there are no sins in him to be
discovered: he intimates rather that his foes are so many and so lively, that
nothing can subdue them except the presence and power of God.—William Arnot
(—1875), in "Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth."
Verses
23-24. There are several things worthy of notice in the Psalmist's
appeal, in the words before us.
First,
notice the Psalmist's intrepidity. Here is a man determined to explore
the recesses of his own heart. Did Bonaparte, did Nelson, did Wellington, ever
propose to do this? Were all the renowned heroes of antiquity present, I would
ask them all if they ever had courage to enter into their own hearts. David was
a man of courage. When he slew a lion in the way, when he successfully
encountered a bear, when he went out to meet the giant Goliath, he gave
undoubted proofs of courage; but never did he display such signal intrepidity
as when he determined to look into his own heart. If you stood upon some
eminence, and saw all the ravenous and venomous creatures that ever lived
collected before you, it would not require such courage to combat them as to
combat with your own heart. Every sin is a devil, and each may say, "My
name is Legion, for we are many." Who knows what it is to face himself?
And yet, if we would be saved, this must be done.
Secondly,
notice the Psalmist's integrity. He wished to know all his sins, that he
might be delivered from them. As every individual must know his sins at some
period, a wise man will seek to know them here, because the present is the only
time in which to glorify God, by confessing, by renouncing, by overcoming them.
One of the attributes of sin is to hide man from himself, to conceal his
deformity, to prevent him from forming a just conception of his true condition.
It is a solemn fact, that there is not an evil principle in the bosom of the
devil himself which does not exist in ours, at the present moment, unless we
are fully renewed by the power of the Holy Spirit. That these evil principles
do not continually develop themselves, in all their hideous deformity, is
entirely owing to the restraining and forbearing mercy of God.
Thirdly,
notice the Psalmist's wisdom. He presents his prayer to God himself. God
is the only Being in the universe that knows himself—that peruses himself in
his own light. In the same light he sees all other beings; and hence it follows
that, if other beings see themselves truly, it must be in the light of God. If
the sun were an intelligent being, I would ask him, "How do you see
yourself? In your own light?" And he would reply, "Yes."
"And how do you see the planets that are continually revolving around you?"
"In my own light also, for all the light that is in them is borrowed from
me."
You
will observe that the Psalmist begins with his principles: his desire is to
have these tried by a competent judge, and to have every thing that is evil
removed from them. This is an evidence of his wisdom. The heart and its
thoughts must be made right, before the actions of the life can be set right.
Those who are most eminent for piety are most conversant with God; and, for
this reason, they become most conversant with themselves. David says, elsewhere,
"Who can understand his errors? Cleanse THOU me from secret
faults." And Job says, "If I wash myself with snow water, and make me
never so clean, yet shalt THOU plunge me in the ditch, and mine own clothes
shall abhor me." When these holy men perused themselves in God's light,
they saw their sins of omission and commission, and prayed earnestly to be
delivered from all.—William Howels, 1832.
Verses
23-24. The text is a prayer, and it indicates, as we think, three great
facts in regard to the suppliant: the first, that David thoroughly wished to
become acquainted with himself; the second, that he felt conscious that God
could see through all disguises; and the third, that he desired to discover, in
order that by Divine help he might correct, whatsoever was wrong in his
conduct. Now, the first inference which we draw from the text, when considered
as indicating the feelings of the petitioner is, that he was thoroughly honest,
that it was really his wish to become acquainted with his own heart. And is there,
you may say, anything rare or remarkable in this? Indeed we think there is. It
would need, we believe, a very high degree of piety to be able to put up with
sincerity the prayers of our text. For, will you tell me that it does not often
happen, that even whilst men are carrying on a process of self examination,
there is a secret wish to remain ignorant of certain points, a desire not to be
proved wrong when interest and inclination combine in demanding an opposite
verdict? ...In searching into yourselves, you know where the tender points are,
and those points you will be apt to avoid, so as not to put yourselves to pain,
nor make it evident how much you need the caustic and the knife. Indeed, we may
be sure that we state nothing but what experience will prove, when we declare
it a high attainment in religion to be ready to know how bad we are...And this
had evidently been reached by the Psalmist, for he pleads very earnestly with
God that he would leave no recess of his spirit unexplored, that he would bring
the heart and all its thoughts, the life and all its ways, under a most
searching examination, so that no form and no degree of evil might fail to be
detected.—Henry Melvill.
Verses
23-24. Self examination is not the simple thing which, at first sight,
it might appear. No Christian who has ever really practised it has found it
easy. Is there any exercise of the soul which any one of us has found so
unsatisfactory, so almost impossible, as self examination? The fact is this,
that the heart is so exceedingly complicated and intricate, and it is so very
near the eye which has to investigate it, and both it and the eye are so
restless and so shifting, that its deep anatomy baffles our research. Just a
few things, here and there, broad and open, and floating upon the surface, a
man discovers; but there are chambers receding within chambers, in that deepest
of all deep things, a sinner's heart, which no mere human investigation ever
will reach, ...it is the prerogative of God alone to "search"
the human heart. To the child of God—the most intimate with himself in all the
earth—I do not hesitate to say—"There are sins latent at this moment in
you, of which you have no idea; but it only requires a larger measure of
spiritual illumination to impress and unfold them. You have no idea of the
wickedness that is now in you." But while I say this, let every Christian
count well the cost before he ventures on the bold act of asking God to
"search" him. For be sure of this, if you do really and earnestly ask
God to "search" you, he will do it. And he will search you
most searchingly; and if you ask him to "try" you, he will try
you,—and the trial will be no light matter!
I
am persuaded that we often little calculate what we are doing—what we are
asking God to do—when we implore him to give us some spiritual attainment, some
growth in grace, some increase in holiness, or peace. To all these things there
is a condition, and that condition lies in a discipline, and that discipline is
generally proportionate to the strength and the measure of the gift that we
ask. I do not know what may have been the state of the Psalmist at the period
when he wrote this Psalm; but I should think either one of Saul's most cruel
persecutions, or the rebellion of his son Absalom, followed quick upon the
traces of that prayer, Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know
my thoughts, etc. Still, whatever his attainment, every child of God will
desire, at any sacrifice, to know his own exact state before God; for, as he
desires in all things to have a mind conformed to the mind of God, so he is
especially jealous lest he should, by any means, be taking a different view, or
estimate, of his own soul from that which God sees it.—Condensed from James
Vaughan.
Verses
23-24. Hypocrisy at the fashionable end of the town is very different
from hypocrisy in the city. The modish hypocrite endeavours to appear more
vicious than he really is, the other kind of hypocrite more virtuous. The
former is afraid of everything that has the show of religion in it, and would
be thought engaged in many criminal gallantries and amours which he is not
guilty of. The latter assumes a face of sanctity, and covers a multitude of
vices under a seeming religious deportment. But there is another kind of
hypocrisy, which differs from both of these: I mean that hypocrisy by which a
man does not only deceive the world, but very often imposes on himself; that
hypocrisy which conceals his own heart from him, and makes him believe he is
more virtuous than he really is, and either not attend to his vices, or mistake
even his vices for virtues. It is this fatal hypocrisy and self deceit which is
taken notice of in those words, "Who can understand his errors? cleanse
thou me from secret faults."
These
two kinds of hypocrisy, namely, that of deceiving the world, and that of
imposing on ourselves, are touched with wonderful beauty in the hundred and
thirty-ninth Psalm. The folly of the first kind of hypocrisy is there set forth
by reflections on God's omniscience and omnipresence, which are celebrated in
as noble strains of poetry as any other I ever met with, either sacred or
profane. The other kind of hypocrisy, whereby a man deceives himself, is
intimated in the two last verses, where the Psalmist addresses himself to the
great Searcher of hearts in that emphatic petition; "Try me, O God, and
seek the ground of my heart: prove me, and examine my thoughts. Look well if
there be any way of wickedness in me, and lead me in the way
everlasting."—Joseph Addison (1672-1719), in "The Spectator."
Verses
23-24. How beautiful is the humility of David! He cannot speak of the
wicked but in terms of righteous indignation; he cannot but hate the haters of
his God; yet, he seems immediately to recollect, and to check himself—"Try
me, O Lord, and seek the ground of my heart." Precisely in
the same spirit of inward humility and self recollection, Abraham, when
pleading before God in prayer for guilty depraved Sodom, fails not to speak of himself,
as being dust and ashes: Ge 18:27.—James Ford, 1871.
Verses
23-24. Why did David pray thus to God, Search me, O God, and know my
heart, having said before, in the first verse, "Thou hast searched
me, and known me"? Seeing David knew that God had searched him, what
needed he to pray that God would search him? why did he beg God to do that
which he had done already? The answer is at hand. David was a diligent self
searcher, and therefore he was so willing to be searched, yea, he delighted to
be searched by God; and that not (as was said) because himself had done it
already, but also because he knew God could do it better. He knew by his own
search that he did not live in any way of wickedness against his knowledge, and
yet he knew there might be some way of wickedness in him that he knew not of.
And therefore he doth not only say, "Search me, O God, and know my
thoughts"; but he adds, "See if there be any wicked way
(or any way of pain and grief) in me"; (the same word signifies
both, because wicked ways lead in the end to pain and grief); "and lead
me in the way everlasting." As if he had said, Lord, I have searched
myself, and can see no wicked way in me; but, Lord, thy sight is infinitely
clearer than mine, and if thou wilt but search me thou mayest see some wicked
way in me which I could not see, and I would fain see and know the worst of
myself, that I might amend and grow better; therefore, Lord, if there be any
such way in me, cause me to know it also. O take that way out of me, and take
me out of that way; "lead me in the way everlasting." David
had tried himself, and he would again be tried by God, that he, being better
tried, might become yet better. He found himself gold upon his own trial and
yet he feared there might be some dross in him that he had not found; and now
he would be retried that he might come forth purest gold. Pure gold fears
neither the furnace nor the fire, neither the test nor the touchstone; nor is
weighty gold afraid of the balance. He that is weight will be weight, how often
soever he is weighed; he that is gold will be gold, how often soever he is
tried, and the oftener he is tried the purer gold he will be; what he is he
will be, and he would be better than he is.—Joseph Caryl.
Verse
24. See if there be any wicked way in me. This is a beautiful
and impressive prayer for the commencement of every day. It is, also, a
great sentiment to admonish us at the beginning of each day. There is
the way of unbelief within, to which we are very prone. There is the way
of vanity and pride, to which we often accustom ourselves. There is the
way of selfishness in which we frequently walk. There is the way of worldliness
we often pursue—empty pleasures, shadowy honours, etc. There is the way of sluggishness.
What apathy in prayer, in the examination and application of God's Word, we
manifest! There is the way of self dependence, by which we often
dishonour God and injure ourselves. There is, unhappily, the way of disobedience,
in which we often walk. At any rate, our obedience is cold, reluctant,
uncertain—not simple, entire, fervent. How necessary is it, then, to go to God
at once, and earnestly to prefer the petition, "Lord, see if there be
any wicked way in me." Let nothing that is wrong, that is opposed to
thy character, repugnant to thy word, or injurious and debasing to ourselves,
remain, or be harboured within us.—Condensed from T. Wallace, in
"Homiletic Commentary."
Verse
24. See if there be any wicked way in me. To what a holiness
must David have attained ere he could need, if we may so speak, Divine
scrutiny, in order to his being informed of errors and defects! Is there one of
us who can say that he has corrected his conduct up to the measure of his
knowledge, and that now he must wait the being better informed before he can do
more towards improving his life? I do not know how to define a higher point in
religious attainment than supposing a man warranted in offering up the prayer
of our text. I call upon you to be cautious in using this prayer. It is easy to
mock God, by asking him to search you whilst you have made but little effort to
search yourselves, and perhaps still less to act upon the result of the
scrutiny.—Henry Melvill.
Verse
24. See if there be any wicked way in me, etc.—
Think
and be careful what thou art within,
For there is sin in the desire of sin:
Think and be thankful, in a different case,
For there is grace in the desire of grace.
—John Byron, 1691-1763.
Verse
24. The way everlasting. Way of eternity, or of antiquity,
the old way, as Jer 6:16; meaning the way of faith and godliness, which God
taught from the beginning, and which continueth for ever; contrary to "the
way of the wicked", which perisheth: Ps 1:6.—Henry Ainsworth.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verses
1, 23. A matter of fact made a matter of prayer.
Verse
1.
1.
A cheering thought for sinners. If God knew them not perfectly, how could he
have prepared a perfect salvation for them?
2.
A comfortable truth for saints. "Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have
need of all these things."—G.R.
Verses
1-5. In these verses we have God's Omniscience,
1.
Described.
a)
As observing minute and comparatively unimportant actions: "My downsitting
and uprising."
b)
As taking note of our thoughts and the motives behind them: "Understandest
my thought."
c)
As investigating all our ways: "Thou compassest", etc.; better rendered,
"Thou triest my walking and lying down", i.e., my activities
and restings.
d)
Accurately estimating every word at the instant of its utterance: "For
there is not a word", etc.
e)
As being "behind" men, remembering their past, and "before"
men, acquainted with their future: "Thou hast beset me", etc.
f)
As every instant holding men under watchful scrutiny: "And laid",
etc.
2.
Personally realized and pondered: "Thou hast searched me." Me
and my run through the whole set of statements. Thus felt and used, the
fact of God's omniscience,
a)
Begets reverence.
b)
Inspires confidence.
c)
Produces carefulness of conduct.—J.F.
Verse
2-4. The knowledge of God extends,
1.
To our movements, our "down sitting and uprising"—when we sit down to
read, write, or converse, and when we rise up to active service.
2.
To our thoughts: "Thou understandest my thoughts afar off." What they
have been, what they now are, what they will be, what under all circumstances
they would have been. He who made minds knows what their thoughts will be at
all times, or he could not predict future events, or govern the world. He can
know our thoughts without being the Author of them.
3.
To our actions: Ps 139:3. Every step we take by day, and all we purpose to do
in wakeful hours of the night: all our private, social, and public ways, are
compassed or sifted by him, to distinguish the good from the bad, as wheat from
the chaff.
4.
To our words: Ps 139:4. It has been said that the words of all men and from all
time are registered in the atmosphere, and may be faithfully recalled. Whether
it be so or not, they are phonographed in the mind of God.—G.R.
Verse
2. (first clause). The importance of the commonest acts of
life.
Verse
2. (second clause). The serious nature of thoughts. Known to
God; seen through, their drift perceived; and attention given to them while as
yet in the distance.
Verse
3. The encircling Presence, in our activities, meditations,
secrecies, and movements.
Verse
4.
1.
Words on the tongue first in it, and in that stage known to God.
2.
Words on the tongue very numerous, yet all known.
3.
Word on the tongue have wide meaning, yet known "altogether."
Lesson:
Take heed of your words not yet spoken.
Verse
5. A soul captured. Stopped, overtaken, arrested. What has it done?
What shall it do?
Verse
6.
1.
God imperfectly known to man.
2.
Man perfectly known to God. It has been said that wise men never wonder; to us
it appears they are always wondering.—G.R.
Verse
6. Theme: the facts of our religion, too wonderful to understand,
are just those in which we have most reason to rejoice.
1.
Prove it.
a)
The incomprehensible attributes of God give unspeakable value to his promises.
b)
The Incarnation is at once the most complete and most endearing manifestation
of God we possess, yet it is the most inexplicable.
c)
Redemption by the death of Christ is the highest guarantee of salvation we can
conceive; but who can explain it?
d)
Inspiration makes the Bible the word of God, though none can give an account of
its mode of operation in the minds of those "moved by the Holy
Ghost."
e)
The resurrection of the body, and its glorification, satisfy the deepest
yearning of our soul (Ro 8:23 2Co 5:2-4); but none can conceive the how.
2.
Apply its lessons.
a)
Let us not stumble at doctrines simply because they are mysterious.
b)
Let us be thankful God has not kept back the great mysteries of our religion
simply because there would be some offended at them.
c)
Let us readily receive all the joy which the mysteries bring, and calmly wait
the light of heaven to make them better understood.—J.F.
Verses
7-10.
1.
God is wherever I am. I fill but a small part of space; he fills all space.
2.
He is wherever I shall be. He does not move with me, but I move in him.
"In him we live, and move", etc.
3.
God is wherever I could be. "If I ascend to heaven", etc. "If I
descend to Sheol", etc. If I travel with the sunbeams to the most distant
part of the earth, or heavens, or the sea, I shall be in thy hand. No mention
is here made of annihilation, as though that were possible; which would be the
only escape from the Divine Presence; for he is not the God of the dead, of the
annihilated, in the Sadducean meaning of the word, but of the living. Man is
always somewhere, and God is always everywhere.—G.R.
Verse
8. The glory of heaven and the terror of hell: "Thou."
Verses
9-10.
1.
The greatest security and encouragement to a sinner supposed.
a)
The place—the remotest part of the sea; by which you are to understand the most
obscure nook in the creation.
b)
His swift and speedy flight after the commission of sin, to this supposed
refuge and sanctuary: "If I take the wings of the morning."
2.
This supposed security and encouragement is utterly destroyed (Ps 139:10).
—See
Flavel's "Seaman's Preservative in Foreign Countries."
Verses
11-12. Darkness and light are both alike to God.
1.
Naturally. "I form the light, and I create the darkness."
2.
Providentially. Providential dispensations that are dark to us are light to
him. We change with respect to him, not he to us.
3.
Spiritually. "Let him that walketh in darkness", etc. "Yea,
though I walk", etc. He went before them in a pillar of cloud to guide
them by day, and a pillar of fire to guide them by night. It was the same God
in the day cloud and in the night light.—G.R.
Verse
14. I am fearfully and wonderfully made. This is true of man
in his fourfold state.
1.
In his primitive integrity.
2. In his deplorable depravity.
3. In his regeneration.
4. In his fixed state in hell or heaven.
—W.W.
Verses
17-18. The Psalm dilates upon the omniscience of God. In no mournful
manner, but the reverse.
1. God's
thoughts of us.
a)
How certain.
b) How numerous.
c) How condescending.
d) How tender.
e) How wise.
f) How practical.
g) How constant.
2. Our
thoughts upon his thoughts.
a)
How late and yet how due to the subject.
b) How delightful.
d) How consoling.
e) How strengthening to faith.
f) How arousing to love.
3. Our
thoughts upon God himself.
a)
They place us near God.
b)
They keep us near God.
c)
They restore us to him. We are with God when we awake from sleep, from
lethargy, from death.
Verses
17-18.
1.
The saint precious to God. He thinks of him tenderly; in countless ways;
perpetually.
2.
God precious to the saints. Noting God's loving kindnesses, numbering them,
newly awakening to them.
3.
The mingling of these loves: "I am still with thee."—W.B.H.
Verse
18. When I awake I am still with thee.
1.
Awaking is sometimes, yea, most commonly, taken in the natural
signification, for the recovery from bodily sleep.
2. Morally,
for recovery from sin.
3. Mystically;
"when I shall awake", that is, from the sleep of death.—T. Horton.
Verse
18. A Christian on Earth still in Heaven (an Appendix to
"A Christian on the Mount; or, A Treatise concerning Meditation"), by
Thomas Watson, 1660.
Verse
18. I am still with thee.
1.
By way of meditation.
2.
In respect to communion.
3.
In regard of action, and the businesses which are done by us.—T. Horton.
Verse
19.
1.
The doctrine of punishment the necessary outcome of omniscience.
2.
Inevitable judgment an argument for separation from sinners.—W.B.H.
Verse
20. Two scandalous offences against God.
1.
To speak slanderously of him.
2.
To speak irreverently of him. These are committed only by his enemies.
Verses
21-22.
1.
Such hatred one need not be ashamed of.
2.
Such hatred one should be able to define: "grieved."
3.
Such hatred one must labour to keep right. "Perfect hatred" is a form
of hate consistent with all the virtues.
Verses
23-24. The language,
1.
Of self examination.
a)
As in the sight of God.
b)
With a desire for the help of God: Ps 139:23. Look me through, and through, and
tell me what thou thinkest of me.
2.
Of self renunciation: "See if", etc. (Ps 139:24); any sin unpardoned,
any evil disposition unsubdued, any evil habit unrestrained, that I may
renounce it.
3.
Of self dedication: "Lead me", etc.: a submission entirely to divine
guidance in the future.—G.R.
Verse
24.
1.
The evil way. Naturally in us; may be of different kinds; must be removed;
removal needs Divine help.
2.
The everlasting way. There is but one, we need leading in it. It is the good
old way, it does not come to an end, it leads to blessedness without end.
Verse
24. (last clause).—See "Spurgeon's Sermons," No.
903: "The Way Everlasting."
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》