Still we are celebrating the glories of the
kingdom of God among men, and are called upon to praise him, as in
the foregoing psalms; but those psalms looked forward to the times
of the gospel, and prophesied of the graces and comforts of those
times; this psalm seems to dwell more upon the Old-Testament
dispensation and the manifestation of God's glory and grace in
that. The Jews were not, in expectation of the Messiah's kingdom
and the evangelical worship, to neglect the divine regimen they
were then under, and the ordinances that were then given them, but
in them to see God reigning, and to worship before him according to
the law of Moses. Prophecies of good things to come must not lessen
our esteem of good things present. To Israel indeed pertained the
promises, which they were bound to believe; but to them pertained
also the giving of the law, and the service of God, which they were
also bound dutifully and conscientiously to attend to,
1 The Lord reigneth; let the people tremble: he sitteth between the cherubims; let the earth be moved. 2 The Lord is great in Zion; and he is high above all the people. 3 Let them praise thy great and terrible name; for it is holy. 4 The king's strength also loveth judgment; thou dost establish equity, thou executest judgment and righteousness in Jacob. 5 Exalt ye the Lord our God, and worship at his footstool; for he is holy.
The foundation of all religion is laid in
this truth, That the Lord reigns. God governs the world by
his providence, governs the church by his grace, and both by his
Son. We are to believe not only that the Lord lives, but
that the Lord reigns. This is the triumph of the Christian
church, and here it was the triumph of the Jewish church, that
Jehovah was their King; and hence it is inferred, Let the people
tremble, that is, 1. Let even the subjects of this kingdom
tremble; for the Old-Testament dispensation had much of terror in
it. At Mount Sinai Israel, and even Moses himself, did
exceedingly fear and quake; and then God was terrible in
his holy places. Even when he appeared in his people's behalf,
he did terrible things. But we are not now come to that mount
that burned with fire,
God's kingdom, set up in Israel, is here made the subject of the psalmist's praise.
I. Two things the psalmist affirms:—1.
God presided in the affairs of religion: He sitteth between the
cherubim (
II. Putting these two things together, we
see what was the happiness of Israel above any other people, as
Moses had described it (
6 Moses and Aaron among his priests, and Samuel among them that call upon his name; they called upon the Lord, and he answered them. 7 He spake unto them in the cloudy pillar: they kept his testimonies, and the ordinance that he gave them. 8 Thou answeredst them, O Lord our God: thou wast a God that forgavest them, though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions. 9 Exalt the Lord our God, and worship at his holy hill; for the Lord our God is holy.
The happiness of Israel in God's government
is here further made out by some particular instances of his
administration, especially with reference to those that were, in
their day, the prime leaders and most active useful governors of
that people—Moses, Aaron, and Samuel, in the two former of whom
the theocracy or divine government began (for they were employed to
form Israel into a people) and in the last of whom that form of
government, in a great measure, ended; for when the people rejected
Samuel, and urged him to resign, they are said to reject God
himself, that he should not be so immediately their king as he had
been (
I. The intimate communion they had with
God, and the wonderful favour to which he admitted them. None of
all the nations of the earth could produce three such men as these,
that had such an intercourse with Heaven, and whom God knew by
name,
II. The good offices they did to Israel.
They interceded for the people, and for them also they obtained
many an answer of peace. Moses stood in the gap, and
Aaron between the living and the dead; and, when Israel was
in distress, Samuel cried unto the Lord for them,