mh_parser/vol_split/19 - Psalms/Chapter 124.xml
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<div2 id="Ps.cxxv" n="cxxv" next="Ps.cxxvi" prev="Ps.cxxiv" progress="66.69%" title="Chapter CXXIV">
<h2 id="Ps.cxxv-p0.1">P S A L M S</h2>
<h3 id="Ps.cxxv-p0.2">PSALM CXXIV.</h3>
<p class="intro" id="Ps.cxxv-p1">David penned this psalm (we suppose) upon occasion
of some great deliverance which God wrought for him and his people
from some very threatening danger, which was likely to have
involved them all in ruin, whether by foreign invasion, or
intestine insurrection, is not certain; whatever it was he seems to
have been himself much affected, and very desirous to affect
others, with the goodness of God, in making a way for them to
escape. To him he is careful to give all the glory, and takes none
to himself as conquerors usually do. I. He here magnifies the
greatness of the danger they were in, and of the ruin they were at
the brink of, <scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.1-Ps.124.5" parsed="|Ps|124|1|124|5" passage="Ps 124:1-5">ver. 1-5</scripRef>.
II. He gives God the glory of their escape, <scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.6-Ps.124.7 Bible:Ps.124.1-Ps.124.2" parsed="|Ps|124|6|124|7;|Ps|124|1|124|2" passage="Ps 124:6,7,124:1,2">ver. 6, 7 compared with ver. 1, 2</scripRef>.
III. He takes encouragement thence to trust in God, <scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.8" parsed="|Ps|124|8|0|0" passage="Ps 124:8">ver. 8</scripRef>. In singing this psalm,
besides the application of it to any particular deliverance wrought
for us and our people, in our days and the days of our fathers, we
may have in our thoughts the great work of our redemption by Jesus
Christ, by which we were rescued from the powers of darkness.</p>
<scripCom id="Ps.cxxv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124" parsed="|Ps|124|0|0|0" passage="Ps 124" type="Commentary"/>
<scripCom id="Ps.cxxv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.1-Ps.124.5" parsed="|Ps|124|1|124|5" passage="Ps 124:1-5" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.124.1-Ps.124.5">
<h4 id="Ps.cxxv-p1.6">The Security of God's
People.</h4>
<div class="Center" id="Ps.cxxv-p1.7">
<p id="Ps.cxxv-p2">A song of degrees of David.</p>
</div>
<p class="passage" id="Ps.cxxv-p3">1 If <i>it had not been</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.cxxv-p3.1">Lord</span> who was on our side, now may Israel say;
  2 If <i>it had not been</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.cxxv-p3.2">Lord</span> who was on our side, when men rose up
against us:   3 Then they had swallowed us up quick, when
their wrath was kindled against us:   4 Then the waters had
overwhelmed us, the stream had gone over our soul:   5 Then
the proud waters had gone over our soul.</p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p4">The people of God, being here called upon
to praise God for their deliverance, are to take notice,</p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p5">I. Of the malice of men, by which they were
reduced to the very brink of ruin. Let Israel say that there was
but a step between them and death: the more desperate the disease
appears to have been the more does the skill of the Physician
appear in the cure. Observe, 1. Whence the threatening danger came:
<i>Men rose up against us,</i> creatures of our own kind, and yet
bent upon our ruin. <i>Homo homini lupus—Man is a wolf to man.</i>
No marvel that the red dragon, the roaring lion, should seek to
swallow us up; but that men should thirst after the blood of men,
Absalom after the blood of his own father, that a woman should be
drunk with the blood of saints, is what, with St. John, we may
wonder at with great admiration. From men we may expect humanity,
yet there are those whose <i>tender mercies are cruel.</i> But what
was the matter with these men? Why <i>their wrath was kindled
against us</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.3" parsed="|Ps|124|3|0|0" passage="Ps 124:3"><i>v.</i>
3</scripRef>); something or other they were angry at, and then no
less would serve than the destruction of those they had conceived a
displeasure against. <i>Wrath is cruel and anger is outrageous.</i>
Their wrath was kindled as fire ready to consume us. They were
proud; and <i>the wicked in his pride doth persecute the poor.</i>
They were daring in their attempt; they <i>rose up against us,</i>
rose in rebellion, with a resolution to <i>swallow us up</i> alive.
2. How far it went, and how fatal it would have been if it had gone
a little further: "We should have been devoured as a lamb by a
lion, not only slain, but <i>swallowed up,</i> so that there would
have been no relics of us remaining, swallowed up with so much
haste, ere we were aware, that we should have gone down alive to
the pit. We should have been deluged as the low grounds by a
land-flood or the sands by a high spring-tide." This similitude he
dwells upon, with the ascents which bespeak this a song of degrees,
or risings, like the rest. <i>The waters had overwhelmed us.</i>
What of us? Why <i>the stream had gone over our souls,</i> our
lives, our comforts, all that is dear to us. What waters? Why
<i>the proud waters.</i> God suffers the enemies of his people
sometimes to prevail very far against them, that his own power may
appear the more illustrious in their deliverance.</p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p6">II. Of the goodness of God, by which they
were rescued from the very brink of ruin: "<i>The Lord was on our
side;</i> and, <i>if he had not been so,</i> we should have been
undone." 1. "God was on our side; he took our part, espoused our
cause, and appeared for us. He was our helper, and a very present
help, a help on our side, nigh at hand. He was with us, not only
for us, but among us, and commander-in-chief of our forces." 2.
That God was Jehovah; there the emphasis lies. "If it had not been
Jehovah himself, a God of infinite power and perfection, that had
undertaken our deliverance, our enemies would have overpowered us."
Happy the people, therefore, whose God is Jehovah, a God
all-sufficient. Let Israel say this, to his honour, and resolve
never to forsake him.</p>
</div><scripCom id="Ps.cxxv-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.6-Ps.124.8" parsed="|Ps|124|6|124|8" passage="Ps 124:6-8" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.124.6-Ps.124.8">
<h4 id="Ps.cxxv-p6.2">The Security of God's
People.</h4>
<p class="passage" id="Ps.cxxv-p7">6 Blessed <i>be</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.cxxv-p7.1">Lord</span>, who hath not given us <i>as</i> a prey to
their teeth.   7 Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the
snare of the fowlers: the snare is broken, and we are escaped.
  8 Our help <i>is</i> in the name of the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.cxxv-p7.2">Lord</span>, who made heaven and earth.</p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p8">Here the psalmist further magnifies the
great deliverance God had lately wrought for them.</p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p9">I. That their hearts might be the more
enlarged in thankfulness to him (<scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.6" parsed="|Ps|124|6|0|0" passage="Ps 124:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>): <i>Blessed be the Lord.</i> God
is the author of all our deliverances, and therefore he must have
the glory of them. We rob him of his due if we do not return thanks
to him. And we are the more obliged to praise him because we had
such a narrow escape. We were delivered, 1. Like a lamb out of the
very jaws of a beast of prey: God <i>has not given us as a prey to
their teeth,</i> intimating that they had no power over God's
people but what was given them from above. They could not be a prey
to their teeth unless God gave them up, and <i>therefore</i> they
were rescued, because God would not suffer them to be ruined. 2.
Like <i>a bird,</i> a little bird (the word signifies a sparrow),
<i>out of the snare of the fowler.</i> The enemies are very subtle
and spiteful; they lay snares for God's people, to bring them into
sin and trouble, and to hold them there. Sometimes they seem to
have prevailed so far as to gain their point. God's people are
taken in the snare, and are as unable to help themselves out as any
weak and silly bird is; and <i>then</i> is God's time to appear for
their relief, when all other friends fail; then God breaks the
snare, and turns the counsel of the enemies into foolishness:
<i>The snare is broken and so we are delivered.</i> Isaac was saved
when he lay ready to be sacrificed. <i>Jehovah-jireh—in the mount
of the Lord it shall be seen.</i></p>
<p class="indent" id="Ps.cxxv-p10">II. That their hearts, and the hearts of
others, might be the more encouraged to trust in God in the like
dangers (<scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.124.8" parsed="|Ps|124|8|0|0" passage="Ps 124:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>):
<i>Our help is in the name of the Lord.</i> David had directed us
(<scripRef id="Ps.cxxv-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.121.2" parsed="|Ps|121|2|0|0" passage="Ps 121:2">Ps. cxxi. 2</scripRef>) to depend
upon God for help as to our personal concerns—<i>My help is in the
name of the Lord;</i> here as to the concerns of the public—Our
<i>help is so.</i> It is a comfort to all that lay the interests of
God's Israel near their hearts that Israel's God is the same that
made the world, and therefore will have a church in the world, and
can secure that church in times of the greatest danger and
distress. In him therefore let the church's friends put their
confidence, and they shall not be put to confusion.</p>
</div></div2>