713 lines
52 KiB
XML
713 lines
52 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Ps.lxxiv" n="lxxiv" next="Ps.lxxv" prev="Ps.lxxiii" progress="46.66%" title="Chapter LXXIII">
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<h2 id="Ps.lxxiv-p0.1">P S A L M S</h2>
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<h3 id="Ps.lxxiv-p0.2">PSALM LXXIII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Ps.lxxiv-p1">This psalm, and the ten that next follow it, carry
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the name of Asaph in the titles of them. If he was the penman of
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them (as many think), we rightly call them psalms of Asaph. If he
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was only the chief musician, to whom they were delivered, our
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marginal reading is right, which calls them psalms for Asaph. It is
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probable that he penned them; for we read of the words of David and
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of Asaph the seer, which were used in praising God in Hezekiah's
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time, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:2Chr.29.30" parsed="|2Chr|29|30|0|0" passage="2Ch 29:30">2 Chron. xxix. 30</scripRef>.
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Though the Spirit of prophecy by sacred songs descended chiefly on
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David, who is therefore styled "the sweet psalmist of Israel," yet
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God put some of that Spirit upon those about him. This is a psalm
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of great use; it gives us an account of the conflict which the
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psalmist had with a strong temptation to envy the prosperity of
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wicked people. He begins his account with a sacred principle, which
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he held fast, and by the help of which he kept his ground and
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carried his point, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.1" parsed="|Ps|73|1|0|0" passage="Ps 73:1">ver. 1</scripRef>.
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He then tells us, I. How he got into the temptation, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.2-Ps.73.14" parsed="|Ps|73|2|73|14" passage="Ps 73:2-14">ver. 2-14</scripRef>. II. How he got out of
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the temptation and gained a victory over it, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.15-Ps.73.20" parsed="|Ps|73|15|73|20" passage="Ps 73:15-20">ver. 15-20</scripRef>. III. How he got by the
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temptation and was the better for it, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.21-Ps.73.23" parsed="|Ps|73|21|73|23" passage="Ps 73:21-23">ver. 21-23</scripRef>. If, in singing this psalm, we
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fortify ourselves against the life temptation, we do not use it in
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vain. The experiences of others should be our instructions.</p>
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<scripCom id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73" parsed="|Ps|73|0|0|0" passage="Ps 73" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.1-Ps.73.14" parsed="|Ps|73|1|73|14" passage="Ps 73:1-14" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.73.1-Ps.73.14">
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<h4 id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.8">God's Goodness to His People; Unsanctified
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Prosperity.</h4>
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<div class="Center" id="Ps.lxxiv-p1.9">
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<p id="Ps.lxxiv-p2">A psalm of Asaph.</p>
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</div>
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<p class="passage" id="Ps.lxxiv-p3">1 Truly God <i>is</i> good to Israel,
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<i>even</i> to such as are of a clean heart. 2 But as for
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me, my feet were almost gone; my steps had well nigh slipped.
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3 For I was envious at the foolish, <i>when</i> I saw the
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prosperity of the wicked. 4 For <i>there are</i> no bands in
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their death: but their strength <i>is</i> firm. 5 They
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<i>are</i> not in trouble <i>as other</i> men; neither are they
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plagued like <i>other</i> men. 6 Therefore pride compasseth
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them about as a chain; violence covereth them <i>as</i> a garment.
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7 Their eyes stand out with fatness: they have more than
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heart could wish. 8 They are corrupt, and speak wickedly
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<i>concerning</i> oppression: they speak loftily. 9 They set
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their mouth against the heavens, and their tongue walketh through
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the earth. 10 Therefore his people return hither: and waters
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of a full <i>cup</i> are wrung out to them. 11 And they say,
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How doth God know? and is there knowledge in the most High?
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12 Behold, these <i>are</i> the ungodly, who prosper in the world;
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they increase <i>in</i> riches. 13 Verily I have cleansed my
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heart <i>in</i> vain, and washed my hands in innocency. 14
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For all the day long have I been plagued, and chastened every
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morning.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p4">This psalm begins somewhat abruptly: <i>Yet
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God is good to Israel</i> (so the margin reads it); he had been
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thinking of the prosperity of the wicked; while he was thus musing
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the fire burned, and at last he spoke by way of check to himself
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for what he had been thinking of. "However it be, yet God is good."
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Though wicked people receive many of the gifts of his providential
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bounty, yet we must own that he is, in a peculiar manner, good to
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Israel; they have favours from him which others have not.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p5">The psalmist designs an account of a
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temptation he was strongly assaulted with—to envy the prosperity
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of the wicked, a common temptation, which has tried the graces of
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many of the saints. Now in this account,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p6">I. He lays down, in the first place, that
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great principle which he is resolved to abide by and not to quit
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while he was parleying with this temptation, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.1" parsed="|Ps|73|1|0|0" passage="Ps 73:1">v. 1</scripRef>. Job, when he was entering into such a
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temptation, fixed for his principle the omniscience of God:
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<i>Times are not hidden from the Almighty,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.24.1" parsed="|Job|24|1|0|0" passage="Job 24:1">Job xxiv. 1</scripRef>. Jeremiah's principle is the
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justice of God: <i>Righteous art thou, O God! when I plead with
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thee,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Jer.12.1" parsed="|Jer|12|1|0|0" passage="Jer 12:1">Jer. xii. 1</scripRef>.
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Habakkuk's principle is the holiness of God: <i>Thou art of purer
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eyes than to behold iniquity,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Hab.1.13" parsed="|Hab|1|13|0|0" passage="Hab 1:13">Hab.
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i. 13</scripRef>. The psalmist's, here, is the goodness of God.
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These are truths which cannot be shaken and which we must resolve
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to live and die by. Though we may not be able to reconcile all the
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disposals of Providence with them, we must believe they are
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reconcilable. Note, Good thoughts of God will fortify us against
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many of Satan's temptations. <i>Truly God is good;</i> he had had
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many thoughts in his mind concerning the providences of God, but
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this word, at last, settled him: "For all this, God is good,
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<i>good to Israel, even to those that are of a clean heart.</i>"
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Note, 1. Those are the Israel of God that are of a clean heart,
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purified by the blood of Christ, cleansed from the pollutions of
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sin, and entirely devoted to the glory of God. An upright heart is
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a clean heart; cleanness is truth in the inward part. 2. God, who
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is good to all, is in a special manner good to his church and
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people, as he was to Israel of old. God was good to Israel in
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redeeming them out of Egypt, taking them into covenant with
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himself, giving them his laws and ordinances, and in the various
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providences that related to them; he is, in like manner, good to
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all those that are of a clean heart, and, whatever happens, we must
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not think otherwise.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p7">II. He comes now to relate the shock that
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was given to his faith in God's distinguishing goodness to Israel
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by a strong temptation to envy the prosperity of the wicked, and
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therefore to think that the Israel of God are no happier than other
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people and that God is no kinder to them than to others.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p8">1. He speaks of it as a very narrow escape
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that he had not been quite foiled and overthrown by this temptation
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(<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.2" parsed="|Ps|73|2|0|0" passage="Ps 73:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>): "<i>But as
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for me,</i> though I was so well satisfied in the goodness of God
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to Israel, yet <i>my feet were almost gone</i> (the tempter had
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almost tripped up my heels), <i>my steps had well-nigh slipped</i>
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(I had like to have quitted my religion, and given up all my
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expectations of benefit by it); <i>for I was envious at the
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foolish.</i>" Note, 1. The faith even of strong believers may
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sometimes be sorely shaken and ready to fail them. There are storms
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that will try the firmest anchors. 2. Those that shall never be
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quite undone are sometimes very near it, and, in their own
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apprehension, as good as gone. Many a precious soul, that shall
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live for ever, had once a very narrow turn for its life; almost and
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well-nigh ruined, but a step between it and fatal apostasy, and yet
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snatched as a brand out of the burning, which will for ever magnify
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the riches of divine grace in the nations of those that are saved.
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Now,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p9">2. Let us take notice of the process of the
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psalmist's temptation, what he was tempted with and tempted to.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p10">(1.) He observed that foolish wicked people
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have sometimes a very great share of outward prosperity. He
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<i>saw,</i> with grief, <i>the prosperity of the wicked,</i>
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<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.3" parsed="|Ps|73|3|0|0" passage="Ps 73:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>. Wicked people
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are really foolish people, and act against reason and their true
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interest, and yet every stander-by sees their prosperity. [1.] They
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seem to have the least share of the troubles and calamities of this
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life (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.5" parsed="|Ps|73|5|0|0" passage="Ps 73:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>): <i>They
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are not in the troubles of other men,</i> even of wise and good
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men, <i>neither are they plagued like other men,</i> but seem as if
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by some special privilege they were exempted from the common lot of
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sorrows. If they meet with some little trouble, it is nothing to
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what others endure that are less sinners and yet greater sufferers.
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[2.] They seem to have the greatest share of the comforts of this
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life. They live at ease, and bathe themselves in pleasures, so that
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<i>their eyes stand out with fatness,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.7" parsed="|Ps|73|7|0|0" passage="Ps 73:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. See what the excess of pleasure
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is; the moderate use of it enlightens the eyes, but those that
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indulge themselves inordinately in the delights of sense have their
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eyes ready to start out of their heads. Epicures are really their
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own tormentors, by putting a force upon nature, while they pretend
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to gratify it. And well may those feed themselves to the full who
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have <i>more than heart could wish,</i> more than they themselves
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ever thought of or expected to be masters of. They have, at least,
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more than a humble, quiet, contented heart could wish, yet not so
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much as they themselves wish for. There are many who have a great
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deal of this life in their hands, but nothing of the other life in
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their hearts. They are ungodly, live without the fear and worship
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of God, and yet they prosper and get on in the world, and not only
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are rich, but <i>increase in riches,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.12" parsed="|Ps|73|12|0|0" passage="Ps 73:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>. They are looked upon as
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thriving men; while others have much ado to keep what they have,
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they are still adding more, more honour, power, pleasure, by
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increasing in riches. <i>They are the prosperous of the age,</i> so
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some read it. [3.] Their end seems to be peace. This is mentioned
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first, as the most strange of all, for peace in death was every
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thought to be the peculiar privilege of the godly (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.37.37" parsed="|Ps|37|37|0|0" passage="Ps 37:37">Ps. xxxvii. 37</scripRef>), yet, to outward
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appearance, it is often the lot of the ungodly (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.4" parsed="|Ps|73|4|0|0" passage="Ps 73:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>): <i>There are no bands in their
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death.</i> They are not taken off by a violent death; they are
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foolish, and yet die not as fools die; for <i>their hands are not
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bound nor their feet put into fetters,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.7" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.3.33-2Sam.3.34" parsed="|2Sam|3|33|3|34" passage="2Sa 3:33,34">2 Sam. iii. 33, 34</scripRef>. They are not taken off
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by an untimely death, like the fruit forced from the tree before it
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is ripe, but are left to hang on, till, through old age, they
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gently drop of themselves. They do not die of sore and painful
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diseases: <i>There are no pangs,</i> no agonies, <i>in their death,
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but their strength is firm</i> to the last, so that they scarcely
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feel themselves die. They are of those who <i>die in their full
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strength, being wholly at ease and quiet,</i> not of those that
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<i>die in the bitterness of their souls and never eat with
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pleasure,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p10.8" osisRef="Bible:Job.21.23 Bible:Job.21.25" parsed="|Job|21|23|0|0;|Job|21|25|0|0" passage="Job 21:23,25">Job xxi. 23,
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25</scripRef>. Nay, they are not bound by the terrors of conscience
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in their dying moments; they are not frightened either with the
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remembrance of their sins or the prospect of their misery, but die
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securely. We cannot judge of men's state on the other side death
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either by the manner of their death or the frame of their spirits
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in dying. Men may die like lambs, and yet have their place with the
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goats.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p11">(2.) He observed that they made a very bad
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use of their outward prosperity and were hardened by it in their
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wickedness, which very much strengthened the temptation he was in
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to fret at it. If it had done them any good, if it had made them
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less provoking to God or less oppressive to man, it would never
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have vexed him; but it had quite a contrary effect upon them. [1.]
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It made them very proud and haughty. Because they live at ease,
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<i>pride compasses them as a chain,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.6" parsed="|Ps|73|6|0|0" passage="Ps 73:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>. They show themselves (to all that
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see them) to be puffed up with their prosperity, as men show their
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ornaments. <i>The pride of Israel testifies to his face,</i>
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<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.5.5 Bible:Isa.3.9" parsed="|Hos|5|5|0|0;|Isa|3|9|0|0" passage="Ho 5:5,Isa 3:9">Hos. v. 5; Isa. iii.
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9</scripRef>. <i>Pride ties on their chain,</i> or necklace; so Dr.
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Hammond reads it. It is no harm to wear a chain or necklace; but
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when pride ties it on, when it is worn to gratify a vain mind, it
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ceases to be an ornament. It is not so much what the dress or
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apparel is (though we have rules for that, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.2.9" parsed="|1Tim|2|9|0|0" passage="1Ti 2:9">1 Tim. ii. 9</scripRef>) as what principle ties it on and
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with what spirit it is worn. And, as the pride of sinners appears
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in their dress, so it does in their talk: <i>They speak loftily</i>
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(<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.8" parsed="|Ps|73|8|0|0" passage="Ps 73:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>); they affect
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<i>great swelling words of vanity</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.5" osisRef="Bible:2Pet.2.18" parsed="|2Pet|2|18|0|0" passage="2Pe 2:18">2 Pet. ii. 18</scripRef>), bragging of themselves and
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disdaining all about them. Out of the abundance of the pride that
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is in their heart they speak big. [1.] It made them oppressive to
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their poor neighbours (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.6" parsed="|Ps|73|6|0|0" passage="Ps 73:6"><i>v.</i>
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6</scripRef>): <i>Violence covers them as a garment.</i> What they
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have got by fraud and oppression they keep and increase by the same
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wicked methods, and care not what injury they do to others, nor
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what violence they use, so they may but enrich and aggrandize
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themselves. <i>They are corrupt,</i> like the giants, the sinners
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of the old world, when <i>the earth was filled with violence,</i>
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<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.7" osisRef="Bible:Gen.6.11 Bible:Gen.6.13" parsed="|Gen|6|11|0|0;|Gen|6|13|0|0" passage="Ge 6:11,13">Gen. vi. 11, 13</scripRef>. They
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care not what mischief they do, either for mischief-sake or for
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their own advantage-sake. <i>They speak wickedly concerning
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oppression;</i> they oppress, and justify themselves in it. Those
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that speak well of sin speak wickedly of it. <i>They are
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corrupt,</i> that is, dissolved in pleasures and every thing that
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is luxurious (so some), and then they deride and speak maliciously;
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they care not whom they wound with the poisoned darts of calumny;
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from on high they speak oppression. [3.] It made them very insolent
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in their demeanour towards both God and man (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.8" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.9" parsed="|Ps|73|9|0|0" passage="Ps 73:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>): <i>They set their mouth against
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the heavens,</i> putting contempt upon God himself and his honour,
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bidding defiance to him and his power and justice. They cannot
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reach the heavens with their hands, to shake God's throne, else
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they would; but they show their ill-will by setting their mouth
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against the heavens. <i>Their tongue</i> also <i>walks through the
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earth,</i> and they take liberty to abuse all that come in their
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way. No man's greatness or goodness can secure him from the scourge
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of the virulent tongue. They take a pride and pleasure in bantering
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all mankind; they are pests of the country, for they neither fear
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God nor regard man. [4.] In all this they were very atheistical and
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profane. They could not have been thus wicked if they had not
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learned to say (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.9" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.11" parsed="|Ps|73|11|0|0" passage="Ps 73:11"><i>v.</i>
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11</scripRef>), <i>How doth God know? And is there knowledge in the
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Most High?</i> So far were they from desiring the knowledge of God,
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who gave them all the good things they had and would have taught
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them to use them well, that they were not willing to believe God
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had any knowledge of them, that he took any notice of their
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wickedness or would ever call them to an account. As if, because he
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is <i>Most High,</i> he could not or would not see them, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.10" osisRef="Bible:Job.22.12-Job.22.13" parsed="|Job|22|12|22|13" passage="Job 22:12,13">Job xxii. 12, 13</scripRef>. Whereas because
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he is <i>Most High</i> therefore he can, and will, take cognizance
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of all the children of men and of all they do, or say, or think.
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What an affront is it to the God of infinite knowledge, from whom
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all knowledge is, to ask, <i>Is there knowledge in him?</i> Well
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may he say (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p11.11" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.12" parsed="|Ps|73|12|0|0" passage="Ps 73:12"><i>v.</i> 12</scripRef>),
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<i>Behold, these are the ungodly.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p12">(3.) He observed that while wicked men thus
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prospered in their impiety, and were made more impious by their
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prosperity, good people were in great affliction, and he himself in
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particular, which very much strengthened the temptation he was in
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to quarrel with Providence. [1.] He looked abroad and saw many of
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God's people greatly at a loss (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.10" parsed="|Ps|73|10|0|0" passage="Ps 73:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>): "Because the wicked are so
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very daring <i>therefore his people return hither;</i> they are at
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the same pause, the same plunge, that I am at; they know not what
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to say to it any more than I do, and the rather because <i>waters
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of a full cup are wrung out to them;</i> they are not only made to
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drink, and to drink deeply, of the bitter cup of affliction, but to
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drink all. Care is taken that they lose not a drop of that
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unpleasant potion; the waters are wrung out unto them, that they
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may have the dregs of the cup. They pour out abundance of tears
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when they hear wicked people blaspheme God and speak profanely," as
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David did, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.136" parsed="|Ps|119|136|0|0" passage="Ps 119:136">Ps. cxix. 136</scripRef>.
|
||
These are the waters wrung out to them. [2.] He looked at home, and
|
||
felt himself under the continual frowns of Providence, while the
|
||
wicked were sunning themselves in its smiles (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p12.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.14" parsed="|Ps|73|14|0|0" passage="Ps 73:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>): "For my part," says he,
|
||
"<i>all the day long have I been plagued</i> with one affliction or
|
||
another, <i>and chastened every morning,</i> as duly as the morning
|
||
comes." His afflictions were great—he was chastened and plagued;
|
||
the returns of them were constant, <i>every morning</i> with the
|
||
morning, and they continued, without intermission, <i>all the day
|
||
long.</i> This he thought was very hard, that, when those who
|
||
blasphemed God were in prosperity, he that worshipped God was under
|
||
such great affliction. He spoke feelingly when he spoke of his own
|
||
troubles; there is no disputing against sense, except by faith.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p13">(4.) From all this arose a very strong
|
||
temptation to cast off his religion. [1.] Some that observed the
|
||
prosperity of the wicked, especially comparing it with the
|
||
afflictions of the righteous, were tempted to deny a providence and
|
||
to think that God had forsaken the earth. In this sense some take
|
||
<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.11" parsed="|Ps|73|11|0|0" passage="Ps 73:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. There are
|
||
those, even among God's professing people, that say, "<i>How does
|
||
God know?</i> Surely all things are left to blind fortune, and not
|
||
disposed of by an all-seeing God." Some of the heathen, upon such a
|
||
remark as this, have asked, <i>Quis putet esse deos?—Who will
|
||
believe that there are gods?</i> [2.] Though the psalmist's feet
|
||
were not so far gone as to question God's omniscience, yet he was
|
||
tempted to question the benefit of religion, and to say (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.13" parsed="|Ps|73|13|0|0" passage="Ps 73:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>), <i>Verily, I have
|
||
cleansed my heart in vain,</i> and have, to no purpose, <i>washed
|
||
my hands in innocency.</i> See here what it is to be religious; it
|
||
is to cleanse our hearts, in the first place, by repentance and
|
||
regeneration, and then to wash our hands in innocency by a
|
||
universal reformation of our lives. It is not in vain to do this,
|
||
not in vain to serve God and keep his ordinances; but good men have
|
||
been sometimes tempted to say, "It is in vain," and "Religion is a
|
||
thing that there is nothing to be got by," because they see wicked
|
||
people in prosperity. But, however the thing may appear now, when
|
||
the pure in heart, those blessed ones, shall see God (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p13.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.5.8" parsed="|Matt|5|8|0|0" passage="Mt 5:8">Matt. v. 8</scripRef>), they will not say that
|
||
they cleansed their hearts in vain.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ps.lxxiv-p13.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.15-Ps.73.20" parsed="|Ps|73|15|73|20" passage="Ps 73:15-20" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.73.15-Ps.73.20">
|
||
<h4 id="Ps.lxxiv-p13.5">The End of the Wicked.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ps.lxxiv-p14">15 If I say, I will speak thus; behold, I should
|
||
offend <i>against</i> the generation of thy children. 16
|
||
When I thought to know this, it <i>was</i> too painful for me;
|
||
17 Until I went into the sanctuary of God; <i>then</i>
|
||
understood I their end. 18 Surely thou didst set them in
|
||
slippery places: thou castedst them down into destruction.
|
||
19 How are they <i>brought</i> into desolation, as in a moment!
|
||
they are utterly consumed with terrors. 20 As a dream when
|
||
<i>one</i> awaketh; <i>so,</i> O Lord, when thou awakest, thou
|
||
shalt despise their image.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p15">We have seen what a strong temptation the
|
||
psalmist was in to envy prospering profaneness; now here we are
|
||
told how he kept his footing and got the victory.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p16">I. He kept up a respect for God's people,
|
||
and with that he restrained himself from speaking what he had
|
||
thought amiss, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.15" parsed="|Ps|73|15|0|0" passage="Ps 73:15"><i>v.</i>
|
||
15</scripRef>. He got the victory by degrees, and this was the
|
||
first point he gained; he was ready to say, <i>Verily, I have
|
||
cleansed my heart in vain,</i> and thought he had reason to say it,
|
||
but he kept his mouth with this consideration, "<i>If I say, I will
|
||
speak thus, behold, I should</i> myself revolt and apostatize from,
|
||
and so give the greatest offence imaginable to, <i>the generation
|
||
of thy children.</i>" Observe here, 1. Though he thought amiss, he
|
||
took care not to utter that evil thought which he had conceived.
|
||
Note, It is bad to think ill, but it is worse to speak it, for that
|
||
is giving the evil thought an <i>imprimatur—a sanction;</i> it is
|
||
allowing it, giving consent to it, and publishing it for the
|
||
infection of others. But it is a good sign that we repent of the
|
||
evil imagination of the heart if we suppress it, and the error
|
||
remains with ourselves. If therefore thou hast been so foolish as
|
||
to think evil, be so wise as to <i>lay thy hand upon thy mouth,</i>
|
||
and let it go no further, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.32" parsed="|Prov|30|32|0|0" passage="Pr 30:32">Prov. xxx.
|
||
32</scripRef>. <i>If I say, I will speak thus.</i> Observe, Though
|
||
his corrupt heart made this inference from the prosperity of the
|
||
wicked, yet he did not mention it to those whether it were fit to
|
||
be mentioned or no. Note, We must think twice before we speak once,
|
||
both because some things may be thought which yet may not be spoken
|
||
and because the second thoughts may correct the mistakes of the
|
||
first. 2. The reason why he would not speak it was for fear of
|
||
giving offence to those whom God owned for his children. Note, (1.)
|
||
There are a people in the world that are the generation of God's
|
||
children, a set of men that hear and love God as their Father. (2.)
|
||
We must be very careful not to say or do any thing which may justly
|
||
offend <i>any of these little ones</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p16.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.18.6" parsed="|Matt|18|6|0|0" passage="Mt 18:6">Matt. xviii. 6</scripRef>), especially which may offend
|
||
<i>the generation of them,</i> may sadden their hearts, or weaken
|
||
their hands, or shake their interest. (3.) There is nothing that
|
||
can give more general offence to the generation of God's children
|
||
than to say that <i>we have cleansed our heart in vain</i> or that
|
||
it is vain to serve God; for there is nothing more contrary to
|
||
their universal sentiment and experience nor any thing that grieves
|
||
them more than to hear God thus reflected on. (4.) Those that wish
|
||
themselves in the condition of the wicked do in effect quit the
|
||
tents of God's children.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p17">II. He foresaw the ruin of wicked people.
|
||
By this he baffled the temptation, as by the former he gave some
|
||
check to it. Because he durst not speak what he had thought, for
|
||
fear of giving offence, he began to consider whether he had any
|
||
good reason for that thought (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.16" parsed="|Ps|73|16|0|0" passage="Ps 73:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>): "I endeavoured to understand
|
||
the meaning of this unaccountable dispensation of Providence; but
|
||
<i>it was too painful for me.</i> I could not conquer it by the
|
||
strength of my own reasoning." It is a problem, not to be solved by
|
||
the mere light of nature, for, if there were not another life after
|
||
this, we could not fully reconcile the prosperity of the wicked
|
||
with the justice of God. But (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.17" parsed="|Ps|73|17|0|0" passage="Ps 73:17"><i>v.</i> 17</scripRef>) <i>he went into the sanctuary
|
||
of God;</i> he applied to his devotions, meditated upon the
|
||
attributes of God, and the <i>things revealed, which belong to us
|
||
and to our children;</i> he consulted the scriptures, and the lips
|
||
of the priests who attended the sanctuary; he prayed to God to make
|
||
this matter plain to him and to help him over this difficulty; and,
|
||
at length, he understood the wretched end of wicked people, which
|
||
he plainly foresaw to be such that even in the height of their
|
||
prosperity they were rather to be pitied than envied, for they were
|
||
but ripening for ruin. Note, There are many great things, and
|
||
things needful to be known, which will not be known otherwise than
|
||
by going into the sanctuary of God, by the word and prayer. The
|
||
sanctuary must therefore be the resort of a tempted soul. Note,
|
||
further, We must judge of persons and things as they appear by the
|
||
light of divine revelation, and then we shall judge righteous
|
||
judgment; particularly we must judge by the end. All is well that
|
||
ends well, everlastingly well; but nothing well that ends ill,
|
||
everlastingly ill. The righteous man's afflictions end in peace,
|
||
and therefore he is happy; the wicked man's enjoyments end in
|
||
destruction, and therefore he is miserable.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p18">1. The prosperity of the wicked is short
|
||
and uncertain. The high places in which Providence sets them are
|
||
<i>slippery places</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.18" parsed="|Ps|73|18|0|0" passage="Ps 73:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>), where they cannot long keep footing; but, when they
|
||
offer to climb higher, that very attempt will be the occasion of
|
||
their sliding and falling. Their prosperity has no firm ground; it
|
||
is not built upon God's favour or his promise; and they have not
|
||
the satisfaction of feeling that it rests on firm ground.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p19">2. Their destruction is sure, and sudden,
|
||
and very great. This cannot be meant of any temporal destruction;
|
||
for they were supposed to <i>spend all their days in wealth</i> and
|
||
their death itself had no bands in it: <i>In a moment they go down
|
||
to the grace,</i> so that even that could scarcely be called
|
||
<i>their destruction;</i> it must therefore be meant of eternal
|
||
destruction on the other side death—hell and destruction. They
|
||
flourish for a time, but are undone for ever. (1.) Their ruin is
|
||
sure and inevitable. He speaks of it as a thing done—<i>They are
|
||
cast down;</i> for their destruction is as certain as if it were
|
||
already accomplished. He speaks of it as God's doing, and therefore
|
||
it cannot be resisted: <i>Thou castest them down.</i> It is
|
||
<i>destruction from the Almighty</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Joel.1.15" parsed="|Joel|1|15|0|0" passage="Joe 1:15">Joel i. 15</scripRef>), from <i>the glory of his
|
||
power,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:2Thess.1.9" parsed="|2Thess|1|9|0|0" passage="2Th 1:9">2 Thess. i. 9</scripRef>.
|
||
Who can support those whom God will cast down, on whom God will lay
|
||
burdens? (2.) It is swift and sudden; their damnation slumbers not;
|
||
for <i>how are they brought into desolation as in a moment!</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.19" parsed="|Ps|73|19|0|0" passage="Ps 73:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>. It is easily
|
||
effected, and will be a great surprise to themselves and all about
|
||
them. (3.) It is severe and very dreadful. It is a total and final
|
||
ruin: <i>They are utterly consumed with terrors,</i> It is the
|
||
misery of the damned that the terrors of the Almighty, whom they
|
||
have made their enemy, fasten upon their guilty consciences, which
|
||
can neither shelter themselves from them nor strengthen themselves
|
||
under them; and therefore not their being, but their bliss, must
|
||
needs be utterly consumed by them; not the least degree of comfort
|
||
or hope remains to them; the higher they were lifted up in their
|
||
prosperity the sorer will their fall be when they are cast down
|
||
into <i>destructions</i> (for the word is plural) and suddenly
|
||
<i>brought into desolation.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p20">3. Their prosperity is therefore not to be
|
||
envied at all, but despised rather, <i>quod erat
|
||
demonstrandum—which was the point to be established,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.20" parsed="|Ps|73|20|0|0" passage="Ps 73:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. <i>As a dream when one
|
||
awaketh, so, O Lord! when thou awakest,</i> or when they awake (as
|
||
some read it), <i>thou shalt despise their image,</i> their shadow,
|
||
<i>and make it to vanish. In the day of the great judgment</i> (so
|
||
the Chaldee paraphrase reads it), when they are awaked out of their
|
||
graves, thou shalt, in wrath, despise their image; for <i>they
|
||
shall rise to shame and everlasting contempt.</i> See here, (1.)
|
||
What their prosperity now is; it is but an image, a vain show, a
|
||
fashion of the world that passes away; it is not real, but
|
||
imaginary, and it is only a corrupt imagination that makes it a
|
||
happiness; it is not substance, but a mere shadow; it is not what
|
||
it seems to be, nor will it prove what we promise ourselves from
|
||
it; it is as a dream, which may please us a little, while we are
|
||
asleep, yet even then it disturbs our repose; but, how pleasing
|
||
soever it is, it is all but a cheat, all false; when we awake we
|
||
find it so. A hungry man <i>dreams that he eats, but he awakes and
|
||
his soul is empty,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.29.8" parsed="|Isa|29|8|0|0" passage="Isa 29:8">Isa. xxix.
|
||
8</scripRef>. A man is never the more rich or honourable for
|
||
dreaming he is so. Who therefore will envy a man the pleasure of a
|
||
dream? (2.) What will be the issue of it; God will awake to
|
||
judgment, to plead his own and his people's injured cause; they
|
||
shall be made to awake out of the sleep of their carnal security,
|
||
and then God shall despise their image; he shall make it appear to
|
||
all the world how despicable it is; so that the righteous shall
|
||
laugh at them, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.52.6-Ps.52.7" parsed="|Ps|52|6|52|7" passage="Ps 52:6,7">Ps. lii. 6,
|
||
7</scripRef>. How did God despise that rich man's image when he
|
||
said, <i>Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of
|
||
thee!</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.4" osisRef="Bible:Luke.12.19-Luke.12.20" parsed="|Luke|12|19|12|20" passage="Lu 12:19,20">Luke xii. 19,
|
||
20</scripRef>. We ought to be of God's mind, for his judgment is
|
||
according to truth, and not to admire and envy that which he
|
||
despises and will despise; for, sooner or later, he will bring all
|
||
the world to be of his mind.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.21-Ps.73.28" parsed="|Ps|73|21|73|28" passage="Ps 73:21-28" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.73.21-Ps.73.28">
|
||
<h4 id="Ps.lxxiv-p20.6">Devout Confidence.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ps.lxxiv-p21">21 Thus my heart was grieved, and I was pricked
|
||
in my reins. 22 So foolish <i>was</i> I, and ignorant: I was
|
||
<i>as</i> a beast before thee. 23 Nevertheless I <i>am</i>
|
||
continually with thee: thou hast holden <i>me</i> by my right hand.
|
||
24 Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel, and afterward
|
||
receive me <i>to</i> glory. 25 Whom have I in heaven <i>but
|
||
thee?</i> and <i>there is</i> none upon earth <i>that</i> I desire
|
||
beside thee. 26 My flesh and my heart faileth: <i>but</i>
|
||
God <i>is</i> the strength of my heart, and my portion for ever.
|
||
27 For, lo, they that are far from thee shall perish: thou
|
||
hast destroyed all them that go a whoring from thee. 28 But
|
||
<i>it is</i> good for me to draw near to God: I have put my trust
|
||
in the Lord <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.lxxiv-p21.1">God</span>, that I may declare
|
||
all thy works.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p22">Behold Samson's riddle again unriddled,
|
||
<i>Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong
|
||
sweetness;</i> for we have here an account of the good improvement
|
||
which the psalmist made of that sore temptation with which he had
|
||
been assaulted and by which he was almost overcome. He that
|
||
stumbles and does not fall, by recovering himself takes so much the
|
||
longer steps forward. It was so with the psalmist here; many good
|
||
lessons he learned from his temptation, his struggles with it, and
|
||
his victories over it. Nor would God suffer his people to be
|
||
tempted if his grace were not sufficient for them, not only to save
|
||
them from harm, but to make them gainers by it; even this shall
|
||
work for good.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p23">I. He learned to think very humbly of
|
||
himself and to abase and accuse himself before God (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.21-Ps.73.22" parsed="|Ps|73|21|73|22" passage="Ps 73:21,22"><i>v.</i> 21, 22</scripRef>); he reflects
|
||
with shame upon the disorder and danger he was in, and the vexation
|
||
he gave himself by entertaining the temptation and parleying with
|
||
it: <i>My heart was grieved, and I was pricked in my reins,</i> as
|
||
one afflicted with the acute pain of the stone in the region of the
|
||
kidneys. If evil thoughts at any time enter into the mind of a good
|
||
man, he does not roll them under his tongue as a sweet morsel, but
|
||
they are grievous and painful to him; temptation was to Paul as a
|
||
thorn in the flesh, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:2Cor.12.7" parsed="|2Cor|12|7|0|0" passage="2Co 12:7">2 Cor. xii.
|
||
7</scripRef>. This particular temptation, the working of envy and
|
||
discontent, is as painful as any; where it constantly rests it is
|
||
the <i>rottenness of the bones</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p23.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.14.30" parsed="|Prov|14|30|0|0" passage="Pr 14:30">Prov. xiv. 30</scripRef>); where it does but
|
||
occasionally come it is the pricking of the reins. Fretfulness is a
|
||
corruption that is its own correction. Now in the reflection upon
|
||
it, 1. He owns it was his folly thus to vex himself: "<i>So foolish
|
||
was I</i> to be my own tormentor." Let peevish people thus reproach
|
||
themselves for, and shame themselves out of, their discontents.
|
||
"What a fool am I thus to make myself uneasy without a cause?" 2.
|
||
He owns it was his ignorance to vex himself at this: "So ignorant
|
||
was I of that which I might have known, and which, if I had known
|
||
it aright, would have been sufficient to silence my murmurs. <i>I
|
||
was as a beast (Behemoth—a great beast) before thee.</i> Beasts
|
||
mind present things only, and never look before at what is to come;
|
||
and so did I. If I had not been a great fool, I should never have
|
||
suffered such a senseless temptation to prevail over me so far.
|
||
What! to envy wicked men upon account of their prosperity! To be
|
||
ready to wish myself one of them, and to think of changing
|
||
conditions with them! <i>So foolish was I.</i>" Note, If good men
|
||
do at any time, through the surprise and strength of temptation,
|
||
think, or speak, or act amiss, when they see their error they will
|
||
reflect upon it with sorrow, and shame, and self-abhorrence, will
|
||
call themselves <i>fools</i> for it. <i>Surely I am more brutish
|
||
than any man,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p23.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.2 Bible:Job.42.5-Job.42.6" parsed="|Prov|30|2|0|0;|Job|42|5|42|6" passage="Pr 30:2,Job 42:5,6">Prov. xxx.
|
||
2; Job xlii. 5, 6</scripRef>. Thus David, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p23.5" osisRef="Bible:2Sam.24.10" parsed="|2Sam|24|10|0|0" passage="2Sa 24:10">2 Sam. xxiv. 10</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p24">II. He took occasion hence to own his
|
||
dependence on and obligations to the grace of God (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.23" parsed="|Ps|73|23|0|0" passage="Ps 73:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>): "<i>Nevertheless,</i>
|
||
foolish as I am, <i>I am continually with thee</i> and in thy
|
||
favour; <i>thou hast holden me by my right hand.</i>" This may
|
||
refer either, 1. To the care God had taken of him, and the kindness
|
||
he had shown him, all along from his beginning hitherto. He had
|
||
said, in the hour of temptation (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.14" parsed="|Ps|73|14|0|0" passage="Ps 73:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>), <i>All the day long have I
|
||
been plagued;</i> but here he corrects himself for that passionate
|
||
complaint: "Though God has chastened me, he has not cast me off;
|
||
notwithstanding all the crosses of my life, <i>I have been
|
||
continually with thee;</i> I have had thy presence with me, and
|
||
thou hast been nigh unto me in all that which I have called upon
|
||
thee for; and therefore, though perplexed, yet not in despair.
|
||
Though God has sometimes written bitter things against me, yet he
|
||
has still <i>holden me by my right hand,</i> both to keep me, that
|
||
I should not desert him or fly off from him, and to prevent my
|
||
sinking and fainting under my burdens, or losing my way in the
|
||
wildernesses through which I have walked." If we have been kept in
|
||
the way with God, kept closely in our duty and upheld in our
|
||
integrity, we must own ourselves indebted to the free grace of God
|
||
for our preservation: <i>Having obtained help of God, I continue
|
||
hitherto.</i> And, if he has thus maintained the spiritual life,
|
||
the earnest of eternal life, we ought not to complain, whatever
|
||
calamities of this present time we have met with. Or, 2. To the
|
||
late experience he had had of the power of divine grace in carrying
|
||
him through this strong temptation and bringing him off a
|
||
conqueror: "I was foolish and ignorant, and yet thou hast had
|
||
compassion on me and taught me (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Heb.5.2" parsed="|Heb|5|2|0|0" passage="Heb 5:2">Heb. v.
|
||
2</scripRef>), and kept me under thy protection;" for the
|
||
unworthiness of man is no bar to the free grace of God. We must
|
||
ascribe our safety in temptation, and our victory over it, not to
|
||
our own wisdom, for we are foolish and ignorant, but to the
|
||
gracious presence of God with us and the prevalency of Christ's
|
||
intercession for us, that our faith may not fail: "<i>My feet were
|
||
almost gone,</i> and they would have quite gone, past recovery, but
|
||
that thou hast holden me by my right hand and so kept me from
|
||
falling."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p25">III. He encouraged himself to hope that the
|
||
same God who had delivered him from this evil work would
|
||
<i>preserve him to his heavenly kingdom,</i> as St. Paul does
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:2Tim.4.18" parsed="|2Tim|4|18|0|0" passage="2Ti 4:18">2 Tim. iv. 18</scripRef>): "I am now
|
||
upheld by thee, therefore <i>thou shalt guide me with thy
|
||
counsel,</i> leading me, as thou hast done hitherto, many a
|
||
difficult step; and, since I am now continually with thee, thou
|
||
<i>shalt afterwards receive me to glory</i>" <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.24" parsed="|Ps|73|24|0|0" passage="Ps 73:24"><i>v.</i> 24</scripRef>. This completes the happiness of
|
||
the saints, so that they have no reason to envy the worldly
|
||
prosperity of sinners. Note, 1. All those who commit themselves to
|
||
God shall be guided with his counsel, with the counsel both of his
|
||
word and of his Spirit, the best counsellors. The psalmist had like
|
||
to have paid dearly for following his own counsels in this
|
||
temptation and therefore resolves for the future to take God's
|
||
advice, which shall never be wanting to those that duly seek it
|
||
with a resolution to follow it. 2. All those who are guided and led
|
||
by the counsel of God in this world shall be received to his glory
|
||
in another world. If we make God's glory in us the end we aim at,
|
||
he will make our glory with him the end we shall for ever be happy
|
||
in. Upon this consideration, let us never envy sinners, but rather
|
||
bless ourselves in our own blessedness. If God direct us in the way
|
||
of our duty, and prevent our turning aside out of it, he will
|
||
afterwards, when our state of trial and preparation is over,
|
||
receive us to his kingdom and glory, the believing hopes and
|
||
prospects of which will reconcile us to all the dark providences
|
||
that now puzzle and perplex us, and ease us of the pain we have
|
||
been put into by some threatening temptations.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p26">IV. He was hereby quickened to cleave the
|
||
more closely to God, and very much confirmed and comforted in the
|
||
choice he had made of him, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.25-Ps.73.26" parsed="|Ps|73|25|73|26" passage="Ps 73:25,26"><i>v.</i> 25, 26</scripRef>. His thoughts here dwell
|
||
with delight upon his own happiness in God, as much greater then
|
||
the happiness of the ungodly that prospered in the world. He saw
|
||
little reason to envy them what they had in the creature when he
|
||
found how much more and better, surer and sweeter, comforts he had
|
||
in the Creator, and what cause he had to congratulate himself on
|
||
this account. He had complained of his afflictions (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.14" parsed="|Ps|73|14|0|0" passage="Ps 73:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>); but this makes them
|
||
very light and easy, <i>All is well if God be mine.</i> We have
|
||
here the breathings of a sanctified soul towards God, and its
|
||
repose in him, as that to a godly man really which the prosperity
|
||
of a worldly man is to him in conceit and imagination: <i>Whom have
|
||
I in heaven but thee?</i> There is scarcely a verse in all the
|
||
psalms more expressive than this of the pious and devout affections
|
||
of a soul to God; here it soars up towards him, follows hard after
|
||
him, and yet, at the same time, has an entire satisfaction and
|
||
complacency in him.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p27">1. It is here supposed that God alone is
|
||
the felicity and chief good of man. He, and he only, that made the
|
||
soul, can make it happy; there is none in heaven, none in earth,
|
||
that can pretend to do it besides.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p28">2. Here are expressed the workings and
|
||
breathings of a soul towards God accordingly. If God be our
|
||
felicity,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p29">(1.) Then we must have him (<i>Whom have I
|
||
but thee?</i>), we must choose him, and make sure to ourselves an
|
||
interest in him. What will it avail us that he is the felicity of
|
||
souls if he be not the felicity of our souls, and if we do not by a
|
||
lively faith make him ours, by joining ourselves to him in an
|
||
everlasting covenant?</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p30">(2.) Then our desire must be towards him
|
||
and our delight in him (the word signifies both); we must delight
|
||
in what we have of God and desire what we yet further hope for. Our
|
||
desires must not only be offered up to God, but they must all
|
||
terminate in him, desiring nothing more than God, but still more
|
||
and more of him. This includes all our prayers, <i>Lord, give us
|
||
thyself;</i> as that includes all the promises, <i>I will be to
|
||
them a God. The desire of our souls is to thy name.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p31">(3.) We must prefer him in our choice and
|
||
desire before any other. [1.] "<i>There is none in heaven but
|
||
thee,</i> none to seek to or trust in, none to court or covet
|
||
acquaintance with, but thee." God is in himself more glorious than
|
||
any celestial being (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p31.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.89.6" parsed="|Ps|89|6|0|0" passage="Ps 89:6">Ps. lxxxix.
|
||
6</scripRef>), and must be, in our eyes, infinitely more desirable.
|
||
Excellent beings there are in heaven, but God alone can make us
|
||
happy. His favour is infinitely more to us than the refreshment of
|
||
the dews of heaven or the benign influence of the stars of heaven,
|
||
more than the friendship of the saints in heaven or the good
|
||
offices of the angels there. [2.] <i>I desire none on earth besides
|
||
thee;</i> not only none in heaven, a place at a distance, which we
|
||
have but little acquaintance with, but none on earth neither, where
|
||
we have many friends and where much of our present interest and
|
||
concern lie. "Earth carries away the desires of most men, and yet I
|
||
have none on earth, no persons, no things, no possessions, no
|
||
delights, that I desire besides thee or with thee, in comparison or
|
||
competition with thee." We must desire nothing besides God but what
|
||
we desire for him (<i>nil præter te nisi propter te—nothing
|
||
besides thee except for thy sake</i>), nothing but what we desire
|
||
from him, and can be content without so that it be made up in him.
|
||
We must desire nothing besides God as needful to be a partner with
|
||
him in making us happy.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p32">(4.) Then we must repose ourselves in God
|
||
with an entire satisfaction, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.26" parsed="|Ps|73|26|0|0" passage="Ps 73:26"><i>v.</i>
|
||
26</scripRef>. Observe here, [1.] Great distress and trouble
|
||
supposed: <i>My flesh and my heart fail.</i> Note, Others have
|
||
experienced and we must expect, the failing both of flesh and
|
||
heart. The body will fail by sickness, age, and death; and that
|
||
which touches the bone and the flesh touches us in a tender part,
|
||
that part of ourselves which we have been but too fond of; when the
|
||
flesh fails the heart is ready to fail too; the conduct, courage,
|
||
and comfort fail. [2.] Sovereign relief provided in this distress:
|
||
<i>But God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever.</i>
|
||
Note, Gracious souls, in their greatest distresses, rest upon God
|
||
as their spiritual strength and their eternal portion. <i>First,
|
||
"He is the strength of my heart,</i> the rock of my heart, a firm
|
||
foundation, which will bear my weight and not sink under it. <i>God
|
||
is the strength of my heart;</i> I have found him so; I do so
|
||
still, and hope ever to find him so." In the distress supposed, he
|
||
had put the case of a double failure, both <i>flesh and heart
|
||
fail;</i> but, in the relief, he fastens on a single support: he
|
||
leaves out the flesh and the consideration of that, it is enough
|
||
that God is <i>the strength of his heart.</i> He speaks as one
|
||
careless of the body (let that fail, there is no remedy), but as
|
||
one concerned about the soul, to be <i>strengthened in the inner
|
||
man.</i> Secondly, <i>"He is my portion for ever;</i> he will not
|
||
only support me while I am here, but make me happy when I go
|
||
hence." The saints choose God for their portion, they have him for
|
||
their portion, and it is their happiness that he will be their
|
||
portion, a portion that will last as long as the immortal soul
|
||
lasts.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p33">V. He was fully convinced of the miserable
|
||
condition of all wicked people. This he learned in the sanctuary
|
||
upon this occasion, and he would never forget it (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.27" parsed="|Ps|73|27|0|0" passage="Ps 73:27"><i>v.</i> 27</scripRef>): "<i>Lo, those that are
|
||
far from thee,</i> in a state of distance and estrangement, that
|
||
desire the Almighty to depart from them, <i>shall</i> certainly
|
||
<i>perish;</i> so shall their doom be; they choose to be far from
|
||
God, and they shall be far from him for ever. <i>Thou wilt</i>
|
||
justly <i>destroy all those that go a whoring from thee,</i> that
|
||
is, all apostates, that in profession have been betrothed to God,
|
||
but forsake him, their duty to him and their communion with him, to
|
||
embrace the bosom of a stranger." The doom is sever, no less than
|
||
perishing and being destroyed. It is universal: "They shall all be
|
||
destroyed without exception." It is certain: "<i>Thou hast
|
||
destroyed;</i> it is as sure to be done as if done already; and the
|
||
destruction of some ungodly men is an earnest of the perdition of
|
||
all." God himself undertakes to do it, into whose hands it is a
|
||
fearful thing to fall: "Thou, though infinite in goodness, wilt
|
||
reckon for thy injured honour and abused patience, and wilt destroy
|
||
those that go a whoring from thee."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxiv-p34">VI. He was greatly encouraged to cleave to
|
||
God and to confide in him, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.73.28" parsed="|Ps|73|28|0|0" passage="Ps 73:28"><i>v.</i>
|
||
28</scripRef>. <i>If those that are far from God shall perish,</i>
|
||
then, 1. Let this constrain us to live in communion with God; "if
|
||
it fare so ill with those that live at a distance from him, then it
|
||
is good, very good, the chief good, that good for a man, in this
|
||
life, which he should most carefully pursue and secure, it is best
|
||
for me to draw near to God, and to have God draw near to me;" the
|
||
original may take in both. <i>But for my part</i> (so I would read
|
||
it) <i>the approach of God is good for me.</i> Our drawing near to
|
||
God takes rise from his drawing near to us, and it is the happy
|
||
meeting that makes the bliss. Here is a great truth laid down, That
|
||
it is good to draw near to God; but the life of it lies in the
|
||
application, "It is good for <i>me.</i>" Those are the wise who
|
||
know what is good for themselves: "<i>It is good,</i> says he (and
|
||
every good man agrees with him in it), <i>it is good for me to draw
|
||
near to God;</i> it is my duty; it is my interest." 2. Let us
|
||
therefore live in a continual dependence upon him: "<i>I have put
|
||
my trust in the Lord God,</i> and will never go a whoring from him
|
||
after any creature confidences." If wicked men, notwithstanding all
|
||
their prosperity, shall perish and be destroyed, then let us trust
|
||
in the Lord God, in him, not in them (see <scripRef id="Ps.lxxiv-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.146.3-Ps.146.5" parsed="|Ps|146|3|146|5" passage="Ps 146:3-5">Ps. cxlvi. 3-5</scripRef>), in him, and not in our
|
||
worldly prosperity; let us trust in God, and neither fret at them
|
||
nor be afraid of them; let us trust in him for a better portion
|
||
than theirs is. 3. While we do so, let us not doubt but that we
|
||
shall have occasion to praise his name. Let us trust in the Lord,
|
||
that we may declare all his works. Note, Those that with an upright
|
||
heart put their trust in God shall never want matter for
|
||
thanksgiving to him.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |