330 lines
24 KiB
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330 lines
24 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Ps.lxxxix" n="lxxxix" next="Ps.xc" prev="Ps.lxxxviii" progress="52.09%" title="Chapter LXXXVIII">
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<h2 id="Ps.lxxxix-p0.1">P S A L M S</h2>
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<h3 id="Ps.lxxxix-p0.2">PSALM LXXXVIII.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Ps.lxxxix-p1">This psalm is a lamentation, one of the most
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melancholy of all the psalms; and it does not conclude, as usually
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the melancholy psalms do, with the least intimation of comfort or
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joy, but, from first to last, it is mourning and woe. It is not
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upon a public account that the psalmist here complains (here is no
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mention of the afflictions of the church), but only upon a personal
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account, especially trouble of mind, and the grief impressed upon
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his spirits both by his outward afflictions and by the remembrance
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of his sins and the fear of God's wrath. It is reckoned among the
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penitential psalms, and it is well when our fears are thus turned
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into the right channel, and we take occasion from our worldly
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grievances to sorrow after a godly sort. In this psalm we have, I.
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The great pressure of spirit that the psalmist was under, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.3-Ps.88.6" parsed="|Ps|88|3|88|6" passage="Ps 88:3-6">ver. 3-6</scripRef>. II. The wrath of God,
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which was the cause of that pressure, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.7 Bible:Ps.88.15-Ps.88.17" parsed="|Ps|88|7|0|0;|Ps|88|15|88|17" passage="Ps 88:7,15-17">ver. 7, 15-17</scripRef>. III. The wickedness of
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his friends, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.8 Bible:Ps.88.18" parsed="|Ps|88|8|0|0;|Ps|88|18|0|0" passage="Ps 88:8,18">ver. 8, 18</scripRef>.
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IV. The application he made to God by prayer, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.1-Ps.88.2 Bible:Ps.88.9 Bible:Ps.88.13" parsed="|Ps|88|1|88|2;|Ps|88|9|0|0;|Ps|88|13|0|0" passage="Ps 88:1,2,9,13">ver. 1, 2, 9, 13</scripRef>. V. His humble
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expostulations and pleadings with God, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.10 Bible:Ps.88.12 Bible:Ps.88.14" parsed="|Ps|88|10|0|0;|Ps|88|12|0|0;|Ps|88|14|0|0" passage="Ps 88:10,12,14">ver. 10, 12, 14</scripRef>. Those who are in
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trouble of mind may sing this psalm feelingly; those that are not
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ought to sing it thankfully, blessing God that it is not their
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case.</p>
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<scripCom id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88" parsed="|Ps|88|0|0|0" passage="Ps 88" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.1-Ps.88.9" parsed="|Ps|88|1|88|9" passage="Ps 88:1-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.88.1-Ps.88.9">
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<h4 id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.8">Sorrowful Complaints; Complaining to
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God.</h4>
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<div class="Center" id="Ps.lxxxix-p1.9">
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<p id="Ps.lxxxix-p2">A song <i>or</i> psalm for the sons of Korah, to the chief
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musician<br/>
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upon Mahalath Leannoth, Maschil of Heman the Ezrahite.</p>
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</div>
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<p class="passage" id="Ps.lxxxix-p3">1 <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.lxxxix-p3.1">O Lord</span> God of
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my salvation, I have cried day <i>and</i> night before thee:
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2 Let my prayer come before thee: incline thine ear unto my cry;
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3 For my soul is full of troubles: and my life draweth nigh
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unto the grave. 4 I am counted with them that go down into
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the pit: I am as a man <i>that hath</i> no strength: 5 Free
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among the dead, like the slain that lie in the grave, whom thou
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rememberest no more: and they are cut off from thy hand. 6
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Thou hast laid me in the lowest pit, in darkness, in the deeps.
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7 Thy wrath lieth hard upon me, and thou hast afflicted
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<i>me</i> with all thy waves. Selah. 8 Thou hast put away
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mine acquaintance far from me; thou hast made me an abomination
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unto them: <i>I am</i> shut up, and I cannot come forth. 9
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Mine eye mourneth by reason of affliction: <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.lxxxix-p3.2">Lord</span>, I have called daily upon thee, I have
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stretched out my hands unto thee.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p4">It should seem, by the titles of this and
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the following psalm, that Heman was the penman of the one and Ethan
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of the other. There were two, of these names, who were sons of
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Zerah the son of Judah, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:1Chr.2.4 Bible:1Chr.2.6" parsed="|1Chr|2|4|0|0;|1Chr|2|6|0|0" passage="1Ch 2:4,6">1 Chron. ii.
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4, 6</scripRef>. There were two others famed for wisdom, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.4.31" parsed="|1Kgs|4|31|0|0" passage="1Ki 4:31">1 Kings iv. 31</scripRef>, where, to magnify
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Solomon's wisdom, he is said to be <i>wiser than Heman and
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Ethan.</i> Whether the Heman and Ethan who were Levites and
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precentors in the songs of Zion were the same we are not sure, nor
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which of these, nor whether any of these, were the penmen of these
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psalms. There was a Heman that was one of the chief singers, who is
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called <i>the king's seer, or prophet,</i> in the words of God
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(<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:1Chr.25.5" parsed="|1Chr|25|5|0|0" passage="1Ch 25:5">1 Chron. xxv. 5</scripRef>); it is
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probable that this also was a seer, and yet could see no comfort
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for himself, an instructor and comforter of others, and yet himself
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putting comfort away from him. The very first words of the psalm
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are the only words of comfort and support in all the psalm. There
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is nothing about him but clouds and darkness; but, before he begins
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his complaint, he calls God <i>the God of his salvation,</i> which
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intimates both that he looked for salvation, bad as things were,
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and that he looked up to God for the salvation and depended upon
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him to be the author of it. Now here we have the psalmist,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p5">I. A man of prayer, one that gave himself
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to prayer at all times, but especially now that he was in
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affliction; for <i>is any afflicted? let him pray.</i> It is his
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comfort that he had prayed; it is his complaint that,
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notwithstanding his prayer, he was still in affliction. He was, 1.
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Very earnest in prayer: "<i>I have cried unto thee</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.1" parsed="|Ps|88|1|0|0" passage="Ps 88:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>), and have <i>stretched
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out my hands unto thee</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.9" parsed="|Ps|88|9|0|0" passage="Ps 88:9"><i>v.</i>
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9</scripRef>), as one that would take hold on thee, and even catch
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at the mercy, with a holy fear of coming short and missing of it."
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2. He was very frequent and constant in prayer: <i>I have called
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upon thee daily</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.9" parsed="|Ps|88|9|0|0" passage="Ps 88:9"><i>v.</i>
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9</scripRef>), nay, <i>day and night,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.1" parsed="|Ps|88|1|0|0" passage="Ps 88:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>. For thus men ought always to
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pray, and not to faint; God's own elect cry day and night to him,
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not only morning and evening, beginning every day and every night
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with prayer, but spending the day and night in prayer. This is
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indeed praying always; and then we shall speed in prayer, when we
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continue instant in prayer. 3. He directed his prayer to God, and
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from him expected and desired an answer (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p5.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.2" parsed="|Ps|88|2|0|0" passage="Ps 88:2"><i>v.</i> 2</scripRef>): "<i>Let my prayer come before
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thee,</i> to be accepted of thee, not before men, to be seen of
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them, as the Pharisees' prayers." He does not desire that men
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should hear them, but, "Lord, <i>incline thy ear unto my cry,</i>
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for to that I refer myself; give what answer to it thou
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pleasest."</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p6">II. He was a man of sorrows, and therefore
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some make him, in this psalm, a type of Christ, whose complaints on
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the cross, and sometimes before, were much to the same purport with
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this psalm. He cries out (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.3" parsed="|Ps|88|3|0|0" passage="Ps 88:3"><i>v.</i>
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3</scripRef>): <i>My soul is full of troubles;</i> so Christ said,
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<i>Now is my soul troubled;</i> and, in his agony, <i>My soul is
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exceedingly sorrowful even unto death,</i> like the psalmist's
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here, for he says, <i>My life draws nigh unto the grave.</i> Heman
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was a very wise man, and a very good man, a man of God, and a
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singer too, and one may therefore suppose him to have been a man of
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a cheerful spirit, and yet now a man of sorrowful spirit, troubled
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in mind, and upon the brink of despair. Inward trouble is the
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sorest trouble, and that which, sometimes, the best of God's saints
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and servants have been severely exercised with. <i>The spirit of
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man,</i> of the greatest of men, will not always sustain his
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infirmity, but will droop and sink under it; <i>who then can bear a
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wounded spirit?</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p7">III. He looked upon himself as a dying man,
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whose heart was ready to break with sorrow (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.5" parsed="|Ps|88|5|0|0" passage="Ps 88:5"><i>v.</i> 5</scripRef>): "<i>Free among the dead</i> (one
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of that ghastly corporation), <i>like the slain that lie in the
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grave,</i> whose rotting and perishing nobody takes notice of or is
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concerned for, nay, whom thou rememberest no more, to protect or
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provide for the dead bodies, but they become an easy prey to
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corruption and the worms; they are <i>cut off from thy hand,</i>
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which used to be employed in supporting them and reaching out to
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them; but, now there is no more occasion for this, they are cut off
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from it and cut off by it" (<i>for God will not stretch out his
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hand to the grave,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.30.24" parsed="|Job|30|24|0|0" passage="Job 30:24">Job xxx.
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24</scripRef>); "<i>thou hast laid me in the lowest pit,</i> as low
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as possible, my condition low, my spirits low, <i>in darkness, in
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the deep</i> (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.6" parsed="|Ps|88|6|0|0" passage="Ps 88:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>),
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sinking, and seeing no way open of escape, brought to the last
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extremity, and ready to give up all for gone." Thus greatly may
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good men be afflicted, such dismal apprehensions may they have
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concerning their afflictions, and such dark conclusions may they
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sometimes be ready to make concerning the issue of them, through
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the power of melancholy and the weakness of faith.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p8">IV. He complained most of God's displeasure
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against him, which infused the wormwood and the gall into the
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affliction and the misery (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.7" parsed="|Ps|88|7|0|0" passage="Ps 88:7"><i>v.</i>
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7</scripRef>): <i>Thy wrath lies hard upon me.</i> Could he have
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discerned the favour and love of God in his affliction, it would
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have lain light upon him; but it lay hard, very hard, upon him, so
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that he was ready to sink and faint under it. The impressions of
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this wrath upon his spirits were God's <i>waves</i> with which he
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afflicted him, which rolled upon him, one on the neck of another,
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so that he scarcely recovered from one dark thought before he was
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oppressed with another; these waves beat against him with noise and
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fury; not some, but all, of God's waves were made use of in
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afflicting him and bearing him down. Even the children of God's
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love may sometimes apprehend themselves children of wrath, and no
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outward trouble can lie so hard upon them as that apprehension.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p9">V. It added to his affliction that his
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friends deserted him and made themselves strange to him. When we
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are in trouble it is some comfort to have those about us that love
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us, and sympathize with us; but this good man had none such, which
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gives him occasion, not to accuse them, or charge them with
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treachery, ingratitude, and inhumanity, but to complain to God,
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with an eye to his hand in this part of the affliction (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.8" parsed="|Ps|88|8|0|0" passage="Ps 88:8"><i>v.</i> 8</scripRef>): <i>Thou hast put away my
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acquaintance far from me.</i> Providence had removed them, or
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rendered them incapable of being serviceable to him, or alienated
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their affections from him; for every creature is that to us (and no
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more) that God makes it to be. If our old acquaintance be shy of
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us, and those we expect kindness from prove unkind, we must bear
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that with the same patient submission to the divine will that we do
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other afflictions, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.19.13" parsed="|Job|19|13|0|0" passage="Job 19:13">Job xix.
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13</scripRef>. Nay, his friends were not only strange to him, but
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even hated him, because he was poor and in distress: "<i>Thou hast
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made me an abomination to them;</i> they are not only shy of me,
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but sick of me, and I am looked upon by them, not only with
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contempt, but with abhorrence." Let none think it strange
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concerning such a trial as this, when Heman, who was so famed for
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wisdom, was yet, when the world frowned upon him, neglected, as a
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vessel in which is no pleasure.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p10">VI. He looked upon his case as helpless and
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deplorable: "<i>I am shut up, and I cannot come forth,</i> a close
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prisoner, under the arrests of divine wrath, and no way open of
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escape." He therefore lies down and sinks under his troubles,
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because he sees not any probability of getting out of them. For
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thus he bemoans himself (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.9" parsed="|Ps|88|9|0|0" passage="Ps 88:9"><i>v.</i>
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9</scripRef>): <i>My eye mourneth by reason of affliction.</i>
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Sometimes giving vent to grief by weeping gives some ease to a
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troubled spirit. Yet weeping must not hinder praying; we must sow
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in tears: <i>My eye mourns,</i> but <i>I cry unto thee daily.</i>
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Let prayers and tears go together, and they shall be accepted
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together. <i>I have heard thy prayers, I have seen thy
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tears.</i></p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ps.lxxxix-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.10-Ps.88.18" parsed="|Ps|88|10|88|18" passage="Ps 88:10-18" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ps.88.10-Ps.88.18">
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<h4 id="Ps.lxxxix-p10.3">Pleading with God.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ps.lxxxix-p11">10 Wilt thou show wonders to the dead? shall the
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dead arise <i>and</i> praise thee? Selah. 11 Shall thy
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lovingkindness be declared in the grave? <i>or</i> thy faithfulness
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in destruction? 12 Shall thy wonders be known in the dark?
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and thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness? 13 But
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unto thee have I cried, <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.lxxxix-p11.1">O Lord</span>; and
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in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee. 14 <span class="smallcaps" id="Ps.lxxxix-p11.2">Lord</span>, why castest thou off my soul? <i>why</i>
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hidest thou thy face from me? 15 I <i>am</i> afflicted and
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ready to die from <i>my</i> youth up: <i>while</i> I suffer thy
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terrors I am distracted. 16 Thy fierce wrath goeth over me;
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thy terrors have cut me off. 17 They came round about me
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daily like water; they compassed me about together. 18 Lover
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and friend hast thou put far from me, <i>and</i> mine acquaintance
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into darkness.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p12">In these verses,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p13">I. The psalmist expostulates with God
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concerning the present deplorable condition he was in (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.10-Ps.88.12" parsed="|Ps|88|10|88|12" passage="Ps 88:10-12"><i>v.</i> 10-12</scripRef>): "<i>Wilt thou do
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a miraculous work to the dead,</i> and raise them to life again?
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Shall those that are dead and buried <i>rise up to praise thee?</i>
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No; they leave it to their children to rise up in their room to
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praise God; none expects that they should do it; and wherefore
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should they rise, wherefore should they live, but to praise God?
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The life we are born to at first, and the life we hope to rise to
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at last, must thus be spent. But <i>shall thy lovingkindness to thy
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people be declared in the grave,</i> either by those or to those
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that lie buried there? And thy faithfulness to thy promise, shall
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that be told in destruction? <i>shall thy wonders be wrought in the
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dark,</i> or known there, <i>and thy righteousness in</i> the
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grave, which is <i>the land of forgetfulness,</i> where men
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remember nothing, nor are themselves remembered? Departed souls may
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indeed know God's wonders and declare his faithfulness, justice,
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and lovingkindness; but deceased bodies cannot; they can neither
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receive God's favours in comfort nor return them in praise." Now we
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will not suppose these expostulations to be the language of
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despair, as if he thought God could not help him or would not, much
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less do they imply any disbelief of the resurrection of the dead at
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the last day; but he thus pleads with God for speedy relief: "Lord,
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thou art good, thou art faithful, thou art righteous; these
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attributes of thine will be made known in my deliverance, but, if
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it be not hastened, it will come too late; for I shall be dead and
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past relief, dead and not capable of receiving any comfort, very
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shortly." Job often pleaded thus, <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.7.8 Bible:Job.10.21" parsed="|Job|7|8|0|0;|Job|10|21|0|0" passage="Job 7:8,10:21">Job vii. 8; x. 21</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p14">II. He resolves to continue instant in
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prayer, and the more so because the deliverance was deferred
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(<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.13" parsed="|Ps|88|13|0|0" passage="Ps 88:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>): "<i>Unto
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thee have I cried</i> many a time, and found comfort in so doing,
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and therefore I will continue to do so; <i>in the morning shall my
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prayer prevent thee.</i>" Note, Though our prayers be not answered
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immediately, yet we must not therefore give over praying, because
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<i>the vision is for an appointed time, and at the end it shall
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speak and not lie.</i> God delays the answer in order that he may
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try our patience and perseverance in prayer. He resolves to seek
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God early, in the morning, when his spirits were lively, and before
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the business of the day began to crowd in—in the morning, after he
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had been tossed with cares, and sorrowful thoughts in the silence
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and solitude of the night; but how could he say, <i>My prayer shall
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prevent thee?</i> Not as if he could wake sooner to pray than God
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to hear and answer; for he neither slumbers nor sleeps; but it
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intimates that he would be up earlier than ordinary to pray, would
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<i>prevent</i> (that is, go before) his usual hour of prayer. The
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greater our afflictions are the more solicitous and serious we
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should be in prayer. "My prayer shall present itself before thee,
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and be betimes with thee, and shall not stay for the encouragement
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of the beginning of mercy, but reach towards it with faith and
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expectation even before the day dawns." God often prevents our
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prayers and expectations with his mercies; let us prevent his
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mercies with our prayers and expectations.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ps.lxxxix-p15">III. He sets down what he will say to God
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in prayer. 1. He will humbly reason with God concerning the abject
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afflicted condition he was now in (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.14" parsed="|Ps|88|14|0|0" passage="Ps 88:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>): "<i>Lord, why castest thou off
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my soul?</i> What is it that provokes thee to treat me as one
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abandoned? <i>Show me wherefore thou contendest with me.</i>" He
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speaks it with wonder that God should cast off an old servant,
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should cast off one that was resolved not to cast him off: "No
|
||
wonder men cast me off; but, Lord, why dost thou, whose gifts and
|
||
callings are without repentance? <i>Why hidest thou thy face,</i>
|
||
as one angry at me, that either hast no favour for me or wilt not
|
||
let me know that thou hast?" Nothing grieves a child of God so much
|
||
as God's hiding his face from him, nor is there any thing he so
|
||
much dreads as God's casting off his soul. If the sun be clouded,
|
||
that darkens the earth; but if the sun should abandon the earth,
|
||
and quite cast it off, what a dungeon would it be! 2. He will
|
||
humbly repeat the same complaints he had before made, until God
|
||
have mercy on him. Two things he represents to God as his
|
||
grievances:—(1.) That God was a terror to him: <i>I suffer thy
|
||
terrors,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p15.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.15" parsed="|Ps|88|15|0|0" passage="Ps 88:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>.
|
||
He had continual frightful apprehensions of the wrath of God
|
||
against him for his sins and the consequences of that wrath. It
|
||
terrified him to think of God, of falling into his hands and
|
||
appearing before him to receive his doom from him. He perspired and
|
||
trembled at the apprehension of God's displeasure against him, and
|
||
the terror of his majesty. Note, Even those that are designed for
|
||
God's favours may yet, for a time, suffer his terrors. The spirit
|
||
of adoption is first a spirit of bondage to fear. Poor Job
|
||
complained of the terrors of <i>God setting themselves in array
|
||
against him,</i> <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p15.3" osisRef="Bible:Job.6.4" parsed="|Job|6|4|0|0" passage="Job 6:4">Job vi. 4</scripRef>.
|
||
The psalmist here explains himself, and tells us what he means by
|
||
God's terrors, even his <i>fierce wrath.</i> Let us see what
|
||
dreadful impressions those terrors made upon him, and how deeply
|
||
they wounded him. [1.] They had almost taken away his life: "<i>I
|
||
am so afflicted</i> with them that I am <i>ready to die,</i> and"
|
||
(as the word is) "<i>to give up the ghost. Thy terrors have cut me
|
||
off,</i>" <scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p15.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.16" parsed="|Ps|88|16|0|0" passage="Ps 88:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>.
|
||
What is hell, that eternal excision, by which damned sinners are
|
||
for ever cut off from God and all happiness, but God's terrors
|
||
fastening and preying upon their guilty consciences? [2.] They had
|
||
almost taken away the use of his reason: <i>When I suffer thy
|
||
terrors I am distracted.</i> This sad effect the terrors of the
|
||
Lord have had upon many, and upon some good men, who have thereby
|
||
been put quite out of the possession of their own souls, a most
|
||
piteous case, and which ought to be looked upon with great
|
||
compassion. [3.] This had continued long: <i>From my youth up I
|
||
suffer thy terrors.</i> He had been from his childhood afflicted
|
||
with melancholy, and trained up in sorrow under the discipline of
|
||
that school. If we begin our days with trouble, and the days of our
|
||
mourning have been prolonged a great while, let us not think it
|
||
strange, but let tribulation work patience. It is observable the
|
||
Heman, who became eminently wise and good, was <i>afflicted and
|
||
ready to die,</i> and suffered God's terrors, <i>from his youth
|
||
up.</i> Thus many have found it was good for them to bear the yoke
|
||
in their youth, that sorrow has been much better for them than
|
||
laughter would have been, and that being much afflicted, and often
|
||
ready to die, when they were young, they have, by the grace of God,
|
||
got such an habitual seriousness and weanedness from the world as
|
||
have been of great use to them all their days. Sometimes those whom
|
||
God designs for eminent services are prepared for them by exercises
|
||
of this kind. [4.] His affliction was now extreme, and worse than
|
||
ever. God's terrors now came round about him, so that from all
|
||
sides he was assaulted with variety of troubles, and he had no
|
||
comfortable gale from any point of the compass. They broke in upon
|
||
him together like an inundation of water; and this daily, and all
|
||
the day; so that he had no rest, no respite, not the lest
|
||
breathing-time, no lucid intervals, nor any gleam of hope. Such was
|
||
the calamitous state of a very wise and good man; he was so
|
||
surrounded with terrors that he could find no place of shelter, nor
|
||
lie any where under the wind. (2.) That no friend he had in the
|
||
world was a comfort to him (<scripRef id="Ps.lxxxix-p15.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.88.18" parsed="|Ps|88|18|0|0" passage="Ps 88:18"><i>v.</i>
|
||
18</scripRef>): <i>Lover and friend hast thou put far from me;</i>
|
||
some are dead, others at a distance, and perhaps many unkind. Next
|
||
to the comforts of religion are those of friendship and society;
|
||
therefore to be friendless is (as to this life) almost to be
|
||
comfortless; and to those who have had friends, but have lost them,
|
||
the calamity is the more grievous. With this the psalmist here
|
||
closes his complaint, as if this were that which completed his woe
|
||
and gave the finishing stroke to the melancholy piece. If our
|
||
friends are put far from us by scattering providences, nay, if by
|
||
death our acquaintance are removed into darkness, we have reason to
|
||
look upon it as a sore affliction, but must acknowledge and submit
|
||
to the hand of God in it.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |