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A52303 David's harp strung and tuned, or, An easie analysis of the whole book of Psalms cast into such a method, that the summe of every Psalm may quickly be collected and remembred : with a devout meditation or prayer at the end of each psalm, framed for the most part out of the words of the psalm, and fitted for several occasions / by the Reverend Father in God, William ... Lord Bishop of Gloucester. Nicholson, William, 1591-1672. 1662 (1662) Wing N1111; ESTC R18470 729,580 564

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he hath done endureth for ever and shall in its time receive an ample reward Prov. 28.27 22.9 2. Nay by it increased his honour and perhaps his wealth also 2 And his Honour His Horn that is his power dignity glory shall be exalted with honour 10. Ver. 10 His last felicity is that he shall exceed and overcome all envy for it is most true 10 He shall overcome all Envy 1. That the wicked shall see it consider the prosperity and liberality of him that fears God and be grieved with his felicity and pine with envy 1 For the wicked shall envy him 2. That as a mad Dog he shall gnash his teeth at it and for very grief melt away 2 But not hurt him and seek his ruine 3. But yet he shall not be able to harm him all his endeavours shall be frustrate and his labours ineffectual The desire of the wicked shall perish He then that fears God is a happy man he that fears him not most unhappy The Prayer collected out of the One hundred and twelfth Psalm O On impotent God it is thy fear alone that can make men truly happy for where thy fear is truly rooted Ver. 1 there piety and justice there thy true worship and all fruits of charity and justice will flourish so therefore affect our bearts with a filial fear that we may make it our delight to run the wayes of thy Commandments Make our will conformable to thy Will and our affection● correspondent to what thou dost affect so shall we find no labour or difficulty in thy precepts but be greatly pleased to be thy obedient servants It is time of the greatest of our desires Ver. 2 That our seed should be mighty upon earth which cannot be expected without thy blessing create in us then an upright he art that so the Generation which succéed us may be blessed We desire that wealth Ver. 3 and riches and honour should be in our house let us aim to attain to these in thy fear Ver. 3 in a just and a righteous way that they may endure to our posterity make us content with what thou bestowest and know That Piety is great gain when the mind is satisfied with what thou givest We now live O Lord in a difficult time we know not what to do but our eyes are to thée Ver. 4 Thou art a gracious God and full of compassion and righteous let therefore thy light arise to us in this darkness let thy counsel direct us and thy comforts shine unto us Ver. 5 that we may prudently carry our selves in these distrculties Provocations we have had to anger and revenge but touch our hearts with so much compassion that we may shew favour toward our enemies forgive them as thou for Christs sake hast forgiden us And since we are compassed about with temptations Ver. 6 enrich our hearts with prudence That we may guide our Affairs with discretion Ver. 7 discréetly putting a difference betwixt Truth and Falshood just and unjust acts and though we be violently assaulted make us constant in thy fear and patient in our sufferings O let us not be moved or seduced from the right way for ever Fix our hearts and make us trust in thée establish our hearts and never let any evil tydings make us afraid but let us rely upon thy promises till we sée our desire upon our enemies Let it not be our aim to heap up wealth but give us grace to use it well to disperse as well as to gather and to be content to give as well as to receine that so the loins of the néedy may bless us and the bellies of the poor pray for us With this unrighteous Mammon let us make our selves friends that when they fall we may be receiv'd into everlasting habitations this is a righteousness that will endure for ever this is a means not only to encrease our reward in the life to come Ver. 6 but also in this to exalt our Hor● our power and dignity with honour For a good man alwayes lives in the memory of good men his name is precious his memorial is honourable whereas the memory of the wicked shall be buried in oblivion or remembred with reproach the righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance Write our names O Lord in the Book of life Ver. 10 and conserve them in the memorials of thy Saints let the wicked sée it and be grieved at it and let the adversaries of thy fear and the blessed estate of thy servants gnash their téeth for envy and melt away to find that their desires come to naught O Lord whosoever he be that shall desire the ruine of those that fear thée let him never be able to fulfil it but together with him let his desire perish So shall thy people and sheep of thy pasture that fear thee the Lord Ver. 1 and delight greatly in thy Commandments bless thy Name for blessing them and call to all that love thee and thy Church to praise the Lord. Amen Amen PSAL. CXIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE Scope of this Psalm is the same with those that went before viz. to excite men to praise God Three parts of this Psalm 1. An Exhortation to praise him directed to his servants ver 1. 2. A Form set down for it expressing how when and where to praise him ver 2 3. 3. The Reasons that perswade us to it first his infinite Power ver 4 5. secondly his Providence most conspicuous in Heaven and in Earth ver 6. in Earth both in Common-wealths ver 7 8. and in private Families ver 9. 1. The Prophet exhorts men to praise the Lord And 1. First He doubles and trebles his Exhortation Praise the Lord praise The first part He exhorts to praise God praise the Name of the Lord that it be not coldly and dully but zealously done or else to shew that he alone is worthy of all praise Ver. 1 The Kingdom is his and therefore the Glory Especially his servants 2. He shewes us by whom he would have it done by his servants Praise the Lord O ye servants He is your Lord you his servants praise him then and do it with a pure heart For praise is not comely in the mouth of a sinner 2. The Form in which it is to be done is this Say The second part A Form of thanksgiving 1. Blessed be the Name of the Lord Job 1. 2. And say it at all times Begin it ab ipso nunc From this time forth and continue in it from this time forth for evermore In prosperity adversity in this life in the future 1 For all times 3. And let it be said in all places even all the World over From the rising of the Sun unto the going down of the same 2 All places the Lords Name is to be praised 3. And now follow the Reasons The third part The reasons for it by which he perswades men
indulgence to this sin In giving him 1. A right spirit there was a crooked and perverse spirit that had prevailed over him he judged not as he did before of Gods Law but perversly opposed it he desires that God would give him a spirit to judge rightly as he did before and firmly to resolve to keep to that was the right and strait way to happiness Renew O Lord in me a right Spirit 2. A holy Spirit The profane carnal spirit is opposed to this 2 A boly spirit and to that he hearkned by this holy Spirit he was wont to be carried which opposed all carnality but such good and sweet motions he perceived to be departed and therefore he desires of God a restitution of this holy Spirit this sanctifying and renewing Spirit that might again kindle in him the love of God holy motions agreeable to Gods Law and an obedience to the same Take not thy holy Spirit from me 3. A free Spirit He found that ever since he fell into his sin he did his duty 3 A free spirit and served his God with an ill will with much reluctancy he took no delight in the doing of it as he did before this therefore he begs that God would again give and restore to him a free Spirit that freely chearfully willingly he might run the way of Gods Commandments and that he would so uphold him with his Spirit that he might constantly continue in the same to his lives end Uphold me O Lord with thy free Spirit 2. Hitherto the Prophet hath presented his three Petitions The second part of the Psalm in which he vows three things and upon the confidence of these he makes his vows first to teach others secondly to praise God thirdly to offer him the best sacrifice a sacrifice which should be instead of all sacrifices which he knew would accept a contrite heart 1. Then that is after my pardon obtained and my reconciliation unto thee I shall teach Ver. 13 for a man under guiltiness himself is not meet to speak and declare a pardon to others His first vow to teach others 2. I will teach thy wayes to sinners not my wayes of sinning but thy methods of pardoning viz. That to the stubborn thou wilt shew thy self froward and stubborn but to the penitent such as I am thou wilt shew mercy 3. And the effect will be That sinners shall be converted unto thee They who were perverted before and averted from thee being encouraged by the mercy I have found shall be converted 2. His second vow to praise God His second vow and promise is to praise God My tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness Ver. 14 my mouth shall shew forth thy praise But to this he was unapt so long as he remained in his sin Ver. 15 for praise is not comely in the mouth of a sinner And also unable to do without Gods special assistance But because not fit to do this he prayes and therefore he prayes for a capacity to do both 1. 1 For remission Deliver me from blood-guiltiness O God and then my tongue shall sing 2. 2 For assistance O Lord open my lips and then my mouth shall shew forth thy praise 3. His third vow is about a sacrifice which should be better than any then in use not the sacrifice of a beast but the sacrifice of a heart a heart well-conditioned His Preface to his third vow Negatively That God delights not in sacrifices seasoned with contrition and sorrow such he knew God would accept and such he should have 1. Thou desirest no sacrifice That is the outward in comparison of the inward would the outward please I would not be behind for that also I would give it thee but I know Thou delightest not in burnt-offerings without the heart 2. Nor in the heart till contrite No nor with the heart neither till it be broken and contrite broken for sin and contrite for meer love that it hath offended so good a Father I vowe therefore to bring thee this sacrifice this is instead of all other instead of many sacrifices this thou wilt not despise and this I will tender The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit His third vow a contrite heart The third part in which he prayes for the Church a broken and a contrite heart Thou O God wilt not despise 3. David having finished his prayers and vows for himself forgets not to petition for Jerusalem for Gods Church and the reason might be a religious fear in him lest for his sin Jerusalem might suffer such a thing might happen for so it did when he numbred the people Peccant Reges plectuntur Achivi His method was to be commended and his charity 1. His method first to be reconciled to God himself before he prayes for others for the prayers of a righteous man prevails much and the Apostle speaks of intercession 2. His charity for we are alwayes bound to remember the afflictions of Joseph and to pray for the peace of Jerusalem He prayes then for her 1. Ver. 18 That God who out of his good pleasure did choose a Church would out of his meer good will and love preserve it 1 That God protect his Church Do good in thy good pleasure to Zion 2. That he would have a special favour even to the material buildings Build thou the walls of Jerusalem 2 Even the walls for these fall not alone Religion and the Service of God fall when the Temple and Houses of God fall to ruine Probatum est 3. Then Religion would flourish For the consequence of Jerusalems prosperity would be this That Religion would flourish with it Then there would be sacrifices burnt-offerings and Holocausts Ver. 19 then they shall offer Bullocks upon thine Altar And which is yet more we shall offer And God pleased with it and thou shalt accept Then thou shalt be pleased with the sacrifices of righteousness We being reconciled unto thee justified sanctified righteous upon thy account and in favour all our sacrifices shall find a gracious acceptance The Prayer collected out of the fifty first Psalm O Almighty Lord and most merciful God thou hast shewed compassion to many penitent sinners since the very beginning of the World thou never rejectedst any that sought to thée with a penstent soul and therefore Lord since thou art the same and no shadow of change in thée I beféech thée cloze not that door of mercy on me that hath béen opened to receive so many before me and let not those Rivers of compassion be dried up to me that have flowed so plentifully to others Have mercy on me O Lord on me Ver. 1 that have sinned against Heaven and against thee and am not worthy to be called thy son but according to thy goodness and multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my iniquities I know Lord thou hast thy debt-debt-book wherein thou writest the
deny me and afford me no comfort And all this is done unto me without any fault or offence of mine Ver. 7 it is for thy sake I have born this reproach For thy sake shame hath covered my face for the zeal of thy House hath eaten me up I have béen very zealous for the Lord God of Hosts they have thrown down thine Altars and slain thy Prophets with the edge of the Sword very studious I have béen and fervent to maintain thy Religion in its purity which others have cast down and in it so much as lies in them have reproached thée but the reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me Because thy Name was dishonoured I wept I chastned even my soul with fasting and whereas I ought for this to have béen more dear unto them I became a scorn even my humiliation and acts of repentance were turned to my reproach I testified also my sadness by my Sackloth and for this I became a Proverb of reproach The Iudges the chief of the City they which sit in the Gates speak against me condemning me and detracting from me and as for the common ordinary sort of people the Drunkards they made songs of me In a word They gave me Gall to eat and Vinegar to drink so inhumane they were that whereas in my greatest sufferings and extremities they ought to have refreshed and relieved me they increased my sorrows and under a colour of refreshment added affliction to the afflicted Now in the midst of these grievances that which most grieves my heart is the scandal of the Cross afraid I am lest that any of thy people looking upon those things which I suffer should estéem me stricken smitten of God and afflicted and thereby take an occasion to renounce the Truth of Religion and fall from thée I beséech thée therefore O Lord God of Hosts Let not them that wait on thee be ashamed for my sake let not them that seek thee be confounded for my sake O Lord God of Israel O Lord to remove this scandal there is no readier way than to bring them down to humble them and to poure the vials of thy wrath upon them Let then their Table be made a snare unto them and what should have been a welfare let it become a trap Gall and bitterness they have offered to me let their dainties be bitterness in their mouths and gall to their palates A snare they have laid for my féet and let that in which they hope to be prosperous and happy be an occasion of falling the very eating of the Paschal Lamb their ruine and thy Word the food of their souls an occasion of errour In hearing let them hear and not understand and in séeing let them sée and not perceive make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy and shut their eyes lest they sée with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand with their heart and convert and be healed Inféeble them O Lord and make their loins to tremble and shake bow down their backs with slavery and hard bondage and press them continually with such burdens of miseries that they may groan and sigh under the heavy hand of their Oppressors Plentifully and speedily poure forth thy indignation upon them and let thy fiercest anger and vengeance continually pursue them let their houses be desolate not a stone left upon a stone and their land without an inhabitant let them procéed from one wickedness to another and add sin to sin till their iniquity come to the full neither ever let them repent them of their wicked wayes that thou might'st pardon and forgive their heinous transgressions or justifie them at thy great Tribunal with mercy thou wilt indulge to all true penitents And although hitherto they have béen reckoned among thy people of whom they are born and with whom thou hast established thy Covenant yet O Lord let them be blotted out of the Book of the living and not be written among the righteous And it is but just that all this happen unto them because when common humanity and thy Word also requires That we weep with him that weeps and lament with him that laments they have helped on the affliction for they persecute Him whom thou hast smitten and they talk to the grief of those whom thou hast wounded O Lord I am wounded I suffer justly under thy hand but to them I have done no harm at this time I am poor and sorrowful destitute of all humane help and affected with extream heaviness Arise then for me and let thy salvation set me up on High Deliver me O Lord from these troubles and so shall I praise thy Name with a Song Ver. 30 Save me from my enemies and I shall magnifie thee with Thanksgiving which sacrifice Ver. 31 I know will better please thee than the fat of fed Beasts or the incense of Rams Besides all those that are of a dejected spirit humbled and brought low at the sight of my afflictions will consider this sée they will That God heareth the poor and despiseth not those who are in captivity and imprisoned for his sake and they will be glad and rejoyce at it and the heart of all those that seek th●● which was even dead before will then revive and live O Lord save Sion and build the Cities of Judah let men dwell there and have it in possession let the seed of thy servants inherit it and all those that love thy Name dwell therein so shall the Heaven and Earth praise thee and every thing that moveth therein Amen Amen PSAL. LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THIS Psalme is the same with the five last verses of the fortieth Psalm The Contents of this Psalm are 1. The Prayer of David for himself that he may be freed from his enemies ver 1. which he repeats ver 5. 2. For the speedy destruction of the wicked ver 2 3. 3. For the prosperity of the godly ver 4. 4. The Arguments he urgeth to move God to grant his prayer 1. His miserable condition I am poor and needy 2. Gods office Thou art my Helper and Redeemer therefore make no long tarrying O my God The Psalm needs no farther Analysis because it is fully Analysed before in the end of the fortieth Psalm The Prayer out of the seventieth Psalm O Lord we therefore daily implore thy mercy because we are daily beset with danger Enemies we have without within us from whose malice and cruelty we can find no safety Ver. 5 except in thy favour and mercy Thou alone art our Help and Deliverer make then no long tarrying O my God rather make haste to deliver us Ver. 1 make haste to help us Many there are that seek after my soul let them be ashamed and confounded Ver. 2 many there are that desire my hurt let them be turned backward and put to confusion suddenly let them be turned back and put to flight Ver. 3 that rejoyce at
joyful noyse 1 Universally that it be done in gladness and singing 3. 2 Heartily That it be not partial and restrain'd but complete the Copia verborum in which the Exhortation is offer'd 3 Completely shews it Jubilate colite scitote Vers. 2 venite laudate benedicite 4. 4 Sincerely That it be sincere and not feined done as in his eye and presence Vers. 3 5. 5 Knowingly That it ought to be well grounded arise from knowledge Know ye that Vers. 4 6. 6 Thankfully But thanksgiving be a part of it 7. 7 Publickly That it be as oft as occasion is offer'd Publick Enter into his Courts with Thanksgiving 2. The second part The Duty being set down reasons the Prophet sets down also to perswade to it The reasons for it drawn from the Nature of God 2. The benefits he bestows on us 1. First from his Essence Know ye if you know not so much already that the Lord he is God Vers. 3 Other gods there be talk'd on but none True but he 1 He is God Which shewed by his works of And therefore none to be serv'd but he 2. And this he shews himself to be by his work of Nature and Grace upon you 1. 1 Nature or Creation By his work of Nature for he is your Maker It is he that hath made us and not we our selves Parents are said to get chilcren but that ability is from God He makes the barren to bear and to be a joyful Mother of children Thou hast fashioned me in my mothers womb What saith Elkanah Am I in the place of God when his Wife was displeased she had no child 2. 2 Of Grace By his work of Grace For we were out of the fold but he call'd us into it and ever since accounted of us as his people of his pasture He governs us feeds us And that we be yet the more cheerful and ready to perform this duty in the last verse he puts us in mind of three Attributes of God His Mercy his Goodness his Truth for which he is worthy to be praised by us because we the better for them for be cause he is good he hath mercy upon us and because he is merciful 2 He is he promiseth us aid and assistance and because he is faithful and true he will perform it 1. Vers. 5 For the Lord is good O how good to those that are true of heart He is reconcil'd to us 1 A good God pardons our sin justifies us adopts us for his children and that freely without any merit of ours 2. His Mercy is everlasting He is the Father of Mercies 2 Merciful and begets Mercies as oft as we bring forth sins It is the Mercy of the Lord that we are not consumed 3. And his Truth endureth to all generations 3 Faithful For he never made promise but either he hath or will perform it God is not as man that he should lye The Prayer collected out of the one hundred Psalm O Omnipotent and holy God Vers. 1 the excellency and transcendency of thy Nature and those infinite benefits by thy favour conferr'd upon us exact at our hands that we appear in thy presence to celebrate thy name with joy and gladness and enter into thy Gates with thanksgiving and into thy Courts with praise But being conscious to our own unworthiness which ariseth from the thoughts of our manifold transgressions afraid we are that we dust and ashes sinful dust and ashes should take upon us to speak unto our Lord we tremble at thy presence and are ready to sink under thy displeasure If thou Lord should'st be extream to mark what is done amiss O Lord who may abide it Remember yet we are thy creatures and the work of thy own hands Vers. 3 for thou hast made us and not we our selves Remember that when we were not a people worthy of love thou calledst us and madest us thy people when we were clean without the pale that wentest after us and broughtest us home to thy fold and madest us the sheep of thy pasture Give us grace then O thou great Shepherd of our souls that we may lament our unthankfulness and forgetfulness of these favours and the heinousness of our rebellions being removed be reconciled unto us and inable us that instead of a corrupt and impure life we may serve thée in righteousness and holiness all our dayes Of this we have yet some hope because thou art good Vers. 5 thy mercy is everlasting and thy truth endureth from generation to generation from thy goodness procéeds thy mercy and because thou art merciful thou hast made promises to penitent believing sinners and we are assured thou wilt perform them because thou art faithful and true O seal these promises to our disconsolate hearts by the graces of thy Holy Spirit Vers. 2 then we shall be bold to come into thy presence then will we enter into thy Gates with thanksgiving then we will be thankful unto thée and bless thy holy Name We will serve the Lord with gladness and make a joyful noyse to our Lord the God of Jacob for ever Amen Here ends the Third Book of the Psalms according to the Hebrews PSAL. CI. A Psalm of David Didascalicus DAVID being Anointed by Samuel to be King or as most conceive newly made King promiseth and vows to God to reign in Righteousness and Holiness In a word he would so govern Himself his Palace the Church the State that all wicked doers being taken away and all good men countenanc'd by him God should be honour'd and justice peace temperance piety flourish Two parts of the Psalm 1. The Syllabus or brief of the Psalm with the Dedication of it vers 1. 2. The full Explication of what he means by Mercy and Judgement and how practised 1. Toward himself For he shews what his life shall be from vers 2. to 5. 2. Toward ungodly men vers 4 5 7 8. and the end of it vers 8. 3. Toward all good men vers 6. These should be his Counsellors and Servants 1. The sum of the Psalm The first part He Summarily sets down what he will treat of in this Psalm viz. Mercy and Judgement the two great vertues of a King I will sing of mercy and judgement Ver. 1 1. Mercy Judgement which he really vowes Mercy in countenancing giving audience judging for and rewarding the good 2. Judgement in discountenancing punishing and being a terror to evil works and workers And that he would do this really not talk and seem to profess a great love to Mercy and Judgement as Princes use to do when they mean no such matter He makes a Solemn Vow to God to perform it Unto thee O Lord will I sing From thee proceed these gifts to thy honour they shall be referr'd and by me as in thy sight impartially executed This I Vow and Promise to thee 2. The
David's HARP Strung and Tuned Or an easie ANALYSIS Of the whole BOOK of PSALMS Cast into such a Method that the Summe of every Psalm may quickly be collected and remembred With a Devout MEDITATION or PRAYER At the end of every Psalm framed for the most part out of the words of the Psalm and fitted for several Occasions By the Reverend Father in GOD WILLIAM by the Divine providence Lord Bishop of Gloucester LONDON Printed for William Leake and are to be sold at the sign of the Crown in Fleet-street between the two Temple-Gates 1662. To the Right Honorable EDWARD EARLE of CLARENDON Viscount Combury Baron of Hyndon Lord High Chancellor of ENGLAND and Chancellor of the University of OXFORD and one of His MAJESTIES most Honorable Privy Councel Right Honorable A KING and a Prophet greet you well And yet it is the same Person under two names who under either notion I presume shall be welcome For you have a King in your heart and admit the Prophet into your bosome The great services you perform to the one and the great affections you bear and real courtesies you do the other hath embol●●ed me to present these my Meditations unto your protection I shall lesse fear the rigid Censures of others if in your Lordships deep judgment I have contributed the least mite that may help forward devotion You are the great Moderator of the rigor of the Law and therefore what I cannot claim in justice I humbly beg in equity that is a favourable sentence for exposing these my crude conceptions under your Name and I am enough honoured if no dishonour be cast upon you by fixing your Honors name to a Work so unworthy This indeed I had not done had not your Lordships favour in particular obliged me to it 'T is by your Lordships influence upon me that I glimmer as a little Star in the Church and that I yield a more vigorous luster is your Lordships endeavor for which I have little to return but thanks in this poor acknowledgment That you are a Patron to the Muses in general is too large and universal Propositions are as Catholica Catholick medicines that cure few That you have been a Patron to my studies puts life into my old blood not to be faint and weary A vice to which old age is subject that is to waste and go out except there be oile in the Lamp That I no sooner medled with this subject was because I durst not The Mysteries herein contain'd and the Art in the delivery were so superlative that I always held them fit for a mature judgment which by length of years and observation is heightned in old men till they wrack upon dotage Besides I have observed that the best of Expositors have presented their thoughts upon the Psalms in their riper years and made them one of their last works Heavenly raptures they met with in this Book which raised their spirits and hearts and beforehand prepared them to that place to which they did approach I have therefore written after their Copy and brought it to light as the child of my old age and then 't is supposed there may be many infirmities in it which that your Lordship cover with your mantle will be a signal Act of charity The Motive that chiefly was most powerful with me to undergo this task were those Meditations and Devotions of others which I used and perused upon these Hymns These to my judgment weak I confesse relish'd more of the Composers own Cenius than of Davids spirit To remedy this I conceived no better way than to compose the Prayer in Davids words which for the most part is here done and though the order of the Verses be here often inverted yet this is done for the better Connexion of the whole The scope and intent of the Psalmist is strictly observed Pray and Sing we ought with understanding and that is not possible till we understand what we Pray or Sing Now to beget this knowledge in those whom I do desire to animate and render devout in those duties the easiest way I could think on was to present the whole Summe of every Psalm in a brief Synopsis This consideration produced that Analysis which I here offer How happily or unhappily this is perform'd I leave it to your Lordships exacter judgment And yet there was another reason which cast me on this Subject The face of the times were sad and cloudy and our Mother the Church in a mourning weed as Rachel lamenting for her children because they were not and yet upon the promises of God there was hope of a resurrection As then those who accompany their dearest friends to their last home though covered over with vests of sadnesse yet mourn not as men without hope So I in this doleful and general funeral as it were of this our Mother followed her to the grave as the bitter and enraged enemies of hers hoped and boasted with a sad heart and waterish eye and yet in this depth of sorrow I received this comfortable assurance that the day of resurrection would appear for Zion that her walls would be rebuilt and flourish which beyond my expectation God be blessed for it I have lived to see and by your Lordships favor enjoy a large and honorable portion in it Now that I might have somewhat suitable and at hand ready to expresse both these passions I could not find any part of Scripture so apt and pertinent as this little Epitom of the whole By which I have been taught to grieve and hope to lament and joy to complain to my God and comfort my self in the deepest of those complaints with those lively and inspiriting encouragements which this Swan of Bethlehem hath left to be sung by all the good people of God in their extremities The whole is Davids the Method only mine and if it shall find a Candid interpretation from others and a favorable acceptation from your Honour you shall oblige me to remain what I am Your Lordships in all due observance WILL. GLOUCESTER A PREFACE To the EXPOSITION of the Psalms THERE is no way by which Man may learn but by the same God vouchsafes to teach him There is Liber Naturae and Liber Scripturae The Book of his Creatures and his Book of Scriptures The Book of his Creatures is as it were a great Common-place Book written in Folio for all Nations and Languages and able to Catechize all men in these two Principles That there is a God and that he is to be worshipped 2. Sect. But his Book of Scriptures is as it were his own Book of Statutes written for his own peculiar people the Church wherein by Precepts he instructs by Requests he exhorts by Promises he allures by Threats he terrifies and therefore hath he sent his servants for the attaining of these ends with divers qualities Some like Moses to teach some like Esau to comfort some like Jeremy to mourn but David with his
the merits of thy only Son my Lord and only Saviour Iesus Christ Amen PSAL. XL. VVhich is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THERE be two main parts of this Psalm 1. A Thanksgiving from ver 1. to 11. 2. A Prayer from ver 11. to the end Thankfulness consists in the exercise of two vertues Truth and Justice 1. Truth causeth us to acknowledge the benefit and from it we have received it 2. Justice ties us to be grateful and to perform some duties as evidences of our thankful mind and both these we meet with in the first part David begins with the profession of his thankfulness The first part David waits on God and he premits to it his confidence I waited patiently for the Lord then shews the success or what God did for him 1. The success of his waiting He inclined his ear and heard my cry 2. He brought me also out of the horrible pit out of the mire and clay 3. He set my feet upon a Rock being drawn from danger he set me in a safe place 4. He established my goings he confirmed my steps that I slip and slide no more 5. And he hath moved me to be thankful He hath put a new song into my mouth He is thankful even a thanksgiving unto our God The deliverance was not common and therefore the praise should not be common but expressed by a new and exquisite song Of which he conceived the consequent would be And conceives others by his example would wait and be thankful also In his thanksgiving he shews the blessed man that his example would be a common document many shall see it my deliverance my thanks and shall fear God and acknowledge his providence and protection and shall put their trust in the Lord. And so he falls upon his form of thanksgiving and First Pronounceth the man blessed that relies on God affirmatively 1. Blessed is the man that makes the Lord his trust reposeth his hope in him 1 He it is that relies on God 2. Negatively trusts on no man respects not the proud men proud of their wealth 2 Not on man wit or power nor such as turn aside to lies trust on lying vanities 3 Admires Gods works which will deceive Secondly Then by an exclamation admires Gods mercies and goodness to his people 1. For their multitude and greatness Many O Lord my God are thy Works 2. For the strangeness they are not vulgar but miraculous Thy wonderful Works 3. For the incomparable wisdom by which they are done and ordered Many O Lord my God are thy wondrous Works which thou hast done and thy thoughts which are to us-ward they cannot be reckoned up in order unto thee if I would declare them and speak of them they are more than can be numbred 2. And so having in words acknowledged his thankfulness 4 His real thanks by obedience he descends to speak of the other part of his gratitude his real thanks to which in equity he thought himself bound viz. To be obedient to Gods voice which is the best sacrifice and indeed far beyond all legal sacrifices as is apparent in Christ to whom these words and the obedience contained in them is principally attributed and by way of accommodation belongs to every one of his Members who means to be thankful for his Redemption 1. And first he acquaints us that the outward worship is to little worship Which was 1. Sincere inward if sincerity and true piety inwardly be wanting Sacrifice and offerings thou didst not desire burnt-offering and sin-offering hast thou not required Not these absolutely but as subservient to true piety and the internal obedience of the heart without which they are of little value I will have mercy and not sacrifice 2. To this end Aures perforasti mihi Thou hast opened boared 2 Outward and made a window in my ear made me docible and thy servant 3. And I will be obsequious a willing and voluntary servant Then said I lo I come this thy whole Law requires 3 Voluntary such in Christ in the Volume of thy Book it is written 4. He describes his singular obedience 1. That he performed it chearfully and with complacency 1 Chearful I delight to do thy Will O my God 2. That he did it heartily Thy Law is within my heart 2 Hearty The obedience of eyes hands and feet may be hypocritical and feigned that which is done with the heart cannot that the heart thou requirest and that thou shalt have to that purpose I have placed thy Law there 3. That he did it charitably to the benefit of others 3 Charitable for our good he published the Gospel 1. I have preached righteousness in the great Congregation 2. I have not refrained my lips and that thou knowest Feci sine fuco In the publication of the Gospel 3. I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart 4. I have declared thy faithfulness and thy salvation 5. I have not concealed thy loving-kindness and truth from the great Congregation The commendation of the Gospel In which verse we have the commendation of the Gospel that it is righteousness for it justifies it sanctifies that it is Gods truth and faithfulness for in it his promises are performed that it is our salvation freeing us from sin death To which we must be obedient Gods wrath hell which must be published and preached in the great Congregation and to it obedience must be yielded to which there be four things necessary set down in this place 1. The help of Gods Spirit Thou hast opened my ears 2. A ready and willing mind Then said I lo I come 3. A ready performance in the work I delight to do thy Will 4. That a respect be had to Gods Law Thy Will is within my heart And thus having premised his thanks for some deliverance already receive The second part He petitions for favour he thought he might be the bolder to petition for continuance of this mercy and favour for the future upon which he now enters in these words Withhold not thou thy mercy from me O Lord let thy loving-kindness and truth continually preserve me His reasons for it Of which Petition he adds a necessary Reason drawn from the greatness of his evils and sins 1. For innumerable evils have compassed me his miseries were many His sad condition 2. My iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up they are more in number than the heirs of my head 3. Therefore my heart faileth me my agony is great my vital spirits fail And therefore prayes again Be pleased O Lord to deliver me And for the confusion of his enemies make haste to help me 2. The second part of his prayer is for the confusion of his wicked enemies Let them be ashamed and confounded together that seek after my soul to destroy it let them
and sustained with my meat this man or this beast rather hath lift up his heel against me and kick't at me And I among others oppressed with these evils do here prostrate my soul before thée O Lord be merciful unto me raise me up from this calamitous condition and make me know by this expression of thy mercy that thou favourest me and wilt never suffer mine enemies to triumph over me By this I shall know That thou wilt uphold thy servants in their integrity and wilt set them in thy presence and before thy face forever Blessed be the Lord God of Israel from everlasting to everlasting Amen Amen Here ends the first Book of the Psalms as the Jewes divide them and so also Junius and Tremellius Moller and Bellarmine PSAL. XLII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DAVID whether by Saul or Absolon Arg. forced from the Assembly of Gods people complains and as men overwhelmed with troubles are also oppressed with grief so is he and as they surprized with passion abruptly express their thoughts so doth he for sometimes he expostulates sometimes he complains sometimes he corrects and checks himself for his weakness and passion one while he opens his doubts and diffidence and presently again sets forth his affiance and confidence in his God It will not then be more easie to set this Psalm in order than the speeches of a passionate man yet I shall endeavour it by reducing the whole to these four heads 1. The zeal of David to serve God in Gods house ver 1 2 4 6. 2. His complaints and expressions of grief for his absence for his affliction and his enemies insultation upon that ground ver 3 4 7 10. 3. His expostulation with his soul for his dissidence ver 5 6. And again with God for his desertion ver 9. 4. His faith and confidence in Gods promises ver 5 8 11. More particularly Davids zeal to Gods House and Worship 1. He begins with an expression of his grief for his ejection from the Assembly and then sets forth his zeal and desire he had to be present with Gods people by an elegant similitude of a chased Ver. 1 and hunted and thirsty Stag As the Hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God my soul is athirst for God for the living God When shall I come and appear before the presence of God ver 1 2. 2. His sorrow and the causes Then he shewes what case he was in in the mean time in a very heavy condition 1. Ver. 3 My tears have been my meat day and night ver 3. 2. 1 The insultation of enemies And the cause was not only his absence but this bitter Sarcasm of his enemies namely while they insult and continually say in scorn unto me Where is now thy God Ver. 4 where is thy Protector where he in whom thou trustest 3. 2 His banishment from Gods presence Now that which added to his grief was that which gave occasion to this Sarcasm his Banishment from Gods Sanctuary and consequently as they thought from his favour and presence This overwhelmed his soul with sorrow this caused a flood of tears 1. 3 The remembrance of his former happiness When I remember these things my absence their insultation I poure o●t my heart by my self Effundo undaque impellitur uno Tear follows upon tear complaint and that from the heart upon complaint 2. And good Reason when I lay together my former happiness with my present condition for the comparison aggravates my misery Thus it was with me but now it is not so I had gone with the multitude I went with them to the House of God with the voyce of joy and praise with a multitude that kept Holy-day ver 4. I had gone now I cannot I must not go 2. At which being somewhat dejected Hitherto he hath expressed his zeal his sorrow his complaints with the causes of them these put his soul into a sad condition to which by an Apostrophe Ver. 5 turning his speech he thus expostulates 1. He blames himself for it Blaming himself for his weakness and diffidence Why art thou so vexed O my soul why art thou cast down and why art thou so disquieted within me 2. Hnd revives by faith Then presently fortifies himself in Gods promises assuring himself of the performance Hope thou in God for I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance In all which is lively described unto us the combate and tentation that a good man undergoes in a spiritual desertion who finds a great difficulty to struggle at the same time with despair and hope who yet at last conquers through faith and kisses the promises 3. His conflict renews But as yet Davids combate is not over for he renews his complaint Lucta recursat trahitur ad novas pugnas Ver. 6 he exclaims again and ingenuously confesseth how he is affected O my God my soul is cast down within me of which he assigns two causes The causes 1. That though he was ready to serve and remember his God yet that he was forced to do it in an improper place at Jordan at Hermon 't was his grief that there and not at Zion he must remember it Therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan and of the Hermonites from the Hill Mizar 2. Then the greatness and continual succession of his troubles Deep calls upon deep Ver. 7 calamity calls upon calamity and one temptation treads upon the heels of another so that I have just cause to think All thy waves and billows all kind of afflictions are gone over me 4. His Faith in it And yet he despairs not he casts not away his hope and confidence for all that but again closeth with his God and encourageth himself in his mercy Yet I know the Lord will command his loving-kindness in the day-time Ver. 8 A day of deliverance there will be when there shall be a Mandat from his mercy for my good and therefore even now in the night-season even in this night of trouble 1. His song shall be with me 2. And my prayer unto the God of my life Upon which he takes heart 5. Upon which he grows more bold couragious confident and fuller of life and spirit and again expostulates not now with his soul as before but with his God I will say unto God my Rock Ver. 9 1. Why hast thou forgotten me for so much my carnal part presents to me 2. Why go I thus mourning because of the oppression of the enemy 3. Why am I thus wounded with grief For as with a Sword in my bones mine enemies reproach me while they say daily unto me Where is thy God Ver. 10 No Sword cuts so deep as this taunt Omnes dolores leves preterquam tum carendum quod erat 6. But in the close after all his complaints and expostulations And quiets his soul he quiets
The Lord is holy his eye is pure he delights in holiness truth and sincerity of the heart but I am unclean fallacious and therefore miserable because my disposition and affections are contrary to his 5. 3 Committed against conscience And that which yet more aggravates his sin committed it was against his conscience against that light of knowledge and wisdom with which God had endued him for God in the hidden part by a secret and unknown way by the motions of his holy Spirit had taught him wisdom but he like a Beast had suffered that light of knowledge to be suffocated by the fury of his own affections Hitherto hath David confessed and aggravated his sin Ver. 14 as every penitent ought but as if a general confession were not enough 4 And lastly names his sin at the 14th verse he names in particular the sin for which he asks pardon Blood-guiltiness Deliver me from Blood-guiltiness O Lord. His sin being confessed He renews his first Petition for remission and that not coldly or for fashion but aggravated with all the circumstances he renews his first Petition for remission which he doth under a Type then in use and a Metaphor the Type is Hyssop and the Metaphor Wash me Ver. 7 1. 1 To be justified Purge me with Hyssop and I shall be clean with a bunch of Hyssop dipped in the blood of the Paschal Lamb the Israelites sprinkled their doors This was again used in besprinkling and cleansing the Leper and in the sacrifice for sin this bunch was and the blood alterius in enigma a Type of Christs blood with that it was that David desired to be sprinkled for then he knew he should be clean for the blood of Christ purgeth from all sin Justified then he would be for it is the blood of Christ that alone justifieth 2. 2 Sanctified And sanctified also he would be and therefore he adds Wash me wash me with thy holy Spirit who is compared to water and I shall be whiter than snow have a snow-white soul not as if he should be without sin while he remained in this life but that his sin being by the power of Gods Spirit weakned mortified and subdued that it reigned not in him it should never be imputed and a sin not imputed is as if it never had been committed 2. The second Petition That the effects of sin be removed 1. Remorse of conscience David having ended his first Petition for forgiveness now proceeds and craves another viz. That the ill effects which sin had brought upon him may be removed the first of which is grief to the soul terrour and disquiet that ariseth out of the accusation of an evil conscience David lay under this the sense of his sin had taken from him his inward joy and his wonted peace of this he desires a restitution Ver. 8 Make me to hear of joy and peace and gladness 2. 2 An ill state of body A second effect it had even upon his body he was in a pining condition his bones were as it were broken through the extremity of the anguish of his spirit the moysture of his body was like the drought in Summer vide Psal 32. ver 3. 4. To be restored again to Gods favour he desires That even the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce 3. Ver. 9 A third ill effect he found upon his sin was that Gods face his favour was turned from him 3 Gods anger and displeasure he that shewed him a favourable countenance now beheld him with an angry brow and so he knew it would be till his sin was remitted and pardoned and therefore he begs 1. Hide thy face from my sins for if they appear before thy eyes I know they will provoke thine anger and then I am but in an ill case for who can abide thine anger He that turns away his face considers not remembers not and he that considers not will not punish 2. And blot out all mine iniquities I know there is a long Catalogue of sins in thy Book writ against me good God Dele blot raze out this hand-writing that it may not be read he that turns away his face from a writing may yet call for it again and read it but if blotted it cannot be read David therefore desires both 3. Now follows Davids third Petition The third Petition for grace and sanctification in which he craves the grace of Sanctification he first sought for remission then for reconciliation and now for renovation which he asks of God in the three following verses Create in me a clean heart O God and renew a right spirit within me Ver. 10 Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit In which we are to consider 1. The subject upon which the work is to be done the heart the spirit Of the heart for as the heart is that part that first lives in nature so it first lives in grace within this work must begin or else outward renovation is to no purpose 2. The work it self which is 1. A Creation By a new Creation Sin had brought Davids heart in respect of a heavenly being as it were to nothing and from nothing to make it something must be an act of power O Lord create when thou wentest away my life went away Lord come again and create 2. It is a Renovation David was fallen as I may so say And renovation of a new spirit in senium peccari into the old age of sin therefore he desires that God would as it were begin with him again and make him to renew his youth as an Eagle O Lord renew a right spirit within me 3. Reconciliation and Restitution And a restitution of a spiritual life Therefore he craves that God would no cast him aside as a dead man and take from him his Spirit by which he lived Cast me not away take not away restore to me the joy of thy salvation 4. A confirmation in what was good Vphold confirm establish me 3. Who was to do this work not himself no humane power but God alone And a confirmation in goodness Which work God alone could do By changing the qualities of the heart but his power his Spirit O God create O Lord restore uphold me by thy Spirit Renovation is a work that hath its beginning its progress its continuance and perseverance from God and his Spirit 4. The Quality of this a cleansing so in the general for it was not the substance of the heart which was to be renewed and changed but the qualities and disposition only now what he means by this pure and clean heart he declares in the following words when he begs of God to give him a right Spirit a holy Spirit a free Spirit 1. A right spirit for he easily perceived that by his
transgressions of them with a pen of Iron and point of a Diamond with whom thou mindest to enter into judgment let not me O Lord be of that number let not my debt stand registred in that Book but of thy mercy and not my merit put it away and blot it out for if my sin stand upon thy account I am but a dead man Lord quicken me Lord forgive me my trespass and put away the hand-writing of thy Ordinance that is against me O Lord if thou wash me not I shall have no part with thée spots I have Ver. 2 that are not the spots of a son pollutions that are of a scarlet dye wash me then by thy vower from iniquity and cleanse me by thy Spirit from my sin or else as an Aethiop I shall never change my spots O Lord lest my uncleanness banish me from my fellowship with thée wash I beséech thée not my féet only but my hands and my head also Wash my féet that is my unclean affections wash my hands that is my unclean actions and wash my head that is my unclean imaginations cleanse me in all that the pollution of any do not cast me from thy presence O Lord I do not hide and conceal the iniquity of my bosom Ver. 3 I séek not to cover it as hitherto I have done but behold now I know it I acknowledge it I confess it to thée against my self therefore shew Lord some pity and compassion upon a miserable sinner and forgive it my sin is ever before me do thou therefore cast it behind thy back My sin is so secret to the eye of the World that no eye beholds it Ver. 4 to them I séem to be what I am not from them I find no trouble but thou O Lord art he to whom all creatures must render an account against thee then against thee I confess that I have grievously offended and done evil in thy sight and therefore it is not O Lord without cause that I suffer these heavy things from thy hands I have deserved them all and given thée just Reason to procéed against me as thou hast done and now I here acknowledge it before the world that thou mayest be justified and have the praise of righteousness even in those things which by the hands of men thou hast brought upon me Righteous art thou O Lord and just in thy judgments I know that in me that is in my flesh there dwells no good thing it is not one Fact only in which I am culpable Behold I was born in iniquity and in sin hath my mother conceived me A Transgressor I have béen from the womb for that bitter root of sin ingraffed in my nature hath gathered strength and shot forth new branches my understanding is darkned my will perverted and my affections bent to evil so that I am truly abominable in thy sight and ashamed of my self especially being conscious to those foul and enormous actual sins that grow from this polluted féed Behold Thou lovest Truth in the inward affections but wo is me I am a man of a double heart Thou hast often instructed my conscience by many secret motions of thy holy Spirit and taught me the way of wisdom but I foolishly have given a check to those inspirations and strayed like a lost shéep in the wayes of folly the light of my conscience I have put out and against my own knowledge I have transgressed Miserable man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin I thank God through Iesus Christ my Lord he hath shed his blood for me he alone is my Iesus Purge me then O Lord not with hyssop but with his blood nor Sope nor Niter nor Fullers Sope can make me clean but that stream which issued out of his wounds and side Purge me then with this blood and I shall be clean wash me and I shall be whiter than snow though my sins were as scarlet yet I shall be whiter than wool though they be red like crimson yet 〈◊〉 shall be white as the driven snow O Lord I hear within me the accusing voyce of a disquiet conscience which pursues accuseth and terrifies me O Lord let me hear the voyce of joy and gladness send down from above the Comforter who alone can speak peace to my soul and then my body which pineth away under this anguish and my bones which séem to be broken through my disconsolate condition shall again recover their wonted strength and my flesh upon me shall rejoyce If then Lord mark what is amiss who can abide it even thy dear Son when he endured the looks of thy angry face fell into agony his soul was heavy his flesh in such pain that he sweat thick clotts of blood how miserable then am I so long as thou shalt look upon me with an angry brow Hide O hide thy face from my sins and blot out all my misdeeds Turn thy angry look from me and look upon the face of thy Anointed that so thy anger when it reacheth me may as the Sun-beams passing through some thick cloud be refracted and mitigated O Lord by my sin I have grieved thy holy Spirit and forced thée who art properly my heart and life of my heart to forsake me come again Lord and restore life unto me without thée I am dead in trespasses and sins I have lost my life Ver. 10 and like a man wanting his quickning spirit when thou wentest away my life went away Return O Lord and come again and create a new heart within me Of my self I have fallen by thy assistance I must rise lend me then the helping hand of thy grace that may lift me up And being fallen my heart is foul Ver. 11 polluted and unclean and who is able to bring a clean thing out of an unclean This is a work much like the producing the first World out of the Tohu and Bohu set O Lord Almighty thy power to work again and create in me a clean heart Fallen I am into the old age of sin begin with me again and make me young and lusty as an Eagle Ver. 12 Cast me not away and forsake me not in my old age of iniquity as a dead man out of mind but let thy presence yet be with me and restore me to the joy of thy salvation O take not from me the graces and assistances of thy Spirit thy right Spirit thy holy Spirit thy frée Spirit A perverse spirit I find in my self thy Spirit will rectifie it and teach me to go the right way an unclean spirit I am possessed with thy Spirit will sanctifie it and purge it from pollution 't is the spirit of bondage to which I am subject thy Spirit can set it at liberty and make it frée impart therefore some nay a liberal portion of this thy Spirit that may teach me the right way that may set me in a holy course that may kéep preserve uphold and confirm me in it that
were inhumane They gave me Gall to eat and in my thirst they gave me Vinegar to drink Nothing more true than these four degrees in Christs Passion such enemies he found such Jewes 2. His prayer being ended The second part An imprecation he fitly subjoins a heavy imprecation by way of a Prophecy 1. And first he prayes That as they gave him Gall and Vinegar in his thirst that they might find the like at their Table Let their Table be made a snare to them and that for their welfare a Trap A heavy judgment The degrees are eight when that which God ordains for our necessity delight content health prosperity should be our hurt discontent sickness death 2. That they be struck blind and he means not so much in body as in mind a grievous judgment when a man can neither see imminent dangers nor future evils Let their eyes be darkned that they see not 3. That they be infeebled in their bodies and counsels Make their loyns continually to shake i. e. let them be unfit for War and action or as Saint Paul renders it Ever bow down their backs let them be in perpetual slavery and carry burdens 4. That they suffer speedily greatly and continually 1. Greatly for he prays effunde poure out and that is commonly out of a full Vessel and plentifully 2. Speedily Poure out thy indignation on them for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil 3. Perpetually Let thy wrathful anger take hold of them for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. That their Countrey be wasted and their posterity thrust from their inheritance and houses Let their habitation be desolate and none dwell in their Tents And here the Prophet interserts a Reason which was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or which is worse their adding affliction to affliction so far from commiseration that they help to increase the grief of those whom God hath wounded For they persecute him whom thou hast smitten and they talk to grieve those whom thou hast wounded 6. That they may fill up the measure of their iniquity and so be ripe for Gods Sickle Add iniquity to iniquity withdraw thy grace that they sin freely 7. That they dye in the state of impenitency Let them not come into thy righteousness 8. That they finally perish Let them be blotted out of the Book of the living and not be written with the righteous 3. The third part He sings praise Hitherto we have heard Davids complaints and prayers but now out of the sense of divine protection he breaks out into praises 1. Ver. 29 He confesses his own condition As for me I am poor and sorrowful and then acknowledgeth Gods help Let thy salvation set me on high And assures himself of Gods acceptance The effects shall be 2. Then with full voyce he sings praise I will praise the Name of God with a Song and will magnifie it with Thanksgiving 3. And of this praise he promiseth himself acceptance This also shall please the Lord better than an Oxe or Bullock that hath Horns and Hoofs And the effect of this his praise for his deliverance 1 Joy to the afflicted will be double First upon the godly poor afflicted people and secondly upon the whole World 1. The effect upon the poor will be joy The humble and meek shall see this and be glad and your heart shall live that seek God their sad heart shall revive 2. The Reason is For the Lord heareth the poor and despiseth not his Prisoners David and Christ he heard and this gives assurance that he will hear suos vincta those that suffer for him Then secondly 2 Thanksgiving in all men the effect it shall have upon the whole World is a general Thanksgiving 1. Let the Heaven and the Earth praise him the Seas and every thing that moveth therein 2. And the Reason he gives for it is worth noting which is his goodness to his Church and people 1. For Gods goodness to his Church In saving them from their enemies He will save Zion 2. In confirming his Kingdom among them He will build the Cities of Judah 3. In giving them security and peace That men may dwell there and have it in possession 4. In conserving it perpetually that the Cates of Hell shall not prevail against it The seed also of his servants shall inherit it and they that love his Name shall dwell therein Not Hypocrites but they who love him sincerely and worship him in Spirit and Truth The Prayer collected out of the sixty ninth Psalm O Blessed Lord God who art more ready to grant than we to ask let this be the time when my prayer shall be accepted by thée O God Ver. 13 in the multitude of thy mercy hear me Hear me O Lord for thy loving-kindness is good Turn unto me according to the multitude of thy tender mercies and hide not thy face from thy servant for I am in trouble Hear me speedily Ver. 1 and save me O my God The waters are come even unto my soul Ver. 1 O let not the water-flood overflow me neither let the deep swallow me up and let not the pit shut her mouth upon me I sink in deep mire where there is no standing deliver me out of the mire Ver. 2 and let me not sink Now in the midst of these extremities I am weary with crying unto thee my throat is dry and hoarse through my daily complaining yea and my eyes are grown weak and dim in looking upward Ver. 18 and in waiting for help from my God Draw nigh then unto my soul and redeem it and let me have an experience of the truth of thy salvation My enemies O Lord are many and mighty and malicious Ver. 4 Those that hate me are more in number than the hairs of my head Mighty they are also Ver. 5 and most injurious for they call me to an account for that I never took and punish me for that I never deserved O Lord Thou knowest my foolishness Ver. 4 and my faults are not hid from thee against thee only I have sinned but to them I have done no harm and yet such is their malice that they séek to destroy me wrongfully and without any cause of mine séek to take away my life To thée O Lord all things are manifest Thou hast known my reproach my shame and my dishonour and my Adversaries are alwayes before thee and this reproach is so great that it hath even broken my heart and I am full of heaviness and which is yet more grievous in this my distress I looked for some to take pity on me but I found none and for comsorters but I found none for not only my enemies afflicted me but even my friends ran from me Ver. 8 and forsook me I am become as it were a stranger unto my Friends and Brethren and an Alien to those who are of my own blood my mothers children and most familiar friends stand staring upon my trouble
things for the best to his people although in the midst of calamities and troubles he seems to desert them 2. And that we may know that he did this from his heart he seals it with a double Amen Amen Amen So I wish so be it The Prayer collected out of the eighty ninth Psalm O God the Habitation of whose Throne is justice and equity and before whose face Mercy and Truth are perpetual attendants we unworthy wretches yet thy Servants do beseech thee that the effects of these thy attributes may be evidently séen in the gathering féeding amplifying protecting Vers. 1 and preserving thy Catholique Church So shall we sing of thy mercies for ever and with our mouths will we make known thy faithfulness to all generations Out of mercy thou hast béen moved to make a Covenant with thy elect that thou set thy Son upon the Throne of his father David and thou hast established with an Oath his seed and built up his Kingdom to all generations He is that mighty one on whom thou hast laid help He is that thy chosen whom thou hast exalted Thou art his Father and he is thy first-born Let then thy hand establish him with thy arm strengthen him Exalt the Throne of him whom thou hast anointed with thy Holy Oyle and make him higher than the Kings of the earth Make his seed to endure for ever and his Throne as the dayes of Heaven Suffer not the enemy to exact upon him not the son of wickedness to afflict him Of this his séed this Kingdom in which we live is a principal part and our King a principal member Vers. 38 But now thou hast cast off and abhorred thou hast been wroth with thine Anointed Thou hast seemed to make void the Covenant which thou hast made with thy Servant Thou hast prostituted his Diadem as if it were a profane thing and cast his Crown and Royal dignity to the ground and suffered it to be trampled upon by the feet of scorners Thou hast broken down his Forts and brought to ruine his strong holds Those fortifications which under thy protection were wont to be a safe-guard from the enemy are surprized demolished and razed So that every one that passeth by hath an opportunity to break into thy Vineyard and riot among the Vines every one liberty to fill his hand with spoile and rapine His adversaries are many and thou hast set up the power of their right-hand against him His enemies are mighty and thou hast given them occasion from their victories over him to rejoice Rejoice and triumph they do that thou hast blunted the edge of his sword and hast not given him victory in the battail It is their glory that thou-hast made his glory to cease and cast his Throne down to the ground These Tyrants boast these sons of Belial exult that thou hast shortned the dayes of his youth and covered him with dishonour How long Lord wilt thou hide thy self shall thy wrath burn like fire for ever We doubt not of thy power in thy mercy we hope Merciful God then raise up thy power and come amongst us O Lord God of hosts who is a strong Lord like unto thee or who among the sons of the mighty can be compared with thee Thou stillest the raging of the Sea when the waves thereof arise Thou hast overthrown that proud King of Egypt Pharaoh and destroyed many other thine enemies with a strong arm Strong is thy hand and high is thy right-hand Shew then thy strength in our weakness arise like a gyant refreshed with Wine and smite thine enemies in the hinder parts that their violence prevail no longer against us that they execute not their whole fury and hatred upon us To thée we who are men but of a short time call to for life To thée Vers. 47 we who now live but must shortly sée death earnestly cry to deliver our souls from the grave Hast thou made us for naught hast thou made all men in vain shall we draw out our short dayes in perpetual miseries Thou art our Father we are elected to be thy Sons let then thy faithfulness and thy mercy be with us Remember Lord the reproach of thy servants and how we do bear in our bosomes the rebukes of a profane people Remember that this reproach is cast upon thy name and the footsteps and long-suffering of thine Anointed is thereby slandered Remember Lord thy former loving-kindness which thou swarest to the seed of David in thy Truth Confess we do to our own shame that we have forsaken thy Law and have not walkt in thy Iudgements that we have broken thy Statutes and not kept thy Commandments and therefore we are content murmur not that thou visit our transgressions with the Rod and our iniquities with stripes but this is it we beg of thée that thou wouldst not utterly take from us thy loving-kindness nor suffer thy Truth to fail Break not thy Covenant nor alter the thing that is gone out of thy lips If the irreversible decrée be not past which we hope is not against this our Church yet let it stand for ever as the Sun and Moon those faithful Witnesses in heaven with the Catholique and never let the gates of hell prevail against it We know and believe that thou art a merciful God long-suffering and of great goodness and therefore in all things we suffer ready we are to say with thy servant Job The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken Blessed be Jehovah Amen Amen The end of the third book of the Psalms according to the Hebrews The fourth book of the Psalms follow PSAL. XC 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE inscription makes Moses to be the Author of this Psalm and because here is mention made in it of the Mortality of man the fragility of his nature and the brevity and misery of his life which proceeded from the wrath of God moved to cut off his life and punish him while he lives for his iniquity conceiv'd it is that Moses composed it upon some notable disobedience and rebellion of Israel while they were in the Wilderness for which God brought upon them an exemplary vengeance whether that of Corah Dathan or Abiram or the plague that consumed them for making the golden Calf or as the common opinion is for their murmuring upon the return and report of the Spies Numb 14. For which God sent a plague among them or else when God smote the people with a very great plague at Kibroth Hattaavah Numb 11. Which of these it was is uncertain One of these is supposed to be the occasion of the composition and that which moved God to indignation which Moses deprecates in the end and prayes to God to return and shew favour to his people There be four parts of this Psalm 1. An ingenious acknowledgment of Gods protection of them ver 1 2. 2. A lively Narration of the mortality of man his fragility and brevity of his life together with
would stay here it were but against Man but they add one wickedness to another to their injustice and cruelty they add impiety and blasphemy And of that I complain next Yet they say Vers. 7 The Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Jacob regard it That he nor hears nor sees nor regards what they do What tell you us of the Lord what do you talk to us of the God of Jacob that God of revenge tush he hath nor eyes nor eares or if he hath he is far removed and cares not for these things below he shall nor see nor hear nor understand nor consider nor examine what we do in this world This is their impiety this their b asphemy This the true cause of all their injustice tyranny cruelty oppression Now our Prophet sets himself seriously to reprehend and confute this The third part Whom David reprehends for their Atheism confutes and derides By an Apostrophe he turns to them and calls them fools and proves by a manifest Argument that they are fools demonstrating that God is nor deaf nor blind as they presumed and conceived from the cause to the effect and urgeth them Emphatically 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Vers. 8 Vnderstand ye bruitish among the people Oh ye fools when will ye be wise Shews that God 1. Understands what will you be bruitish alwayes will you never have common sense in your heads 2. Vers 9 He planted the ear caused you to hear and shall not he then hear 2 Hears 3. 3 Sees He formed the eye with all the tunicles and put into it a visive faculty by which you see and shall not he see Nil dat quod non habet To say the contrary is as if you should affirm the fountain that sends forth the stream had no water in it or the Sun that enlightens the world had no light or the fire that warms had no heat Are these affirmations fit for wise men Neither is it that the God of Jacob doth nor hear nor see Farther yet Vers. 10 4. He chastiseth the heathen as Sodom Gomorrah c. 4 Chastiseth or he chastises them by the checks of their own conscience the Synderesis being set in their souls to that purpose their thoughts accusing them or excusing and shall not he then correct you who go under the name of his people and yet so impiously blaspheme 5. 5 Knows the vain thoughts of man He that teacheth man knowledge hath endued him with a reasonable soul and made him capable of all Arts and Sciences is he stupid is he without understanding Shall not he know Nay nay say or think what you will it is not so so far he is from being deaf that he cannot hear your words or blind that he cannot see your actions that he looks into your hearts and knows your thoughts counsels and judgeth them all vain Vers. 11 The Lord knows the thoughts of man that they are but vanity With which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he concludes his reprehension 4. And so from them he comes to the Good man The fourth part David shews the happinness of good men who are Blessed and shews his happiness whom he labours to comfort in his extremities whom he pronounceth Blessed Blessed is the man and his blessing lies in these things 1. In his sufferings because when he is punished he is but chastised and his chastisements are from the Lord. Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest Vers. 12 2. In his teaching that when he is chastised 1 In his sufferings in that taught thereby Obedience he is but taught obedience to the Law of God taught by book taught out of thy Law which because he hath not well kept therefore he is whipt and by it taught to heed it to love it to affect the observation better hereafter 3. In consideration of the end that he sret not Vers. 13 but bear more moderately the insultations and injuries of the wicked for the end And patience in regard of the end why God chastiseth and teacheth thee out of his Law is That he may give thee rest a quiet and even soul from the dayes of adversity and that thou shouldst expect with patience Domc. so long till the pit be digged up for the ungodly Such a day there is and the day will come Hell as ready to receive the sinner as a Grave digged up for a dead body Expect it therefore with a quiet mind Vers. 14 4. And the reason is That though God for a time seem to be angry Of which the 1. Confirmation is from Gods faithfulness and equity and suffer his people to be afflicted yet he will not utterly neglect and forsake them For the Lord will not cast off his people neither will he forsake his inheritance 5. A day of judgement and execution of justice shall come when judgement shall return unto righteousness Vers. 15 When the Church is in affliction these two seem to be seperated and divorced but they shall meet again and kiss each other The justice of God which seems to be only potential and habitual and as it were asleep while his chosen do suffer and wicked men oppress them shall then be apparent and actual so that the justice of God in the defence and deliverance of his Church and the judgement of God in the condemnation of the wicked shall be conspicuous 2. In which the just shall so fully acquiesce that all those who are upright in heart shall follow it Applaud acknowledge it A second confirmation of the comfort he gave to the Church in affliction 2 Confirm'd by his own example Object is fetcht from his own experience from the 16. to the 20. verse Object Yea but this time of judgement may be long in the mean while 't is necessary to have some helper and help against the persecutions and injuries of cruel men Who will arise for me Vers. 16 and labour to protect me in so great a concourse of devils or mischievous men who will stand up for me and defend me against the workers of iniquity Resp. Even he that then stood up for me No man but God alone Resp. Vers. 17 he did it and unless the Lord had been my help my soul had almost dwelt in silence I had been inter silentes laid in the grave among the dead saith David vers 17. 2. If I said and complain'd to him that I was in any danger Vers. 18 My foot slips I was tempted and ready to fall Thy mercy O Lord held me up in mercy he lent me his hand and sustained me 3. Vers. 19 In the multitude of the thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul 1. The thoughts within me were sorrows of heart and many they were occasioned from within from without a multitude of them and yet I did not only patiently undergo them but found comfort in them 2. Thy comforts delight my soul as were the
deserved both praise and a reward And an ample reward he had for it for God established the dignity of the high Priesthood in Phineaz and in his posterity as long as the Common-wealth of the Jewes continued 7 Another rebellion at Meribah 7. The Prophet comes to another remarkable sin of the Jewes extant Numb 20. where the people chode with Moses for want of water 1. They anger'd him also at the waters of strife That is God when they contradicted Moses 2. So that it went ill with Moses for their sakes for being passionate and disturbed with cholar He spake unadvisedly with his lips When Moses smote the Rock and offended God Hear now ye Rebels c. and he smote the Rock By their murmuring and grumbling they so provoked his spirit to bitterness that he who at other times was chearful and ready to obey all Gods Commands did now somewhat strike at it 8 Their rebellion after they came into Canaan 8. Hitherto the Prophet hath set down seven several rebellions of the Jewes during their abode in the Wilderness now he proceeds to shew us how they have behaved themselves after they came into and were seated in the land of Canaan Better a man would think they should be now that God had made good his Word to them But I see a Blackmore cannot change his skin nor they their manners disobedient stubborn and rebellious they were still which the Prophet confesseth and is upon Record in the Book of Judges 1 They destroy'd not the Heathen 1. God had expresly commanded that the Nations of Canaan should be destroyed Deut. 7.1 2 3. But they did not destroy the Nations concerning whom the Lord had commanded this was Disobedience 2 They married with them 2. But were mingled among the Heathen They made Leagues and Marriages with them Judg. 2. 3. 3. And learned their works Many superstitious many lewd customes 3 Learned their works 4. But which went beyond all they learned to be Idolaters of them 4 Became Idolatrous forsook God for the Devil 1. They served their Idols which was a snare unto them for for that they became their slaves Judg. 2 c. 2. Yea they sacrificed their sons and daughters unto Devils that is to Moloch 5 This polluted them and the land 3. With inhumane sin that the Prophet might aggravate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he comes over it again And shed innocent blood that is the blood of innocent children even the blood of their sons and daughters whom they sacrificed to the Idols of Canaan The Consequents of which were double First a double pollution Secondly a heavy judgment 1. First A pollution of the Land in which they dwelt The land was defiled with blood 2. A pollution of their own souls Thus were they defiled in their own works Polluted as a Harlot that pollutes her body by the prostitution of it so they polluted when they went a whoring after their own inventions Espoused they were to God their husband but they left him and followed Idols they were to be accounted no better than Whores which Idols were properly their own inventions For which they were punish'd abominated for they learned to prostitute themselves to them neither from God nor Moses The judgment or punishment now followes and a signification whence it proceeded it came not by chance nor meerly by the hand of man it was by Gods Order and Anger 1. Therefore was the wrath of the Lord kindled against his people Therefore for their Idolatry Murder Whoredom so that he was not only angry but his anger was kindled it was in a flame 2. Nay he took so great dislike to them that abominatus est insomuch That he abhorred his own inheritance It must be a very foule offence that will kindle the wrath of a mild King against his people And justly given into the hand of the Heathen and a strange dislike for which a man will renounce and abhor his own inheritance it shewes how heinous a sin Idolatry is And the punishment he took upon them was very just 1. He gave them into the hand i. e. the power of the Heathen and this E Lege Taliouis God had given the Heathen into their hands to destroy them which because they did not but learned their works therefore now God gave them into the hands of the Heathen 2. Who were hard Lords over them He made them their Lords and hard Lords they were as easily appears in the story of the Book of Judges and the first of Samuel and no wonder for they hated them yea even when they made Leagues and Contracts with them Their case must be then very miserable when those that hated them ruled over them from such they were to expect little favour 3. And little they had for the Prophet in the next verse acquaints us that 1. Their enemies also oppressed them Tyrants Oppressors they were read the Book of Judges c. and very often if they sought to free themselves 2. They were brought into subjection under their hand to wit under the hand of the Philistines Moabites Ammonites c. In which state and condition yet God did not forget them For many times did he deliver them Not once but often as by Gideon Jephtha Deborah Sampson and others Yet God deliver'd them But O the ingratitude of a sinful Nation whereas being deliver'd they should have served But they provoked him again being deliver'd they provoked him with their Counsel that is by following the Counsels of their own hearts and not the directions of God And so were very justly brought into the case they were before And again punished For they were brought low for their iniquity that they might know that God that had humbled them and deliver'd them could when they revolted bring them into the same case they were before Yet again receiv'd to grace for God is moved by their affliction as he often did And now the Prophet adds that which indeed he drives at through the whole Psalm the wonderful and immutable good-will of God to them though he forgave and deliver'd them upon their Repentance and in a short time provoked him again Nevertheless he received them to Grace even after their Recidivations and Relapses and the Causes that moved him to this were external and internal 1. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that outwardly and occasionly moved him to it was their affliction and cry He regaraed their affliction when he heard their cry 2. But the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that inwardly sway'd him was his word past to them But more out of Mercy and his Word and his mercy 1. His word and his promise was past to Abraham to be their God and he would not break it And he remembred for them his Covenant 2. His tender affection that he alwayes bear them this caused him to repent and grieve that they should be
néedy to an opulent and a voluptuous life which the many aim at in their prayers but the end of this our Request is That thanks may be given to thy holy Name and that we may triumph in thy praise that the purity of that Religion which thou hast delivered and committed unto us may be conserved and propagated and thy worship now intermitted may be restored and thy praises which by the sadness of these times have béen silenced may again with triumph be heard in the Congregation Then with joyful lips we shall give thanks unto the Lord and by experience make it known That thou art good and that thy mercy endureth for ever Ver. 1 Not indéed as we ought not as thou deservest for who can utter the mighty Acts of the Lord or who can shew forth all his praise But we will do what we can exalt with our voyces and honour thée with our lives We will keep thy judgments and do righteousness at all times that thy praises may be comely in our mouths and our lives become thy Gospel Grant us this mercy O Lord and then the Priests shall sound forth at thine Altar Blessed be the Lord God of Israel and all the people shall say with a chearful heart Amen Hallelujah The end of the fourth Book of the Psalmes according to the Hebrewes PSAL. CVII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE Title of this Psalm is Allelujah because in it are set forth the praises of God for delivering such as are oppressed from four common miseries after every of which is expressed those intercalary verses Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness c. Then they cryed unto the Lord in their trouble As also for the effects of his Providence who only by his power orders and governs the change and vicissitudes we see in the World There be four especial Points handled in this Psalm 1. A Preface in which he exhorts all to praise God especially the Redeemed ver 1 2. 2. A Declaration of his goodness in particular 1. To the banished and strangers famish'd from ver 3. to 9. 2. To the prisoners and captives from ver 10. to 16. 3. To the sick from ver 16. to 23. 4. To the Mariners from ver 23. to 32. 3. A praise of Gods Power and Providence which is evidently seen in the changes and varieties of the World of which he gives several instances by which it is proved That he is the sole Disposer and Governour of the Universe from ver 33. to 42. 4. The Conclusion which sets forth the use we are to make of it ver 42 43. 1. The first part He incites all to praise God This Psalm begins as did the former and the intention in it is the same viz. That we celebrate and set forth Gods praise yea and for the same Reasons O give thanks unto the Lord Ver. 1 1. For he is good 2. And merciful For his mercy endureth for ever 2. And those who he invites to perform this Duty are indeed all who are sensible that they have received any mercy or goodness from him any way Especially the redeemed in Soul or Body whom he calls the Redeemed of the Lord that men may know when they are freed from any evil that it is only by chance or by their wisdom c. Gods hand is in it he is the first and chief cause of it the rest inferiour instruments to bring to pass his Providence 1. Let the Redeemed of the Lord say so i. e. that he is good that he is merciful 2. Ver. 2 They say so whom he hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy If the Holy Ghost by the enemy means the Devil then he speaks of our Redemption by Christ if by the enemy some Tyrant Tribulation c. then a corporal and temporal Redemption but the last is generally understood and especially is referr'd to the first afflicting misery Banishment and the next verse intimates so much 3. And gather'd them out of the Lands from the East and from the West from the North and from the South which is yet as true of our spiritual Redemption and Christs collection of his Church from all parts of the World Mat. 8.11 John 10.16 11.52 2. Most Expositors therefore begin the second part at the second verse But some at the fourth The second part but the matter is not much material In those two there was mention made of Gods goodness in their deliverance in their collection from all lands But in the following is an evident Declaration of what they suffered during their absence from their Countrey which is the first misery described here by the Prophet to which a mans life is subject And it is the heavier Cross when a man is forc'd to it by Banishment as is apparent by the complaints that have been made of it by those that have suffer'd they are sine foco sine lare Curat nemo vagos laedere nemo veretur Exul non curae creditur esse Deos. Omnes exhausti jam casibus omnium egeni And this is the misery which the Prophet first instanceth in this place which first he describes then shewes the course the Banished took and lastly acquaints us with the manner of their deliverance which is the method in the rest 1. The first kind of misery Banishment Their misery was 1. That they wander'd no small discomfort to an ingenuous nature to be a Vagrant to walk from place to place and not have a certain House to put his head in In which they 1. Wandered 2. In solitary places Gods people were for a time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pilgrims and strangers and all that time few and evil were their dayes 2. The place adds to the misery Banished men are not confined to solitary places alwayes though that they have not the company they desire yet company they may have but the case of these Banished was That they wander'd in the Wilderness in a solitary place they fovnd no City to dwell in Literally it was fulfilled in the Israelites while they travelled through the Wilderness 3. Hungry and thirsty omnium egeni Men may wander and be in solitary places 3 Suffer'd hunger and thirst but yet have a supply of necessary food To this pass sometimes Gods people come that they have nor meat nor drink as Eliah the Israelites David c. 4. 4 Even to fainting And the Famine may be so great that their souls that is their life is ready to faint in them This is the Incrementum that the Prophet useth to aggravate the misery of Banished men and are the several steps by which it riseth 2. The course they took Next the Prophet shewes us the Course that these banished and hungry souls took for ease and help and that it failed them not no nor the rest following that took the same Course and therefore he four times repeats it versu intercalari The way was
two Arguments to prove that God knowes all things that belong to us 1. Because God knowes all things past and future antiqua novissima before behind us and therefore no wonder if he know all the actions of men 2. Because he hath made man he governs him Thou O Lord madest man and after hast put thy hand upon him to order him Thou bearest him as it were in thy hands and must therefore of necessity know his wayes The Prophet concludes this Attribute of Gods Omniscience with an Epiphonema Such knowledge is not in man Such knowledge to know the hearts thoughts actions words of all men is too wonderful for me it is a property that belongs to God alone It is high Ver. 6 I cannot attain unto it it passeth my Reach and Capacity 2. The second part His Omnipresence From Gods Omniscience David descends to speak of his Omnipresence and by it shewes That no man can hide himself from the eye and knowledge of God because he is present in every place 1. Ver. 7 Whither shall I go from thy Spirit i.e. That I may be hid from thy knowledge No place can hide us from his presence 2. Or whither shall I go from thy presence i. e. From thy eye face Say I should think of some lurking place to hide my self in it must be in Heaven Hell the Sea the utmost part of the earth or else I must be hid from thee by some dark night But none of these will do it For thou art present in all these places and beholdest in the thickest darkness 1. Ver. 8 If I ascend up to heaven thou art there 2. Ver. 9 If I make my bed in hest thou art there 3. If I take the wings of the morning and remain in the uttermost parts of the Sea even there shall thy hand lead me ut custos captivum and thy right hand shall hold arrest me and keep me under restraint 4. If I say Surely the darkness shall cover me even the light shall be about me yea the darkness hides not from thee but the night shineth as the day the darkness and light are both alike to thee 3. His instance to prove both is mans formation in the womb And among many instances that might be given to declare Gods Omniscience and Omnipresence omitting other he makes choice of one only viz. the formation of a child in the womb God saith he forms the child in the belly of the mother makes the seminal vessels which are destined for generation sees how to work and how to join all parts together in that dark Cell and therefore night day darkness and light are all one to him He is present in that abstruse and secret place and sees how to knit bones and sinewes and nerves together to form the vital parts endue them with faculties cause flesh to come upon them and till all be perfected to wrap up the Embrio in it Secundine But to the words 1. The excellency of the Authour is commended Thou hast possessed my Reins Ver. 13 The Reins are Organs ordained for generation the Reins are again the most secret and hidden parts of the body Psal 26.2 The sense then is Thou hast undertaken wholly to frame me as I lay hid in the womb and there hast cherished me being formed 2. Thou hast covered me in my mothers womb cloathed me with flesh skin bones and inclosed me with a Secundine And here the Prophet Which the Prophet admires before he proceeds in his description of the childs formation in the womb breaks off the course and falls in admiration of Gods work and sings praise for it 1. I will praise thee and extoll thee my Maker 2. Ver. 14 For I am fearfully and wonderfully made It is enough to strike any man into a reverential fear of thee and a wonder that shall consider se●●ously this work 3. Marvellous are thy works all are marvellous and that my soul knoweth right well but none beyond this And now he goes on He continues his Narration of a childs formation in the womb and continues his Narration of the formation of the Embrio and descends to speak of some parts 1. My substance Vis mea robur meum ossatio mea ossium artuum compages essentia mea for Interpreters differ in the reading is not hid from thee Ver. 15 2. When I was made in secret in the dark and secret Cell of my mothers womb 3. And curiously wrought The word in the Hebrew as Moller observes signifies aca pingere vestes auro variis filis diversorum colorum intexere Man indeed is a curious piece and the variety of faculties Organs parts shew him to be so 4. In the lowest parts of the earth Not that man was made in infinis terrae but in his mothers belly in which yet the work is as secret and remote from us as if God did it in the lower parts of the earth 2 Maccab. 7.22 23. 5. Thy eyes didst see my substance being yet imperfect When I was an Embrio in which there appeared no form or distinction of parts Thy eyes saw what all would come to that from that imperfection time would produce a perfect child and also caused it to be so 6. And in thy book of prescience and providence were all my Members written The Idea of them was with thee Vt pictura in mente pictoris 7. Which in continuance were fashioned mora tempores He again admires Gods works when as yet there was none of them perfect He closeth this part with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in which he doth admire the wisdom of God in his counsels and in his works Two things he saith of them 1. That they are dear and of esteem to him How precious also are thy thoughts to me O God Not only in the formation of man but in other things 2. That they are infinite as indeed they are to any man that shall reflect upon the kinds the Species the Individua's in the world David might well say O how great is the Summe of them If I should count them they are more in number than the sand For they are indeed innumerable 3. For this cause When I awake I am present with thee I never awake and rise but some new matter or other of thy providence wisdom is offer'd to my mind to meditate on which puts me into an admiration of thy power which should be the use that every man ought to make of Gods works from the consideration of them arise to consider the Creator This is to be present with God 3. The third part David purgeth himself from ambition and blood And so David having ended his Theis of the Omniscience and Omnipresence of God comes up closer to that for which he said all this which was to justifie himself before Gods Tribunal It is objected against me that I am a bloody man a man of Belial and that out of ambition I have
invaded the Kingdom But thou Lord art Omniscient and knowest all things thou art Omnipresent and at all my actions if therefore I be such a man execute justice upon me For 1. Surely thou wilt slay the wicked thou wilt execute vengeance upon them I dare not then be of their society Will not have to do with such men or embrace their friendship 2. Depart therefore from me ye bloody men Joab Doeg Shimei Saul avaunt 3. Besides I desire none of their company and acquaintance for they are not only enemies to me but thee also they speak not only ill of me but they blaspheme For they speak against thee wickedly and thy enemies take thy name in vain 4. And yet he deals more roundly with them that he was so far from shewing them any love and giving them the right-hand of fellowship that he hated them Which hatred arose from their hatred of God their impiety was the cause of it and to that he opposeth himself even with a perfect hatred 1. Do not I hate them O Lord that hate thee Such he hates and am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee The interrogatory makes it the more quick 2. And to himself he returns this answer Yea I hate them with a perfect hatred I count them my enemies I cannot then be the man they would make me so far I am from the imputed crimes that no man condemns them more than my self 4. The last part And sets himself before Gods Tribunal Lastly for his more full purgation and sets himself before Gods Tribunal It seems his conscience was very clear and his heart sincere that he durst abide that Trial. If I be such as they say I refuse no punishment but if otherwise shew some testimony of my innocency in this matter 1. Search me O God and know my heart What in the beginning of the Psalm he said God did now he intreats him to do and to do it with effect 2. Try me and know my thoughts examine my heart my wayes my thoughts my progess my actions 3. And see if there be any wicked way in me i.e. any malicious bloody presumptuous way Prayes for Gods direction 4. And lead me in the way everlasting This this was the end he proposed of his trial That if God saw any way of wickedness in him that might seduce him he would withdraw him from that way and lead him to think desire and do those things which would bring him to eternal life The Prayer collected out of the One hundred and thirty ninth Psalm SO great is thy knowledge Ver. 1 providence and perspicality O Almighty God Ver. 2 that nothing can be hid from thy eye Thou hast searched and known my actions my thoughts my motions and my intentious There is not a word in my tongue but thou know'st it altogether Whither then shall I go from thy Spirit Ver. 7 or whither shall I go from thy presence Could I ascend to Heaven Thou art there should I make my bed in Hell Thou art there also Nor East nor West nor Sea nor Land nor Night nor Day are able to conceal us from thée for thou knowest all and art present at all our secrets So awe us then O God nay over-awe us by the presence of thy eye that in fear and reverence we may walk before thée as wary to offend the eye of holiness and to provoke the ear of jealousie I never cast my eye seriously upon my self but I find matter of wonder and fear for I am fearfully and wonderfully made Thou wert present with those seminal vessels when I was framed in secret and fashioned in my mothers womb Thy work then was curious the formation strange the symmetry wonderful the harmony admirable the proportions sutable in thy Book were all my members written which in continuance were fashioned from an imperfect Embrio Thou brought'st me to the shape of a perfect child and gavest me life and being O how precious are all thy thoughts unto me O God how great is the sum of them If I should go about to count them they pass my capacity for they are more in number than the Sand and therefore so often as I take thy wayes and works into consideration I awake out of the lethargy of a secure and careless mind and am present with thée in my thoughts and meditations as desirous only to live to thée and to please thée alone Thy wisdom thy knowledge thy presence doth over-awe me in all my wayes for I am assured that thou looksst into the very secret recesses of the heart and that thou wilt slay the wicked and all them that speak against thee wickedly and who take thy Name in vain These thou countest for thy enemies and they never shall be estéemed for my friends Depart therefore from me you bloody men Thou Lord which knowest all things and searchest the secrets of all hearts art my witness That I hate them that hate thee and that I am grieved with those that rise up against thee yea I hate them with a perfect hatred because they are enemies to thée therefore I count them my enemies They lay to my charge many grievous crimes for I am a man of contentions they charge me as a pestilent Fellow a son of Belial a troubler of Israel But ' Lord Thou knowest my Innocency and integrity of my heart to thée there fore I appeal who art an infallible Witness and Iudge of my Conversation Search me then O my God and know my heart try me and examine my thoughts and see if there be any wicked way any action or progress of any wickedness in me And if as by the testimony of a good conscience I am firmly perswaded no such guilt can be found upon me leave we not then to perish with wicked men but lead me constantly in the way of Virtue and Religion in which without thy conduct I cannot walk lead me I say in that way by thy Word and Spirit which will bring me to everlasting life through the merits of Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen PSAL. CXL DAVID being persecuted by Saul Doeg and the men of Ziph prayes to God for his safety and defence from their evil tongues But the Fathers apply it more largely and make it a prayer of the Church in persecution against the Devil and wicked men which are his instruments to persecute Gods people The parts of the Psalm are 1. A Petition to be delivered from his enemies whom he describes from ver 1. to 6. 2. A Protestation of his confidence in God ver 6 7. 3. A prayer against them ver 8 9 10 11. 4. A manifestation of his hope that God will uphold him in a just Cause ver 12 13. 1. He first summarily proposeth his Petition 1. Deliver me O Lord from the evil man Doeg or the Devil The first part David prayes for deliverance from wicked men qui inimious home Mat. 13. 2. Preserve