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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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curses perjuries shall be stopped shamed he shall be and confounded The Prayer collected out of the sixty third Psalm O God Ver. 1 thou art my God the God whom I only serve that God whom I have alwayes found propitious unto me therefore even before the morning light I will awake and séek thée I am at this time banished and forced to dwell in a dry and thirsty land where no water is yet the want of necessary relief doth not so much afflict me as the want of thy presence after thée therefore I thirst to thée I sigh of thée I more attentively meditate than of any bodily sustenance It is the grief of my heart that I cannot be present to hear thy holy Word to offer up my supplications before thée Ver. 2 to receive the Seals of thy love and my salvation in the Assemblies of thy Saints there I was wont to behold thy power in thy Sanctuary Ver. 5 I did contemplate thy glory and my mouth shall be satisfied as it were with marrow and fatness even with the chiefest delights might I be again restored to those spiritual comforts in thy house My life is not so dear unto me as is thy loving-kindness that kindness which I was wont to enjoy in thy presence Ver. 3 bring me then back again to thy Sanctuary Ver. 5 and my lips shall praise thee Thus will I bless thée whil'st I live and with the invocation of thy Name in prayer I will lift up my hands unto thée begging help and grace of none but thée who art my Gracious Merciful and Almighty God This I account the joy of my heart and for this my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips And yet being where I am in a desolate Wilderness in a thirsty and dry land I will remember thee in my Bed Morning and in the Night-season I will meditate upon thee and not without great reason for thou alwayes hast béen my help Thou hast protected me as the Hen doth her Chickens under her feathers and therefore under the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce My soul out of the consideration of thy power and goodness shall cleave unto thée and follow hard after thee and I am perswaded that I shall not be frustrate of my hope for in all my dangers hitherto thy right hand hath upholden me This is my hope this is my confidence I doubt not therefore but that all those that seek after my life to destroy it shall quickly perish and be brought to the power of death or to the lower parts of the earth And many of them as they have sought to shed my blood have their own blood let out by the edge of the Sword and their bodies being unburied torn and devoured by Birds of prey and Beasts of rapine and cruelty O Lord let the King séeing the vengeance which thou wilt take of his enemies rejoyce in thee in thy help in thy salvation And let all those who religiously serve thée and truly fear an Oath glory in thee and make their boast of thée especially when they shall sée That the mouth of all those that have spoken lyes against thy people and by perjury oppressed and undone them shall be stopped by an immature death and made an example to others that they do no more so wickedly nor any more calumniate thy people that serve thée with an honest and sincere heart Amen PSAL. LXIV 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE Subject of this Psalm is the same with many that went before for in this Psalm 1. David being in danger by Saul and his Courtiers commends his cause to God ver 1 2. 2. Complains of his enemies of whose qualities he gives a a very lively description from ver 3. to 7. 3. He foretels their ruine from ver 7. and the event to 10. 1. He prayes in general Hear my voyce O God in my prayer The first part He prayes 2. Then in special That his life may be safe Preserve my life from fear of the enemy Ver. 1 3. As also to be hid from their counsels and practises Hide me from the secret counsel of the wicked and from the insurrection of the workers of iniquity Thus in general he speaks of them 1. That they were a sort of wicked men 2. That they were workers of iniquity 3. That they took secret counsel against him 4. That their counsels broke out into act and therefore he desires to be hid as it were in some secret place where he might decline the danger and their attempts 2. And so having set a general character of iniquity upon them The second part The qualities of his enemies as a Reason to perswade God to hear him he descends in particular to describe their villany 1. They were great Calumniators and false Accusers of him Ver. 3 no Sword sharper than their tongue no Arrow swifter than their false aspersions 1 Calumniators with this they were nimble to wound his credit and reputation which he aggravates by two circumstances 1. That it was in secret 2. That it was against him who was innocent and upright They whet their tongue like a Sword and bend their Bowes to shoot their arrows bitter words That they may shoot in the secret at the perfect 2 Obstinate suddenly do they shoot at him and fear not 2. They were obstinate and confirmed in mischief no counsel no perswasion could call them from it so obdurate and hardned in it That they incourage themselves in an evil matter 2. They commune and lay their heads together of laying of snares privily where the Lyons Paw will not reach they take the Foxes Tail 3. Atheistical and impudent they are secure and proud contemners of divine justice 3 Atheistical They say Who shall see them 4. Indefatigable they were and carried on with an earnest desire to do mischief 4 Crafty and indefatigable They search out iniquities they accomplish a diligent search They invent all crafty wayes to circumvent me 5. And all this is done subtilly craftily heartily both the inward thought and the heart of every one of them is deep 't is no easie thing to find their intent 3. The third part Their punishment And now he foretels their punishment 2. And the event 1. Their punishment was like to be hasty sharp deadly and very just 1. 1 Speedy God shall shoot at them with an arrow suddenly they shall be wounded 2. Most just For they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves verifying our Saviours words 2 Just With what measure you mete with the same it shall be measured By their tongues they did the mischief by their tongues they should fall The consequence 2. 1 On them desertion The event should be double 1. In general to all 2. In particular to the righteous 1. Universally All that see them should flee away fear desert forsake them 2. 2 On all fear And all men
every man according to his works call these tyrants to an account for the male-administration of thy Laws Render them O Lord seven-fold into their bosomes So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture shall give thee thanks for ever PSAL. LXXXIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 TO resolve this Psalm there is no difficulty For it branches it self into These parts 1. A short Ejaculation or Prayer vers 1. 2. A Complaint of the enemies of Gods Church which is the reason of his Prayer from vers 2. to 11. 3. A fearful Imprecation against them from vers 11. to the end 1. The first part An ardent Ejaculation The Prophet out of a holy impatience at the patience and long-suffering of God calls ardently and earnestly upon him as appears by the ingemination of the words that he would be no longer patient at the affronts and insultations of the Churches enemies The cause was his own not to be endured then longer Keep not thou silence Vers. 1 O God hold not thy peace be not still O God 2. The second part His complaint of enemies And next he begins to Complain which was the reason of his Petition These were enemies 1. To the people of God 2. To God himself vers 5. And then he tells us who they were from vers 6. to 9. 1. Vers. 2 He describes the enemies of the Church The Characters of which are Their Characters 1. They were Souldiers They make a tumult Their warlike fierceness is signified by it As Lions Bears 2. They were arrogant and proud They that hate thee life up their head And wilt thou then be silent 3. They are subtle men They have taken crafty counsel against thy people and consulted against thy hidden ones those whom thou hidest under the shadow of thy wings Thy pecul●●r Exod. 19.5 4. Their intent Their counsel broke out into action and they encouraged one another in mischief even to the total and final destruction of the Church Come say they let us cut them off from being a Nation that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance 2. Which Confederacy and Conspiracy was not only against the people of God but against God himself For they have consulted together with one consent nemine dissentiente The Conspirators and are confederate against thee 3. He gives us in a Catalogue of these Conspirators All the world against God and his Church The Tabernacles of Edom and the Ismaelites of Moab Vers. 6 and the Hagarens Gebal and Ammon and Amalek the Philistines with the inhabitants of Tire Ashur also is join'd with them they have holpen the children of Lor. Selah 3. And having discovered the men and their attempts The third part He prayes to God to take revenge on them he prayes to God for revenge which consisted in four particulars 1. Their fall and ruine 2. Their persecution 3. Their terrour 4. And their disgrace Which he illustrates by divers similitudes 1. Of a wheel that easily runs down a hill 2. Of stubble driven away by the wind 3. As wood burnt up by the fire 4. Of a flame that consumes the Mountains 5. Of a tempest that throws down all things before it 1. Their ruine and fall he would have it total and exemplary That their ruine be total Do unto them as unto the Medianites as to Sisera as to Jabin at the brook of Kison Which perished at Endor and became as the dung of the earth Make them and their Princes like Oreb and Zeb yea all their Princes as Zeba and as Zalmunna Of which he interserts a reason Who have said Let us take to our selves the houses of God in possession 2. And this their ruine he would have sudden and violent 2 Sudden and violent as appears by the similitudes 1. Precipitate them whirl them down O my God make them like a wheel or unquiet in mind 2. Remove them as light things are blown away by the wind Make them as stubble before the wind 3 Terrible and shameful 3. Burn them as speedily as the fire burns the wood Or as the flame sets furs on fire on the Mountains 3. Persecute them with thy tempest 4. Make them afraid with thy storm 5. Fill their faces with shame These three parts of their punishment 1. Flight 2. Fear Terrour 3. Shame and Ignominy The ends of his prayer And that the Prophet might not seem uncharitable in this bitter imprecation he now shews the ends why he thus prayed These were two 1. The first That they might seek after God in effect be converted 1 That converted Do this to them that they may seek thy name O Lord. 2 Or confounded Or as others conceive Seek thy name meerly out of a servile fear of Gods vengeance and contain their fury not daring any further to attempt any thing against the Church Which the next verse confirms Let them be confounded and troubled for ever yea let them be put to shame and perish i. e. brought to utter destruction or at least so enfeebled that they may be said to perish 2. The second That thereby Gods glory may be the more exalted 3 And Gods name glorified viz. That men may know that thou whose name is Jehovah art the most High over all the earth i. e. not Lord of the Jews only but the Gentiles also Vt cognoscatur Junius That thy Eternity Majesty Power may be acknowledg'd by all men The Prayer collected out of the eighty third Psalm O Omnipotent God Vers. 2 so great is the hatred so many the conspiracies so secret and malicious are the counsels of our enemies against thee and thy people that were it not for the promises which thou hast made unto thy people we should despair and faint They have appeared in Arms and headed the iumultnous many against us They who by their impiety shew they hate thee have lift up in pride their head they have taken crafty counsel against they people and consulted against those whom thou hast taken under the shadow of thy wings So great is their malice and hatred to us that they have said in their hearts and encouraged each other in this mischief Come say they let us cut them off from being a Nation that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance yea their consultations and confederacies their Leagues and Covenant is not so much against us as against thy honour thy service thy truth which we endeavour to maintain They have consulted together with one consent and are confederate against thee yea so far they have prevailed that they have taken to themselves and their own use all the houses of God in possession Wherefore Vers. 1 O Lord we beseech thee keep no longer silence hold not thy peace be not still since thy enemies lift up their heads against thee awake and lift up thy head against them and thou who for thy people Israels safety didst shew thy
God If assaulted by men or Divels Thou the most High Thou Almighty a God able to defend me and therefore I will hope in thee I will dwell trust rely upon thee and this thy promise in every temptation and danger 2. Next to assert the truth of this 2 By the attestation of the Prophet who enumerates the particulars from which he shall be delivered he brings in the attestation of the Prophet for being moved by the Holy Ghost he saith as much Surely he shall deliver thee and then falls upon the particulars from which the godly man shall be delivered set down in many Metaphors 1. He shall deliver thee from the snare of the Fowler from the deceits of evil men or Divels 2. From the noysom pestilence all danger to which we are incident by plague Ver. 3 war famine Again when thou art little in thy own eyes as it were but a Chicken 1. He shall cover thee as the Hen doth her young Birds with his feathers and under his wings shalt thou trust secured from the Kite the rain the storm and heat of the Sun 2. When thou art grown up and able to encounter an enemy in the field he shall help thee to a shield and a buckler and that shall be his Truth Ver. 5 his Veracity thy faith in it and which is yet more Thou shalt not be afraid 1. For the terrour by night any hidden secret tentation danger treachery detraction conspiracy 2. Nor for the arrow that flies by day any open persecution calamity proud assault invasion 3. Nor for the pestilence that walks in darkness Ver. 6 the machinations of wicked men hatched in the dark 4. Nor for the destruction that walks at noon-day the bold Threats and Decrees of Tyrants and Persecutors Moller observes rightly that the promises of deliverance here made do not belong to one or other kind of evil but to all kind of calamities open or secret and so may be appliable to any some of which steal upon us as in the night secretly other overwhelm us as in the day openly But the promise is general as Bellarmine well observes whether the danger come by day or night those that trust in God are armed with his shield of Truth against it For if God be with us who can be against us Rom. 8. The Prophet goes on and confirms the godly in their security by the dissimilitude or unlike condition of wicked men when thou shalt be safe Ver. 7 they shall fall But with the wicked it is not so they shall fall 1. A thousand shall fall at thy side on thy left hand overcome by adversity 2. Ten thousand on thy right hand flattered into sin by prosperity But not the night fear nor the arrow by day shall not come nigh thee 3. And which is another cause of comfort pleasure Only with thy eyes shalt thou behold Ver. 8 and see the reward of the wicked which sometimes falls out in this life as the Israelites saw the Egyptians dead upon the Sea-shore Moses and Aaron Dathan and Abiram swallowed up quick c. But shall be fully fulfilled at the last judgment Mat. 23. Of which security Ver. 9 comfort content the Prophet in the next verse gives the Reason But not the godly because God is their help the danger shall not come nigh thee when they fall thou shalt see it and consider it with content Because thou hast made the Lord which is my Refuge even the most High thy habitation Thou trustest in him as I do and therefore shalt have the like protection deliverance comfort that I by his promise have Farther yet There shall no evil befall thee Ver. 10 neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling The meaning of which No evil shall befall them Not from sin Nor punishment is not as if the godly man should be free either from the evil of sin or punishment for while they carry about them this body of flesh they are subject to both But evil from sin may well be said not to befall them because it humbles them makes them more cautelous causes them to love God the more to adhere to him the faster and sue forth a Pardon and Petition for grace to resist and so though evil in it self yet is not a destructive evil to them Again the evil of punishment is to them a fatherly correction to mend and better them not to ruine them and in this sense we may justifie the Prophet in his words There shall no evil befall thee neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling Be it sin or punishment all shall work together for the best for those that love God and then not properly evil Well For the Angels have a charge to keep them I am the just man may say secure that no evil shall befall me but I desire to know how I shall know that I may be kept so that I fall not among Thieves Ver. 11 This Objection the Prophet prevents saying in effect Fear not For he shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy wayes They shall bear thee up in their hands Ver. 12 lest thou dash thy foot against a stone In which verses consider 1. That the good man is protected by Angels many Angels have a care of one poor man 2. That they are commanded by God to do it for are not they ministring Spirits sent by God to that end Hebr. 1. 3. That it is a particular administration a charge given De te the poorest the meanest Saint 4. That they are to keep to look to defend thee and what is thine Thou hast an invisible Guard 5. But then mark the limitation and restriction it is in all thy wayes in the walk of thy Vocation to which God hath called thee either walk in them or the Angels have no charge to keep thee 6. Lastly In all thy wayes not in one but all for the wayes of men are many and in all he needs the custody of Angels 1. The Law is a way and the way of the Law is manifold 2. Our works and operations are manifold which are our way too 3. Our life is a way and there be many parts and conditions of our life various ages manifold states and in all these wayes we need a Guardian for we may slip in every Law in every operation in every age in every state of life Which that it be not done God hath given his Angels charge over us to keep us to keep us only nay which is more 1. They shall bear thee as kind Mothers and Nurses do their Children 2. They shall bear thee in their hands the will the understanding wisdom and power are as it were the Angels hands with all these they will bear us 3. That thou dash not thy foot that is thy affections which carry the soul to good or bad 4. Against a stone which are all difficulties and obstacles which as stones the Divel
casts in out way to hinder us that we be not scandalized at these we have the help of Angels And which is yet more under their custody we shall tread under foot Satan And they shall tread under foot all their enemies and all his Complices him a roaring Lyon an old Serpent a fierce Dragon and all his Associates Tyrants Persecutors all Hereticks and Hypocrites for such is the promise Thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and Adder the young Lyon and Dragon shalt thou trample under feet Ver. 13 3. In the mouth of two or thrte witnesses shall every word stand saith God and here we find the Law strictly observed To be proved it was that all who truly trust in God were to be protected by God of which one witness The third witness that the good man shall be protected God himself who is here brought in to attest all this on three conditions was the just man ver 2. Another the testimony of the Spirit by the Prophet from ver 3. to this verse To which a third we have here even God himself for in these three last verses the Prophet brings in God himself testifying this great and comfortable Truth with his own mouth and adding much to what was formerly said But yet upon these three conditions presupposed in the protected 1. His love 2. His acknowledgment of Gods Name 3. He shall call upon me with vehemency with an earnest desire 1. Because he hath set his love upon me Chasak pleased me loved me Ver. 14 adhered close to me hoped in me trusted to me with a filial love and adherence 1 The good mans love to God 2. Because he hath known my Name acknowledged my Power Wisdom Goodness 2 His acknowledging of God these are the causes and the conditions presupposed in the protected 3. He shall call upon me Invocation necessary also 3 His Invocation Therefore I will deliver him I will answer him I will be with him in trouble Therefore saith God I will honour him which Bellarmine supposeth to belong to this life I will glorifie him or set him on high and the second I will deliver him 1 I will deliver him with long life I will satisfie him and shew him my salvation 1. I will deliver him by the shield by my Angels by other wayes mediatly 2 I will glorifie him or immediatly yet so that it be remembred that I do it Ver. 14 for these shall not deliver without me 3 I will answer his prayers 2. I will answer him answer his desires answer his prayers so they be cries 3. I will be with him in trouble joyn my self close to him 4 I will be with him in trouble go into prison with him as it were suffer with him and think my self pursued when he is persecuted give him comfort even then Martyres non eripuit sed nec deseruit They sung in prison 4. I will h●●our him For the names of those who suffered for his sake 5 I will honour him are honourable right dear in the sight of the Lord is the death of all his Saints These Promises may belong to this life to the other those which follow Ver. 15 1. I will deliver him For the just by death and by death only The promises for the other life repeated are freed from the present and all future miseries Blessed are the dead for they rest from their labours 2. I will glorifie him As if it were not enough to deliver him 1 Rest such a thing in this life may fall out as it happened to Joseph Job David 2 Glory Daniel But the true glory no question must be When the righteous shall shine like the Sun be set upon their Thrones and judge the twelve Tribes of Israel 3. With long life will I satisfie him i. e. with eternal felicity Ver. 16 with a continuance in bliss which shall be eternal for without eternity 3 Eternity even the length of dayes cannot satisfie as appears by old men who yet have complained of a short life 4. And that the Prophet speaks of this eternal felicity 4 The beatifical Vision is more than probable because he adds I will shew him my salvation Salutare meum My Christ his Jesus or salutem meam my salvation that is I will bring to pass that when through his whole life I have given him sufficient evidences of my fatherly affection I will at last translate him to a place where he shall no longer live by faith but shall see and experimentally feel what he hath believed I will make all manifest and shew it unto him Happy he shall be in the enjoyment of the Beatifical Vision which nor ignorance nor trouble nor labour nor sorrow nor death it self nor fear of it shall interrupt The Prayer O Gracious God who hast made so comfortable promises of security aid and help to all those that with faith love and hope adhere and trust to thée Teach us in all our temptations pressures and sorrows to dwell in thy secret place to rely upon thy visible assistance and to abide under the shadow of the Almighty Ver. 1 Make us know That thou art our Refuge That thou art our Fortress Ver. 2 That thou art our God That in thee alone must be our trust and confidence Assaulted we are secretly and openly the Fowler the Divel sets his snares for us Ver. 3 and hopes to take us in his Net as a silly Bird in danger we are to be devoured by the Sword and the noysome pestilence In the night we are surprized with terrours Ver. 5 too often affrighted with conspiracies and treasons of treacherous enemies and the secret whispers of false friends In the day of our prosperity Ver. 6 the kéen arrows of bloody enemies and persecutors are let flie at us the pestilence and pestilent plots of those which watch for our ruine walk about in the darkness and the malice of Tyrants by a perpetual destruction labours to waste us at noon-day even in the sight of the Sun Cover us Ver. 4 O gracious God as the Hen doth her tender Birds with thy feathers and give us confidence under thy wings assure our hearts by a lively faith of the Truth of thy promises and let thy faithfulness in the performance be unto us a Shield and a Buckler by which we may receive and quench all the fiery darts of the Divel O Lord we have made thée who hast no Superiour our Refuge our Sanctuary to flie to we have made thée our habitation to rest Ver. 9 to dwell in who art the most High above all and séest what is done below and sits in the highest Throne and over-rulest the whole World When then a thousand shall fall by our side Ver. 7 or ten thousand at our right hand let not thy heavy indignation come near to us let no evil befall us that repose our confidence in thée Ver. 10 nor any
up against us Men carnal corrupt men that look after nothing but to satisfie their own Ambition Lust Avarice Those arose seditiously tumultuously rebelliously of such the Proverb is true Home homini lupus 2. Which the Prophet verifies in the next verse expressing the danger that the Church was in from these men or Beasts rather by these two similitudes of Beasts of prey of waters 1. Ver. 3 Then they had swallowed us up quick that had been the consequent of their rising The danger the Church was in before delivered like Wolves and Bears they had rush'd upon us and devoured us as poor sheep eaten us even alive Though Bellarmine refers this Clause to waters also because Beasts tear before they devour and so eat not their prey alive But the Metaphor may be proper enough the other way for he shewes what they would do if they could and that in their fury they spare not a living soul By cruel enemies 2. The cause their wrath Which fury of theirs the Prophet conceals not but illustrates it by a Metaphor This they had done to us when their wrath was kindled against us Ver. 4 3. His other similitude is from waters Then the proud waters had gone over our soul And in the verse before Then the waters had overwhelmed us the stream had gone over our soul He compares the Enemies Army to a swelling Torrent that carries all before it 3. Ver. 6 Next acknowledgeth the deliverance and gives thanks to the Authour to be God alone He gives thanks for it Blessed be the Lord who hath not given us over as a prey into their teeth The deliverance was beyond expectation which he illustrates by another similitude of a Bird taken in but escaping out of a snare unexpectedly 1. Ver. 7 Our soul is escaped as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowler taken to be killed 2. The snare is broken and we are delivered the Fowler is deceived of his prey 4. Ver. 8 He concludes the Psalm with a gratulatory Epiphonema 1. And relies on God Our help is in the Name of the Lord. The Church relies in all dangers upon God whether they be assaulted openly as by Bears and Wolves or secretly as the Fowler layes wait for the Bird yet her help is in Gods protection and tutelage 2. Who made Heaven and Earth i. e. The Creatour who hath all things in his hand and power and therefore is able to deliver us The Prayer EXcept thou Ver. 1 O Omnipotent and Merciful God shalt by thy power and favour assist and help us our enemies Swords drawn out against us must néeds dispatch and consume us for their wrath is so kindled against us that as Wolves and Bears devour the poor flock so have they rush'd into amongst us and desired to swallow us quick when they seditiously and rebelliously rose up against us yea the déep waters of the proud hath overwhelmed and gone over our soul Sought they have to swéep us away as a mighty Torreut and over-run us at once as an unexpected inundation doth the lower vallies And what they could not do by violence that they have attempted by close and secret practices for they have set snares for our souls as the crafty Fowler doth for the innocent Bird. O Lord avert thy anger from us and take not vengeance upon us according to our deserts be not wanting to thy own Ordinances to thy Name thy Truth which with us is like to suffer Bring to pass that we may at last say Blessed be the Lord who hath not given us over for a prey unto their teeth let their nets be broken Ver. 6 their plots vissolved weaken their strength and bring to naught their counsels and make a way for our souls to escape as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowler from thée alone which hast made Heaven and Earth we look for help therefore we humbly beséech thée that for thy infinite goodness and mercy Ver. 8 thou wouldst be propitious to our prayers and deliver us from these fierce bloody and subtile enemies for the merits of Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen PSALM CXXV 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IT is the purpose of the Prophet to comfort the Church of God 1. The Sume By an assurance of her perpetuity both from Gods presence and protection ver 1 2. 2. That though God suffer them to be chastised by the wicked yet he will not leave them under the rod ver 3. 3. He prayes for the good 4. Sets down the portion of the wicked ver 4 5. 1. The first part In the beginning of the Psalm the Prophet sets down a general promise of the perpetuity of the Church because of Gods continual presence with her Ver. 1 And shews to whom it belongs 1. They that trust in the Lord. That trust in him The Church shall continue not with a vain confidence and presumption but that rely upon him by faith not fained out of a pure heart and a good conscience and aftervent love 2. These shall be as mount Zion which cannot be moved secure and immovable as is Zion not only immovable because a mountain but because a holy mountain consecrated and dear to God 3. Which the Prophet farther explains and assigns a perpetual duration to it but abides for ever which is a comfort to the Church Because God protects it of which Zion was the Type No tempest no storm no persecution no enemy shall destroy it Of which the Prophet gives a reason in the next verse by a Similitude for Zion which was in Jerusalem hath the mountains round about it for a wall of defence 't is not easie for an enemy to approach Jerusalem nor to take It was a Virgin-City never taken but twice and then when God took away his protection from it and delivered it to the hand and will of the Babylonians and Romans Which protection he will never take from his Church and therefore the Church is unexpugnable 1. As the mountains are round about Jerusalem 2. So the Lord is round about his people A wall of fire round about Ver. 2 Zach. 2. 3. From henceforth even for ever They that trust in the Lord shall be alwayes safe and secure for though they be temporally afflicted yet all shall work for their good He may take from them their wealth health c. yet he gives something better patience comfort with hope of eternal glory 2. Which the Prophet confirms preventing an objection The second part What shall those that trust in the Lord be safe and secure How comes it to passe then that they are oppressed to which the Prophet by way of prevention answers The power of the wicked shal never destroy it He grants it may be so but the oppression is not to continue The power of the wicked shall be over the just for their probation for their trial and correction but it shall not rest upon them it
remember what was done for them after They proved a rebellious people for which God humbled them and brought the Philistins and the Babylonian Kings against them who conquered them and kept them under and in subjection But God in this their oppression when they cryed and turned to him forsook them not but raised up some Judge King or other to deliver them as Gideon Sampson David Cyrus c. which the Prophet mentioneth in the next verses Ver. 23 Who remembred us when we were in our low estate for his mercy c. And hath redeemed us from our enemies for his mercy Psal 135.14 5. Lastly That this goodness is not extended only to his people 3 And his providence to all creatures but even to all Creatures is manifest in that he provides for nourishes and conserves every living creature for Caro here signifies every thing that hath life and bread all kind of nourishment by which the life is sustained Ver. 25 Who gives food to all flesh for his mercy endures for ever 6. He concludes as he begun O give thanks unto the God of Heaven The conclusion that we praise him for his mercy endureth for ever And he calls him the God of Heaven because he only made the Heaven and hath his Throne in Heaven Ver. 26 having the whole World under him and in his power that preserves moderates governs all things by his wisdom power mercy The Hymn collected out of the One hundred and thirty sixth Psalm O Omnipotent God so great is thy goodness so infinite is thy mercy to the sons of men that we are not able to express it because we cannot comprehend it Whatever we enjoy is from thy mercy whatever we hope to enjoy is thy mercy Thy mercy endures for ever and therefore we will sing of thy mercies from everlasting to everlasting Ver. 5 Whethersoever we cast our eyes we find objects of thy mercy whether we behold the Heavens framed by thy wisdom and adorned with great lights the Sun to rule the day or the Moon and Stars to govern the night or whether we look down upon the earth stretched out above the waters that it might be the habitation and yield food for all creatures in both these nay in all places they occur unto us ample Testimonies of thy bounty and mercy all which should we consider with a pious and serious mind we must néeds with an inflamed heart and free tongue never cease to sing with the Prophet Ver. 25 Thy mercy endureth for ever In the Creation of all things From Ver. 10. To Ver. 22. in giving food to all flesh thy mercy hath been wonderful But in the choosing gathering conserving revenging the wrongs and pardoning the sins of thy people more wonderful our hearts were as hard and as cold as a stone should we not consider what thou didst for thy people Israel which is an engagement to us what thou wilt do for thy Church For thy mercy endures for ever Thou smotest Aegypt and slew mighty Kings for their sakes Thou didst lead them as a Captain and provide Manna and Quails and waier for them as a father defend them from their enemies and never cease to prosecute them with mercy till thou givest them the heritage of the Heathen yea when they were brought to any low estate Thou redeemest them from their enemies for thy mercy endures for ever Thou therefore who art rich in bounty clemency and mercy that never can have an end behold we beséech thée thy Church and remember it now in a low estate remit our sins pardon our transgressions repent concerning thy servants and redeem us from our enemies for thy mercy endures for ever Thou which givest food to all flesh Ver. 25 féed our souls with the celestial Manna thy Word and thy Sacraments for thy mercy endures for ever So shall we give thanks to thee O Lord because thou art good and thy mercy endureth for ever Ver. 1 So shall we give thanks to the God of gods for his mercy endureth for ever So shall we give thanks to the Lord of lords for his mercy endureth for ever We will give thanks to the God of Heaven for his mercy endureth for ever Ver. 26 PSAL. CXXXVII AT the composure of this Psalm the Jewes were in captivity at Babylon under the heavy yoke of the Assyrian Tyrant far from their own Countrey banished from the Temple of God deprived of all publick Exercises of Religion scoffed and scorned by the pride and insultation of an enemy and now they begin to complain and pray remember what they were and what they are what they enjoyed and what they want that at Jerusalem they could sing songs of Zion but now at the Rivers of Babylon they must sit down and hang up their Harps The Psalm hath two parts 1. A complaint of Israel because of the insultation of the Babylonians in which they deplore their sad condition remember the pleasures of Jerusalem and the Religion of the Temple and long to be there from ver 1. to 7. 2. An imprecation for they pray for Divine vengeance to descend upon their Persecutors ver 7.8 9. Israels complaint in their captivity 1. Their complaint ariseth from the sense of their captivity which is aggravated The first part 1. From the place Babylon By the waters of Babylon 1 From the place a place far from their own Countrey where they served a cruel and barbarous people a people that were Aliens from the Covenant God made with Abraham Ver. 1 and scorners of their Religion that had wasted their City consumed with fire defiled robbed their Temple by them they were disposed to the Banks of the Rivers where in their fields they were forced to base and servile works 2. From the continuance of their captivity and misery There we sate down 2 From the continuance and misery took up the seats they alotted us and durst not remove for seventy years exposed to wind and weather and injuries of wild Beasts 3. From the effect it produced in them tears mourning yea 3 The effect tears we wept so we spent our time but our enemies cruelty was such that our tears wrought not any compassion on their hard hearts 4. From the cause that drew these tears from them 4 The cause the remembrance of Zion not so much their present calamities as the remembrance of what they enjoyed before but now were deprived of the Religion and Service of their God We wept when we remembred thee O Zion Toties quoties so often as they remembred the Temple the Feasts the Sacrifices the Songs the Hymns they sung to God in Zion so often they sate and wept 5. From the intensiveness of their grief so great it was 5 Their grief intensive that they laid aside whatever should provoke mirth they had more mind to weep than sing their Harps were unstrung Ver. 2 and their Instruments of Musick laid aside As for
mighty King of Kings and Lord of Lords by whom Kings and Princes decree justice Ver. 1 that especially which thou requirest of thy Vicegerents on earth is That they shew Mercy and execute Judgement that they extend acts of Grace and Charity toward the good and to be a terror to evil doers Come Ver. 2 Lord unto me with thy aid and Spirit for without thy help I am not able to do any duty and make me first to reform my self and my house Cause me to walk wisely with zeal and prudence in a perfect way Give me power to walk constantly and with delight in my own family with a perfect heart Ver. 3 that I may be a pattern of good works unto all within my house an example of piety religion iustice and charity to all about me Slip Lord and fall I may but it shall not be willingly and maliciously for I will set no wicked thing before my eyes that I should be tempted thereby Thou Lord hast hitherto put into my heart a hatred of the works of them that turn aside Ver. 4 and gracious God continue in me that hatred still for so I am sure that nor the Wedge of Gold nor the Babylonish Garment shall cleave to my fingers Give me so much courage O Lord as to execute judgement upon the wicked Ver. 5 and so much charity as to extend mercy to the good Let my justice be so exemplar that every man of a crooked and perverse froward heart be afraid of me and depart from me let me never know countenance or shew the least friendship to a wicked person Embolden me to cut off every one that privily slandereth his neighbour Ver. 7 As for the men who shew the pride of their heart with the rowling of their eyes and for such who have a heart so full swoln with ambition and covetousness that nothing can satisfie suffer me not to have any familiarity with them not so much as to admit them to my Table Thou knowest O Lord how full the world now is of fraudulent persons and men of lying lips make my sevetity so awful and my authority so reverential that he that works deceit do not dare to dwell stay and remain within my house and he that tells lyes be afraid to tarry in my sight As on the contrary move me to discern Ver. 6 and to be favourable is all those who are faithful in the Land men of truth and trust let my eyes be bent upon them to do them good these let me call from all places to dwell with me and if there be any that walk in a perfect way bring him to be my servant my Counsellor my bosome-friend Iustice and Religion are the Pillars of any Kingdom and at this time the foundations of the earth be out of course make me to beat up the Pillars of it Write the book of thy Law within my heart and let the advancement of true Religion be my chiefest care Ver. 8 After let me carry so great a love to justice that the wicked of the Land be by me early and speedily destroyed and all wicked doers be unrooted and cut off from the City of my God This is a City of Saints far far be removed from it all yride and covetousness all fraud and lying all Idolatry and false worship all impiety and injustice Let righteousness flourish in the Gates and piety in the Temples thereof and holiness shew it self in the lives of the Citizens to the glory of thy Holy name and the salvation of our poor souls through Iesus Christ our Lord and only Saviour Amen PSAL. CII The Title of this Psalm is A Prayer of the afflicted when he is overwhelmed and poureth out his complaint before God It is by the Church chosen for one of the Penitentials IT seems to me to be composed by the Prophet to be a form of prayer to be used by the faithful Jews in the time of their Captivity at Babylon For in it is expressed the sad condition they were then in in the person of an afflicted man the present state of Religion under the desolation of the Temple which the Prophet laments and yet again comforts himself and his people upon the consideration of Gods Eternity and Immutability and that therefore he will perform his promise have mercy on Sion build again the Temple restore them again to their own Land in which they should quietly and happily dwell This no question is the literal sense of the Psalm but it cannot be doubted but the Prophet had a farther intent in it For the faithful among the Jews knew that the Restitution of Solomons Templ● was but a Type of that Temple which the Messiah would build up of living stones and inhabit by his Spirit This then they prayed for and for the erection of it when they prayed for the re-edification of the other as appears by very many passages in this Psalm Two General parts there are of this Psalm 1. A description of the Calamity of the Church under the person of an afflicted man from vers 1. to 12. 2. The comfort yet she took in these Calamities and the ground of it from vers 12. to 28. 1. The whole is formed into a prayer A Prayer The first part which is proposed in the two first verses and an earnest motion made for audience 1. Ver. 1 Hear my prayer O Lord and let my cry come unto thee 2. Hide not thy face from me in the day when I am in trouble encline thine ear to me In which he complains and shewes his sad condition in the day when I call answer me speedily 2. And he presseth his prayer by way of complaint shewing many wayes what a heavy case he was in 1. Ver. 3 By a consumption of his strength 1. My dayes are consumed as smoke In many respects which though it swells into the air in a great thick body yet it is suddenly dispersed and vanisheth 2. And my bones which are as it were the pillars of this house my body are burnt and dryed up 1 A Consumption as it were an hearth or the stones of the hearth which the fire by continuance burns out 3. My heart is smitten and withered like grass that either cut down withers to hay or standing is burnt up by the scorching heat of the Sun 4. To this pass I am come that I can take no sustenance I forget to eat my bread 2. From his continual weeping and pining away By reason of the voice of my groaning 2 Grief my bones cleave to my skin 3. From his Solitude He was deserted of his friends Clausa fides miseris 3 Solitude I am become like a Pellican in the Wilderness I am become like an Owle in the Desert Solitary Birds 4. 4 Watching From his continual watchings I watch and am as a sparrow alone on the house top As Moller observes this kind of bird impatientissime viduitatem ferunt 5.
5 Reproach From the reproach of them who had been his friends but were now his enemies for a wicked man thinks himself reproached by a good mans honest conversation Wisd 5. Mine enemies reproach me all the day long and they are mad against me are sworn against me have conspited by an Oath to undo me 6. And that which made them so mad and swe●r was my repentance which I testified by ashes on my head 6 Sadness and tears in my eyes I have caten ashes like bread my dayly food and mingled my drink with weeping I drank tears with my wine that is I was fed with bitterness and sustain'd with tears which they derided And now behold the reason why every true penitent is thus humbled All these increased by the sense of Gods anger it is not for want nor yet for want of wit but it is out of a true sense of Gods anger which he hopes to pacifie by his sorrow and humiliation 1. Ver. 10 Because of thine indignation and thy wrath for my former sin 2. Which I collect thus Thou hast formerly lifted me up then sure I was in thy fovour but hast now cast me down whence I may well conclude that I am in disfavour with thee 3. And the effect plainly shews it For my dayes are as a shadow that declines and am withered like grace Become mortal flying fading from thy wrath raised by my own default 2. The second part He yet comforts himself in Gods promises Hitherto the Prophet hath petition'd and complain'd His case was lamentable yet he is notswallow'd up of sorrow Heart he begins to take and comfort he promiseth himself in the Eternity and Immutability of God and his love to his Church Hence he conceives hope of reconciliation and being moved by the Spirit of God foretells the restauration of Zion and Jerusalem and typically the state of Christs Church 1. To his Church on which he will have mercy and had when he restored them True I wither away as grass and so shall all Individual men But 1. Thou O Lord shalt endure for ever and therefore thy Church and promises to thy Church 2. And thy Remembrance from generation to generation The Covenant which thou hast made shall be remembred from father to son Ver. 13 till the worlds end 2. Thou seemest now to sleep But thou shalt arise 1. Thou shalt have mercy on Zion and save thy people 2. For the time to favour her yea the set time is come Literally the seventy years of the Captivity were neer expired Typically by the Spirit the Prophet foresaw and conceiv'd the Redemption of the Church in the future as a thing present And both he calls a time of favour for from the favour and mercy of God both proceeded 3. And this Consideration wrought a double effect This wrought a double effect 1. One upon Gods people for the present viz. an earnest desire to have it so Ver. 14 Earnest they were that Jerusalem should again be built the Church set up For thy servants take pleasure in her stones 1 A desire to have it so and favour the dust thereof Ver. 15 2. The other upon the Heathen 2 Another on the Heathen viz. Compassion Conversion So the Heathen shall fear thy name which began when Darius and Cyrus saw and acknowledged the Prophesies and obeyed them 2. And all the Kings of the earth thy glory which was truly fulfill'd in the conversion of Constantine c. to the Faith And he adds the cause why Kings and Nations should be so strangely converted because he had beyond all belief and expectation of man Ver. 16 so strangely delivered his people from Captivity and so miraculously set up his Kingdom in his Church This shall be done When or because the Lord shall build up Zion he shall appear in glory Before he cast his people into the grave as it were without any hope of life or restitution but when he shall bring them from thence he shall make his glory and honour manifest And that which moved him to it was the prayers of his people Ver. 17 He will regard the prayer of the destitute and not despise their prayer Which effects followed on their prayer Of this mercy a Record to be kept Now lest the Jews should conceive that what was done for them did concern them only and not their Children or to speak more properly the whole people of God in all ages to come God would have a Record kept of it 1. This shall be written for the generation to come 2. And the people which shall be created shall praise the Lord Ver. 18 Cum viderint impleta quae praedicta And of this he assigns two reasons even the self-same set down at the 16. and 17. Verses 1. For be hath looked down from the height of his Sanctuary Ver. 19 from the heaven did the Lord behold the earth 2. To hear the groans of the prisoners Ver. 20 to loose those that are appointed to death That the glory be returned to God Now this Mercy from God calls upon us for our Duty for the proper end of it was and the effect that it should work upon us is that we should be thankful Therefore he looked down therefore he heard the groans of the prisoners c. That being freed 1. They should declare the name of the Lord in Zion Ver. 21 and his praise in Jerusalem 2. And this praise should be compleated Ver. 22 When the people are gathered simul or in unum united together and the Kingdoms to serve the Lord. The Gentiles join with the Jews in it And here methinks I hear the Prophet breaking off his comfort The Prophet laments he shal not live to see it and breaking out in the midst of his prophecy with Balaam As if he had said I am assured all this shall come to pass and be done for Gods people but alas who shall live when God doth this Whosoever shall I shall not certainly For he weakned my strength in the way and hath shortned my dayes Ver. 23 Yet my desire is it might be otherwise Yet he desires he might and in this my desire is but the same with many Kings and Prophets that have gone before me all which long and desired to see the flourishing estate of the Church under the Messiah and therefore Ver. 24 I said O my God take me not away in the midst of my age But suffer me to draw out my life to see that that all good men have aspired to see to wit that I may behold Christ promised in the flesh and be a partaker of the glory of his Kingdom Which Petition And presseth that he might Perswading God to it upon 24. The consideration of Gods eternity and immutability that it might be the easier granted he presseth it by a Collation of Gods Eternity and Immutability with his own life As if he should say Spare me