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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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to make intercession for Kings and all that are in Authority that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty Hear the prayers of thy Church which we send up unto thée for our King now in the day of his trouble Ver. 2 let the power of that God who defended Jacob from the fury of his brother Esau protect him and set him on high in a safe place Send him help from thy Sanctuary thy Throne in Heaven strengthen and support him by those prayers that are offered out of Zion for him Remember O Lord those fervent supplications and intercessions that are daily offered at thy Throne of grace in his behalf and accept the vowes and sighs and groans sent up unto thée by thy afflicted people for his restitution Grant unto him according to his own hearts desire and fulfil and give good success to all his counsel and whatsoever he for the advance of thy glory piety justice and the good of his people shall request that be pleased to hear and deny him not the request of his lips Our enemies put their trust in their Arms and Ammunition and suppose that their strength of Horse and arm of flesh shall hold them up and kéep them safe in that power which they have got by violence blood perjury and hypocrisie But we will remember the Name of the Lord our God being assured that a Horse is but a vain thing to save a man neither shall he deliver any man by his great strength it is not these humane helps we put our trust in but in thy Name alone Truly when thou shalt perform this for us as we trust thou wilt then will we rejoyce in thy salvation and in the Name of our God will we set up our Trophies of victory O let his enemies be brought down Ver. 8 and fall flat before him and let all those who with a sincere heart séek to advance his cause and right thy Church and thy sincere worship Ver. 6 rise and stand upright Make it known That the Lord will save his Anointed that he hath heard him and the prayers that have béen offered for him from his holy heaven and that he hath restored him by the saving strength of his right hand Save Lord save the King the Church and thy People Let the King of Heaven thy Christ our Iesus whom thou hast exalted to be Lord and King hear us when we call Amen PSAL. XXI The Peoples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Carmen Triumphale THIS Psalm is the Peoples Thanksgiving after the Victory In the former Psalm they pray'd for David when he went out to War in this they praise God for the Conquest God gave him over his enemies and the singular mercies God bestowed on him Three parts there are of it 1. A general Proposition in ver 1. 2. A Narration which is twofold from ver 1. to 4. 1. An enumeration of the particular blessings bestowed on David from ver 1. to 6. 2. An account how God would deal with his enemies from ver 6. to 13. 3. A Vow or Acclamation ver 14. The Sum of the Psalm is contained in the first verse The King shall joy The first part the King shall be exceeding glad Ver. 1 Joy then is the affection that King and People were transported with for all that follows shew but the rise and causes of it The joy of the King in Gods salvation 1. The rise or object of it The strength of God the salvation of God 1. His strength by which he did subdue his enemies contemn dangers 2. His salvation by which he escaped dangers fell not in battle 2. The second part Then they make a large Narration of the goodness of God to Davids person in particular of which the severals are these following 1. God granted to the King what he ask'd with his heart and mouth Gods goodness to David Thou hast given his hearts desire and hast not witholden the requests of his lips 2. He granted unto him more than he asked was more ready to give Ver. 2 than David to pray Thou preventedst him with the blessings of goodness Ver. 3 3. He chose him to be King Thou hast set a Crown of pure gold upon his head in which God prevented him chosen him when he thought not of it 4. When he went to War He asked his life Ver. 4 and thou gavest him even length of dayes for ever and ever which is most true in Christ who was the Son of David in him his life and Kingdom is immortal 5. A great accession of Glory Honour Majesty he was no poor obscure King now as at first nor contemptible in the eyes of the people Ver. 5 but greater than Saul or any King of Israel that followed of which yet he was not to boast not in his power not in his riches wisdom but in Gods goodness His glory is great but in thy salvation Honour and Majesty hast thou laid upon him All which are sum'd up under the word Blessing in the next verse Ver. 6 For thou hast made him most blessed for ever And added this to the blessing that thou hast given him a heart to rejoyce in it Thou hast made him exceeding glad with thy countenance 6. The continuance of these blessings which is another favour Ver. 7 with the cause of it Davids confidence in God The cause his trust in God For the King trusteth in the Lord and through the mercy of the most High he shall not be moved 2. Hitherto is the first part of the Narrative that concerned Davids person in particular now follows the effects of Gods goodness to him ab extra and the whole Kingdom in the overthrow of his enemies The overthrow of his enemies by God and necessary it was to add this since no Kingdom though abounding with good Laws Wealth Subjects prudently governed can be happy except it be defended and safe from enemies abroad Now here their ruine and destruction is described and the cause 1. God by Davids hand would do it Thine hand the Sword of God and Gideon 2. He would certainly do it Ver. 8 for he should find them out wherever they were Thy hand shall find out all thy enemies and thy right hand shall find out all that hate thee 3. Ver. 9 This was easie to do as easie as for fire to consume the stubble Thou shalt make them as a fiery Oven in the time of thy wrath the Lord shall swallow them c. 4. Ver. 10 This destruction should be universal it should reach to them and their posterity Their fruit shalt thou destroy from the Earth and their seed from among the children of men 5. Ver. 12 Their judgment fearful and unavoidable God would set them up as a Mark to shoot at that should turn their back and yet they should not so escape because when they fled God would overtake them with a bended Bow and shoot his Arrows upon them
2. Their treachery this The Mighty men are gathered against me They run and prepare themselves 3. They are diligent about it They return at Evening 2. Mad and set to do it they make a noise like a Dog and threaten boldly 3. Unwearied and obstinate in their purpose They go round about the City 4. Impudent and brag what they will do to me Behold they belch out with their mouth 5. And their words are bloody Swords are in their lips 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. And the cause of this is that they are proud and atheistical Who say they doth hear Secure they think themselves supposing they may contemn God and man neither regard what 's done or what becomes of poor David Ver. 3 4. 5. In the mid'st of which aggravations he inserts his own innocency Expresseth his own innocency They gather themselves together not for my transgression nor for my sin O Lord they run and prepare themselves without my fault And upon this he renews his Petition Ver. 4 1. Awake to help me and behold He renews his Petition 1. Thou therefore the Lord God of Hosts the God of Israel the Lord God of Hosts therefore powerful 2. The God of Israel therefore merciful 2. Awake to visit all the Heathen i.e. Punish the Heathen and the Israelites in this no better 3. And be not merciful to any wicked Transgressors i. e. malicious obstinate To this rage and implacable hatred of his enemies The third part Comforts himself in Gods promises he now begins to oppose the comfort he had upon the assurance of Gods promises this I know 1. Thou O Lord shalt laugh at them as it were in sport destroy them be their power never so great yet thou wilt laugh them to scorn 2. Them and all that are like them Thou shalt have all the Heathen in derision 3. I confess that Saul's strength is great but my Protector greater Because of his strength I will wait upon thee for God is my defence 4. This I am assured also That the God of my mercy that hath hitherto shewed me mercy shall prevent me come in feason to my help 2. Expresseth his desire about his enemies And God shall let me see my desire upon mine enemies And to the 16th verse he expresseth what his desires were 1. Negatively He would not have them slain and eradicated He would not have them slain and be gives his Reason for it Slay them not lest my people forget for a dead man is quickly out of mind and his punishment out of mind and so few are the better for it 2. Positively The first degree of which is dispersion But 1. S●attered vagrancy and banishment Scatter them which how heavy a judgment it is let the Jewes be witness 2. The second degree is Humiliation Bring them down O Lord our shield 2 Humbled Bring them from their power command honour to a low degree which is no small heart-breaking to a great spirit Fuimus Troes is never remembred without a groan And now he assigns the cause why he would have them scattered and brought low The causes that their blasphemies and lies may never be forgotten but they stand as a terrour to all lyars and blasphemers 1. For the sins of their mouths and the words of their lips 1 Taken in their own sna●e let them be taken in their pride The Jewes cryed Beelzebub Nolumus hum and taken they were 2. And for cursing and lying which they speak They cursed themselves his blood be upon us and upon them it is with a witness 3. He goes on in his desires Consume them O Lord emphatically consume them in wrath that they may not be which at first sight seems contrary to his first desire Slay them not But it is not so 4 Consumed for he speaks not of their life as if he would have them so consumed that they should not remain alive but he desires only a consumption of their power royalty command c. And so these words are a farther explication of his second desire Bring them down He would have them so brought down and consumed in their strength dignity command wealth riches that made them proud that they never be able any more to oppose God hurt his people trample upon Religion and his Church he would have them live 4. The final cause to deter others And shews the end why he would have them live and remain still it is ut cognoscant that they might know by their calamities and miseries That it is God that ruleth in Jacob and unto the ends of the Earth that he doth wonderfully govern and preserve his Church that is scattered over all the Earth 5. His insultation over them by a Sarcasm And now by a bitter Epitrope or Synchoresis rather he insults over them before at the 6th verse he shewed their double diligence threats malice to do mischief 1. They return at Evening Well esto be it so And at Evening let them return 2. They make a noise like a Dog Well Let them make a noise like a Dog 3. They go round about the City Well Let them go round about the City So withall they know that they shall be but in a miserable poor mean condition 1. Let them wander up and down for meat Let them find no setled habitation but wander among strange Nations to seek for necessary food 2. And grudge if they be not satisfied Let them be famelici so hunger-bit that is nor little that will satisfie them let them be alwayes grudging if they have not content so that if they be not satisfied they will stay all night be importunate and unmannerly Beggars vexed with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. The fourth part The Doxology The Conclusion is a Doxology and contains Davids thanks in which he acknowledgeth That God is his defence his refuge his strength of him therefore he would make his song 1. But I will sing of thy power 2. I will sing of thy mercy 1. Aloud 2. In the morning 3. The Reason he gives For thou hast been my defence and refuge in the day of my trouble Both he repeats again 1. Vnto thee O my strength will I sing 2. The Reason The Reason For God is my defence and the God of my mercy And he joyns these two Attributes strength and mercy very well for take away strength from him and he cannot remove morcy and he will not protect both must go together in any one that will defend Power that he can mercy that he will otherwise 't is but in vain to hope for help from him David found God to be both and for both he extolls him The Prayer collected out of the fifty ninth Psalm OMy God Ver. 1 whom only I serve on whom alone I do depend deliver me I beséech thée from the hands of my enemies defend me from the malice of those that rise up against me
cannot be touch'd with the feeling of our infirmities Hebr. 4.15 6. Lastly The High Priest must be compassed with infirmities 6 Compassed with infirmities and so was Christ In all things like us sin only excepted He took our infirmities and bare our sorrowes and in all things it behoved him to be like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people for in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted Hebr. 2.17 18. 2. A Priest then it is evident Christ is it remains now to shew 2 A Priest for ever 1. How he is a Priest for ever 2. How a Priest after the Order of Melchizedech 1. A Priest for ever Christ is said to be in respect of his Person his Office the Effect 1. In respect of his Person For he succeeded no Priest 1 In his Person his Vocation being immediate neither is any to succeed him in this Priesthood for he lives for ever and therefore needs not as the Priests under the old Law any Successor to continue his Priesthood to posterity whosoever since do any service for him are but his Under-Officers and Authoriz'd by him The plenitude of his Power shall never be transfer'd to any other he lives and keeps it in his own hands 't is but in vain to talk of a Successor 2. A Priest he is for ever in respect of his Office Not of offering 2 In his office of intercession for that is ended and was when he offer'd himself upon the Cross but in respect o●● his Intercession in that for ever he doth intercede in Heaven to his Father for his people 3. A Priest he is for ever in respect of the Effect 3 In his effects 1. Redemption 2. Salvation because by that Sacrifice which he once offer'd on the Cross he becomes to all his the cause of these inestimable Effects Redemption and eternal Salvation in which sense that his Sacrifice once offer'd on the Cross may well be said to be Eternal 2. That Christ is a Priest that he is a Priest for ever is evident 3 After the order of Melchizedech it remains now to be examined How a Priest after the Order the Rite the Manner the Word and Power given and prescribed to Melchizedech or the similitude of Melchizedech 1. This Melchizedech suppose it were Sem was King of Salem 1 King and Priest and Priest of the most High God Gen. 14. So was Christ a King of Jerusalem above Gods own City and a Priest offering himself a sacrifice for sin 2. Melchizedech is by interpretation King of righteousness so is Christ 2 Our righteousness The Lord our righteousness Jer. 23.6 1 Cor. 1.30 3. Melchizedech is King of Salem i. e. peace 3 Our peace so Christ is the Prince of peace Isa 9.6 4. Melchizedech was without father without mother to us so 4 God for ever as being to us revealed by God so was this our Priest Having nor beginning of dayes nor end of life as touching his Godhead Apoc. 1.11 5. Melchizedech blessed Abraham ex Officio the greater the less 5 He blesseth and Christ blesseth us In turning every one of us from our iniquities Acts 3. ult 6. 6 Ordains the Sacrament Melchizedech brought forth bread and wine to refresh Abrahams Army and Christ hath in the Sacrament set forth bread and wine to refresh hungry and thirsty souls Thus much we can grant and yet not admit of the Popish Sacrifice Now I proceed in the Exposition of the Psalm The Lord at thy right hand shall strike through Kings in the day of his wrath Ver. 5 His Kingdom and Priesthood must continue After that the Prophet had said That the Messiah should be a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchizedech He intimates in this verse That notwithstanding all opposition that should be made against him yet his Priesthood should be eternal as if he had said Many Kings of the earth shall conspire as did Herod Domitian Decius Maximinus Dioclesian Julian c. to overthrow Christs Priesthood and overturn Religion but it shall never be done his Priesthood and holy Rites shall stand and continue for 1. For God hath given him power to revenge the enemies of his Church The Lord is on thy right hand Given thee power who sits at his right hand which thou wilt use in defence of thy Church 2. And this thy Lord shall strike through Kings the greatest the potenst enemies 3. In the day of his wrath For such a day there is and that will come and when this day of revenge and vengeance comes the proudest Tyrant shall not escape He will recompence the slackness of revenge by the sharpness of the punishment he hath leaden feet but iron hands he will lay on Confringet Which the Prophet farther explains in the following verse This David explains in which Christ is described as a valiant Conqueror over his enemies 1. Ver. 6 He shall rule and judge not only over the Jewes but the Heathen also set up his power and judge the people in righteousness 2. He shall fill the places with dead bodies make such a slaughter among his enemies as enraged Souldiers do in the storm of a City that fill the Trenches with the dead The meaning is that the execution upon his enemies will be great and furious not one spared 3. He shall wound the heads over many Countries Even Kings and Monarchs those in the greatest Power and Authority Of this Herod the Persecutors Maximinus Dioclesian Julian c. are Examples The Prophet through the whole Psalm had spoken of Christs Exaltation Ver. 7 How he was set on Gods right hand and made a King How by the Oath of God he was made a Priest and how in the defence of his Priesthood and Kingdom he would subdue conquer and break to pieces his enemies In this last verse he acquaints us by what means he came to this honour His Cross the way to the Crown his Cross was the way to the Crown his Passion and Humiliation to his Exaltation He saith David shall drink of the Brook in the way therefore shall he lift up his Head as if he had said with the Apostle He humbled himself and became obedient to death even the death of the Cross wherefore God hath also highly exalted him c. Phil. 2.8 9. Hebr. 2.9 12.2 Isa 5.11 12. 1. He shall drink To drink is to be afflicted Jer. 49.12 Matth. 20.22 2. He shall drink of the Brook de Torrente and that 's more than of the Cup His Passion set out by a Torrent for a Cup contains a certain portion of sorrowes but a Torrent a whole Ocean of miseries 2. In a Cup that which is ●●unk may be clean and clear but in a Torrent a man can
is The Lord is on my side therefore I will not fear what man can do unto me He saith God is for me therefore I shall not suffer for he knew that he was to suffer many things But God is my helper therefore I will not fear for the evils that man can bring upon me because I know That all things shall work together for good to those that fear God Matth. 10.28 2 Cor. 4.17 2. The Lord takes my part with them that help me And his second Inference is Therefore I shall see my desire upon them that hate me I shall see my self in safety my enemies cast down and peace restored to the Church which last is my chief desire Out of which he deduceth yet a third Inference viz. that men trust in God for 1. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put any confidence in man Ver. 8 for be it he be willing to help yet oftentimes man is not able 2. And again It is better to trust in the Lord than to put any confidence in Princes for say they be able to help yet they are false politick and will not David found it true in Achish King of Gath But the Lord both can and will and therefore it is far better to trust in him 3. Of which being confident he sings an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Davids Triumph for his assured victories acquaints us in what dangers he was and yet how God ever deliver'd him and therefore proposeth himself for an example how good it is to trust in God 1. All Nations Moabites Ammonites Edomites Philistines Syrians compassed me about But to no purpose for in the Name of the Lord will I destroy them 2. They compassed me about yea they compassed me about but in the Name of the Lord I will destroy them 3. They compassed me about like Bees swarms there were of them and they were angry creatures arm'd with stings but they were quench'd as fire of thorns that makes a great blaze and a great noise but suddenly goes out for in the Name of the Lord will I destroy them A multitude of enemies here were angry and stinging enemies and all compassing and about him David a King for Kings are most opposed and subject to be stung but in the Name of the Lord I will destroy them The arms that I confide in and especially prepare against them is Nomen Domini I fight indeed and war against them but my special weapons in all my War in which I trust is the Name the Protection the Tutelage of the Lord setting upon them in his power with his help I will destroy them Now he that fights in the Name of the Lord must be sure to have 1. A Vocation to fight 2. A good Cause And 3dly He must manage the War with affections conformable to piety he must not seek himself nor his own ends but Gods glory execution of justice c. 4. He told us of a multitude of enemies and for the overthrow of these he sang his Triumph now he singles out some one in particular whether Saul Ishbosheth or his son Absolon it is uncertain But to such a one by an Apostrophe he turns his speech 1. Thou hast thrust sore at me that I might fall Ver. 13 I came into some great danger there was little hope of life or of escape 2. But the Lord helped me I impute it not to my own indeavour wit good fortune that I escaped nor yet to any second causes it was the Lord that did it for me Which in the next verse he more fully acknowledgeth The Lord is my strength and song and is become my salvation 1. My strength that I am able to resist my enemies 2. My salvation that I be delivered from my enemies 3. My song The third part The Triumph sung by the Church him whom I joyfully praise and sing of after I am delivered 3. And that this his song might be the fuller here David calls for the whole Quire to sing with him His delivery concern'd the whole Church and therefore he desires the praise be sung in full voyce by the whole Church and so it fell out for they kept a Jubilee a day of Thanksgiving for it 1. Ver. 15 The voyce of rejoycing and salvation is in the Tabernacles of the righteous They congratulate their own safety in my delivery and sing thus to God 2. Ver. 16 The right hand of the Lord doth valiantly The right hand of the Lord is exalted The right hand of the Lord doth valiantly This was the Anthem that the whole Quire of Saints and Believers sang and they repeat it and come over it again and again to express their joy Now this Anthem sung by the Church By David again was no sooner ended but David takes his Harp again and sings this Versicle by himself and insulting over his enemies he chants 1. I will not dye as they desired and indeavoured by a violent death I will not be broken-hearted by these griefs and pressures but I will take heart and rise as it were out of the Grave not to live an idle life and spend my dayes in pleasure but to declare the works of the Lord. 2. And among his works this is one upon which I will especially insist that 1. The Lord hath chastned me sore Within I have strugled with sin with the Devil with the sorrowes of death without I have been assaulted by bitter enemies 2. But in both these I must acknowledge his fatherly affection for these stroaks were not deadly he hath not given me over unto death 4. The fourth part It is conceived that this Psalm was composed by David that it might be sung The Anthymn sung betwixt David and the Priests when Priests and people were assembled together to give thanks to the Lord for that their good King was now fully delivered from his enemies and quietly setled in his Throne that then which followes may be best understood if with Junius we form it into a Dialogue 1. Ver. 19 David in these words speaks to the Priests and Levites who had the care of the Tabernacle Open to me the gates of righteousness that is the gates of Gods house in which righteousness ought to dwell For I will go in to them and I will there publickly and in the whole Assembly of good men praise the Lord and give him thanks for his mercy to me 2. Ver. 20 To this the Priests return answer This is the gate of the Lord the sole gate of justice that leads to him and the just only shall enter into it procul este profani 3. David replies shewing his Reason in brief why he entred into Gods house Ver. 21 his end was to praise God which he doth in few words for God loveth not long prayers I will praise thee for thou hast heard me and art become my salvation And to the 28th verse how God had setled him in his Kingdom made him
with a profession of his Integrity where we may not think that he is justifying himself before God but only declaring how unjustly he was oppressed by men Defensio est non arrogantia 1. Ver. 1 I have done judgment and justice Judgment is the effect of justice and by the exact Rule of Justice And prayes that God leave him not to his enemies David had so proceeded in judging the people that he had given to every one his own and yet he could not live free from the calumnies and slanders of wicked men and therefore he prayes 2. Ver. 2 Leave me not to my Oppressours And his Petition hath equity in it for 't is but equal that he who had been so just to others should have justice done him And by it we may learn to commend a just cause to God if we look for his assistance Now in this Petition David proceeds and useth many other Arguments to perswade it 1. Be surety or undertake for thy servant for good My enemies suspect me of injustice and violence but do thou interpose and be surety for me that it is not true neither that ever they shall find any such dealing at my hand or answer for me when I am not by for what they lay to my charge 2. Let not the proud oppress me His condition is miserable Ver. 3 that falls into the hands of proud men for their insultations are unsufferable and they merciless such he fears and prayes against them 3. And this he doth in an ardent manner and the reason is because he saw he was destitute of all humane help it was Gods help that only could secure him which he expected and almost fainted in the expectation of it 1. My eyes fail The eyes of faith and whole intention of my soul are fixed on thee and they are ready to fail while thy help comes not 2. My eyes fail for thy salvation Not only that which is temporal in the deliverance from mine enemies though I vehemently desire that too but for that salvation of Gods people mentioned Psal 106.4 4.6 3. For the Word of thy righteousness The ground that I wait for thy salvation is thy Promise thy righteous Word passed to me 4. And he proceeds in this prayer and desires God to deal with him But deal with him as an honest servant as with an honest servant not which did his Will but yet desired to do it and was displeased with himself and sorrowful when he did it not he pleads not me●● but mercy 1. O deal with thy servant according to thy mercy Ver. 4 2. And teach me thy statutes which he often asks and is then obtained when God infuseth so much love into our hearts that we know and do his Will for knowledge without charity puffs up but edifies not 5. He asks the same again renewes his Petition with a Reason and this frequent Petition of the same thing shewes his ardent desire to obtain it I am no stranger unto thee but a domestick servant and therefore bound to obey thy Commands let me want no grace that may enable me to serve thee Ver. 5 I am thy servant give me understanding that I may know thy Testimonies It is a gift of thy donation only 6. And now he enters his complaint and useth that as a new Argument He complains of the ungodly that destroyed Gods Law that God hear him 1. It is time for thee Lord to work to do judgment against the wicked To us there is a time when God seems not to work in that he executes not his wrath against the wicked Ver. 6 in such a time it is no sin to pray with David That God would arise and work for a time it is when his Church is in a publick trouble the sins of the Amorites full and his people brought low 2. For they have destroyed thy Law Not only broken it disgraced but cast it aside and destroyed it A time then it is to work and execute now made it void 7. Which David was zealous to preserve But their malice and endeavours were not so great to evacuate and destroy Gods Law as Davids zeal and affection was bent and inflamed for the preservation of it which he useth as another Argument that God would not leave him in the hand of his Oppressours ver 1. Therefore I love 1. Therefore David was no Temporizer in Religion Ver. 7 whose affections toward Gods Word depended upon times and persons but his love appears in this That when his enemies fought to destroy it then he loves it They endeavour to make void therefore I love thy Law 2. I love thy Law He saith not he fulfilled it but only he loved it it is a good progress in godliness when we come thus far that we can say with David I love thy Law 3. And shews his love to it And that he might shew the greatness of his affection he mentions those things which are most loved gold fine gold or jewels to which his love was not so great as to Gods Commandments I love thy Commandments above gold yea above fine gold And he insists upon this point his love to Gods Law What would they make it void and cast it aside This makes me the more esteem it and judge that there is the more excellency in it Ver. 8 It must needs be good which wicked men set lite by Two things I find in me arising from hence which are quite contrary an esteem and hatred but yet of contrary objects 1. And his estimate of it Therefore I esteem all thy precepts concerning all things to be right He had an high estimate of Gods precepts he thought them just in all things just because they prescribe nothing but that which is exactly just and just because they bring a just punishment on the Transgressors and a reward to the righteous 2. Therefore I hate every false way Nor one way but every way of sin and the flesh many they are but he hates them all and his hatred arose out of the justice and equity he perceived to be in Gods Law therefore I hate The Prayer O Most Omnipotent God I can no way excuse my self before thy Tribunal for my manifold breaches of thy Law For I have sin'd against Heaven and against thee and am not worthy to be call'd thy son but to man I have done no harm Ver. 1 I have alwayes born such a love to justice that I have done that which is just and equal Thus with a good conscience I can profess before thée and therefore I beséech thée leave me not in the hands of those who continually calumniate me and séek to oppress me Thou knowest O Lord Ver. 2 how they detract from me and invent lies against me when I am no by do thou then interpose in my behalf undertake to answer for me and suffer not the proud Transgressors of thy Law to bring upon me that force and injury
and he expresses the cause 2. Because mine enemies have forgotten thy words I did even pine away for grief and anger that men should be so prophane to forget so just and useful Laws 4. 3 Commends it as pure like tryed gold And now he returns to a nother commendation of Gods Law and shewes another affection that from thence arose in him to wit love 1. Ver. 4 Thy Word is very pure or proved most pure 'T is like gold that is tried in the fire from which all drosse is by melting purged Psal 12.6 Upon trial Gods law will be found to be far from all injustice Unjust he is not when he chastiseth his children for there is sin in them nor unjust he is not when he suffers the wicked to flourish for it is their portion Luke 16.25 Righteous are thy judgments 2. And shews his love to it And this raised in David another affection viz. Love Therefore thy servant loveth it Love in God is the fountain of all his benefits bestowed on us and love in man is the fountain of all our service and obedience to our God Love is such a duty that it cannot be excused in any without which all that we can do in his service is nothing He must love Gods Law because it is his Law and a just Law that means to keep it for Love is the fulfilling of the Law 3. A third effect that this wrought in David was a careful remembrance of it yea albeit he was in a mean estate and for it despised by his enemies 1. Ver. 5 I am small the youngest and least among my brethren 2. And his care not to forget it no not in sad times And despised and little set by by my brethren Saul c. 3. Yet do not I forget thy precepts nor my poverty nor contempt can bring me to that passe that I forget my duty to thee Many there are who will professe Religion as long as they see peace and honour followit but rather than they will endure trouble and contempt will utterly forsake it Thus did not David he kept in memory Gods Law And indeed the first step of defection is to forget what God hath commanded for upon this the transgression easily follows 5. 3 He commends it from the perpetuity of it And here he interserts a fourth commendation of Gods Law viz. The immutability perpetulty and eternity of it It is immutable and may never be dispensed with it is a righteousnesse and it is everlasting 1. Ver. 6 Thy righteousnesse is an everlasting righteousnesse No man may change it no man may dispense with it so long as the world stands so long it must be rul'd by it 2. Thy Law is the Truth The Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it hath the priority of all Lawes in this it contains no falshood the promises and threats in it shall certainly be fulfilled 6. Upon which he makes mention of a fourth effect that it produced in him Therefore he joyes and delights in it in his tribulation viz. joy and delight yea non obstante all his troubles and sorrows 1. Trouble and anguish hath taken hold upon me The righteous are often under the crosse that sin may be subdued Ver. 7 patience and the graces of the Spirit increased the pleasures of the world contemned and the joyes of heaven desired 2. Yet thy Commandments are my delights Yet even in this great tribulation the meditation of thy truth contained in thy Law doth delight me it is the remedy against all my afflictions to call to mind what thou hast promised This is it that sanctifies all afflictions to me and makes me rejoyce in them 7. Ver. 8 That Gods Word and Truth was everlasting that gave him so much comfort and joy that he repeats it again 1. He repeats both And desires understanding in it The righteousnesse of thy testimonies is everlasting and adds only his accustomed Petition unto it 2. Give me understanding and I shall live Live and revive in all my troubles It is no life that men have who are destitute of this knowledge they live uncomfortably and therefore the Word of God is contemned by none but such as know not the excellency thereof and the comfort it brings The Prayer O Lord thou art a righteous Iudge and thy justice is so essential to thée Ver. 1 that thou canst no more defrand thy servants of thy promised comforts nor let the wicked escape unpunished in their sins than deny thy self to be God Thou art upright in thy judgments even in those stripes thy children receive and in all those plagues the wicked receive at thy hands O Lord we confesse that for our sins we justly have deserved to receive those blowes and yet we comfort our selves in this that these chastisements are to be but temporal whereas the stripes of the wicked are like to be eternal They may escape thy anger and flourish here but they shall never flye from the wrath to come Now from this eternal justice which is in thée hath procéeded thy Law which is a Law of equity for the testimonies which thou hast commanded Ver. 2 are exceeding righteous a Law of truth having no admi●tion of vanity or falshood a law of purity the finest gold purged from the drosse is not purer a perpetual and eternal law that to all men and at all times prescribes their duty Put then O Lord into my heart a zeal a love to this Law let me never forget it but take my delight in it even then when trouble and heavinesse have taken hold on me It is not unknown unto thée how I have béen consumed with grief and inflamed with anger because ungodly men have forgotten thy words Ver. 3 this they laugh at for this they despise me but their milice doth but increase my love to thy Law and their contempt quicken me in the memory of thy promises O give me an understanding heart and an inflamed soul to thy truth and so I shall live quietly in the midst of my calamities and chearfully end my dayes in thy sear and by thy favour be brought at last to a safe harbour in heaven by Iesus Christ my only Lord and Saviour Amen 19. KOPH DAVID in this Octonary fervently petitions for Audience The Contents Davids prayer Deliverance increase of grace 2. The end he desires it is to keep to observe and meditate on Gods Word 3. His main reason to perswade it is Gods mercy and the danger he was in by mischievous enemies from whom nothing could deliver him but Gods goodness of which he had had former experience 1. For his prayer it was very well conditioned 1. Ver. 1 It was earnest a Cry rather than a Petition I cried and again ver 2. I cried 2. Ver. 3 It was sincere I cried with my whole heart Toto affectu totis viribus 3. Seasonable and continual he did persevere in prayer 1. I prevented the dawning of the
it rase it even to the foundations And thou O Babylon which hast done the work as I doubt not but as my God hath begun and will in his good time take a condign punishment upon the Edomites so also he will bring thée down Thou art miserable and thou shalt be miserable Happy shall that King and people be that rewardeth thee as thou hast served us Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones O merciful God whatever wrath and indignation is due unto us for the breach of thy Commandments and dishonouring thée in thy Service remove it O Lord from thy people and transfer it upon them that with an implacable malice pursue thy people and séek by all means to corrupt and waste thine inheritance which was purchased by the precious blood of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ PSAL. CXXXVIII DAVID delivered from his enemies and troubles and advanced to the Kingdom gives thanks to God acknowledgeth Gods goodnesse in hearing his prayers foretels the conversion of Kings shews that God regards the humble rejects the proud puts his trust in God for the future and prayes that God would continue and enlarge his mercy to him More briefly 1. In the three first verses he promiseth a grateful heart and to sing forth the praises of God because God heard his cryes and prayers and in tribulations sent him comfort 2. In the three next he shews what after Kings would do when the works and truth of God should be made known to them 3. In the two last verses he professeth his confidence in God shews what he hopes for from him and in assurance that God will perfect his work prayes him not to desert and forsake him David shews his thankfulness 1. First David shews his thankfulness which he illustrates and amplifies 1. The first part And illustrates it that From the manner of the doing of it done it should be cordially sincerely ardently totally I will praise thee with my whole heart 2. From the witnesses before whom it should be done Before the Gods will I sing praise Ver. 1 Coram Elohim Not only privately but publickly before the Potentates 1 He would do it heartily 2 Before all men whether Angels or Kings of the earth Psal 111.1 Psal 107.32 3. From the place the Temple then the Tabernacle a symbol of Gods presence with his people Ver. 2 It was as it were Gods Palace and there he ruled as a King 3 In the Temple and therefore he would fall low bow worship I will worship toward thy Holy Temple Which the Jews did when absent from Jerusalem Dan. 6. 4. 4 The causes inducing him to it From the causes inwardly inducing him to it I will praise thy Name for thy loving kindnesse and for thy truth 1. 1 Gods calling him to be King For thy loving kindnesse in calling me from the sheepfold to the Kingdom 2. 2 Performing his word And for thy Truth in performing thy promise In performing which 5. Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name This clause is diversly read Thou hast magnified thy Name in thy Word that is in performing thy Word above all things Or Thou hast-magnified thy Name and thy Word above all things Or Magnificas cum to●o nomine tuo sermonem tuum Jun. All these have the same sense But the vulgar reads it thus Quoniam magnificasti super omne nomen sanctum tuum And Bellarmine by Sanctum tuum understands Christ who Luc. 1. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to whom he gave a Name above every Name I suppose our English Translation should be pointed thus Thus hast thou magnified thy Word above all thy Name or and above all thy Name For Musculus by and joyns the Substantives 3 For hearing and granting his petitions Magnificasti super omnia nomen tuum eloquium 6. From Gods facility in hearing and granting his petitions which he presented to his God in the time of his banishment and affliction Ver. 3 In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthenedst me with strength in my soul Infirme creatures we are and in temptations and afflictions must faint except God strengthen us Out of all these motives David would praise God 2. David having set down what God had done for him The second part in mercy call'd him from following the Ewes great with young ones anointed him to be a King heard his prayers strengthned him in his affliction and in truth performed his promises conceives it impossible but that either the Neighbour or future Kings should take this when they heard of it into their consideration and ●cknowledge the miracle and praise God for it This certainly is the literal sense This mercy to David was like to move other Kings to magnifie God though it may have an eye to the conversion of Kings in future to the faith 1. All the Kings of the earth Hiram Toe c. or the future Kings of Israel Judah shall praise thee when they hear the words of thy mouth what thou hast said of me David and of my seed Ver. 5 2. Yea They shall sing in the wayes of the Lord that is of the wayes of the Lord Muscul of his mercy truth clemency For great is the glory of the Lord he is very glorious in all his wayes his works his proceedings 3. Of which this is one Though the Lord be high yet hath he respect to the lowly of which I David may be an instan̄ce But the proud he beholds afar off He removes far from him he will not have to do with them they are in remotis agendis of which Saul may be an example and the Devil 3. Because God who is high looks upon the lowly The third part With it so mov'd he was that he puts his affiance in God therefore David being conscious to himself of his own humility promiseth himself help from God in all his tribulation even for the time to come 1. If I walk in the midst of trouble that is on all sides exposed to trouble Ver. 7 2. Thou wilt revive me make me live and preserve me safe and untouch't 3. Thou shalt stretch forth thy hand against the wrath of my enemies Thou by thy power shalt restrain their fury that would devour me and hinder their endeavours and enterprises 4. And thy right hand shall save me Thy power thy virtue thy Christ who in Isa 53. is call'd the arm of the Lord shall do it The last verse depends on the former because he knew And that that God who had would yet deliver him that as yet many troubles and afflictions remained to be undergone therefore he was confident that the same God who had hitherto delivered him would be a good God to him for the future and deliver him in time to come and so make his work perfect 1. The Lord will perfect that which concernt me not for any
merit but mercy 2. Of which he gives the Reason Thy mercy O Lord endureth 〈◊〉 ●ver Ver. 8 It is not for a moment it vanisheth not with one benefit For his mercy but 〈◊〉 is eternal so is it eternal and the resote I know that God will pers●● in me what he hath begun 3. And to that end he concludes with a prayer And for this he prayes Forsake not the work of thy own hands Thou which in mercy hast begun this work conserve increase perfect it because it is thine own work only and none of mine If we desire that God should perfect any work in us we must be sure that it is his work Absolons work had no blessing for it was none of Gods The Prayer out of the One hundred and thirty eighth Psalm O Lord I will praise thee with my whole heart neither will I do this privately and within the walls of my house but in publick and in the Assembly of thy Saints even before Angels and the greatest Princes who are Terrestrial gods Ver. 1 I will sing Psalms to the honour of thy Name I will bow my self and fall low and worship towards thy holy Temple and there praise thy Name for thy loving-kindness in making unto me many gracious promises and for thy Truth in performing what thou hast promised in both which Thou hast magnified thy Name Ver. 2 and thy Word above all things that are in heaven and earth Thou hast commanded me to call on thée in time of trouble and I in obedience to thy Word have call'd And in the day when I cryed Thou answer'dst me by which Thou hast magnified thy Word and in my weakest estate Ver. 3 Thou hast strengthned me with strength and consolation in my soul by which Thou hast magnified thy Name So many have béen thy mercies so wonderful thy Providence so strange thy protection toward me through my whole life so beyond expectation thy salvation sent unto me in my greatest dangers Ver. 4 That whosoever shall hear the words of thy mouth spoken of me and fulfilled in me will be ready to praise thee yea Ver. 5 they shall sing of the wayes of the Lord of thy wisdom thy power thy justice thy goodness and confess upon the consideration of thy works That great is the Majesty and Glory of our God For though thou art high most high in nature most high in power most high in command and empire Ver. 6 yet thou humblest thy self and hast respect to the lowly for whose sake thou humbledst thy self in thy Son didst vouchsafe to descend from Heaven and converse with them As for the proud Thou beholdest them afar off as no way approving their haughty thoughts O Lord remove far from me all pride of heart and create in me an humble spirit that thou may'st cast one good look toward me descend into my heart by grace and that I may from this low estate ascend unto thée Thou O Lord hast hitherto béen merciful unto me and deliver'd me from many troubles Ver. 7 but yet I carry about me a body of flesh and my sorrowes are not at an end I must look for afflictions and I expect them that which alone can arm me against these calamities is the experience of thy former mercies hitherto thou hast and I am assured that hereafter thou wilt deliver me Though then I walk in the midst of trouble I know thou wilt revive me Thou shalt stretch forth thy hand against the wrath of mine enemies quell their fury and allay their rage and thy right hand shall save me O Lord perfect thy work in me that thou hast begun It procéeds not from my mer●● but thy mercy Ver. 8 and this thy mercy is not for a moment but endures for ever 〈◊〉 vanisheth not with one benefit but is eternal as thou art eternal And all the works that flow from me whether within me or done upon me are thy works forsake not then but protect and cherish the works of thine own hands nor leave me who am thy workmanship created after thine own image Good God renew in me what is decay'd by the fraud and malice of the Devil or my own frailty let thy grace pursue me and thy right hand uphold me that I may attain to that perfection of thy Saints in glory through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen PSAL. CXXXIX IN this Psalm David having aspersions laid upon him by his enemies appeals to God in justification of his innocency and he desires of God to be his Witness and Compurgator ver 23. Now that this his Appeal be not thought unreasonable he presents God in his two especial Attributes Omniscience and Omnipresonce Then he shewes how free he was like to be from the faults with which he was charg'd in that he loved goodness and good men and hated the wayes of wickedness and wicked men This is the Sum. The parts are 1. A Description of Gods Omniscience from ver 1. to 7. 2. The Description of his Omnipresence from ver 7. to 18. 3. Davids hatred of evil and wicked men from ver 19. to 23. 4. The Protestation of his own innocency which he offers to the Test and Tryal of God ver 23 24. 1. He begins with Gods Omniscience The first part Gods Omniscience He and takes upon him the person of mankind for what he saith of himself is as true of all men for we are all known to God Ver. 1 1. O Lord Thou hast searched me out proved examined Knowes tryed me by an exact search or scrutiny it needed not but he would have us know that God most accurately searcheth into all our wayes not the least thing we do is hid from him Thou searchest me out and knowest me Now what he said in general he opens in particulars Ver. 2 2. As first for our Actions he searches and knowes them 1 Our actions 1. Thou knowest my down-sitting and my uprising when where and for what cause I sit down or rise 2. For our thoughts he searches them also 2 Our thoughts Thou understandest my thoughts afar off from all eternity Thou knowest my counsels my cogitations even before I began to think them Ver. 3 3. The intents and purposes of our thoughts and actions 3 Our intents the ends we aim at Thou compassest my path and my lying down and art acquainted with all my wayes 4. Yea and our words too There is not a word in my tongue but Ver. 4 O Lord Thou knowest it altogether 4 Our words And of this he gives this Reason because God is our Maker Ver. 5 toti quanti quanti sumus we are his work Thou hast beset me behind and before The Reason is because he is our Maker and laid thy hand up●● me The Vulgar reads this verse thus Ecce Domine tu cognovisti omnia novissima antiqua mea tu formasti me posuisti super me manum tuam where Bellarmine saith there be
They shall not stand in judgment though some refer this clause to this life When he is judg'd by men causa cadet he shall be condemn'd 2. Exclusion from the company of the just Sinners shall not stand in the Congregation of the righteous 3. Ver. 6 The cause of both In the close he shews the cause why the godly is happy the wicked unhappy 1. Because the way of the righteous is known to God approved by him and defended 2. But the way studies plots counsels of the wicked shall perish The Prayer out of the first Psalm O Almighty and most merciful God who hast taught us by thy holy Word that the only way to obtain felicity Ver. 1 is to avoid evil and to do good never suffer me to walk in the counsels of the ungodly nor to stand in the way of sinners nor to acquiesce and sit down and rest in the Chair of the Deriders of Religion and Piety Ver. 2 But so renew and quicken all the faculties of my soul by the gracious assistance of thy Spirit that my delight may be to walk in the paths of thy Commandments and the meditations of my heart day and night taken up with the study of thy sacred Word and Will By nature I am a wild Trée Ver. 3 barren of good fruit be pleased then to transplant me and ingraff me into the true Olive root me in true faith sustain me in charity let those heavenly dews of grace and Rivers of waters which flow from thy Sanctuary moysten and comfort my dry soul so I may bud and knit and fructifi● and in a fit season bring forth such fruits as may chear thee my God and be beneficial to man then I may expect happy successes and prosperity upon the work of my hande O Lord thou knowest my frailties no Trée more subject to the violence of tempests than I am to the fury and rage of enemies who if they may have their will will not leave one leaf upon me they will deprive me of my juice and devest me of my greenness O let not then the scorching heat of any temptation wither nor the storm of a winter persecution beat off a leaf of grace with which thou hast beautified my soul but in the midst of this fiery trial let me still flourish and in the coldest blast let me retain my life and fresh vigour that howsoever I séem to men to be in an unhappy condition yet I may have the testimony of thy Spirit within that thou who disposest all things to the best for those who love thée wilt make me prosper Prosper me therefore in my wayes prosper me in my actions prosper me in my afflictions prosper me in life prosper me in my death whatsoever I do let it prosper Should I sell my self to work wickedness consent to ungodly counsels or settle upon the lees of sin and sit down in the Chair of the scornful I can expect no such success from thy hand Ver. 4 thy mouth hath said it As for the ungodly it shall not be so with them though they may séem to men to be well rooted and excéedingly to flourish yet their prosperity is but for a moment their happiness light and vain Carried they are with every violent wind of lewd affections and empty Doctrines Ver. 5. 6. and therefore they shall be as the Chaffe which the wind drives from the face of the earth their way shall perish they shall never be able to stand in judgment But thou O Lord art a sure protection for thy people Grant therefore O Lord Ver. 6 that when I shall appear before thy Iudgment seat I may be able to stand with boldness in thy presence and let thy mercy absolve me from my sins for the merits of my Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ Amen PSAL. II. The prime Subject of this Psalm is Christ the Type David THE persons we are chiefly to reflect on are three which make three parts of the Psalm The Enemies of Christ Christ the Lord. The Princes and Judges of the earth 1. The enemies to Christ are great men who are described here The first part The enemies of Christ described partly from their wickedness and partly from their weakness First Their wickedness is apparent 1. They furiously rage 2. They tumultuously assemble 3. They set themselves stand up 1 By their wickedness and take counsel against the Lord and against his Anointed 4. They encourage themselves in mischief saying Come and let us cast away their cords from us Ver. 1 All which is sharpned by the interrogative Why Secondly Their weakness 2 Their weakness for their plots vain in that they shall never be able to bring their plots and conspiracies against Christ and his Kingdom to pass for 1. What they imagine is but a vain thing Ver. 1 2. He that sits in Heaven shall laugh and have them in derision Ver. 4 3. He shall speak unto them in his wrath and vex them in his sore displeasure Ver. 5 4. For maugre all their plots Ver. 6 God hath set up his King upon his holy hill of Zion 2. At ver 6. begins the exaltation of Christ to his Kingdom The second part Christ by God exalted to be King which is the second part of the Psalm in which the Prophet by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brings in God the Father speaking and the Son answering First The words of the Father are Vnxi te in Regem I have set my King Ver. 6 where we have the inauguration of Christ or his calling to the Crown 1 His inauguration Secondly The answer of the Son I will preach the Law which sets forth his willing obedience to publish and proclaim the Laws of the Kingdom Ver. 7 of which the chief is Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee 2 His willing obedience Thirdly The reply of the Father 3 His reward containing the reward that Christ was to have upon the publication of the Gospel which was Ver. 8 1. An addition to his Empire by the conversion and access of the Gentiles 1 The amplification of his Kingdom Ask of me and I will give thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the uttermost ends of the Earth for thy possession Ver. 9 2. And the confusion of his Enemies Thou shalt break them 2 The confusion of his enemies who would not have thee reign that did rage and stand up against thee with a Rod of iron and break them in pieces as a potters vessel 3. In the third part the Prophet descends to his Exhortation and Admonition The third part The Prophet exhorts and that very aptly for is Christ a King is he a King anointed by God is he a great King a powerful King so great that the Nations are his Subjects Ver. 10 so powerful that he will break and batter to pieces his Enemies Besides Kings 1. to is he the only begotten
Son of God Be wise therefore O ye Kings in which Ver. 11 1. The persons to whom this fair Caveat is given Kings and Judges 1 Know their Duty 2. What they are here taught 2 To do their Duty First To know their Duty Be wise be learned Secondly To do their Duty Serve the Lord in fear rejoyce with trembling Ver. 12 kiss the Son 3 Without delay and that 3. The time when this is to be done even Now the Reason double 1. Drawn from his wrath and the consequent punishment 1 Lest he be angry and destroy them Lest he be angry and ye perish from the right way 2. From the happy condition of those who learn to know him and fear 2 Because they are happy that trust in him and serve and adore him For if his wrath be kindled yea but a little blessed are all they that put their trust in him The Prayer collected out of the second Psalm O Blessed God unto whom all hearts are open and from whom no secrets are hid whose eyes are ten thousand times brighter than the Sun and pass through the World and behold all the thoughts and conspiracies and actions of men Encline thine ear and hear open thine eyes and sée the attempts of Satan and wicked men The Heathen have raged furiously and the people have tumultuously assembled Ver. 1 and imagine vain things yea the Kings of the Earth have risen together they have taken counsel and joyn'd their power against God Ver. 2 and against him who is thy Anointed These many in number Ver. 3 strong in power encourage themselves in mischief saying Come let us break off these Bonds of Laws and Religion from off our necks by which they would yoke us and cast away their cords in which they would bind us for we will not that he or his Anointed reign over us For of a truth Lord against thée and thy holy child Iesus whom thou hast anointed both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the Nation of the Jewes have gathered themselves together and do whatsoever thy hand and thy Counsel determined before to be done And now O Lord behold their threatnings for thy Names sake for thy Sons sake for thy Promise sake let not the gates of Hell prevail against thy Church Ver. 4 Thou that sits in Heaven laugh them to scorn Ver. 5 Thou which art the most High have them in derision speak unto them in thy wrath and vex them in thy sore displeasure Raise up thy power Ver. 6 O Lord and come amongst us Set thy King upon thy holy Hill of Zion Ver. 7 He is thy only begotten Son from everlasting and yet was content for our Redemption to humble himself to the womb and be born and made of a woman that he might preach thy Law and make known the glad tidings of salvation to all people Ver. 8 Give him therefore the Heathen for his inheritance and the utmost parts of the Earth for his possession Merciful God who hast made all men and hatest nothing that thou hast made nor wouldest the death of a sinner but rather that he should be converted and live have mercy upon all Iewes Turks Infidels and Heretiques and take from them all ignorance hardness of heart and contempt of thy Word and fetch them home blessed Lord to thy stock that they may be saved among the remnant of thy true Israelites that there may be but one Fold and one Shepheard As for such who obstinately and wilfully and maliciously stop their ears that they may not hear and shut their eyes that they may not sée lest they should hear with their ears and sée with their eyes and thou shouldst heal them These are the men O Lord who will not have thée reign over them poure therefore thy indignation upon them and bring them down in their pride and obstinacy Ver. 9 break them in pieces with a rod of iron and dash them into shivers like a Potters vessel of which being broken into smaller parcels there is no use nor hope or possibility of reparation Gracious God Ver. 10 poure down the graces of thy holy Spirit upon all thy people especially upon the Kings and Rulers of the Earth give them those gifts that may make them wise and those graces that may make them good let them learn their Duties Ver. 11 and do their Duties to thée O so encline all our hearts that we may serve thee in fear rejoyce before thee with reverence that we kiss bow down and adore thy Son submit and be obedient to him receive his Doctrine and acquiesce in his Laws and never be at rest till our heart assure us that thou art reconciled unto us through him O who may stand in thy sight when thou art angry we tremble therefore to féel at this time the effect of thy hot wrath upon us Ver. 12 for thou hast suffered us to perish from the right way for truth to embrace lying vanities and for thy Gospel to worship our own imaginations This is the just reward of our disobedience this is the just revenge and punishment of our sin in that we have not served thée in fear nor come into thy Courts and rejoyced before thée with reverence nor bow'd our knées and béen obedient to thy Son Vers 12 For this thy wrath is kindled and it burns not a little against us O Lord grant that this thy severity may have a true impression upon our hearts let us be true penitents and by our sighs and groans give thée no rest in heaven till thou return and have mercy upon us Recall us again to the right way Vers. 12 and never let us more erre and wander from it Confirm our hope it rengthen our faith alwayes let us put our confidence in thy mercy knowing that they alone who put their trust in thée are blessed for when thy wrath is kinded they shall be gather'd under thy wings and shall be safe under thy feathers Call us O Lord to thy truth justifie us by thy Sons blood sanctifie us by his Spirit and make us of that number to whom thou wilt say at the last day Come ye Blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the world Amen Amen PSAL. III. The occasion of this Psalm was Absalons rebellion DAVID being deserted by his subjects rail'd upon by Shimei pursued for his Crown and life by his ungracious son and not finding to whom to make his moan betakes himself to his God and before him he expostulates his wrong confesseth his faith and makes his prayer There be then three strains of this accurate Psalm 1. His complaint 2. The confession of his confidence 3. His Petition The first part Davids complaint of his enemies 1. He begins with a sad and bitter complaint amplified 1. By the Number and Multitude of his enemies That they were Multi Many Multi valde very many that they were multiplicati
thy fear will I worship And yet not relying so much upon himself as in the goodness and mercy of God he professeth vers 7. As for me I will come into thy house upon the multitude of thy mercy and in thy fear will I worship toward thy Holy Temple In which observe 1. A difference betwixt bad and good men In their wayes and hope As for me Vers. 7 2. And shews his demeanour in Gods service That David would come to Gods house the place of prayer 3. But not presumptuously or Pharisaically Upon hope of mercy 4. There he would worship I will worship 5. But with reverence In thy fear I will worship And thus David having petitioned for audience The second part Davids Petition and deliver'd the grounds of his confidence he brings forth his Petition That his life be holy and innocent 1. Lead me forth in thy righteousness 2. Make thy way strait before me of which he gives this reason Vers. 8 Because of his enemies which dayly laid wait to intrap him and subvert him in his goings These his enemies he describes to the life The third part He farther describes his enemies By their Mouth Heart Throat Tongue 1. There is no faithfulness in his mouth 2. Their inward parts are very wickedness Vers. 9 3. Their throat is an open Sepulchre 4. They flatter with their tongue And then he falls to prayer again 1. Against his enemies 2. The fourth part He again prayes against them Then for Gods people or the Church 1. Against his enemies 1. Destroy thou them O God 2. Let them fall by their own counsels 3. Cast them out in the multitude of their transgressions Vers. 10 Of which Imprecation he gives this reason For they be Rebels For they have rebell'd against thee Rebels not against David but against God for he that resists the power resists the Ordinance of God They have not rejected thee but they have rejectect me The fifth part And for Gods people The Conclusion contains his Prayer for Gods people whom he here describes and calls The righteous 2. They that put their trust in God 3. They that love his Name And he prayes for them that Vers. 11 1. They may rejoyce that they may shout for joy 2. They may be joyful in God And he adds this reason Whom he knows God will favour Because thou defend'st them thou wilt bless them and with thy favour thou wilt compass them as with a shield The Prayer collected out of the fifth Psalm O Most Gracious and Holy God who hast saught us that thou art not a God Vers. 4 who hath pleasure in wickedness neither shall any evil dwell with thee Vers. 5 in whose sight the foolish shall not stand Vers. 6 and by whom those who speak leasing shall be destroy'd Thou that hatest all the workers of iniquity and abhorrest both the blood-thirsty and deceitful man We a sinful Nation press'd with the weight of these grievous sins and sensible of thy heavy judgements Vers. 7 yet are bold to come into thy house upon the multitude of thy mercies and in thy fear to worship toward thy holy Temple We beséech thée to give us a true sight and sense of these our heinous transgressions that so our true repentance and amendment may move thée to repent of all the evil thou hast brought upon us Vers. 8 And hereafter lead us in thy righteousness i● an innocent and harmless course of life and make thy way strait before us that we erre not in it and fall not from it and from thée Thou who wast pleased to pay that dear ransome upon the Cross for us on purpose that thou might'st redéem us from all iniquity and purisle unto thy self a peculiar people zealovs of good works We beséech thée write thy law which is our way in our hearts that most excellent divine law of thine that we may know it and do it and turn every one from our iniquities Enemies O good God we have too many Vers. 9 besides the devil and the flesh to turn us out of this good way Enemies in the way of truth Enemies in the way of life Enemies in whose mouth there is no faithfulness Enemies Vers. 10 whose inward parts are very wickedness Roaring enemies whose throat is an open Sepulchre to devour us Lying crafty enemies who flatter with their lips for to deceive us Frustrate Gracious God their counsels destroy their power and forces cast all those out in the multitude of their transgressions who have rebell'd against thee Give ear Ver. 1 O Lord to our words and consider our Meditations hearken to the voice of our cry Ver. 2 our King and our God For unto thee do we pray To thee alone we fly Ver. 3 Our voice shalt thou hear in the morning In the morning will we direct our prayer unto thee and will look up expecting thy comfort and help from heaven to descend upon us O let us then hear the voice of joy and deliverance be●ime in the morning Vers. 11 that those who love thy name may rejoyce at thy justice done upon the wicked and at thy goodness and mercy shew'd toward the righteous let them glory and make their boast that thou art a just and a merciful God just to deliver thy people from evil and merciful to reward them with the chiefest good Arise O Lord to bless us and compass us with thy loving-kindness as with a shield Confirm us in faith and hope that we may rejoice make us love thy name that we may once more shout for joy Impute unto us thy righteousness that may make us just and give us the graces of thy holy Spirit that may make us righteous in our generation so that thou may'st be moved to bless us in this valley of tears and to crown us with blessings in the life to come where we may live an everlasting blessed life of love and holiness with thée O Father of mercies and with thy Son and holy Spirit for ever PSAL. IV. Which is the first of the Penitentials and is fit for a Penitent afflicted under Gods hand THE streins of this Psalm are two in general 1. A Petition to God for himself contain'd in the seven first verses ● An insultation over his enemies contain'd in the three last The Petition stands upon two leggs 1. A deprecation of evil 2. A petition of good First he prayes to God to avert his wrath The first part He prayes that God avert his wrath O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger nor chasten me in thy heavy displeasure Secondly he intreats to be partaker of Gods favour Have mercy upon me 1. Vers. 1 To his body Heal me O Lord. 2. Then to his soul Return O Lord deliver my soul oh save me 2 Shew mercy And this his Petition he inforceth upon divers and weighty reasons Vers. 2 1. Vers. 4 This he inforceth 1. From the greatness of his calamity From
shall my prayer prevent thée Lord why castest thou out my soul why hidest thou thy face from me I am afflicted and ready to dye yea from my youth up thy terrours have I suffered with a troubled mind thy fierce wrath goeth over me thy displeasure hath cut me off This is the desire of my enemies Ver. 7 among whom I daily live who insult over me for my sins and labour to draw me to despair of thy mercies these come daily about me like water and compass me about together Oh let not their mischievous imagination prosper left they be too proud never let them cry there there so would we have it But I will praise the Lord for that he hath done I will wait on thy name for thy Saints like it well Ver. 8 therefore all ye workers of iniquity who have temptted me to sin and pressed me to despair Depart from me for the Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping Ver. 9 the Lord which I repeat with joy and comfort hath heard the voyce of my supplication the Lord hath received and graciously answered my prayer So let thine enemies perish Ver. 10 O Lord so let them be ashamed and suddenly confounded and sore vexed even as many as are adversaries to thy Church and thy Glory Amen PSAL. VII The occasion A slaunder and accusation laid against him by Cush the son of Jemini that he sought to kill Saul from which he frees himself before God THree parts there are of this Psalm 1. His Appeal to God by way of Petition ver 1.2 6. 2. The Reasons of it set down through the whole Psalm 3. The first part Davids Appeal to God by way of petition to which he desires God to be The Doxology or his Thanksgiving ver 17. 1. He begins his Appeal with a Petition for freedom and deliverance from his Persecutors Save me deliver me ver 1. in which he desires God to be 1. Attentive to him first upon the Relation that was betwixt them for he was his Lord his God secondly He trusted in him O Lord my God I trust in thee Ver. 1 ver 1. 2. 1 Attentive 2 Benevolous Benevolous For he was now in danger of death he had 1. Enemies 2. Many Enemies 3. Persecuting Enemies 4. But one above the rest a Lyon who sought first to catch then to tear and rend him to pieces so that if God forsook him he would do it Save me from those that persecute me and deliver me least he catch my soul as a Lyon and tear it in pieces while there is none to deliver ver 2. The second part His reasons of Appeal 2. And then he gives his Reasons why he doth appeal to his God which are his own Innocency and Gods Justice 1. He makes before God a protestation of his Innocency Accused he was 1 His innocency that he lay in wait and plotted for Saul's life and Kingdom but he purgeth himself shews the impossibility of it and that with a fearful imprecation 1. O Lord my God if I have done any such thing as they object Ver. 3. 4. if ther● be iniquity in my hands if I have rewarded evil t● him that was at peace with me ver 3 4. which was indeed an impossible matter And imprecates evil to himself if it were not so for I have deliver'd him that without any cause is my enemy as Saul in the Cave 1 Sam. 24. 2. Upon which he falls to a fearful imprecation to light upon himself if he were any way guilty Then let my enemy persecute my soul and take it Ver. 5 let him tread down my life upon the Earth and lay mine honour in the dust In effect thus then let my enemy have his will upon me take both my life and my honour dearer than my life from me lay all in the dust Kingdom Life Fortunes whatsoever thou hast promised me and I expect 2. And which is the second Reason of his Appeal being thus innocent 2 Gods justice he call to God for justice Arise O Lord in thy anger lift up thy self Ver. 6 because o● the rage of mine enemies and awake for me to the judgment that thou hast commanded 1. The rage of my enemies is great 2. The judgment was thine that chose me from my Brethren to be King of thy people Israel Thou commandest Samuel to anoint me Arise thou therefore lift up thy self and awake for me 3. Besides this will be for thy Honour and E●ification of thy Church 3 Gods glory The Congregation of thy people shall compass thee not me about Ver. 7 they will assemble to praise thee for their sakes therefore return thou on High Ascend the Tribunal and do justice Now upon this Argument of Gods justice He stayes upon Gods justice he dwells and insists till the last verse of the Psalm and he implores it upon the ingemination of his own innocency and the impiety of his enemies God the Judge 1. He avows God to be the Judge not of his cause alone but of the whole world The Lord shall judge the people Ver. 8 2. Then he importunes him to do justice to him and to wicked men He implores his justice 1. To him an innocent and upright person 1 To him an innocent Judge me O Lord according to my righteousness and according to the integrity that is in me 2. To the wicked O let the wickedness of the wicked come to an end Ve. 9 3. And yet again he prayes over the same thing but not only for himself 2 Upon the wicked In God all the properties of a a good Judge 1. Knowledge 2. Prudence 3. To save but all good men Establish the just and adds his Reason that God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He knows not only the words and deeds but the heart also The righteous Lord trieth the very hearts and reins and therefore fittest to be a Judge in whom is required knowledge and prudence 4. The other two properties of a Judge are to save to punish and the triumph of his faith is that he knows he will do both 1. He will save the just and upright in heart he will judge the righteous Ver. 10 and therefore his defence is in God 2. He will punish the wicked for he is angry with the wicked every day Ver. 11 And yet even to them he shews much clemency and forbearance 4 To punish he stayes for their conversion he whets bends sharpens prepares his instruments of death he cuts them not down shoots not till-there is no remedy 5 Clemency Marry If they will not turn he will whet his Sword Ver. 12 he hath bent his Bowe and made it ready Ver. 13 he hath prepared for him the instruments of death and ordains his Arrows against the Persecutors 5. But mercy shewed unto the wicked it seems will not mend and better him nor Davids innocency But forbearance mends
will bless the Lord not only for those temporal blessings formerly mentioned but rather for these spiritual following Ver. 7 1. 1 For illumination For the illumination of my mind that I may understand the thing that is right I will bless the Lord who hath given me counsel 2. 2 For Sanctification For my sanctification My reins instruct me in the night seasons when I am most retir'd methinks I hear a still voyce within me This is the way walk in it 3. 3 For his perseverance For my confidence and perseverance I say the eye of my faith full upon him without irregular affections and passions 1. I have set the Lord alwayes before me I do not forget him 2. Because he is at my right hand to help me that I fall not 3. I shall not be moved Satan may stand at my right hand to resist and trouble me Zach. 3.1 But God is on my right hand to assist and deliver me Ver. 9 or comfort me therefore I shall not be greatly moved 4. 4 His joy in it For that joy I find in me I am in a good plight as much as heart can wish or need require therefore my heart is glad wicked men rejoyce in appearance And for his assurance 1. Of the Resurrection by Christ their joy is but skin-deep but Davids is deeper his heart glory flesh rejoyceth spirit soul body overjoyed the cause is The Resurrection of the Body Resurgam 1. My flesh shall rest in hope or dwell In this world as in diversorio in the grave as repositorio in heaven as in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Mansion 2. Ver. 10 Thou wilt not leave my soul in Hell My body say some in the grave but there is more in it 3. Neither wilt thou suffer Chasid Thy Holy One to see Corruption the Messiah that is to come out of my loi●s Christs Resurrection is the cause Ve. 9. 11. the pledge the security of ours Job 19.25 5. And eternal life which he illustrates The promise of a future life which is here illustrated 1. From the quantity Fulness of joy 2. From the quality Pleasures 3. From the constancy and honour done us At thy right hand and his hand is strong and none can take us out of it 4. From the perpetuity duration continuance for evermore 5. From the cause the presence sight beatifical vision Thou wilt shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulness of joy and at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore The Prayer out of the sixteenth Psalm O God thou hast béen a merciful God unto me through my whole life and bestowed upon me many spiritual and temporal blessings which thou hast denied to many of thy better servants Ver. 6 that inheritance which thou my heavenly Father hast alotted to me Ver. 5 is fallen to me in a rich and pleasant place and it is sufficient for me because thou hast bestowed it who art all-sufficient O Lord though I am altogether unworthy of this favour yet be thou still the portion of my cup replenish it and uphold and maintain me in it for I shall quickly lose and forgo it if it be in mine own kéeping But upon these outward things I set not my heart Ver. 2 for my goods are nothing to thee for can a man be profitable to his God as a man that is wise is profitable to himself The sole way that I can honour thée with these outward blessings is by doing good to the Houshold of faith make me therefore carry a charitable mind Ver. 3 and a liberal hand to these make me set my delight upon the Saints that are in the earth and upon such as excel in vertue for these thy Son hath suffered for their salvation he shed his blood in these thou delightest and let it be my delight then to do them good Increase to that end Ver. 7 and continue unto me thy Graces illuminate my mind with thy Counsels Ver. 6 let my reins also instruct me in the night season that I may yield to thy holy inspirations let thy Spirit that continual spring of comfort and counsel dictate and suggest unto me what I ought to do and to choose that good part that shall never be taken from me I know O Lord that they who depend upon lying vanities Ver. 4 and run after another god do but multiply sorrows to themselves never let me then joyn with them in their bloody offerings nor let their names be mentioned by me or come within my lips with approbation and honour These are enemies unto thée O Lord preserve me from them and I know thou wilt preserve me Ver. 1 because I put my trust in thee Thou art my Lord I have set thee alwayes before me Ver. 8 be at my right hand and I shall never be moved So shall I have cause to bless thée and rejoyce in thée Ver. 7 My heart also shall be glad while I remain in the Land of the living And when this Tabernacle in which I sojourn shall be taken down and I gather'd to my Fathers Ver. 9 My flesh shall rest quietly in the grave in hope of a joyful Resurrection for I am assur'd Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell because thou hast not suffer'd thy Holy One to see corruption I am a Member of that Body whereof he is the Head he the Redéemer I one of those that he hath redéemed and therefore I hope to sée God in my flesh and to see him not with other but with these same eyes Confirm me in this hope strengthen me in this faith shew me in the valley of death the path of life while I live here conduct me in the way of grace that leads to glory where in thy presence I shall have fulness of joy I shall sée thée face to face and enjoy that happiness in a full measure which nor eye hath séen nor ear hath heard neither can enter into the heart of man to understand neither shall this joy admit of any end or satiety for at thy right hand there is pleasures for evermore This happiness O Lord is only in thy power to bestow vouchsafe therefore to give it unto us we beséech thée for the merits of thy only Son our Saviour Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen PSAL. XVII Davids Appeal to God in justification of himself and his Petition for defence against his Enemies THERE be three parts of the Psalm 1. A Petition 1. For Audience ver 1. ver 6. 2. For perseverance in good ver 5. 3. For special favour ver 7 8. 4. For deliverance at this time especially v. 13 14. 2. A Narration in which we meet with 1. His Appeal to God and his own justification ver 2 3 4. 2. The Reasons of it his Enemies and their Character ver 9 10 11 12 13 14. 3. A Conclusion which hath two parts one belonging to this life and the other to the future ver 15. 1. He
begins with a Petition and it is for Audience The first part He petitions for Audience and he perswades it upon two Reasons 1. The justice of his cause 2. The sincerity of his heart 1. Hear the right O Lord attend unto my cry give ear unto my prayer 2. Ver. 1 That goeth not out of feigned lips it comes from a sincere heart and not from the lips only And gives the Reasons therefore hear it 2. Then again there be other Reasons why I desir'd to be heard Ver. 6 1. I am apt to slip and fall from thee Hold up my goings c. Ver. 5 2. The danger I am in is great and it must be a strange miracle Ver. 7 some special grace if I perish not Shew thy marvellous loving kindness Ver. 13. 14. 3. My Enemies insolent and mighty and thy Sword only can deliver me The second part He appeals to God as his Judge Arise O Lord disappoint him and cast him down c. ver 13 14. 2. His Appeal to God since a verdict must pass upon me Let my sentence come forth from thy presence for I know that thou art a just Judge Ver. 2 thou art sway'd with no prejudice Let thine eyes behold the things that is equal and then I am assured it will go well with me Ver. 3 For thou hast before this time taken me to task Being conscious of his innocency and hast found nothing and I am resolv'd that thou shalt find nothing nothing as touching that cause that my Enemies alledge against me 1. Nothing in my heart Thou hast proved my heart 2. Nothing in my tongue For I am purposed that my mouth shall not transgress 3. Ver. 4 Nothing in my hand For concerning the works of men which are mischievous by the words of thy lips I have had so great regard to that which thou hast expresly in thy Word prohibited That I have kept my self from the paths and wicked wayes of the Destroyer of him that to satisfie his own lusts breaks all Lawes Perfasque nefasque ruit 4. And yet desires assistance I confess indeed that I am a poor weak and infirm creature apt to fall as other men Ver. 5 without thou sustain me by thy grace do thou therefore keep me in this mind ever Hold up my goings in thy paths th●t I slip not And this first Petition he renews again Ver. 6 and quickens it by his assurance and confidence to be heard He renews his Petition I have called upon thee for thou wilt hear me O God Encline thine ear to me and hear my speech And he puts in a special Petition which hath two parts or clauses Ver. 7 1. Shew thy marvellous loving kindnesses More than ordinary which he perswades from the person of God O thou that savest by thy right hand them that put their trust in thee from those that rise up against them 2. Ver. 8 That he would save him with the greatest care and vigilancy as a man would preserve the apple of his eye as the Hen her Chickens Keep me as the apple of thine eye hide me under the shadow of thy wings And to perswade this Ver. 9 he fetcheth his Argument from his present necessity he was inviron'd with enemies And perswades it from the quality of his enemies wicked men deadly enemies whom he describes 1. Capital enemies they were and they oppressed him They compass'd him about 2. Ver. 10 Powerful proud rich enemies they were Men inclosed in their own Fat with their mouth they speak proudly They insult and threaten him Ver. 11 3. Their counsels were fixt and bent to ruine him Figentes lumine terram 4. Ver. 12 Cruel they were as Lyons like a Lyon c. ver 12. 5. Ver. 14 Enemies they were that prosper'd in their designs ver 14. They are men of this World 2. They have their portion and look for no other in this life 3. Their bellies are fill'd 4. Their children are many 5. And they leave off their substance to their Babes Therefore he petitions the third time Ver. 13 ver 13. Arise O Lord disappoint him He petitions yet again The third part 1. Faith c. 3. The Conclusion containing the expectation of David opposed to his enemies felicity 1. In the life As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness 2. In this life to come when I awake up i. e. rise from the dead after thy likeness I shall be satisfied with it The Prayer collected out of the seventeenth Psalm I Have called unto thée O Lord be not deaf to my prayer but attend to my cry Ver. 1. 6. Encline thine ear and hear my speech be favourable to the justice of my cause and grant my petition which I make unto thée from the bottom of my heart and offer unto thée not with feigned and dissembling lips I know that thou art a just Iudge who art sway'd with no prejudice to thée therefore I do appeal Let my sentence come forth then from thy presence Ver. 2 and let thine eyes which behold all things consider that which is just and right and look upon that which is equal betwixt me and my accusers For my innocence is not unknown to thée for thou hast proved my heart Ver. 3 whether it were sincere or no thon hast visited me by a night of crosses and temptations and often spoken unto me and searched me out by many thoughtful cogitations which thou hast sent into my soul when déep sléep falls upon man Thou hast tried me as gold in the fire by many a sharp tribulation and yet hast not found any perfidiousness or malicious falshood in me for I have purposed notwithstanding the provocations and great pride and injuries which cruel men have laid upon me that my mouth shall not offend and blaspheme Ver. 4 And though it be a difficult thing for flesh and blood not to wish and speak and return ill to such impious and injurious Malefactors yet in all my life I have had an eye to thy Commandments and by the words of thy lips I have kept my self from the wayes and works and paths of those who attempt to corrupt thy Truth and destroy thy Law But I do not impute this my innocence Ver. 5 and Christian Conversation to my own strength I am not as the Pharisee proud ot it for whatsoever is in me good and vertuous I attribute it wholly to thy grace and benignity I am a weak creature as apt to fall and sin as any I beséech thée therefore who by thy preventing grace hast caused me to enter into the way of thy Commandment go along with me by thy concomitant grace in it Uphold my goings in thy paths that my foot-steps slip not that nor my desires nor actions deviate from the right way and so I become worthy that thy talent of grace be taken from me So many enemies I have that lay wait to subvert me in
this way Ver. 7 and despoil me of this my innocence that it must be more than an 〈…〉 that must preserve me Ver. 8 Shew therefore thy marvellous loving kindness 〈…〉 that savest by thy right hand those that trust in thee Let me be a● dear unto th●e and as safely kept as the apple of the eye protect and hide me under the shadow of thy wings with thy merciful care and tenderness more than the kind Hen doth her little Chickens from the coldest showres or the scorching Sun or the gréedy Hawk or Vulture For behold O Lord our enemies breathing nothing but fury and death Ver. 9 compass me and thy poor Church about on every side they have shut up their bowels of compassion towards us they waste and oppress us Ver. 10 they are fatned with wealth power success and prosperity and being swell'● with their victories over us their mouth speaketh high and proud things It satisfieth not that they have outed us and despoiled us of all our goods oven yet when they have driven us almost to hide our selves in secret places they watch our steps Ver. 11 and compass us about with their nets and snares to catch and destroy us On this only they fasten their eyes and bend their thoughts and counsels Ver. 12 that they lay us flat upon the Earth and bring our honour to the dust No Lyon is more gréedy of his prey nor young Lyon that lurks in secret places dent to raven than they are to take tear and devour us But thou O Lord hast séemed overlong to sléep Ver. 13 the impunity of our enemies hath béen overlong deferr'd Arise now therefore O Lord and shew thy power and come amongst us Disappoint them and cast them down and deliver our souls from the ungodly who is thy Sword and the Rod of thy wrath with which thou dost punish thy disobedient and rebellious children Deliver us O Lord from the men of thy hand Ver. 14 from the men whom thy hand hath armed against us who yet now fight against thée save us from the men of this world who expect no other life nor reward nor are like to receive none for they shall receive their portion in this world in this short life and though their mind is unsatiable yet their bellies are fill'd their belly is their God and their belly thou fill'st with thy hid and choicest pleasures they flow and abound in wealth and delights they have enough and to spare a multitude of children to whom they leave their superfluities and ill-gotten goods And in this they place their greatest happiness But Vers. 15 O Lord let me never receive from thée these outward things as my sole and utmost reward rather let my lot be to suffer with thy people here in this life that I may be happy with them in the life to come With the hope of this reward I will sustain my self in the midst of my pressures I will not forgo my innocence as they must their riches but I hope to behold thy face in my righteousness with all the defects thereof pardoned and covered with the long white Robe of thy Son Being fully perswaded that I here who want and hunger neither could be satisfied with these vain and perishing goos if I did abound in them when I shall awake out of my bed of dust and be renew'd after thy likeness I shall be satisfied with thy glory joy immortality which thou hast prepared for all those who wait for the coming of our Lord Iesus Christ Amen PSAL. XVIII Is Davids 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Song of Triumph after his Conquest of all his enemies 2 Sam. 22. IN which He expresseth what God is to him he first expresses what God is to his servants to him especially My Rock my Fortress my Deliverer c. 2. The first part The effect it wrought upon him 1. Love I will love the Lord. Vers. 2 The effect it wrought in him 2. Confidence In him will I trust 3. Invocation I will call on the Lord. The fruit of which was his safety So shall I be saved from my enemies 2. Vers. 1 Next he makes a long Narrative 1. Of the dangers in which he was Vers. 2 2. Of his Escape 1. Vers. 3 The second part His danger was great Sorrows of death floods of ungodly men sorrows of hell snares of death these compassed him made him afraid prevented him came upon him at unawares The danger he was in vers 4 5. 2. Vers. 4 5. He shews how he behav'd himself in these dangers and from whom he sought for help Very great He flies to God He betook him to God In my distress I call'd upon the Lord and cryed unto my God 3. He shews the goodness of God to him and his readiness to help him He heard me out of his Holy Temple Vers. 6 and my cry came before him c. 4. Vers. 6 The cause of his escape was the immediate hand of God who made use of his Power to deliver him Gods goodness for his escape From Vers 7. The manner to Vers 16. Vers 16 17 18. and testified his presence in a strong way by Concussion of the earth Thunders winds tempests darkness thick clouds hail-stones coals of fire lightnings strange inundations 5. He reckons up his deliverance with the manner and the causes 1. He took he drew me and when the danger was greatest for it was out of many waters from my strong enemy from them that hated me were too mighty for me that sought at unawares to surprise me 2. He did it in a strange way For he sent from above He brought me into a large place 3. But then he was my stay And the causes that moved him to it were 1. His own good-will Because he delighted in me 2. Vers. 20 My innocence Which he declares from vers 20. to vers 25. 6. Which extends to all good men And then ab hypothesi from his own particular case he takes occasion to discourse in Thesi that this is not true only in Davids person but shall be verified of all that are Innocent as he was Which he proves from the nature and usual manner of Gods proceeding with good and bad men from vers 27. With the merciful thou wilt shew thy self merciful and with an upright man thou wilt shew thy self upright With the pure thou wilt shew thy self pure and with the froward thou wilt shew thy self froward For thou wilt save the afflicted people and bring down the high looks of the proud c. The third part Davids Victory amplified Now follows Davids glorious victory 2. The consequent upon it from vers 28. to 46. 1. His victory he expresses and amplifies many wayes 1. From the opposition that he conquer'd Nor troops Vers. 29 nor walls hinder'd Vers. 30 31. 2. From Gods singular protection He was his Buckler His Rock Vers. 32 33. 3. From the Armour the nimbleness the military
us from the darkness of sin and ignorance Good God so affect my heart with the love of thy Law that I may desire it more than gold Ver. 10 yea than much fine gold let it be sweeter to my mouth than the honey-comb Grant good Lord that I who desire to be thy servant may be taught by it Ver. 11 and from the kéeping of it let me expect my reward and have my reward in this present life security and peace of conscience and be refreshed by the comforts of thy holy Spirit and in the life to come live with thée in those Mansions which thou hast prepared for those who kéep thy Law for ever But thou O Lord knowest the frailty of my flesh how weak my endeavours are how imperfect my obedience If none but the observers of thy Law shall be rewarded I must néeds despair of a blessing either in this or another life in that the Errors of my life which I know are very many and those which I know not are numberless How often do I commit that wickedness which I ought to leave undone and omit those Duties which I ought to have done How often doth vice steal upon me in the cloaths of vertue and Error and Falshood in the shape of Truth Who can tell how oft he offendeth Ver. 12 Therefore O my good God I beséech thée of thy infinite mercy cleanse me and wash oft these secret spots of my soul with the rest of which in particular I have no knowledge yet my conscience in general tells me that of such I am guilty And however so long as I carry about me this body of flesh Ver. 13 I must also carry about with me this body of sin yet I beséech thée keep me from presumptuous sins never suffer my will to be so over-born that I sin against thée with a high hand though it dwell yet let it not reign though it remain yet let it not dominéer and tyrannize in my mortal body Thy servant Lord I desire to be and no vassal drudge and slave to sin never then suffer it to have the dominion over me This is that great offence which is inconsistent with grace that turneth thée to be our enemy that excludes from the Kingdom of Heaven never never O Lord suffer me to be guilty of it Thou that hearest prayers to thée shall all flesh come Ver. 14 now with a prostrate soul and a penitent heart I appear before thy Throne and humbly beg audience Let these words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be alwayes pleasing and acceptable to thee O Lord thou art my Rock my Strength hold me up that through weakness I fall not from thée Thou O sweet Jesus art my Redeemer and hast bought my soul with a dear price that of thy precious blood frée me from the power of sin the sorrows of death the power of Satan and pains of Hell and bring me by thy Merits and Passion to everlasting life that I may reign with thée for ever PSAL. XX. Is a Form of Prayer delivered by David to the People to be used by them for the King when he went out to Battle against his Enemies THERE be three parts of it 1. A Vote or Benediction of the People for their King from ver 1. to 5. 2. A Congratulation or Triumph of the People after the victory supposed to be obtained from ver 5. to 9. 3. A Petition ver 9. 1. The Vote and Congratulation is directed to Davids person The first part by form of Acclamation the particulars are that he may have Ver. 1 1. Audience in his necessity The Lord hear thee in the day of trouble The vote of the people for the King 2. Protection The Name of the God of Jacob defend thee 3. Help and Strength in the Battle Send thee help strengthen thee which is amplified by the place Out of the Sanctuary out of Zion either from the Sanctuary where prayers were made for him so that they desire their prayers may be heard for him or E Coelo 4. Acceptance of his person testified by the acceptance of his offerings and sacrifices as that of Abel Oderetur omnia munera tua holocaustum tuum in cinerem redigat 5. Answer concession and grant of his Petitions Grant thee according to thy own heart and fulfil all thy counsel which is plainly set down in the next verse The Lord fulfil all thy Petitions Which granted they vow thanks The Vote being ended they perswade that it may be granted because it will redound to Gods glory for then they would shew themselves thankful and honour him for the victory 1. We will rejoyce in thy salvation or as some read it Do this O Lord ut exultemus That we may rejoyce In tua salute referring it to God as the Authour or to the King as saved 2. And in the Name of our God will we set up our Banners Joyfully will we enter into the City with displayed Ensigns and erect them triumphantly as Trophies of the victory to the honour of our God 2. Now follows the Congratulation and Triumph of their faith The second part for they give thanks as for a victory already obtain'd for to their faith it was certain Before they pray'd for Audience and Protection Ver. 6 here they testifie they were certain and secure of both They comfort themselves by faith that God will grant what they ask of him Now know I. 1. Of Protection Now know I that the Lord will save his Anointed 2. Of Audience He will hear him from his holy Heaven 3. Of Help Helping him with the saving strength of his right hand And the certainty of their victory proceeded solely from their confidence in God to him they impute it wholly in the former verse such was their gratitude which that it might be the clearer they illustrate it by an Argument drawn à dissimili they were not as the common sort of Souldiers that trust more to their Arms than to their Prayers 1. Amd the rather because they trust not in their Ammunition As most men do Hi in curru in equis Some put their trust in Chariots and some in Horses as the Ammonites 2 Sam. 10.6 2. But we do not so We will remember the Name of the Lord our God The use of Arms is common and lawful to good and bad men but the difference lies in the confidence Here is an elegant Antithesis 2. And therefore the success was according their confidence in their Armour and Ammunition destroyed our trust in God hath saved us They are brought down and fallen The third part A short ejaculation but we are risen and stand upright The whole sum of the Psalm is repeated in this Epiphonema 1. Save Lord. 2. Let the King that is Christ bear us when we call The Prayer collected from the twentieth Psalm O Lord which art King of Kings Lord of Lords and yet hast commanded us
Thou shalt make them turn their back when thou shalt make ready thine Arrows upon the siring against the face of them And at last the cause is added of this severity against them Ver. 11 of that succour he will afford his afflicted The cause oppressed people and the sharp revenge he will take upon their enemies For they intended evil against and imagin'd a mischievous device which they were not able to perform A great comfort this The Epilogue is an Acclamation The third part A Vote to Gods glory and it hath two parts 1. A Petition 2. A Profession 1. Be thou exalted Lord in thy own strength Shew thy self more powerful than all Men or Devils in destroying the enemies of thy Church Ver. 13 2. Their thankfulness And we will be a thankful people So will we sing and praise thy power 1. Serva Regem Populum 2. Nos agemus gratias A Prayer for Kings and all in Authority collected out of the twenty first Psalm O Lord shew thy mercy to the King that is now in great distress and cast aside by a stubborn rebellious and self-ended people Call for him again Ver. 1 and make him the Head-stone of the Corner that he may unite these distracted and divided Kingdoms give him occasion to rejoyce in thy strength and to be excéeding glad of that salvation which thou alone now he is deserted of all men art able to send him against his malicious enemies Thou art the Lord of Hosts and victory and success procéed from thée fight for him O Lord and fight with him that he may be safe and being saved rejoyce and rejoycing ●●ng of thy Name all the day long With instant and fervent prayers he Ver. 2 and with him his true-hearted people sollicite thée to avert thy wrath and shew tender compassion grant him then what he shall desire with his heart and deny him not the request of his lips With heart and tongue Petitions are presented to thy Throne for him hear O Lord Ver. 3 and grant and grant and do what is desired Nay prevent his Petitions give him more than he hath asked or we can expect let the blessings of thy goodness flow upon him unexpected and set upon his head a Crown of the purest gold which of right belongs to him and which his ambitious and bloody enemy most injuriously hath ravish'd and detains from him Ver. 4 His enemies purshe him to take away his life but do thou bestow upon him length of dayes let him live to a good old Age safe and obeyed in his Kingdom He is now despised but let his glory be again great and illustrious he is now dishonour'd but do thou load him with honour his Majesty is laid low in the dust but do thou raise it so he shall have just cause to make his boast not of his wealth not of his power not of his wisdom but of thy salvation goodness and deliverance only Set him a blessing for ever to his people and make him exceeding glad with thy favour and countenance He hath had often experience that the help of man is but vain that they are all but weak and broken réeds which run into the hand wound and grieve those that lean upon them therefore setting aside all humane confidences he reposeth his trust only in thée Thou art his God and the God of his Father whose blood was shed to maintain thy Truth through the mercy then of thée the most High God let him not be moved much less removed as he places his trust in thée so place him again in his Fathers Seat As thou hast heretofore shewed thy Power against thy enemies Ver. 8 so declare thy Might now let no lurking places hide them no Fortresses secure them find them out with thy hand and make them féel thy just and severe revenge Ver. 9 pursue those that hate thée and thy Truth let thy right hand lay hold of them and execute thy wrath upon them never suffer them to escape Ver. 10 but make them as a fiery Oven in the day of thy anger that presently devoures those that are cast into it swallow them up in thy hot indignation Ver. 12 and let the fire of thy just vengeance consume them Destroy the fruit of their loyns from the Earth and root out their seed from among the children of men make them to turn their backs and slie in the day of Battle and yet so let them not escape for even then make thou ready the arrow upon the string and set them as a Butt to shoot at prepare thy Bow against the face of them let them sée with great grief the faces of those thou hast saved and féel their arm For by their Treason and Rebellion against thy King Ver. 11 they have intended evil against thée they have imagined to destroy thy Truth to abolish thy Gospel and Ordinances which yet as appears by their own factions and divisions they are not able to perform Frustrate O Lord their counsels and never let them be able to perform them Raise up thy power O Lord and come amongst us Ver. 13 Be thou exalted in thy own strength shew thy self more potent than all Divels and Men who rejected our Kings and do eat up and oppress thy people so shall we sing and praise thy power PSAL. XXII De Messia ejus Passione Regno THIS Psalm though in some sense it may be applied to David as a Type yet Christ is the thing signified and therefore it is primarily and principally verified of and in him for he is brought in here speaking First complaining of his dereliction then shewing his Passion and the cruelty of his Enemies Thridly intreating ease and deliverance from them Lastly Promising to his Father thanks foretelling the preaching of the Gospel and the enlargement of his Kingdom by the accession of all Nations There be three chief parts of this Psalm 1. Our Saviours complaint and the causes of it lively and prophetically expressing his sufferings almost through the whole Psalm 2. His Petition and Prayer that God would not absent himself but deliver and save him ver 3 4 5 9 10 11 19 20 21. 3. His Thanksgiving from ver 22. to the end Davids and in him Christs complaint of dereliction 1. He begins with a heavy complaint of Dereliction in his extremity and that he could not be heard though he roared and cried which is thus pathetically expressed and ingeminated My God my God why hast thou forsaken me The first part why art thou so far from helping me and from the words of my roaring Ver. 1 O my God I cry in the day-time but thou hearest not and in the night-season and am not silent 2. And that he might seem to have the more just reason to complain for this desertion God carried himself to him after an unusual manner when other his Saints called upon him he heard them he sent them comfort which in this
grief and scorn is fallen upon me justly for my sin To them Lord I have done no hurt but thée I have offended and to thée I will declare my iniquity and be sorry for my sin I beséech thée therefore O Lord rebuke me not in thy wrath nor chasten me in thy hot displeasure Forsake me not O Lord my God be not far from me for I séem to be destined and appointed to bear stripes and affliction and my sorrow is continually before my eyes But in thee O Lord is my hope answer for me O Lord my God in my prayer I have and will alwayes say Lord hear me lest otherwise my enemies should rejoyce over me for when my foot at any time slippeth they proudly insult and magnifie themselves against me make haste to help me O Lord my salvation Amen PSAL. XXXIX THIS Psalm is conceived to be penned upon the same occasion with the former in some grievous distress he was that 's certain whether by Absolom or Shimei or some great sickness uncertain However as he professed before at his sufferings and in juries he was patient and silent I was as as a deaf man that heard not and as a dumb man c. Psal 38.13 14. Yet here he confesseth that the tentation was so sharp and the provocation was so great that he could not choose but speak he could hold no longer but must needs burst out yet as there so here his complaint and petition is to his God There be three parts of the Psalm 1. A Manifest of his resolution and full purpose of heart for silence ver 1. and the consequence upon it ver 2 3. 2. His Expostulation with God about the shortness and variable condition of life ver 4 5 6. 3. His Petition for remission from sin ver 8. from punishment ver 10. for a farther respite and grace ver 12 13. First David acquaints us here with his resolution Dixi I said I decreed The first part Davids resolution to be silent I fully purposed and it was filent and dumb in the presence of his enemies 1. I said I will take heed to my wayes that I sin not with my tongue and again I will keep my mouth as with a bridle while the wicked is before me Ver. 1 2. And this resolution for a while he kept I was dumb with silence Ver. 2 I held my peace even from good even from a just defence But his heart boyled within him sain he would speak 3. But I found in this very great difficulty nay impossiblity 1. For all this while my sorrow was stirred it was pain to me to be silent 2. My heart was hot within me I was in flame to utter my mind Ver. 3 3. And while I was thus musing the fire burst out what was within And at last he burst out and spake in a querulous manner The second part I saw could not be concealed no more than fire for a while raked up in embers and at last I spake with my tongue Secondly But better it had been he had been silent still since in a querulous manner he begins to expostulate with God Lord let me know mine end and the measure of my dayes what it is As if he had said Ver. 4 Better it were my dayes were ended and I in my Grave than to be thus vexed in body and mind without by enemies and perfidious friends and if yet it must be so it were well I knew the end of it and how long I must be under this Cross and were my life what others is The condition of mans life yet it hath many properties to alleviate the comforts of it 1. It is very brittle and frail Make me know how frail I am Ver. 4 1 Frail. 2. It is very short it may be measured out by a hand-breadth 2 Short which is no long measure nor a yard that is made of it Behold thou hast made my dayes as a hand-breadth Ver. 5 3. Nay which is yet of less reckoning 'T is as nothing before thee a nihil 3 A Nihil 4. 'T is full of vanity Verily every man at his best state in his strength 4 Vain riches power is altogether vanity his labours promise much satisfie little 5. 'T is unstable and uncertain as a shadow the image of a shadow 5 Uncertain Surely every man walketh in a vain shadow Ver. 6 6. 'T is full of trouble and disquiet Surely they are disquieted in vain 6 Troublesome 7. His labours are for he knows not whom He heapeth up riches 7 Laborious and knows not who shall gather them Thus David querulously expostulates but presently recollecting himself 2 He checks himself he stops and checks as it were his immodesty nor the brevity nor the vanity nor the uncertainty nor the anxiety of his life shall hereafter much trouble him he had a surer Rock than any worldly thing whereon to rely which was his God And now Lord 3 And shewes God to be his stay what wait I for my hope is in thee Let others toyle for riches admire dignities empires pleasures let them be proud of these and complain that their life is too short to enjoy these But I have far a stronger hold to trust to even thee O Lord who I am perswaded wilt be propitious to me and be my stay among all the variety and instability of humane things this was his comfort Thirdly The third part He prayes Then upon this confidence he falls to prayer 1. For remission of sin Deliver me from all my transgressions 2. 1 For remission For defence against ill tongues Make me not a reproach to the foolish 3. Pardon for his immodest expostulation upon promise not to do the like I was dumb 2 For defence I opened not my mouth hereafter I will humble my self under thy hand 3 Pardon for his impatience and be silent for thou hast done it my affliction is from thee 4. 4 A remove of punishment and pleads for it A remove of his punishment Take away thy plague away from me 1. And he adds the cause either remove thy hand or I must needs yield and perish I am even consumed by the means or by the blow of thy hand 2. And this he amplifies by a similitude of a Moth and adds a second Reason When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty consume away as a Moth which is bred in the Garment and insensibly corrodes Upon divers Reasons frets eats it as doth some disease our body that bred in it consumes it And for confirmation he repeats his former words ver 5. delivering it here in a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Surely every man is vanity Selah mark that 3. To which may be added a third The consideration of our present condition in this life we and all our fathers are but pilgrims and strangers in this
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
uphold our cause Judge us O Lord in thy strength Thou which art terrible to the oppressor and a refuge to those who are injuriously oppressed Vers. 1 arise in thy just judgement and punish the wicked and deliver the innocent Reward evil to those our enemies that observe our wayes and lay wait for our soul Cut them off Lord and destroy them according to the Truth of thy promises made to thy people Deliver us O Lord out of all our troubles and let our eyes see that severe revenge which thou wilt take upon our and thy enemies So will we offer unto thée the Sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving fréely and chéerfully in the midst of the Congregation for this is good before thy Saints It is a pleasant thing to them to hear and sée that thou art a faithful merciful and just God true in thy promises just in thy judgements and merciful in the Delivery of thy people from the hand of the violent and bloody man O my God I will sing of thy Name and Power for ever PSAL. LV. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 WHETHER David composed this Psalm upon the hard usage of Saul or the rebellion of his son Absolon is uncertain sure it is he was in some great distress and upon it he makes his address to his God There are in genetal four parts of this Psalm 1. He prayes to God to hear his prayer vers 1 2. 2. He complains of his trouble from vers 3. to 8. 3. He prayes against his enemies and shews the causes from vers 8. to 15. 4. He takes heart upon assurance of Gods help and his enemies overthrow from vers 15. to the end 1. He first beggs audience 1. Give ear hide not thy self attend hear me The first part He prayes for audience of his complaint The second part 2. My prayer supplication that I mourn complain make a noise Affected he was with the sense of that he pray'd for and therefore earnest he was in it 2. This in General but next in particular he mentions the causes of his complaint and earnestness to God that he might be hea●d The causes of it two both in regard of his enemies 2. And the condition that he now was in 1. The danger he was in was very great Vers. 3 escape he could not without Gods help for his enemies prosecuted him very sore 1 The malice of his enemies 1. They slander'd and calumniated him and threatned him Because of the voice c. 2. They vexed pressed upon him and oppressed him Because of the oppression of the wicked 3. They plotting his ruine devol'd and cast iniquity upon him Charg'd him home 4. They were implacable angry and hated him In wrath they hate me 2. Then for his own person he was in a sad heavy doleful condition 2 His sad condition 1. My heart is sore pained within me His grief was inward 2. The terrors of death are fallen upon me Vers. 4 He saw nothing but death before him 3. Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me Which are the outward effects of fear 4. And an horrible dread within hath overwhelmed me Amazement follow'd his fear And he illustrates this his condition by the counsel he took with his own heart His result upon it to fly upon the deliberation the result was that he would speedily fly away fly into the Wilderness as if he might be safer among bruit beasts than such men 1. And I said That was his result upon the debate with himself 2. O that I had the wings of a Dove It is a fearful creature of a swift wing in fear he was and he would fly as fast as far as the Dove from the Eagle 3. As far even to some remote land where I should have rest from these wicked men 4. And by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he amplifies and explains himself again 1. That he would fly far away even to some desolate place out of their reach Lo then would I wander far off and remain in the Wilderness 2. That he would do it with speed I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest Such turbulent and impetuous creatures his enemies were that threw down all before them as a wind storm tempest 3. The third part His Imprecation To his Prayer he adds an Imprecation 1. Destroy them O Lord. Destroy them in their own counsels 2. Or else Divide their tongue Let them not agree in their counsels Vers. 9 Of this he gives the reasons in the following words The reason viz. that they were a sort of violent contentious ungodly troublesome crafty and fraudulent people 1. Violent they were and litigious I have seen violence and strife in the City 2. Ungodly and workers of iniquity they were and uncessant in it Day and night they go about the walls thereof mischief and sorrow are in the midst of it 3. Crafty and fraudulent also Deceit and guile depart not from their streets It was then a City a Corporation a Society of evil doers And of this he produceth an instance His instance a friend that became his enemy which whether it were some bosome friend of David that stole out of the City of Keilah and betray'd his counsels to Saul or else Achitophel that being formerly his great Favourite and Counsellour fell to Absolon it is uncertain whoever it was such a treacherous person there was and of him he complains and well he might for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This treachery he exaggerates most eloquently by an Incrementum Which he Aggravates by circumstances and Apostrophe drawing his aggravation from the Laws of friendship which he had broke Had it been an enemy he could have borne it but that it was a friend was intolerable and also unexcusable Thus the Climax stands 1. For it was not my enemy that reproached me Then I could have borne it 2. Neither was it he that hated me that did magnifie himself that is arise and insult against me Then I would have hid my self from him Never admitted him to my bosome 3. But mark this Emphatical Adversative for now he turns his speeth to the Man 1. It was Thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou precipuè per aliis None but Thou 2. A man according to my own rank mine equal My guide or counsellour my acquaintance or own familiar friend 3. We took sweet counsel together One to whom I communicated my secrets 4. And walked in the house of God in company Professors we were of the same Religion Now all these Circumstances much aggravate and heighten the treachery that thou my equal my director my familiar friend one whom I made the Master of all my secrets one who was a great Professor of the same Religion with me Upon which he redoubles his Imprecation on the Faction that thou shouldst betray me even breaks my heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judas betrayest Thou Being thus much wrong'd and moved
as he had just reason he falls again upon an imprecation not only on him but all that did believe him even upon the whole faction Let death seize upon them let them go down quick into hell have Corah Dathan and Abiram's wages And he adds the reason They are signally and incorrigibly wicked For wickedness is in their dwelings and among them 4. The fourth part Hitherto hath David pray'd complain'd imprecated but now he shews how he recovered heart again being certain of Gods help and a revenge to be taken on his enemies 1. As for me I will call upon God fervently His affiance in God that 1. He shall be safe and the L●rd shall save me 2. Evening and morning and at noon-day uncessantly will I pray and cry aloud and he shall hear 3. And I pray in faith experience I have of his deliverance He hath done it and he will do it again He hath redeem'd my soul in peace from the battle that was against me Even in the midst of the battel I was as safe as in a time of peace Miraculously deliver'd as if there had been no danger 4. For there were many with me Many enemies say some other many Angels Those referre it to the danger the other to the protection Many enemies round about me and then 't is a wonder I should be deliver'd Many Angels press'd to help me and then 't was no wonder that my life was saved But as for the ungodly it is not so with them 2 That his enemies shall perish for this Verse is opposed to the former 1. God shall hear viz. Me and my prayers and the wrongs they do me 2. And shall afflict them i. e. my enemies 3. Even he that abideth of old Selah Mark that for he is immutable his power and strength is the same and his care and love to his people Therefore he will afflict them And besides there is in them that which will provoke him to it 1. Because they have no changes Obstinate they are impenitent The reasons For they are and change not their wayes Or else they prosper Vers. 19 they have perpetual success and meet with no alterations 1 Impenitent secure and this makes them secure and proud 2. They fear not God They ask Who is the Lord 2 They fear not God that we should let Israel go 3. They are truce-breakers violators of Oaths Leagues Covenants Articles of War He that is 3 Truce breakers some chief Commander among them hath put forth his hands made war and brued his hands with blood against such as are at peace with him He hath broken and profaned his Covenant His Oath 4. He is a gross Hypocrite his deeds answer not his words The words of his mouth were smoother than butter 4 Dissemblers but Warre was in his heart His words were softer than oyle and yet they are drawn swords In the Epilogue of the Psalm he exhorts good men to relie upon God He exhorts good men to relie on God Cast thy burden the cares troubles c. with which thou art loaded on the Lord and he fits it to his present purpose both as it concerns the godly and the ungodly 1. To the Godly he gives this comfort 1. He that is God shall sustain thee He will uphold thee and give thee strength under the heaviest burden Come unto me all ye that are heavy laden 2. He shall never suffer the righteous to be moved With the tentation he will give the issue press'd they may be but not oppress'd to fall finally 2. To the Ungodly 1. Overthrown they shall be and utterly destroy'd Thou O God shalt bring them down into the pit of destruction The Grave Tertifies the ungodly Hell 2. Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their dayes They come commonly to some untimely death As Absolon Achitophel Saul of whom the Psalm was composed He concludes with the use he would make of it As if he had said His affiance in God Let these bloody and deceitful men repose their confidence in their Armies in their violence in the crafty and subtile wayes I will take another course But I will trust in thee The Prayer collected out of the fifty fifth Psalm O Merciful God Vers. 1 who art the refuge of those that in their trouble flie unto thee give now ear to our prayer and hide not thy self from our supplication Vers. 2 attend to our requests who have now just reason to mourn and complain unto thee For when we hear the voice of the enemy when we feel the oppression of the wicked Vers. 3 when we suffer under the calumnies and slanders of those that hate us to whom should we make our addresses but to thee our God who hast commanded us to call on thee in trouble and hast promised to hear us Of a quiet mind we cannot be so long as we sée and féel that those that are enemies to thy Truth séek our subversion hence it is that our heart is sore pained that fearfulness and trembling are come upon us hence it is that the fear and sorrows of death hath overtaken us and a horrible darkdess hath so surpriz'd our understandings that we know not what to do what counsel to lay hold on Happy is the silly and innocent Dove wings she hath swift wings to fly from the talents of the bloody hawlk Oh that we had those advantages those swift wings for then would we fly away that we might be at rest then would we wander into some Wilderness and live among beasts from whom we might expect more mercy than from these bloody men Hast we would to escape from the present storm and furious tempest But since it is so that we must live among them O Lord bring the counsel of Achitophel to naught precipitate and destroy their conspiracies divide their tongues and raise discords among them that speaking and plotting contrary things they may as at Babel come to confusion Such is their impiety that they deserve no other for they are a Nation of evil doers In their City there is nothing but violence uncharitableness and contention all séek their own not the things of Christ Day and night even upon the walls iniquity walks the round mischief and injustice have taken up their quarters in the midst of it wickedness and unlawful gain possesseth the streets and deceit and guile and oppression of the poor for gain walk abroad publickly with a whores forehead that cannot blush And wilt not thou O Lord visit for these things wilt thou not be aveng'd on such a Nation as this Worthy such men are to suffer under thy hand let then Death come hastily upon them when they expect it not and let them go down quick into Hell as Corah Dathan and Abiram with their rebellions company for wickedness is in their dwellings for they are assembled for no other purpose but to do mischief And one there
is among the rest whose unkindness breaks my heart Had it been a professed enemy that had spoke evil of me and reproached me I could more patiently have borne it or had it béen one that openly hated me or proudly threatned my ruine that had done me this harm I would have withdrawn my self declined his company and avoided his attempts But that which makes the mischief unsufferable and my danger inevitable It is thou that hast spoken ill of me Thou that hast betray'd me who wast my intimate and bosome friend Thou who wast my familiar Thou to whom I intrusted my secrets Thou who wentest with me to the House of God one who séem'd to be of the same mind with me in all prophans and divine things His words were smoother than butter and softer than oyle when Vers. 21 as it appears since he had war in his heart and a sword to be drawn to destroy me For this is the man that hath now put forth his hand against me and not me alone but all such with whom he had made peace nor Oaths nor Covenant nor Articles of agréement can hold him he hath broken them all And his followers and favourites are no better than himself bloody and deceitful men they are They have seen no changes therefore they fear not God O Lord hear my prayer and afflict them Bring them down to the pit of destruction let them perish by some violent and immature death and never live out half their dayes But as for me I will in the midst of these troubles call upon my God I will hope and trust in thee and the Lord shall save my life Earnestly will I cry uncessantly at morning evening and at noon-day will I pray and cry aloud and he shall hear my voice Experience I have of his merciful hand he hath redeem'd my life miraculously in the battail that was set against me even then he hath secured me as in a time of peace Then he hath sent and set an Army of Angels for my guard so that there were many with me O Lord thou art immutable thou abidest of old thou art the same and changest not I will therefore cast my burden of cares and sorrows upon thee so for I am assured that thou wilt sustain me that I shall not sink under it Thou wilt not suffer thy righteous servant to be tost and tumbled by the persecution of wicked men for ever Amen PSAL. LVI 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DAVID in banishment among the Philistines and being there in great danger of his life prayes complains of his professeth his confidence in God The Contents of it are 1. Davids Prayer vers 1 7 8. 2. The cause the fear of his enemies whom he describes vers 1 2 5 6. 3. His Confidence in Gods Word vers 3 4 9 10 11. 4. His Thankfulness vers 4 10 12 13. 1. He begins with a prayer for mercy little he was like to find from man The first part His prayer The second part from his God he expected it and therefore he prayes Be merciful to me O God 2. And then presently be subjoins the cause The cause his danger from his enemies the danger he was in by his bloody and cruel enemies whom he begins to describe 1. From their unsatiable raven like a gulf they would swallow me up Vers. 1 which he repeats in the next verse Man would swallow me my enemies at home and abroad would swallow me up Whom he describes 2. From the time Dayly they would do it without intermission 3. From their number Many there be that fight against me Of these he gives us a farther Description at the fifth and sixth verses 1. From their uncessantmalice Every day they wrest my words Vers. 5 All their thoughts are against me for evil 2. From their secret treachery craft vigilance Vers. 6 They gather themselves together they hide themselves their counsels lying as it were in ambush for me They mark my steps Go whither I will they are at my heels 3. From their implacable hatred nothing could satisfie them but his blood They lay wait for my soul In the very midst of this Complaint he inserts his courage and confidence The third part His courage 1. In Gods promise 1. What time I am afraid I will trust in thee 2. I will not fear He ariseth higher Even when he fears he will not fear His word his promise is pass'd to me for protection and I will trust to it In God I will praise his Word In God have I put my trust I will not fear what flesh for the proudest the mightiest enemy I have is but flesh and all flesh is grass I will not then fear what flesh can do unto me 3. Vers. 10 This reason he repeats again vers 10 11. 1. In God I will praise his Word In the Lord I will praise his Word 2. In God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do to me And this his Confidence he quickens and animates 2 In Gods justice 1. First from his assurance that God would punish and bring down his enemies Vers. 7 Shall they escape for their iniquity No no. In thine anger thou wilt cast them down 2. 2 In Gods mercy in protecting him From his assurance of Gods Tutelage and paternal eye over him in all his dangers griefs complaints petitions banishment Men think Vers. 8 Non vacat exiguis rebus adesse Jovi he knew otherwise 1. Thou tellest and hast upon accompt my wanderings My flights Vers. 9 exile 2. Thou putt'st my tears into thy bottle Preserv'st them as rich Wine 3. Thou keep'st a Record of them Are they not in thy book 4. Thou putt'st my enemies to flight When I cry unto thee then I know my enemies shall be turned back for God is with me 4. The fourth part And therefore at last he concludes with thanks to which he holds himself bound by Vow 1. His thankfulness for his deliverance Thy vows are upon me Damnatus sum voti I owe thee thanks by vow and I will pay it I will render praises unto thee 2. Vers. 12 The reason is For thou hast delivered my soul from death 2. Vers. 13 Thou wilt deliver me Wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling 3. And the end is That I may walk before God in the light of the living That I may live awhile and walk as before thy eye as in thy sight uprightly sincerely The Prayer collected out of the fifty sixth Psalm O Lord Vers. 1 to whom all hearts are open no secrets are hid thou knowest and seest the secret counsels and open attempts of wicked men against thy people Their endeavours are to swallow us up day by day they fight to oppress us Many they are for number and mighty they are for power that fight against us O thou most High And their malice is no less than their might nor their watchfulness inferiour to
Generation let Him sée His séed and let His séed sit upon His Throne till the Heavens pass away with a noise the Elements melt with fervent heat and this Earth with the works that are therein be burnt up O let Him abide before thee His God for ever never let Him in His own person fall out of thy favour nor his Posterity from the light of thy countenance establish His Throne in mercy and truth and let thy loding-kindness alwayes preserve Him His heart is in thy hand melt it into clemency affect it with mercy that He may be a Father unto thy people and mourn with those that mourn and lament with those that lament yet affect Him sofar with the love of Truth that he be zealous for the Truth of Religion earnest to promote thy worship in sincerity and resolute to administer true judgment unto thy people let him bring the whéel upon the wicked and extend the bowels of compassion to the innocent and oppressed A mercy this is when we cast our eye upon the present calamities and state of things even beyond hope beyond expectation but thou our God art Almighty and All-sufficient stir up thy strength then and come and help us where the help of man is in vain then let thy power be manifest which thing if thou wilt grant us Then will I sing praise unto thy Name for ever I will return unto thée every day that Thanksgiving which I have vowed which is due and which I doubt not thou wilt accept through the Name of Iesus Christ my Lord and only Saviour Amen PSAL. LXII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE intent of this Psalm is to teach men to trust in God and not to trust in wealth strength or in the power or promises of man The Contents of the Psalm 1. Davids confidence in God ver 1 2. 2. The mischievous but vain attempts of his enemies ver 3 4. 3. He encourageth himself and others to the same confidence from ver 5. to 9. 4. That no trust is to be put in men or riches ver 9 10. 5. The grounds of our confidence in God ver 11 12. 1. In the two first verses David expresseth The first part His affiance in God or rather labours to express as appears by his often repetition of the same thing in divers words his hope trust and confidence in God Ver. 1 1. Truly my soul waiteth upon God or is silent i.e. I do acquiesce in him 2. From him comes my salvation If I be safe in my greatest troubles Ver. 2 't is from him 3. He only is my Rock and my Salvation he is my Defence so that I shall not greatly be moved He is to me what a Rock or Tower of defence is to such as flie to them 2. And upon it he infers The second part He upon it insults over his enemies that the mischievous attempts of his bitterest adversaries are but vain with them he expostulates them he checks and over them he insults 1. How long will ye imagine mischief against a man i. e. me he chides their obstinacy Ver. 3 2. Ye shall be slain all of you And shewes their mischievous attempts and their ruine he declares by a double similitude Ye shall be as a bowing wall whence when some stones begin to shut out or fall the rest follow or as a tottering fence that is easily thrown down Next by the description of their manners he intimates the cause of their ruine Ver. 4 1. They only consult to cast him down from his excellency Their counsels to destroy David 2. They delight in lyes invent tales and lies to destroy me 3. Flatterers and Dissemblers they are They bless with their mouth but curse inwardly no marvail then if destined to the slaughter if they be as a broken wall c. 3. And lest his heart faint and fail through the multitude of tentations The third part He encourages 1. Himself he first encourageth himself to be confident still secondly then perswades others to it 1. He encourageth himself Ver. 5 making use of the words of the first and second verses for Reasons My soul wait thou only upon God for my expectation is from him he only is my Rock and my Salvation he is my Defence I shall not be moved In God is my Salvation and my Glory the Rock of my strength and refuge is in God 2 Others to trust in God 2. He exhorts others to do the like Trustin him ye people which he amplifies 1. By assignation of the time Trust in him at all times in prosperity that he be not secure in adversity that ye be not heartless 2. And in our saddest occasions he shews and exhorts what is to be done that we bring our grievances and complaints to God and with an honest heart open them Poure out your heart that is the griefs of your heart before him 3. The reason he our refuge Adding this Reason God is our Refuge for us 4. The fourth part So are not other things whether men secondly wealth especially unjustly gotten 1. So not other things Not men there is no credit or trust to be put in them of what degree soever 1. 1 Not men Surely men of low degree are vanity 2. And men of high degree are a lye The low are notable the high deceive and frustrate our hopes 2. Put them into the balance they are altogether lighter than vanity make trial of them as you would of things in a Scale and you shall find them so vain and light 2 Not riches But God is to be trusted for his power and mercy that they carry no proportion to what is weighty they ascend and flurt up and away as an empty Scale 2. Nor riches and wealth especially if unjustly heaped together and therefore rely not on them Trust not in oppression and become not vain in robbery if riches increase set not your heart upon them 5. The fifth pa●t In the Close he sets down the grounds of his confidence taken upon Gods Word God hath spoken ' twice have I heard the same i. e. He hath often spoken it 1. That power belongs to God and therefore he is to be trusted 2. That mercy belongs to God and therefore also he is to be trusted The consequent of both is Thou renderest to every one according to his works bonis vera malis malè rely upon him The Prayer collected out of the sixty second Psalm O God infinite in essence terrible in judgments though thou hast commanded us in our trouble to call upon thee and to trust unto thee yet such is the infirmity of flesh and blood that we find in our distresses too many discouragements tempted we are to doubt whether thou canst but more often sollicited to doubt whether thou wilt come down and deliver us But such is thy condescension to the weakness of man Ver. 11 That thou hast spoken once Ver. 12 nay twice
we might have heard the same once by thy Word and again privately by thy Spirit that power belongs to thee that also unto thee belongs mercy power and therefore thou canst mercy and therefore thou wilt relieve us Be it then Ver. 1 that our soul is like to be drowned with a whole flood of evils and the sorrows of death compass us round yet we will submit our selves only unto thée our soul shall wait upon our God being fully assured that thou art able and perswaded that thou art willing and therefore from thy power and mercy shall come our salvation that thou in thy good time will be to us a Rock to secure us a defence to keep us and therefore we will not be greatly moved Our enemies are many and mighty and they make many assaults to our ruine and utter overthrow But how long O ye sons of men will ye imagine mischief against the innocent Ver. 3 how long will ye take counsel to cast him down from his excellency How long will you invent lyes and speak unto me smooth and fair words with your mouths when you curse me in your hearts Know you not That in God is my salvation and my glory that he is the Rock of my strength and that I hope and expect that he will be my Refuge And therefore I am fully perswaded that all your endeavours are in vain ye shall be slain all the sort of you you shall be as a bowing wall that suddenly falls to ruine and as a tottering hedge which a small blast throws down for thou O God art just and renderest to every man according to his works O Lord then so strengthen our faith that we may trust only in thée found we have by experience That the man of low degree is but vanity and the man of high degree is a lye when we have had occasion to make trial of them and weigh them in the balance they have béen found too light nay lighter than vanity it self As for riches they in the day of trouble have taken themselves wings and flown away as they have increased so also we must confess that our love hath béen increased to them and our hearts hath béen too much set upon them but even our experience hath taught us this also that these are but miserable comforters Wherefore men and money and all other worldly helps being set by at all times in prosperity and adversity in life and in death we will trust to thée to thée will we make our prayer before thée will we poure forth our sorrows our thoughts the destres of our hearts for thou only art the defence and refuge of all that hope in thée for ever and ever Amen PSAL. LXIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 DAVID at this time being forced to flie into the Wilderness complains of his condition that he was compelled to be absent from the Assembly of Gods servants and expresseth his vehement desire to be again joyned unto them The Contents are 1. His ardent affection to be present in the Assembly of Saints ver 1. and the Reasons that moved him to it 2 3 4 5. 2. That being where he was yet he forgot not his God ver 6 7 8. 3. A double Prophecy what should befall his enemies ver 9. 10. and what to himself ver 11. 1. O God thou art my God He premiseth this phrase The first part Premising his confidence in God as the foundation of his desires contemplations meditation invocation consolation 2. Then he by a Congeries expresseth his ardent desire and fervent affection 1. Early will my soul seek thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thee not other things Ver. 1 2. My soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth after thee in a barren dry He expresseth his ardent desire to be present where the Ark was and thirsty Land where no water is No question in this barren and dry Land he must want many things but of that he complains 't is only that he wanted the presence of God in his Sanctuary 2. And so he expresseth himself in the following verse Athirst his soul was Ver. 2 to see the power and glory of God viz. The Ark of the Covenant which was a Type of Gods power and glory as he had formerly done so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary And the Reason of this he interserts by a Parenthesis because thy loving-kindness is better than life A life indeed I live but it is not vita vitalis Ver. 3 The Reason I have not so much comfort in it as long as I am absent from thy Sanctuary then I should see thy goodness in the use of thy Ordinances The consequences three and that I account far beyond my life could I be so happy to be admitted again thither then these effects would follow 1. Praise 2. Invocation 3. And Content Ver. 4 1. Praise For my lips shall praise thee thus will I bless thee c. 2. Invocation and prayer I will lift up my hands unto thee Ver. 5 3. Content great content and joy arising from these My mouth shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness when my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips 2. The second part But yet in the case he was he forgets not his duty Yea but doth David now being in the Wilderness forget his duty did he not praise and pray to his God yes verily and that he next signifies that no man doubt of it but it was not with such content as in the company of Gods people 1. Ver. 6 Even here When I remember thee upon my Bed and meditate on thee in the night-watches 2. Because thou hast been my help therefore under the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce 3. My soul followeth hard after thee thy right hand hath upholden me 'T is evident then that David here wanted not his comfort for 1. He meditates and remembers what God had done for him 2. He remembers that he had been his help and therefore he rejoyceth in it 3. He still adheres to him and follows hard after him for help still 3. The third part He foretels what should fall And now being secure of Gods protection he foretels what would happen to his enemies 2. and what to himself 1. To his enemies ruine But those that seek after my soul to destroy it they shall go some of them into the lower parts of the Earth or the Grave or Hell 1 To his enemies 2. They shall fall by the Sword as did Saul and be a portion for Foxes be unburged and be devoured by wild Beasts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. To himself honour and a Crown But the King i. e. David shall rejoyce in God the Reason is 1. Every one that swears by him that is by God viz. that worships and fears him an Oath being by a Synecedoche for the whole worship of God 2. But on the contrary the mouth of those that speak lyes utter blasphemies
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
thou hast wrought in us Bring down our enemies till they submit every one and humbly bring pieces of silver untill Princes come out of Egypt and strangers stretch forth their hands and become Homagers to thee our God O how glorious will be thy praise how excellent thy Name Ver. 32 when all the Kingdoms of the earth with one heart and one voyce shall sing praises to thee Thou ridest upon the Heavens which were of old Thou speakest from thence in Thunder and sendest out a mighty voyce therefore will we ascribe strength unto our God which is the God of Israel O God Thou art wonderful and terrible out of thy holy place when thou communicatest thy presence to thy servants Thou art the God of Israel that gives strength and power unto thy people Blessed therefore be our God Amen PSAL. LXIX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 IN this Psalm David shews to what extream straits he was brought by malicious enemies and yet he is but the Type for the bitter passion of our Saviour are by these not obscurely set out to us The parts are 1. Davids prayer and the Reasons he useth for help from ver 1. to 23. 2. An imprecation against his enemies from ver 23. to 31. 3. His profession of thanks from ver 30. to the end 1. The first part His prayer and the occasion and reason He petitions Save me O God ver 1. and then adjoyns his Reasons which are many 1. The present condition in which he was in expressed by divers Metaphors comparing his enemies to waters 1 His present danger deep waters deep mire great floods 1. Ver. 1 Save me for the waters are come in unto my soul 2. I sink in the deep mire where there is no standing 3. I am come into the deep waters where the floods overflow me no more hope for me to escape without thy help than for a man of life who is compassed with the waves of the Sea Yea and that which adds to my grief I call to thee and thou seemest not to hear 1. I am weary of my crying 2. My throat is dry 3. My eyes fail while I wait upon my God nothing is wanting on my part and yet I have no answer and yet I will wait still for thou art my God 2. 2 From his enemies Farther yet when I consider my enemies I have reason to cry Save me for they are malicious 2. Many 3. Mighty 4. Injurious 1. Malicious They hate me without a cause 2. Many They are more than the hairs of my head 3. Mighty and injurious They that would destroy me being my enemies wrongfully are mighty Then ●restored that I took not away 3. 3 From his innocence From his innocence touching which he appeals to God O God Thou knowest how guilty I am of that which they impute to me for foolishness viz. I am not guilty and yet my faults are not hid from thee Before thee I confess that I am a sinner but not guilty of any folly done to them for that which they call folly viz. thy Service is my greatest wisdom 4. 4 From the hurt may come by it Lest if he suffer thus and be not saved others then by it will be discouraged fall away and judge it a vain thing to depend and rely upon thee and therefore he prayes Let not them who wait upon thee O Lord God of Hosts be ashamed for my cause let not them who seek thee be confounded through me O God of Israel 5. 5 That he suffers for Gods sake And the fifth Reason he gives which may be most perswasive that God hear and save viz. that what we suffer is not for his own but for Gods sake Because for thy sake have I suffered reproach shame hath covered my face for this I am become a stranger to my Brethren An 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Alien to my mothers children And upon this cause he stayes usque ver 13. and shews how he was affected toward God that he might make it appear For it was for that for this cause it was he suffered 2. And then how for it they were affected to him 1. 1 His zeal He was zealous for his God The zeal of thy house hath eaten me up and for this he suffered The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen on me 2. 2 A penitent He was religious a Penitent fasted usque ad castigationem animae I wept and chastned my soul with fasting but when I did this that also was turned to my reproof 3. He humbled himself even to wear Sackloth I made Sackloth my garment but he could not so please neither I became a Proverb to them to them of all sorts 1. To the high and such as were in Authority Those that sit in the Gate speak against me 2. To the low common and ordinary people And I was the song of the Drunkards 2. This I suffer for thy sake and therefore he now renews again his Petition He renews his Petition and enforceth it near upon the same Arguments and first he prayes earnestly hoping that he hath chosen for this a fit season But as for me my prayer is unto thee in an acceptable time 1. Hear me ver 13. Deliver me let me not sink let me be delivered ver 14. Let not the water-flood overflow me neither let the deep swallow me c. And again Hear me O Lord turn unto me Hide not thy face from thy servant Hear me speedily Draw nigh to my soul and redeem it Deliver me 2. Thus earnest he was in his prayer and his Arguments to perswade Audience are 1. Gods goodness mercy truth In the multitude of thy mercy hear me in the truth of thy salvation Hear me O Lord for thy loving-kindness is good Turn unto me according to the multitude of thy tender mercies 2. I am in very great troubles and dangers In the mire and like to sink in deep waters that overflow and are ready to swallow me in a pit whose mouth is ready to shut upon me I am in trouble therefore hear me speedily and deliver me 3. I am thy servant 't is for my service to thee I suffer therefore hide not thy face c. 4. Do it do it because of my enemies as if he had said Though I be not worthy for whom thou shouldst do this yet mine enemies are such that they deserve no favour they deserve not that I be left in their hands 1. They are scorners and that thou knowest Thou hast known my reproach my shame and my dishonour my Adversaries are all before thee in thy sight they do it 2. And this their base usage toucheth me near and puts me into an agony Reproach hath broken my heart I am full of heaviness 3. My friends stand afar off flie and forsake me And I looked for some to take pity but there was none and for comforters but I found none 4. Lastly they
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
my harm and downfall On the contrary let all those who seek thee who are zealous of glory and call upon thy Name rejoyce and be glad in thee Ver. 4 and when they shall see thy salvation that thy great deliverance of me from an imminent and unexpected danger be in love with thy salvation and say alway The merciful and just God be continually praised who hath sent his Angel and so miraculously delivered his servants delay not therefore O Lord but send us help through Iesus Christ our Lord. PSAL. LXXI 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 BEcause David composed this Psalm in his old age as is evident by the 4 5 8. verses conceived it is that the enemies he here prays to be delivered from was Absolon and his Conspirators The parts in general are two 1. A Prayer that God would help and deliver him to perswade which he useth many Arguments from ver 1. to 22. 2. His Vow of Thanksgiving from ver 22. to the end 1. The first part Davids Prayer In the first verse he proposeth his Petition in general words Let me never be put to confusion Vers. 1 be shamed by my enemies 2. And intimates the cause In thee I put my trust Vers. 2 Which Petition he renews more particularly vers 2. Deliver me Vers. 3 cause me to escape encline thine ear save me Be my strong habitation whereunto I may alwayes resort 2. His Arguments to perswade it And then urgeth many Arguments that he might draw God to hear and deliver him 1. Vers. 2 From his justice and equity Deliver me in thy righteousness i. e. as thou art a just God 2. Vers. 3 From his word and promise Thou hast given Commandment to save me therefore save me Vt verax 3. Vers. 3 From his power Thou art a Rock and Fortress Able then to deliver 4. From that relation betwixt God and David Thou art my Rock my Fortress my God my hope An interest I have in thee Therefore deliver 5. Vers. 4 From the Qualities of his Adversaries They were wicked unrighteous cruel men 6. From the confidence he had in God Which he amplifies from the time 1. Thou art my trust even from my youth 2. And recalling as it were his words Nay long before By thee I have been holden up from the womb Thou art he that took me out of my mothers bowels 7. From his thankful heart My praise shall be continually of thee 8. From the condition he was in Become he was the scorn of men I am as a wonder unto many 9. Lastly None he had to trust to but his God But thou art my strong refuge and therefore from him prayes and expects deliverance that thereby he might sing his praises with the fuller voice Let my mouth be fill'd with thy praise and with thy honour all the day 3. He renews his prayer And then he returns to his prayer again Cast me not off in the time of old age forsake me not when my strength faileth And then complains of his Adversaries which he useth for a reason also Describes his enemies that God hear him These are very impetuous and intolerable 1. For mine enemies speak against me Linguam ad jurgia solvunt 2. They labour to take away my life They watch they lay wait for my soul 3. They study mischief They take counsel together It is a plot a conspiracy 4. They insult and speak words able to break my heart God hath forsaken him persecute him and take him for there is none to deliver him 4. Prayes against them This puts David to his prayers again O my God be not farre from me make haste to help me O my God And he prayes 1. Against them Let them be confounded and consumed that are adversaries to my soul let them be covered with reproach and dishonour that seek my hurt 2. Professeth Then makes a profession of his hope and thankfulness 1. 1 His hope But I will hope continually 2. I will yet praise thee more and more In which he ascribes all the honour to God My mouth shall shew forth thy righteousness and thy salvation all the day 2 His thankfulness for I know not the numbers thereof I will go in the strength of the Lord God I will make mention of thy righteousness even of thine only Secondly Vers. 17 He re-inforceth his prayer from his experience unto him from his youth He re-inforceth his prayer by his experience of Gods goodness to him 1. O God thou hast taught me from my youth Both by thy Word and Spirit 2. And hitherto I have served thee I have declared thy wondrous works 3. Therefore let thy grace uphold me still forsake me not now when I am old and gray-headed And the end why he thus prayes is 4. Vntill I have shewed thy power to this generation and thy strength to every one which is yet for to come Let not thy power receive dishonour by my ruine Thirdly And yet again he returns to praise God He again praiseth God for his goodness and he begins with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Thy righteousness O Lord is very high who hast done great things O God who is like unto thee i. e. Wonderful O Lord is thy power in defence of thy Servants for thou savest them in another way and by a higher hand than we can wish or think 2. And this is evident in me I am the example of it For 1. Thou hast shewed me 1. Troubles 2. Great and sore troubles Of which he is an example 2. Yet thou shalt quicken me again 3. And shalt bring me up from the depths of the earth 4. Thou shalt increase my greatness 5. And comfort me on every side 'T is an elegant Incrementum 2. And thus by faith having incouraged and comforted himself in God The second part His Doxology he cheerfully returns his Doxology professing to do it by all means he could 1. With instruments of Musick I will also praise thee with the Psaliery even thy Truth O my God unto thee will I sing with the Harp O thou holy One of Israel 2. With his lips and soul My lips shall greatly rejoice when I sing to thee and my soul which thou hast redeemed Hypocrites praise God with the lips only but David joins the soul to the lips 3. With his tongue My tongue shall also talk of thy righteousness all day long And he concludes with this reason For they are confounded for they are brought to shame that seek my hurt The Prayer collected out of the seventy first Psalm O Lord God Almighty many are the enemies Vers. 10 that séek after my soul to destroy it they speak against me they lay wait for my soul they take counsel together they encourage themselves in mischief saying that God of whose favour he was want to boast and by whose hand he hath hitherto béen sale that God hath now forsaken him and left him
the Rites Ceremonies New Moons Sabbaths Sacrifice Circumcision Pasch c. 4. Vers. 31 And keep not my Commandments i. e. The Decalogue and Moral Law In a word if they become vitious in their Morals and profane and Rebels in my Worship and Religion This then shall happen unto them Resp They shall smart for it escape they shall not but shall soundly smart for it they shall feel 1. Virgam 2. And Verbera The Rod the Whip Then 1. I will visit i. e. punish their transgression with the Rod. 2. And their iniquity with stripes Which was often done By the Babylon Antiochus c. And yet in judgement I will remember mercy But in judgement God will remember mercy I will remember my Covenant my Promise my Word my Oath and will make that good totally I will not cast off Davids seed which I mean not after the flesh for that is long since cast off but after the Spirit Christ which was of the seed of David and those which are his seed viz. the Church shall enjoy the benefit of my Covenant and Oath for ever Nevertheless my loving-kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulness to fail My Covenant will I not break nor alter the thing gone out of my lips And that there be no doubt of this For the Covenant is immutable he brings in God repeating his Oath and Covenant 1. His Oath Once have I sworn by my holiness that is by my self who am Holy 2. His Covenant That I will not lye unto David For His seed shall endure for ever and his Throne as the Sun before me It shall be established for ever as the Moon and as a faithful witness in heaven As the Sun and Moon are not obnoxious to mutations no more is this Covenant they must endure to the end of the world and so must this Covenant They are faithful Witnesses in heaven and so we are to seek for the performance of this Covenant in heaven not in earth the Covenant being about a heavenly Kingdom not an earthly It being evident that the Kingdom of David on earth hath failed many ages since But that of Christ shall never fail 7. The seventh part And that God did punish Davids seed for their rebellion is evident So that he was tempted to charge God for breach of promise Now that Davids Kingdom did fail or at least was brought to a low ebb is the complaint in the following words which flesh and blood considering gave a wrong judgement upon it as if God did nothing less than perform his Oath and Covenant This is it which the Prophet layes to Gods charge But thou hast cast off and abhorred thou hast been wroth with thy anointed Both King and people are cast aside Than which nothing seems more contrary to thy Covenant Thou hast made void the Covenant of thy servant thou hast profaned his Crown Of which there be many lamentable consequences 1. His Crown is cast to the ground The glory of his Kingdom trampled upon 2. The instances in which they suffered His hedges broken down his strong holds brought to ruine 3. All that pass by the way spoile him Exposed he is to all Rapine and Plunder 4. He is a reproach to his neighbours Exposed to all contumely and disgrace 5. Thou hast set up the right-hand of his enemies and made all his adversaries to rejoice Thou seemest to take part with the enemy against him and makest him exult and rejoice in oppressing him 6. Thou hast also turn'd the edge of his sword blunted his sword that was wont to slay and hast not made him to stand in the battle but to fly and turn his back Vers. 44 7. Thou hast made his glory The glory dignity authority of his Kingdom to cease and cast his Crown to the ground 8. The dayes of his youth thou hast shortned cut him off in the prime and strength of his years Thou hast covered him with shame made his opulent glorious Kingdom ignominious which was true in divers of Davids posterity especially Jehoiakim These were the sad complaints which the Prophet poures out as despairing so far as sense and reason could direct him of the performance of what God had promised But he recovers and prayes The eighth part But he quickly recovers and recalls his thoughts and that he may move God to help he falls to prayer which is very pathetical 8. He considers the nature of God as kind loving merciful slow to anger and asks 1. Usque quo How long Lord wilt thou hide thy self for ever Hide thy favour 2. Shall thy wrath burn like fire An element that hath no mercy Pathetically moves God to pity Then he useth other Arguments pathetically expressed to move God to pity 1. Drawn from the brevity of mans life Remember how short my time is Upon divers Arguments 2. From the end that man was created not in vain but to be an object of Gods goodness and favour which if he enjoins not he shall seem to be born to no purpose therefore he asks Wherefore hast thou made all men in vain 3. From the weakness and disability of man His life is short and can he lengthen it What man is he that liveth and shall not see death Yea though he live long yet he is a mortal creature Shall he deliver his soul from the grave 4. From the Covenant of which he puts God in mind Lord where are thy former loving-kindnesses which thou swarest to David in thy Truth 5. From the ignominy scorns sarcasms by enemies cast upon them which he desires God to look upon 1. Remember Lord the reproach of thy servant 2. And how I do bear in my bosome not spoken afar off but in my hearing and to my face as if poured and emptyed into my bosome the rebukes not of this or that man but many people 6. And lastly That these reproaches in effect fall upon God For they who reproach Gods Servants are his enemies Remember the reproaches 1. Wherewith thine enemies have reproached O Lord. 2. Wherewith they have reproached the footsteps of thine anointed i. e. Either whatsoever he sayes or does Quocunque se vertat 2. Or else by footsteps is to be understood the latter end of Davids Kingdom which was indeed subject to reproach 3. But the Chaldee Paraphrast by footsteps understands the coming of the Messiah in the flesh which because it was long promised and men saw not performed they derided mocked at and reproached as vain 9. The close of this long Psalm is a Benedictus by which the Prophet The last part The Doxology after his Combate with Flesh and Blood about the performance of the Covenant doth compose his troubled soul and acquiesce in God blessing him for whatsoever falls out no otherwise than Job did breaking forth into this Epiphonema 1. Vers. 52 Blessed be the Lord for evermore Blessed be his Name who doth and orders all
if he said I cannot be satisfied in the contemplation of them Expleri mentem nequit ardescitque tuendo There is such a depth in them that I cannot attain to it nor comprehend it 2. And he ends it not without an indignation that the wise men of the world Vers. 6 who yet in his judgement for their disregard of it are but fools But fools disregard should not consider it In the Creature they look after nothing but profit and pleasure in which regard they are but fools for this bruitish man knows not how great are his works this fool understands not how deep are his cogitations 2. 2 Of Governance of the world about which the mistake is That fools judge those that flourish happy men And that he may illustrate their folly the more from the work of Creation he comes to Gods work of Governance of the world and shews that as they who would be and are reputed wise are mistaken in the one so also they are mistaken in the other For they think the ungodly and such as flourish in power and wealth happy and that the righteous men sometimes oppressed are unhappy and upon these two instances he insists to the end of the Psalm First He instances in the ungodly When the wicked spring up rise on a sudden for such a time there is as the grass that grows insensibly and in a night Vers. 7 and when all the workers of iniquity do flourish become very conspicuous But this is not so exalted in pride and power and abound in wealth Who would not now take them for happy men For their felicity is but for a moment and ends in infelicity No saith our Prophet it is not so He that governs the world hath another end in it 1. This their felicity is the greatest infelicity It is that they may perish be destroyed 2. That they may perish for ever Remember Dives 3. And this their destruction is from God that sits in the Throne and is immutable in his decrees and wayes They flourish and are aloft but it is but for a Moment But thou Lord Vers. 8 art most high for evermore And thou wilt execute thy decree upon them 4. Which the Prophet fully opens in the next verse Vers. 9 which the Epizeuxis makes more Emphatical For lo thine enemies O Lord for lo thine enemies shall perish and all the workers of iniquity shall be scattered 1. Behold they were green they flourished but the change shall be sudden 2. They were enemies thy enemies workers of iniquite therefore cursed with a curse 3. They shall perish they shall be scattered they rose 2 But with the godly it is quite otherwise whose happy condition he demonstrates they flourished as grass and they shall be scattered as dry grass which the wind blows from the face of the earth His second Instance is in the Godly whose happy condition he demonstrates First in Hypothesi or in himself vers 10 11. And in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In all others that be true members of the Mystical Church of Christ from vers 12. to the end 1 In himself 1. He instanceth in himself that his condition is not like the ungodly Vers. 10 He shot not up as the fading grass but his strength and power should be as an Unicorn 1. But my horn shalt thou exalt as the horn of an Unicorn which hath one lofty and strong horn that is my power and glory and felicity shall still mount higher 2. And I shall be anointed with fresh oyle Anointed to be King over Israel by Samuel with a horn of Oyle by God with the gracious sweet Oyle of his Spirit 3. And that which adds to my flourishing estate My eye shall see my desire on my enemies and my eares shall hear my desire of the wicked that rise up against me Which he lived to see and hear in the ruine of Saul and his house 2. And that which the Prophet said of himself 2 In all other righteous persons that are like the he transfers now to all just and righteous men whom he compares to the Palm and Cedar 1. The righteous shall flourish like a Palm tree Of which the Poet Vers. 11 1 Palm-tree Nititur in pondus palma consurgit in altum Quo magis premitur hoc mage tollit onus So a good Christian 2. He shall grow like a Cedar in Lebanon 2 And Cedar Cedar wood is not consumed by worms or time Nor the Church by antiquity Vers. 12 nor persecution The Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it nor any true member of it Of which the reason is because these Palms and Cedars Vers. 13 these righteous men are planted set by faith water'd by the Word and Sacraments The reason they planted in the house of God rooted by Charity in the Church which is the house of the Lord and therefore they shall flourish be green and vigorous in the Courts of our God Every plant that our heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted out In which they 1. Shall flourish as are all those wild Olives that grow out of the Pale of the Church or those that are in it but were never truly engraffed into it but the true plants shall flourish 2. Nay which is yet more they shall be full of Sap and loaden with fruit Vers. 14 1. They shall bring forth fruit in their old age 2 Be fruitful It shall be contrary to them as to other trees Those grow fruitless and bear not when they grow old These are then most loaden with the fruits of grace 2. 3 Abound in grace They shall be fat and flourishing Other trees when old are zere and dry These then are fat in juice and flourish in good works 'T is conceiv'd that in the end of the last dayes the estate of Christs Church shall most flourish 3. And the reason of this their vigour of the continuance of this their radical and vital moysture to their old age Which is done for that end that they may extoll the praises of God is that they bring forth fruit which is specified in the last verse Vt annuncient That they might shew forth Gods faithfulness praise him for that as it is at the second verse 1. Vers. 15 That they might shew that the Lord is upright Just and righteous in himself 2. That he is a Rock A sure stable foundation to trust to 3. And that there is no unrighteousness in him No injustice though for a time he suffer the wicked to flourish and the just to be under the Cross For in his good time he will shew his Justice in rewarding the just and punishing the unjust The Prayer O Almighty God Vers. 1 and Merciful Father since it is a good thing in it self just and to be paid as a due debt honourable being the work of Angels Vers. 3 to give thanks to the Lord and to
troubles in the flesh so were comforts in my soul which did mitigate the sorrow of my heart which did arise from that which grieved the outward man so that the sad thoughts of my heart were turned into matter of joy 2 Cor. 7.4 I am fill'd with comfort I am exceeding joyful in all our tribulation Can then the sorrowful thoughts of the heart The prolepsis can tribulations and afflictions delight any soul Yes they may the soul of a pious and righteous man while he considers That 1. Apodosis shewing the true use and end of afflictions Either by them he is purged from the impurity of sin that cleaves so close to him 2. Or that he is by them proved and tryed by God whether he will cleave fast to him 3. Or that God doth this to make him conformable in his sufferings to his head Christ Jesus 4. Or that his reward in heaven for his patience shall be the greater For our light affliction which is but for a moment works for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 In the multitude of the greatest sorrows these are Gods comforts and they may delight a soul 3. 3 Confirm'd from the nature of God that will revenge injustice His third Reason to comfort the Church in affliction is drawn from the Nature of God to whom all iniquity especially committed by those in the seats of justice is hateful of which because those who are in high places are most guilty for they most oppress his people therefore he will be sure to take the severest revenge on them And with this also he comforts the people of God under the Cross 1. Vers. 20 Shall the Throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee Thou art a just God Especially in Magistrates who hope to bear it out 1. By their Throne 2. By wicked Laws and wilt thou have any thing to do any society with those that sit upon Thrones and Seats of justice and execute injustice which they hope to bear out by their power 2. Which frame mischief by a Law i. e. Frame wicked Laws or under the colour of Law and Justice oppress the innocent Summum jus summa injuria and injuries may and are too often done ex pravâ interpretatione legis With those who do injustice by the sword of justice God will have no fellowship 3. Vers. 21 And yet there is a third pretence of wicked men to colour their proceedings against innocent men 3 By their Council The first was their Throne 2. The second was the Law And the third is their Council and consultations in them These they call to that end Coeunt turmatim Jagheddu Congregabuntur Convenient They meet by Troops as Thieves they Assemble they Convene in Synods they gather themselves together and that to a most wicked end 1. Against the soul of the Righteous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag To hunt 2. To Condemne the Innocent Blood Their Laws are Dracc's Laws Now what shall the poor Innocent do in such a case From whom God will defend his people How shall he be comforted Help he must expect none from man from man it cannot come it must come from Heaven and therefore let him say with David Let my enemies rage as they list Vers. 22 and exercise all cruelties toward me under a pretence of zeal piety and legal justice 1. But the Lord is my defence that their treachery and plots shall not hurt me 2. My God is the Rock of my refuge on whom my hope shall safely relie 3. I am fully assured for I have his Word and his promise engaged for it 1. That he shall bring upon them their own iniquity that is Vers. 23 that the iniquity of the wicked man And punish them for their injustice shall return upon his own head As thy Sword hath made women childless so shall thy mother be childless among women saith Samuel to Agag 1 Sam. 15.33 Judges 1.7 2. And shall cut them off in their own wickedness in malitia eorum not so much for their sin as the malice of it 3. Which for assurance of it he repeats and explains who it is that shall do it Yea the Lord our God shall cut them off the Lord whose providence they derided our God the God of Jacob whom they contemned vers 7. The Prayer collected out of the ninty fourth Psalm O Omnipotent Lord God Vers. 6 strange and wonderful is the insolence of wicked men for they do not only slay the widow and stranger and murder the fatherless Vers. 5 but they are come to that height of pride and madness that they break in pieces thy people and afflict thine heritage yea they set their mouths against heaven and blaspheme thee to thy face Vers. 7 boldly and presumptuously they say The Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Jacob regard it O Lord how long shall the wicked Vers. 3 how long shall the wicked thus triumph How long shall they utter and speak hard things How long shall all the workers of iniquity boast themselves of their power their strength Vers. 1 their armies their success their wisdom To thee O Lord God Vers. 2 vengeance belongs to thee vengeance belongs evidently and apparently shew thy justice Lift up thy self ascend into thy Throne and Tribunal O thou Judge of the whole earth and reward the proud after their deserving Man I see being advanced to honour hath no understanding Vers. 8 and without thy Spirit of wisdom is to be compared to the beasts that perish for is it else possible that a creature endued with reason should become so bruitish as to imagine that he that planted the ear and gave him power to hear should not hear Or so foolish as to think that he who framed that admirable Organ of the eye and placed in it the visive faculty should not see himself be deaf and not listen to what is proudly spoke against him and blind and not regard what is maliciously done against his people Is it conceivable that any man should be so follish and stupid as to suppose that he who hath fallen in fury upon many Nations for their sins shall not correct him for his transgressions that he who hath taught man knowledge and shewed him by his own conscience what is good and evil and by it reproving him when he does amiss and by it taking revenge on him a is it possible I say that he should not know and revenge it Yet to this Blasphemy and Atheism some have arrived O Lord never let any of thine fall into this bruitishness far remove from them this folly make them wise to know that thy ear of jealousie hears all things and that thy eyes run through the world and tryes the children of men that thou art present in all our wayes seest our actions hearest our words nay searchest into the secrets of our hearts and the depth of our counsels and that it is
thy hatred to sin and incorrigible sinners for this is caused for the wickedness of them that dwell therein Good God so let us lay to heart this judgment That our Houses be not desolate great and fair without an Inhabitant that ten Acres of Vineyard yield not a Bath and the seed of an Homer yield not an Ephah And in this vicissitude thy Mercy is as conspicuous as thy Iustice for on the contrary Thou turnest the Wilderness into a standing water and dry ground into Water-springs Put into the hearts of thy hungry to dwell there thither lead their Colonies in them let them prepare their Cities for habitation give life to the séed of the Fields which they sowe and water the Vineyards that they plant That they may yield them fruits of increase Bless them also O Lord so that they be multiplied greatly in the fruit of their bodies and suffer not their Cattle to decrease But yet if these sin against thée and kick after they are waxed fat visit their offences with the rod and their sin with scourges as thou didst multiply them so again diminish them as thou didst exalt them so again bring them low let some oppressing enemy or sharp and afflictive disease put them to grief and sorrow My bowels my bowels I am pained at the very heart my eyes do fail with tears and my liver is poured out upon the Earth for the Lord hath despised in the indignation of his anger the King and the Priest How long shall I sée thy Standard and hear the sound of thy Trumpet How long wilt thou poure contempt upon Princes and cause them to wander in a strange land where yet they can find no way no way of relief no way of help In mercy return good God and visit the séed of the righteous cast not his Crown to the ground for ever but set the poor man on high from affliction build him a sure house gather him and his family into one flock and fold become his Shepherd féed and govern him by thy singular Providence and Manuduction and let thy work in it be so manifest that all who sée it may fear and say This is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes The righteous shall see and consider it and rejoyce and then all iniquity shall stop her mouth Make us wise O Lord to observe and in observing to consider and by considering to lay to heart these things That thou sitting in thy Throne above yet orderest the things below that honour and contempt are from thée that sickness and health are thy gife that relief in a Famine that restitution to the Banish'd that liberty to the Captive that deliverance from any furious storm and tempest is from thy hand that the barrenness of the ground is from thy curse and the fertility of the earth followes upon thy blessing for so shall we understand the loving-kindness of the Lord. O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and fo● his wonderful works to the children of men O give thanks unto the Lord for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Let the redeemed of the Lord say so those whom he hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy and gather'd them out of all lands and brought them into his Church that they bow their knees at the Name of Jesus by whom all mercies pass to us and to whom be all praise honour laud and dominion this day and for evermore PSAL. CVIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THIS Psalm is wholly composed and drawn into one out of two Psalms The first part of it untill the 6th verse is verbatim taken out of the 57th Psalm beginning at the 7th verse the latter part from ver 6. to the end is taken out of the 60th Psalm beginning as it doth here at the 6th verse and is continued as here unto the end I shall not need therefore to Analyse and explain or insert a Meditation upon it since it is done already and therefore I pass on to the next PSAL. CIX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE later Expositors expound this Psalm of Doeg Achitophel and other Persecutors of David and so it may be understood in the Type But the Ancient Fathers apply it to Judas the Traytor and the Jewes that put Christ to death which opinion because it is more probable being occasioned by those words of Peter Acts 1.20 which by him are applied to Judas out of this Psalm I shall expound it of Christ whom David doth personate and of Judas and the malicious Jewes very fitly understood in the persons of his wicked and slanderous enemies There be four parts of this Psalm 1. A short Ejaculation ver 1. and the Reasons of it express'd in a Complaint of the fraud and malice of his enemies ver 6. 2. A bitter Imprecation against them from ver 6. to 21. 3. A Supplication presented to God for himself from ver 21. and the Reasons to ver 30. 4. A profession of thanks ver 30 31. 1. The first part He begins with an ejaculation He begins with an Ejaculation Hold not thy peace O God of my praise ver 1. Observe 1. Ver. 1 The Epithite or Title he useth O God of my praise In the reading Translators vary O God for thus they read Deus laudis meae Deus laus mea Deus laudabilis mihi and they expound it 1. Either actively that is O God whom I praise even in my greatest pressures or calamities 2. Or passively Who art my praise the Witness and Advocate of my innocency and integrity when I am condemned by malicious tongues which sense seems fittest for this place and to this the Vulgar gives more light that thus reads it Domine laudem meam ne tacueres And Bellarmine puts the words into Christs mouth in which he desites that God would not conceal his Charity Innocence and other Virtues being very like that prayer John 17.5 Father glorifie thy Son 2. Hold not thy peace Hold not thy peace Tacere in Scripture when referr'd to God is to connive and rest and seems as it were not to regard and the contrary loqui to speak to do somewhat for revenge or deliverance This then is that which David here asks That when the malice of his enemies arrived at that height that it could be no longer endured that God would connive at them suffer them and hold his peace no longer but would declare his displeasure against them 2. The reason the malice of his enemies Whom he describes to be And after by way of Complaint he describes unto us their malicious nature and unsufferable conditions which he aggravates by an elegant Gradation For the mouth of the wicked and the mouth of the deceitful are opened against me they have spoken against me with a lying tongue They were 1. Impious 2. Deceitful 3. Lyars Impiety deceit lying were then the ingredients of their sin Ver. 2 1. 1 Turpious For the
Thy hands have made me and fashioned me I am thy workmanship Ver. 1 Thy Power thy Wisdom which are as it were Gods two hands made me when I was not made me a living soul and fashioned all my joynts bones ligatures sinewes tendons muscles c. in my mothers womb 2. Therefore give me understanding He means not the intellectual faculty for that every man hath but an understanding heart a divine light that my mind may perfectly know learn approve love thy Will 3. Give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandments learn the sense and love the meaning and practice what he learned 2. His next Argument to perswade God to this is Because others better for it the benefit that thereby would redound to others that he ordering his life according to that understanding that God should give him others would thereby be edified and better'd in their lives by his example for there is such a communion and fellowship betwixt the members of Christs Body that they mourn and rejoyce together the grace given to one is a joy to the rest They that fear thee will be glad when they see me Ver. 2 because I have hoped in thy Word 3. His third Argument is his ingenous confession Because his own fault if deserted that he himself was in the fault and not God if he were at any time deserted and destitute of this divine light 1. I know O Lord that thy judgments are right Ver. 3 if at any time I be void of grace 2. And that thou in faithfulness in thy justice hast afflicted me because I have so deserved and therefore I complain not of thy justice but flie to thy mercy and say 2. And this is his second Petition Let I pray thee Ver. 4 thy merciful kindness be for my comfort according to thy Word 2 He prayes for mercy to comfort him Upon Gods promise He had had experiment of Gods justice and equity in afflicting him for not keeping his Law and therefore to comfort him he begs mercy being destitute of grace he broke the Law this disheartned him but if again God would bestow him so much grace that he might keep it this would comfort him which that God might be moved more readily to bestow he puts him in mind of his promise let it be according to thy Word 2. And for this mercy he was so earnest and fervent that he prayes for it again Ver. 5 Let thy tender mercies come unto me But if we mark it in this verse he seeks for another kind of mercy than he sought before then he sought for mercy to comfort him in his troubles now he seeks for mercy to live and sin no more 1. Let thy tender mercies come to me that I may live To live the life of grace that I may live the life of grace which is the ready way to the life of glory Matth. 19.17 2. For thy Law is my delight To live according to thy Will is that I delight in 3. A third Petition he puts up not against but for his enemies 3 He prayes for his enemies for shame is often the Corrector of sin he that is ashamed of what he hath done will not do it again and therefore he prayes in this Form 1. Let the proud be ashamed adding a Reason Ver. 6 that shewes their malice 2. For they have dealt perversly with me without cause no cause at all I gave them but they have dealt perversly wittingly and willingly not by chance nor out of ignorance nor upon inanimadvertence but on full purpose of heart they have wrong'd me and sought to withdraw me from the right way 3. But I will meditate in thy precepts I will be constant in thy Truth still and persevere in my integrity Ver. 7 4. 4 And that he may find comfort from the godly A fourth Petition he yet offers that however he found trouble and discomfort from the wicked yet he might comfort from the godly Let such as fear thee turn unto me and those that have known thy Testimonies Gods Church is a Communion of Saints and to them God hath so distributed his graces that one stands in need of another where one doubts anothers light may resolve him one grieves another may comfort him one tempted another may uphold or restore him Ver. 8 This company then David would have joyned to him and he to them for these ends 5. 5 He prayes for grace and sincerity Lastly he petitions for that which he had often sought grace and sincerity that he may nor in this nor another life be ashamed to appear before his God Let my heart be sound in thy statutes that I be not shamed Hypocrisie and rottenness of heart will be the mother of shame Sincerity and uprightness will make a man bold before God and man The righteous is as bold as a Lyon This Section is a continued prayer and therefore there needs no other 11. CAPH IN this Section The Contents David first laments being grieved with some inward anguish Secondly Complains to God of his enemies Thirdly Expresses his hope and constancy Fourthly And prayes to God for comfort and grace 1. David complains of his heavy case David being in distress and deferr'd of help was sore dejected and cast down his soul fainted his eyes failed and his body pined withered and shrunk away ver 1 2 3. He begins in sad words 1. 1 Within My soul fainteth for thy salvation As the body wanting natural helps to refresh it Ver. 1 becomes faint so doth the soul destitute of heavenly comfort languish This was Davids case 2. Yet he despairs not Yet he despairs not Yet I hope in thy Word The delaying of thy salvation makes me faint but the assured hope I have in thy Word and Promise keeps my heart alive and strengthneth me and comforts me 3. Ver. 2 My eyes fail for thy Word 1. My eyes especially those of my mind are still looking up to Heaven for help and they are ready to fail because the help comes not as the eyes do that long looks after any thing 2. Saying When wilt thou comfort me how long Lord how long dost thou delay me when will the comfort come God delayes the prayers of his servants and his promises that they should be the fitter to receive 4. Ver. 3 I am become like a bottle in the smoke That is dried up extenuated and worn away to nothing shrunk into wrinkles being destitute of the comforts of thy Spirit 5. Yet do I not forget thy statutes I mortifie my flesh still and therefore being obedient 2 From without by enemies I have reason to expect comfort and ease from thee 2. Ver. 4 This distress he found within but he had vexation also from without bitter enemies And thinks the time long till God take revenge on them of which he complains asking first 1. How long he should suffer under them How many
I have sought thy precepts I am thine because I sought nothing but that which is thine and how I might please thee O how few can say this and upon this account cry to God O save me 4. Which to do David had very great reason at this time This he had reason to do having many enemies and those for he had bitter enemies from whom he could not be safe except God saved him two things he notes in them 1. Diligence Te wicked have waited for me waited for an opportunity 2. Cruelty Waited to destroy me Their malice was so great Ver. 7 that no less would satisfie them 1 Diligent in mischief 3. And here now in such an extremity 2 Cruel Amidst which Gods promise sustained him the comfort of Gods Word is very seasonable the consideration of that is able to stay a fainting soul Psal 124. with which David comforts himself here But I will consider thy Testimonies that thou hast testified that thou art able and wilt deliver those that trust to thy Word Dan. 6.16 22. 5. He hath shewed the perfection of Gods Word in establishing and upholding the frame of the World 2. And then the excellency thereof in bringing joy comfort help to an afflicted soul but in the close of this Section he compares it with all other things which we esteem as excellent and perfect be they Riches Honours Scepters Crowns Kingdoms c. among which the Word of God hath still the preheminence they fail but Gods Word endures 1. I have seen an end of all perfection Ver. 8 Jonah 's Gourd is smitten with a worm the golden head had feet of clay c. 3 The preheminence of Gods Word the fairest day is enter'd at night 2. But thy Commandment is exceeding broad Exceeding broad indeed for in it are contain'd all other National and Municipal Lawes they being nothing else if just but extracts of it or exceeding broad because all Lawes of a good life and the rewards of those that keep the Law and on the contrary the prohibitions of all vices and the punishments of Transgressors are contained in it Or exceeding broad because it is the Commandment of love which extends to God Angels men enemies Or exceeding broad which is nearer Davids purpose because it extends to and refresheth all that are in distress and affliction it abides by them in tentations while they live and forsakes them not in their death but conveyes them into their grave in peace and the comfort of it abides with them for ever when they are dissolved The Prayer O Omnipotent God Thou hast given us assurance of thy Faithfulness and Truth in the performance of thy Word and Promise made unto thy servants even by that constant order and continuance which we behold in thy creatures For why is it that those orbs above have béen so long-liv'd why are they not corrupted why do they continue in that excellent beauty Ver. 1 and perpetual motion but that thy Word is setled in Heaven Why is it that the foundations of earth do not decay and shake Ver. 2 but that thy faithfulness is to all generations they continue this day according to thy Ordinance for they are thy creatures Thou their Lord Ver. 3 and they must serve and do their homage to thée We alone are thy disobedient creatures and for this thou bringest us justly into trouble and under these we should have fainted and utterly perished had it not béen from the comforts that we receive from thy Word Ver. 4 it delights our souls and confirms our hearts even in the extremities of our sorrowes when we find in it thy Word many gracious promises made unto thy servants I will never therefore forget thy precepts for with them thou hast quickned me Ver. 5 I was ready even to expire and dye till I meditated on and called to mind thy Law which by the power of thy Spirit hath encreased grace in me and by the promise of glory brought me again to life Ver. 6 For which promise I am thine and I vow my self to be thine I will no more be a servant to the Devil the World and the flesh I renounce them all I forsake them and betake my self wholly to thy service And since I have given my self wholly unto thée let me be thy care Ver. 7 O save me save me O my God for I am invironed with malicious and cruel enemies whom nothing can satisfie but my blood they are diligent and wait for an opportunity to destroy me and take away my life but thou O Lord hast testified that thou wilt deliver those that trust in thée and therefore I will consider in my troubles these thy testimonies I sée an end of all perfection Riches Honours Crowns Kings Friends fade and fail Ver. 8 and are but miserable comforters but thy Commandment is exceeding broad it extends to and refresheth all that are in affliction it abides by them in tentations while they live and forsakes them not in their death in life and death therefore I will adhere to this Take not then the comfort of thy Word out of my mouth while I live and never let it leave me till it hath brought me to eternal happiness through Iesus Christ my Lord and Saviour Amen 13. MEM. DAVID in this Section shewes his great affection to the Law of God The Contents Davids affection to Gods Word 2. And the many benefits and fruits he reaped from it 1. His affection is declared in the first verse which he pathetically expresseth 1. Ver. 1 O how I love thy Law wherein he calls God himself to be Judge of his love witnessing thereby that it was no counterfeit love but compleat and sincere 2. And he proves that which he sayes The nature of true love is to converse with and think on the thing beloved and it useth all means to obtain it So David here proves his love to God by the love he bears to his Law and his love to his Word by the thoughts he had on it All the day long is my meditation in it I think speak or do little else all the day 2. 2 The Encomium of it first And now he enters upon his Encomium or praise of Gods Word from the admirable effects that it might have in them who will meditate in it of which he makes himself the instance This he amplifies by comparing himself with three kinds of men his Enemies his Teachers the Ancients than all which he grew wiser by this meditation 1. Ver. 2 Thou through thy Commandments hast made me wiser than mine enemies The Law of God being well thought on 1 It made him wiser than his enemies teacheth a man what how where and when to speak or to be silent to act or desist which wisdom Davids enemies wanted he was then wiser than they A great controversie there is who is the wise man the godly man or the Machivilian Gods Word will easily
And prayes for the grace of God to sustain him in it that be may be quickned according to Gods promise nor frustrated of his hope but persevere unto the end Lastly He insults over his enemies and foretells their destruction 1. 1 David shews his hatred of wickedness David shewes his dislike to all things contrary to Gods Law 1. I hate vain inventions Not only execution of evil but the invention even the very beginnings of it New inventions in his Worship new glosses and interpretations contrary to the Text Ver. 1 David hates not dislikes only 1 His Reasons 1 His love to Gods Law but hates 2. But thy Law do I love And because I love thy Law I hate vain inventions 2 God a shield to him 3. And there is great reason I should do so For thou art my hiding place and my shield 1. Ver. 2 My hiding place That publick evils do not reach me 2. My shield to keep off blowes that are nearly made at me in both my hope is in thy Word 2. To God then and his Law he would adhere in all extremities 2 And to ill men whom he avoids but as for all wicked men he would be sure to sunder from them he knew he should get no good by their company and therefore he turns to them and bids them avaunt 1. D part from me ye evil doers for ye are the pests of piety 2. And your course and mine are contrary you go one way and I another you follow your own inventions Ver. 3 but I will keep the Commandments of my God 3. Now David being fully perswaded that he had a peculiar interest in God He prayes that God uphold him in this resolution turns himself to prayer and not without reason for our intentions and resolutions are nothing except God bless them and therefore David prayes 1. Uphold me according to thy Word that I may live Ver. 4 and let me not be ashamed of my hope Ver. 5 2. Hold thou me up and I shall be safe and I will have respect to thy statutes continually There is in Gods children an instability of love and obedience apt they are to cool and fall necessary then it is that they pray with David that God uphold them in life He did well in hating them by Gods example that they being conjoyned to him in love to hold them up when they slip and stumble that they fall not 4. And that he did well in hating wicked men he now proves it Ver. 6 in that therein he followed the example of God in which he could not choose but do well 1. Thou saith he hast trodden down trampled under thy feet as vile creatures all that erre from thy statutes 2. For their deceit is falshood They deceive themselves in their wickedness for either they conceive that they need nor be subject to the Law of God or that they look for a good in sin which sin promiseth but they shall never find or else they flatter themselves with a vain hope to escape Gods judgment which yet at last shall certainly overtake them 3. This last is certain and David in the next verse expresseth so much Ver. 7 Thou hast taken away all the wicked of the earth as dross for no better they are in Gods account they esteem Gods children for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but they are so and for such shall be dealt with and scowred away 4. Therefore I love thy Testimonies therefore that I may avoid this judgment 5. How by the judgments of God he profited in the love of his Testimonies he shew'd in the end of the former verse in this he shewes how he profited in his fear My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgments Ver. 8 Happy is he that by other mens harms learns to be wise and godly A ●on Whom he fears when he sees a Slave whip't may learn not to offend his father The beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord and we are to work out our salvation with fear and trembling Our love in this life is imperfect and therefore it may nay must consist with fear nay which is more the love of God will never be kept in our hearts but by the fear of God and therefore this verse is read Confige timore tuo carnes meas Fasten as with Nails my lustful affections to the Cross of Christ that they have no liberty to move to go loose and wander where they please Gal. 5.24 'T is then as if David had said because I have begun to be afraid of thy judgments that bring heavy punishments on wicked men therefore I desire to be established in this holy and filial fear and never to be severed from it Over-much familiarity breeds contempt a true conception of Gods Justice and Majesty begets Reverence The Prayer O most holy God Ver. 1 and merciful Father it is not unknown to thée how I love thy Law thy eyes that séest the very secrets of the heart are conscious that my flesh trembleth for fear of thée and that I am afraid of thy judgments When I behold how thou hast trodden down all that erre from thy statutes how thou puttest away all the wicked of the earth like dross my heart in ●he midst of my body is become like melting wax which every moment presents unto me my sin and what I have deserved Let their sufferings be my instructions and thy wrath executed on them be an admonition to me ever hereafter to love to keep thy Testimonies Lord I desire to be established in this holy and filial fear and to work out my salvation with fear and trembling Which that I may bring to good effect Lord up●old me according to thy Word that I may live the life of grace I hope in thy Word let me not be ashamed of my hope Thou art my God and I will keep thy Commandments hold thou me up and I shall be safe stay me in all tentations that I fall not hide me under the shadow of thy wings and be my shield to kéep off those blowes which Satan makes at me either by himself or his instruments these press ●ard upon me to invegle me to a false Worship and to joyn with them in their new coined inventions Ver. 1 but I hate all vain thoughts Depart from me ye evil doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God By thy grace I stand and by thy grace I am what I am O let thy grace continue with me and accompany me through all the changes and chances of this mortal life till it hath brought me to rest in the bosom of my Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ Amen 16. AIN DAVID in this Octonary The Contents David professeth his integrity having made 1. Profession of his Integrity 2. Prayes for protection against his enemies 3. And also for grace to know his way upon earth and follow it 1. He begins
morning and cried 2. Mine eyes prevent the night morning and evening he prayed 2. For audience deliverance increase of grace That which he pray'd for was 1. Audience Hear me O Lord And again Hear my voyce ver 5. 2. Ver. 1 Deliverance Save me ver 2. 3. Increase of grace Quicken me ver 5. 3. Ver. 2 The end that he desires salvation and grace 1. That he might keep Gods statutes First is That he might keep Gods Statutes Hear me I will keep thy Statutes 2. Ver. 1 Save me that I may keep thy Testimonies ver 2. 3. Ver. 2 I prayed and watched that I might meditate in thy Word ver 4. 4. Ver. 4 Quicken me according to thy Word for the self-same end ver 5. 4. His arguments to perswade it The Arguments he especially useth besides the former to move God to hear and grant his Petitions are 1. His faith and hope I cried because I waited and hoped in thy Word and promises 1 His faith 2. Gods mercy Hear my voyce according to thy loving-kindness The common Argument to be used by all Gods children 2 Gods goodness for were they never so righteous and just yet in mercy they must desire to be heard and not for their merits 3. The danger that he was now in by persecuting enemies 1. Ver. 6 They draw nigh they are at hand the danger is near 2. 3 The danger he was now in His comfort that God was near him Yea and great too for they are mischievously bent they follow after mischief hunted after all occasions to do evil 3. Most impious men they are far from thy Law they hate it shun it labour to make it odious in every eye 5. But the comfort is that they are not so near but thou art as near they to do mischief but thou to defend me let then their number power malice be what it will thy power and mercy is beyond it 1. Thou art near O Lord let then these my enemies be far from thy Law they cannot be far from thee Ver. 7 Thou art near and wilt reach them by thy justice And would not desert him and this is my comfort 2. For all thy Commandments are Truth Albeit the evil of wicked men follow me because I follow thee yet I know thy Commandments are true and it is not possible that thou shouldst desert thy servants who stand to the maintenance of thy Word their wickedness shall never escape thy hand of punishment they may punish my body but they cannot deprive me of my Crown of glory 6. He concludes with an Epiphonema Of which he is confident being assured upon his own experience of the stability and immutability of Gods Word I know thy Commandments are Truth for Ver. 8 1. Concerning thy Testimonies thy Will that thou hast testified in thy Word 2. I have known of old even ever since I began to look into them study them and practise them 3. That thou hast founded them for ever They are of eternal Truth immutable and indispensable and this is the Anchor of our souls that we be not carried away with the winds and waves of tentations The Prayer OVL of a vehement desire I have cried to the Lord for help and that not only with my tongue and voyce but with my whole heart Ver. 1 hear me good God which if thou wilt vouchsafe to grant I will more studiously and fréely séek to know and kéep thy statutes Ver. 2 I have called and eried to no other God but thée therefore save me from these pressures and dangers Ver. 3 and being by thée saved and delivered I will more diligently kéep thy Testimonies Neither have I only called upon thée by bay but I have prevented the bawning of the morning with a great cry I have sought thy face and implored thy help because I repose my sole hope in thy promisses I have prevented also the night watches my eyes day and night have béen intent upon thée that I might be occupied in the meditation of thy words both in those in which thou hast promised thy mercy and in those in which thou hast signified thy Will and exacted my obedience Hear therefore my voyce according to thy loving-kindness and according to that equity by which thou usest to procéed with all those that love thée and call upon thy Name quicken me with the sense of thy savour and deliver me from this imminent death and danger And the impiety of my enemies makes me be the more instant to obtain this mercy for they that persecute my soul are set upon mischief they hunt after my life nay they hate not me only but thy Law it is odious in their eyes they look strangely upon it and desire it should be as odious in others From this imminent dagger it is not possible for me to be safe but by thy hand and guidance As then they approach near to hurt so do thou approach near to help and make it appear by my deliverance that all thy promises are truth This I have known long since and now Lord let me have erperience of it again so shall I have just cause to praise thy judgments and sing of thy mercies and make it known That thou hast founded them forever nor the rage of man nor the malice of Devils shall be ever able to shake thy-Truth or evacuate thy promises which thou hast ma●● to thy Church in Iesus Christ our Lord. 20. RESH IN this Section David petitions to God for help in his affliction The Contents 2. Complains of the multitude of his persecutors 3. Laments their condition 4. And shewes his constancy and love to Gods Word 1. David in his affliction prayes to God David begins with a petition In afflictions it is some comfort to us to have our case known consider'd and examined especially by those that love us therefore David desires 1. Ver. 1 That God would consider his case Consider my afflictions so much at least 1 To help him 2. Then that he would help him Deliver me from my tempting enemies 3. His Reason to perswade both For I do not forget thy Law though I perfectly keep it not yet I have not cast it behind my back I do not forget it I desire to keep it This he could plead with a good conscience if not what he had done yet what he would have done therefore he could boldly make this request Deliver me 4. 2 To be his Advocate But yet he goes further and desires God to be his Advocate to him he appeals 1. Plead my cause and deliver me At the bar of men a just cause oftentimes miscarries for want of a good Advocate Ver. 2 and is born down by an unjust Judge wherefore I beseech thee who art the just Judge of the World take my cause in hand plead it to their faces and deliver me Arise up for me in the judgment that thou hast commanded 2.
appear before thee and let not that happen to them that fell to the Bethshemites 1 Sam. 6. 3. He prayes for the King that is himself For thy servant Davids sake 3 For the King turn not away the face of thine Auointed Ver. 10 1. For thy servant Davids sake David is not here to be taken absolutely for his person only but as having the Covenant and Promise made to him and God could not be better put in mind of the promise than by mention of the person to whom it was made He prayes not then to be heard for Davids merits but for the promise made to David 2. Turn not away the face of thine Anointed That is suffer me not who am Anointed in my fathers stead and sit upon his Throne to depart from thy presence ashamed and confounded rejecting my prayer In this Form Bathsheba petitioned to Solomon for Adonijah 1 Kings 2.20 I desire one small Petition of thee ne avertas faciem meam which we translate Say me not nay Or else this phrase imports That we turn our face from God when we sin and he turns away his face from us and so long as we continue in that state our faces are turned from God Solomon then might pray That when at any time he turned his face from God that God would not continue his face from him but look back upon him as Christ did on Peter that so he might repent and amend and not alwayes stand with his face from God for though we freely sin and turn our face from God yet if God be pleased with a merciful eye to look upon us and pity us that so by his mercy and pity we desire and endeavour to sin no more then he does not turn away our face shame and confound us for ever Solomon in this sense prayes Suffer not my face to be turned from thee which will be done If thou suffer not thy face to be turned from me 2. The second part Gods promise made to David The Prophet now proceeds to reckon up the promises made to his father David which were confirmed by an Oath from God that these being remembred he might the easilier prevail in his Petitions asking of God as it were a due debt in which we are to observe 1. Ver. 11 The manner of the promise he confirmed by his own Oath The Lord hath sworn in truth to David 1 Confirmed by oath having no greater to swear by he swear by himsel 2 The matter of his oath 2 Sam. 12.13 Isa 55.3 Psal 89.34 It was mercy to promise but greater for assurance to bind himself by a faithful Oath and irreversible Oath He will not turn from it he will not repent of it Psal 110.4 2. 1 As it relates to Christ absolute The matter of his Oath expressed in the end of the eleventh and in ver 12 13 14. 1. For the seed of David as it concerns Christ is categorical and absolute Of the fruit of thy body I will set upon thy Seat which words are refer'd by St. Peter unto Christ Acts 2.30 According to the flesh he was from Davids seed Ver. 12 and it is observable that the Prophet speaks reservedly De fructu ventris not de fructu femoris for by the mothers side Christ was to be of Davids seed not by the fathers 2. Again I will set upon thy Seat Luke 1.32 Davids Seat was Zion and Zion typically 2 As it relates to Davids seed hypothetical Isa 2. is the Church over that Christ was to reign as David in Zion 2. For the seed of David as it relates to his poster●y the Oath is hypotherical and conditional If thy children will keep my Covenant and my Testimonies that I shall teach them their children shall 〈◊〉 upon thy Throne for evermore 1 Chron. 28.9 Psal 89.28 to 37. Ezek. 21.26 For if his posterity observed not the Law 3 And to Zion i. e. the Church eternal but worshipped their own inventions the promise was at an end 3. As the external Kingdom was by this Oath annexed to one Family so by the same Oath and Covenant Ver. 13 the external worship was assigned to one place 1. Ver. 14 For the Lord hath chosen Zion he hath desired it for his habitation 2. This my rest for ever here will I dwell for I have desired it From the time of the promise performed Zion was the Seat of the Sanctuary and so continued to the coming of the Messiah so long Zion was Civitas Regia Sacerdotalis But Zion was but a Type of Christs Church The promise which God makes to his Church The third part of which these words are more truly verified for this Christ hath truly chosen and it shall be his rest for ever with it he will be for ever present efficacious in the hearts of Believers and approve their works and worship to the worlds end 3. In the last part of the Psalm the Prophet brings in God promising to his Church many good things 1. Ver. 15 First He promiseth such abundance of temporal things that the poor shall not want I will abundantly bless her provision I will satisfie her poor with bread Godliness hath the promise of this life as well as that which is to come Ver. 16 2. Ver. 17 He promiseth for a second blessing That her Priests should be endued with holiness and her Saints shout for joy which answers to the Petition in the ninth verse 3. The third Benefit is That there the Kingdom of David to arise viz. The Kingdom of the Messiah There will I make the horn of a David to flourish that is the power Luke 1.69 I have ordained a Lamp for mine Anointed 1 Kings 11.36 15.4 John 5.35 4. The fourth Benefit is the confusion of their enemies Ver. 18 and eternal Authority in this Kingdom His enemies will I cloath with shame but upon himself shall his Crown flourish The Prayer out of the One hundred and thirty second Psalm Ver. 1 O Lord merciful and gracious declare thy self mindful of the séed of our David be ●uindful O Lord of all his mildness charity and patience Ver. 2 in which he suffered with a constant and invincible fortitude many and great afflictions Remember O Lord his dowes remember how mindful he was of his oath given unto thée for the proservation of thy Church and Truth He gave his eyes no sleep nor slumber to his eye lids that he might uphold the places deckcated to the Lord the habitations of the mighty God of Jacob. These O Lord for our sins Thou hast suffered to be demolished and profaned wicked men are come into thine inheritance and made thy house of proper a den of Thieves Arise O Lord and reward the proud after their deservings Then will we go into thy Tabernacle we will worship at thy footstool Arise O Lord into thy rest and come with us into that place that thou hast peculiarly chose unto thy self and
sanctified for thy honour and service shew in this thy strength and prosence and that thou may'st be worthily honour'd in this place Let thy Priests be cloathed with righteousness as with a garment and let thy Saints whom thou hast especially ponsecrated to thy service exult and shout for joy For thy servant Davids sake our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ hear the sighs and groans and turn not away the face of thine Anointed let him not for ever suffer a repulse in his Petitions and with shame avert his face from thée But grant him his hearts desire and deny him not the request of his lips Thou swaredst unto David in thy Truth and didst never turn from it Of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy Seat Set once more upon the Seat the son of our David and make his children kéep thy Testimonies which thou shalt teach them and let his children also so upon thy Throne for evermore Thy Throne is in Zion and Zion is thy Church which thou hast chos● to thy self and destred for thy habitation O Lord let it be thy rest for ever dwell here because thou hast defited it abundantly bless her provision and satisfie her poor with bread cloath her Priests with salvation and make her Saints to shout aloud for joy In the midst of her make the horn and power of David to bu● ordain a bearning and a shining lamp out of the loins of thy Anointed cloath his enemies with shame and infamy but upon his head let the Crown flourish and in his posterity to perpetual generations PSAL. CXXXIII IN this Psalm the amability of peace and the blessings of unity are described and commended whether in the Church Family and Common-wealth 1. It is saith the Prophet a good and pleasant thing ver 1. 2. He declares both by similitudes 1. The pleasantness by the oyntment with which the High Priest was anointed 2. The goodness or profit of it by the dew that falls upon the Mountains viz. Hermon and Zion 3. But in plainer terms from the blessing commanded by God to fall upon the head of the peaceful ver 3. It is probable this Psalm was written by David when all the Tribes were united and agreed to anoint him King in Hebron for then all Factions were ceased and it was a good and a pleasant thing to behold their concord and unity under one King and in one Religion 1. An Elogy of peace and concord The Prophet begins with a general Encomium of peace unity concord Behold how gold and pleasant a thing it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity Ver. 1 1. Behold take notice of it for it is the speech of him who did now taste it and had the experience of the difference of dissention and the profit of a setled peace 2. How good aid pleasant He admires it being not well able to express it 3. The Encomium it self in expressed by two Epithers It is good and pleasant 1. 1 It is good It is good and brings much profit with it Concordia parvae res crescunt 2. 2 Pleasant It is pleasant and brings much content with it Vis virta fortior amaenior 4. The concord it self thus express'd Brethren either in a Family Church or Commonwealth to dwell together in unity to be of one heart one mind one soul and intend the common good This is a good and pleasant thing 2. Like the perfume on Aarons head The pleasantness and content that is to be received from it he opens by a similitude comparing it to the oyntment which was very precious and sweet that was poured upon the head of the High Priest Ver. 2 It is like the precious oyntment upon the head that ran down upon the beard even Aarons beard that went down to the skirts of his garment concord was like this halm 1. All sorts were the better for it Princes Nobles people the head the beard the skirts 2. It sends forth a sweet and pleasant savour rejoyceth all as did that oyntment 3. It heals bruises wounds ulcers made by War as that balsom did 1 Cor. 13. 3. 3 Profitable The profit and commodities that flow from unity peace and concord he expresseth Ver. 3 by comparing it to the dew that falls upon the Mountains which makes them fruitful for when the rains that falls upon them dry up or run away the dewes remain and refreshes the grass peace he saith is like this dew It is as the dew of Hermon Like the dew of Hermon of Zion which is accompanied with a blessing and as the dew that descended on the Mountains of Zion it gently descends and insensibly fructifies and benefits the ground and peace enricheth 4. And this he sets down without any Metaphor viz. That peace hath a promise of a blessing a perpetual blessing from God for there the Lord commanded his blessing even life for evermore God declares by the abundance of all things which he gives to those that live in peace how acceptable concord and unity of Brethren is unto him 1. He commands his blessing commands all creatures to be useful unto them and serve them 2. His blessing is prosperity good success c. Benedicere ejus est benefacere 3. This he calls life for non est vivere sed valere vita with troubles grief c. a mans life is non vitales no life A quiet life those then that live in peace shall have which is not interrupted with grievances On the contrary where there are dissentions in Religion or in the Civil State there is malediction and death The Prayer out of the One hundred and thirty third Psalm O God who art the Authour of peace and lover of concord and hast adopted us to be thy children in Christ Iesus Ver. 1 grant that we may be all of one heart and one soul and as we are Brethren so as Brethren we may dwell together in unity make us to know the good and swéet of peace and no longer by Schisms Wars and Dissentions with-hold good things from us O refresh the head and skirts of the garment Ver. 2 Prince and people with this precious oyntment let it descend upon thy people as the dew upon the Mountains by which they are moistned and bring forth much fruit Ver. 3 After our long experience of the evils that arise from division and dissention command thy blessing of peace to lite upon us so shall our life that hath béen hitherto full of troubles be swéet and comfortable prosperous and happy and we will alwayes live in unity peace and concord and praise thy Name for thy mercy in Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen PSAL. CXXXIV IN this Psalm the Prophet exhorts the Levites and Ministers of Religion to attend to their appointed houres of prayers 2. The Levites exhorted to bless God Brings in the Ministers blessing the people ver 3. 1. Behold bless ye the Lord. Ver. 1 2. Yea principally
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
took himself to prayer ver 1 2. 2. Then his consternation and anxiety of heart which arose from the malice and craft of his enemies and the defect of help from his friends ver 3 4. 2. His addresse to God and Petition ver 5 6 7. 1. The two first verses shew Davids intention in this Psalm viz. David in trouble flyes to prayer by Prayer in his trouble to make his Addresse to God 1. I cried unto the Lord with my voice with my voice unto the Lord did I make my supplication 2. I poured out my supplication before him and shewed him all my trouble The first part This is amplified 1. From the vehemence instance fervour I cryed I supplicated Ver. 1 I poured out I shewed 2. From the Object unto the Lord him and no other I invocated The conditions of his prayer I poured out before him Ver. 1 3. From the Instrument With my voice Which doth not exclude vocem cordis For no question he understood and attended what he said 4. From the humility in Prayer It was a supplication Ver. 2 I made my supplication 5. From his free and full expression fully and at large he opened his griefs and desires he left nothing behind unsaid that should be I poured out my complaint vented all from my heart as water poured out of a vessel Shew'd and declared my trouble 6. From his sincerity and confidence in God That he durst do this before him in his eye in his sight argues an honest heart The cause anxiety of minde That which caused him to do this was 1. The consternation and anxiety of mind in which he was This I did Ver. 3 when my spirit was overwhelmed within me When my breath was as it were gone and my life for ought I saw almost at an end and I in the confines of death There being then no sufficiency in me I betook my self unto thee who art All-sufficient 2. Then I addressed my self to thee For thou knewest my path my actions my intentions the secret of my wayes my path 2 The flie dealing of his enemies and that without any just cause I suffer these things being forced and hunted into this Cave 3. The craft and sly dealing of his enemies Especially Saul 2. In the way wherein I walked In my Vocation in that way wherein thou settest me 2. Have they privily laid a snare for me Saul gave him his caughter Mical to be a snare to him and a Dowry he must have of an hundred fore-skins of the Philistines that he might fall by their hands 4. Ver. 4 His destitution at this time of trouble all forsook him deserted him even his friends 3 The desertion of his friends 1. I looked on my right hand for the help of my friends and behold if any man would be an assistant to me and take my part stand by me as Souldiers in War to their Captain but there was no man that would know me they were as strange to me as if they had never seen me Not a man durst own me the miserable have few friends 2. Refuge failed me With Achish at Ziglag I have no place to flie for safety 3. No man cared for my soul regarded my life cared whither I perished or not 2. The second part He makes his address to God david being excluded of all humane help now makes his Address to God I cryed unto thee O Lord and said 1. Thou art my refuge my stay my hope my Tower of defence to flie to my Sanctuary 2. Thou art my portion my inheritance in the land of the living while I live in this world And upon it he sends up his prayer to God And prayes as before fortified from a double Argument 1. 1 Because depressed From the lamentable condition to which he was brought 2. From the fury malice and power of his enemies 1. His condition at this time was very pitiful Attend unto my cry for I am brought very low afflicted depressed have none to help me Ver. 6 2. 2 And that by too strong enemies The power and malice of his enemies was very great Deliver me from my persecutors for they are too strong for me He renews his prayer and presseth it from the final cause Bring my soul out of Prison But if saved upon which follow two effects 1. Ver. 7 The first in my self Gratitude That I may praise thy Name 1 He thankful 2. 2 Others would fall to him The second in others Assistance and incouragement to defend me and my Cause The righteous shall compass me about come and flow from all parts unto me 3. The Reason For thou shalt deal bountifully with me Bestow favours upon me after thou hast freed me from my former miseries which men seeing who are commonly the friends of prosperity will magnifie me and resort unto me The Prayer collected out of the One hundred and forty second Psalm WHEN O Omnipotent and Merciful God we are in this life besieged with continual dangers and impetuous enemies to whom should we flie Ver. 1 or to whom we should make our moan but to thee O Lord who art able and ready because thou art merciful to deliver us In my present distress therefore I file to thée and I cry unto thee with my voyce with my voyce unto thee O Lord I make my supplication I open at large and pour out before thée my just complaint Ver. 2 the sadness and anxiety of my soul to thée I shew my trouble who alone knowest the way to deliver thine in their extreamest afflictions My Spirit is overwhelmed within me when I behold the present state of things my life for ought I sée was in the confines of death Ver. 3 but how undeservedly Thou knowest to whom all my acts and secret'st path of my wayes is best known Even in the very way wherein thou settest me and in which I walked with an honest and an upright heart have they my enemies closely and privily laid a snare to take me And in the midst of these dangers and treacheries to the greater discomfort of my soul I found nor friend to help me Ver. 4 nor any Sanctuary to which I might retire I looked on my right hand to sée who would take my part and stand up for me and with me but behold there was no man that would own me or know me I became as a stranger to my brethren and as an alien to my own mothers sons I thought with my self to take Sanctuary but a place of refuge failed me not a man there was that cared or regarded what became of me or of my life In this distress and dereliction whither should I go to whom should I flie Ver. 5 from whom should I look for help but from thée O Lord Men will not but thou art ready men cannot or dare not but thou art able and ready prest to succour thy poor afflicted people To thee
and my fortress my high tower and my deliverer my shield and he in whom I trust in which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is an Incrementum and a Gradation As it is before Psalm 18.1 2. To which Psalm this is very like so that it is thought to be made on the same occasion 1. He is my Strength or my Rock The strength I have is from him 2. My Goodness benignity or mercy That is original of all my good In mercy he call'd me from the sheepfold And in mercy he hath hitherto prevented and sustained me 3. He is my Fortress to him I fly as to a strong hold 3 Subdued the people under him or an high Tower of defence 4. And when I fly to him he deserts me not he is my deliverer from danger and captivity and he is my shield to protect me and cover my head in the day of battel Therefore I will Trust in him and relie upon him 3. He praiseth God that he had done more for him than he could wish or expect for he had not only freed him from the hand of Goliah but had subdued the people unto him He admires that God so great should do so much for man so vile Put it unto their hearts to yield obedience to him as their General after his victory over Goliah 1 Sam. 18.5 or when they made a league with him in Hebron 2 Sam. 5. It is a favour of God when the people are subdued and yield quiet obedience to their King Now out of the consideration of so many benefits David breaks forth into an admiration He wonders that when God is so great and man so vain vile and base that he should look upon him esteem him at so high a rate to love him to advance him Of which he was an example above other men Which acknowledgement tends very much to the praise of God 1. As amaz'd therefore and astonished he asks Lord what is man Ver. 3 what am I and my fathers house 2 Sam. 7.18 What is man that thou takest knowledge of him or the son of man that thou makest account of him 2. To which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he returns this answer which tends to the exaltation of God and debasement of man 1. Man is like to vanity Capable indeed of great things Ver. 4 if God fill him but till he be fill'd by God like a vain and empty vessel that hath nothing but aire in it 2. His dayes are as a shadow that passeth away God is alway the same he changeth not but man is but for a moment like a shadow that is alwayes moving and shifts the place till the night coming on it vanisheth In comparison of God this is the condition of man who otherwise is the glory of Gods creatures 2. David though he had the people subdued unto him The second part He prayes for Gods assistance to perfect his victories yet was not as yet freed from enemies the Philistins Ammonites c. did molest him and therefore he prayes to God to assist him in the conquest of these and shew some evident tokens from heaven that he did assist him in their Conquest He speaks after the manner of men as before Psal 18. from vers 7. to 16. Ver. 5 Incline the heavens and come down touch the Mountains and they shall smoke Cast forth lightnings and scatter them shoot out arrows and consume them Send thine hand from above Since the pride of man is such that it will not acknowledge thee nor fear thee for thy mercies shew thy presence by dark clouds by fire sent from heaven by thunder and lightniog c. that they may be terrified and forced to acknowledge thee 2 And makes his address for himselfe This is the first part of his Petition against his enemies 2. And now he commenceth a second and makes his Address to God for himself 1. Rid me and deliver me out of great waters i. e. from dangers of men 2. From the hands of strange Children Moabites Ammonites Ver. 7 Philistins c. Upon whom he sets these two Characters 1. Their mouth speaks vanity Lyes no truth flatteries no sincere words 2. And their right-hand is a right-hand of falshood Ver. 8 Their power they use to oppress to deceive to rapine homicide c. Interserting an Hymn But before he proceeds and ends his Petition Intercerting an Hymn he breaks out as it were in an extasie and falls back to that he began with the praise of God interserting this short Hymn 1. Ver. 9 I will sing a new song unto thee O God upon a Psaltery and an instrument of ten strings will I sing praises to thee Psal 33.3 And this I will do because Thou givest victory unto Kings To Saul by my hand and service but especially because Thou hast delivered me David thy servant from the hurtful sword From that sharp and deadly sword of the great Goliah And then he returns Repeats his petition repeats and concludes his Petition in the same words he began Rid me and deliver me from the hand of strange children Ver. 11 2. Whose mouth speaks vanity 3. And their right-hand is a right-hand of falshood 3. The third part Who is a happy man His Benedictus and Petition being ended he falls upon a discourse of the Happy man and shews that happiness is of two kinds one in the eye of the world and that it ariseth from Temporal felicities The other in the sight of God and it ariseth from Piety and Religion where both these are conjoined the Man is happy but the first without the last will never make a happy man The first are the things that the greatest part of the world aim at That their sons may be as plants c. vers 12 13 14. And David denies not but the people are happy that are in such a case vers 14. But alwayes with this condition and limitation that God be not left out and forgotten For Happy is that people whose God is the Lord vers 14. The addition of Temporal blessings will be a great comfort to our lives and God promiseth them to the obedient Deut. 28. But there is another thing Necessary the fear of God which will make a Man happy Without which men talk in vain when they speak of felicity and therefore the old Translatour reads the words thus Quorum filij Ver. 12 Whose sons may be as plants c. vers 12. And then the Antecedent to Quorum must be An acute sense of these words They whose mouth speaks vanity And then the sense will be It is the desires of vain men that their sons may be as plants their daughters beautiful that their sheep multiply their Oxen strong no decay of any thing Upon which they are apt to sing to themselves Happy are the people that are in such estate But David checks this vanity this false opinion What they happy No no. They are happy who
of Gods favour A fourth Petition again he presents that he might have a sence and feeling of Gods favour 1. Make thy face to shine upon thy Servant For as the Sun by the intetposition of a cloud is obscured Ver. 7 and by it we are deprived of light and heat So when God doth not help us by his Grace he seems to hide his face upon which there follows a coldness and darkness upon the soul of which David having experience prayes Make thy face to shine for then the contrary effects would follow light and comfort of soul 2. And teach me thy statutes Illuminate me 4. Ver. 8 These Prayers of David testifie how he loved the Law and now he witnesseth the same by his grief He grieves for the wickedness of others his grief for the sins of others to that use he put his tears Rivers of water run down from my eyes because they keep not thy Law The sins of other men may become ours if we mourn not for them 1 Cor. 5.2 Ezek. 9.8 The Prayer O Lord Ver. 1 I never can be satisfied in the contemplation of thy Law in which I find so great depths Mysteries and wonders in few words I find most perfect wisdom and equity contain'd all vertues commanded all vices prohibited all men of all ages and all conditions taught their duties The very entrance into them gives light Ver. 2 and dispels the darkness of error and ignorance the continuance in them gives understanding to the simple who are of an humble spirit and submit and captivate their reason to thy wisdom The proud and malicious thou dost reject and to them the Lamp of thy Law gives no more light than a Candle hid under a Bushel O make me then of an humble spirit teach me to submit my natural and corrupted reason to thy divine revelations never let me think my self so wise in my own eyes that I néed not the teaching of thy Spirit so shall I hope to understand the wonderful things of thy Law Ver. 1 so shall my soul kéep them That I may obtain so great a favour Ver. 3 I have opened my mouth in prayer never did any man that is anhelous and almost stified more labour for breath than I have panted for this grace for I have excéedingly longed and desired to come to a right understanding of thy Commandments Behold I turn my prayer unto thée be thou converted and look upon me Ver. 4 look upon me with the eye of that mercy as thou usest to do upon those that love thy Name and thy Honour deal by me as thou art wont to deal with thy friends and dutiful servants for I desire to be in that number though O Lord I must néeds confess my self to be an unprofitable servant That I may be better hereafter order my steps Ver. 5 dispose and direct all my affections and actions according to the eract rule of thy Word and never permit any iniquity to have the dominion over me Though to my grief it will dwell yet never let it reign in my mortal body or so far dominéer that I obey it in the lusts thereof Ver. 7 I am sensible what a darkness comes over my soul upon thy displeasure and the withdrawing of thy countenance make then thy face to shine upon thy servant that all mists and darkness being dispelled I may be again refreshed and comforted by the bright beams of thy favour and withal teach me thy most just Statutes without the knowledge of which I can expect neither protection from thée nor felicity To with-hold and deter me from my duty to thée I find too many impediments tentations I have from men who scoff and mock at me because I keep thy Law that calumniate and detract from my good name because I adhere to thy Truth that oppress and undo me because I am constant in my obedience to thée O deliver me from the scorns and oppression of man and so being set at liberty I shall more readily and chéerfully keep thy precepts These are bitter enemies to thy truth and sons of Belial they have broke the yoke and cast oft thy bonds and yet for them my soul shall mourn in secret Rivers of water shall run down my eyes because they keep not thy Law Turn Lord even to these if it be thy good pleasure and turn them to thée for they are thy creatures and bear thy Image true it is that they have defaced it by rebellion but thou canst restore it by thy Spirit which if they shall go on to ver and grieve to rebell and provoke while he is at his work then number them to the sword and bow them down to the slaughter because when thou calledst they would not answer when thou spakest they would not hear but continued to do evil before thy eyes and did choose that wherein thou didst not delight Make them know that there is a God in Israel that will avenge his own cause and protect his people and get himself glory upon his enemies But let thy servants sing for joy of heart and rejoice in thy salvation for ever and ever 18. TSADDI IN this Octonary David again commends the Law of God from the Author The Contents from the equity contain'd in it from the purity and perpetuity of it 2. The consideration of which wrought in him zeal and love to it a care to remember it and a joy and delight in it 3. Notwithstanding all opposition 1. Ver. 1 David being rempted to impatience and distrust at the prosperity of the wicked David in trouble comforts himself with Gods justice comforts himself with the consideration of Gods righteous Nature Righteous art thou O Lord Thou alterest not with times thou changest not with persons thou art alwayes unto all the one and the same Righteous God 2. 2 He commends Gods Law as just And just are thy Judgements in giving rewards and distributing punishments righteousness is so essential to thee that thou canst no more defraud the godly of their promised comforts Ver. 2 nor let the wicked go unpunished in their sins than deny thy self to be God which is impossible 2. And from a righteous God hath proceeded a righteous Law For God forbid that the Judge of all the world should do unjustice The Testimonies which thou hast commanded are exceeding righteous and very faithful So that God is not only just in himself and just in his retributions but that very Law which he hath commanded us to keep contains in it exact justice The Laws of men may be unequal but Gods Law hath in it nothing but equity and Truth it gives liberty to no injustice or iniquity 3. Shews his zeal to it Now the first affection that this consideration wrought in David was an ardent zeal it anger'd and griev'd him that so just a God should be dishonored and so just a Law forgotten Ver. 3 1. My zeal hath even consumed me My zeal to thy Law