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A35945 A brief explication of the other fifty Psalmes, from Ps. 50 to Ps. 100 by David Dickson ... Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1653 (1653) Wing D1396; ESTC R19237 330,684 408

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to wit as God incomprehensible every where present and to be sought in heaven and adored in a spiritual manner for the Temple and Ark were but as his footstool 1 Kings 18. 27. Exalt the Lord our God and wors●…ip at his footstool 4. Holinesse is the Lords property he is holy in himself holy in his appointing of his ordinances and holy in his receiving of worship rejecting all worship But what he commandeth and calleth for and he will be acknowledged holy by all that worship him and worthy is he so to be esteemed of for He is holy and this is the first reason Ver. 6. Moses and Aaron among his Priests and Samuel among them that call upon his Name they called upon the LORD and he answered them 7. He spake unto them in the cloudy pillar they kept his Testimonies and the ordinance that he gave them The next reason is from the example of holy men of God Moses and Aaron Priests or chief Officers and Samuel a Priest Prophet and Ruler of the Lords people who all of them subjected themselves to the Ordinances of God and worshipped him to their own great utility and advantage also of them with and for whom they prayed unto God and worshipped him Whence learn 1. The examples of holy men of God commended in Scripture unto us do serve for inducement and encouragement unto us to beleeve in God to worship and to obey him Moses and Aaron among his Priests or chief Officers and Samuel among them that call upon his Name 2. Because the holiest men of God that ever were in the Church stood in need of the ordinary meanes of grace and worship and subjected themselves unto Ordinances the Lord will have none of his people to neglect Ordinances or lift themselves above Ordinances for Moses Aaron and Samuel were among them that call upon his Name 3. Whoever worship God and obey his Ordinances uprightly are enrolled in the catalogue with the chiefest Saints worshippers of God Moses Aaron and Samuel among them that call upon his Name 4. The prayers of the faithfull are not frustrated but have a good answer and the answer of the holiest supplicants is set forth to encourage the meanest of believers to call upon God also as the impartial hearer of the prayers of all that call upon God in truth for he is no accepter of persons and to shew this it is said here They called upon the Lord and he heard them 7. The more evidences we have of Gods presence and the more familiarly he condescendeth to teach us the more humble and observant should we be of his Ordinances and Commands He spake unto them in the cloudie pillar they kept his testimonies and the Ordinances which he gave them Ver. 8. Thou answeredst them O LORD our God thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions The third reason to move all to the duty of worship and obedience is from the example of the mercy of God toward sincere worshippers on the one hand and justice toward them that followed mens inventions in Religion in the wildernesse or afterward on the other hand Whence learne 1. The same God the same Mediator the same Covenant of grace belong to the true Church both in former latter ages Thou answeredst them O Lord our God 2. Albeit the Lord give fo●…th his Ordinances most holy and perfect to direct men in their worshipping yet so perverse is mens corrupt nature as from time to time they are devising devices and following their own inventions as here is imported 3. As the Lord is very merciful to his people when they continue in his fear so is he just to correct them when they pollute Religion Thou tookest vengeance of their inventions 4. Penitent sinners although plagued for their sin yet were never refused forgivenesse of sin when they prayed and sought unto God for it Thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions 5. Plagued inflicted for sin upon Gods people are not punishments satisfactory unto justice but means of correction serving to drive men to repentance and to seeking of mercy and may well stand with forgivenesse of sins for G●…d can both plague sinners to drive them to repentance and forgive their sin when they do repent Thou wast a God that forgav●… them though thou tookest vengeance of their inventions Ver. 9. Exalt the LORD our God and worship at his holy hill for the LORD our God is holy The fourth exhortation to glorify God wherein he doth expound what he meaneth by the footstool of the Lord spoken of ver 5. to wit mount Sion the holy hill where the Ark was adding the same reason of the exhortation which was was before because the Lord our God is holy Whence learn 1. It is a part of our exalting of the true God to joyne with his true Church and to offer unto him with others such worship as he doth prescribe Exalt the Lord our God and worship at his holy hill 2. The Lords holinesse requireth of all men the exaltation of his Name and subjection to his Ordinances neither can his holinesse suffer any other worship then what he himselfe doth appoint Worship at his holy hill for the Lord our God is holy 3. The holinesse of God and the untainted glory of all his attributes is both the glory and comfort of his people who are in Covenant with him and a motive also to them to invite all men to the fellowship of his service with themselves Exalt the Lord our God for the Lord our God is holy PSAL. C. A Psalme of praise THe title of the Psalm sheweth the sum and scope thereof to be for stirring up of the whole Church to praise God cheerfully unto which duty all are exhorted once ver 1 2. for three reasons First because he is God Secondly because we are his creatures Thirdly because we are his covenanted people or members of the visible Church whereof he taketh care as a Pastor doth of his own flock ver 3. And again all are exhorted to thank praise and blesse him ver 4. And that for his goodnesse mercy and truth ver 5. Ver. 1. MAke a joyfull noise unto the LORD all ye lands 2. Serve the LORD with gladnesse come before his presence with singing From the first exhortation to praise God Learne 1. The d●…y of the Church visible in all her particular meetings in every place how largely soever God shall extend it is to accept the offer of the grace of God joyfully and to acknowledge the glorious riches of the graee of God which he offereth unto them in the Gospell Make a joyfull noise unto the Lord all ye lands or all the earth 2. As we ought to accept of the offer of the grace of God joyfully't so should we also dedicate our selves to Gods service heartily as he calleth for it because according to the Gospel our persons and service are
red sea so soon as he manifests himselfe it will get out of the way as affrighted at his Majesty The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee they were afraid the depths also wre troubled 4. The commotions which God hath made in heaven by rain hailstone thunder fire and lightning when he would shew himselfe for his people and against their enemies do testify sufficiently what God can and will do for his own children who draw near unto him and how he will rebuke every adversary power which is against them The clouds poured out water the skies sent out a sound thine arrowes went abroad the voice of thy thunder was in heaven the lightnings lightened the world the earth trembled and shook Whether we referre these words to what God did in plaguing Egypt before he brought out his people or after when he shewed his anger in pursuing the Egyptians in their flight when they were seeking to escape out of the red sea or to what the Lord did in fighting for his people against the Canaanites they teach the same doctrine to us ver 19. Thy way is in the sea and thy path in the great waters and thy footsteps are not known 20. Thou leddest thy people like a flock by the land of Moses and Aaron He closeth his meditation with two observations one is that the Lords wayes are past finding out and this he insinuateth by making a way through the red sea where never one went before and never one could follow after The other observation is that God can save his people by how few and weak instruments he pleaseth Whence learn 1. The Lord draweth deep in the working out of the delivery and salvation of his own people bringing them first unto extremity of danger and then making a plain and clear escape from all their straits Thy way is in the sea where no man can wade except God go before him and where any man may walk if God take him by the hand and lead him through 2. What God is in working when he engages his children in dangers and which way he is going when he leads them into overflowing troubles and deep waters they cannot understand till he hath done his work Thy path is in the great waters 3. A particular reason of every thing which God doth can no man find out for the which cause the Lord craveth submission of all his children in their exercises as he did of Iob Thy footsteps are not known 4. Whether men do see reasons of Gods dealing with them or not the Lord hath a care of his weak and witlesse people as a shepherd hath of his flock and is a gracious leader of his people that follow him Thou leddest thy people as a flock 5. The Lord hath his meanes and instruments of whose ministery he maketh use and those albeit they be few and weak yet shall he do his greatest works by them according as he doth imploy them Thou leddest thy people as a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron PSAL. LXXVIII Maschil of Asaph IN this Psalm the Lords Spirit doth stirre up his people to make a right use of the Lords works of justice and mercy set down in holy Scripture and to this end he giveth account of Gods dealing very mercifully with his people and never in justice but when mercy was abused and he sheweth also the peoples dealing with God unthankfully deceitfully whether he dealt mercifully or in justice with them The Psalm may be divided thus After a Preface to prepare the hearer for attention and observation of what he was to deliver ver 1 2 3 4. he bringeth forth first the evidence of Gods gracious care he had of his people in giving them his blessed Word to teach unto them faith and obedience ver 5 6 7 8. Secondly the evidence of Gods judgement against his people who were put to flight before their foes when they did not believe the Lord and did not make use of his works among them ver 9 10 11. Thirdly he setteth down how great things God did for them in Egypt and in the wildernesse ver 12 13 14 15 16. Fourthly how they made no better use of these mercies then to tempt God and provoke him to wrath ver 17 18 19 20. Fifthly how for their tempting of God he was angry at them for their unbelief and notconsidering of the miraculous feeding of them with Manna v. 21 22 23 24 25. and how in wrath he satisfied their lust by sending quailes for them to eat flesh their fill ver 26 27 28 29. Sixthly how because they repented not of their provocation the Lord did plague them and they went on in their misbeliefe and disobedience 〈◊〉 and God went on in the course of multiplying judgements on them and cutting off multitudes of them ver 30 31 32 33. Seventhly how they at last made a fashion of repenting and seeking of God but proved in effect nothing but flattering dissemblers and hypocrites unconstant in the Covenant ver 34 35 36 37. Eighthly how the Lord in mercy pitied and spared them many a time notwithstanding all their provocations of his justice against them ver 38 39 40 41. Ninthly he setteth down the prime cause of all this their sinne and misery because they marked not or made no use of the difference that God put between the Egyptians and them nor how for their cause he had plagued the Egyptians with plague after plague ver 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51. And brought their fathers safely out of Egypt when their enemies were drowned before their eyes ver 52 53. Tenthly he setteth down how the Lord perfected their journey to Canaan and brought them to the possession of it thrusting our the Canaa●…ites that they might have place ver 54 55. Eleventhly how they for all this provoked God to anger with their idolatry and superstition ver 56 57 58. Twelfthly how the Lord for this their oft repeated provocation did miserably vex them in the dayes of Eli and Samuel giving over his Ark into the Philistines hand and plaguing their countrey with variety of plagues ver 59 60 61 62 63 64. Thirteenthly how God of his free mercy put his enemies to shame and restored Religion and Liberties to Church and Kingdom ver 65 66. And last of all how he brought them to a setled condition under David who was a type of Christ ver 67 6●… 69 70 71 72. Ver. 1. GIve eare O my people to my Law incline your eares to the words of my mouth 2. I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter dark sayings of old 3. Which we have heard and known and our fathers have told us 4. We will not hide them from their children shewing to the generations to come the praises of the LORD and his strength and his wonderful work that he hath done In the Preface the Spirit of the Lord calleth for attention unto the doctrine which he is
his fixed purpo●…e to praise the Lord for his delivery Whence learn 1. Renewed sense of Gods favour and fresh experience of his mercy towards his children and of his justice against his and their enemies doth much refresh quiet and settle the hearts of his people and confirme their faith My heart is fixed 2. It is a part of our thanksgiving unto God to acknowledge the fruit of his gracious working for us felt upon our spirits whensoever our hearts are cheared up by him after any sad exercise My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed 3. As it is needful to labour on the heart that it may be fitted and prepared fixed and bended for Gods worship so in special for the work of praise whereunto naturally we are most dull and indisposed then shall the work go on more chearfully My heart is fixed I will sing and give praise Ver. 8. Awake up my glory awake psaltery and harp I my self will awake early From the third part of this thanksgiving wherein he stirs up himself by all means within and without himself to set forth his sense of Gods mercy and of Gods glory in bestowing of it Learn 1. A well-imployed tongue for praising of God and edifying others is indeed a mans commendation and glory above other creatures Therefore David directing his speech toward his tongue after the manner of Orators affectionate speaking saith Awake my glory 2. Albeit the abolition of the Ceremonial Law hath taken away the roome which musical instruments once had in the stately publick instituted worship of God in the congregation yet neither is the natural private use thereof taken away nor the signification of that typical ordinance to be forgotten to wit that we of our selves a●… dull and unapt to holy things and that the Lords praises are above our power to reach unto them or expresse them and that we should stir up all the faculties of our soul unto this holy service as David here insinuatech to be the moral signification thereof for after he hath said Awake Psaltery and Harp he subjoyneth I my self will awake 3. As he who in earnest is wakened up to glorifie and praise God will finde himself short in abilities to discharge this work of praise so will he finde the choicest time of the day when the body is best refreshed most deservedly bestowed upon this exercise I my self will awake early Ver. 9. I will praise thee O LORD among the People I will sing unto thee among the nations From the fourth part of his thanksgiving wherein he promiseth to let all the world know the mercy bestowed upon him Learne 1. The Spirit of God who indited this Scripture made his Pen-man know that the Gentiles should have the use of his Psalmes I will praise thee amongst the People 2 David was a type of Christ in sufferings exercises spiritual and in receiving of deliveries for this promise is fulfilled in Christ and this undertaking is applied unto Christ Rom 15. 9. 3. Then do we seriously minde the praise of God when according to our place we labour to make others also know God as we know him I will praise thee among the People Ver. 10. For thy mercy is great unto the Heavens and thy truth unto the clouds 11. Be thou exalted O God above the Heavens let thy glory be above all the earth From the last part of his thanksgiving wherein he confesseth that the excellency of the glory of God doth transcend his reach and capacity and that he can follow it no further then by wishing the Lord to glorifie himself Learne 1. The matter of the joy of the Saints and of their sweettst Songs is the goodnesse of God which appointed and promised such and such mercies unto them and the faithfulnesse of God which doth bring to passe his gracious purpose and promises made unto them For thy mercy is great and thy truth saith he 2. There is no possibility of taking up the greatnesse of Gods mercy and truth they reach so farre as our sight cannot overtake them Thy mercy is great unto the Heavens where mortal eyes cannot come to see what is there And thy truth unto the clouds through which mans eye cannot pierce 3. Seeing the Lords glory is greater then heaven or earth can contain and God himself only can manifest his own glory it is our part when we have said all we can for glorifying of God to pray him to glorifie himself and to make it appear to all that his glory is greater then heaven or earth can comprehend Be thou exalted above the Heavens and let thy glory be above all the earth PSAL. LVIII To the chief Musician Al-●… Michtam of David TH●… Psalmist being opp essed by the calumnies of the Courtiers ●…t King Saul and by the Sen●…tors of the Courts of Justice who should have provided against the oppression of the subjects chargeth them in the first part of this Psalm as must guilty of injustice done to him ver 1 2 3 4 5. In the second part he prayeth against them that God would execute judgement upon them ver 6 7 8. And in the third part he pronounceth the sentence of their deserved destruction ver 9 10 11. From this experience of the Propher we may see what strong Parties and hard opposition the godly may meet with in the defence of a good cause and how necessary it is in such trials to exercise our faith and to exalt God above all opposite powers that we may be borne out and get consolation and victory in the Lord. Ver. 1. DO ye indeed speak righteousnesse O Congregation do ye judge uprightly Oye sonnes of men 2. Yes in heart you work wickednesse you weigh the violence of your hands in the earth 3. The wicked are estranged from the wombe they go astray assoone as they be borne speaking lies 4. Their poison is like the poison of a serpent they are like the deaf Adder that stoppeth her eare 5. Which will not hearken to the voice of Charmers charme never so wisely In the fi●…st part he ch●…rgeth the Councel and Senate or Congregation of the Judges first for not giving out righteous decrees or sentences ver 1. Secondly for their resolved violent oppressing decrees ver 2. Thirdly for their inveterate wickednesse and falshood from the wombe ver 3. Fourthly for their incorrigible wickednesse which they will not for any admonition or advertisement amend ver 4 5. Whence learn 1. There is a Congregation of Rulers whose office it is to administer justice to the people who presuppose they be the supreme Court in authority and place above the body of the people yet are they subject to Gods challenge which he doth send unto them by the hand of his messengers when they do wrong as here we see Do ye indeed speak righteousnesse O Congregation 2. When the just cause of the righteous cometh before the Judge whosoever be pursuer were he as great a Party as King Saul
therefore sai●…h he God hath spoken once 6. Albeit one testimony of Scripture for a ground o●… faith or ●…ule of life rightly considered be abundantly sufficient to settle our faith in that point and to warrant our obedience yet God will inculc●… that truth oftner and have us to receive it oftner and more firmly and as it is the Lords kindnesse to us and care of us to cau●…e his once ●…poken Word to be oftne repeated unto us oftner cleared and confirmed unto us by repeated experimental evidence of the certainty thereof so it is our duty to receive it more and more heartily so oft as it is repeated and inculcated and to meditate and consider o●… it and to take a deeper and a deeper impression of it God hath spoken once twice have I heard it 7. The proprity of authority and power to do all and everything is the Lords onely and as 〈◊〉 the power of the creature it is but lent and derived to it at Gods pleasure The creature can neither hurt us nor help it selfe or us but as God is pleased to use it as an instrument Twice have I heard this that power belongeth to God 8. To induce a soul to trust in God only it is necessary that ●…t so look to his power as it also look to his mercy and lay hold on both faith ●…ath nee●… of b●…th as of two wings to carry it up to God above all vain enticements and terrours and tentations and as props whereon to settle and fix it self joyntly Also unto thee O ●…ord belongeth mercy 10. As the man that puts his trust in God and studieth to obey his Word shall finde Gods mercy to pardon his transgression and Gods power to sustain him in all his difficulties and to pe●…orm all the promises made to his servants so the man that trusts not in God but in himself or in some creature without him el●… thinking to work his own happinesse by his own wayes sh●…ll finde the fruit of his wicked course according as God hath forewarned For thou renderest to every man according to his works PSAL. LXIII A Psalme of David when he was in the wildernesse of Iudah WE have in this Psalme Davids exercise in his banishment when he was hiding himself from Saul in the wildernesse of Iudah wherein is set down his lingring and prayer after the benefit of the publike ordinances ver 1 2. And the fruits of a gracious and comfortable answer given to his prayer in number foure The first is a resolution to follow spiritual duties and in special to praise God ver 3. and to be a constant supplicant depending on God ver 4. and to take his contentment in God and in his praises ver 5 6. and joyfully to trust in Gods mercy ver 7. The second fruit is the acknowledgement of Gods power sustaining him in his adherence unto God practised by him for time past and pu●…posed for time to come ver 8. The third fruit is confidence of the destruction of his enemies ver 9 10. The fourth is assurance that he shall receive the Kingdome promised unto him to the confusion of all such as did slander him as a traitor From the Inscription Learne 1. Su●…h of Gods children as dwell most st●…tely and commodiously among their neighbours may be driven sometimes to hide themselves in a wildernesse as David was 2. Banishment from among friends cannot banish a man from God but may serve rather to drive him toward God 3. Troubles are grievous when they are present but may prove a matter of a joyful song when called to remembrance A Psalme of David when he was in the wildernesse of Judah Ver. 1. O God thou art my God early will I seek thee my soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is 2. To see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in thy sanctuary From his prayer Learne 1. The Lord is the only ease of a distressed minde and there is no speedier relief then to go to God in prayer as the Psalmist did saying O God 2. When we would speak unto God to purpose we should fasten our hold on the Covenant O God thou art my God 3. Troubles will sharpen a man in the use of the means and rouse him out of nasty security Early will I seek thee 4. It is good to fasten duties on our selves by resolution and to strengthen our resolution by shewing it to the Lord Early will I seek thee 5. A lively soul will be no lesse de●…rous of spiritual comfort from God then the b●…dy for natural food after long fasting My soul thirsteth fo●… thee 6 Spiritual affections when they are strong will 〈◊〉 ●…e b●…dy with impressions answerable thereto My flesh longeth ●…fter thee 7. It is a barren place to a godly soul where t●…e publik●… exercises of Religion cannot be h●… for this cause mainly did God c●…ll the wildernesse A dry and ●…hirsty land where no water is 8. 〈◊〉 the power and glo●…y of God is no wh●…e so clearly seen as in publike ordinances therefore should t●… ordinances be loved sought after and haunted that we may finde communion with God in them My soule thirsteth to see thy power and thy glory 9. The more good a man hath found in the publike exerci●…s of Religion the more will he esteem of them and in ●…cial when he is deprived of them My soule thirsts to see thy power and glory so as I have seen thee in thy sanctuary Ver. 3. Because thy loving kindnesse is better the●… life my li●…s shall ●…raise thee 4. Thus will I blesse thee while I live I will lift up ●…ine hands in thy Name 5. My soule shall be satisfied as with marrow and 〈◊〉 and my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips 6. When I remember thee upon my bed and meditate on thee in the night-watches 7. Because thou hast been my help therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoyce Here the Lord giveth to his servant a gracious answer and 〈◊〉 is condition in the wildernesse m●…king him no lesse glad then eve●… he was in the publike exerci●…e of Religion by granting him the comfort of his holy Spirit ●…s the fruits of the answer of his prayer do make manifest The first wh●…eof is shewen in sundry holy resolutions to prais●… the kindnes of God to blesse God and to call on his Name in all conditions to take contentment in God and to trust in him Whence learn 1. When a man who loveth the publick ordinances is debarrrd from them and maketh use of private exercises of Religion God can and will supply unto him what he wanteth and be a little sanctuary unto him as here appeareth 2. The felt kindnesse of God and shedding abroad of his love in the heart of a believer is joy unspeakable and glorious able to supply all wants unto him and to sweeten all troubles unto him and
avenge their quarrel God will shoot against wicked archers and not misse the mark ●…ut God shall shoot at them with an arrow shall they ●…e wounded 2. Where desperate malice is seen there sudden mischief may be foreseen that it shall light upon the malicious sudde●…ly shall they be wounded 3. The wicked adversaries of Gods people are destroyers of themselves by their opposition unto them for as they thought to do unto Gods children God doth to them So they shall make their own tongue fall upon themselves 4. Sometimes God will make the wicked spectacles of his judgement to the affrightment of all that knew them and do see their plague All that see them shall flee away 5. The judgement of the wicked should be all mens lesson and all sorts of people shall learn by their plagues to know Gods justice and terrour And all men shal●… feare and declare the works of God 6. Not every spectator of Gods work giveth glory to God but they only who compare his Word with his works and through the vaile of means and instruments do look to God the righteous Judge of the world They shall declare the work of God for they shall consider wisely of his doing 7. When wo and wrack doth come upon the wicked then doth joy and comfort come to the godly not so much for the dammage of the wicked as for the manifestation of the glory of God The righteous shall be glad in the Lord. 8 As the Lords mercies do confirm the faith of the righteous so also do the works of his justice They shall be glad in the Lord and shall trust i●… him 9. The delivery of one of the godly is a pledge of the like delivery to ●…ll in the like case and as one so all and every one of the righteous and upright in heart shall triumph at length over all enemies and make their boast of God All the upright in heart shall glory PSAL. LXV To the chief Musician A Psalme and Song of David THis Psalme is all of Gods praises The Proposition that he is to be praised is set down ver 1. The reasons of his praise unto the end are nine The first whereof is because he heare h prayer ver 2. The second because he mercifully pardoneth sins ver 3. The third because of his gracious purpose and powerful prosecution of the decree of election of his own redeemed on●…s ver 4. The fourth because of his defending of his Ch●…rch in all places ver 5. The fifth is from his strength manifested in the framing and setling of the mountains ver 6. The sixth from his wise and powerful over-ruling of all unruly and raging creatures ver 7. The seventh is from his preventing of troubles which are coming to his Church by terrifying all Nations at the beholding of the tokens of his displeasure against the enemies of his people ver 8. The eighth argument is taken from the joyful peace granted sometime to his people ver 8. The ninth Argument of Gods praise is from the rich plenty of all necessary food from year to year which God provideth for maintenance of man and beast and specially of his people Israel in their land ver 9 10 11 12 13. Ver. 1. PRaise waiteth for thee O God in Sion and unto thee shall the vow be performed From the Proposition concerning his purpose to spend this Psalm only in praising of God Learne 1. Although prayer and praises do alwayes agree well yet some time may call for praises and for the work of praise only and may take up the whole man for a time as here 2. How mournful a condition soever the Lords people may be in yet God is preparing thereby matter for his own glory Praise waiteth for thee And whatsoever matter of praise be seen or whatsoever measure of praise be given unto God by his people more is due to him and more is making ready for him Praise waiteth for thee 3. Although the rest of the world be senselesse of Gods benefits yet his Church must set about the work of his praises and shall be enabled to give him praise Praise waiteth for thee O God in Sion 4. As it is the duty of every man who doth seek deliverance from trouble or any other benefit from God to oblige himself to praise God for it so it is the Lords manner to gaine to himself praise by granting prayers and to purchase the performance of praises promised unto him Unto thee shall the vow be performed Ver. 2. O thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come From the first reason of the Lords praise Learn 1. The hearing and granting of prayer is the Lords property and his usual practice and his pleasure and his nature and his glory O thou that hearest prayer 2. The readinesse of the Lord to hear prayer doth open the door of accesse to all sorts of people who are sensible of their own frailty and necessities and do know his readinesse to relieve them Gentiles as well as Jewes shall come unto him O thou that hearest prayer all flesh shall come unto thee Ver. 3. Iniquities prevaile against me as for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away From the second reason of the Lords praise Learn 1. Sin is a sore adversary and many times prevails over us and drawes on troubles on us which makes us know the ill of it better then we knew before the committing of it Iniquities prevaile against me 2. Whatsoever be the sins of the people we live amongst let us make special accompt of our own guiltiness in the point of confession as David doth here when he saith Iniquities prevaile against me 3. Our sins should be looked upon not to chase us from God but to humble us and drive us to seek pardon and purgation from the Lord whose free grace only can take sins away Iniquity prevails over me as for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away 4. The holy Prophets and Pen men of Scripture have no grounds of hope for pardon of sin save those which are common to the meanest of Gods people for David in his confession cometh in by himself alone aggravating his own sins most Iniquities prevail against me saith he But in the hope of pardon he joyneth with the rest of Gods people saying As for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away Ver. 4. Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee that he may dwell in thy Courts we shall be satisfied with the goodnesse of thy house even of thy holy Temple From the third reason of the Lords praise Learne 1. God hath made election of some out of the rest of mankinde on whom he doth effectually bestow blessednesse Blessed is the man whom thou choosest 2. All those whom God doth effectually call and reconcile to himself and draweth into communion and society with himself are elected and blessed persons Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causest to
the ewes for the good of the Gentiles and enlarging of the Kingdom of Christ among them The petition is propounded ver 1 2 In the next place is an acclamation with the Gentiles glorifying of God at their in-bringing now foreseen that it should come most certainly ver 3 4. In the third place the Church of the Jewes do applaud the second time the conversion of the Gentiles and their praising of God promising to themselves that by that meanes the increase of Gods blessing on them shall follow and the enlarging of the Kingdom of God through all the world ver 5 6 7. Ver. 1. GOD be merciful unto us and blesse u●… and cause his face to shine upon us Sela●… 2. That thy way may be known upon earth thy s●…ving health among all nations This is the blessing which the Lord commanded the children of Aaron to pronounce upon the people of Israel Numb 6. 22 23. ●…hich here the people do turn into a prayer for the drawing in ●…f the Gentiles unto Gods service Whence learn 1. It is safe turning of Gods offers promises and forms of blessing of his people into prayers we are sure so to pray according to Gods will as the Church doth here 2. It is the duty of every citizen of the Church as lively members of that body to pray for the blessing of God upon all his people God be merciful unto us and cause his face to shine upon us 3. Then are the Lords people blessed when God doth make them instrumental to enlarge his Kingdome and to propagate the true Religion that is the doctrine of mans salvation and Gods service and this should be the aim we should shoot at in seeking any blessing to his people That the Lord may be known upon earth thy saving health among all the nations 4. The world is ignorant of true Religion till God by his own instruments reveale it and no way of Religion will please God nor profit men save Gods way only wherein he will have men to walk in the course of faith and obedience and wherein he revealeth how he will deal with us and how we must behave our selves toward him Therefore say they That thy way may be known upon earth thy saving health among all nations Ver. 3. Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 4. O let the nations be glad and sing for joy for thou shalt judge the people righteously and govern the nations upon earth Selab The Psalmist foreseeth by the revelation of Gods Spirit that the Gentiles shall be converted and shall rejoyce in God and praise him and therefore will have the Church of the Jewes to welcome them and to joyn in acclamation of praise to God with them because of Christs reigning among them and ruling them by his most holy lawes Whence learn 1. The manifestation of Gods freely gifted salvation in Christ and the revealing of his manner of dealing with people and how he will have people deal with him and one with another is a matter of unspeak●…ble praise to God and joy to men to whom this grace is revealed that thy saving health may be known among all nations let the people praise thee O God 2. True converts unto Christ besides the joy they have of their own salvation have also daily new accession of joy at the conversion of others as they come in and ought to blesse and praise God heartily with them when they behold their conversion Let all the people praise thee do they say twice and hereafter also the third time 3. The conversion of the Gentiles was not a thing only wished for by the Church of the Jewes but also prophesied of unto them clearly O let the nations be glad and sing for joy for thou shalt judge the people righteously c. 4. The Spirit which did endite the Psalmes did not degrade the promised Messiah Jesus Christ from his Godhead for his future incarnation but speaketh of him and to him as God blessed for ever that is the true God to the Jewish Church before his coming and true God to the converted Gentiles after his coming in the flesh one with the Father and holy Spirit for sixe times in this Psalm he is called God and acknowledged here to be the fountain of mercy and blessing to men and of manifested reconciliation with men and the object of all divine honour and praise and God the Lord and Law-giver of the converted Gentiles Thou shalt judge the people righteously and govern the nations upon earth 5. The doctrine and discipline of Christ whereby he judgeth and governeth his Church is most holy and righteous and in as far as particular Churches and Christians submit themselves to his Lawes Doctrine and Government they are his true subjects and shall finde the fruit of his governing and judging For these shall he judge righteously unto these shall he do the part of a Governour even on earth He shall govern the nations upon earth Ver. 5. Let the people praise thee O God let a●… the people praise thee 6. Then shall the earth yield her increase and God even our own God shall blesse us 7. God shall blesse us and all the ends of the earth shall fear him In the last place the Jewish Church giveth a second acclamation to the incoming of the Gentiles and do promise to themselves by that meanes Gods blessing more abundantly upon themselves as now being one body with the Gentiles in the same Covenant of grace with them Whence learn 1. As the conversion of the Gentiles was esteemed by the Jewes a matter worthy to be oftner presented to God and prayed for and earnestly pursued by all that loved God so was it foreseen to bee a matter of growing and lasting joy to men and growing and lasting praise to God and to Christ who is God the Converter of them and the Governour and Teacher of them effectually to know his Name and salvation Let all the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 2. The Spirit of God gave the Church of the Jewes to understand that the conversion of the Gentiles especially the conversion of the fulnesse of the Gentiles which here is prayed for when he saith Let all the people praise thee was to be a means or a mercy antecedent unto or nearly joyned with the bringing in and blessing of the Jewish Church and possibly in their own land Then shall the earth yield her increase and God even our own God shall blesse us for by the earth he meaneth the promised land of Canaan which hath been and is accursed during the time of their ejection out of it 3. When God shall be gracious to the Jewes after the conversion and bringing in of the Gentiles and shall renew the Covenant with them in Christ it shall fare the better with true Religion and with the Christian Churches among the Gentiles it shall be to them as a resurrection from the
dead in regard both of the purity of Doctrine and Worship and of the multiplication of persons converted unto Christ in all places God shall blesse us saith he then and what more And all the ends of the earth shall fear him PSAL. LXVIII To the chief Musician A Psalm or song of David THis Psalm is very suitable to that time when David having gotten the victory over his enemies round about did assemble all Israel and carried the A●…k of God now returned from the land of the Philistines triumphantly out of the house of Obed-Edom into the City of David as a type of Christs ascension after the work of Redemption in the world In which P●…lm after the manner that Moses prayed unto God or to Christ who was to be incarnate when the Ark did march David prayeth here first against the Lords enemies ver 1 2. And then for the Lords people ver 3. In the next place he exhorteth all the Lords people to praise God ver 4. and giveth twelve or thirteen reasons for it First because of his mercy to the desolate and afflicted ver 5 6. Secondly because of his wonderfulnesse and terriblenesse in delivering of his people out of bondage as appeared in his bringing of his people out of Egypt and through the wildernesse ver 7 8. Thirdly because of his fatherly care to entertain his redeemed people as did appear in his nourishing of his Church in Canaan ver 9 10. Fourthly because of the victories which he giveth usually to his people when their enemies do invade them ver 11 12. Fifthly because of the delivery which he will give to his people out of their most sad calamities as he hath oftentimes given proof ver 13 14. Sixthly because his Church is the most glorious Kingdome in the world being compared therewith ver 15 16. Seventhly because Christ the King of the Church hath all the Angels at his command to serve him and having ended the work of Redemption was to ascend gloriously for sending down gifts to his Church and ruling of it ver 17 18. Eightly because of Gods bounty to his people in daily renewed mercies till he perfect the work of their salvation ver 19 20. Ninethly because of his avenging of himself upon all his enemies ver 21. Tenthly because God hath undertaken to work over again in effect as need shall require what he hath done in bringing his people out of Egypt and in giving them victory over the Canaanites ver 22 23. whereof the experience of his power already manifested for Israel was a proof and pledge sufficient ver 24 25 26 27. Eleventhly because it was decreed by God to establish his Church and to make her strong by making Kings to become converts ver 28 29. and that partly by treading down some of her enemies ver 30. and partly by making others even some of her greatest enemies to seek reconciliation with God even her God ver 31. Twelfthly he exhorteth to praise God because of his omnipotent power in conversion of Kingdomes ready to be let forth for the defence of his people ver 31 32 33 34. and ready to overthrow their enemier and all for the strengthening of his Church for all which he exhorteeh all to blesse the Lord ver 35. Ver. 1. LEt God arise let his enemies be scattered let them also that hate him flee before him 2. As smoke is driven away so drive them away as waxe melteth before the fire so let the wicked perish at the presence of God 3. But let the righteous be glad let them rejoyce before God yea let them exceedingly rejoyce In Davids prayer against his enemies and for Gods people Learn 1. Such prayers as the Spirit hath endited unto the Saints in Scripture it is lawful and expedient for strengthening of our faith to use the same or the like words in the like case for David prayeth here as Moses prayed at the marching of the Ark Numb 10. 35. Let God arise c. 2. As the Ark was amongst the Israelites so is Christ amongst his people and what ground of confidence the Church had because of that pledge of Gods presence at t●…e Ark we have the same and a more sure ground of confidence in Christs incarnation represented thereby that upon every appearance of his beginning to stirre against the enemies of his work we may say Let God arise 3. The enemie of the Church are the enemies of God and esteemed haters of him because they are haters of his people with whom albeit the Lord doth be●…r for a while yet will he take order when he pleaseth it will not cost him much labour on●…y Let God arise and let his enemies b●… scattered 4. Although all the enemies of God make head against his people yet will they not prevaile when God appeareth they will turn back Let them also that hate him flee before him 5. Whatsoever strength of forces or number the enemies of Gods people have in appearance it is nothing before God but like smoak before the winde and waxe before the fire As smoak is driven away ●…s waxe melteth before the fire so let the wicked perish at the presence of God 6. Albeit the Lord exercise his people with affliction and with grief for a while yet he alloweth unto them comfort and joy whatsoever become of their enemies But let the righteou●… be glad 7. The only true matter of the Saints joy is God himselfe and his manifested presence and he will not be pleased except his children lift up their hearts and comfort themselves in him above and against all grief and sense of whatsoever enemies opposition Let them rejoyce before God yea let them exceedingly rejoyce Ver. 4. Sing unto God sing praises to his Name extoll him that rideth upon the heavens by his Name JAH and rejoyce before him From his exhortation of the Church to praise God with the joyful voice of singing Learn 1. Vocal singing of praises unto God is a moral duty and a part of his holy worship frequently called for in Scripture Sing unto God sing praises to his Name 2. Our thoughts of God should not be base but high and heavenly lifting his Name up above the most glorious creatures all they bei●… but his servants as he pleaseth to make use of them Extoll him that rideth upon the heavens 3. The Lord is onely and properly wo●…thy of praise because he onely hath his being of himself and giveth be●… to all things which are beside himselfe His Name is JAH 4. The Lords praises are his peoples advantage and the true matter of their confidence and joy Sing praises to him and rejoyce before him Ver. 5. A Father of the fatherlesse and a Iudge of the widowes is God in his holy habitation 6. God setteth the solitary in families he bringeth out those that are bound with chaines but the rebellious dwell in a dry land From the first r●…on of the exhortation to praise God Learn 1. The Lords
highnesse above the heavens doth not hinder him from taking notice of the lowest of his poor people yea the most helplesse and desolate among men are the first objects of his warmest love A Father of the fatherlesse and a Iudge of the widows is God 2. Albeit the Lord be infinite and incomprehensible by any place yet hath he appointed a trusting place where his people shall finde him by his own ordinance to wit the assembly of his Saints his holy Temple shadowing forth Christ to be incarnate who now is in heaven now is incarnate and sitting at the right hand of God in whom dwells the Godhead here here is God to be found God in his holy habitation 3. It is the Lords nature pleasure and ordinary practise to make up the wants and to change to the better the disconsolate condition of his own humbled and emptied children God setteth the solitary in families 4. The souls that are most sensible of bonds and bondage do lie nearest the seeking of the fruit of his redemption yea none in bonds have made or shall make use of God the Redeemer but his bonds and ●…etters hindering him from freedome of Gods service and from attaining of felicity have been and shall be loosed off him he bringeth out those which are bound in chaines 5. Such as will not be ruled by his Word according as they are disloyal rebels to him so shall they be dealt with as rebels that is they shall neither have Gods blessing joyned with any benefit which they seem to possesse nor any spiritual comfort in their afflictions when their calamity cometh upon them but the rebellious dwell in a dry land Ver. 7. O God when thou wentest forth before thy people when thou diddest march through the wildernesse Selah 8. The earth shook the heavens also dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it self was moved at the presence of God the God of Israel From the second reason of praising God Learn 1. It is expedient for our up-stirring unto thankfulnesse to cast our eye upon some particulars wherein the Lords goodnesse to us and our obligation to his love may appear as here the P●…almist doth lead us by the hand unto the Lords particular work of redemption of Israel out of Egypt 2. That one work of the Churches delivery out of Egypt representing the redemption of his people from the misery of sin and Satans bondage 〈◊〉 a sufficient proof for ever of the Lords love care power and faithfulnesse to deliver his own out of all their misery which the Church and every member thereof should alwayes make use of unto the end of the world whether we look upon that work in the type singly or as it is a representation or pawne of the spiritual delivery of his people this work should we often look upon and still hold it up unto God O God when thou wentest forth before thy people when thou didde●… march through the wildernesse 3. In the wo●…ke of the Lord it is needful not only to look upon that which may foster saith in God and love toward him but also to set before us what may serve to keep our hearts in fear and awe of his dreadful Majesty The earth shook the heavens dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it self was moved at the presence of God even the God of Israel Ver. 9. Thou O God didst send a plentiful raine whereby thou didst confirme thine inheritance when it was weary 10. Thy Congregation hath dwelt therein thou O God hast prepared of thy goodnesse for the poor From the third reason of Gods praise Learne 1. The ordinary sustaining of Gods people bodily and spiritually in the possession of any benefit temporal or spiritual given unto them should be observed as well as the bestowing of any benefit in an extraordinary way as here the ordinary sustaining of Israel in Canaan is made a part of the song of praise no lesse then their miraculous delivery out of Egypt Thou O Lord didst send a plentiful rain whereby thou didst confirme thine inheritance when it was we●…ry 2. The people who are in Covenant with God externally are the Lords own peculiar more nearly and properly then any other society in the world therefore Israel here is called by the Prophet speaking to God Thy Congregation 3. It is for the Churches cause that the land wherein his people dwelleth is blessed at any time by God Thy Congregation hath dwelt in it 4. The blessing bestowed upon the Church or the place wherein they dwell is not given for any goodnesse in his people but for the goodnesse grace and good will of God to them Thou O God hast prepared of thy goodnesse for the poor Ver. 11. Th●… Lord gave the word great was the company of those that published it 12. Kings of armies did flee apace and she that ●…rried at home divided the spoile From the fourth reason of praise Learn 1. The Lord will sometime exercise his Church with warres afflictions and trials when he doth not intend to punish them but to give them the victory over their enemies and that for his own glory as in Ioshuahs time and Davids whereunto the text doth relate The matter of joyful newes or the word of the Churches victory over her ●…oes whensoever it is proceeds from the Lord who furnisheth matter for and words and utterance of joy to his people and praise to himself The Lord gave the word 2. When God will glorifie himself by comforting his Church he shall not want Heraulds of his praise Great was the company of those that published it 3. Were the enemies of the Church never so powerful and Gods people never so far●…e inferiour unto their enemies in power yet shall the enemy not be able to stand when God begins to fight for his people Kings of armies did flee apacc 4. It is easie for the Lord to make them a prey to the weakest of his people who do set themselves to make havock of the Church yea and to inrich his people with the spoil of such adversaries She that tarried at home divided the spoile Ver. 13. Though ye have lien among the pots yet shall ye be as the wings of a Dove covered with silver and her feathers with yellow gold 14. When the Almighty scattered Kings in it it was white as snow in Salmon From the fifth reason of praise Learn 1. As the Lord sometimes doth beautifie his people with victories and wealth so also at other times for just reasons he will darken all their outward glory and make them look as blacked scullions in the kitchin Though ye have lien among the pots c. 2. The Lord after the trial and hard exercises of his people for a time will give them so glorious an event and delivery as shall take off all the ignominy of their former affliction and make up all their losses yea he will cause their formerly deforming affl●…ions to serve for washing-balls of
sope to make them so much more beautiful Though ye have lien among the pots ye shall be as the wings of a Dove covered with silver and her feathers with yellow gold 3. Experiences of mercies shewen to the Lords people are pawns and evidences of like mercies in time to come as here When the Almighty scattered Kings in the land it was made white is made a proof of the Promise made ver 13. 4. As a dark duskie mountain whereupon groweth no green thing but black h●…th is made white when covered with snow so is a disgraced shamed impoverished inslaved land made glorious again by a merciful manner of delivery manifesting the Lords kinde respects unto it When the Almighty scattered Kings in Iudea it was made white as snow in Salmon Ver. 15. The hill of God is as the hill of Bashan an high hill as the hill of Bashan 16. Why leap ye ye high hills this is the hill which God desireth to dwell in yea the LORD will dwell in it for ever From the sixth reason of praise Learne 1. The Kingdomes of this world especially some of them of more eminent sort do seem very rich and glorious in comparison of the outward appearance of the Kingdome of Christ in his Church as the great high and fruitful hill of Bashan seemed to be more glorious then the hill of Sion yet all things being compared in speciall the spiritual priviledges of the one with the tempor●…l priviledges of the other the Church of God will outreach the most glorious Kingdom on the earth The hill of God is as the hill of Bashan an high hill as the hill of Bashan 2. Although the Kingdomes of the world rejoyce in their Prerogatives and despise the Kingdom of Christ in his Church yet have they no cause to exalt themselves Why leap ye ye high hills 3. This one priviledge of the Church that it is the place of Gods residence wherein he will manifest himself familiarly and comfortably to his own may oversway all the excellency of all the Kingdomes of the world no Kingdom which hath not Gods Church in it can say the like This is the hill which God desireth to dwell in yea the Lord will dwell in it for ever Ver. 17. ●…he chariots of God are twenty thousand even th●…usands of Angels the Lord is among them as in Sinai in the holy place Ver. 18. Thou hast ascended on high thou hast led captivity captive thou hast received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell among them From the seventh reason of praise Learn 1. No Kingdome hath such defence so potent and so numerous armies to fight their battels as the Church hath The chariots of God are twenty thousand even thousands of Angels 2. The defence of Angels is made fast to his Church and their power made sure to be for her because God is in his Church even the Lord whom all Angels do serve and attend upon is in his Church as at his giving of the law upon Mount Sinai did appear The Lord is among them as in Sinai 3. The Lord is no lesse terrible against his foes in Sion then in Sinai and whatsoever terrour the Lord did shew to his Church in Sinai against the violaters of his law he will manifest it for the comfort and defence of his people who heartily embrace his Gospel The Lord is among them to wit these chariots and Angels as in Sinai so in the holy place 4. The Ark was not more gloriously conveyed from the house of O●…ed-edom unto the city of David then God that is Christ who is God who descended to assume humane nature that he might therein perfect the work of Redemption did gloriously ascend into heaven after the price of Redemption was paid by him Thou hast ascended on high Eph. 4. 8 9 10. 5. The praises of God and joy of the Church are perfected in Christ no satisfaction in the shadows till Christ the substance be looked unto therefore here the Lords Spirit led his people to look through the shadow of the ascending of the Ark toward the city of David unto the ascending of God incarnate represented by the Ark into heaven Thou hast ascended on high 6. Christ did not enter into his glory without a battel going before and that with strong and many enemies and in his fighting he carried the victory and after his victory he did triumph first in the Crosse and then in his Ascension over sin Satan the world hell grave and all He led captivity captive 7. Christ as Mediatour and King of his Church was fully furnished with all things needful for gathering his Church for edifying governing and perfecting of it Thou hast received gifts for men even those gifts which the Apostle speaketh of for the gathering and edifying of the body of the Saints Eph. 4. 11 13. 8. The gifts which Christ hath received and given forth are not for the Jewes only or Gentiles only for the poore only or rich only but for men indefinitely Thou hast received gifts for men 9 As he hath received gifts for bringing on to life those that are reconciled so also to conquer subdue and bring in rebels and to reconcile enemies Thou hast received gifts for men yea and for the rebellious also 10. The end of Christs Ascension and receiving and sending down gifts among men is to gather and preserve and establish unto God a Church in the world wherein he may make himself manifest and dwell and rule in the midst of his enemies Thou hast received gifts for men that the Lord might dwell among them 11. Yea what●…oever gifts are bestowed upon unregenerate men within the visible Church or without it which may any way be serviceable to the Church they are all bestowed on them in favour of the Church that God may dwell in his visible Church which by those gifts is edified Thou hast received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also tha●… the Lord God might dwell among them Ver. 19. Blessed be the Lord who daily loadeth us with benefits even the God of our salvation Selah 20. He that is our God is the God of salvation and unto GOD the Lord belong the issues from death From the eighth reason of praise Learne 1. Where the Lord will be merciful he will be merciful and not weary in doing good to his people in a current course of bounty the observation whereof should stirre up our hearts to thankfulnesse Blessed be the Lord who daily loadeth us with benefits 2. The favours and benefits which God doth bestow upon his people do come in greater number and measure unto them then they are able to acknowledge make use of or be thankful for and so in a sort do burden the spirits of the truly godly Blessed b●… God who daily loadeth us with benefits 3. As all benefits do flow unto Gods children from the covenanted kindnesse of God for giving unto them eternal salvation
life in raising of him out of the grave of his trouble Thou which hast shewed me great and sore troubles shalt quicken me again and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth 4 As trouble humbleth and abaseth a man before the world so the Lords delivering of him and shewing his respect to him honoureth the man again and exalteth him before men Thou shalt increase my greatnesse 5. As no trouble doth come alone but multitudes of troubles joyned together when the Lord will humble and try a man so no comfort cometh single or alone when the Lord will change the mans exercise but a multitude of comforts joyned together Thou wilt comfort me on every side 6. Losses are made lighter and comforts weightier when God is seen and acknowledged in them Thou which hast shewed me sore troubles it is but a view of trouble what we have felt when troubles are seen to come from Gods hand thou shalt increase my greatnesse and comfort me on every side Ver. 22. I will also praise thee with the Psaltery even thy truth O my God unto thee will I sing with the Harp O thou holy One of Israel 23. My lips shall greatly rejoyce when I sing unto thee and my soule which thou hast redeemed 24. My tongue also shall talk of thy righteousnesse all the day long for they are confounded for they are brought unto shame that seek my hurt The fourth and last evidence of his confidence is his promise of joyful thanksgiving by way of a begun song and that for the foresight of his own delivery and of his enemies overthrow Whence learn 1. Faith is so satisfied with Gods promise that it can praise heartily for what is promised before it finde performance I will praise thee with the Psaltery even thy truth 2. It is our interest in the Covenant which makes us to have interest in particular promises I will praise thy truth O my God 3. A soul sensible of Gods kindnesse and sure by faith of the performance of his faithful promises cannot satisfy it selfe in praising of God it hath so high estimation of his fidelity power and love Therefore after he hath said I will praise thee he addeth unto thee will I sing with the Harp 4. How hardly soever a soul hath been exercised with troubles for a while so soon as it seeth by faith the Lords prepared event It will justify all the passages of Gods providence as just and wise and good and in a word as holy in all respects To thee will I sing O holy One of Israel 5. Singing with our voice unto the Lord is a part of moral worship as well as prayer with the voice when his honour and our upstirring and others edifying calleth for it My lips shall greatly rejoyce when I sing unto thee 6. As the work of praising God requireth sincerity earnestnesse and cheerfulnesse so the work thus done becometh not onely honourable to God but also refreshful to the worshipper My lips shall greatly rejoyce when I sing unto thee 7. Dangers and distresses how grievous soever they be for the time yet do they furnish matter of praise to God and joy to the party troubled afterward when the delivery cometh My lips shall rejoyce and my so●…'e which thou hast redeemed 8. Beside singing of Psalmes unto God speaking of his praise in all companies and upon all occasions is a part of our bounden duty of thankfulnesse for making his word good to us in the overthrow of our enemies and delivering of us My tongue also shall talk of thy righteousnesse all the day long 9. The overthrow of the enemies of the godly is as certain to come as if we saw it with our eyes already come to passe The same Word of God the same light and perswasion of spirit manifesteth the delivery of the godly and the destruction of their enemies For they are confounded for they are brought to shame that seek my hurt PSAL. LXXII A Psalm for Solomon IN this Psalm under the shadow of King Solomons reigne Christs gracious government is praised and first the Church is taught to pray for a blessing on King David and his sonnes government including Christs ver 1. Next the answer is given by the spirit of the Lord in a prophecie of the blessednesse of the Reign and Kingdome of Christ the Sonne of David from ver 2. to ver 18. Thirdly the use hereof is ●…et down in thanksgiving unto God ver 18 19. and herein is the accomplishment of all the desires of David obtained by this satisfactory answer ver 20. From the inscription and prayer Learn A King may command within his kingdom many things but he cannot command a blessing on his own government he must make suit for this to God He may leave a kingdome to his childe but because a kingdom is nothing without Gods blessing he must pray for this blessing and seek the assistance of the prayers of the Church for this intent and this duty Kings may crave of the Church and Gods people should not refuse it A Psalm for Solomon Ver. 1. GIve the king thy judgements O God and thy righteousnesse unto the kings son From the prayer of the Church Learn 1 Gifts from God are necessary to fit a man for an office and it is n●…t every gift which doth make fit for a particular office but such gifts specially as are for the discharge of the place a man hath and those must be asked from and granted by God and by this meanes sanctified Give the King thy judgements O God 2. Nothing is more conducible to make a Kings government prosperous and blessed then equity and justice according to the revealed will of God Give the King thy judgements and thy righteousnesse to the Kings son Ver. 2. He shall judge thy people with righteousnesse and thy poor with judgement 3. The mountaines shall bring peace to the people and the little hills by rightoousnesse 4. He shall judge the poore of the people he shall save the children of the needy and shall break in pieces the oppressour 5. They shall fear thee as long as the Sun and Moon endure throughout all generations 6. He shall come down like raine upon the mowen grasse as showers that water the earth 7. In his dayes shall the righteous flourish and abundance of peace so l●…ng as the Moon endureth 8. He shall have dominion also from sea to sea and from the river unto the ends of the ●…arth 9. They that dwell in the wil●…ernesse shall bow before him and his enemies shall lick the d●…st 10. The kings of Tarshish and of the Is●…es shall bring presents the kings of Sheba and Seba shall offer gifts 11. Yea all kings shall fall down before him all nations shall serve him 12. For he shall deliver the needy when he crieth the poor also and him that hath no helper 13. He shall spare the poore and needy and shall ●…ve the soules of the
publick worship in their several divisions through the land 11. Houses built for meeting of the Lords people to publick worship albeit they be not typically holy as the Temple of Ierusalem was yet do they belong to God as meanes dedicate for maintaining his service and when they are marred it is a wrong done to God and a cause of complaint to God against the sacrilegious spoilers thereof as here we see 12. External troubles are much lighter when the publick ordinances and signes of Gods presence in a land may be had for spiritual comfort but when those are removed every trouble is the more heavy We see not our fignes there is no more any Prophet ne●…ther any among us that knoweth how long that is publick meanes ordinary and extraordinary which may give us comfort do now cease If it be asked how can this be applied unto the time of the captivity seeing Ieremy Ezekiel Daniel and the Prophet who did write this Psalme by inspiration were living at the beginning of the captivity and after the burning of the Temple It may be answered that Ieremy was carried away ●…o Egypt and the people could not have use of his ministery Ezekiel and Daniel were carried away to Babylon and the poor which remained in the land had none of the Prophets to comfort them yea Ezekiel and Daniel were but now and then imployed of God to utter their prophecies and the multitude of the captives who were to make use of this Psalm were scattered in sundry places and could not have the benefit of their or of any others ministery as they were wont to have and this in speciall maketh the Iamentation to have a ground that the table was drawn from the children the people had not that accesse which they enjoyed before unto meanes either extraordinary or ordinary they had not their former allowance and howsoever in the copies of Ieremiahs prophecie 70. yeares was determined for the peoples captivity yet none of the Prophets at the time of writing this told or could tell them how long time should passe before their desolution should be repaired how long it should be ere the Temple should be builded again and the Prophet by whom this Psalm was endited had no further commission then he speaketh of and so these foresaid expressions may stand with the time of the beginning of the captivity of Babylon Ver. 10. O God how long shall the adversary reproach shall the enemy blaspheme thy Name for ever 11. Why withdrawest thou thy hand even thy right band pluck it out of thy bosome After the lamentation is subjoyned an imprecation against the enemies that God would not deferre to punish them Whence learn 1. Mens patience is much short of Gods long-suffering and forbearance for here it is the speech of a suffering people O God how long shall the adversary reproach when with God it is not yet time to fall upon them 2. The Lords long-suffering patience doth greatly harden the adversaries in their insolent mocking of Gods people for instead of saying Lord how long wilt thou bear with them he saith O God how long shall the adversaries reproach 3. The truly godly can endure their own troubles better then they can bear the open dishonouring and blaspheming of God by occasion of their trouble Therrfore this expression from the deepest sense of his heart doth break forth Shall the enemy blaspheme thy Name for ever 4. Albeit tentations from carnal sense do represent God as if he were idle when he suffers his enemies to trample on his people and on his glorious Name yet faith will not admit of such a thought but dealeth with God by prayer to let his strength and power be so manifest that the world may not think his hand is in his bosome Why withdrawest thou thy hand even thy right band pluck it out of thy bosome This he believeth the Lord shall do and giveth reasons for his hope in that which followeth Ver. 12. For God is my King of old working salvation in the midst of the earth 13. Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength thou brakest the heads of the Dragons in the waters 14. Thou brakest the heads of Leviathan in pieces and gavest him to be meat to the ●…ople inhabiting the wildernesse 15. Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood thou driedst up mighty rivers 16. The day is thine the night also is thine thou hast prepared the light and the sun 17. Thou hast set all the borders of the earth thou hast made summer and winter In the second part of the Psalme the Psalmist doth confirme his own and other believers saith that God would undoubtedly deliver his people and take order with their enemies First from the interest they have in God and God in them Secondly from the experience of sensible deliveries past of his people ver 12. Thirdly from the great work of redemption of his people from Pharaohs tyranny ver 13 14. Fourthly from the Lords seeding his people in the wildernesse ver 15. Fifthly from the Lords sovereignty and disposing of all creatures in the world ver 16 17. Whence learn 1. Relations between God and his Church and in special this that he hath made himselfe King thereof are pawnes of Gods defending his Kingdom and injured subjects and punishing of his enemies for here the Church giveth it for a reason of their hope of delivery God is my King 2. The more time is past since God did avow himselfe King of his Church the more confident may later generations of the Church be to finde new evidences of his royal actions for them and against their enemies God is my King of old 3. New troubles must not make us forget old mercies but rather call them to memory to be made use of afresh as pledges that what he hath done before he will do the like again God is my King of old working salvation in the earth that is such deliverances of his Church as all the earth was witnesse of 4. The delivery of Israel out of Egypt and the destruction of the Egyptians is a pawn unto the Church in every age after that God will destroy their enemies how strong and terrible soever they be and will deliver his Church Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength thou brakest the heads of the Dragons in the waters 5. As all the enemies of the Church are no lesse cruel and savage against the Lords people then unreasonable Sea-beasts and Sea-monsters so can he make their carcases a prey to unreasonable beasts as he made Pharaoh and his Captaines to become food to the beasts of the wildernesse when the Sea did cast up their carcases on the sho●…e like sea-wrackt Thou brakest the heads of Leviathan in pieces and gavest him to be meat to the people inhabiting the wildernesse 6. The Lord will not fail to provide consolation to his Church in her necessity though no probable means do appear as he furnished his people
tentations till he come to suc●… height as is expressed ver 7 8 9. and for an event must begin and reprove his owne misbelief dispute for the help of his faith taking arguments from his experience from Gods power and good will and Gods dealing with others before him 9. Th●… works of God when they are looked on cursorily or lightly p●…st by cannot be discerned but when they are well conside ed they will be found wonderfull I will remember the works of the Lord surely I will remember thy wonders of old 10. It is good for a soul in a hard exercise to raise it self from thinking of God and of his works unto speaking unto God directly no ease or reliefe will be found till addresse be made unto himselfe till we turn our face toward him and direct our speech unto him as here the Psa●…mist doth from the midst of the eleventh verse to the en●… of the Psalm 11. Estimation of any of Gods works and good gotten by meditation on some of his works is able to engage the heart to a deeper consideration of all his works I will medit●… also of all thy works saith he 12. He that would have pro●… by Gods works must bridle the levity of his own minde which cannot stay fixed in the consideration till it be tied in meditation I will meditate of all thy works 13. When we have ●…d our own souls upon Gods works we should study to make use of what we have learned thereby to the good of others and glory of God I will meditate of all thy works and t●…lk of all thy doings Ver. 13. Thy way O God is in thy sanctuary who is so great a God at our God 14. Thou art the God that doest wonders thou hast declared thy strength among the people In tke last place he confirmeth his faith and setleth his minde by consideration of the Lords dealing with his people recorded in 〈◊〉 Scripture whereof h●… speaketh first in general v●… 〈 ◊〉 〈◊〉 Then more specially of the bringing of his people out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through the wildernesse terribly discomfiting their enemies and tenderly leading them as his own flock by weak and 〈◊〉 instruments Whence 〈◊〉 1. When the heart of a man is turned toward the Lord then the vaile of darknesse confusion and misbelief is removed he can justify the Lord in all that he doth as most holy and ●…ust as here we see in the Ps●…ist who since he began to direct himselfe toward God can now ●…y 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thy way O God is in the Sanctuary 2. There is no understanding of Gods dealing with us nor can any right construction be made of his exercising of us except we come to the Lords Ordinances where his Word his Oracles of Script●…e do 〈◊〉 his works per●…ectly Thy w●…y O God is in the Sanctuary 3. When the works and wayes of God are looked upon by the ●…ght of the Word in his Sanctuary or Church and God is looked ●…o through his works and Word then is a soul forced to admire his holines and wisdom and justice and power and goodnes above all comparison Who is so great a ●…od as our God 4. The exercise of the believers conscience with fears and suspicions o●… Gods affection unto him endeth in admiration of God in exaltation of God ●…n believing more firmly in God in magnifying the grace of his ●…ing in Covenant with God in acknowled●…ing his own blessednesse and the blessednesse of all other believers for having God for their God Who is so great a God as our God 5. So much in general may be seen of Gods dealing with his people as may 〈◊〉 a man in his own particular who is troubled about Gods ●…sation toward him for when Israel in Egypt was put to 〈◊〉 straits as they saw nothing but rooting of them out with 〈◊〉 and oppression God did work so well so wisely so powerfully and so graciously for them as all their hard exercise was ●…rned to their greater comfort an●… Gods greater glory This in general is the use that the Psalmist maketh of Gods dealing with his people and doth finde it applicable to h●…s own conditio●… T●…u art the God that doth wonders 6. When we cannot see how it is likely or possible we can be extricated out of the difficulties we are cast into especially in our spiritual condition we are ●…ged to give unto God the glory of doing above all things we can conceive for the good of those that des●…e to be his subjects Thou ●…t the God that do●…st wonders 7. What God hath con●…ed the world of already concerning what he can do for his 〈◊〉 ●…ay satisfie eve●…y par●…icular soul of his wisdom power and goodnesse toward it selfe when it doth draw in toward him 〈◊〉 one of his people for this use doth the Psalmist make of Gods doing for his people Thou hast declared thy strength among thy people Ver. 15. Thou hast with thine arm redeemed thy people the sonnes of Iacob and Ioseph Selah 16. The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee they were afraid the depths also were troubled 17. The clouds poured out water the skies sent out a sound thine arrowes also went abroad 18. The voice of thy thunder was in the heaven the lightnings lightned the world the earth trembled and shooke He descendeth more specially to the consideration of the Redemption of Israel out of Egypt which is a representation of the spiritual Redemption of his people whom at the time when they were in the deepest misery and least able to help themselves were most oppressed by the enemies and for their own disposition were in a most sinful condition and in a desperate mood against the means and instruments of their delivery God did deliver and remove all the difficulties which might hinder their event and escaping from misery from whence the Psalmist might strongly reason for his own comfort that God would not faile to deal graciously with his soul who was seeking favour from God and a renewed sense of reconciliation with him Hence learn 1. That no soul can be under such sense of wrath and desolation but he may draw comfort from the great work of Redemption of lost sinners for if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saved from wrath by his life And this spiritual Redemption was figured by the bodily delivery of Israel out of Egypt Thou hast with thine arme redeemed thy people the sonnes of Iacob and Ioseph 2. It is by reason of the Covenant that people receive deliverances and consolations and proofs of Gods power working for them Therefore doth he stile the sonnes of Iacob from their interest in God and Gods interest in them by Covenant Thou hast redeemed thy people 3. No obstacle how great soever can stand in the way of the delivery and comfort o●… Gods people but God can and will remove it were it as the
his own Name on the sinner whatsoever be his priviledge and though he were never so neer to God in external priviledges So a fire was kindled against Iacob and anger also came up against Israel 3. Misbelief is a more grievous sin then men do esteem of it for it calleth Gods truth mercy goodnesse power constancy and all in question and even his justice amongst the rest which if the misbeleever did consider he would not provoke justice against himself by this sin Wrath came up against Israel because they believed not in God 4. They do not believe in God who study not to depend upon him for salvation and for whatsoever is necessary to them for salvation yea they who do not believe that the Lord shall bring them out of every strait in a way most serving to their welfare and for his own honour do not believe in him for salvation so solidly as he requireth of them They believed not in God saith he and trusted not in Gods salvation 5. The more meanes encouragements helps and props to support a mans faith are furnished of God the greater is the sinne of unbeliefe in him As the Israelites misbelief was the greater for Gods miraculous bringing of water out of the rock and Manna from the clouds as here the Israelites misbelief is aggravated thus They trusted not in his salvation though he had commanded the clouds and rained down Manna 6. Man liveth not by bread but by the efficacious Word of God It is so easie for God to rain down victuals out of the clouds as to make them grow out of the ground let him say the Word and it is done He commanded the clouds and opened the doores of heaven and rained down Manna on them to eat 7. The Lord doth provide well for his own redeemed people what the earth doth not yield unto them he maketh the heaven one way or other furnish unto them as when the Israelites wanted the corne of the earth the Lord gave them of the corne of heaven so that man did eat Angels food not that there is corne in heaven or that Angels do eat any corporal food but manna is so called for the excellency of the food that it might have served for food to Angels if they had any need of food 8. The more excellent the benefit is which God giveth the greater is the ingratitude of him who doth not esteem of it and make use of it as becometh as we see in Israels sinne who did not esteem of Manna as they should have done had the Lord sed them with dust of the earth or roots of grasse be any other m●…n thing they should have had no reason to complain but when he giveth them a new food created every morning for their cause sent down from heaven as fresh furniture every day of such excellent colour taste smell and wholesomenesse what a provocation of God was it not to be content now in special when he gave them abundantly of it He sent them meat to the full Ver. 26. He caused an East-win●… to blow i●… 〈◊〉 heaven and by his power he brought in the So●… winde 27. He rained flesh also upon them as dust and feathered fowles like as the sand of the sea 28. And he let it fall in the midst of their cam●… round about their habitations 29. So they did eat and were well filled for he ga●… them their own desire Here the Lord being tempted by a murmuting and unthankfull people to refute their suspicion of his power sendeth the●… the most delicate flesh that could be found in the world quail●… in abundance till they were all filled Whence learn 1. T●… Lord that he may shew what regard he hath to satisfy good and lawful desires doth sometime grant unto men their unlawfull and unreasonable desires that holy desires may be the better entertained and constantly followed till they be granted as appeareth by the Lords granting of the unreasonable desire of the Israelites after flesh 2. The Lord hath the Commandement of the windes to make them blow from what aire and in what measure he pleaseth He caused an East-winde to blow in the heaven and by his power he brought in the South-winde 3. The Lord can gather so many creatures as he mindeth to make use of at his pleasure he can gather birds and fowles and make their flight longer or shorter as he pleaseth and make them light and fall where he pleaseth and can bring near to mans hand what he hath a mind to give unto him He rained flesh also upon them as dust and feathered fowls like as the sand of the sea and he let them fall in the midst of their camp round about their habitations 4. As the Lord doth grant lawful desires in mercy so also doth he grant sinful desires in wrath So they did eat and were filled for he gave them their own desire 5. When the carnal heart doth meet with the object of his lust he falleth upon it as a beast doth without fear of God or moderation of affection They did eat and were well filled for be gave them their own desire Ver. 30. They were not estranged from their lust●… but while their meat was yet in their mouthes 31. The wrath of God came upon them and sle●… the fattest of them and smote down the chosen m●… of Israel 32. For all this they sinned still and believed not for his wondrous works 33. Therefore their dayes did he consume in vanity and their yeares in trouble In the sixth place he setteth down their impenitency continued in and the Lords judgements poured out one after another upon them Whence learn 1. Sinful lust is unsatiable even when the body is overcharged with the service of it To lust sinfully is a snare but to continue in the slavery of lust is a felling of a mans selfe and a wedding of him unto that lust such was the sin of the carnal Israelites They continued in their lusting and repented not albeit they ●…t time to repent they and their lust did not discord They were not estranged from their lust 2. When men will not be enemies to their own sinful lusts they do provoke the Lord to become enemy to them and to poure wrath on them in the very act of their sinning While their meat was yet in their mouthes the wrath of God came upon them 3. Such as are most head-strong in sinne and take to themselves most liberty to sin and do give example most unto others to sin shall be most notoriously punished High places and eminency in power as it doth not lessen sin but aggravate it so doth it not exempt from judgment but procu●…eth that it should be augmented rather as is to be seen here in the punishment of the Nobles and great men in the camp of Israel The wrath of God came upon them and slew the fattest of them and smote down the chosen men of Israel 4. Such is the perversenesse of
the meanest of men and exalt them how high soever he pleaseth but also to represent from how low a degree of humiliation Christ incarnate was to be raised to the government of his Church and Kingdome he setteth down the mean condition of life wherefrom David was raised to the royal dignity of governing Israel He took him from the sheep solds from following the ewes great with young he brought him to feed Iacob his people and Israel his inheritance From Ver. 72. Learn The duties and properties of a good King are these First He must resolve to be Gods servant in his charge as David was Seconly All his subjects and in special the Lords people must be cared for by him in a civil way as a flock of sheep is cared for by the Pastour David fed them Thirdly A Kings heart must be set uprightly for Gods honour and for the subjects welfare in the whole course of his government He fed them according 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King ●…st de●… prudently with his subjects accomodating the whole ●…se of his dealing with them as their several conditions do re●…ire He guided them by the skilfulnesse of his hands And whatsoever measure David had of those properties were but a shadow of the perfections of Christ in his Government Fifthly neither lawes nor teaching nor miracles nor benefits nor judgments can avail unto the salvation of a people or person till they be put under the hand and guiding of Christ as we are taught here in the example and representation of the Lords dealing with Israel in this Psalme wherein when God hath tried his people with oft repeated mercies and judgements they come to no setled estate till they be put under the Government of David who in this is 〈◊〉 type of Christ. For he closeth with this he guided them by the skilfulnesse of his hands PSAL. LXXIX A Psalme of Asaph THe scattered and captive people of God after the destruction of Ierusalem and of the Temple do put up a pitiful complaint unto God to ver 6. and do pray for a merciful reliefe to his Church and for avenging their blood upon their enemies As for the complaint in it they lament four things First the profanation and desolation of the Lords inheritance and Temple by the heathen their enemies ver 1. Secondly the barbarous cruelty and inhumanity used against them ver 2 3. Thirdly the contempt and mocking of their wicked neighbours in their misery ver 4. Fourthly ●…as they acknowledge this to proceed from Gods displeasure so they lament that it is like to be everlasting ver 5. In their prayer in the latter part of the Psalme they crave First justice upon their enemies ver 6. 7. Secondly pardon of their own sins and deliverance out of their misery for sundry reasons ver 8 9 10 11. Thirdly that God wol●…d reward their inhumane neighbours who mocked at their misery ver 12. And do close their petition with a promise of praise and thanks unto God by the Church in all succeeding ages Whence learn in general 1. The Church of God may be brought so low as here we see once it was 2 So many of Gods people as live to see such publike calamities and misery must not despaire of a recovery but should and may run to God and pray for the Church in affliction expecting order after consusion and after dissipation to see a gathering of Gods people again and after apparent overthrow of Religion a restoring of Gods publick worship as the example of the Psalmist in this Psalm doth teach whose courage and confidence in God for relief of the Lords people is wonderful as the condition of the Church at that time seemed to be desperate As the holy Ghost the enditer of this Psalm doth give warning here to all Churches in all ages to beware to provoke the Lord unto wrath lest he deal with them as he dealt with those Israelites so doth he give warrant to all afflicted Churches to follow the example of this afflicted Church to run to God for help for which cause he hath given this Psalme to be made use of by the Church A Psalme of Asaph Ver. 1. O God the heathen are come into thine inheritance thy holy people have they defiled they have laid Ierusalem on heapes In the first part of this Lamentation Learn 1. Albeit there be no place nor person how near and dear soever unto God exempted from judgement when they are polluted yet the wicked instruments of the judgement poured out upon the place and persons consecrated to God may justly be complained of as here we see O God the heathen are come into thine inheritance 2. When Gods people who should be holy defile themselves and Gods Ordinances it is no wonder that by prophane persons they be punished and their holy things polluted Thy holy Temple have they defiled that is they have abused it dealt with it as a vile and pro●…ane thing 3. Albeit people in Covenant with God have disgraced their holy profession and polluted his ordinances and be justly plagued by seeing holy ordinances put over in the hands of profane men for their cause yet neither will the Lord disclaime his interest in his own ordinances nor do his people lose right and interest in God and in his ordinances when they take with their punishment and do make their addresse to God for reliefe Thy holy Temple have they defiled 4. When God giveth over religious ordinances in the hands of profane men to be abused no wonder if they that are the cause of this do suffer in their civil state also no wonder the City suffer with the Temple Ierusalem have they laid on heaps Ver. 2. The dead bodies of thy servants have they given to be meat unto the fowles of the heaven the flesh of thy Saints unto the beasts of the earth 3. Their blood have they shed like water round about Ierusalem and there was none to bury them From the second part of the lamentation and complaint●… Learn 1. Falling in battel before the enemies may prove that God hath a just cause against the party overcome but cannot prove that the victors cause is good presuppose both parties had appealed to God for there the heathen do overcome and the Lords servants and Saints are slaine and they who are lest alive do complaine of the victors and take with their punishment at Gods hand who doth follow his own quarrel as he pleaseth and will not at mens pleasure sit down and decide appellations when they call to him or stand unto 〈◊〉 time set down by men to him to determine their controversie O God the 〈◊〉 are come into thine inheritance c. The dead bodies of thy servants have they given to be meat to the fowles a●… Heavy and fearful are the judgements temporal which may come upon Gods people when they have provoked God to wrath against them for their sinnes even such as are here
to a mischief and to perdition as here we see I gave them up and they walked in the counsel of their own hearts Ver. 13. O that my people had hearkened unto me and Israel had walked in my wayes Last of all is set down by way of Gods lamenting for his people what felicity they did lose by this their refusing to make God their delight and his voice their rule to walk by First if they had obeyed God their enemies should not have been their Master but they should have been made victorious over their adversaries ver 13 14 15. Next they should have been satisfied with all contentments abundantly set forth under the terms of feeding them with fine wheat and honey This lamenting of God for his peoples misery is borrowed from the manner of men lamenting the misery which their disobedient children have brought upon themselves and is not to be taken so as if there were in God any passion or perturbation or miserable lamentation but this speech is to be conceived as other like speeches in Scripture which are borrowed from the affections of men and are ●…med to move some holy affection in men suitable to that affection from which the Lord taketh the similitude and so O that my people had hearkened unto me serveth to move his people who should hear this expressi●…n to repent and lament their not hearkening unto God and to studie in all time to come to be more obedient unto him even as they would eschew the curse which came upon misbelieving and disobedient Israel and as they desire to obtain the blessings whereof carnal Israelites did come short and did deprive themselves and if it be asked what may be imported by this speech properly We answer O that my people had hearkened unto me c. sheweth these six things First what order the Lord hath set in giving blessings to his visible Church namely that they begin and beleeve in him and study to obey him and that they by means appointed by him should look to have such blessings as he hath promised to beleevers and to obedient people Next this manner of speech sheweth how acceptable and pleasant unto God it is to see the saith obedience and welfare of his people all joyned together in his appointed order Thirdly that the meritorious and culpable cause of mens miserie is not in God but in man who by his sin deserveth it and draweth it on himself Fourthly that God delighteth not in the death or destruction of his people but that they should repent and live Fifthly that this is his will that whosoever shall hear of the evil meeting which the Israelites did give unto God and of the judgement which they did draw upon themselves may be made wise by this lamentation made by God for Israels destruction and so may rather chuse to hearken to God as they did not then to be given over in his wrath to their own lusts and to perish in his indignation as befell them Sixthly that God requireth a suitable meeting of his people to his dispensations that is that they may be so willing to hearken to his voice and so loath to offend him as he doth manifest by word and works his willingnesse to save them and his loathnesse to destroy them From the Lords lamenting Learn further 1. As on the one hand the miscarriage and misery of others before us should make us wise to eschew the evil which befell them to obtain the good whereof they by their disobedience were deprived So on the other hand the willingnesse of God to blesse those who do follow his direction should make us diligent to understand what course God hath prescribed and should make us confident to obtain blessednesse in our endevour to follow it for O that my people had hearkened unto me c. doth teach us so much 2. They may be in the number and estimation of Gods people by vertue of Church-Covenant who for their refusing to follow Gods counsell may come short of Gods blessings for O that my people had hearkened unto me c. maketh this evident 3. He who heareth God uttering his wishes for the conversion of his people and lamenting that his Word is not believed and that his offer of grace is not received doth give God an evill meeting and neither believeth Gods goodnesse nor careth for his own salvation except he joyn with God lamenting his own misbelief in time past and do wish heartily the same wish with God for his own conversion for time to come for this speech O that my people had hearkened unto me c. is framed to this very end to make the hearer willing and so to convert him or else to convict him if he take not hold of the offer 4. Whatsoever be the Lords secret decrees concerning the salvation of some and condemnation of other some in the visible Church yet the meanes of execution of those decrees are so holy and just and wisely carried on as those decrees shall not be particularly revealed to the stumbling of any man but the offer of grace and declaration of Gods goodnesse is so laid out in common that whosoever doth not embrace the same is made inexcusable for when God saith O that my people had harkened unto me he that doth not answer the Lord with O that thou wouldst frame this heart of mine to the obedience of faith hath nothing to say if he be damned for his slighting of the offer so freely held forth unto him and pressed upon him Ver. 14. I should soon have ●…bdued their enemie●… and turned my hand against their adversaries 15. The haters of the LORD should have submitted themselves unto him but their time should have endured for ever 16. He should have fed them also with the finest of the wheat and with honey but of the rock should I have satisfied thee From the good which should have come to his people set downs ver 14 15 6. Learn 1. Gods blessings are not to be looked after except in the wayes of God and i●… any man come short of Gods blessing he beareth the blame himselfe O that Israel had walked in my wayes I should soon have subdued their enemies c. 2. If the Lords people have provoked him to let loose their enemies upon them and to prevaile over them the onely way to have affaires changed is to turn to God and to walk in his wayes If Israel had walked in my wayes I should have turned my hand against their adversaries 3. They that are enemies to the Lords people are haters of the Lord and where the profession of true religion and righteousnesse is hated there the quarrell is common to God with his people for their enemies are here called Haters of God 4. It is a benefit to Gods people and a point of glory to God when Gods enemies and theirs do submit themselves to God albeit but feignedly which good Gods people do hinder when they walk
he proclaimeth the blessednesse of all the Lords Ministers who may alwayes be there ver 4. Fifthly he calleth them blessed who have liberty to come on foot from any part of the country to keep at least the solemn feasts ver 5 6 7. In his prayer he requests in generall terms to be restored to the Lords worship ver 8 9 for two reasons one is because he preferreth the meanest officers condition in Gods house to the most quiet dwelling among the wicked ver 10 Another reason because felicity is to be found in God by the means of his Ordinances ver 11. and mean time while his p●ayer should be granted he resteth by faith on God in whom believers are made blessed whereever they be Ver. 1. HOW amiable are thy tabernables O LORD of hostes The Psalmist being now in exile casteth his eyes upon his own countrey wherein throughout all the land the Lord was worshipped in their several Synagogues but most solemnly in Sion the place where the Ark and the Tabernacle were and putting a difference between the holy Ordinances of Gods worship and the multitude of profane mixed among the godly who did joyn in the worship he beholdeth the glorious beauty of the holy service and places where the occasion thereof was offered and so breaketh out in commendation and admiration of the lovelinesse thereof Whence learn 1. As God is glorious in all his hosts which all are very ready as souldiers to fight for him at his com●…d so is he most glorious in the campe of the visible Church ●…ilitant for here his authori●… justice mercy grace wisdom and power is most of all manifested for the overthrowing of the kingdom of sin and Satan therefore saith he How ●…iable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of hostes 〈◊〉 This beauty of the Lords Churches and places of his residence as it is not discerned by the blind world but only by such as are illuminated with heavenly light so is it highly prized loved and admired by them only for it is the sweet singer of Israel who saith How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of hosts 3. Albeit the world will not believe what here is said nor take this praising of the lovelines of Gods publick worship from the hand of the godly yet the Lord will receive this testimony unto the beauty of his Ordinances from such as do present it before him therefore doth the Psalmist most confidently direct his speech to God himselfe here How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord Ver. 2. My soule longeth yea even fainteth for the courts of the LORD my heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God In the next place he professeth his longing after liberty to enjoy the priviledges of the publick Ordinances albeit he was to have it no wayes but in the societe of such people as were then in the visible Church of whose wickednesse he had sufficient experience they being now in armes against him following Absalom Whence learne 1. The beauty and lovelinesse of Gods publick Ordinances is best discerned and love and longing after th●… most stirred up when a man is deprived of them for a time ●…y soule longeth yea even fainteth for the courts of the Lord. 2. Bodily affliction sharpeneth the sense of spiritual wants and the sense of wan●… of spiritual meanes of comfort augmenteth bodily affliction My soul fainteth my heart and my flesh cryeth out 3. It is not the publick Ordinances alone to be enjoyed in an outward formality which Saints do seek after but it is to finde God in and by the meanes it is to finde the Lords lively operation on their hearts which they long after My heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God Ver. 3. Yea the sparrow hath found an house 〈◊〉 the swallow a nest for herself where she may lay 〈◊〉 young even thine Altars O LORD of hostes my King and my God In the third place he wisheth to be partaker of the publick worship were it in never so mean and despicable a condition so he may enjoy Gods presence in his ordinances he is content to creep into any corner of Gods house and go out and seek his meat and return like a sparrow or swallow Whence learn 1. A soul which loveth communion with God indeed will choose any temporal condition of life how poor soever how despised soever rather then be deprived of what may make better for his spiritual condition as appeareth in the Psalmist who wished to have the place of a Sparrow or of a Swallow any residence near Gods Altar 2. The soul which craveth lively communion with God should cleave close unto the title and interest which he h●…th in God by Covenant as the Psalmist doth here Thine Altar saith he my King and my God Ver. 4. Blessed are they that dwell in thy house they will be still praising thee Selah In the fourth place he proclaimeth the Priests and Levites the Lords Ministers to be blessed men for their priviledge and opportunity to serve the Lord. Whence learn 1. Albeit many who have the means and opportunity of profiting by publike ordinances do not consider the day of their visitation to make use of the means while they have them yet the godly who are deprived of the means and do behold the faire occasions of grace offered by them do count them blessed as here Blessed are they 〈◊〉 dwell in thy house 2. It is a blessed thing indeed to have the occasion of communion with God in publick ordinances and to make use thereof in setting forth the Lords glory and in this respect there are no men in the world more blessed then faithful Ministers Blessed are they that dwell in thy house they will be still praising thee Ver. 5. Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee in whose heart are the wayes of them 6. Who passing through the valley of Baca make 〈◊〉 Well the raine also filleth the pooles 7. They go from strength to strength every one of them in Sion appeareth before God In the fifth place he looketh upon their condition who dwell farre o●… from the Tabernacle who might at least thrice a year come front the farthest corner of the land to keep the solemnities appointed of God and he counteth them blessed albeit in their voyage they should endure never so much toile in travelling and should with difficulty drink their water either rained down from the clouds or drawn from a well or cistern digged with much labour for albeit they should sustain toile and drought in their way yet having refreshments one after another and renewed strength for their journey they should all come at last to the place of publick ordinances in Sion and here he describeth the true and blessed Israelites whether Proselytes or borne Jewes resolved to come and appear before the Lord in the appointed solemnities by these six properties First they encourage themselves for the journey by hope in God to be furnished with strength Blessed
is illuminated to behold and the heart inclined to follow righteousnesse Secondly in the work of daily direction by his Word and Spirit Righteousnesse shall go before him 3. As the way that the Believer must walk in is that which is prescribed by the Lord his leader so the effectual mover of the Believer unto sanctification is the grace of righteousnesse or sanctification which Christ the leader doth send forth into his peoples heart to make them follow the direction given unto them For Righteousnesse shall go before him and set us in the way of his steps PSAL. LXXXVI A Prayer of David THis Psalme agreeth well with the time when David was in trouble being persecuted by Saul The summe of it is a prayer for reliefe consisting of 7. Petitions some of them more generally some of them more particularly expressing his trouble and his desire of relief all which Petitions have reasons joyned unto them serving to strengthen the faith of the supplicant Ver. 1. BOw down thine eare O LORD heare me for I am poore and needy The first Petition is for audience and the reason of his hope to be heard is because of his necessity to be helped Whenc●… learn 1. When a believer hath any Petition to present unto God he may expect accesse unto God and audience and acceptation of his person and prayer O Lord hear me 2. Albeit the supplicant be on earth and God to be found in heaven albeit the supplicant be mean and base both in his own eyes and in effect and God be the high and lofty one that inhabi●…h eternity yet will he humble himselfe to take notice of the supplica●…ion of 〈◊〉 believing supplicant Bow down thine ear O Lord. 3. Of that whereof misbelief would make use unto discouragement and desperation faith maketh a ground of hope to be helped for affliction and weaknesse and want of all help and comfort from man is the Lords forerunner to advertise the believer that the Lord is coming O Lord hear me for I am poor and needy Ver. 2. Preserve my soul for I am holy O thou my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee The second Petition is for protection of his life and the reasons of his hope are taken from the qualities of such a person as hath right to expect Gods protection Whence learne 1. The bodies and soules of Gods children have snares l●…id for them by enemies bodily and spiritual from which they cannot deliver themselves except they do commit the custody thereof u●…o God as the Prophet doth saying Preserve my soul our wit our prudence our power our fighting our fleeing or whatsoever means we can use under heaven are litle worth if God do not preserve us 2. That man hath a ground of hope to be preserved by God who being pursued for his life by malicious persecutors for falsely alledged wrongs done by him can attest God for his innocency in the particular whereof he is charged as here David doth Preserve my soule for I am holy that is free from the fault whereof I am charged or I am a favourite of thine or a man who hath been bountifull in doing good to him that pursueth me for thus much also will the word bear 3. The conscience of studying to please God is very sweet in time of trouble and especially when trouble falleth on for Gods service O my God save thy servant 4. Innocency in a particular cause is not sufficient to bear us out not yet the conscience of out good service done to God but we must make use of the Covenant and put our trust in Gods goodnesse whensoever we do expect any good from God O my God save thy servant that trusteth in thee Ver. 3 Be mercifull unto me O Lord for I cry unto thee daily The third Petition is for mercy and forgivenesse of sin and the reason of hope is because he is a daily supplicant Whence learn 1. Innocency in our carriage toward men and the goodnesse of the cause which we defend may leave us in the mire in time of trouble because of our sinnes whereof we are guilty in other respects except we flee to Gods mercy Therefore when sin is objected mercy must be our refuge and plea Be mercifull to my O Lord. 2. Assiduity and instance in prayer doth promise certainly a good answer after asking seeking and knocking Be mercifull to me for I cry unto thee daily Ver. 4. Rejoyce the soule of thy servant for unto thee O Lord do I lift up my soule 5. For thou Lord art good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon thee The fourth Petition is for comfort the reasons of his hope are because he seeketh his comfort no where else but in God Next because God is gracious to all supplicants When●…e learne 1. As the Lord doth burden his own children sometime with affliction and sorrow for their humiliation and trial of faith so will he also comfort them in due time and give them cause of joy in himselfe for the strengthening of their faith and they may pray for this and expect it Rejoyce the soule of thy servant 2. He that would have comfort from God must set himselfe to seek it in him onely and not look after it elsewhere under the heaven and in this way he may oray for it and expect it as the Psalmist doth here For I lift up my soul unto thee O Lord. 3. The knowledge of Gods goodnesse and mercy is the ●…ife of ●…aith the fountain of consolation and ground of prayer Rejoyce t●…e 〈◊〉 ●…f thy servant for thou O Lord art good 4. Whatsoever evill the sinner doth finde in himselfe there is a remedy in God for it if he 〈◊〉 any good thing God hath it and is ready to communicate it For thou Lord art good If the sinner be smitten with the conscience of sin and deserving of wrath The Lord is ready to forgive If a mans sins do seem so many and heinous as he dare not approach The Lord is plenteous in mercy 5 He who desireth to partake of Gods goodnesse and mercy must resolve to worship the Lord to believe in him and to pray unto him and whosoever taketh this course whatsoever he be without exception he shall finde the Lord to be good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy to all them that call upon him Ver. 6. Give ear O LORD unto my prayer and attend unto the voice of my supplications 7. In the day of my trouble I will call upon thee for thou wilt answer me 8. Among the gods there is none like unto thee O Lord neither are there any worke like unto thy works 9. All nations whom thou hast made shall come and worship thee O Lord and shall glorifie thy Name 10. For thou art great and dost Wondrous things thou art God alone The fifth Petition is for reliefe and deliverance out of his present distresse propounded in the general termes
few to assist it their enemies were many they were straitned with poverty and famine and the hearts and hands of the Godly were weakened they were like to faint and despaire that either Church or State should flourish any more amongst them for comfort in such a time was this Psalme fitted leading the Lords people to live by faith and to work on in the building of the Lords house and reparation of the City looking to God the Builder of his Church and maintainer of his people To which purpose the Psalmist giveth them seven consolations opposite to so many tentations unto discouragement The first is that they should look to God who had founded his owne Temple solidly and so not saint for the weaknesse and fewnesse of the builders ver 1. The second that they should look to Gods love and good will and not be troubled for want of externall power and riches ver 2. The third is that they should look to the prophecies concerning the Church and not be troubled for what present outward appearance and carnall reason did represent ver 3. The fourth is that they should not be troubled for the multitude of their foes for the present time but look to the multitude of friends and converts which they should have hereafter ver 4 5. The fifth is that they should not be troubled with the feare of the ruine of the Church but look to Almighty God who would establish her so that no power should overturn her ver 5. The sixth is that they should not be troubled with the present contempt under which they did lie but look to the glory and estimation which God should put in his owne time upon the Church and her children ver 6. The seventh is that they should not be troubled with their present grief they were in but should look to the spiritual joy and causes thereof which the Lord was to furnish to his people ver 7. Ver. 1. HIs foundation is in the holy mountaines The first comfort of the afflicted Jewes troubled for the hindering of the building of Gods Temple is that God had by his decree and promise made the mountains of Sion and Moriah the place of his rest amongst his people till the Messiah should come in whom these types were to be accomplished and for whose cause they were to be preserved till he came who is the only solid rock whereupon the Church is builded Whence learn 1. When the builders of the Lords Church are few and weak his people had need to be comforted against their feares and doubts as here we see and the way to be comforted in such hard times is to look by faith to God as the builder of his own house who hath laid the foundation upon solid grounds that every believer that trusteth in him may be as Mount Sion which cannot be removed His foundation is on the holy mountaines Ver. 2. The LORD loveth the gates of Sion more then all the dwellings of Iacob The second comfort is that God had chosen Sion above all other places to be his rest and did love there to dwell rather then elsewhere Whence learn 1. The dignity of any place person or society proceedeth not from any thing in the place or society but from the Lords election and free love The Lord loveth the gates of Sion more then all the dwellings of Iacob 2. The love of the Lord to his chosen Church is a solid ground of assurance of her continuance as here in the figure we are taught Ver. 3. Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Selah The third comfort is from the prophecies past about the Church and promises made unto ●…her in figurative termes Whence learn 1. The Church is the incorporation in which the Lord reigneth ruleth and resideth It is the City of God 2. The priviledges of the Church are very glorious the glory of Kings Crowns and Diadems is nothing to them but bodily and temporal shadows of what is spiritually and everlastingly bestowed on the Church Glorious things are sp●…ken of thee 3 Albeit glorious things are bestowed on the Church yet it is not so much any thing already done as what is to be done which maketh the Church blessed it is not present possession but hope not sight but faith which maketh the Church blessed and the Scriptures are a sufficient right to us for all blessings which are to come Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Ver. 4. I will make mention of Rahab and Babylon to them that know me Behold Philistia and Tyre with Ethiopia this man was borne there 5. And of Sion it shall be said This and that man was borne in her and the highest himself shall establish her The fourth comfort is that the Churches chief enemies should be converted to the faith and should count it their greatest honour so to be Whence learn 1. It is among the troubles of the Church that she ha●…h so many enemies and those so mighty and potent as the Egyptians and Babylonians I will make mention of Rahab that is Egypt and Babylon and Palestina and Tyre and Ethiopia which are here named as the most eminent oppressors of the Church among all other Kingdomes 2. It should comfort the Church that God is able to make her chiefest enemies to become Converts and that he hath done it sundry times and will yet do it more and that he can take order with those enemies which shall not be converted as he did with Rahab and Babylon for I will make menti●…n of Rahab and Babylon to them that know me signifieth a mention-making of them viz. to the edification of the Churches children both concerning what God had done to those Nations in justice and what he would do to them in mercy or unto other enemies like unto them 3. As it is the glory and comfort of the Church to have her enemies made Converts so is it honourable to the enemies were they never so potent in the world to be Citizens of the City of God I will make mention of them that this man was born there that is in the City of God 4. The conversion of men from Paganism and Idolatry unto fellowship in the Covenant with the Church is a sort of new birth to the externally converted f●…om which their new birth and n●…w being is to be reckoned This man was borne there 5. As whatsoever honour men have in the world it is not to be compared with the honour of regeneration and being born Citizens of the Church so whatsoever contempt the members of the Church do suffer of the world it 's made up by the honour of being bo●…n in the Church for of Sion it shall be said This and that man were born in her 6. I here is no reason to feare the ruine of the Church or the not continuing of her from age to age to be a mother and receptacle of Converts For the highest himself shall establish her
the habitation of thy throne mercy and truth shall go before thy face The ninth reason for strengthening his faith taken from the properties and attendants of GODS Kingdome is this Justice and judgemet are the supporters of his throne and mercy and truth are his officers preparing way for the LORD when he is about to do justice in favour of his people therefore I need not fear that the promise of Christs Kingdome shall faile Whence learn 1. Whatsoever oppression or desolation the Lords people may be under the unalterable tighseousnesse of GOD cannot f●…ile to execute justice and judgement for punishing of the oppressour and relieving of his people for Iustice and judgement are the habitation of his throne or the base whereupon his throne is setled 2. Albeit the sinnes of the Lords people might stop the way of relief coming to them or prejudice them of having any benefit from justice yet mercy and truth are ready at hand to prepare the way by pardon of their sins and performing all promises unto them Mercy and truth shall go before his face Ver. 15. Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound they shall walk O LORD in the light of thy countenance 16. In thy Name shall they rejoyce all the d●…y and in thy righteousnesse shall they be exalted 17. For thou art the glory of their strength and in thy favour our horne shall be exalted 18 For the Lord is our defence and the holy One of Israel is our King The tenth reason for strengthening of his faith is taken from the blessednesse of Believers in GOD whose properties and priviledges are set ●…own in order six all of them proving GODS people to be blessed Whence learn 1. Whatsoever are the afflictions of the LORDS people and in what danger and difficulty soever they be in yet are they certainly blessed Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound 2. Those are to be accounted GODS people who with a good heart joyne with others at GODS command in the worship and service of GOD Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound for the joyful sound was the sound of the silver trumpets which were blowne at the joyning in battel in their warres or for their journeys or gathering of Assemblies or intimation of solemne feasts and at the offering of the sacrifices of Israel Psal. 81. Numb 10. Ioel 2. And the knowing of this joyful sound signifieth the alacritie of Gods people to serve and obey the Lord as he in his Ordinances should warne direct and guide them 3. The properties and priviledges of B●…lievers in GOD make sure proof of their blessednesse for they live in grace and favour with GOD whether they do sensibly feell it or not as their persons so also their carriage in faith and upright endeavour to please GOD are alwayes acceptable to GOD And this is the first priviledge of GODS people They shall walke O LORD in the light of thy countenance 4. Believers have matter and just cause to rejoyce in GOD for their interest in him what soever be their present condition In thy Name shall they rejoyce all the day This is another priviledge of Gods people 5. The joy of Believers is underpropped and enlarged when they consider that Gods righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ is imputed unto them and Gods righteousnesse in performing his promises is set on work for their direction encouragement reformation and defence And in thy righteousnesse shall they be exalted This is the third priviledge of Believers 6. Albeit the godly finde no power in themselves either to do or suffer no power either to defend themselves or oppose their enemies yet they want not strength either imployed for them or furnished as they need unto them by God in a glorious manner as they will see if his helping them be rightly looked upon For thou Lord saith he art the glory of their strength wherein they may glory in their weakest condition And this is the fourth priviledge of GODS people 7. The free grace and love of GOD graciously tendered to Believers is the ground of their strength comfort confidence and gloriation because it is the fountaine of all their felicity and well-spring of life to them to look unto this that they are in favour with GOD And in thy favour our horne shall be exalted And this is the fifth priviledge of the LORDS people 8. Albeit B●…lievers be destitute of help from men yet they are neither left without protection nor without government because God or Christ who is God is the Churches King to protect guide and governe her for The Lord is our defence or shield and the holy One of Israel is our King the O●…iginal also will bear of and to The Lord is our defence of and to the holy One of Israel is our King whereby what may be said of the typical King David and of the true King Christ considered as man may give assurance that God would be their defence and King because David ann Christ as man were Gods Kings and Kings for Gods service and honour authorized of God and devoted to him And this is the sixth priviledge of GODS people All which priviledges are so many proofes of the blessednesse of the Believers in whatsoever condition they are 9. It is wisdome for every Believer when he is about to reckon the riches of GODS people and to set forth their priviledges to make application thereof to himself in amongst the rest of that number as the example of the Psalmist here doth teach us who in the later part of this computa●…ion doth so In thy favour our horne shall be exalted the Lord is our defence our King Ver. 19 Then thou spakest in vision to thy holy One and saidst I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people 20. I have found David my servant with my holy oile have I anointed him In the second part of the Psalmist for the further comfort of the Church in her saddest condition and to strengthen yet more the godly in their troubles 1. He expoundeth the Covenant of Grace made with Christ represented typically by David because he must be looked upon only as the shadow but Christ as the chief party and as he in whom the reall substance is accomplished perfectly Therefore shall we speak of both as the word doth relate unto the one or unto the other or to both in severall respects And first of the circumstances of the Covenant and then of the several Articles thereof for the Psalmist marketh 1. The time of revealing of the Covenant They to wit when it pleased God to let it be known that he purposed to take a course for the comfortable governing of his Church and People 2. He observeth the way of revealing it which he sheweth to be by vision he spake to his holy servant to wit Samuel or Nathan 3 He commendeth the man who was to rule as fit
and able to be helpful to his people I have laid help upon one that is mighty 4. He sheweth the cause of his prese●…ment to be his owne free love and good will I have exalted one chosen o●…t of the people 5. He nameth him and his offi●…e I have found David my servant 6. He telleth of his spiritual furniture figured sorth by anointing With my holy Oile have I anointed him Whence learn 1. Albeit the Lord hath alwayes a special care of the governing of his people yet doth he not at all times alike clearly make manifest this care by giving comfortable Governours he hath his own times as to hide his face in this particular so his own then also when to shew his love Then thou spakest 2. The Lords minde is not to be found by conjectures but by his Word revealed to his holy Prophets Then thou spakest to thy holy One in vision and said 3. As the Lo●…ds people stand in need of a good King a man of power able and willing to be helpful to the subjects and not hurtful so God must be the inabler of him and designer of him after the way he pleaseth and the maker of him to be effectually helpful I have laid help upon one that is mighty 4. It is conducible to the intent a Ruler may be helpful to the subjects that there be some naturall tie between him and them for this God did provide for in the appointing comfortable Governours over his own people I have exalted one chosen out of the people 5. That one is preferred before another or advanced to any place of power or trust over others in mercy it is of Gods grace free choice and good will I have exalted one chosen out of the people 6. The man who must in his government do good to Gods people must be a man for God Gods servant not by office and duty onely but of a set purpose also I have sound David my servant 7. The man whom God imployeth in Government for his people must be furnished with gifts and graces of his Spirit figured by holy oyle With my holy oyle have I anointed him 8. As David was in type so Christ is in truth and in all respects more eminently then David●… strong helper mighty to save appointed of the Father to help us in all cases and to whom we are directed to go that we may finde helpe on whom helpe doth lie in whom we sha●… surely finde help he is one of our kinde taken out from among the people acquainted with the meanest condition his subjects can be in exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour chosen and predestinated as man for the office before the world was devoted to the service of the Redemption sanctification government and salvation of his people and filled as man with the holy Ghost above measure that out of his fulnesse we may all receive grace for grace of whom it is most really true With my holy oyle have I anointed him Ver. 21. With Whom my hand shall be established mine arme also shall strengthen him From this ver to the 38. he bringeth forth tenne promises as so many heads and articles of this Covenant whereof this is the first concerning assistance to be given to David in type and to Christ more substantially and in more eminent effects Whence learn 〈◊〉 As to David in his Kingdome so to Christ as man in his Kingdom God hath engaged his outwardly assisting power constantly With whom my hand shall be established 2. As to David so to Christ full furniture of power for all the parts ●…f government is p●…omised in favour of all the subjects of his Kingdom●… Mine arme also shall strengthen him as the work is great or difficult divine strength shall enable him to go about it and do it Ver. 22. The enemy shall not exact upon him nor the sonne of wickednesse afflict me The second promise is that as Davids subjects albeit they had many battels yet were they not subdued in his time nor made tributaries to their enemies nor made miserable by them so shall Christs subjects and kindly converts unto him be sound during his time which is from generation to generation and for ever albeit troubled by the spiritual enemies of his Kingdome yet they shall not be made tributaries voluntary servants or miserable slaves to them for sinne shall not have dominion over them nor shall Satan or persecuters have such power as to drive them away from their liege Lord Jesus Christ the true David the true King of the I●…rael of God The enemy shall not exact upon him nor the sonne of wickednesse afflict him or make him really miserable for all things shall work together for their good Ver. 23. And I will beat down his foes before his face and plague them that hate him The third promise is of the destroying the enemies of Davids and Christs Kingdome which albeit they should not want enemies both open enemies openly envading the Kingdome or opposing it to their power and also inward secret enemies who in heart should wish the hurt and harm of their Kingdom yet God should dest●…oy as Davids enemies so far as might serve the type so Christs enemies more eminently and in a more compleat manner and measure I will beat down his enemies before his face this is for open enemies I will plague them that bate him this is for secret intestine enemies in special both these sorts shall be permitted to exercise Christs subjects but shall at length be fully destroyed Ver. 24. But my faithfulnesse and my mercy shall be with him and in my Name shall his horne be exalted The fourth promise is for removing all difficulties and impediments which might hinder the growing of Christs-Kingdom and of his subjects unto full glory for here the promi●…e as it relates unto the type hath not the accomplishment clearly and fully Whence learn 1. There are two things which do oppugne and assault faith the one is the greatnesse of the work and benefit promised the other is the sinnes of these to whose behoof the promise is made but Gods faithfulnesse and mercy promised to be with Christ for the benefit of his subjects doth answer both those obstacles for Gods promise must be accomplished how great things soever he hath promised there is nothing too hard for him and Gods mercy taketh away the obstacle of unworthiness and ill-deserving by reason of sin Mercy holdeth truth on upon the course thereof toward us when justice otherways might break it off from us But my faithfulnesse and my mercy shall ●…e with him 2. The subjects of Christs Kingdom want not matter of gloriation albeit they have nothing in themselves to boast of Gods power misdom goodnesse and mercy manifested in the Word is the only ground of their gloriation In my Name shall his horne be exalted for when Christs subjects glory in God through him Christs glory is exahed in Gods Name Ver. 25. I will
rejoyce and be glad all our dayes 5. Were ou●… trouble never so great and of long continuance the renewed intimation of Gods reconciliation to us sh●…ll season and sweeten all our trouble recompense all our losses and make our condition in this short and miserable life tolerable yea in God very comfortable Make us glad according to the dayes wherein thou hast afflicted us and the yeares wherein we have seen evill Ver. 16. Let thy work appear unto thy servants and thy glory unto their children The fourth Petition is that God would continue the work of building and enlarging of his own Church and of glorifying himselfe in their s●…ght and in the sight of the posterity from generation to generation Whence learn 1. The building purging enlarging propagating of the Church and manifesting of Gods care for it is the Lords own proper work which he will not leave off but albeit he hide his working for a time yet is he on his work and his people should pray for and may expect the manifestation of it Let thy work appear unto thy servants 2. As it is the glory of the Lord to manifest his grace an●… mercy toward his people or visible Church so the desire of his people is to have the Lord glorified no lesse th●…n to have themselves preserved or comforte●… Let thy work appear to thy servants and thy glory to their children 3. The Church in every age should have a care that the posterity may be partakers of the same merciful work of God which they in their time have had experience of and that their children may profit by the co●…ections of their predecessors Let thy work appear to thy servants and thy glory to their children Ver. 17. And let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us and establish thou the work of our hands upon us yea the work of our hands establish thou it In this last verse are the two last heads of his prayer The first Petition is that God would beautify his people with his holy Ordinances with order and unity and peace with a holy conversation and the evidences of his dwelling among them as his own confederate people proper subjects of his Kingdome and domesticks of his own family Whence learn 1. As God is the glory of his own people in whom is their beauty and ornament whereby they are made honourable in the sight of all Nations as the Bride is made comely by the attire and ornaments put upon her so should his people esteem of him affect and love him remember him and seek their beauty in him Let the beauty of the Lord be upon us 2. Then is the beauty of the Lord upon his people and seen to be on them when they behave themselves as his covenanted people walking in faith and obedience before him and he sheweth himselfe their covenanted God protecting and blessing them Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us and this Petition was granted all the dayes of Ioshuah and of the Elders that outlived Ioshuah The sixth Petition is that God would blesse the endeavours of his people for promoting of Gods work among them and for transmitting his Ordinances and his truth to the posterity Whence learn 1. Whosoever do pray for the advancing of the Lords work in his Church must resolve not to be idle but to engage themselves to endeavour in their places and callings according to their power th●… promoting of his work as becometh his servants and instruments Establish thou the worke of our hands 2. Whosoever go about the building of the Lords Church and promoting of Religion must acknowledge that the successe of their labour dependeth onely upon God who must be entreated for the blessing Establish thou the work of our hands 3. In respect that our work is so mixed and defiled with imperfections and sins that God may justly withdraw himselfe from it we must the more earnestly deal with God to keep his own hand about his work and about our hands in it as the twice repeating of the Petition doth import Yea the work of our hands establish thou it PSAL. XCI ALbeit this Psalm hath no inscription nor the name of the penman who did write it yet Satan could not deny it to be the Lords Word for out of this Psalm he brought one of his darts against our Saviour Matth. 4. and the Promises which are made here to the believer are so much more strongly ours as Christ head of all his people hath interest therein as man and hath taken them to him in our name Ver. 1. HE that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty The summe of the Psalme is an encouragement to believe in God by nine motives or inducements most of them being precious Promises whereunto Christ our Lo●…d hath the first right and title and we onely in and through him The first motive is because the believer shall have the warme and comfortable protection of God Almighty Whence learn 1. Trusting in God is the means of entertaining of constant conjunction and communion with God for he that is a believer dwelleth in the secret place of the most High 2. The unsearcheable depths of the riches of Gods truth grace power and goodnesse and of his other attributes whereupon faith doth fixe it selfe are a mystery to the world which carnal reason knoweth not nor how to make use thereof and therefore is well compared to a secret place He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High 3. In the most High is whatsoever the Believer standeth in need of a habitation well furnished with ease comfort peace refreshment protection and whatsoever else a soule could wish for the secret place of the most High where the believer may and must dwell is Gods truth and love and unto him that dwelleth here is the Promise made 4. The Believer is not exempted by his faith from trouble yea trouble and exercise from his enemies he may surely expect but he is exempted from being taken overcome and destroyed by them for a refuge even the secret place of the most High here is provided for him 5. He that betaketh himselfe unto God for refuge and will make his refuge his habitation shall not be refused lodging nor be thrust out when he is entered He shall abide in the shadow of the Almighty 6. The scorching heat of persecution shall not prevaile against the Believer for Gods omnipotencie shall be imployed for his protection and consolation He shall abide in the shadow of the Almighty Ver. 2. I will say of the LORD He is my refuge and my fortresse my God in him will I trust The second motive is the Psalmists example who in his owne experience having felt the good of trusting in God in hardest straits doth resolve to believe in him still Whence learne 1. He that hath experience of the fruit of faith is the fittest man to bear
and comforts given to any one beleever are not proper to him only but common to all beleevers and the man who can apply these promises to himself is the fittest man to bear witnesse of the interest which others have therein for what the Psalmist hath applied to himself he extendeth to all in substance The righteo●…s shall flourish 2. The godly shall get up their head notwithstanding of whatsoever weight of troubles laid upon them and they shall constantly grow up to the full stature of perfection whatsoever opposition be made They shall flourish like the Palme-tree he shall grow like a Cedar in Lebanon 3. The Lords children are like trees which do not grow in every soile are not nourished with every moisture the place of their planting growth and flourishing is the house of the Lord where the Word and Spirit of the Lord joyned with the holy ordinances may be had for food They are planted in the house of the Lord and fl●…rish in the Courts of our God 4. Not every barren tree or weed not every one who is in the visible Court of Gods Church doth grow and flourish or is made partaker of the spiritual grace and blessing of the ordinances but only planted ones that is such plants as the heavenly Father hath planted for to those only who by Covenant have embraced God is the promise made Those that be planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the Courts of our God 5. True beleevers shall still persevere and the decay of the outward man shall not hinder the renewing of their inward man day by day and their last works shall be better then their first They shall still bring forth fruit in old age they shall be fat and flourishing 6. The end of the Lords destroying of the wicked and of his blessing of the true beleever with the growth of grace and perseverance to the end is the glory of Gods righteousnesse singlenesse in Covenant-making and of his constant affection to uprightnesse for these threatenings and promises shall be made good To shew that the Lord is upright 7. Whosoever neglect to give glory unto God the beleever will not faile to lay his own weight upon God and build all his felicity on him being assured that he will neither flee from nor faile the godly He is my rock 8. L●…t the Lord do what he pleaseth let the wicked prosper for a while and the godly be troubled for a while yet God is wise and just and holy and that man hath profited well in the school of God who give●…h this glory unto God constantly as the Ps●…lmist doth here He is my rock and there it no unrighteousnesse in him PSAL. XCIII IN this Psalme for the comfort of Gods people against the multitude and power of their enemies and the greatnesse of Kings and Potentates in the world who oft times are like to overflow devoure and drown the Church the glory of the Lord is described in whom is the Churches defence comfort and victory For this end f●…st the praises of God for the Churches comfort are set down absolutely ver 1 2. Then the opposition of the enemies of the Church is compared to the growing flood or raging sea ver 3. And thirdly the prai●…s of God are set down in opposition to their power ver 4 5. with the use of this doctrine ver 7. Ver. 1. THE LORD reigneth he is clothed with Majestie the LORD is clothed with strength wherewith he hath girded himselfe the world also is established that it cannot be moved 2. Thy throne is established of old thou art from everlasting From the praises of God absolutely set down for the comfort of the Church in all respects and for strengthening of their f●…ith specially against all her enemies Learn 1. Howsoever matters concerning the Church or any member thereof shall go whatsoever he be that hath power for troubling of the Church God is he who is great Governour of all and this ●…s one ground of confidence and comfort to the Lords people The Lord reigneth 2. The outward splendor of ear●…ly Kings and Potenta●…s in the world opposite to Christs Kingdom is no small tentatio●… to Gods people but the beleever must oppose unto this the g●…orious government of God He is clo●…thed with Majesty 3 How strong soever the adverse powers of the world do see●… it must not terrifie the beleever in following the Lords cause b●… his st●…ength must be opposed thereun●…o and that so much the more comfortably as Gods strength is not borrowed from ●…y as the strength of the creature is The Lord is cl●…thed with strength wherewith he ●…th girded himself 4. The 〈◊〉 of the constant guiding of the world sheweth the power and wisdom of God employed much more in setling the work of his Church for whose cause the world was made and is upheld and est●…blished The world also is established that it cannot be moved 5 The Lords Kingdom in his Ch●…h is not like the new upsta●…ts in this world which are of short standing unstable If any King be kind to his Church his people have reason to thank God but they must not lean to such a King his ●…eign shall be but short and if any King be froward and oppose himself to the Church we must not be too much feared for him because his Kingdom is but lately begun and is of short continuance but the Kingdom of the Lord is an ancient Kingdom and well setled Thy throne is established of old 6. The eternity of God is the ground of the immutability of his Kingdom and of the perpetual comfort of the Church against all opposers Thou art from everlasting Ver. 3. The floods have lifted up O LORD the floods have lifted up their voice the floods lift up their waves In the second pl●…ce is the tentation of the Church they are like to be ●…ve flowed as with a deluge by the multitude of powerfull enemies whereof the Church complaineth unto God Whence learn 1. It is no wonder to see the world rising up tumultuously to overthrow the Church and as it were a deluge coming upon them to drown and devoure all no wonder to heare the enemies threatening destruction to the Chur●…h like to the noise of waters after raine coming down the mountains upon them which are not able to flee The floods have lifted up the floods have lifted up their voice and the third time the flood●… lift up their waves 2. The best way to encounter threatenings and feares is to oppose God unto them and to lay them forth before the Lord that he may answer them as here the Psalmist doth The floods have lifted up O Lord saith he c. Ver. 4. The LORD on high is mightier then the noise of many waters yea then the mighty waves of the sea In the third place he sets down the power of God in opposition to all the b●…ags and malice and power of the enemies as very
acknowledge Gods power and mercy in our supplications so also it is our duty to glorify the mercy of God afte●… the self experience of it Thy mercy O Lord held me up Ver. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soule He setteth down here a further benefit of his faith in God to wit that by what he saw in God he found comfort and joy in all his perplexities Whence learne 1. In the time of danger or of narrow trial many questions and doubts and discourses of minde use to arise which did not appear in time of ease and these multiplied thoughts do breed perplexity anxiety and grief which call for comfort as the experience of the Psalmist doth teach In the multiude of my thoughts within me c. 2. No ease for a perplexed soule till it go to God in Christ the resting stone in Sion and in him support is to be found under burdens and comfort against whatsoever cause of grief yes and more also joy and delight swallowing up all grievances 〈◊〉 the Psalmist by experience did finde usually In the multitude of my thoughts wi●…hin me thy comforts delight my soul now Gods comforts are Gospel comforts Ver. 20. Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee which frameth mischief by a law 21. They gather themselves together against the soule of the righteous and condemne the innocent blood He sheweth what use he made of the oppressors wickednesse for supporting of his own faith to wit that he was perswaded that God allowed not their mischievous courses howsoever they pretended to do what they did by a Law because not the good of the subject but the overthrow of the godly was intended by them Whence learne 1. The seat of Justice within the visible Church may possibly turn enemies to piety and righteousnesse and to those that follow Gods Word In which case the grief tentation wrastling and trial of the godly is not small 〈◊〉 the Psalmists experience doth teach us who here cometh to God with a question Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee 2. As the Thrones of Justice are honourable are countenanced and protected of God when they decree and execute righteousnesse so they lose their reputation and are de●…uded of Gods approbation comfort and defence when they decree and execute iniquity Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee 3. Albeit wicked men ofttimes love to have the appearance and shadow of equiry yet unrighteousnesse impiety oppression is not the more justifiable that it be covered with the authority of a law but rather God will abhorte that wickednesse which is enjoyned by a law so much the more as it hath pretence of law Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee that forgeth mischief by a Law 4. The iniquity of persecutors is the matter of confidence for the oppressed for if our adversaries be against God and against us also then have we fellowship with God in a common cause Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee saith he 5. When mischief is enacted by Law then shortly may the godly be pannelled as criminally guilty and they who allow the Law shall be found ready to sit upon Assises to condemn the righteous as the experience of the Psalmist doth shew They gather themselves together against the soule of the righteous and condemn the innocent blood Ver. 22. But the LORD is my defence and God is the rock of my refuge 23. And he shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut them off in their own wickednesse yea the LORD our God shall cut them off From this consideration he draweth two conclusions one assuring him of his own protection ver 22. another assuring him of the destruction of the adversary ver 23. Whence learne 1. As nothing save faith in God can uphold a man in time of persecution so by persecution and trouble God useth to cause his own to make use of faith and to draw nearer hand unto him as the Psalmist did finde by experience saying But God is my defence 2. It is needful that he who would have Gods help and protection in a particular good cause should see that the reconciliation of his person be solidly grounded on the Covenant of Gods grace My God is the rock of my refuge 3. The godly may from Gods Word give out damnatory decrees against their persecutors which surely shall he executed as here thrice destruction is pronounced by the Psalmist against the oppressors 4. The destruction intended against the godly by their oppressors is as ready ●…s any thing to be the trap to take themselves in God shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut thent oft in their own wickednesse 5 How little appearance soever there be of the vengeance of God upon wicked Rulers abusing their power against the godly for their righteousnesse and piety yet the overthrow of them must not be doubted of because of the Covenant past between God and his servants who serve him in suffering for righteousnesse for the repeating of the sentence of destruction the third time against such oppressors doth teach so much Yea the Lord our God shall cut them off PSAL. XCV THis Psalme is applied to Christ by the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. Whereof there are two parts In the first is an exhortation to worship God in Christ or Christ God with the Father and holy Spirit dwelling among them in the Temple and representing unto them his future incarnation and the execution of his offices in types and figures The arguments of pralsing and worshiping of him are five The first because he is the rock of our salvation ver 1 2. The second because of his greatnesse ver 3. The third for his power ver 4. The fourth because he created all things and us his people ver 5 6. The fifth because he is our covenanted God and Pastor ver 7. In the latter part of the Psalm is another exhortation unto the visible Church to evidence their obedience of saith and not to harden their heart in the time of Gods dealing with them by his Word as their fathers did who perished in the wildernesse for their provocation ver 8 9 10 11. Ver. 1. O Come let us sing unto the LORD let us make a joyfull noise to the Rock of our salvation 2. Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalmes From the first exhortation unto a chearful praising and worshipping of God manifesting himselfe in Christ to his Church and unto joyful thanksgiving for salvation offered and granted to us in him which is the first reason to move them to the duty Learn 1. As the necessity and acceptablenesse of the duty of praising God and thanksgiving unto him is very remarkable so is our unreadinesse unto the duty and unchearfulnesse in it observable also for the frequent and pressing
exhortations thereunto do intimate so much unto us O come let us sing unto the Lord let us make a noise let us come before him 2. Every one but specially the Lords Ministers should stirre up their people and others also to this duty to discharge it not only in secret but also publickly in their Congregations and that with chearfulnesse with heart and voice whatsoever shall be their private grievances and burdens Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving and make a joyful noise unto him with Psalms 3. Whatsoever evil or grief do trouble us there is reason of joy and praise and thanks when we look to Jesus Christ and his benefits Make a joyful noise unto the Rock of our salvation From him is our full deliverance and upon him lieth our victory over sin Satan death hell and all enmity founded as upon a Rock 4. It is time to come before God for mercy to prevent justice while yet we are spared and he is not come to us in judgement for so the Word in the original giveth ground signifying coming speedily and with prevention Let us speedily come before his presence or preoccupy his presence 5. He that cometh to God in Christ meeteth with his reconciled face for the coming to the Tabernacle the Ark and mercy-seat did signify and promise so much and therefore it is said Let us come before his presence or before his face 6. Singing of Psalmes should be done as a matter of honouring God and not as a matter of pleasing our own eares or the eares of others Let us come with thanksgiving or confession and praising and make a joyfull noise unto him with Psalmes Ver. 3. For the LORD is a great God and a great King above all gods Another reason of praising Christ is his greatnesse and supremacie above all Rulers and above all imaginable excellency Whence learn 1. He that hath a minde to praise God shall not want matter of praise as they who come before Princes do who for want of true grounds of praise in them do give them flattering words For the Lord is a great God for power and preheminency for strength and continuance 2. Except we put all things that bear the name of excellency under Gods feet whethe●… they be Angels or Princes or whatsoever the world maketh their god we do not give him his due honour He is a great King above all gods Ver. 4. In his hand are the deep places of the earth the strength of the hills is his also A third reason of his praise is this he is strong sustaining by his power sea and earth and all things of weight Whence learn 1. Whatsoever is most secret and remote from mens power or from our sight and knowledge God hath it at his disposing for he sustaineth it and maketh it subsist In his hand are the deep places of the earth 2. There is nothing of any strength among all the creatures which hath not its strength borrowed from God The strength of the hills is his also Ver. 5. The sea is his and he made it and his hands formed the dry land 6. O come let us worship and bow down let us kneel down before the LORD our maker A fourth reason of Christs praise is because he is the Creatour of all things and to be worshipped of us as our Creatōu●… That Christ as God or God to be incarnate one with the Father and holy Spirit is here intended appeareth by the command given to the worshippers to present themselves in the Temple and to kneel down toward the place of the A●…k before God dwelling between the Cherubims that is before Christ God to be incarnate Whence learn 1. All things were made by Christ whether high or low Coloss. 1. 16. And it was meet that our Saviour should be no other then he by whom sea and dry land were made so great is the work which the Mediator hath in hands The se●… is his and be made it and his hands formed the dry land 2. Christ as he is one with the Father and holy Spirit in greatnesse and power in respect of his Godhead and divine nature so is he one with the Father and holy Spirit in the capacity of divine honour O come let us worship and show down 3. Religious kneeling is a part of divine worship whereby we testify our absolute submission unto and highest giving of honour to God in soul and body and this honour is incommunicable to any creature Come let us worship and bow down let us kneel before the Lord our maker Ver 7. For he is our God and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand to day if ye will hear his voice The fifth reason of Christs praise is because he is our God and Pastor of his Church by office of his Mediatorship Whence learn 1. God deserveth praise of all the world but specially of his Church because of the near relation of Covenant between God and his Church Let us worship and bow down for he is our God 2. The good shepherd of the Church who layeth down his life for his sheep the great Doctor and Prophet of the Chuech the Mediator of the Covenant of grace and covenanted spouse of the Church is very God and was knowne believed on and worshipped as very God before his incarnation He is our God and we are the people of his pasture 3. Christ the Make●… the God the Mediator and Pastor of the Church doth not only effectually feed his people by teaching but also effectually governeth and defendeth his Church by his omnipotent power We are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand whom his Almighty hand and power governeth and protecteth in all ages Ver. 8. Harden not your heart as in the provocation and as in the day of temptation in the wildernesse 9. When your fathers tempted me proved me and saw my work 10. Fourty years long was I grieved with this generation and said It is a people that do ●…re in their heart and they have not knowne my wayes In the latter part of the Psalme which beginneth in the former verse To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart 〈◊〉 he giveth another exhortation to his Church visible to believe and obey the voice of our great Prophet Jesus Christ as the Apostle Heb. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. teacheth us to expound it The main argument to enforce the exhortation is lest the curse of God should overtake the disobedient and they should be debarred from heaven and happinesse as the misbelieving Israelites were secluded from Canaan and from heaven signified by it the history may be seen Exod. 17. Whence learue 1. The voice of God in the Scriptures in the Gospel appointed to be preached by sent Ministers is the voice of God the Father God the Son and God the holy Spirit one God in three persons for all who do grant the Scriptures to
be divine do acknowledge also that the Scriptures are the voice of God the Father and this Psalme the Apostle Heb. 3. 7. calleth the saying of the holy Ghost and in that same place he expoundeth his voice of whom this place doth speak to be the voice of the Sonne Jesus Christ and so the voice of God in the Scriptures in the Gospel appointed to be preached by sent messengers is the voice of God the Father Son and holy Spirit as David also doth teach us 2 Sam. 23. 2 3. The Spirit of the Lord spake by me there is the person of the holy Spirit The God of Israel said there is the ordinary designation of the person of the Father without secluding of the VVord or Spirit The Rock of Israel spake to me there is the description of the person of the Son who is the Builder of the Church his house and the foundation whereupon his Church is builded against which the gates of hell shall not prevail 2. The visible Catholick Church which hath the Word of God preached unto them and are in Covenant with him is the people of Christs pasture and sheep of his hand wherein may be found many such as harden their heart and perish and so are not all of them elect persons for To day if ye will hear his voice is spoken unto all to whom the Word of God doth come and doth bring them in the bond of the Covenant to hear his voice 3. Of such as are in Covenant with God in Christ to believe and obey his voice those only are actually true disciples who have this property to love to believe and to obey Gods voice to yield their heart to the Lords Word To day if ye will hear his voice is here the probation of their covenanted profession 4. The present time only is the opportunity of salvation or embracing of the offer of Gods grace and testifying of our obedience of saith we are not sure how long the Word shall remain with us or we with it To day if ye will hear his voice 5. How ignorant weak and unable soever a man be by nature to believe and obey the voice of God yet seeing God doth offer himselfe by his Word to cure him of all his evils he cannot endure that a man should wittingly willingly reject the counsel of the Lord and resolutely strengthen himself in his natural misbelief and disobedience for this were to harden his own heart yet more which here is forbidden To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your heart 6. The example of other mens sinnes should be made use of to make us wise for eschewing the like as here the history of the peoples murmuring against God and his Ministers is for this end recorded from Exod. 17. 3 4. concerning their tentation of God and provocation of him in the willernesse 5. It is to good purpose that we look upon the sins of our fore-fathers and upon Gods judgements on them for their sins that we may be humbled m●…de watchful against heredita●…y sins so this end is the time told them When your fathers tempted me proved me 8. He that maketh question ei●…her of Gods power or good will after he hath had experience and proof thereof burieth unthankfully the Lords bounty and doth draw a great deal deeper in the sin for this doth aggravate the provocation of God by the carnal Israelites here that they had often proof what God could do They saw my works saith he 9. The Lord not only marketh mens sins but also doth reckon how long they continue in them Fourty yeares long was I grieved 10. M●…sbelieving of God and not submitting our selves to his government is a vexing of his Spirit and a provocation of him to reject the sinner Fourty yeares long was I grieved with this generation 11. The errors of the minde are dangerous but the errors of the heart are yet more dangerous for the faults of the minde simply considered are ignorance and error but the fault of the heart is a loving of darknes and error the error of the minde saith I knew not I did not understand such a duty but the error of the heart saith no lesse then I will not know I desire not to hear of I care not for such a duty I said it is a people that do erre in their heart and they have not known my wayes that is they have not regarded my wayes have not allowed of them or loved them for otherwayes they were not simply ignorant of them they heard his words and saw his works 12. Not to subject our selves to such and such particular hard exercises difficulties straits and sad dispensations as it pleases God to put us under is a not knowing and disapproving of the ways of God which he followeth in dealing with his people and is no lesse then if we did take upon us to be wiser then he and to counsel and direct him how to govern the world and our particulars better then he doth They erre in heart and have not known my wayes Ver. 11. Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest To enforce the exhortation the Lord repeateth the doom pronounced upon such as harden their own hearts in their unbelief and disob●…ience of the voice of God to wit that he sware they should not enter into his rest that is they should not enter into the rest of reconciliation and peace with God which is a part of the believers rest whereof the Apostle speaketh commenting on this place Heb. 4. 3. nor into the rest of Canaan the type of heaven so they ●…ied in the wildernesse nor into the rest of heaven signified by Canaan so many of them as continued in this sin of hardening their heart against the voice of God Whence learn 1. There is a rest of God ordained for Believers who give up their hearts to the impression of Gods voice in the obedience of faith to wit the rest of justification reconciliation and peace with God the rest of begun sanctification and ceasing from their own works and the rest of everlasting refreshment begun in this life and perfected in the life to come for this is the rest which God calleth here his rest They shall not enter into my rest 2. A●… all sin hath judgement following after it as the shadow followeth the body so hardening of the heart against Gods Word in special hath wrath annexed unto it To whom I sware in my wrath 3. Obstinate hardeners of their heart in unbelief and disobedience against Gods Word are near to the curse and whosoever do continue to the end shall be found reprobates justly damned to the eternal torment of restlesseness against whom God standeth sworne to condemn them and destroy them Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest 4. The most fearful curses and threatnings pronouncel against sinners by God and the most terrible
intercept his worship for in opposition t●… relative worship in the service of graven images he saith Worship him importing that when images are worshipped God is not worshipped at all whatsoever the image-worshipper doth i●…tend 4. Whatsoever creature hath excellency in heaven or earth or can pretend to any eminency or excellency of whatsoever sort must do homage unto Christ Worship him all 〈◊〉 gods and this is the first use of the former Doctrine Ver. 8. Sion heard and was glad and the daughters of Iudah rejoyced because of thy judgement●… O LORD Ver. 9. For thou LORD art high above all th●… earth thou art exalted far above all gods The second use is to comfort all true worshippers partly because they hear Gods wrath threatened and executed against Idolaters and partly because they have hereby a clear evidence o●… Christs supremacy over all creatures Whence learn 1. The condemnation of imagerie and of all service and worshi●…●…ven images is a Doctrine comfortable to the true mem●… the Church Sio●…d to wit this curse against Ido●… and was glad 2. The true ●…rch considered in her collect●… incorporation as the Mo●… Sion and in her particular branches and subdivisions as Daughters of Iudah depending upon Christ the true Vine-tree of Iudah have the same reason●… of joy and the same grounds of edification by Gods Word and works of judgement wrought for clearing of true Religion and shaming of false worship Sion beard and was glad and the daughters of Iudah rejoyced because of thy judgements O LORD 3. The manifestation of the Gospel of Christ is the exaltation of God and manifestation of his excellency whose dishonour as it should be the matter of our grief so his manifested glory should be our joy as the reason here given of the joy of the Saints doth teach us For thou Lord art high above all the earth thou art exalted far above all gods Ver. 10. Ye that love the LORD hate evil he preserveth the souls of his Saints he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked 11. Light is sowen for the righteous and gladnesse for the upright in heart The third use of the Doctrine is an exhortation to the faithfull to studie holinesse and to eschew the fellowship of sin whatsoever may be the danger partly because the Lord will deliver his own out of the hands of their enemies partly because God h●…th appointed comfort unto them both in and after their afflictions Whence learn 1. A Believer in God or a true worshipper of God in Christ is a lover of God for thus are they described here Ye that love the Lord. 2. The love of God must be joyned with and manifested by the study of a ●…oly life and with not onely abstaining from but also with hating and abhorring of that which is sinful Ye that love the Lord hate evil 3. Albeit the hating of evil and loving of God may readily make a man the object of malice and of persecution from wicked men yet shall the godly have their soules saved yea and at length be fully delivered from the harme which S●…tan and the wicked intend to bring upon the godly for that cause He preserveth the soules of his Saints he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked 4. All the exercises of the godly and specially their troubles for righteousnesse are but the seeds of their joy and consolation which God is to bring forth unto them out of these troubles Light is sowen for the righteous 5. The Lords children who love him and hate evil must not think to have the fruit of their rightcousnesse presently in possession but must give a time unto it as is given to 〈◊〉 that is cast into the ground and as after a time the corne doth spring and comes to a ripe harvest so shall the troubles of the godly have a comfortable issue Light is sowen for the righteous 6. In reckoning of the righteous the Lord counteth men by their heart and so many as by faith in Christ have purified their hearts unto the un●…eigned study of holinesse they are righteous before God albeit their infirmities be many and whatsoever fit of grief and interruption of joy such men be subject unto for a time yet at length their po●…tion shall be a full harvest of gladnesse Light is sowen to the righteous and who these are he sheweth and gladnesse for the upright in heart Ver. 12. Rejoyce in the LORD ye righteous and give thanks at the remembrance of his holinesse The fourth use of the Doctrine is an exhortation unto Beleevers to be joyfull and thankfull whatsoever be their condition in this present life because of the salvation manifested in Christ. Whence learne 1. Whatsoever may be the tribulation of the faithfull in the world they have matter of joy in the LORD and they should stirre up themselves to rejoyce and make conscience of the commandment Rejoyce ye righteous in the LORD 2. Whatsoever can be taken from the godly their right and interest in CHRIST can never be taken from them and so there is cause to give thanks for this gift for ever And give thanks at the remembrance of his holinesse or confesse to the remembrance of his holinesse that is acknowledge to his glory the benefit which you have by being a Subject to this King 3. Whatsoever word or work of CHRIST doth bring us to the remembrance of his Name should bring us also to the consideration and remembrance of his holinesse which is the untainted glory of all his attributes wisdome justice goodnesse power mercy truth c. and is the untainted glory of his Word workes and purchase unto us Give thankes at the remembrance of his holinesse PSAL. XCVIII THis Psalme is an exhortation to Jew and Gentile to rejoyce and blesse the Lord for Christs coming to set up his Kingdome in the world The exhortation is thrice pressed 1. In proper termes requiring the Church to sing for joy with reasons adjoyned ver 1 2 3. Then it is repeated and musical instruments called for to shew that by humane voice the matter of the joy which is in Jesus Christ is inexpressible ver 4 5 6. 3. To shew that neither voice of man nor musical instruments are sufficient to expresse the joy which cometh by Christs Kingdome the whole creatures are called unto this work of rejoycing and setting forth his glory ver 7 8. And the reason is given because Christ cometh to set up and exercise his Kingdome in righteousnesse ver 9. Ver. 1. OSing unto the LORD a new song for he hath done marvellous things his right hand and his holy arme hath gotten him the victory 2. The LORD hath made known his salvation his righteousnesse hath he openly shewed in the sight of the heathen 3. He hath remembred his mercy and his truth toward the house of Israel all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God The exhortation to sing unto the Lord who is Christ
hath five reasons adjoyned The first is because he hath wrought the work of Redemption wonderfully The next is because he hath done his work by conflict with his enemies and hath gotten the victory ver 1. The third because he hath caused to preach his salvation to the Gentiles ver 2. The fourth because he hath performed his promises made to the Jewes And the fifth because he hath made all the earth to see the salvation which God in Covenant with his Church hath wrought for his people ver 3. Whence learne 1. The joy which Christ doth bring can never waxe old but because mercies through him are everlasting and the persons who have share in this joy are made new and all things unto them are made new therefore the song and joy also shall be made new O sing unto the Lord a new song 2. Salvation brought by Christ and the work of Redemption wrought by him is a most wonderful work for it is brought about by the incarnation of God by the painfull suffering and shamefull death of God inearnate by whose stripes we are healed and by whose death and resurrection we have life and immortality given unto us For he hath done marvellous things 3. It is by battell against the enemies of our salvation that we are delivered for Christ hath wrestled with the guilti nesse merit and punishment of our sins wrestled with the curse of the Law with Satan death and hell and whatsoever could hinder our Redemption and Salvation and hath gotten unto himselfe the victory to our advantage His right hand and his holy arme hath gotten him the victory 4. No creatures help hath our Lord used in this work but done all immediately by his own divine power being God Omnipotent His right hand and his holy arme hath gotten him the victory 5. The glory of the salvation of man by this meanes is most justly to be ascribed to him alone and to be called his salvation because he devised it and brought it about immediately by himself and causeth to proclaime it in his own Name to the world by the preaching of the Gospel so it is in all these respects his salvation The Lord hath made known his salvation 6. The way how Christ maketh known his salvation and maketh us partakers of his salvation is by making known his righteousnesse or the righteousnesse of faith and making us partakers thereof by the preaching of it among the Gentiles His righteousnesse hath ●…e openly shewed in the sight of the heathen 8. Whatsoever promise he hath made to the Jewes he doth not forget it but whatsoever cloud is come upon that Nation all the mercies and promises made to them shall all be performed He hath remembred his mercy and his truth toward the house of Israel 9. The fulnesse of the Gentiles shall be made partakers of the Covenant of Grace with the true Church of the Jewes All the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God Ver. 4. Make a joyful noise unto the LORD all the earth make a loud noise and rejoyce and sing praise 5. Sing unto the LORD with the harp and the voice of a Psalm 6. With trumpets and sound of cornet make a joyful noise before the LORD the King From the repeating of the exhortation to the whole earth Jewes and Gentiles and calling formusical instruments to expresse this joy whereby the paedagogie of the Church under the ceremonial law which now is abolished taught them the greatnesse of the spiritual joy of Christs coming Learn 1. The joy of faith the joy allowed unto beleevers in Jesus Christ is unspeakable and full of glory which cannot be exp essed by words or humane voice for this the varie y of musical instruments in Gods praise at the offering of the sacrifices did shadow forth under the law and here it is signified by this exhortation to sing with the harp trumpet a●…d cornet and that with special relation to Christ as King in Sion Make a joyful noise before the Lord the King Ver. 7. Let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof the world and they that dwell therein 8. Let the floods clap their hands let the hills be joyful together In the exhortation directed to the dumb creatuees sea floods and hills that they should utter Songs of joy 〈◊〉 1. The setting forth the praise of Christ for the Redemption of sinners may not only furnish work to all reasonable creatu●…s but also if every drop of water in the sea and in every river and flood every fish in the sea every fowle of the aire eve●…y living creature on the earth and whatsoever else is in the world if th●…y all had reason and ability to expresse themselves yea and if a●… the hills were able by motion and gesticulation to communicate their joy one to another there is work for them all to set out the praise of Christ for Let the sea roare and the fulnesse thereof the world and they that dwell therein Let the floods clap their hands c. doth import so much 2. As the Lord can never be sufficiently praised for salvation through Christ so cannot any hearers dutifully and as becomes them hear this doctrine without great jov or stirring up themselves to rejoyce therein for if senselesse creatures in their own kinde be called upon to rejoyce much more sinful men to whom the graçe of Christ is offered and for whom the work of Redemption is wrought Ver. 9. Before the LORD for he cometh to judge the earth With righteousnesse shall he judge the world and the people with equity The reason of all this joy is rendered in this that Christ is coming to judge the earth and the world righteously and to judge his own people in special Whence learn 1. All the joy conceived for the Redemption and Salvation wrought by Christ and all the joy which floweth from his righteous Government should be offered unto God in sincerity as a part of worship and thankful acknowledgement of his gracious gift for the exhortation is not to rejoyce simply but to rejoyce before the Lord. 2. Christ is very God essentially JEHOVAH before he be incarnate and when he cometh into the world by assuming our ●…ature he is the same Rejoyce before the Lord or Ichovah for he cometh to judge the earth that is Christ who is Iehovah cometh to judge the earth 3. It was soretold that the work of governing the Church and of ●…uling the whole earth for the Churches behoof is committed unto Christ incarnate or to Christ coming into the world He comcth to judge the earth 4. Christ shall guide the whole world so as all wrongs shall be condemned and be taken order with his own people shall have injuries done to them avenged and themselves directed protected and comforted With rightcousucsse shall he judge the world 5. As Christ shall reward every man according as his works have been and do no man wrong so shall he make his
own people righteous and followers of the rule of equity With righteousnesse shall he judge the world and the people with equity PSAL. XCIX FOr the comfort of the Church against the multitude of enemies round about her there is in this Psalm 〈◊〉 declaration of the Kingdom of Christ reigning as God one with the Father and holy Spirit in the Church of Israel before his Incarnation with a fourefold exhortation to all who shall heare tell of him The first exhortation is to stand in ●…we of him because of his great majesty manifested in Sion ver 〈◊〉 2. Another exhortation is to praise him for his greatnesse terriblenesse holinesse and righteousnesse ver 3 4. A third exhortation is to glorifie and worship him for sundry reasons ver 5 6 7 8. For which he repeateth the exhortation the fourth time ver 9. Ver. 1. THe LORD reigneth let the people tremble he sitteth between the Cherubims let the earth be moved 2. The LORD is great in Sion and he is high above all people From the first exhortation to feare Christ and to stand in awe of him Learn 1. Christ was King in his Church before his incarnation and did reigne in the sight of his Saints from the beginning of the world for as the Father from the beginning was in Christ his Sonne the Mediatour reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses unto them so Christ the eternal Sonne was in the Father and with the Father and holy Spirit gathering and governing his Church all the time before his incarnation for it is Christ of whom ●…ere the Psalmist speaketh and calleth him Iehovah King in Sion The Lord reigneth 2. Albeit the Church be compassed about with enemies as the lilie among the thornes yet because her Lord reigneth in the midst of her she hath r●…ason not only to comfort her selfe in him but also hath ground of de●…ying her enemies and boasting against them The Lord reigneth let the people or Nations tremble 3. The Lords people do not worship an unknown God they know who he is and where to finde him to wit in his ordinances on the throne of grace reconciling himself to the world in Christ He sitteth between the Cherubims 4. Whosoever do seek God in Christ have the Angels attending on Christ to go forth for the service and safety of the beleever and worshipper for this did the ceremonial figure signifie He sitteth between the Cherubims 5. As Christ is attended by Angels to the comfort of his Church so also for the terrour and punishment of all adversaries in the world He sitteth between the Cherubims let the earth be moved 6. Albeit the Lord be great in his works every where yet is his greatnesse most manifest to his Church by his Word and Works to her and for her The Lord is great in Sion 7. There is no opposition which can be made against the Church no power or multitude of people able to prevail by counsel device plot or practice against his Sion or his Church for He is high above all people to dissipate their devices bridle their fury and destroy them at his pleasure Ver. 3. Let them praise thy great and terrible Name for it is holy 4. The Kings strength also loveth judgement thou dost establish equity thou executest judgement and righteousnesse in Iacob The second exhortation is to praise Christ the King of his Church for his greatnesse terrour holinesse moderation of his power and love of justice Whence learn 1. Whatsoever we know or understand of God we should not only by faith subscribe to it and seale it and praise God for it our selves but should also commend it to others and wish the like should be done by all men Let them praise thy Name 2. As the greatnesse of God in Christ on the one hand should induce men so the terrour of our God who is a consuming fire to his adversaries on the other hand should presse men to praise him Let them praise t●…y great and terri●…le Name 3. Whatsoever in Scripture is said of Christ will be found to be really in him he will answer to his name perfectly in all things without staine or blot Let them praise thy great and terrible Name for it is holy 4. Albeit the enemies of Christ despise the weaknesse and simplicity of his Government yet he is a powerful and strong King both in himself and in and for all who beleeve in him for here the Church praiseth the Kings strength 5. Christ moderateth his power specially in relation to his subjects and doth not what he may dealeth not in the rigour of justice with his people layeth no more on them then they are able to beare his yoke is easie and his burden is light yea he suffereth them not to be tempted above their strength but dealeth discreetly with them moderation and discretion pleaseth him The Kings strength loveth judgement 6. The course which our God hath set down for comforting the afflicted relieving the oppressed taking order with hypocrites and obstinate offenders is very equitable and a course which he will not alter or change for He loveth judgement and thou dost establish equity saith he 7. Christs actions and dispensations are answerable to his Lawes and his revealed Word he teacheth his subjects righteousnesse he maketh them righteous performeth his promises and executes his threatenings in his Church according to his sacred Word Thou executest judgement and righteousnesse in Iacob Ver. 5. Exalt ye the LORD our God and worship at his footstool for he is holy A third exhortation wherein he presseth the same duty of glorifyng of God the third time by three reasons One is because he is holy ver 5. Another is from the example of the Lords most approved servants who did subject themselves unto the Lords ordinances to their own and others advantage ver 6 7. A third reason from the example of the Church both in the wildernesse and in after-times who as they found the benefit of obedience of the ordinances of God when theyr worshipped God as he commanded them so did they smart so their disobedience when they followed their own inventions ver 8. whereupon he repeateth the exhortation the fourth time ver 9. Whence learne 1. Then is God rightly acknowledged when his Covenant of grace offered in Christ is embraced when men ioyne themselves to the true God of Israel and when they esteeme of God and acknowledge him as supreme Lord and King over all Exalt ye the Lord our God 2. God will be worshipped when and where and how he pleaseth to command and will not be worshipped but in Christ figured by the Temple and Ark of the Testimony in it worship as o●… before his fo●…tstool 3. The worshippers of God under the Old Testament were taught to lift their minde●… above all earthly things and loose their mindes from all limitation of God unto any corporal presence in the Sanctuary or Ark and to worship him at Solomon did