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Psalm 115

The Impotence of Idols and the Greatness of God

1

Not to us, O L ord, not to us, but to your name give glory,

for the sake of your steadfast love and your faithfulness.

2

Why should the nations say,

“Where is their God?”

 

3

Our God is in the heavens;

he does whatever he pleases.

4

Their idols are silver and gold,

the work of human hands.

5

They have mouths, but do not speak;

eyes, but do not see.

6

They have ears, but do not hear;

noses, but do not smell.

7

They have hands, but do not feel;

feet, but do not walk;

they make no sound in their throats.

8

Those who make them are like them;

so are all who trust in them.

 

9

O Israel, trust in the L ord!

He is their help and their shield.

10

O house of Aaron, trust in the L ord!

He is their help and their shield.

11

You who fear the L ord, trust in the L ord!

He is their help and their shield.

 

12

The L ord has been mindful of us; he will bless us;

he will bless the house of Israel;

he will bless the house of Aaron;

13

he will bless those who fear the L ord,

both small and great.

 

14

May the L ord give you increase,

both you and your children.

15

May you be blessed by the L ord,

who made heaven and earth.

 

16

The heavens are the L ord’s heavens,

but the earth he has given to human beings.

17

The dead do not praise the L ord,

nor do any that go down into silence.

18

But we will bless the L ord

from this time on and forevermore.

Praise the L ord!


8 They who make them shall be like unto them. Many are of opinion that this is an imprecation, and hence translate the future tense in the optative mood, may they become like unto them But it will be equally appropriate to regard it as the language of ridicule, as if the prophet should affirm that the idolaters are equally stupid with the stocks and stones themselves. And he deservedly severely reprehends men naturally endued with understanding, because they divest themselves of reason and judgment, and even of common sense. For those who ask life from things which are lifeless, do they not endeavor to the utmost of their power to extinguish all the light of reason? In a word, were they possessed of a particle of common sense, they would not attribute the properties of deity to the works of their own hands, to which they could impart no sensation or motion. And surely this consideration alone should suffice to remove the plea of ignorance, their making false gods for themselves in opposition to the plain dictates of natural reason. As the legitimate effect of this, they are willfully blind, envelop themselves in darkness, and become stupid; and this renders them altogether inexcusable, so that they cannot pretend that their error is the result of pious zeal. And I have no doubt that it was the prophet’s intention to remove every cause and color of ignorance, inasmuch as mankind spontaneously become stupid.

Whosoever trusteth in them. The reason why God holds images so much in abhorrence appears very plainly from this, that he cannot endure that the worship due to himself should be taken from him and given to them. That the world should acknowledge him to be the sole author of salvation, and should ask for and expect from him alone all that is needed, is an honor which peculiarly belongs to him. And, therefore, as often as confidence is reposed in any other than in himself, he is deprived of the worship which is due to him, and his majesty is, as it were, annihilated. The prophet inveighs against this profanity, even as in many passages the indignation of God is compared to jealousy, when he beholds idols and false gods receiving the homage of which he has been deprived, (Exodus 34:14; Deuteronomy 5:9) If a man carve an image of marble, wood, or brass, or if he cast one of gold or silver, this of itself would not be so detestable a thing; but when men attempt to attach God to their inventions, and to make him, as it were, descend from heaven, then a pure fiction is substituted in his place. It is very true that God’s glory is instantly counterfeited when it is invested with a corruptible form; (“To whom hast thou likened me?” he exclaims by Isaiah 40:25, and 46:5, and the Scripture abounds with such texts;) nevertheless, he is doubly injured when his truth, and grace, and power, are imagined to be concentrated in idols. To make idols, and then to confide in them, are things which are almost inseparable. Else whence is it that the world so strongly desires gods of stone, or of wood, or of clay, or of any earthly material, were it not that they believe that God is far from them, until they hold him fixed to them by some bond? Averse to seek God in a spiritual manner, they therefore pull him down from his throne, and place him under inanimate things. Thus it comes to pass, that they address their supplications to images, because they imagine that in them God’s ears, and also his eyes and hands, are near to them. I have observed that these two vices can hardly be severed, namely, that those who, in forging idols, change the truth of God into a lie, must also ascribe something of divinity to them. When the prophet says that unbelievers put their trust in idols, his design, as I formerly noticed, was to condemn this as the chief and most detestable piece of profanity.


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