Study

a Bible passage

Click a verse to see commentary
Select a resource above

108. Psalm 108

1 My heart, O God, is steadfast;
   I will sing and make music with all my soul.

2 Awake, harp and lyre!
   I will awaken the dawn.

3 I will praise you, LORD, among the nations;
   I will sing of you among the peoples.

4 For great is your love, higher than the heavens;
   your faithfulness reaches to the skies.

5 Be exalted, O God, above the heavens;
   let your glory be over all the earth.

    6 Save us and help us with your right hand,
   that those you love may be delivered.

7 God has spoken from his sanctuary:
   “In triumph I will parcel out Shechem
   and measure off the Valley of Sukkoth.

8 Gilead is mine, Manasseh is mine;
   Ephraim is my helmet,
   Judah is my scepter.

9 Moab is my washbasin,
   on Edom I toss my sandal;
   over Philistia I shout in triumph.”

    10 Who will bring me to the fortified city?
   Who will lead me to Edom?

11 Is it not you, God, you who have rejected us
   and no longer go out with our armies?

12 Give us aid against the enemy,
   for human help is worthless.

13 With God we will gain the victory,
   and he will trample down our enemies.


43. Whosoever is wise, so as to observe these things. We are now informed that men begin to be wise when they turn their whole attention to the contemplation of the works of God, and that all others besides are fools. For however much they may pique themselves upon their superior acuteness and subtilty, all this is of no avail so long as they shut their eyes against the light which is presented to them. In employing this interrogatory form of address, he indirectly adverts to that false persuasion which prevails in the world, at the very time when the most daring heaven-despiser esteems himself to be the wisest of men; as if he should say, that all those who do not properly observe the providence of God, will be found to be nothing but fools. This caution is the more necessary, since we find that some of the greatest of philosophers were so mischievous as to devote their talents to obscure and conceal the providence of God, and, entirely overlooking his agency, ascribed all to secondary causes. At the head of these was Aristotle, a man of genius and learning; but being a heathen, whose heart was perverse and depraved, it was his constant aim to entangle and perplex God’s overruling providence by a variety of wild speculations; so much so, that it may with too much truth be said, that he employed his naturally acute powers of mind to extinguish all light. Besides, the prophet not only condemns the insensate Epicureans, whose insensibility was of the basest character, but he also informs us that a blindness, still greater and more detestable, was to be found among these great philosophers themselves. By the term, observe, he informs us, that the bare apprehension of the works of God is not enough, — they must be carefully considered in order that the knowledge of them may be deliberately and maturely digested. And, therefore, that it may be engraven upon our hearts, we must make these works the theme of our attentive and constant meditation. When the prophet says, Whosoever is wise, even they shall understand, the change of the singular into the plural number is beautifully appropriate. By the one he tacitly complains of the fewness of those who observe the judgments of God; as if he should say, How seldom do we meet with a person who truly and attentively considers the works of God! Then he adverts to the fact of their being so visibly before all, that it is impossible that men could overlook them, were it not that their minds are perverted by their own wickedness. And if any person be disposed to inquire how it comes to pass that the prophet, after treating of the judgments and severity of God, now makes mention of his loving-kindness, I answer, that his loving-kindness shines most conspicuously, and occupies a very prominent place in all that he does; for he is naturally prone to loving-kindness, by which also he draws us to himself.


VIEWNAME is study