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50. Psalm 50

1 The Mighty One, God, the LORD,
   speaks and summons the earth
   from the rising of the sun to where it sets.

2 From Zion, perfect in beauty,
   God shines forth.

3 Our God comes
   and will not be silent;
a fire devours before him,
   and around him a tempest rages.

4 He summons the heavens above,
   and the earth, that he may judge his people:

5 “Gather to me this consecrated people,
   who made a covenant with me by sacrifice.”

6 And the heavens proclaim his righteousness,
   for he is a God of justice. With a different word division of the Hebrew; Masoretic Text for God himself is judge The Hebrew has Selah (a word of uncertain meaning) here.

    7 “Listen, my people, and I will speak;
   I will testify against you, Israel:
   I am God, your God.

8 I bring no charges against you concerning your sacrifices
   or concerning your burnt offerings, which are ever before me.

9 I have no need of a bull from your stall
   or of goats from your pens,

10 for every animal of the forest is mine,
   and the cattle on a thousand hills.

11 I know every bird in the mountains,
   and the insects in the fields are mine.

12 If I were hungry I would not tell you,
   for the world is mine, and all that is in it.

13 Do I eat the flesh of bulls
   or drink the blood of goats?

    14 “Sacrifice thank offerings to God,
   fulfill your vows to the Most High,

15 and call on me in the day of trouble;
   I will deliver you, and you will honor me.”

    16 But to the wicked person, God says:

   “What right have you to recite my laws
   or take my covenant on your lips?

17 You hate my instruction
   and cast my words behind you.

18 When you see a thief, you join with him;
   you throw in your lot with adulterers.

19 You use your mouth for evil
   and harness your tongue to deceit.

20 You sit and testify against your brother
   and slander your own mother’s son.

21 When you did these things and I kept silent,
   you thought I was exactly Or thought the ‘I AM’ was like you.
But I now arraign you
   and set my accusations before you.

    22 “Consider this, you who forget God,
   or I will tear you to pieces, with no one to rescue you:

23 Those who sacrifice thank offerings honor me,
   and to the blameless Probable reading of the original Hebrew text; the meaning of the Masoretic Text for this phrase is uncertain. I will show my salvation.”


16 But unto the wicked, etc. He now proceeds to direct his censures more openly against those whose whole religion lies in an observance of ceremonies, with which they attempt to blind the eyes of God. An exposure is made of the vanity of seeking to shelter impurity of heart and life under a veil of outward services, a lesson which ought to have been received by all with true consent, but which was peculiarly ungrateful to Jewish ears. It has been universally confessed, that the worship of God is pure and acceptable only when it proceeds from a sincere heart. The acknowledgement has been extorted from the poets of the heathen, and it is known that the profligate were wont to be excluded from their temples and from participation in their sacrifices. And yet such is the influence of hypocrisy in choking and obliterating even a sentiment so universally felt as this, that men of the most abandoned character will obtrude themselves into the presence of God, in the confidence of deceiving him with their vain inventions. This may explain the frequency of the warnings which we find in the prophets upon this subject, declaring to the ungodly again and again, that they only aggravate their guilt by assuming the semblance of piety. Loudly as the Spirit of God has asserted, that a form of godliness, unaccompanied by the grace of faith and repentance, is but a sacrilegious abuse of the name of God; it is yet impossible to drive the Papists out of the devilish delusion, that their idlest services are sanctified by what they call their final intention. They grant that none but such as are in a state of grace can possess the meritum de condigno; 252252     “The Schoolmen in that Church, ‘the Church of Rome,’ spoke of meritum de congruo, and meritum de condigno. By meritum de congruo, ‘to which Calvin refers in the concluding part of the sentence,’ they meant the value of good works and good dispositions previous to justification, which it was fit or congruous for God to reward by infusing his grace. By meritum de condigno they meant the value of good works performed after justification, in consequence of the grace then infused.” — Dr Hills Lectures in Divinity, volume 2, p. 348; see also Turretines Theology, volume 2, p. 778. but they maintain that the mere outward acts of devotion, without any accompanying sentiments of the heart, may prepare a person at least for the reception of grace. And thus, if a monk rise from the bed of his adultery to chant a few psalms without one spark of godliness in his breast, or if a whore-monger, a thief, or any foresworn villain, seeks to make reparation for his crimes by mass or pilgrimage, they would be loath to consider this lost labor. By God, on the other hand, such a disjunction of the form from the inward sentiment of devotion is branded as sacrilege. In the passage before us, the Psalmist sets aside and refutes a very common objection which might be urged. Must not, it might be said, those sacrifices be in some respect acceptable to God which are offered up in his honor? He shows that, on the contrary, they entail guilt upon the parties who present them, inasmuch as they lie to God, and profane his holy name. He checks their presumption with the words, What hast thou to do to declare my statutes? that is, to pretend that you are one of my people, and that you have a part in my covenant. Now, if God in this manner rejects the whole of that profession of godliness, which is unaccompanied by purity of heart, how shall we expect him to treat the observance of mere ceremonies, which hold quite an inferior place to the declaration of the statutes of God?


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