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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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venting of ill speeches to the prejudice of Christs cause and truth and true holines in his Saints especially when they are under sufferings afflictions whatsoever is a high provocation of Gods wrath They talk to the grief of those whom thou hast wounded 4. The persecution of Gods children for righteousnesse is a sufficient ditty for all the forenamed damnation in the preceding verses this is the reason of the justice of the imprecation For they persecute him whom thou hast smitten 5. The Church without breach of duty to men may sing and rejoyce in these fearful imprecations against the malicious enemies of Christ and his Church first as lovers of God more then of men secondly as followers not of their own quarrel but of the controversie of the Lord of hostes whose souldiers they are against all his enemies whatsoever thirdly as subscribers to the justice of God who will not suffer malicious cruelty to be unpunished and fourthly as rejoycers in Gods love to his people who ownes the wrongs done to his Church and servants therein as done to himself and will be avenged upon their adversaries and having decreed doom against the adversaries of his Church will have his children to be ministers under the great Judge to pronounce the sentence against his and their enemies and as it were to give out order for execution of the sentence saying Let their table let their e●…s let their habitation be so and so disposed of Ver. 27. Adde iniquity unto their iniquity and let them not come into thy righteousnesse 28. Let them be blotted out of the book of the living and not be written with the righteous The seventh plague of the enemies of Christ and his Church is this howsoever igno●…ant Zelots some of them may finde mercy ye●… malicious persecutors of truth and piety grow worse and worse and being entered in the course of persecution cannot go off but do draw deeper and deeper in guiltinesse and that in Gods righteous judgement punishing sin by sin Adde iniquity unto their iniquity The eigth plague is they are given over to a reprobate sense so as they cannot lay their owne sins to heart and so cannot see the necessity of the remission of sin nor put a price upon the purchase of Justification unto sinners by Christ the Redeemer nor be found among the persons justified by faith in him Let them not come into thy righteousnesse The ninth plague is this albeit the enemies of Christ and his people may pretend to be among the number of his friends and to have their names written in great letters in the Catalogue of the visible Church yet God shall disclaim them one day as none of his and thrust them from him as workers of iniquity Let them be blotted out of the book of the living The tenth plague is this as the visible Church hath an open book wherein all within the external Covenant are written as Saints by calling and Covenantets with God for life and salvation out of which book God dashes out the names of his wicked enemies so God hath a secret book roll as it were wherin he enrolleth all the regenerate all the justified and among the names of this sort or among the names of the true members of the invisible Church of the regenerate none of the names of Christs malicious enemies shall be written Let them not be written with the righteous Ver. 29. But I am poor and sorrowful let thy salvation O God set me up on high The third and last part of the Psalme wherein is set down the glorious event of this sad exercise in foure evidences of victory of his saith over this assault The first whereof is in his confident prayer not only to be delivered but also to be exalted ver 29. The second evidence is in his hearty promise of thanksgiving ver 30 31. The third evidence is in a prophecie of the fruit of this exercise which the beleevers shall have by it ver 32 33. The fourth is a thanksgiving for mercies foreseen which shall come to the Church and in special to the Church of Israel ver 34 35 36. All which in as farre as they concern David the type are but little in comparison of Christ the Antitype From the first evidence of the victory of his faith appearing in his confident prayer Learne 1. It is no strange thing to see poverty of spirit and sad afflictions joyned the one to help and season the other But I 'am poor and sorrowful 2. There is as sure ground of hope of an event out of every trouble wherein the children of God can fall as there is ground of hope of the overturning of the most setled worldly prosperity of their enemies for the fore-named curses shall come on the enemies of the godly but the childe of God in the mean time may expect salvation and to be set on high which he confidently prayeth for But I am poor and sorrowful let thy salvation O God set me up 3. The conscience of humiliation under Gods hand is a great evidence of delivery out of whatsoever trouble if a man in a righteous cause be emptied of self-conceit and carnal confidence and brought down to poverty of spirit and affected with the sense of sins and misery following upon it and withal go to God in this condition he may be sure to be helped the poor in spirit are freed from the curse But I am poor and sorrowful saith the Psalmist here let thy salvation set me up on high 4 The man afflicted and persecuted for righteousnesse humbled in himself and drawn to God for relief shall not only be delivered but also shall be as much exalted after his delivery as ever he was cast down Let thy salvation O God set me up on high 5. The kindly sufferer of righteousnesse will have no deliverance but such as God will allow him as God shall bring unto him and as he doth not look for delivery another way so he doth look for a glorious delivery this way Let thy salvation O God set me up on high Ver. 30. I will praise the Name of God with a song and will magnifie him with thanksgiving 31. This also shall please the Lord better then an oxe or bullock that hath hornes and hoofes From the second evidence of his victory of faith in his promised thanksgiving Learne 1. When the Lord comforts the heart of a sufferer for his cause he can make him glad before the delivery come by giving him the assurance that it shall come and can engage his heart to solemn thanksgiving in the midst of trouble for poverty of spirit will esteem the farre sore-sight of delivery at last as a rich mercy and matter of a song I will praise the Name of God with a song 2. The Lord in the delivering of his children out of their troubles will give evidence of his greatnesse as well as of his goodnesse of his power as well as of his
A BRIEF EXPLICATION Of the other fifty Psalmes From Ps. 50. to Ps. 100. BY DAVID DICKSON Professour of Divinity in the Colledge of Edenburgh Blessed is the man whom thou chusest 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 Psal. 65. 4. Imprimatur Iuly 16. 1653. EDMUND CALAMY London Printed by T. R. E. M. for Ralph Smith at the Bible in Cornhill near the Royal Exchange 1653. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE The EARL of EGLINGTON Mercy and Peace through Iesus Christ. My right Noble Lord THE reason of my sending forth of this piece under your Lordships name is that by this means I may pay home before I die the old debt which I owe to your Lordship and to the whole noble family for countenancing and encouraging me openly in my Ministery all the while I was in Irwin near your Lordship full twenty yeares And the reason why I do confesse my debt now and go about to discharge some part of it at this time of your Lordships restraint in England is because when I call to minde the time of my restraint about some thirty yeares ago when the High Commission Court of Prelates procured my confinement within a little village in the North beyond Aberdein in regard I could not give them satisfaction by receiving the yoak of some Popish ceremonies imposed then upon the Ministery I cannot forget how comfortable your Lordship was to me then and what paines and travel you endured summer and winter without wearying untill they who at that time had power to loose me from my confinement being made sensible some of them of the iniquity and all of them of the inexpediencie of keeping me in bonds I was restored to the free and full use of my Ministery Wherefore I do esteem it a part of due gratitude to do what in me lieth to be comfortable to your Lordship in this your present condition and do heartily pray to God that your exercise and trouble may prove a meanes of your happinesse It is true indeed that happinesse without this meanes were to be wished if so it were Gods pleasure but unto God onely in whose hands alone it is to make men blessed and in whose friendship and favour through Christ only men are really blessed it doth belong as to choose the man to whom so also to choose the meanes whereby and the manner how he will communicate the right and possession of true blessednesse If happinesse were at mens wish and carving no man would choose God for his chief good nor Gods way to bring his felicity about for the multitude of men do say Psal. 4. 6. Who will shew us any good The good which God doth shew unto them and the way how by reconciliation with himself and walking humbly and uprightly before him they may have God to be their rich reward is not the thing they love to have but corn and wine and oile and whatsoever may best please their fleshly fancie is their desire And of this the Lord doth complain Psal. 81. 11. My people saith he would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me And what was it which they did preferre unto God they loved to have their own will in this world whatsoever should befall them after death they loved rather to have their own earthly desires satisfied then to have the friendship of God and their choice was given unto them to their owne destruction So saith the Lord I gave them over to their owne hearts lust and they walked in the counsell of their owne heart Few when they look upon the course which the world doth runne after yea very few do preferre the fellowship of God reconciled to them in Christ before riches honour and sensual pleasure For Who will shew us any good is that which many do say Psala 4. 6. bu●… Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us is the petition of the few opposed to the multitude and even those few godly would wish to go to heaven with ease and to be free from trouble in their journey if it were the Lords will as we may see in the prayer of Iabez 1 Chron. 4. 10. Who called on the God of Israel saying Oh that thou wouldest blesse me indeed and enlarge my coast and that thine hand might be with me and that thou wouldest keep me from evill that it may not grieve me But our loving and wise God who knoweth perfectly what is fittest for every man doth crosse and correct those natural desires of his children And howsoever he will now and then possibly grant the prayer of Iabez to some of his people yet he hath appointed this to be the ordinary road-way to heaven which the Apostle pointeth forth to us Acts 14. 22. We must through much tribulation enter into the Kingdom of God And this course of carrying of Gods children through many afflictions doth no wayes hinder their happinesse for how many soever their crosses be yet this holdeth alwayes fast Psal. 65. 4. Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causest to approach unto thee If therefore by plurality of chastisements the Lord shall draw and drive them to seek remission of sinnes and reconciliation with himself and the renewed sense thereof through Christ and shall by the rod hedge them within the way of walking with him in a friendly communion they lose nothing except their lusts and do gain eternal blessednesse And certain●y there is so much reliques of natural corruption so strong inclinations unto sinne so many actuall outbreakings and grosse transgressions to be found in the most precious Saints that there is no wonder the Lord should visit their trespasses with the rod and their iniquity with stripes but all the wonder is that he will not take his loving kindnes utterly from them There is also so great need of loosing their affections from what seemeth love-worthy in this world so great need of raising the hearts of the heires of Salvation unto the seeking of a Kingdom which cannot be shaken and of a crown uncorruptible as all reason doth call for the mixture of troubles with earthly comforts lest the sweetnesse of temporary vanities should prove unto them poysonable Moreover the experience of the Saints set down in Scripture and especially in the Psalmes doth make it manifest that by the variety of outward and inward troubles the faith of Gods children hath been tried and trained to farther strength Their love hope and patience and all other spiritual graces in them have been so fostered and augmented as they have been made joyfully and thankfully to subscribe this truth Psal. 94. 12. Blessed it the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law This is the language of the Lords present dispensation toward his people and the lesson which his Providence doth recommend to us all that we may learn it
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
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
set down to wit overturning of the outward face of Religion destruction of their lands cities and estate killing of them in abundance and want of burial when they are dead 3. As not by outward prosperitie so also not by outward calamities is the love of hatred of God to be known the same sort of outward dispensation may befall both The dead bodies of thy servants they have given to be meat to the fon●…es of heaven 4. No tempered wrath hot calamities whatsoever can separate the Lords children from Gods love and estimation of them nor untie the relations between God and them for here albeit their carcases fall be devoured with the fowls of the heaven and beasts of the earth yet remaine they the Lords servants and Saints under these sufferings The dead bodies of thy servants c. the flesh of thy Saints 5. The slaughter of the Lords people and the scattering of such as escape of them may be so great when his anger is kindled against them that none may be found to bury the slaine but the dead may lie unburied Their blood have they shed like water round about Jerusalem and there was none to bury them 6. Nothing is to be expected of Gods enemies towards Gods people when they fall in their hands but savage cruelty and barbarous inhumanity for which they are to answer unto God to whom the complaint of the living and the cry of the blood of the slaine doth call for vengeance as the experience of the Lords people in this place doth teach Ver. 4. We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about us From the third part of the complaint and lamentation Learn 1. In the day of Gods displeasure against his people yea in the day of the trial of the faith and patience of his people no wonder that such as should most pity our calamity and be comfortable unto us rejoyce to see us in misery yea and make our calamity a matter of reproach to us a matter of scorne and derision of us for here it is said We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about 〈◊〉 2. When God doth afflict his people all their priviledges and the Religion which they professe do become contemptible and ridiculous to the ungodly who do not esteem either of Gods ordinances or of his people but when they are adorned with outward prosperity The Lords people were seared and honoured by them that were about them when God did fight for them and countenanced them but now they lament We are become a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about us 3. To be mocked in misery and specially of them by whom we should be comforted is amongst the saddest passages of our affliction Therefore here is this part of their lamentation set down after the formerly mentioned misery as a load above a burden and that which did imbitter their sorrow most of all because it did reflect upon their Religion their faith their interest in God as if all had been ridiculous Ver. 5. How long LORD wilt thou be 〈◊〉 gry for ever shall thy jealousie burne like fire From the fourth part of the lamentation Learn 1. The Lords displeasure and anger against his people is more heavy to them then all the calamities which have lighted on them How long wilt thou be angry putteth the capstone on their prison-house 2. Guilty consciences cannot but apprehend wrath when their plagues are heavy yea they cannot escape a conflict with the fear of everlasting wrath when his hand doth lie long upon them How long Lord Wilt thou be angry for ever 3. When Gods people do fall from their matrimonial Covenant with God and their heart and eyes do go a whoring after idols no wonder the Lord be jealous and his wrath for this be most hot and be like to devour unto utter destruction Shall thy jealousie burne like fire 4. Whatsoever hath been our calamity whosoever have been the instruments of our misery yea how great soever our provocation of Gods anger hath been it is wisdome as to expound all the malice and cruelty of men to be the effects of Gods anger and jealousie and that his anger and jealousie is kinled by our sinnes so to runne to God and lament the whole matter before him and deprecate his wrath as the Church doth here How long Lord Wilt thou be angry for ever Ver. 6. Poure cut thy wrath upon the heathen that have not known thee and upon the kingdomes that have not called upon thy Name 7. For they have devoured Iacob and laid waste his dwelling place In the latter part of the Psalme is their prayer and first for justice and vengeance on their enemies Whence learn 1. Albeit it be not lawful for us in our own quarrel to pray against our enemies yet in the Churches quarrel in the Lords quarrel it is lawful to pray in general against the incorrigible and desperate enemies of God and his people as here the Church is taught 2. Albeit temporal judgements may overtake Gods visible Church when the open enemies of Gods people and of his true worship are spared yet at length the fulnesse of wrath is reserved for the ungodly one and all Poure out thy wrath upon the heathen that have not known thee 3 Prayer to God and invocation of his Name upon all occasions as Gods honour and mens necessities and duties publick private and secret do call them to come before him is a mark differencing Gods people from the ungodly whether professed or real heathens and a mark of such as shall finde mercy distinguishing them from the object of Gods wrath Poure out thy wrath upon the Kingdomes that have not called on thy Name 4. Unto the tight worshipping of God the true knowledge of God is required for how shall men call upon God in whom they believe not whom they know not or whom to know they care not Therefore such as are strangers from God here are described by this They have not known thee they have not called on thy Name 5. The members of a visible Church may be scattered one from another that they cannot in one place joyntly and professedly enjoy publick Ordinances as here Iacob is devoured and his dwelling place laid waste 6. The heaviest article in the ditty of the ungodly is their being either accessory to or active in the overthrow of Gods people Poure out thy wrath on them for they have devoured Iacob and laid waste his dwelling place Ver. 8. O remember not against us former iniquities let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low 9. Help us O God of our salvation for the the glory of thy Name and deliver us and purge away our sinnes for thy Names sake 10. Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God let him be knowne among the
he so loveth the publike ordinances is because by this means he getteth accesse to the fountain of all felicity who doth ward off all evil from the upright beleever and giveth unto him whatsoever is good for his soule or body i●… this life and in the life to come Whence learn 1. The g●… have need of light and direction life vigour strength and con●… folation and all this is in God or what more can be imported in the similitude taken from the Sunne in relation to earthly creatures For the Lord God is a Sunne 2. The godly are subject to dangers and perils from without especially from enemies bodily and spiritual and have need of preservation and defence from all adversarie power malice and craftinesse and this protection only God is able to give The Lord is a Sunne and 〈◊〉 shield 3. The beleever is burdened with the body of sin and born down frequently with the sense of his own unworthinesse witlesseness and weakness and in God is the perfect remedy of all those evils The Lord will give grace 4. Albeit the beauty of godliness be much obscured in this life with crosses and afflictions from God with calumnies and persecutions from men and the godly must lie in grave and suffer corruption of the●… 〈◊〉 as others yet the remedy of this also shall be found God to the beleever He will give grace and glory grace in 〈◊〉 life and glory after it without fail 5. Albeit the Lord ●…n to keep the godly in great scarcity sometimes of things com●…table in this life and of spiritual consolations also for a time ●…et doth he so dispose of their entertainment in all respects as every thing shall work together for their good For no good thing will be withhold from them that walk uprightly Ver. 12. O LORD of hostes blessed is the man that trusteth in thee When the Psalmist hath lamented his exile from the publick ordinances and prayed to be restored to that priviledge he comforteth himself in the mean time by the consideration of Gods grace and power to supply all wants even that of publick ordi●…nces when it cannot without hazard of life be had by the beleever Whence larn 1. How hard soever the Lords dispensation be to his own children yet must we ever continue to trust in God as the Psalmists example here doth teach 2. God can supply the want of the publike ordinances and be a little Sanctuary to his children and make them quiet yea and blessed in beleeving in him O Lord of hostes blessed is the man that trusteth in thee for in the beginning of the Psalm his heart ●…eth for the longing after the publike ordinances he count●… the Ministers of Gods house blessed he counteth every man who may be in any corner of Gods house happy he counteth the travelling Israelite coming to the ordinances blessed and at length pronounceth every beleever blessed and so himself to be blessed also PSAL. LXXXV To the chief Musician A Psalme for the sonnes of Korah THis Psalm agreeth well with the condition of the Church of the Jewes now fallen into new troubles after their re●… from the captivity of Babylon In the former part where●… they pray for a new proof and experience of Gods mercy to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the latte part is set down a comfortable answer to their prayer and for the help of their faith in their prayer Fi●… they make mention of their gracious delivery from the captivity ver 1 2 3. Next they pray for repentance and removing of the tokens of Gods wrath ver 4 5. Thirdly they pray for restauration of their miserable and dead condition wherein they were lying by some merciful deliverance ver 6 7. As for the answer in the latter part he prepareth himself to receive it from the Lord and by inspiration receiveth indeed a comfortable prophecy of five notable fruits of mercy The first is of peace to Gods people ver 8. The next is of deliveranes and salvation to his servants ver 9. The third is of the grace of Christ unto justification and the fruits of it ver 10 11. The fourth is of temporal blessings upon the place where the Lords people do dwell and that for his peoples comfort ver 12. The fifth is of the grace of Christ unto sanctification ver 13. Ver. 1. LORD thou hast been favourable unto thy land thou hast brought back the captivity of Iacob 2. Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people thou hast covered all their sin Selah 3. Toou hast taken away all thy wrath thou hast turned thy selfe from the fiercenesse of thine anger After the Church of the Jewes had been delivered from captivity they fall into new troubles because of their sins and their new provocations of God and in this Psalme they cry to God for mercy and for strengthening of their faith They acknowledge the Lords favour in loosing their captivity ver 1. and in forgiving their sinnes ver 2. and in removing all the tokens of his wrath from them ver 3. Whence learn 1. After great mercies shewn to Gods people new provocations do draw on new judgements as appeareth in the change of the condition of the Church here represented 2. Neither old sinnes ●…or late neither old judgements nor presently lying on wrath must keep back Gods people from running unto God by prayer for obtaining favour of God again as the example of the Church here doth teach 3. As no sins can make the Lord so forget his Covenant with his people as mercy should not be let forth to ●…ent sinners suing for grace so no wrath is so great as ●…ll debarre poor supplicants from accesse unto God when they come to seek mercy 4. As new necessities do call to minde old supplies received from God so they who would have any new benefit from the Lord should thankfully remember the old and take encouragement from those to hope for further Lord thou hast been favourable to thy land thou hast brought back the captivity of Iacob 5. As grace is the only ground of Gods bounty to his people so is it the only ground of his peoples prayer for new experiences of his grace as here Gods favour is acknowledged to be the cause of bringing back the people from captivity and the ground whereupon the Psalmist foundeth his prayer Thou hast been favourable to thy land 6. As that is a benefit indeed which is given with remission of sins so every one who seeketh a benefit should desire to have the benefit which they come to seek joyned with remission of their sin as the Psalmist here maketh the bringing back from captivity a compleat favour because joyned with remission of sinnes without which it had been the lesse comfortable Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people 7. The way of Gods forgiving of sins is by not imputing of them not bringing of them forth to be reckoned but hiding them from justices view and covering them with the imputation of
the righteousnesse of the Redeemer Thou hast covered all their sinne 8. As while sin unrepented and unforgiven remaineth wrath also remaineth so when sinne it taken away Gods wrath also is taken away when God forgiveth sin he takes away the punishment of sin for after he hath said Thou hast covered all their sin he subjoyneth Thou hast taken away all thy wrath thou hast turned from the ●…nesse of thine anger 9. As the conscience of sin and feeling of wrath lying on and fearing the growth of it do much hinder the guilty from confident approach unto God so the seen experiences of Gods drawing of those barres in form●… times do open the door to afflicted sinners confidently to come and seek mercy as here the Psalmist doth teach us in his making of this preface to his following prayer Ver. 4. Turn us O God of our salvation and cause thine anger towards us to cease 5. Wilt thou be angry with us for ever wilt th●… draw out thine anger to all generations In the next place upon the foresaid grounds the Church afflicted prayeth for grace to repent that so remission of si●… and removing of wrath may follow Whence learn 1. Whosoever in a Church afflicted are sensible of their own and th●… Churches sinnes should deal with God for giving repentance to his back-sliding people and to encrease their own repentance before they seek removal of the tokens of wrath as here the godly do pray in the first place Turn us O God 2. The Lords Covenant with his people for everlasting salvation is a ground to pray and hope for temporal deliverance from God who hath power and wayes of his own how to save when we see no event Turn us saith he O God of our salvation 3. When God giveth grace to a people to repent and turn to him the tokens of his wrath will be removed also or be so changed as they shall be no more effects of wrath therefore joyneth he with Turn 〈◊〉 this petition also And cause thine anger toward us to cease 4. The anger of the Lord toward his people is but temporal and for a moment in comparison of deservings albeit it seem to endure long and the beleever may be perswaded that it shall not continue against supplicants long for Wilt thou be angry with us for ever wilt thou draw out thine anger to all generations doth import so much that his anger could not be perpetual Ver. 6. Wilt thou not revive us again that thy people may rejoyce in thee 7. Shew us thy mercy O LORD and grant us thy salvation In the third place he prayeth for some relief from the distress wherein they were for the time and putteth his petition out of question by this interrogation because Gods purpose and pleasure was that his people should have joy in their God and thereupon he requesteth for new tokens of mercy from the ground of his Covenant with them for salvation Whence learn 1. As it is a death to be deprived so much as of the evidence and sense of Gods favour so it is life to be clear that we are in favour with God and as such who have had the sense of Gods favour cannot endure to want it so shall they have it restored Wilt thou not revive us again 2. Because plagues and wrath upon Gods people are temporal they may look certainly for a change to the better and after they have smarted for their sins for a while yet may expect to be restored to joy and comfort again Wilt thou not revive us again that thy people may rejoyce in thee 3. When God changeth the chear of his people their joy should not be in the gift but in the Giver That thy people may rejoyce in thee 4. Albeit the dear children of God for whom mercy and salvation is appointed may be destitute of the sight and evidence of both yet must they beleeve both claim both and hope for the manifestation of both unto them shew 〈◊〉 thy mercy O Lord c. grant us thy salvation 5. As mercy is the cause of salvation temporal and eternal and no merit in us so must he who looks for salvation of either sort make mercy his plea and no good in himself Shew us thy mercy O Lord and grant us thy salvation Ver. 8. I will heare what God the LORD will speak for he will speak peace unto his people and to his Saints but let them not turn again to folly In the latter part of the Psalm is the answer of this prayer which the Psalmist doth expect and receive by way of prophecy of five sweet effects of Gods mercy to his people whereof the first is peace and reconciliation and removing the tokens of his wrath Whence learn 1. The prayer of a beleever put up to our everliving Lord is not a vain work of pouring out words in the aire but a profitable exercise of faith grounded upon Gods Word and goodnesse whereof he may expect certainly a return I will hear what the Lord will say 2. Comfortable promises will suffice the beleever who if he know what the Lord doth say he will be clear also what the Lord will do I will hear what the Lord will say 3. Albeit Gods people be under the sense of wrath yet the Lord will comfort them after seeking grace of him he will speak peace to his people 4. Those who indeed do minde true holinesse are Gods people to whom the Lord will speak peace and for whose cause the society wherein they are shall partake of the fruits of Gods favour to them he will speake peace to his people and to his Saints 5. As the interruption of our peace with God is procured by our folly or foolish following of the vanities which allure unto sin and divert us from co●…munion with God so the restoring of us to peace must come 〈◊〉 our forsaking of those sinful and foolish courses which ha●… procured wrath and the way to keep us in that peace is not 〈◊〉 return to these courses again and this is the very end both of God●… correcting of us and of his restoring of us to peace that we sinne not as before He will speak peace to his Saints but let them 〈◊〉 return again to folly Ver. 9. Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him that glory may dwell in our land The second effect of mercy to his Saints is the nearnesse of free salvation in Christ who is the glory of the land of Iud●… where he was borne and the glory of that land whatsoever it is wherein his Saints and he amongst his Saints do dwell Whence learn 1. The heires of the promises are only such as do study to please God and to eschew provoking of him for the answer of the former prayer and the word of Promise and Prophecie here is made in favour only of them that fear him 2. There is no satisfactory deliverance to the afflicted beleever labouring under the sense
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
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
accepted imperfections pitied our sins pardoned and our holy endeavours are graciously rewarded Serve the Lord with gladnesse 3. Our joy should be stirred up and expressed by singing of Psalmes especially when we come to the assemblies or publick meetings wherein the Lord hath promised to give his presence with his own Ordinances Come before his presence with singing Ver. 3. Know ye that the LORD he is God it is he that hath made us and not we our selves we are his people and the sheep of his pasture From the reasons of this exhortation Learne 1. Such is our natural Atheisme that we have need again and again to be instructed that the Lord is God of whom and through whom and for whom are all things Know ye that the Lord he is God 2. If we did consider well that we are Gods creatures it were a forcible motive unto us to employ in Gods service whatsoever we have of God life motion being and gifts and to beware to make any thing we have of God a weapon of unrighteousnesse for fighting against him and of this consideration we have need to be put in minde and to be stirred up to the duty He it is that hath made us 3. The glory of our regeneration or new creation belongeth unto God no lesse then the glory of our creation and natural birth and it is no lesse madnesse to ascribe the work of our regeneration to our own power then to ascribe our first ●…tion to our selves for in both respects here it is said that 〈◊〉 is ●…e that made us and not we our selves 4. As the Lords people should stirre up themselves to more thankful service unto God as their relations unto God and obligations to him as their King and Pastor are joyned so may they expect from God for their encouragement whatsoever is needful to a people or a flock to have●… from a good King and faithful Pastor We are his people and sheep of his pasture Ver. 2. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving and in into his cours●… with with praise be thankeful unto him and blesse his Name From the repetition of the exhortation Learne 1. It is our duty in our approaches unto God specially for any solemne service to consider what rich benefits we have from him that thereby we may be stirred up unto the more hearty acknowledgement of his favours Enter into his gates with thanksgiving 2. ●…s the Lords benefits to us should be looked upon in our address●…s unto him so also his glorious attributes and his workes answerable thereto should be considered whereby we may be the better disposed to give unto him glory in all respects Enter into his co●…s with praise 3. The more we look upon Gods praises the more shall we see our own riches and the solidity of our blessednesse in him and the reasons to move us to thank and blesse him Be thankfull unto him and blesse his Name Ver. 5. For the LORD is good his mercy is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations From the reasons subjoyned to the second exhortation to praise the Lord Learne 1. It is a matter of perpetual praise of God and of thanksgiving and blessing of him that as he is alsufficient in himselfe so he is also communicative of his riches unto his creatureas and unto us his own people most of all Blesse his Name for the Lord is good 2. Albeit we be sinfull and deserve to be cut off in justice from the benefits which Gods goodnesse might bestow upon us yet the course of his pardoning mercy renewing the remission of sin to us as oft as we come to him in his Christ doth keep the channel of his goodnesse open and clear to us that it may run toward us for ever His mercy is everlasting 3. The Covenant of grace set down in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament with the legacie of so many rich Promise●…erving to strengthen the faith of every weak believer doth make the matter of Gods praise and of his peoples joyes so sure that how sad soever our spirits may be when we look to our selves yet we shall have matter of praising thanking and blessiug God when we look to his goodnesse and mercy and to what he hath for our comfort said in the Word of his everlasting truth Be thankfull unto him and blesse his Name for the Lord is good his mercy is everlasting and his truth endureth to all generations Amen FINIS
dealing with his people The goodnesse of God endureth continually 2. So long as Gods unchangeable kindnesse endureth the wicked have no cause to insult over the godly nor have the godly cause to faint or be discouraged for this goodnesse of God David doth oppose both to Doegs boasting and to his own tentation The ●…indnesse of the Lord endureth for ever Ver. 2. Thy tongue deviseth mischiefs like a sharp r●…sour working deceitfully 3. Thou lovest evil more then good and lying rather then to speak righteousnesse Selah 4. Thou lovest all devouring words O thou deceitful tongue The next Argument of refuting Doegs folly is because this cruel calumny should bring Gods vengeance on Doeg and root him out from all felicity and here he first sets down his ditty in these three verses before he sets down his doom ver 5. Whence learn 1. The tongue when it is abused is a world of wickednesse setting the world on fire as it self is set on fire from hell by Satan for whatsoever mischief the devil can suggest or a wicked heart can devise the tongue will serve to vent it therefore is the tongue charged with devising of mischief Thy tongue deviseth mischief 2. The smooth convey of a wicked device doth not hide the mischief of it from Gods sight nor extenuate the mans fault but rather doth help on the mischief more cunningly and powerfully like a sharp rasour working de●…itfully 3. When a man speaketh no more of a tale of his neighbour but what may serve to the mans hurt and prejudice and keepeth up the relation of that part of the tale which might clear the mans innocency or might give a right construction of his doing albeit that part of the tale told be true if all the rest of the tale had been told with it yet being told alone as if it were the full history it is evil it is false lying It is a murthering and devouring speech and full of deceit and doth argue the Speaker such a one as Doeg was in the particular at least to whom David saith Thou lovest evil more then good and lying rather then to speak righteousnesse Thou lovest all devouring words O thou deceitful tongue 4. The more wit deliberation and affection is in a sin the heavier is the guilt and challenge for it more just Doegs devising mischief Doegs chusing evil and not good chusing lying and not righteousnesse loving these evil and all-devouring words maketh his ditty most fearful 5. God shall likewise destroy thee for ever he shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place and root thee out of the land of the living ●…ah Now followeth his doom Whence learn 1. As any wicked man is instrumental for bringing temporal destruction on the godly so is he instrumental in drawing everlasting destruction upon himself from Gods hand God shall likewise destroy thee for ever 2. He that seeketh to settle himself to inlarge himself to root himself in the earth and to prolong his standing in the world by wrong means and in special by hurting the godly and their good name and cause shall finde the event quite contrary to his desire designe and expectation as Doeg did whose doom was destruction for his evil offices done at Court against David ●…nd the Lords Ministers God shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place and root thee out of the land of the living Ver. 6. The righteous also shall see and feare and shall laugh at him 7. Lo this is the man that made not God his strength but trusted in the abundance of his riches and strengthened himself in his wickednesse The third Argument of ref●…tation of Doegs vain-boasting is that his wisdome should be seen to be ridiculous folly and his b●…asting to be the matter of his shame and disgrace Whence learn 1. The notable enemies of Gods children and servants may expect to be notably punished and that they who did see their sin shall see also Gods vengeance on them The righteous shall see it 2. As the godly are the only wise observers of Gods work and dispensation of his mercy and justice so also are they the only persons that do make spiritual advantage thereby The righteous shall see it and fear 3. As the good of godlinesse is seen and felt by the godly in their own experience of Gods blessing upon themselves so is it seen and observed also in the contrary evils which befal the ungodly Lo this is the man that made not God his strength say they but trusted in the abundance of his ri●…hes and strengthened himself in his wickednesse Ver. 8. But I am like a green Olive-tree in the house of God I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever The fourth Argument for refutation of Doegs foolish boasting is because I saith David shall flourish in Gods favour in despite of Doeg Whence learn 1. Whatsoever may befall 〈◊〉 godly by the malice of their enemies it shall not hinder their felicity when their enemies are running to their own destruction it shall be well with the godly they may be perswaded of it for the Psalmists example doth encourage to it But I am like a green Olive-tree 2 As the Olive-tree being planted in a fertile ground draweth in moisture whereby it is nourished and groweth up so doth the beleever being planted in the Church draw spirit and life trom God by the holy ordinances whereby he groweth up I am like a green Olive-tree in the house of God 3. The wisdom of the godly and the ground of their true blessednesse is this they make fast work of their everlasting felicity by saith in God and this maketh them like green Olives all the dayes of their life for I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever is given here for a reason of his happy growing in the house of God Ver. 9. I will praise thee for ever because thou hast done it and I will wait on thy Name for it is good before thy Saints He closeth the Psalm comfort●…bly with resoluti●…n to praise God and to depend upon him Whence learn 1. Victory over tentations obtained by saith i●… very glori●…us for saith doth make a man as sure of what is to come as if it were perfected and filleth him with praise for the certain hope of the performance of Promises I will prais●… thee for ever saith David because thou hast done it 2. ●…ith being soli●…ly fixed bringeth forth hope and quiet expectation of what is promised I will wait o●… thy Name 3. As the Christian patience of one of the Saints is a matter of g●…od example and great encouragement unto all the rest that behold it ●…o the consideration of the good which may redound to others who shall be witnesses of our patient atten●…ing upon God should sti●…e us up to this duty of patient hope in God I will wait on thee for it is good before thy Saints PSAL. LIII To
gets up the head it seeth its own deliverance and the overthrow of the enemy both at once in the proper cause there 〈◊〉 to wit the fountain of over-running mercy engaged unto it by Covenant The God of my mercy There is the 〈◊〉 of ●…rlasting mercy whereof God is called God because he is the beleevers God for ever and therefore the God of all mercy consolation and salvation to the beleever He saith he shall prevent me that is he shall give manifest deliverance before I succumb it sh●…ll come soon●… then I could set it a time Then for his enemies he saith God shall let me see upon mine enemies to wit what I could lawfully desire or what should satisfie me Ver. 11. Slay them not lest my people forget Scatter them by thy power and bring them down O Lord our shield 12. For the sinne of their mouth and the words of their lips let them even be taken in their pride and for cursing and lying which they speak 13. Consume them in wrath consume them that they may not be and let them know that God ruleth in Iacob unto the ends of the earth Selah 14. And at evening let them returne and let them make a noise like a dog and go round about the City 15. Let them wander up and down for meat and grudge if they be not satisfied In the fourth place he prayeth to God to glorifie himself in the manner and measure of his just judgement on his obstinate enemies which in effect is a Prophecy of the punishment of Persecutors of the righteous and of the wrath to come upon the enemies of Christ of whom David in his trouble and unjust sufferings was a type Whence learn 1. Sometime the Lord will delay the cutting off of wicked enemies of his people for a curse to them and a benefit to his people Slay them not left my people forget 2. The Lords people are subject to forget the Lords doing for them and punishing of their enemies except the Lord did renew the evidence of his care he hath of them by often renewed or long continued judgement on their enemies whose misery is made more to them by lingring judgements in the sight of men then if they were cut off more suddenly Slay them not left my people forget 3. In praying against our wicked enemies that persecute us we must take heed that we be found pleading not our own particular revenge but the common cause of the Church and the Lords quarrel Slay them not left my people forget scatter and bring them down O Lord our shield It is the good of the Lords people and the glorifying of God which is in his eyes 4. Albeit the Lord do not at first cut off the troublers of his Church but do suffer them to live for the exercise of his people yet it is mercy worthy to be prayed for if God disable them and break their power that they prevaile not over the righteous Scatter them by thy power and bring them down O Lord our shield 5. Albeit the Persecutors do not accomplish their purpose against the righteous yet their pride their brags their lies their slanders their curses against the godly are a sufficient ditty for damnation and wrath to come upon them For the sin of their mouth and the words of their lips let them even be taken in their pride and for cursing and lying which they speak 6. After the keeping alive of the wicked for a time to the encreasing of their misery at length utter destruction cometh upon them Consume them in wrath consume them that they may not be 7. By the judgements of God upon the adversaries of his people the knowledge of his sovereignty over and Kingly care for his Church is made more known to the world the encrease of which glory of the Lord should be the scope of the prayers of the Saints against their foes And let them know that God ruleth in Iacob unto the ends of the earth 8. It is suitable to Gods justice and no strange thing to see such as have been messengers servants officers of persecuting powers or searchers out of the godly as beagles or blood hounds to be made beggars vagabonds and miserable spectacles of Gods wrath before they die roving to and fro●… like hungry and masterlesse dogs At evening let them return and let them make a noise like a dog and go round about the City let them wander up and down for meat and grudge if they be not satisfied Ver. 16. But I will sing of thy power yea I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning for thou hast been my defence and refuge in the day of my trouble 17. Unto thee O my strength will I sing for God is my defence and the God of my mercy In the last place he promiseth thanksgiving for the mercy whith he felt in the day of his trouble and sixeth his faith on God as his merciful Protector and only strength whereon he was to lean in every condition where in he could fall Whence learn 1. Whatsoever mischief fall upon the wicked the Lords children whom they maligne shall have reason to rejoyce and to praise God for supporting them in their trials and delivering of them out of toubles But I will sing of thy power 2. When the godly do compare the Lords putting difference between them and the rest of the wicked world pitying them and pardoning their sins when he justly pursueth the sins of others they cannot but rejoyce and proclaim Gods mercy with earnest affection Yea I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning 3. The shining light of one late experience of Gods care of a man serveth to bring to remembrance and to illuminate the whole course of Gods by past care and kindnesse to him and to raise a song of joy and praise to God for altogether For thou hist been my refuge and defence in the day of trouble 4. What God hath been unto us being looked on rightly may serve to certifie us what God is unto us and what he shall be to us and what we may expect of him For from thou hast been my defence and my refuge he inferreth hope of joyful experience of the same mercy for time to come Unto thee O my strength will I sing 5 When a man is sure of God engaged to him by good will and Covenant and proof given for letting out to him protection and mercy as his soul needeth he cannot choose but have a heart full of joy and a mouth full of joyful praises unto God Unto thee O my strength will I sing for God is my defence and the God of my mercy PSAL. LX. To the chief Musician upon Shushan-Eduth Michtam of David to teach When he strove with Aram Naharaim and with Aram Zobah when Ioab returned and smote of Edom in the valley of salt twelve thousand THis Psalme is a prayer for the victory of Israel over their enemies indited unto the
possession begun thou hast given me the heritage of those that fear thy Name 8. The inheritance of the chief of Gods servants and of the meane●… and weakest of them is one the right of every beleever is alik●… good albeit the hold laid upon the right by all is not ali●… strong and what the strongest of the godly do beleeve for their own consolation and salvation the weakest may beleeve the same to belong to every beleever that feareth God as David doth here Thou hast given me the heritage of those that fear thy Name Ver. 6. Thou wilt prolong the Kingslife and his ●…ares as many generations 7. He shall abide before God for ever O prepare mercy and truth which may preserve him 8. So will I sing praise unto thy Name for ever that I may daily perform my vowes In the third place he prophesieth not simply of the stability of the Kingdom in his own person and posterity bu●… under the type namely he speaketh of the perpetuity of the Kingdome of Christ the true King of Israel for which end he prayeth that mercy and truth may be forth-coming to the subjects 〈◊〉 Christ that his Kingdom may be prolonged and so David in his ●…e and all the Saints in their time may joyfully praise God continually Whence learn 1. It is not unusual with 〈◊〉 together with present consolation and the light of 〈◊〉 ●…tion In Christ to reveal also and give assurance of great things concerning Christs Kingdome as here and elsewhere in 〈◊〉 Scripture is to be seen Thou wilt prolong the Kings life and his years as many generations 2. The glory o●… Christ and perpetuity of his Kingdome is every subject good and comfort for this is comfort to David that Christ shall live for eve●… that he shalt abide before God for ever 3. The Kingdome of Christ and government of his subjects in his Church shall be allowed of God and be protected ●…f God 〈◊〉 blessed of God for ever however it be opposed by men in the world he shall abide before God for ever 4. The perpetuity of Christs Kingdom and preservation of the subjects in this life till they be possessed of heaven is by the merciful remedying the misery and removing of the sin which they are subject unto and by performing of what he hath promised and prepared through Christ to bestow upon them O prepare mercy and truth which 〈◊〉 preserve him 5. The best retreat that can be made after wrestling and victory over troubles is prayer and praises as here David after his exercise prayeth O prepare mercy and truth and then saith unto thee will I sing 6 As the main matter of our vowes is the moral duty of rejoycing in God and hearty praising of him so ●…wed experience of Gods mercy and truth towards has people in Christ is the main matter of our joy in him and praise unto him O prepare mercy and truth c. so will I sing praise unto thy Name that I may daily perform my vowes PSAL. LXII To the chief Musician to Ieduthun A Psalm of David THis Psalme is the issue of a sore conflict and inward combate which David felt from the strong opposition of his irreconcileable adversaries and from the lasting troubles which he sustaine by their persecution and by his friends for saking of him whereby he was put hard to it what to think or what to do at length faith in God giveth him victory and maketh him first to break forth in avowing of his faith and hope in God ver 1. 2. Next to insult over his enemies as dead men because of their sinful course ver 3 4. Thirdly to strengthen himselfe in his faith and hope ver 5 6 7. Fourthly to exhort all men to trust in God and to depend on him for reasons set down ver 8 9. And not to trust in oppression and robbery for reasons set down ver 10 11 12. Ver. 1. TRuly my soul waiteth upon God from him cometh my salvation 2. He on'y is my rock and my salvation he is my defence I shall not be greatly moved From this abrupt beginning of the Psalm declaring that he hath had a sore disputation and wrestling with tentations within him and out of which this is the first coming forth Learn 1. Albeit strong faith be put to a conflict when trouble and tentations do set on yet when it looketh on God and his promises it gets the victory and putteth the soul to a submissive attendance on God and a quiet hope of compleat deliverance Truly my soul waiteth upon God from him cometh my salvation 2. Then is faith well tried and approved when being stript of all supporters except God it doth content it self with him alone as all-sufficient he onely is my rock and my salvation 3. Faith findeth as many answers in Gods sufficiency as temptations can make objections against it he is my rock and my salvation he is my defence 4. As a man resolveth to believe and follow the course of sound faith so he may assure himselfe of establishment and victory over all temptations notwithstanding his own weaknesse I shall not greatly be moved doth David conclude from his resolution to rest on God Ver. 3. How long will ye imagine mischief against a man ye shall be slain all of you as a bowing wall shall ye be and as a tottering fence 4. They onely consult to cast him down from his excellency they delight in lies they blesse with their mouth but they curse inwardly Selah In the second place he insulteth over his enemies and layeth before them the danger of their wicked wayes W●…ence learn 1. So soon as a man hath fastened himselfe on God he may reckon with all adversary powers and insult over them for the seeing of Gods help discovers to the Believer the vanity of all opposition how long will ye imagine mischief against a man 2. As the godly when they fall under persecution may lie long under it and must resolve patience al the while on the one hand so on the other hand persecutors are unreasonably carried on in the course of persecution like madmen who cannot give over the pursuit albeit they see God against themselves and with the godly whom they pursue how long will ye imagine mischief against a man 3. Persecutors shall not have their will against the godly but by their persecution shall draw upon themselves compleat sudden and irrecoverable destruction ye shall be slain all of you as a bowing wall and a tottering fence that is you shall perish suddenly as when a bowing wall and tottering fence rusheth to the ground in a moment 4. As the standing fast in the faith and service of God in a good cause is the excellency of the Believer so is it the eye-sore of his adversaries which they of all things can least endure in the godly and therefore do bend all their wit and forces most unto to break them off their holy carriage and course
soft with showres thou blessest the springing thereof 11. Thou crownest the yeer with thy goodnesse and thy paths drop fatnesse 12. They drop upon the pastures of the wildernesse and the little hills rejoyce on every side 13. The pastures are clothed with ●…ocks the valleyes also are covered over with corn they shout for joy they also ring The ninth reason of the Lords praise is from his plentiful furnishing of food yearly for man and beast but in special for his making the promised land fruitful unto his people Israel when he shall give them rest from their enemies and peace therein after their being exercised with troubles What may be prophetical in this whole Psalme as touching the Israelites we will not here enquire nor how far the Prophet did look beyond his own and Solomons time when he said Praise waiteth for thee in Sion c. Only Hence learn general doctrines 1. The Lords blessing of the ground and making it fruitful is his coming as it were to visit it Thou visitest the earth and waterest it 2. Gods providence is then best seen when particular parts are looked upon one after another Thou waterest it thou enrichest it tho●…●…parest them corn c. 3. The sending of timely rain and plent●… of it and after that abundance of victual should not be slightly passed over but well and carefully marked for the husbandry is all the Lords Thou preparest them corn when thou hast so provided for it 4. Second causes and the natural course of conveying benefits unto us are not rightly seen except when God the first and prime cause is seen to be nearest unto the actual disposing of them for producing the effect Thou waterest the ridges thereof abundantly c. Thou ●…ssest the springing thereof 5. From the one end of the year to the other God hath continual work about the bringing forth of the ●…ruits of the ground and glo●…iously doth perfect it once a year Thou crownest the year by thy goodnesse 6. Every one of the footsteps of Gods providence for the p●…ovision of his peoples food hath its own blessing●… as appeareth in the profitable use of the straw and stubble and chaffe and multiplication of the seed Thy paths drop fatnesse 7. The Lord hath a care to provide food not only for man but also 〈◊〉 beasts and not only for ●…ame beasts which are most useful for man but also for wilde beasts in the wildernesse making his rain to fall on all parts of the ground They drop upon the pastures of the wildernesse and the little hills rejoyce on every side 8. Albeit temporal benefits be inferior to spiritual yet because unto Gods children they be appendices of the spiritual they are worthy to be taken notice of and that God should be praised for them as here the Paslmist sheweth praising God for spiritual blessings in the beginning of the Psalm and here in the end for temporal benefits 9. The plurality of Gods creatures and the comparison of Gods benefits set before our eyes are the scale musick book and noted lessons of the harmony and melody which we ought to have in our hearts in praising him yea these benefits do begin and take up the song in their own kinde that we may follow them in our kinde The pastures are clothed with flocks the valleyes also are covered over with corn they shout for joy they also sing PSAL. LVI To the chief Musician A song or Psalme THis Psalm being all of praises may be divided into three parts In the first the Psalmist exhorteth all the earth to praise God ver 1 2 3 4. and that because of the works which God did of old for his people ver 5 6. and because he is able to do the like when he pleaseth ver 7. In the second part he exhorts the Church of Israel living with him in that age to praise God for the late experience of Gods goodnesse towards them in the delivery granted to them out of their late trials troubles and sore vevations ver 8 9 10 11 12. In the third place the Prophet expresseth his own purpose of thankfulnesse unto God for the large experience which he had in particular of Gods mercies to himselfe from ver 13. to the end Ver. 1. MAke a joyful noise unto God all yee lands 2. Sing forth the honour of his Name make his praise glorious From this urgent exhortation to praise God Learn 1. As the duty of praise is most necessary and most spiritual so are we more dull and indisposed thereto then to any other exercise spiritual and had need to be stirred up thereunto therefore saith he Make a noise sing forth c 2. The Prophets of old had it revealed unto them that the Gentiles should be brought to the knowledge of God and made to worship him as Make a joyful noise unto God all ye lands importeth 3. The praise of the Lord is a task for all the world to be imployed about and a duty whereunto all are bound seeing they all do see his works and all do hold what they have of him but specially those that hear of him by his Word to whom most specially the Word doth speak Make a joyful noise all ye lands 4. Men ought to go about the work of praising God so cheerfully so wisely and so avowedly as they who do hear his praise spoken of may understand his Majesty magnificence goodnesse power and mercy Make a noise unto God sing forth the honour of his Name make his praise glorious Ver. 3. Say unto God How terrible art thou in thy works through the greatnesse of thy power shall thine enemies submit themselves unto thee 4. All the earth shall worship thee and shall sing unto thee they shall sing to thy Name Selab Here the Psalmist as the Lords pen-man doth furnish matter and words of praising God unto the hearers and prophesieth that the fulnesse of the Gentiles shall concurre in his worship and take part in the song of his praise Whence learn 1. Because we can do nothing of our selves in this work of the Lords praise God must furnish to us matter words Say unto God How terrible c. 2. As the work of the praise of God should be done in love and confidence and sincerity and in his own strength so may it be directed to him immediately and that without flattery otherwayes then men are praised for praise properly is due to God only and no man can speak of him except in his own audience Say unto God How terrible art thou in thy works 3. The works of the Lord every one of them being rightly studied are able to affright us by discovering the incomparable dreadful and omnipotent Majesty of the worker thereof How terrible art thou in thy works 4. When the Lord is pleased to let forth his judgements on his adversaries and to let them see what he can do none of them dare stand out against him but if they be not converted
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
exact any thing of his subjects but that which he offereth to furnish and enable them to discharge he lets none be tempted above his strength he taketh small beginnings in good part he spareth the rod in a great measure mitigates the correction and in midst of wrath he remembereth mercy He shall spare the poor and needy whatsoever hard exercise he put them to he will give them their soul for a prey They shall not perish who in the sense of their need depend upon him He shall save the souls of the needy ver 14. The sixteenth benefit and commendation of Christs Kingdome albeit the Lord suffer his subjects to be tried with heresies and seducers by oppressors and persecutors yet he will assist them in the trial and bring them out of it He shall redeem their soule from deceit and violence and if for his own glory he put any of them to lay down their life for his cause it shall be a point of special honouring of them as of precious sonnes whom he esteemeth much of both living and dead Precious shall their blood be in his sight v. 15. The seventeenth benefit and commendation of Christs government is from his everlasting indurance albeit other Kings die and leave their kingdom to their successor yet it is not so with Christ he indureth for ever his death for paying the ransom of our sins did not interrupt his reign but made way for his more glorious reigning after his resurrection he hath life in himselfe as in the fountain He shall live he shall live conquering and bringing in moe subjects who shall pay tribute unto him To him shall be given of the gold of Sheba The eighteenth benefit and commendation of Christs Kingdom is this Christ shall be well beloved of all his subjects whose exercise it shall be to wish and pray for the prosperity of his Kingdome Church and mystical body and who shall commend and praise his glorious and lovely Majesty Prayer also shalll be made for him continually and daily shall he be praised v. 16. The nineteenth benefit commendation of Christs government is that a little seed of his precious Word sowen among men of whose conversion there might be least hope like a handful of corn sowen upon the mountaines or most barren ground shall have a glorious increase of the conversion of many notable Saints like as corn in a barren place should grow up like Cedar-trees There shall be an handful of 〈◊〉 in the earth on the top of mountains the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon and this blessing of the Gospel he can make it to be without prejudice of the manured land of Churches already planted which are as cities inhabited those he can blesse and will blesse at his pleasure with the abundant growth of grace amongst them And they of the City shall flourish as the grasse of the earth ver 17. The last commendation and benefit of Christs government summeth up all that can be said in these foure generals 1. That Christs Name fame and honour shall be perpetuated from one generation to another for the running of his benefits to his subjects and for the course of his judgements on his enemies His name shall endure for ever his Name shall be continued as long as the Sun 2. His Gospel shall spread further and further among men to deliver his own from the curse due for sin to make them partakers of the blessing of full felicity Men s●…all be blessed in him 3 It shall be in vain to seek blessednesse any where except in him only who is the procurer applier and maintainer of true blessednesse the way whereunto is to come to God in and through Christ In him men shall be blessed And 4. Such a fulnesse of converted Gentiles at length shall be brought in that the blessednesse of the Gospel of Christ and of spiritual communion with him and the riches of his goodnesse and grace shall generally be acknowledged in all the world All Nations shall call him blessed Ver. 18. Blessed be the LORD God the God of Israel who only doth wonderous things 19. And blessed be his glorious Name for ever and let the whole earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen After this gracious answer of the Churches prayer in so glorious a prophecie of Christ thanksgiving and praise is endited unto the Church to be offered up to God for this mercy Whence learn 1. When the heart hath beleeved what the eare hath heard of the blessedness to be found in Christ the mouth should be opened to praise and blesse God Blessed be the Lord God the God of Israel 2. As the keeping of the race of David till the coming of Christ distinct from other families in so many revolutions of affairs as were between Davids reigne and Christs coming is very wonderful so the enlarging of the Kingdome of Christ since he came is full of wonder also whether we look to the King o●… to the subjects converted or the way of converting them by the preaching of his Word or the preservation or continuing of Christs Kingdome in the world amongst so many Devils and wicked adversaries all his subjects being so weak and sinful as they are It is a matter of great wonder indeed Blessed be the God of Israel who onely doth wondrous things There are no wonders like the wonders done in the Redemption of men by Christ 〈◊〉 yea there is no other who can work any wonders but Christ alone 3. As the blessings of Christ are everlasting so should the thanksgiving for them be and no lesse can content the heart of a true beleever who the more he thinks of Christ the more glory seeth he in him and blessed be his glorous Name for ever saith he 4. Before Christ do put an end to his work and give up the Kingdome to the Father his glory shall shine in all the parts of the world for the prayers endited to the Church are not vanishing wishes but reall promises and certaine prophecies ●…et the whole earth be filled with his glory 5. As faith sets so its seal unto the truth of Gods Word in special what concerneth the salvation of men and the glory of God in Christ so love to both the glory of God and salvation of souls se●…s to its seal also or both faith and love do subscribe the same truth of God in both respects again and againe Amen and Amen Ver. 20. The prayers of David the sonne of Iesse are ended This clos●…e of the Psalm is added by the Psalmist David himself and is a part of the text serving first to shew that this was the last of the Psalmes endited by the Spirit to him a little before his death when Solomon was now reigning howsoever in the order of providence it be not in the hindmost place of this book of the Psalmes And next it serveth to shew that in this answer made to his prayer set down in this Psalme all his
heathen in our sight by the revenging of the blood of thy servants which is shed 11. Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee according to the greatnesse of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die Secondly they pray for pardon of their sins and delivery from the misery which their sins had procured unto which Petitions sundry reasons are added for strengthening of the faith of the Church Whence learne 1. The sense of sin maketh the afflicted to be patient and submissive unto God without murmuration and their lamentation for their misery doth resolve in prayer and in a prayer for remission of sin O remember not against us former iniquities 2. The onely right way to remedy a miserable condition is to sue for remission of sins and for the renewed evidence of reconciliation for before the Church here do ask any thing for their outward delivery they pray O remember not against us former iniquities 3. A peoples long continuance in sin doth furnish ground of fear of the long continuing of begun wrath and judgement upon them and therefore they pray for the forgetting of their sin that the quarrel being the judgement may be removed O remember not against us our former iniquities 4. When warth and justice are like to consume us and quickly make an end of us a refuge is open to us in Gods tender mercies who cannot destroy utterly a sinner fleeing to his mercy Let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low 5. When the Lords people are brought low let them not look for a lifting up or reliefe except from God onely therefore say they here Help us O Lord. 6. Such as have laid hold on God for salvation promised in the Covenant may also look for particular deliveries out of particular troubles as appendices of the main benefit of salvation Therefore Help us O God of our salvation say they 7. When men do ask any thing the granting whereof may glorify God they may confidently expect to have it and in speciall when God may be so glorified as his people may also be preserved and comforted Help us say they for the glory of thy Name and deliver us 8. As the conscience of sin useth to step in oftner between us and mercy so must we call oftner for remission of sinne for earnest affection can double and treble the same Petition without babling Deliver us and purge away our sins 9. It is the glory of the Lord to forget sin and when remission of sinnes is prayed for according to Gods promise the Lords glory is engaged for the helping of faith to obtain Purge away our sin for thy Names sake 10. Idolaters are ready to insult over Gods people and their religion and over God also when the Church is afflicted and this dishonour of God true Saints cannot endure Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God 11. Howsoever the Lord will punish his own people for their sins in the sight of the heathen yet will he not suffer the heathen long to insult over his people or over the true religion but by shewing kindnesse to his people will have the heathen to know that he is their God who will answer for himself and for his people and their religion also Wherefore should the heathen say Where is their God 12. As it doth belong ●…o Gods honour to deliver his people in their distresse so also to punish the persecutors of his Church and blasphemers of his Name Let him be known among the heathen in our sight by avenging the blood of thy servants 13. It is a comfort and encouragement of living Saints to see God avenge the blood of dead Saints slain by their enemies Let him be knowne in our sight by avenging the blood of thy servants 14. As it is no wonder to see griefe and sighing to be the cheer of Gods people when the Lord hath scattered them and they are captive prisoners under their oppressors so may we be sure their tears and sighing shall not be misregarded by God Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee 15. Albeit it seem impossible to deliver Gods people when they are as condemned prisoners destinated by their enemies unto destruction yet saith seeth delivery very possible to Gods omnipotency According to the greatnes of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die Ver. 12. And render unto our neighbours seven-fold into their bosome their reproach where with they have reproached thee O Lord. 13. So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture will give thee thanks for ever we will shew forth thy praise to all generations In the last place they pray for vengeance on their wicked neighbours who mocked them and their Religion in the time of their calamity and thus they close their prayer with a promise to praise God for the granting of their petitions Whence learn 1. Such as rejoyce at the calamity of Gods people and mock them in their misery especially neighbours who should be most comfortable as they are in some respect more guilty then open oppressors so shall they be most severely plagued of God for their cruelty Render unto our neighbours seven-fold into their besom their reproach 2. The mocking of Gods people in their misery especially for their Relgion is the mocking of God and reproaching of him whose servants they are Render them the reproach wherewith they have reproached thee O Lord. 3. When God taketh vengeance on the enemies of the Church then is it seen what interest God hath in that despised company for the Church here is confident that then their relations unto God and Gods care of them shall be evident So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture shall give thee thanks that is we shall come out of distresse and gather our selves together and professe our selves to be thy people and chosen flock and shall praise thee 4. The troubles of the Lords people and their mourning are but temporal and of short endurance but their deliverance and comfort when their troubles are ended is everlasting and no lesse then everlasting duration can suffice them to praise God and thank him for his kindnesse So we thy people shall give thee thanks for ever 5. As the Lords work for his distressed people calleth for thanks at their hands so also doth it call for praise at their hands who shall hear of it and they whose duty it is to give thanks ought also according to their power to stirre up others to praise God with themselves and to stirre up also the posterity in all succeeding ages as the Church here promiseth We will shew forth thy praise to all generations PSAL. LXXX To the chief Musician upon Shoshannim Eduth A Psalm of Asaph THis Psalm given to the Church to be made use of is of the like sad subject with the former and may be applied to the time of carrying away the ten tribes out of the holy land while
before was converted 9. Then is the heart united and fixed when the fear of God doth rule it that is when after it is informed of Gods will it feareth to omit what he commandeth and to do what he forbiddeth Unite my heart to feare thy Name Ver. 12. I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart and I will glorifie thy Name for evermore 13. For great is thy mercy toward me and thou hast delivered my soul from the lowest hell Here David hopeth to be heard and promiseth praise to God both for his by-past and also for his fore-seene deliverance flowing from the greatnesse of Gods mercy to him Whence learn 1. He who prayeth according to Gods will may promise to himself satisfaction and unto God thanks for granting his requests I will praise thee O Lord my God 2. The thanksgiving of the godly especially when the heart is enlarged is very hearty joyned with great delight and constant purpose of glorifying of God constantly I will praise thee O Lord my God with all my heart and I will glorifie thy Name for evermore 3. When a man seeth his sinnes great his deserving great his danger and delivery great he must also see Gods mercy toward him great and his obligation to thanksgiving great I will glorifie thy Name for evermore for great 〈◊〉 thy mercy toward me 4. Preventing mercy keeping us from the evill we were in danger to fall into is to be esteemed of by ●…s as delivering mercy bringing us out of the evill wherein we were lying The Lords keeping of us from falling into hell should he accounted by us no lesse mercie then if we had been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and had been brought back out of it by him Thou hast de●… 〈◊〉 my soul from the lowest hell The same may be said of 〈◊〉 particulars and when our eyes are open to see the evils 〈◊〉 which the Lord hath kept us when we were in danger of them 〈◊〉 shall be forced so to judge Ver. 14. O God the proud are risen against 〈◊〉 and the assemblies of violent men have sought af●… my soul and have not set thee before them 15. But thou O Lord art a God full of compassion and gracious long-suffering and plenteous in mercy and truth Here are other reasons of his hope to be delivered taken 〈◊〉 the pride and oppression of the godlesse enemy and from 〈◊〉 pity and compassion Whence learn 1. Proud violent cruell and godlesse men are the readiest instruments which can be found unto Satan for persecuting Gods children Such were the enemies of David a type of Christ and an example of his persecuted followers The proud are risen against me 2. Whatsoever wicked man pleaseth to make head against the godly he will readily finde multitudes to follow him The proud are risen against me and the assemblies of violent men have sought after my soul. 3. When men do reject the fear of God there is no wickednesse so great which they will not commit They have sought after my soul and have not set thee O God before th●… that is they neither fear thy judgements nor care for what may please thee 4. The more violent cruell prophane and ungodly our persecutors are the more hope is of Gods pity towards us as the Psalmist reasoneth But thou O Lord art a God full of compassion 5. Whatsoever objections may arise from our unworthinesse from our former sinful provocations of God and the multitude and greatnesse of our former sins to hinder our hope that God shall pity us in our affliction they are all answered and taken away by consideration of the unspeakable greatnesse of Gods goodnesse for in God is compassion he is full of compassion a God full of compassion that is infinitely compassionate and as it were affected wi●…h our misery he is gracious though we be unworthy he is long-suffering although we be given to strife and provocation of him and how great soever our misdeferrings have been he is plenteous in mercy and howsoever we have forfeited our interest in his promises yet he will not follow the forfeiture but will keep up our right unto his promises still he is plenteous in truth great is his faithfulnesse who keepeth promises albeit he might justly reject them Ver. 16. O turne unto me and have mercy upon me give thy strength unto thy servant and save the son of thine handmaid 17. Shew me a token for good that ther which hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou LORD hast helpen me and comforted me The seventh pe●…ition is for strength to stand out till such a clear delivery should come to him from God as might put his enemies to confusion when they should see it Whence learn 〈◊〉 Whosoever do consider well the riches of Gods grace and goodnesse may confidently pray for a proof of it in the changing of a miserable condition into a better even when God seemeth angry and ●…erse Thou art plenteous in mercy and truth O turne unto me and have mercy upon me 2. It is no small mercy to have strength from God to subsist under troubles till the delivery come and for this strength the man emp●…ied of self-confidence may call and should be content with supporting strength till the Lords time of deliverance come Give thy strength unto thy servent 3. The longer course the kindnesse of the Lord hath had toward us and the more relations are between God and us we may expect the more confidently for further effects and fruit of his kindnesse for our deliverance for David here reckoneth from his being born within the Covenant borne as a domestick as a childe of the Church who belonged to Gods protection and care as the son of the handmaid belonged to the care of the master of the family Save the son of thy handmaid 4. As the wicked delight to see the godly in misery that they may insult over godlinesse so the go●…ly desire deliverance that in their person godlinesse may not suffer nor wicked men be heartened in their insolenci●… Shew me a token for good that they who hate me may see it 5. The good successe and delivery of some of the Saints out of their troubles and 〈◊〉 is a good token both to themselves and to all other godly persons of a blessed event unto them from all their troubles Therefore David prayeth for it Shew me a ●…oken for good 6. As the good event of the godly from their troubles is a matter of 〈◊〉 and gloriation unto the godly so is it also the matter of shame and confusion to the wicked who do hate them Shew me a t●…ken for good that they who hate me may see it and be ashamed because thou Lord hast holpen me and comforted me PSAL. LXXXVII A Psalme or song for the sonnes of Korah WHen God loosed the captivity of the Jewes by Cyrus son of them did returne from Babylon the work of repuration of Church and S●…ate Temple and City had
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
carelesse security but Gods judgements do draw them forth to the light and do make it appear that God hath observed them all Thou hast set our iniquities before thee our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance 4. The misbelief and disobedience of Gods visible Church maketh their life both short and miserable as the experience of the Israelites doth shew For all our dayes are passed away in thy wrath we spend our life like a tale that is told 5. The more we study to see the length of mans life it appeareth the shorter the more we look upon mans strength and beauty and glory we finde him the weaker the vainer and the naughtier The dayes of our yeares are threescore yeares and ten and if by reason of strength they be fourescore yeares yet c. 6. If our infancy and ordinary sicknesses and casualties of incident griefs and sorrowes sometimes for one cause and sometimes for another be considered the life of man hath little in it except trouble and grief Their strength is labour and sorrrow 7. If any man seem to have lesse trouble and sorrow or more strength then others it is nothing to count upon the shortnesse of it maketh it to lose worth and estimation for It is soon cut off and we flee away Ver. 11. Who knoweth the power of thine anger even according to thy feare so is thy wrath In the calamities of the Israelites he observeth how terrible the Lords wrath is which albeit few do consider yet might men see it in his fearful threatnings and judgements Whence learne 1. Albeit the misery and short life of sinful man doth speak somewhat of the terriblenesse and power of Gods anger yet is it taken notice of by few Who knoweth the power of thy anger 2. The wrath of God may be known by the fear and terror of God which his severe justice almighty power terrible threatnings and fearful judgements executed against sinne do teach m●…n to know Even according to thy fear so is thy wrath Seeing men know not the power of Gods wrath till it break forth upon them it is wisdome to study his fear that wrath may be prevented and to take the measure of the power of Gods wrath by measuring his dreadful feare and terrible terror and to stand in awe of him in time Who knoweth the power of thine anger even according thy fear so is thy wrath Ver. 12. So teach us to number our dayes that we may apply our heartt unto wisdome In the third part of this Psalme he putteth up six Petitions for the right use and gracious seasoning of the short and sorrowful life of the Lords people The first Petition is for wisdome to provide in time for the remedy of sin and of everlasting misery before this short and uncertain life be ended Whence learn 1. Albeit our life be both short and uncertain how soon it may end yet we look upon the indesinitesse of the time of continuance of it as if the duration of it were infinite and our yeares were innumerable for Teach us to number our dayes importeth some acknowledgement of this fault 2. Albeit it be easie for us to consider how many of our dayes are already past and how few these that are to come must be by course of nature or may be few in the way of Gods ordinary providence yet this lesson how easie soever must be taught of God before we can profitably consider of it So teach us to number our days as we may apply our hearts unto wisdom 3. The only remedy of sin and of the wrath of God and misery of mortal men for sin is the wisdom whi●…h is taught of God in the Scripture to wit that sinners should seek reconcilia●…ion with God through the ●…acrifice and obedience of Ch●…ist and study to keep friendship with God by the power of his Spi●… So teach us to number our dayas as we may apply our hearts unto wisdome 4. The right use of the sin wrath and judgements which we see in our time manifested is to deal wi●…h God by prayer that not only he would inform us of our danger and duty not onely reveal to our mindes the mystery of grace and reconciliation but also that he would effectually move our will he●…t and affections by faith which worketh by love to make application of the remedy of those evils to our selv●…s So teach us to nu●…ber our dayes that we may apply our hearts unto wisdome Ver. 13. Return O LORD how long and let it repent thee concerning thy servants The second Petition is that God would not only remove the tokens of his displeasure against his people but also now at length would shew himselfe reconciled by changing his dispensation toward them in a course of comfort Whence learne 1. Albeit the Lord do not go away from his people but ●…oth ever remain with them in some one or other gracious operation yet in respect of a comfortable presence he may turn away till his people request him to return as here Return O Lord. 〈◊〉 The Lords withdrawing of his comfortable p●…esence from his people for how short a time soever seemeth a long time to us in this short life Return O Lord how long 3. Albeit the Lord do not change his affection and repent like a man yet he can change his operation like a father who commiserates his childes affliction and goeth about to cherish him after correction●… Let it repent thee concerning thy servants 4. Albeit we be but very slight servants and be fore smitten for our disobedience yet should we not cast away our calling nor suffer our rel●…tions unto God to be dissolved but should adhere unto them by any means as here they call themselves still servants Let it repent thee concerning thy servants Ver. 14. O sati fie us early with thy mercy that we may rejoyce and be glad in our dayes 15. Make us glad according to the dayes wherein thou hast afflicted us and the yeares wherein we have seen evill The third Petition is for some spiritual comfort and refreshment to their spirits which might keep them in heart and hope of eternal salvatior Whence learn 1. A soul sensible of wrath hath as great hunger for spiritual comfort as a ●…ished man hath for meat O satisfie us 2. The renewed intimation of Gods mercy pardoning sin and making clear ou●…●…onciliation is able to comfort us in our greatest sorrow O satisfie us with thy mer●…y 3. As bodily hunge cannot suffer delay so neither can sense of wrath and desire of●…favourable acceptation long endure the want of consolation but after a night of trouble earnestly expecteth a morning of comfort O satisfie us early with thy mercy 4. A poor hungry soul lying under sense of wrath will promise to it selfe happinesse for ever if it can but once again sinde what it hath sometime felt th●… is one sweet fill of Gods sensible mercy towards it O satisfy us that we may