ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS VIII TO XVIII.
PSALM VIII.
TO THE END, FOR THE WINE-PRESSES, A PSALM OF DAVID HIMSELF. (12)
1. He seems to say nothing of wine-presses in the text of the Psalm of
which this is the title. By which it appears, that one and the same thing is often
signified in Scripture by many and various similitudes. We may then take
wine-presses to be Churches, on the same principle by which we understand also by a
threshing-floor the Church. For whether in the threshing-floor, or in the
wine-press, there is nothing else done but the clearing the produce of its covering;
which is necessary, both for its first growth and increase, and arrival at the
maturity either of the harvest or the vintage. Of these coverings or
supporters then; that is, of chaff, on the threshing-floor, the corn; and of husks, in
the presses, the wine is stripped: as in the Churches, from the multitude of
worldly men, which is collected together with the good, for whose birth and
adaptating to the divine word that multitude was necessary, this is effected, that by
spiritual love they be separated through the operation of God's ministers. For
now so it is that the good are, for a time, separated from the bad, not in
space, but in affection: although they have converse together in the Churches, as
far as respects bodily presence. But another time will come, the corn will be
stored up apart in the granaries, and the wine in the cellars. "The wheat,"
saith he, "He will lay up in garners; but the chaff He will burn with fire
unquenchable."(1) The same thing may be thus understood in another similitude: the wine
He will lay up in cellars, but the husks He will cast forth to cattle: so that
by the bellies of the cattle we may be allowed by way of similitude to
understand the pains of hell.
2. There is another interpretation concerning the wine-presses, yet still
keeping to the meaning of Churches. For even the Divine Word may be understood
by the grape: for the Lord even has been called a Cluster of grapes; which they
that were sent before by the people of Israel brought from the land of promise
hanging on a staff, crucified as it were.(2) Accordingly, when the Divine Word
maketh use of, by the necessity of declaring Himself, the sound of the voice,
whereby to convey Himself to the ears of the hearers; in the same sound of the
voice, as it were in husks, knowledge, like the wine, is enclosed: and so this
grape comes into the ears, as into the pressing machines of the wine-pressers.
For there the separation is made, that the sound may reach as far as the ear;
but knowledge be received in the memory of those that hear, as it were in a sort
of vat; whence it passes into discipline of the conversation and habit of
mind, as from the vat into the cellar: where if it do not through negligence grow
sour, it will acquire soundness by age. For it grew sour among the Jews, and
this sour vinegar they gave the Lord to drink.(3) For that wine, which from the
produce of the vine of the New Testament the Lord is to drink with His saints in
the kingdom of His Father.(4) must needs be most sweet and most sound.
3. "Wine-presses" are also usually taken for martyrdoms, as if when they
who have confessed the name of Christ have been trodden down by the blows of
persecution, their mortal remains as husks remained on earth, but their souls
flowed forth into the rest of a heavenly habitation. Nor yet by this interpretation
do we depart from the fruitfulness of the Churches. It is sung then, "for the
wine-presses," for the Church's establishment; when our Lord after His
resurrection ascended into heaven. For then He sent the Holy Ghost: by whom the
disciples being fulfilled preached with confidence the Word of God, that Churches
might be collected.
4. Accordingly it is said," O Lord, our Lord, how admirarble is Thy Name
in all the earth!" (ver. 1). I ask, how is His Name wonderful in all the earth?
The answer is, "For Thy glory has been raised above the heavens." So that the
meaning is this, O Lord, who art our Lord, how do all that inhabit the earth
admire Thee! for Thy glory hath been raised from earthly humiliation above the
heavens. For hence it appeared who Thou wast that descendedst, when it was by some
seen, and by the rest believed, whither it was that Thou ascendedst.
5. "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise,
because of Thine enemies" (ver. 2). I cannot take babes and sucklings to be
any other than those to whom the Apostle says, "As unto babes in Christ I have
given you milk to drink, not meat."(5) Who were meant by those who went before
the Lord praising Him, of whom the Lord Himself used this testimony, when He
answered the Jews who bade Him rebuke them," Have ye not read, out of the mouth of
babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise?"(6) Now with good reason He
says not, Thou hast made, but," Thou hast made perfect praise." For there are
in the Churches also those who now no more drink milk, but eat meat: whom the
same Apostle points out, saying, "We speak wisdom among them that are
perfect;"(7) but not by those only are the Churches perfected; for if there were only
these, little consideration would be had of the human race. But consideration is
had, when they too, who are not as yet capable of the knowledge of things
spiritual and eternal, are nourished by the faith of the temporal history, which for
our salvation after the Patriarchs and Prophets was administered by the most
excellent Power and Wisdom of God, even in the Sacrament of the assumed Manhood,
in which there is salvation for every one that believeth; to the end that moved
by Its authority each one may obey Its precepts, whereby being purified and
"rooted and grounded in love," he may be able to run with Saints, no more now a
child in milk, but a young man in meat, "to comprehend the breadth, the length,
the height, and depth, to know also the surpassing knowledge of the love of
Christ."(8)
6. "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise,
because of Thine enemies." By enemies to this dispensation, which has been
wrought through Jesus Christ and Him crucified, we ought generally to understand
all who forbid belief in things unknown,(1) and promise certain knowledge:(2) as
all heretics do, and they who in the superstition of the Gentiles are called
philosophers. Not that the promise of knowledge is to be blamed; but because
they deem the most healthful and necessary step of faith is to be neglected, by
which we must needs ascend to something certain, which nothing but that which is
eternal can be. Hence it appears that they do not possess even this knowledge,
which in contempt of faith they promise; seeing that they know not so useful
and necessary a step thereof. "Out of the mouth," then "of babes and sucklings
Thou hast made perfect praise," Thou, our Lord, declaring first by the Apostle,
"Except ye believe, ye shall not understand;"(3) and saying by His own mouth,"
Blessed are they that have not seen, and shall believe."(4) "Because of the
enemies: "against whom too that is said, "I confess to Thee, O Lord of heaven and
earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise, and revealed them unto
babes."(5) "From the wise," he saith, not the really wise, but those who deem
themselves such. "That Thou mayest destroy the enemy and the defender." Whom but
the heretic?(6) For he is both an enemy and a defender, who when he would
assault the Christian faith, seems to defend it. Although the philosophers too of
this world may be well taken as the enemies and defenders: forasmuch as the Son
of God is the Power and Wisdom of God by which every one is enlightened who is
made wise by the truth: of which they profess themselves to be lovers, whence
too their name of philosophers; and therefore they seem to defend it, while they
are its enemies, since they cease not to recommend noxious superstitions, that
the elements of this world should be worshipped and revered.
7. "For I shall see Thy heavens, the works of Thy fingers" (ver. 3). We
read that the law was written with the finger of God, and given through Moses,
His holy servant: by which finger of God many understand the Holy Ghost.(7)
Wherefore if, by the fingers of God, we are right in understanding these same
ministers filled with the Holy Ghost, by reason of this same Spirit which worketh in
them, since by them all holy Scripture has been completed for us; we understand
consistently with this, that, in this place, the books of both Testaments are
called "the heavens." Now it is said too of Moses himself, by the magicians of
king Pharaoh, when they were conquered by him, "This is the finger of God."(8)
And what is written," The heavens shall be rolled up as a book."(9) Although it
be said of this aethereal heaven, yet naturally, according to the same image,
the heavens of books are named by allegory. "For I shall see," he says, "the
heavens, the works of Thy fingers:" that is, I shall discern and understand the
Scriptures, which Thou, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, hast written by Thy
ministers.
8. Accordingly the heavens named above also may be interpreted as the same
books, where he says, "For Thy glory hath been raised above the heavens:" so
that the complete meaning should be this, "For Thy glory hath been raised above
the heavens;" for Thy glory hath exceeded the declarations of all the
Scriptures: "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise,"
that they should begin by belief in the Scriptures, who would arrive at the
knowledge of Thy glory: which hath been raised above the Scriptures, in that it
passeth by and transcends the announcements of all words and languages. Therefore
hath God lowered the Scriptures even to the capacity of babes and sucklings, as
it is sung in another Psalm, "And He lowered the heaven, and came down:"(10) and
this did He because of the enemies, who through pride of talkativeness, being
enemies of the cross of Christ, even when they do speak some truth, still
cannot profit babes and sucklings. So is the enemy and defender destroyed, who,
whether he seem to defend wisdom, or even the name of Christ, still, from the step
of this faith,(11) assaults that truth, which he so readily makes promise of.
Whereby too he is convicted of not possessing it; since by assaulting the step
thereof, namely faith, he knows not how one should mount up thereto. Hence then
is the rash and blind promiser of truth, who is the enemy and defender,
destroyed, when the heavens, the works of God's fingers, are seen, that is, when the
Scriptures, brought down even to the slowness of babes, are understood; and by
means of the lowness of the faith of the history, which was transacted in time,
they raise them, well nurtured and strengthened, unto the grand height of the
understanding of things eternal, up to those things which they establish.(12)
For these heavens, that is, these books, are the works of God's fingers; for by
the operation of the Holy Ghost in the Saints they were completed. For they that
have regarded their own glory rather than man's salvation, have spoken without
the Holy Ghost, in whom are the bowel: of the mercy of God.
9. "For I shall see the heavens, the works of Thy fingers, the moon and
the stars, which Thou hast ordained." The moon and stars are ordained in the
heavens; since both the Church universal, to signify which the moon is often put,
and Churches in the several places particularly, which I imagine to be intimated
by the name of stars, are established in the same Scriptures, which we believe
to be expressed by the word heavens.(1) But why the moon justly signifies the
Church, will be more seasonably considered in another Psalm, where it is said,
"The sinners have bent their bow, that they may shoot in the obscure moon the
upright in heart."(2)
10. "What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that
Thou visitest him?" (ver. 4). It may be asked, what distinction there is between
man and son of man. For if there were none, it would not be expressed thus,"
man, or son of man," disjunctively. For if it were written thus, "What is man,
that Thou art mindful of him, and son of man, that Thou visitest him?" it might
appear to be a repetition of the word "man." But now when the expression is,
"man or son of-man," a distinction is more clearly intimated. This is certainly to
be remembered, that every son of man is a man; although every man cannot be
taken to be a son of man. Adam, for instance, was a man, but not a son of man.
Wherefore we may from hence consider and distinguish what is the difference in
this place between man and son of man; namely, that they who bear the image of
the earthy man, who is not a son of man, should be signified by the name of men;
but that they who bear the image of the heavenly Man(3) should be rather called
sons of men; for the former again is called the old man(4) and the latter the
new; but the new is born of the old, since spiritual regeneration is begun by a
change of an earthy, and worldly life;(5) and therefore the latter is called
son of man. "Man" then in this place is earthy, but "son of man" heavenly; and
the former is far removed from God, but the latter present with God; and
therefore is He mindful of the former, as in far distance from Him; but the latter He
visiteth, with whom being present He enlighteneth him with His countenance. For
"salvation is far from sinners;"(6) and, "The light of Thy countenance hath
been stamped upon us, O Lord."(7) So in another Psalm he saith, that men in
conjunction with beasts are made whole together with these beasts, not by any
present inward illumination, but by the multiplication of the mercy of God, whereby
His goodness reacheth even to the lowest things; for the wholeness of carnal men
is carnal, as of the beasts; but separating the sons of men from those whom
being men he joined with cattle, he proclaims that they are made blessed, after a
far more exalted method, by the enlightening of the truth itself, and by a
certain inundation of the fountain of life. For he speaketh thus: "Men and beasts
Thou wilt make whole, O Lord, as Thy mercy hath been multiplied, O God. But the
sons of men shall put their trust in the covering of Thy wings. They shall be
inebriated with the richness of Thine house, and of the torrent of Thy
pleasures Thou shall make them drink. For with Thee is the fountain of life, and in Thy
light shall we see light. Extend Thy mercy to them that know Thee."(8) Through
the multiplication of mercy then He is mindful of man, as of beasts; for that
multiplied mercy reacheth even to them that are afar off; but He visiteth the
son of man, over whom, placed under the covering of His wings, He extendeth
mercy, and in His light giveth light, and maketh him drink of His pleasures, and
inebriateth him with the richness of His house, to forget the sorrows and the
wanderings of his former conversation. This son of man, that is, the new man, the
repentance of the old man begets with pain and tears. He, though new, is
nevertheless called yet carnal, whilst he is fed with milk; "I would not speak unto
you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal," says the Apostle. And to show that
they were already regenerate, he says, "As unto babes in Christ, I have given
you milk to drink, not meat." And when he relapses, as often happens, to the old
life, he hears in reproof that he is a man; "Are ye not men," he says, "and
walk as men?"(9)
11. Therefore was the son of man first visited in the person of the very
Lord Man, born of the Virgin Mary. Of whom, by reason of the very weakness of
the flesh, which the Wisdom of God vouchsafed to bear, and the humiliation of the
Passion, it is justly said, "Thou hast lowered Him a little lower than the
Angels" (ver. 5). But that glorifying is added, in which He rose and ascended up
into heaven; "With glory," he says, "and with honour hast Thou crowned Him; and
hast set Him over the works of Thine hands" (ver. 6). Since even Angels are the
works of God's hands, even over Angels we understand the Only-begotten Son to
have been set; whom we hear and believe, by the humiliation of the carnal
generation and passion, to have been lowered a little lower than the Angels.
12. "Thou hast put," he says, "all things in subjection under His feet."
When he says, "all things," he excepts nothing. And that he might not be allowed
to understand it otherwise, the Apostle enjoins it to be believed thus, when
he says, "He being excepted which put all things under Him."(1) And to the
Hebrews he uses this very testimony from this Psalm, when he would have it to be
understood that all things are in such sort put under our Lord Jesus Christ, as
that nothing should be excepted.(2) And yet he does not seem, as it were, to
subjoin any great thing, when he says, "All sheep and oxen, yea, moreover, the
beasts of the field, birds of the air, and the fish of the sea, which walk through
the paths of the sea" (ver. 7). For, leaving the heavenly excellencies and
powers, and all the hosts of Angels, leaving even man himself, he seems to have put
under Him the beasts merely; unless by sheep and oxen we understand holy
souls, either yielding the fruit of innocence, or even working that the earth may
bear fruit, that is, that earthly men may be regenerated unto spiritual richness.
By these holy souls then we ought to understand not those of men only, but of
all Angels too, if we would gather from hence that all things are put under our
Lord Jesus Christ. For there will be no creature that will not be put under
Him, under whom the pre-eminent(3) spirits, that I may so speak, are put. But
whence shall we prove that sheep can be interpreted even, not of men, but of the
blessed spirits of the angelical creatures on high? May we from the Lord's
saying that He had left ninety and nine sheep in the mountains, that is, in the
higher regions, and had come down for one?(4) For if we take the one lost sheep to
be the human soul in Adam, since Eve even was made out of his side,(5) for the
spiritual handling and consideration of all which things this is not the time,
it remains that, by the ninety and nine left in the mountains, spirits not
human, but angelical, should be meant. For as regards the oxen, this sentence is
easily despatched; since men themselves are for no other reason called oxen, but
because by preaching the Gospel of the word of God they imitate Angels, as
where it is said, "Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn."(6) How
much more easily then do we take the Angels themselves, the messengers of
truth, to be oxen, when Evangelists by the participation of their title are called
oxen? "Thou hast put under" therefore, he says, "all sheep and oxen," that is,
all the holy spiritual creation; in which we include that of holy men, who are
in the Church, in those wine-presses to wit, which are intimated under the
other similitude of the moon and stars.(7)
13. "Yea moreover," saith he, "the beasts of the field."(8) The addition
of "moreover" is by no means idle. First, because by beasts of the plain may be
understood both sheep and oxen: so that, if goats are the beasts of rocky and
mountainous regions, sheep may be well taken to be the beasts of the field.
Accordingly had it been written even thus, "all sheep and oxen and beasts of the
field;" it might be reasonably asked what beasts of the plain meant, since even
sheep and oxen could be taken as such. But the addition of "moreover" besides,
obliges us, beyond question, to recognise some difference or another. But under
this word, "moreover," not only "beasts of the field," but also "birds of the
air, and fish of the sea, which walk through the paths of the sea" (ver. 8), are
to be taken in. What is then this distinction? Call to mind the
"wine-presses," holding husks and wine; and the threshing-floor, containing chaff and corn;
and the nets, in which were enclosed good fish and bad; and the ark of Noah, in
which were both unclean and clean animals:(9) and you will see that the
Churches for a while, now in this time, unto the last time of judgment, contain not
only sheep and oxen, that is, holy laymen and holy ministers, but "moreover
beasts of the field, birds of the air, and birds of the sea, that walk through the
paths of the sea." For the beasts of the field were very fitly understood, as
men rejoicing in the pleasure of the flesh where they mount up to nothing high,
nothing laborious. For the field is also "the broad way, that leadeth to
destruction:"(10) and in a field is Abel slain.(11) Wherefore there is cause to fear,
test one coming down from the mountains of God's righteousness ("for thy
righteousness," he says, "is as the mountains of God"(12)) making choice of the broad
and easy paths of carnal pleasure, be slain by the devil. See now too "the
birds of heaven," the proud, of whom it is said, "They have set their mouth
against the heaven."(13) See how they are carried on high by the wind, "who say, We
will magnify our tongue, our lips are our own, who is our Lord?"(14) Behold too
the fish of the sea, that is, the curious; who walk through the paths of the
sea, that is, search in the deep after the temporal things of this world: which,
like: paths in the sea, vanish and perish, as quickly as the water comes
together again after it has given room, in their passage, to ships, or to whatsoever
walketh or swimmeth. For he said not merely, who walk the paths of the sea; but
"walk through," he said; showing the very determined earnestness of those who
seek after vain and fleeting things. Now these three kinds of vice, namely, the
pleasure of the flesh, and pride, and curiosity, include all sins. And they
appear to me to be enumerated by the Apostle John, when he says, "Love not the
world; for all that is in the world is the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the
eyes, and the pride of life."(1) For through the eyes especially prevails
curiosity. To what the rest indeed belong is clear. And that temptation of the Lord
Man was threefold: by food, that is, by the lust of the flesh, where it is
suggested, "command these stones that they be made bread:"(2) by vain boasting,
where, when stationed on a mountain, all the kingdoms of this earth are shown
Him, and promised if He would worship:(3) by curiosity, where, from the pinnacle
of the temple, He is advised to cast Himself down, for the sake of trying
whether He would be borne up by Angels.(4) And accordingly after that the enemy could
prevail with Him by none of these temptations, this is said of him, "When the
devil had ended all his temptation."(5) With a reference then to the meaning of
the wine-presses, not only the wine, but the husks too are put under His feet;
to wit, not only sheep and oxen, that is, the holy souls of believers, either
in the laity, or in the ministry; but moreover both beasts of pleasure, and
birds of pride, and fish of curiosity. All which classes of sinners we see mingled
now in the Churches with the good and holy. May He work then in His Churches,
and separate the wine from the husks: let us give heed, that we be wine, and
sheep or oxen; not husks, or beasts of the field, or birds of heaven, or fish of
the sea, which walk through the paths of the sea. Not that these names can be
understood and explained in this way only, but the explanation of them must be
according to the place where they are found. For elsewhere they have other
meanings. And this rule must be kept to in every allegory, that what is expressed by
the similitude should be considered agreeably to the meaning of the particular
place: for this is the manner of the Lord's and the Apostles' teaching. Let us
repeat then the last verse, which is also put at the beginning of the Psalm,
and let us praise God, saying, "0 Lord our Lord, how wonderful is Thy name in
all the earth!" For fitly, after the matter of the discourse, is the return made
to the heading, whither all that discourse must be referred.
PSALM IX.
1. The inscription of this Psalm is, "To the end for the hidden things of
the Son, a Psalm of David himself."(6) As to the hidden things of the Son there
may be a question: but since he has not added whose, the very only-begotten
Son of God should be understood. For where a Psalm has been inscribed of the son
of David,(7) "When," he says, "he fled from the face of Absalom his son;"
although his name even was mentioned, and therefore there could be no obscurity as
to whom it was spoken of: yet it is not merely said, from the face of son
Absalom; but "his" is added. But here both because "his" is not added, and much is
said of the Gentiles, it cannot properly be taken of Absalom.(8) For the war
which that abandoned one waged with his father, no way relates to the Gentiles,
since there the people of Israel only were divided against themselves. This Psalm
is then sung for the hidden things of the only-begotten Son of God.(9) For the
Lord Himself too, when, without addition, He uses the word Son, would have
Himself, the Only-begotten to be understood; as where He says, "If the Son shall
make you free, then shall ye be free indeed."(10) For He said not, the Son of
God; but in saying merely, Son, He gives us to understand whose Son it is. Which
form of expression nothing admits of, save His excellency of whom we so speak,
that, though we name Him not, He can be understood. For so we say, it rains,
clears up, thunders, and such like expressions; and we do not add who does it all;
for that the excellency of the doer spontaneously presents itself to all men's
minds, and does not want words. What then are the hidden things of the Son? By
which expression we must first understand that there are some things of the
Son manifest, from which those are distinguished which are called hidden.
Wherefore since we believe two advents of the Lord, one past, which the Jews
understood not: the other future, which we both hope for; and since the one which the
Jews understood not, profited the Gentiles; "For the hidden things of the Son" is
not unsuitably understood to be spoken of this advent, in which "blindness in
part is happened to Israel, that the fulness of the Gentiles might come in."(11)
For notice of two judgments is conveyed to us throughout the Scriptures,
if any one will give heed to them, one hidden, the other manifest. The hidden
one is passing now, of which the Apostle Peter says, "The time is come that
judgment should begin from the house of the Lord." (12) The hidden judgment
accordingly is the pain, by which now each man is either exercised to purification, or
warned to conversion, or if he despise the calling and discipline of God, is
blinded unto damnation. But the manifest judgment is that in which the Lord, at
His coming, will judge the quick and the dead, all men confessing that it is He
by whom both rewards shall be assigned to the good, and punishments to the
evil. But then that confession will avail, not to the remedy of evils, but to the
accumulation of damnation. Of these two judgments, the one hidden, the other
manifest, the Lord seems to me to have spoken, where He says, "Whoso believeth on
Me hath passed from death unto life, and shall not come into judgment;[1] into
the manifest judgment, that is. For that which passes from death unto life by
means of some affliction, whereby "He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth,"[2]is the hidden judgment. "But whoso believeth not," saith He, "hath been judged
already:"[3] that is, by this hidden judgment hath been already prepared for
that manifest one. These two judgments we read of also in Wisdom, whence it is
written, "Therefore unto them, as to children without the use of reason, Thou
didst give a judgment to mock them; But they that have not been corrected by this
judgment have felt a judgment worthy of God."[4] Whoso then are not corrected
by this hidden judgment of God, shall most worthily be punished by that manifest
one. ...
2. "I will confess unto Thee, O Lord, with my whole heart" (ver. 1). He
doth not, with a whole heart, confess unto God, who doubteth of His Providence in
any particular: but he who sees already the hidden things of the wisdom of
God, how great is Iris invisible reward, who saith, "We rejoice in
tribulations;"[5] and how all torments, which are inflicted on the body, are either for the
exercising of those that are converted to God, or for warning that they be
converted, or for just preparation of the obdurate unto their last damnation: and so
now all things are referred to the governance of Divine Providence, which fools
think done as it were by chance and at random, and without any Divine
ordering. "I will tell all Thy marvels." He tells all God's marvels, who sees them
performed not only openly on the body, but invisibly indeed too in the soul, but
far more sublimely and excellently. For men earthly, and led wholly by the eye,
marvel more that the dead Lazarus rose again in the body, than that Paul the
persecutor rose again in soul.[6] But since the visible miracle calleth the soul
to the light, but the invisible enlighteneth the soul that comes when called, he
tells all God's marvels, who, by believing the visible, passes on to the
understanding of the invisible.
3. "I will be glad and exult in Thee" (ver. 2). Not any more in this
world, not in pleasure of bodily dalliance, not in relish of palate and tongue, not
in sweetness of perfumes, not in joyousness of passing sounds, not in the
variously coloured forms of figure, not in vanities of men's praise, not in wedlock
and perishable offspring, not in superfluity of temporal wealth, not in this
world's getting, whether it extend over place and space, or be prolonged in
time's succession: but, "I will be glad and exult in Thee," namely, in the hidden
things of the Son, where "the light of Thy countenance hath been stamped on us, O
Lord:"[7] for, "Thou wilt hide them," saith he, "in the hiding place of Thy
countenance."[8] He then will be glad and exult in Thee, who tells all Thy
marvels. And He will tell all Thy marvels (since it is now spoken of prophetically),
"who came not to do His own will, but the will of Him who sent Him."[9]
4. For now the Person of the Lord begins to appear speaking in this Psalm.
For it follows, "I will sing to Thy Name, O Most High, in turning mine enemy
behind." His enemy then, where was he turned back? Was it when it was said to
him, "Get thee behind, Satan"?[10] For then he who by tempting desired to put
himself before, was turned behind, by failing in deceiving Him who was tempted,
and by availing nothing against Him. For earthly men are behind: but the heavenly
man is preferred before, although he came after. For "the first man is of the
earth, earthy: the second Man is from heaven, heavenly."[11] But from this
stock he came by whom it was said, "He who cometh after me is preferred before me."
[12] And the Apostle forgets "those things that are behind, and reaches forth
unto those things that are before."[13] The enemy, therefore, was turned
behind, after that he could not deceive the heavenly Man being tempted; and he turned
himself to earthy men, where he can have dominion....For in truth the devil is
turned behind, even in the persecution of the righteous, and he, much more to
their advantage, is a persecutor, than if he went before as a leader and a
prince. We midst sing then to the Name of the Most High in turning the enemy
behind: since we ought to choose rather to fly from him as a persecutor, than to
follow him as a leader. For we have whither we may fly and hide ourselves in the
hidden things of the Son; seeing that "the Lord hath been made a refuge for
us."[14]
5. "They will be weakened, and perish from Thy face" (ver. 3). Who will be
weakened and perish, but the unrighteous and ungodly? "They will be weakened,"
while they shall avail nothing; "and they shall perish," because the ungodly
will not be; "from the face" of God, that is, from the knowledge of God, as he
perished who said," But now I live not, but Christ liveth in me."[1] But why
will the ungodly "be weakened and perish from thy face ?" "Because," he saith,
"Thou hast made my judgment, and my cause:" that is, the judgment in which I
seemed to be judged, Thou hast made mine; and the cause in which men condemned me
just and innocent, Thou hast made mine. For such things served[2] Him for our
deliverance: as sailors too call the wind theirs, which they take advantage of
for prosperous sailing.
6. "Thou satest on the throne Who judgest equity" (ver. 4). Whether the
Son say this to the Father, who said also, "Thou couldest have no power against
Me, except it were given thee from above,"[3] referring this very thing, that
the Judge of men was judged for men's advantage, to the Father's equity and His
own hidden things: or whether man say to God, "Thou satest on the throne Who
judgest equity," giving the name of God's throne to his soul, so that his body may
peradventure be the earth, which is called God's "footstool: "[4] for "God was
in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself:"[5] or whether the soul of the
Church, perfect now and without spot and wrinkle,[6] worthy, that is, of the
hidden things of the Son, in that "the King hath brought her into His
chamber,"[7] say to her spouse, "Thou satest upon the throne Who judgest equity," in that
Thou hast risen from the dead, and ascended up into heaven, and sittest at the
right hand of the Father: whichsoever, I say, of those opinions, whereunto this
verse may be referred, is preferred, it transgresses not the rule of faith.
7. "Thou hast rebuked the heathen, and the ungodly hath perished" (ver.
5). We take this to be more suitably said to the Lord Jesus Christ, than said by
Him. For who else hath rebuked the heathen, and the ungodly perished, save He,
who after that He ascended up into heaven, sent the Holy Ghost, that, filled by
Him, the Apostles should preach the word of God with boldness, and freely
reprove men's sins? At which rebuke the ungodly perished; because the ungodly was
justified and was made godly. "Thou hast effaced their name for the world,[8]
and for the world's world. The name of the ungodly hath been effaced. For they
are not called ungodly who believe in the true God. Now their name is effaced
"for the world," that is, as long as the course of the temporal world endures.
"And for the world's world." What is "the world's world," but that whose image and
shadow, as it were, this world possesses? For the change of seasons succeeding
one another, whilst the moon is on the wane, and again on the increase, whilst
the sun each year returns to his quarter, whilst spring, or summer, or autumn,
or winter passes away only to return, is m some sort an imitation of eternity.
But this world's world is that which abides in immutable eternity. As a verse
in the mind, and a verse in the voice, the former is understood, the latter
heard; and the former fashions the latter; and hence the former works in art and
abides, the latter sounds in the air and passes away. So the fashion of this
changeable world is defined by that world unchangeable which is called the world's
world. And hence the one abides in the art, that is, in the Wisdom and Power
of God: but the other is made to pass in the governance of creation. If after
all it be not a repetition, so that after it was said "for the world," lest it
should be understood of this world that passeth away, it were added "for the
world's world." For in the Greek copies it is thus, <greek>eid</greek>
<greek>ton</greek> <greek>aiwna</greek>, <greek>kai</greek> <greek>eis</greek>
<greek>ton</greek> <greek>aipna</greek> <greek>ton</greek> <greek>aipnos</greek> Which the
Latins have for the most rendered, not, "for the world, and for the world's
world;"[9] but, "for ever, and for the world's world,"[10] that in the words "for
the world's world," the, words "for ever," should be explained. "The name,"
then, "of the ungodly Thou hast effaced for ever," for from henceforth the ungodly
shall never be. And if their name be not prolonged unto this world, much less
unto the world's world."
8. "The swords of the enemy have failed at the end" (ver. 6). Not enemies
in the plural, but this enemy in the singular. Now what enemy's swords have
failed but the devil's? Now these are understood to be divers erroneous opinions,
whereby as with swords he destroys souls, In overcoming these swords, and in
bringing them to failure, that sword is employed, of which it is said in the
seventh Psalm, "If ye be not converted, He will brandish His sword."[12] And
peradventure this is the end, against which the swords of the enemy fail; since up to
it they are of some avail. Now it worketh secretly, but in the last judgment
it will be brandished openly. By it the cities are destroyed. For so it follows,
"The swords of the enemy have failed at the end: and Thou hast destroyed the
cities." Cities indeed wherein the devil rules, where crafty and deceitful
counsels hold, as it were, the place of a court, on which supremacy attend as
officers and ministers the services of all the members, the eyes for curiosity, the
ears for lasciviousness, or for whatsoever else is gladly listened to that
bears on evil, the hands for rapine or any other violence or pollution soever, and
all the other members after this manner serving the tyrannical supremacy, that
is, perverse counsels. Of this city the commonalty, as it were, are all soft
affections and disturbing emotions of the mind, stirring up daily seditions in a
man. So then where a king, where a court, where ministers, where commonalty are
found, there is a city. Now again would such things be in bad cities, unless
they were first in individual men, who are, as it were, the elements and seeds
of cities. These cities He destroys, when on the prince being shut out thence,
of whom it was said, "The prince of this world" has been "cast out,"[1] these
kingdoms are wasted by the word of truth, evil counsels are laid to sleep, vile
affections tamed, the ministries of the members and senses taken captive, and
transferred to the service of righteousness and good works: that as the Apostle
says, "Sin should no more reign in" our "mortal body,"[2] and so forth. Then is
the soul at peace, and the man is disposed to receive rest and blessedness.
"Their memorial has perished with uproar:" with the uproar, that is, of the
ungodly. But it is said, "with uproar," either because when ungodliness is
overturned, there is uproar made: for none passeth to the highest place, where there is
the deepest silence, but he who with much uproar shall first have warred with
his own vices: or "with uproar," is said, that the memory of the ungodly should
perish in the perishing even of the very uproar, in which ungodliness riots.
9. "And the Lord abideth for ever" (ver. 7). "Wherefore" then "have the
heathen raged, and the people imagined vain things against the Lord, and against
His anointed:"[3] for" the Lord abideth for ever. He hath prepared His seat in
judgment, and He shall judge the world in equity." He prepared His seat when He
was judged. For by that patience Man purchased heaven, and God in Man profited
believers. And this is the Son's hidden judgment. But seeing He is also to
come openly and in the sight of all to judge the quick arid the dead, He hath
prepared His seat in the hidden judgment: and He shall also openly "jUdge the world
in equity:" that is, He shall distribute gifts proportioned to desert, setting
the sheep on His right hand, and the goats on His left.[4] "He shall judge the
people with justice "(ver. 8). This is the same as was said above, "He shall
judge the world in equity." Not as men judge who see not the heart, by whom very
often worse men are acquitted than are condemned: but "in equity" and "with
justice "shall the Lord judge, "conscience bearing witness, and thoughts
accusing, or else excusing."[5]
10. "And the Lord hath become a refuge to the poor" (ver. 9). Whatsoever
be the persecutions of that enemy, who hath been turned behind, what harm shall
he do to them whose refuge the Lord hath become? But this will be, if in this
world, in which that one has an office of power, they shall choose to be poor,
by loving nothing which either here leaves a man while he lives and loves, or is
left by him when he dies. For to such a poor man hath the Lord become a
refuge, "an Helper in due season, in tribulation." Lo, He maketh poor, for "He
scourgeth every son whom He receiveth."[6] For what "an Helper in due season "is, he
explained by adding "in tribulation." For the soul is not turned to God, save
when it is turned away from this world: nor is it more seasonably turned away
from this world, except toils and pains be mingled with its trifling and hurtful
and destructive pleasures.
11. "And let them who know Thy Name, hope in Thee" (ver. 10), when they
shall have ceased hoping in wealth, and in the other enticements of this world.
For the soul indeed that seeketh where to fix her hope, when she is torn away
from this world, the knowledge of God's Name seasonably receives. For the mere
Name of God hath now been published everywhere: but the knowledge of the name is,
when He is known whose name it is. For the name is not a name for its own
sake, but for that which it signifies. Now it has been said, "The Lord is His
Name."[7] Wherefore whoso willingly submits himself to God as His servant, hath
known this name. "And let them who know Thy Name hope in Thee" (ver. 10), Again,
the Lord saith to Moses, "I am That I am; and Thou shalt say to the children of
Israel, I AM, hath sent me."[8] "Let them" then "who know Thy Name, hope in
Thee;" that they may not hope in those things which flow by in time's quick
revolution, having nothing but" will be" and "has been." For what in them is future,
when it arrives, straightway becomes the past; it is awaited with eagerness, it
is lost with pain. But in the nature of God nothing will be, as if it were not
yet; or hath been, as if it were no longer: but there is only that which is,
and this is eternity. Let them cease then to hope in and love things temporal,
and let them apply themselves to hope eternal, who know His name who said, "I am
That I am;" and of whom it was said, "I AM hath sent me."[8] "For Thou hast not
forsaken them that seek Thee, O Lord." Whoso seek Him, seek no more things
transient and perishable; "For no man can serve two masters."[1]
12. "Sing to the Lord, who dwelleth in Sion" (ver. 11), is said to them,
whom the Lord forsakes not as they seek Him. He dwelleth in Sion, which is
interpreted watching, and which beareth the likeness Of the Church that now is; as
Jerusalem beareth the likeness of the Church that is to come, that is, the
city of Saints already enjoying life angelical; for Jerusalem is by interpretation
the vision of peace.[2] Now watching goes before vision, as this Church goes
before that one which is promised, the city immortal and eternal. But in time it
goes before, not in dignity: because more honourable is that whither we are
striving to arrive, than what we practise, that we may attain to arrive; now we
practise watching, that we may arrive at vision. But again this same Church
which now is, unless the Lord inhabit her, the most earnest watching might run into
any sort of error. And to this Church it was said, "For the temple of God is
holy, which temple ye are:"[3] again," that Christ may dwell in the inner man in
your hearts by faith."[4] It is enjoined us then, that we sing to the Lord who
dwelleth in Sion, that with one accord we praise the Lord, the Inhabitant of
the Church. "Show forth His wonders among the heathen." It has both been done,
and will not cease to be done.
13. "For requiring their blood He hath remembered" (ver. 12). As if they,
who were sent to preach the Gospel, should make answer to that injunction which
has been mentioned, "Show forth His wonders among the heathen," and should
say, "O Lord, who hath believed our report?"[5] and again, "For Thy sake we are
killed all the day long ;"[6] the Psalmist suitably goes on to say, That
Christians not without great reward of eternity will die in persecution, "for requiring
their blood He hath remembered." But why did he choose to say, "their blood"?
Was it, as if one of imperfect knowledge and less faith should ask, How will
they "show them forth," seeing that the infidelity of the heathen will rage
against them; and he should be answered, "For requiring their blood He hath
remembered," that is, the last judgment will come, in which both the glory of the slain
and the punishment of the slayers shall be made manifest? But let no one
suppose "He hath remembered"to be so used, as though forgetfulness can attach to
God; but since the judgment will be after a long interval, it is used in
accordance with the feeling of weak men, who think God hath forgotten, because He doth
not act so speedily as they wish. To such is said what follows also, "He hath
not forgotten the cry of the poor:" that is, He hath not, as you suppose,
forgotten. As if they should on hearing," He hath remembered," say, Then He had
forgotten; No, "He hath not forgotten," says the Psalmist, "the cry of the poor."
14. But I ask, what is that cry of the poor, which God forgetteth not? Is
it that cry, the words whereof are these, "Pity me, O Lord, see my humiliation
at the hands of my enemies "? (ver. 13). Why then did he not say, Pity "us" O
Lord, see our humiliation at the hands of "our" enemies, as if many poor were
crying; but as if one, Pity "me," O Lord? Is it because One intercedeth for the
Saints, "who" first "for our sakes became poor, though He was rich;"[7] and it
is He who saith, "Who exaltest me from the gates of death (ver. 14), that I may
declare all Thy praises in the gates of the daughter of Sion"? For man is
exalted in Him, not that Man only which He beareth, which is the Head of the Church;
but whichsoever one of us also is among the other members, and is exalted from
all depraved desires; which are the gates of death, for that through them is
the road to death. But the joy in the fruition is at once death itself, when one
gains what he hath in abandoned wilfulness coveted: for "coveting is the root
of all evil: "[8] and therefore is the gate of death, for "the widow that
liveth in pleasures is dead."[9] At which pleasures we arrive through desires as it
were through the gates of death. But all highest purposes are the gates of the
daughter of Sion, through which we come to the vision of peace in the Holy
Church.... Or haply are the gates of death the bodily senses and eyes, which were
opened when the man tasted of the forbidden tree, [10]... and are the gates of
the daughter of Sion the sacraments and beginnings of faith, which are opened to
them that knock, that they may arrive at the hidden things of the Son? ..
15. Then follows, "I will exult for Thy salvation:'' that is, with
blessedness shall I be holden by Thy salvation, which is our Lord Jesus Christ, the
Power and Wisdom of God. Therefore says the Church, which is here in affliction
and is saved by hope, as long as the hidden judgment of the Son is, in hope she
says," I will exult for Thy salvation:" for now she is worn down either by the
roar of violence around her, or by the errors of the heathen. "The heathen are
fixed in the corruption, which they made" (ver. 15). Consider ye how punishment
is reserved for the sinner, out of his own works; and how they that have
wished to persecute the Church, have been fixed in that corruption, which they
thought to inflict. For they were desiring to kill the body, whilst they themselves
were dying in soul. "In that snare which they hid, has their foot been taken."
The hidden snare is crafty devising. The foot of the soul is well understood to
be its love: which, when depraved, is called coveting or lust; but when
upright, love or charity ....And the Apostle says, "That being rooted and grounded in
love, ye may be able to take in."[1] The foot then of sinners, that is, their
love, is taken in the snare, which they hide: for when delight shall have
followed on to deceitful dealing, when God shall have delivered them over to the
lust of their heart; that delight at once binds them, that they dare not tear away
their love thence and apply it to profitable objects; for when they shall make
the attempt, they will be pained in heart, as if desiring to free their foot
from a fetter: and giving way trader this pain they refuse to withdraw from
pernicious delights. "In the snare" then "which they have hid," that is, in
deceitful counsel, "their foot hath been taken," that is, their love, which through
deceit attains to that vain joy whereby pain is purchased.
16. "The Lord is known executing judgments" (ver. 16). These are God's
judgments. Not from that tranquillity of His blessedness, nor from the secret
places of wisdom, wherein blessed souls are received, is the sword, or fire, or
wild beast, or any such thing brought forth, whereby sinners maybe tormented: but
how are they tormented, and how does the Lord do judgment? "In the works," he
says, "of his own hands hath the sinner been caught."
17. Here is interposed, "The song of the diapsalma" (ver. 16): as it were
the hidden joy, as far as we can imagine, of the separation which is now made,
not in place, but in the affections of the heart, between sinners and the
righteous, as of the corn from the chaff, as yet on the floor. And then follows,
"Let the sinners be turned into hell" (ver. 17): that is, let them be given into
their own hands, when they are spared, and let them be ensnared in deadly
delight. "All the nations that forget God." Because "when they did not think good to
retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind."[2]
18. "For there shall not be forgetfulness of the poor man to the end"
(ver. 18); who now seems to be in forgetfulness, when sinners are thought to
flourish in this world's happiness, and the righteous to be in travail: but "the
patience," saith He, "of the poor shall not perish for ever." Wherefore there is
need of patience now to bear with the evil, who are already separated in will,
till they be also separated at the last judgment.
19. "Arise, O Lord, let not man prevail" (ver. 19). The future judgment is
prayed for: but before it come, "Let the heathen," saith he, "be judged in Thy
sight:" that is, in secret; which is called in God's sight, with the knowledge
of a few holy and righteous ones. "Place a lawgiver over them, O Lord." (ver.
20). He seems to me to point out Antichrist: of whom the Apostle says, "When
the man of sin shall be revealed."[3] "Let the heathen know that they are men."
That they who will be set free by the Son of God, and belong to the Son of Man,
and be sons of men, that is, new men, may serve man, that is, the old man the
sinner, "for that they are men."
20. And because it is believed that he is to arrive at so great a pitch of
empty glory, and he will be permitted to do so great things, both against all
men and against the Saints of God, that then some weak ones shall indeed think
that God cares not for human affairs, the Psalmist interposing a diapsalma,
adds as it were the voice of men groaning and asking why judgment is deferred.[4]
PSALM X.[5]
"Why, O Lord," saith he, "hast Thou withdrawn afar off?" (ver. 1). Then he
who thus inquired, as if all on a sudden he understood, or as if he asked,
though he knew, that he might teach, adds, "Thou despisest in due seasons, in
tribulations:" that is, Thou despisest seasonably, and causest tribulations to
inflame men's minds with longing for Thy coming. For that fountain of life is
sweeter to them that have much thirst. Therefore he hints the reason of the delay,
saying, "Whilst the ungodly vaunteth himself, the poor man is inflamed" (ver.
2). Wondrous it is and true with what earnestness of good hope the little ones
are inflamed unto an upright living by comparison with sinners. In which mystery
it comes to pass, that even heresies are permitted to exist; not that heretics
themselves wish this, but because Divine Providence worketh this result from
their sins, which both maketh and ordaineth the light; but ordereth only the
darkness, that by comparison therewith the light may be more pleasant, as by
comparison with heretics the discovery of truth is more sweet. For so, by this
comparison, the approved, who are known to God, are made manifest among men.
1. "They are taken in their thoughts, which they think:" that is, their
evil thoughts become chains to them. But how become they chains? "For the sinner
is praised," saith he, "in the desires of his soul" (ver. 3). The tongues of
flatterers bind souls in sin. For there is pleasure in doing those things, in
which not only is no reprover feared, but even an approver heard. "And he that
does unrighteous deeds is blessed." Hence "are they taken in their thoughts, which
they think."
2. "The sinner hath angered the Lord" (ver. 4). Let no one congratulate
the man that prospers in his way, to whose sins no avenger is nigh, and an
approver is by. This is the greater anger of the Lord. For the sinner hath angered
the Lord, that he should suffer these things, that is, should not suffer the
scourging of correction. "The sinner hath angered the Lord: according to the
multitude of His anger He will not search it out." Great is His anger, when He
searcheth not out, when He as it were forgetteth and marketh not sin, and by fraud
and wickedness man attains to riches and honours: which will especially be the
case in that Antichrist, who will seem to man blessed to that degree, that he
will even be thought God.[1] But how great this anger of God is, we are taught
by what follows.
3. "God is not in his sight, his ways are polluted in all time" (ver. 5).
He that knows what in the soul gives joy and gladness, knows how great an ill
it is to be abandoned by the light of truth: since a great ill do men reckon the
blindness of their bodily eyes, whereby this light is withdrawn. How great
then the punishment he endures, who through the prosperous issue of his sins is
brought to that pass, that God is not in his sight, and that his ways are
polluted in all time, that is, his thoughts and counsels are unclean ! "Thy judgments
are taken away from his face." For the mind conscious of evil, whilst it seems
to itself to suffer no punishment, believes that God cloth not judge, and so
are God's judgments taken away from its face; while this very thing is great
condemnation. "And he shall have dominion over all his enemies." For so is it
delivered, that he will overcome all kings, and alone obtain the kingdom; since too
according to the Apostle, who preaches concerning him, "He shall sit in the
temple of God, exalting himself above all that is worshipped and that is called
God."[2]
4. And seeing that being delivered over to the lust of his own heart, and
predestinated to extreme[3] condemnation, he is to come, by wicked arts, to
that vain and empty height and rule; therefore it follows, "For he hath said in
his heart, I shall not move from generation to generation without evil" (ver. 6):
that is, my fame and my name will not pass from this generation to the
generation of posterity, unless by evil arts I acquire so lofty a principality, that
posterity cannot be silent concerning it. For a mind abandoned and void of good
arts, and estranged from the light of righteousness, by bad arts devises a
passage for itself to a fame so lasting, as is celebrated even in posterity. And
they that cannot be known for good, desire that men should speak of them even for
ill, provided that their name spread far and wide. And this I think is here
meant, "I shall not move from generation to generation without evil." There is
too another interpretation, if a mind vain and full of error supposes that it
cannot come from the mortal generation to the generation of eternity, but by bad
arts: which indeed was also reported of Simon, when he thought that he would
gain heaven by wicked arts, and pass from the human generation to the generation
divine by magic.[4] Where then is the wonder, if that man of sin too, who is to
fill up all the wickedness and ungodliness, which all false prophets have
begun, and to do such" great signs; that, if it were possible, he should deceive the
very elect,"[5] shall say in his heart, "I shall not move from generation to
generation without evil"?
5. "Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness and deceit" (ver. 7).
For it is a great curse to seek heaven by such abominable arts, and to get
together such earnings for acquiring the eternal seat. But of this cursing his mouth
is full. For this desire shall not take effect, but within his mouth only will
avail to destroy him, who dared promise himself such things with bitterness and
deceit, that is, with anger and insidiousness, whereby he is to bring over the
multitude to his side. "Under his tongue is toil and grief." Nothing is more
toilsome than unrighteousness and ungodliness: upon which toil follows grief;
for that the toil is not only without fruit, but even unto destruction. Which
toil and grief refer to that which he hath said in his heart, "I shall not be
moved from generation to generation without evil." And therefore, "under his
tongue," not on his tongue, because he will devise these things in silence, and to
men will speak other things, that he may appear good and just, and a son of God.
6. "He lieth in ambush with the rich" (ver. 8). What rich, but those whom
he will load with this world's gifts? And he is therefore said to lie in
ambush with them, because he will display their false happiness to deceive men; who,
when with a perverted will they desire to be such as they, and seek not the
good things eternal, will fall into his snares. "That in the dark he may kill
the innocent." "In the dark,"[6] I suppose, is said, where it is not easily
understood what should be sought, or what avoided. Now to kill the innocent, is of
an innocent to make one guilty.
7. "His eyes look against the poor," for he is chiefly to persecute the
righteous, of whom it is said, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven"[1] (ver. 9). "He lieth in wait in a secret place, as a lion
in his den." By a lion in a den, he means one in whom both violence and deceit
will work. For the first persecution of the Church was violent, when by
proscriptions, by torments, by murders, the Christians were compelled to sacrifice:
another persecution is crafty, which is now conducted by heretics of any kind
and false brethren: there remains a third, which is to come by Antichrist, than
which there is nothing more perilous; for it will be at once violent and crafty.
Violence he will exert in empire, craft in miracles. To the violence, the word
"lion" refers; to craft, the words "in his den." And these are again repeated
with a change of order. "He lieth in wait," he says, "that he may catch the
poor;" this hath reference to craft: but what follows, "To catch the poor whilst
he draweth him," is put to the score of violence. For "draweth" means, he
bringeth him to himself by violence, by whatever tortures he can.
8. Again, the two which follow are the same "In his snare he will humble
him," is craft (ver. 10). "He shall decline and fall, whilst he shall have
domination over the poor," is violence. For a "snare" naturally points to "lying in
wait:" but domination most openly conveys the idea of terror. And well does he
say, "He will humble him in his snare." For when he shall begin to do those
signs, the more wonderful they shall appear to men, the more those Saints that
shall be then will be despised, and, as it were, set at nought: he, whom they
shall resist by righteousness and innocence, shall seem to overcome by the marvels
that he does. But "he shall decline and fall, whilst he shall have domination
over the poor;" that is, whilst he shall inflict whatsoever punishments he will
upon the servants of God that resist him.
9. But how shall he decline, and fall? "For he hath said in his heart, God
hath forgotten; He turneth away His face, that He see not unto the end" (ver.
11). This is declining, and the most wretched fall, while the mind of a man
prospers as it were in its iniquities, and thinks that it is spared; when it is
being blinded, and kept for an extreme and timely vengeance: of which the
Psalmist now speaks: "Arise, O Lord God, let Thine hand be exalted" (ver. 12): that
is, let Thy power be made manifest. Now he had said above, "Arise, O Lord, let
not man prevail, let the heathen be judged in Thy sight:"[2] that is, in secret,
where God alone seeth. This comes to pass when the ungodly have arrived at what
seems great happiness to men: over whom is placed a lawgiver, such as they had
deserved to have, of whom it is said," Place a lawgiver over them, O Lord, let
the heathen know that they are men."[3] But now after that hidden punishment
and vengeance it is said, "Arise, O Lord God, let Thine hand be exalted;" not of
course in secret, but now in glory most manifest. "That Thou forget not the
poor unto the end ;" that is, as the ungodly think, who say, "God hath forgotten,
He turneth away His face, that He should not see unto the end." Now they deny
that God seeth unto the end, who say that He careth not for things human and
earthly, for the earth is as it were the end of things; in that it is the last
element, in which men labour in most orderly sort, but they cannot see the order
of their labours, which specially belongs to the hidden things of the Son. The
Church then labouring in such times, like a ship in great waves and tempests,
awaketh the Lord as if He were sleeping, that He should command the winds, and
calm should be restored.[4] He says therefore, "Arise, O Lord God, let Thine
hand be exalted, that Thou forget not the poor unto the end."
10. Accordingly understanding now the manifest judgment, and in exultation
at it, they say, "Wherefore hath the ungodly angered God?" (ver. 13); that is,
what hath it profiled him to do so great evil ? "For he said in his heart, He
will not require it." Then follows, "For Thou seest toil and considerest anger,
to deliver them into Thine hands" (ver. 14). This sentence looks for distinct
explanation, wherein if there shall be error it becomes obscure. For thus has
the ungodly said in his heart, God will not require it, as though God regarded
toil and anger, to deliver them into His hands; that is, as though He feared
toil and anger, and for this reason would spare them, lest their punishment be too
burdensome to Him, or lest He should be disturbed by the storm of anger: as
men generally act, excusing themselves of vengeance, to avoid toil or anger.
11. "The poor hath been left unto Thee." For therefore is he poor, that
is, hath despised all the temporal goods of this world, that Thou only mayest be
his hope. "Thou wilt be a helper to the orphan," that is, to him to whom his
father this world, by whom he was born after the flesh, dies, and who can already
say, "The world hath been crucified unto me, and I unto the world."[5] For of
such orphans God becomes the Father. The Lord teaches us in truth that His
disciples do become orphans, to whom He saith, "Call no man father on earth."[1]
Of which He first Himself gave an example in saying," Who is my mother, and who
my brethren?"[2] Whence some most mischievous heretics 3 would assert that He
had no mother; and they do not see that it follows from this, if they pay
attention to these words, that neither had His disciples fathers. For as He said,
"Who is my mother?" so He taught them, when He said, "Call no man your father on
earth."
12. "Break the arm of the sinner and of the malicious" (ver. 15); of him,
namely, of whom it was said above, "He shall have dominion over all his
enemies." He called his power then, his arm; to which Christ's power is opposed, of
which it is said, "Arise, O Lord God, let Thine hand be exalted. His fault shall
be required, and he shall not be found because of it;"[4] that is he shall be
judged for his sins, and himself shall perish because of his sin. After this,
what wonder if there follow, "The Lord shall reign for ever and world without
end; ye heathen shall perish out of His earth"? (ver. 16). He uses heathen for
sinners and ungodly.
13. "The Lord hath heard the longing of the poor"(ver. 17): that longing
wherewith they were burning, when in the straits and tribulations of this world
they desired the day of the Lord. "Thine ear hath heard the preparation of
their heart." This is the preparation of the heart, of which it is sung in another
Psalm, "My heart is prepared, O God, my heart is prepared:"[5] of which the
Apostle says, "But if we hope for what we see not, we do with patience wait for
it."[6] Now, by the ear of God, we ought, according to a general rule of
interpretation, to understand not a bodily member, but the power whereby He heareth;
and so (not to repeat this often) by whatever members of His are mentioned, which
in us are visible and bodily, must be understood powers of operation. For we
must not suppose it anything bodily, in that[7] the Lord God hears not the sound
of the voice, but the preparation of the heart.
14. "To judge for the orphan and the humble" (ver. 18): that is, not for
him who is conformed to this world, nor for the proud. For it is one thing to
judge the orphan, another to judge for the orphan. He judges the orphan even, who
condemns him; but he judges for the orphan, who delivers sentence for him.
"That man add not further to magnify himself upon earth." For they are men, of
whom it was said, "Place a lawgiver over them, O Lord: let the heathen know that
they are men."[8] But he too, who in this same passage is understood to be
placed over them, will be man, of whom it is now said, "That man add not further
to magnify himself upon earth:" namely, when the Son of Man shall come to judge
for the orphan, who hath put off from himself the old man, and thus, as it
were, buried his father.
15. After the hidden things then of the Son, of which, in this Psalm, many
things have been said, will come the manifest things of the Son, of which a
little has been now said at the end of the same Psalm. But the title is given
from the former, which here occupy the larger portion. Indeed, the very day of the
Lord's advent may be rightly numbered among the hidden things of the Son,
although the very presence of the Lord itself will be manifest. For of that day it
is said, that no man knoweth it, neither angels, nor powers, nor the Son of
man.[9] What then so hidden, as that which is said to be hidden even to the Judge
Himself, not as regards knowledge, but disclosure? But concerning the hidden
things of the Son, even if any one would not wish to understand the Son of God,
but of David himself, to whose name the whole Psalter is attributed, for the
Psalms we know are called the Psalms of David, let him give ear to those words in
which it is said to the Lord, "Have mercy on us, O Son of David:"[10] and so
even in this manner let him understand the same Lord Christ, concerning whose
hidden things is the inscription of this Psalm. For so likewise is it said by the
Angel: "God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David."[11] Nor to
this understanding of it is the sentence opposed in which the same Lord asks of
the Jews," If Christ be the Son of David, how then doth he in spirit call Him
Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand, until I put
Thine enemies under Thy feet."[12] For it was said to the unskilled, who
although they looked for Christ's coming, yet expected Him as man, not as the Power
and Wisdom of God. He teacheth then, in that place, the most true and pure faith,
that He is both the Lord of king David, in that He is the Word in the
beginning, God with God,[13] by which all things were made; and Son, in that He was
made to him of the seed of David according to the flesh. For He doth not say,
Christ is not David's Son, but if ye already hold that He is his Son, learn how He
is his Lord: and do not hold in respect of Christ that He is the Son of Man,
for so is He David's Son;[14] and leave out that He is the Son of God, for so is
He David's Lord. [15]
PSALM XI.(1)
TO THE END, A PSALM OF DAVID HIMSELF.(2)
1. This title does not require a fresh consideration: for the meaning of,
"to the end," has already been sufficiently handled.(3) Let us then look to the
text itself of the Psalm, which to me appears to be sung against the
heretics,(4) who, by rehearsing and exaggerating the sins of many in the Church, as if
either all or the majority among themselves were righteous, strive to turn and
snatch us away from the breasts of the one True Mother Church: affirming that
Christ is with them, and warning us as if with piety and earnestness, that by
passing over to them we may go over to Christ, whom they falsely declare they
have. Now it is known that in prophecy Christ, among the many names in which notice
of Him is conveyed in allegory, is also called a mountain.(5) We must
accordingly answer these people, and say, "I trust in the Lord: how say ye to my soul,
Remove into the mountains as a sparrow?" (ver. 1). I keep to one mountain
wherein I trust, how say ye that I should pass over to you, as if there were many
Christs? Or if through pride you say that you are mountains, I had indeed need to
be a sparrow winged with the powers and commandments of God: but these very
things hinder my flying to these mountains, and placing my trust in proud men. I
have a house where I may rest, in that I trust in the Lord. For even "the
sparrow hath found her a house,"(6) and, "The Lord hath become a refuge to the
poor."(7) Let us say then with all confidence, lest while we seek Christ among
heretics we lose Him, "In the Lord I trust: how say ye to my soul, Remove into the
mountains as a sparrow?"
2. "For, lo, sinners have bent the bow, they have prepared their arrows in
the quiver, that they may in the obscure moon shoot at the upright in heart"
(ver. 2). These be the terrors of those who threaten us as touching sinners,
that we may pass over to them as the righteous. "Lo," they say, "the sinners have
bent the bow:" the Scriptures, I suppose, by carnal interpretation of which
they emit envenomed sentences from them. "They have prepared their arrows in the
quiver:" the same words, that is, which they will shoot out on the authority of
Scripture, they have prepared in the secret place of the heart. "That they may
in the obscure moon(8) shoot at the upright in heart:" that when they see,
from the Church's light being obscured by the multitude of the unlearned and the
carnal, that they cannot be convicted, they may corrupt good manners by evil
communications.(9) But against all these terrors we must say, "In the Lord I
trust."
3. Now I remember that I promised to consider in this Psalm with what
suitableness the moon signifies the Church.(10) There are two probable opinions
concerning the moon: but of these which is the true, I suppose it either
impossible or very difficult for a man to decide. For when we ask whence the moon has
her light, some say that it is her own, but that of her globe half is bright, and
half dark: and when she revolves in her own orbit, that part wherein she is
bright gradually turns towards the earth, so as that it may be seen by us; and
that therefore at first her appearance is as if she were horned. ...According to
this opinion the moon in allegory signifies the Church, because in its
spiritual part the Church is bright, but in its carnal part is dark: and sometimes the
spiritual part is seen by good works, but sometimes it lies hid in the
conscience, and is known to God alone, since in the body alone is it seen by men. ...
But according to the other opinion also the moon is understood to be the Church,
because she has no light of her own, but is lighted by the only-begotten Son
of God, who in many places of holy Scripture is allegorically called the
Sun.(11) Whom certain heretics(12) being ignorant of, and not able to discern Him,
endeavour to turn away the minds of the simple to this corporeal and visible
sun, which is the common light of the flesh of men and flies, and some they do
pervert, who as long as they cannot behold with the mind the inner light of truth,
will not be content with the simple Catholic faith; which is the only safety
to babes, and by which milk alone they can arrive in assured strength at the
firm support of more solid food. Whichever then of these two opinions be the true,
the moon in allegory is fitly understood as the Church. Or if in such
difficulties as these, troublesome rather than edifying, there be either no
satisfaction or no leisure to exercise the mind, or if the mind itself be not capable of
it, it is sufficient to regard the moon with ordinary(13) eyes, and not to seek
out obscure causes, but with all men to perceive her increasings and fulnesses
and wanings; and if she wanes to the end that she may be renewed, even to this
rude multitude she sets forth the image of the Church, in which the
resurrection of the dead is believed.
4. Next we must enquire, what in this Psalm is meant by "the obscure
moon," in which sinners have prepared to shoot at the upright in heart? For not in
one way only may the moon be said to be obscure: for when her monthly course is
finished, and when her brightness is interrupted by a cloud, and when she is
eclipsed at the full, the moon may be called obscure. It may then be understood
first of the persecutors of the Martyrs, for that they wished in the obscure
moon to shoot at the upright in heart; whether it be yet in the time of the
Church's youth, because she had not yet shone forth in greatness on the earth, and
conquered the darkness of heathen superstitions; or by the tongues of blasphemers
and such as defame the Christian name, when the earth was as it were
beclouded, the moon, that is, the Church, could not be clearly seen; or when by the
slaughter of the Martyrs themselves and so great effusion of blood, as by that
eclipse and obscuration, wherein the moon seems to exhibit a bloody face, the weak
were deterred from the Christian name; in which terror sinners shot out words
crafty and sacrilegious to pervert even the upright in heart. And secondly, it
can be understood of these sinners, whom the Church contains, because at that
time, taking the opportunity of this moon's obscurity, they committed many
crimes, which are now tauntingly objected to us by the heretics, whereas their
founders are said to have been guilty of them.(1) But howsoever that be which was
done in the obscure moon, now that the Catholic name is spread and celebrated
throughout the whole world, what concern of mine is it to be disturbed by things
unknown? For "in the Lord I trust;" nor do I listen to them that say to my soul,
"Remove into the mountains as a sparrow. For, lo, sinners have bent the bow,
that they may in the obscure moon shoot at the upright in heart." Or if the moon
seem even(2) now obscure to them, because they would make it uncertain which is
the Catholic Church, and they strive to convict her by the sins of those many
carnal men whom she contains; what concern is this to him, who says in truth,
"In the Lord I trust"? By which word every one shows that he is himself wheat,
and endures the chaff with patience unto the time of winnowing.
5. "In the Lord," therefore, "I trust." Let them fear who trust in man,
and cannot deny that they are of man's party, by whose grey hairs they swear; and
when in conversation it is demanded of them, of what communion they are,
unless they say that they are of his party, they cannot be recognised. ...Or perhaps
you will say that it is written, "Ye shall know them by their works"?(3) I see
indeed marvellous works the daily violences of the Circumcelliones,(4) with
the bishops and presbyters for their leaders, flying about in every direction,
and calling their terrible clubs "Israels;" which men now living daily see and
feel. But for the times of Macarius,(5) respecting which they raise an invidious
cry,(6) most men have not seen them, and no one sees them now: and any Catholic
who saw them could say, if he wished to be a servant of God, "In the Lord I
trust."...
6. Let the Catholic soul then say, "In the Lord I trust; how say ye to my
soul, Remove into the mountains as a sparrow? For, lo, the sinners have bent
the bow, they have prepared their arrows in the quiver, that they may in the
obscure moon shoot at the upright in heart:" and from them let her turn her speech
to the Lord and say, "For they have destroyed what Thou hast perfected"(7)
(ver. 3). And this let her say not against these only, but against all heretics.
For they have all, as far as in them lies, destroyed the praise which God hath
perfected out of the mouth of babes and sucklings,(8) when they disturb the
little ones with vain and I scrupulous questions, and suffer them not to be
nourished with the milk of faith. As if then it were said to this soul, why do they
say to you, "Remove into the mountains as a sparrow;" why do they frighten you
with sinners, who "have bent the bow, to shoot in the obscure moon at the
upright in heart"? She answers, Therefore it is they frighten me, "because they have
destroyed what Thou hast perfected." Where but in their conventicles, where
they nourish not with milk, but kill with poison the babes and ignorant of the
interior light. "But what hath the Just done?"(9) If Macarius, if Caecilianus,
offend you, what hath Christ done to you, who said, "My peace I give unto you,
My peace I leave with you;"(10) which ye with your abominable dissensions have
violated? What hath Christ done to you? who with such exceeding patience
endured His betrayer, as to give to him, as to the other Apostles, the first
Eucharist consecrated(11) with His own hands, and blessed with His own mouth.(12) What
hath Christ done to you? who sent this same betrayer, whom He called a
devil,(13) who before betraying the Lord could not show good faith even to the Lord's
purse,(14) with the other disciples to preach the kingdom of heaven;(15) that He
might show that the gifts of God come to those that with faith receive them,
though he, through whom they receive them, be such as Judas was.
7. "The Lord is in His holy temple" (ver. 4), yea in such wise as the
Apostle saith, "For the temple of God is holy, which" temple "ye are."(1) "Now if
any man shall violate the temple of God, him shall God destroy." He violateth
the temple of God, who violateth unity: for he "holdeth not the head, from which
the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint
supplieth(2) according to the working after the measure of every part maketh
increase of the body to the edifying of itself in love."(3) The Lord is in this His
holy temple; which consisteth of His many members, fulfilling each his own
separate duties, by love built up into one building. Which temple he violateth,
who for the sake of his own pre-eminence separateth himself from the Catholic
society. "The Lord is in His holy temple; the Lord, His seat is in heaven." If you
take heaven to be the just man, as you take the earth to be the sinner, to
whom it was said, "Earth thou art, and unto earth shalt thou go;"(4) the words,
"The Lord is in His holy temple" you will understand to be repeated, whilst it is
said, "The Lord, His seat is in heaven."
8. "His eyes look upon the poor."(5) His to Whom the poor man hath been
left, and Who hath been made a refuge to the poor.(6) And therefore all the
seditions and tumults within these nets,(7) until they be drawn to shore, concerning
which heretics upbraid us to their own ruin and our correction, are caused by
those men, who will not be Christ's poor. But do they turn away God's eyes from
such as would be so? "For His eyes look upon the poor." Is it to be feared
lest, in the crowd of the rich, He may not be able to see the few poor, whom He
brings up in safe keeping in the bosom of the Catholic Church? "His eyelids
question the sons of men." Here by that rule I would wish to take "the sons of
men"(8) of those that from old men have been regenerated by faith. For these, by
certain obscure passages of Scripture, as it were the closed eyes of God, are
exercised that they may seek: and again, by certain clear passages, as it were the
open eyes of God, are enlightened that they may rejoice. And this frequent
closing and opening in the holy Books are as it were the eyelids of God; which
question, that is, which try the "sons of men;" who are neither wearied with the
obscurity of the matter, but exercised; nor puffed up by knowledge, but confirmed.
9. "The Lord questioneth the righteous and ungodly" (ver. 5). Why then do
we fear lest the ungodly should be any hurt to us, if so be they do with
insincere heart share the sacraments with us, seeing that He "questioneth the
righteous and the ungodly." "But whoso loveth iniquity, hateth his own soul:" that is,
not him who believeth God, and putteth not his hope in man, but only his own
soul doth the lover of iniquity hurt.
10. "He shall rain snares upon the sinners" (ver. 6). If by clouds are
understood prophets generally, whether good or bad, who are also called false
prophets: false prophets are so ordered by the Lord God, that by them He may rain
snares upon sinners.(9) For no one, but the sinner, falls into a following of
them, whether by way of preparation for the last punishment, if he shall choose
to persevere in sin; or to dissuade from pride, if in time he shall come to seek
God with a more sincere intent. But if by clouds are understood good and true
prophets only; by these too it is clear that God raineth snares upon sinners,
although by them He watereth also the godly unto fruitfulness. "To some," saith
the Apostle, "we are the savour of life unto life; to some the savour of death
unto death."(10) For not prophets only, but all who with the word of God water
souls, may be called clouds. Who when they are understood amiss, God raineth
snares upon sinners; but when they are understood aright, He maketh the hearts of
the godly and believing fruitful. As, for instance, the passage, "and they two
shall be in one flesh,"(11) if one interpret it with an eye to lust, He
raineth a snare upon the sinner. But if you understand it, as he who says, "But I
speak concerning Christ and the Church,"(12) He raineth a shower on the fertile
soil. Now both are effected by the same cloud, that is, holy Scripture. Again the
Lord says, "Not that which goeth into your mouth defileth you, but that which
cometh out."(13) The sinner hears this, and makes ready his palate for
gluttony: the righteous hears it, and is guarded against the superstitious distinction
in meats. Here then also out of the same cloud of Scripture, according to the
several desert of each, upon the sinner the rain of snares, upon the righteous
the rain of fruitfulness, is poured.
11. "Fire and brimstone and the blast of the tempest is the portion of
their cup." This is their punishment and end, by whom the name of God is
blaspbemed; that first they should be wasted by the fire of their own lusts, then by the
ill savour of their evil deeds cast off from the company of the blessed, at
last carried away and overwhelmed suffer penalties unspeakable. For this is the
portion of their cup: as of the righteous, "Thy cup inebriating how excellent is
it! for they shall be inebriated with the richness of Thine house."(1) Now I
suppose a cup is mentioned for this reason, that we should not suppose that
anything is done by God's providence, even in the very punishments of sinners,
beyond moderation and measure. And therefore as if he were giving a reason why this
should be, he added, "For the Lord is righteous, and hath loved
righteousnesses" (ver. 7). The plural not without meaning, but only because he speaks of men,
is as that righteousnesses be understood to be used for righteous men. For in
many righteous men there seem, so to say, to be righteousnesses, whereas there
is one only righteousness of God whereof they all participate. Like as when
one face looks upon many mirrors, what in it is one only, is by those many
mirrors reflected manifoldly. Wherefore he recurs to the singular, saying, "His face
hath seen equity." Perhaps, "His face hath seen equity," is as if it were said,
Equity hath been seen in His face, that is, in knowledge of Him. For God's
face is the power by which He is made known to them that are worthy. Or at least,
"His face hath seen equity," because He doth not allow Himself to be known by
the evil, but by the good; and this is equity.
12. But if any one would understand the moon of the synagogue, let him
refer the Psalm to the Lord's passion, and of the Jews say, "For they have
destroyed what Thou hast perfected;(2) and of the Lord Himself, "But what hath the
Just done?" whom they accused as the destroyer of the Law: whose precepts, by
their corrupt living, and by despising them, and by setting up their own, they had
destroyed, so that the Lord Himself may speak as Man, as He is wont, saying,
"In the Lord I trust; how say ye to my soul, Remove into the mountains as a
sparrow?"(3) by reason, that is, of the fear of those who desire to apprehend and
crucify Him. Since the interpretation is not unreasonable of sinners wishing to
"shoot at the upright in heart,"(4) that is, those who believed in Christ, "in
the obscure moon," that is, the Synagogue filled with sinners. To this too the
words, "The Lord is in His holy temple; the Lord, His seat is in heaven,"(5)
are suitable; that is, the Word in Man, s or the very Son of Man who is in
heaven.(6) "His eyes look upon the poor;" either on t Him whom He assumed as God, or
for whom He suffered as Man. "His eyelids question the sons of men." The
closing and opening of the d eyes, which is probably meant by the word eyelids, we
may take to be His death and resurrection, whereby He tried the sons of men His
disciples, terrified at His passion, and gladdened by the resurrection. "The
Lord questioneth the righteous and ungodly,"(7) even now from out of Heaven
governing the Church. "But whoso loveth iniquity, hateth his own soul." Why it is
so, what follows teaches us. For "He shall rain snares upon the sinners:"(8)
which is to be taken according to the exposition above given, and so on with all
the rest to the end of the Psalm.
PSALM XII.(9)
TO THE END, FOR THE EIGHTH, A PSALM OF DAVID.
1. It has been said on the sixth Psalm,(10) that "the eighth" may be taken
as the day of judgment. "For the eighth" may also be taken "for the eternal
age;" for that after the time present, which is a cycle of seven days, it shall
be given to the Saints.
2. "Save me, O Lord, for the holy hath failed;" that is, is not found: as
we speak when we say, Corn fails, or, Money fails. "For the truths have been
minished from among the sons of men" (ver. 1). The truth is one, whereby holy
souls are enlightened: but forasmuch as there are many souls, there may be said in
them to be many truths: as in mirrors there are seen many reflections from one
face.
3. "He hath talked vanity each man to his neighbour" (ver. 2). By
neighbour we must understand every man: for that there is no one with whom we should
work evil; "and the love of our neighbour worketh no evil."(11) "Deceitful lips,
with a heart and a heart they have spoken evil things."(12) The repetition,
"with a heart and a heart," signifies a double heart.
4. "May the Lord destroy all deceitful lips" (ver. 3). He says "all," that
no one may suppose himself excepted: as the Apostle says, "Upon every soul of
man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and of the Greek."(13) "The tongue
speaking great things:" the proud tongue.
5. "Who have said, We will magnify our tongue, our lips are our own, who
is Lord over us?" (ver. 4). Proud hypocrites are meant, putting confidence in
their speech to deceive men, and not submitting themselves to God.
6. "Because of the wretchedness of the needy and the sighing of the poor,
now I will arise, saith the Lord"(14) (ver. 5). For so the Lord Himself in the
Gospel pitied His people, because they had no ruler, when they could well obey.
Whence too it is said in the Gospel, "The harvest is plenteous, but the
labourers are few."(1) But this must be taken as spoken in the person of God the
Father, who, because of the needy and the poor, that is, who in need and poverty
were lacking spiritual good things, vouchsafed to send His own Son. From thence
begins His sermon on the mount to Matthew, where He says, "Blessed are the poor
in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."(2) "I will place in
salvation." He does not say what He would place: but, "in salvation," must be understood
as, in Christ; according to that, "For mine eyes have seen Thy salvation."(3)
And hence He is understood to have placed in Him what appertains to the taking
away the wretchedness of the needy, and the comforting the sighing of the poor.
"I will deal confidently in Him:" according to that in the Gospel, "For He
taught them as one having authority, and not as their scribes."(4)
7. "The words of the Lord" are "pure words" (ver. 6). This is in the
person of the Prophet himself, "The words of the Lord" are "pure words." He says
"pure," without the alloy of pretence. For many preach the truth impurely;(5) for
they sell it for the bribe of the advantages of this life. Of such the Apostle
says, that they declared Christ not purely. "Silver tried by the fire for the
earth."(6) These words of the Lord by means of tribulations approved to sinners.
"Purified seven times:" by the fear of God, by godliness, by knowledge, by
might, by counsel, by understanding, by wisdom.(7) For seven steps also of
beatitude there are, which the Lord goes over, according to Matthew, in the same
sermon which He spake on the Mount, "Blessed" are "the poor in spirit, blessed the
meek, blessed they that mourn, blessed they which do hunger and thirst after
righteousness, blessed the merciful, blessed the pure in heart, blessed the
peacemakers."(8) Of which seven sentences, it may be observed how all that long
sermon was spoken. For the eighth where it is said, "Blessed" are "they which suffer
persecution for righteousness' sake,"(9) denotes the fire itself, whereby the
silver is proved seven times. And at the termination of this sermon it is said,
"For He taught them as one having authority, and not as their scribes."(4)
Which refers to that which is said in this Psalm, "I deal confidently in Him."
8. "Thou, O Lord, shalt preserve us, and keep us from this generation to
eternity" (ver. 7): here as needy and poor, there as wealthy and rich.
9. "The ungodly walk in a circle round about" (ver. 8): that is, in the
desire of things temporal, which revolves as a wheel in a repeated circle of
seven days; and therefore they do not arrive at the eighth, that is, at eternity,
for which this Psalm is entitled.(10) So too it is said by Solomon, "For the
wise king is the winnower of the ungodly, and he bringeth on them the wheel of the
wicked.--After Thine height Thou hast multiplied the sons of men."(11) For
there is in temporal things too a multiplication, which turns away from the unity
of God. Hence "the corruptible body weigheth down the soul, and the earthy
tabernacle presseth down the mind that museth upon many things."(12) But the
righteous are multiplied "after the height of God," when "they shall go from strength
to strength."13
PSALM XIII. (14)
UNTO THE END, A PSALM OF DAVID.
1. "For Christ is the end of the law to every one that believeth."(15)
"How long, O Lord, wilt Thou forget me unto the end?" (ver. 1) that is, put me off
as to spiritually understanding Christ, who is the Wisdom of God, and the true
end of all the aim of the soul. "How long dost Thou turn away Thy face from
me?" As God doth not forget, so neither doth He turn His face away: but Scripture
speaks after our manner. Now God is said to turn away His face, when He doth
not give to the soul, which as yet hath not the pure eye of the mind, the
knowledge of Himself.
2. "How long shall I place counsel in my soul?" (ver. 2). There is no need
of counsel but in adversity. Therefore "How long shall I place counsel in my
soul?" is as if it were said, How long shall I be in adversity? Or at least it
is an answer, so that the meaning is this, So long, O Lord, wilt Thou forget me
to the end, and so long turn away Thy face from me, until I shall place
counsel in mine own soul: so that except a man place counsel in his own soul to work
mercy perfectly, God will not direct him to the end, nor give him that full
knowledge of Himself, which is "face to face." "Sorrow in my heart through the
day?" How long shall I have, is understood. And "through the day" signifies
continuance, so that day is taken for time: from which as each one longs to be free,
he has sorrow in his heart, making entreaty to rise to things eternal, and not
endure man's day.
3. "How long shall mine enemy be exalted over me?" either the devil, or
carnal habit.
4. "Look on me, and hear me, O Lord my God" (ver. 3). "Look on me," refers
to what was said, "How long" dost "Thou turn away Thy face from me." "Hear,"
refers to what was said," How long wilt Thou forget me to the end? Lighten mine
eyes, that I sleep not in death." The eyes of the heart must be understood,
that they be not closed by the pleasurable eclipse of sin.
5. "Lest at any time mine enemy say, I have prevailed against him" (ver.
4). The devil's mockery is to be feared. "They that trouble me will exult, if I
be moved;" the devil and his angels; who exulted not over that righteous man,
Job, when they troubled him; because he was not moved, that is, did not draw
back from the stedfastness of his faith.(1)
6. "But I have hoped in Thy mercy" (ver. 5). Because this very thing, that
a man be not moved, and that he abide fixed in the Lord, he should not
attribute to self: lest when he glories that he hath not been moved, he be moved by
this very pride. "My heart shall exult in Thy salvation;" in Christ, in the
Wisdom of God. "I will sing(2) to the Lord who hath given me good things;" spiritual
good things, not belonging to man's day. "And I will chant(3) to the name of
the Lord most high" (ver. 6); that is, I give thanks with joy, and in most due
order employ my body, which is the song of the spiritual soul. But if any
distinction is to be marked here, "I will sing" with the heart, "I will chant" with
my works; "to the Lord," that which He alone seeth, but "to the name of the
Lord," that which is known among men, which is serviceable not for Him, but for us.
PSALM XIV.(4)
TO THE END, A PSALM OF DAVID HIMSELF.
1. What "to the end" means, must not be too often repeated. "For Christ is
the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth;"(5) as the
Apostle saith. We believe on Him, when we begin to enter on the good road: we
shall see Him, when we shall get to the end. And therefore is He the end.
2. "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God" (ver. 1). For not
even have certain sacrilegious and abominable philosophers, who entertain
perverse and false notions of God, dared to say, "There is no God." Therefore it is,
hath said "in his heart;" for that no one dares to say it, even if he has dared
to think it. "They are corrupt, and become abominable in their affections:"
that is, whilst they love this world and love not God; these are the affections
which corrupt the soul, and so blind it, that the fool can even say, "in his
heart, There is no God. For as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge,
God gave them over to a reprobate mind."(6) "There is none that doeth goodness,
no not up to one." "Up to one," can be understood either with that one, so
that no man be understood: or besides one, that the Lord Christ may be excepted.
As we say, This field is up to the sea; we do not of course reckon the sea
together with the field. And this is the better interpretation, so that none be
understood to have done goodness up to Christ; for that no man can do goodness,
except He shall have shown it. And that is true; for until a man know the one God,
he cannot do goodness.
3. "The Lord from heaven looked out upon the sons of men, to see if there
be one understanding, or seeking after God" (ver. 2). It may be interpreted,
upon the Jews; as he may have given them the more honourable name of the sons of
men, by reason of their worship of the One God, in comparison with the
Gentiles; of whom I suppose it was said above, "The fool hath said in his heart, There
is no God," etc. Now the Lord looks out, that He may see, by His holy souls:
which is the meaning of, "from heaven." For by Himself nothing is hid from Him.
4. "All have gone out of the way, they have together become useless:" that
is, the Jews have become as the Gentiles, who were spoken of above. "There is
none that doeth good, no not up to one" (ver. 3), must be interpreted as above.
"Their throat is an open sepulchre."(7) Either the voracity of the ever open
palate is signified: or allegorically those who slay, and as it were devour
those they have slain, into whom they instil the disorder of their own
conversation. Like to which with the contrary meaning is that which was said to Peter,
"Kill and eat; "a that he should convert the Gentiles to his own faith and good
conversation. "With their tongues they have dealt craftily." Flattery is the
companion of the greedy and of all bad men. "The poison of asps is under their
lips." By "poison," he means deceit; and "of asps," because they will not hear the
precepts of the law, as asps "will not hear the voice of the charmer;"(9) which
is said more clearly in another Psalm. "Whose mouth is full of cursing and
bitterness:" this is, "the poison of asps." "Their feet are Swift to shed blood."
He here shows forth the habit of ill doing. "Destruction and unhappiness" are
"in their ways." For all the ways of evil men are full of toil and misery. Hence
the Lord cries out, "Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and
I will refresh you. Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me, for I am meek and
lowly in heart. For My yoke is easy and My burden light."(1) "And the way of
peace have they not known:" that way, namely, which the Lord, as I said, mentions,
in the easy yoke and light burden. "There is no fear of God before their
eyes." These do not say, "There is no God;" but yet they do not fear God.
5. "Shall not all, who work iniquity, know?" (ver. 4). He threatens the
judgment. "Who devour My people as the food of bread:" that is, daily. For the
food of bread is daily food. Now they devour the people, who serve their own
ends out of them, not referring their ministry to the glory of God, and the
salvation of those over whom they are.
6. "They have not called upon the Lord." For he doth not really call upon
Him, who longs for such things as are displeasing to Him. "There they trembled
for fear, where no fear was" (ver. 5): that is, for the loss of things
temporal. For they said, "If we let Him thus alone, all men will believe on Him; and
the Romans will come, and take away both our place and nation."(2) They feared to
lose an earthly kingdom, where no fear was; and they lost the kingdom of
heaven, which they ought to have feared. And this must be understood of all temporal
goods, the loss of which when men fear, they come not to things eternal.
7. "For God is in the just generation." It refers to what went before, so
that the sense is, "shall not all they that work iniquity know that the Lord is
in the just generation;"(3) that is, He is not in them who love the world. For
it is unjust to leave the Maker of the worlds, and "serve the creature more
than the Creator."(4) Ye have shamed the counsel of the poor, for the Lord is his
hope" (ver. 6): that is, ye have despised the humble coining of the Son of
God, because ye saw not in Him the pomp of the world: that they, whom he was
calling, should put their hope in God alone, not in the things that pass away.
8. "Who will give salvation to Israel out of Sion?" (ver. 7). Who but He
whose humiliation ye have despised? is understood. For He will come in glory to
the judgment of the quick and the dead, and the kingdom of the just: that,
forasmuch as in that humble coming "blindness hath happened in part unto Israel,
that the fulness of the Gentiles might enter in,"(5) in that other should happen
what follows, "and so all Israel should be saved." For the Apostle too takes
that testimony of Isaiah, where it is said, "There shall come out of Sion He who
shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob:"(6) for the Jews, as it is here, "Who
shall give salvation to Israel out of Sion?" "When the Lord shall turn away the
captivity of His people, Jacob shall rejoice, and Israel shall be glad."(7) It
is a repetition, as is usual: for I suppose, "Israel shall be glad," is the
same as, "Jacob shall rejoice."
PSALM XV.(8)
A PSALM OF DAVID HIMSELF.
1. Touching this title there is no question. "0 Lord who shall sojourn in
Thy tabernacle?" (ver. 1). Although tabernacle be sometimes used even for an
everlasting habitation: yet when tabernacle is taken in its proper meaning, it is
a thing of war. Hence soldiers are called tent-fellows,(9) as having their
tents together. This sense is assisted by the words, "Who shall sojourn?" For we
war with the devil for a time, and then we need a tabernacle wherein we may
refresh ourselves. Which specially points out the faith of the temporal
Dispensation, which was wrought for us in time through the Incarnation of the Lord. "And
who shall rest in Thy holy mountain?" Here perhaps he signifies at once the
eternal habitation itself,(10) that we should understand by "mountain" the
supereminence of the love of Christ in life eternal.(11)
2. "He who walketh without stain, and worketh righteousness" (ver. 2).
Here he has laid down the proposition; in what follows he sets it forth in detail.
3. "Who speaketh the truth in his heart." For some have truth on their
lips, and not in their heart. As if one should deceitfully point out a road,
knowing that there were robbers there, and should say, If you go this way, you will
be safe from robbers; and it should turn out that in fact there were no robbers
found there: he has spoken the truth, but not in his heart. For he supposed it
to be otherwise, and spoke the truth in ignorance. Therefore it is not enough
to speak the truth, unless it be so also in heart. "Who hath practised no
deceit in his tongue" (vet. 3). Deceit is practised with the tongue, when one thing
is professed with the mouth, another concealed in the breast. "Nor tone evil to
his neighhour." It is well known that by "neighbour," every man should be
understood. "And hath not entertained slander against his neighbour," that is, hath
not readily or rashly given credence to an accuser.
4. "The malicious one hath been brought to nought in his sight"(1) (ver.
4). This is perfection, that the malicious one have no force against a man; and
that this be "in his sight;" that is, that he know most surely that the
malicious is not, save when the mind turns itself away from the eternal and immutable
form(2) of her own Creator to the form of the creature, which was made out of
nothing. "But those that fear the Lord, He glorifieth:" the Lord Himself, that
is. Now "the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom."(3) As then the things
above belong to the perfect, so what he is now going to say belongs to
beginners.
5. "Who sweareth unto his neighbour, and deceiveth him not." "Who hath not
given his money upon usury, and hath not taken rewards against the innocent"
(ver. 5). These are no great things: but he who is not able to do even this,
much less able is he to speak the truth in his heart, and to practise no deceit in
his tongue, but as the truth is in the heart, so to profess and have it in his
mouth, "yea, yea; nay, nay;"(4) and to do no evil to his neighbour, that is,
to any man; and to entertain no slander against his neighbour: all which are the
virtues of the perfect, in whose sight the malicious one hath been brought to
nought. Yet he concludes even these lesser things thus, "Whoso doeth these
things shall not be moved for ever:" that is, he shall attain unto those greater
things, wherein is great and unshaken stability. For even the very tenses are,
perhaps not without cause, so varied, as that in the conclusion above the past
tense should be used, but in this the future. For there it was said, "The
malicious one hath been brought to nought in his sight:"but here, "shall not be moved
for ever."
PSALM XVI. (5)
THE INSCRIPTION OF THE TITLE, OF DAVID HIMSELF.(6)
1. Our King in this Psalm speaks in the character of the human(7) nature
He assumed, of whom the royal title at the time of His passion was eminently set
forth.
2. Now He saith as follows; "Preserve me, O Lord, for in Thee have I
hoped" (ver. 1): "I have said to the Lord, Thou art my God, for Thou requirest not
my goods" (ver. 2): for with my goods Thou dost not look to be made blessed.
3. "To the saints who are on His earth" (ver. 3): to the saints who have
placed their hope in the laud of the living, the citizens of the heavenly
Jerusalem, whose spiritual conversation is, by the anchor of hope, fixed in that
country, which is rightly called God's earth; although as yet in this earth too
they be conversant in the flesh. "He hath wonderfully fulfilled all My wishes in
them." To those saints then He hath wonderfully fulfilled all My wishes in their
advancement, whereby they have perceived, how both the humanity of My divinity
hath profited them that I might die, and the divinity of the humanity that I
might rise again.
4. "Their infirmities have been multiplied"(8) (ver. 4): their infirmities
have been multiplied not for their destruction, but that they might long for
the Physician. "Afterwards they made haste." Accordingly after infirmities
multiplied they made haste, that they might be healed. "I will not gather together
their assemblies by blood." For their assemblies shall not be carnal, nor will I
gather them together as one propitiated by the blood of cattle.(9) "Nor will I
be mindful of their names within My lips." But by a spiritual change what they
have been shall be forgotten; nor by Me shall they be any more called either
sinners, or enemies, or men; but righteous, and My brethren, and sons of God
through My peace.
5. "The Lord is the portion of Mine inheritance, and of My cup" (ver. 5).
For together with Me they shall possess the inheritance, the Lord Himself. Let
others choose for themselves portions, earthly and temporal, to enjoy: the
portion of the Saints is the Lord eternal. Let others drink of deadly pleasures,
the portion of My cup is the Lord. In that I say, "Mine," I include the Church:
for where the Head is, there is the body also. For into the inheritance will I
gather together their assemblies, and by the inebriation of the cup I will
forget their old names. "Thou art He who will restore to Me My inheritance:" that to
these too, whom I free, may be known "the glory wherein I was with Thee before
the world was made."(10) For Thou wilt not restore to Me that which I never
lost, but Thou wilt restore to these, who have lost it, the knowledge of that
glory: in whom because I am, Thou wilt restore to Me.
6. "The lines have fallen to me in glorious places" (ver. 6). The
boundaries of my possession have fallen in Thy glory as it were by lot, like as God is
the possession of the Priests and Levites.(11) "For Mine inheritance is
glorious to Me." "For Mine inheritance is glorious," not to all, but to them that see;
in whom because I am, "it is to Me."
7. "I will bless the Lord, who hath given Me understanding" (ver. 7):
whereby this inheritance may be seen and possessed. "Yea moreover too even unto
night my reins have chastened Me." Yea besides understanding, even unto death, My
inferior part, the assumption of flesh, hath instructed Me, that I might
experience the darkness of mortality, which that understanding hath not.
8. "I foresaw the Lord in My sight always" (ver. 8). But coming into
things that pass away, I removed not Mine eye from Him who abideth ever, foreseeing
this, that to Him I should return after passing through the things temporal.
"For He is on My right hand, that I should not be moved." For He favoureth Me,
that I should abide fixedly in Him.
9. "Wherefore My heart was glad, and My tongue exulted" (ver. 9).
Wherefore both in My thoughts is gladness, and in my words exultation. "Moreover too My
flesh shall rest in hope." Moreover too My flesh shall not fail unto
destruction, but shall sleep in hope of the resurrection.
10. "For Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell" (ver. 10). For Thou wilt
neither give My soul for a possession to those parts below. "Neither wilt Thou
grant Thine Holy One to see corruption." Neither wilt Thou suffer that sanctified
body, whereby others are to be also sanctified, to see corruption. "Thou hast
made known to Me the paths of life" (ver. 11). Thou hast made known through Me
the paths of humiliation, that(1) men might return to life, from whence they
fell through pride; in whom because I am, "Thou hast made known to Me." "Thou wilt
fill Me with joy with Thy countenance." Thou wilt fill them with joy, that
they should seek nothing further, when they shall see Thee "face to face;" in whom
because I am, "Thou wilt fill Me." "Pleasure is at Thy right hand even to the
end." Pleasure is in Thy favour and mercy in this life's journey, leading on
even to the end of the glory of Thy countenance.(2)
PSALM XVII. (3)
A PRAYER OF DAVID HIMSELF.
1. This prayer must be assigned to the Person of the Lord, with the
addition of the Church, which is His body.
2. "Hear My righteousness, O God, consider My supplication" (ver. 1).
"Hearken unto My prayer, not in deceitful lips:" not going forth to Thee in
deceitful lips. "Let My judgment from Thy countenance go forth" (ver. 2). From the
enlightening of the knowledge of Thee, let Me judge truth. Or at least, let My
judgment go forth, not in deceitful lips, from Thy countenance, that is, that I
may not in judging utter aught else than I understand in Thee. "Let Mine eyes see
equity:" the eyes, of course, of the heart.
3. "Thou hast proved and visited Mine heart in the night season" (ver. 3).
For this Mine heart hath been proved by the visitation of tribulation. "Thou
hast examined Me by fire, and iniquity hath not been found in Me." Now not night
only, in that it is wont to disturb, but fire also, in that it burns, is this
tribulation to be called; whereby when I was examined I was found righteous.
4. "That My mouth may not speak the works of men" (ver. 4). That nothing
may proceed out of My mouth, but what relates to Thy glory and praise; not to
the works of men, which they do beside Thy will. "Because of the words of Thy
lips."(4) Because of the words of Thy peace, or of Thy prophets. "I have kept hard
ways." I have kept the toilsome ways of human mortality and suffering.
5. "To perfect My steps in Thy paths" (ver. 5). That the love of the
Church might be perfected in the strait ways, whereby she arrives at Thy rest. "That
My footsteps be not moved." That the signs of My way, which, like footsteps,
have been imprinted on the Sacraments and Apostolical writings, be not moved,
that they may mark them who would follow Me. Or at least, that I may still abide
fixedly in eternity, after that I have accomplished the hard ways, and have
finished My steps in the straits of Thy paths.
6. "I have cried out, for Thou hast heard Me, O God" (ver. 6). With a free
and strong effort have I directed My prayers unto Thee: for that I might have
this power, Thou hast heard Me when praying more weakly. "Incline Thine ear to
Me, and hear My words." Let not Thy hearing forsake My humiliation.
7. "Make Thy mercies marvellous" (ver. 7). Let not Thy mercies be
disesteemed, lest they be loved too little.
8. "Who savest them that hope in Thee from such as resist Thy right hand:"
from such as resist the favour, whereby Thou favourest Me. "Keep Me, O Lord,
as the apple of Thine eye" (ver. 8): which seems very little and minute: yet by
it is the sight of the eye directed, whereby the light is distinguished from
the darkness; as by Christ's humanity, the divinity of the Judgment s
distinguishing between the righteous and sinners. "In the covering of Thy wings protect
Me." In the defence of Thy love and mercy protect Me. "From the face of the
ungodly who have troubled Me" (ver. 9).
9. "Mine enemies have compassed about My soul;" "they have shut up their
own fat" (ver.10). They have been covered with their own gross joy, after that
their desire hath been satiated with wickedness. "Their mouth hath spoken
pride." And therefore their mouth spoke pride, in saying, "Hail, King of the
Jews,"(1) and other like words.
10. "Casting Me forth they have now compassed Me about" (ver. 11).
Casting Me forth outside the city, they have now compassed Me about on the Cross.
"Their eyes they have determined to turn down on the earth." The bent of their
heart they have determined to turn down on these earthly things: deeming Him, who
was slain, to endure a mighty evil, and themselves, that slew Him, none.
11. "As a lion ready for prey, have they taken Me" (ver. 12). They have
taken Me, like that adversary who "walketh about, seeking whom he may devour."(2)
"And as a lion's whelp dwelling in secret places." And as his whelp, the
people to whom it was said, "Ye are of your father the devil:"(3) meditating on the
snares, whereby they might circumvent and destroy the just One.
12. "Arise, O Lord, prevent them, and cast them down" (ver. 13). Arise, O
Lord, Thou whom they suppose to be asleep, and regardless of men's iniquities;
be they blinded before by their own malice, that vengeance may prevent their
deed; and so cast them down.
13. "Deliver My soul from the ungodly." Deliver My soul, by restoring Me
after the death, which the ungodly have inflicted on Me. "Thy weapon: from the
enemies of Thine hand" (ver. 14). For My soul is Thy weapon, which Thy hand,
that is, Thy eternal Power, hath taken to subdue thereby the kingdoms of
iniquity, and divide the righteous from the ungodly. This weapon then "deliver from the
enemies of Thine hand" that is of Thy Power that is from Mine enemies.
"Destroy them, O Lord, from off the earth, scatter them in their life." O Lord,
destroy them from off the earth, which they inhabit, scatter them throughout the
world in this life, which only they think their life, who(4) despair of life
eternal. "And by Thy hidden things their belly hath been filled." Now not only this
visible punishment shall overtake them, but also their memory hath been filled
with sins, which as darkness are hidden from the light of Thy truth, that they
should forget God. "They have been filled with swine's flesh." They have been
filled with uncleanness, treading under foot the pearls of God's words. "And they
have left the rest to their babes:" crying out, "This sin be upon us and upon
our children."(5)
14. "But I shall appear in Thy righteousness in Thy sight" (ver. 15 ). But
I, Who have not appeared to them that, with their filthy and darkened heart,
cannot see the light of wisdom, "I shall appear in Thy righteousness in Thy
sight."
I shall be satiated, when Thy glory shall be manifested." And when they
have been satiated with their uncleanness, that they could not know Me, I shall
be satiated, when Thy glory shall be manifested, in them that know Me. In that
verse indeed where it is said, "filled with swine's flesh," some copies have,
"filled with children:" for from the ambiguity of the Greek(6) a double
interpretation has resulted. Now by "children" we understand works; and as by good
children, good works, so by evil, evil.
PSALM XVIII.(7)
TO THE END, FOR THE SERVANT OF THE LORD, DAVID HIMSELF.
1. That is, for the strong of hand, Christ in His Manhood.(8) "The words
of this song which he spoke to the Lord on the day when the Lord delivered him
out of the hands of his enemies, and of the hand of Saul; and he said, On the
day when the Lord delivered him out of the hands of his enemies and of the hand
of Saul:" namely, the king of the Jews, whom they had demanded for
themselves.(9) For as "David" is said to be by interpretation, strong of hand; so "Saul" is
said to be demanding. Now it is well known, how that People demanded for
themselves a king, and received him for their king, not according to the will of God,
but according to their own will.
2. Christ, then, and the Church, that is, whole Christ, the Head and the
Body, saith here, "I will love Thee, O Lord, My strength" (ver. 1). I will love
Thee, O Lord, by whom I am strong.(10)
3. "O Lord, My stay, and My refuge, and My deliverer" (ver. 2). O Lord,
who hast stayed Me, because I sought refuge with Thee: and I sought refuge,
because Thou hast delivered Me. "My God is My helper; and I will hope in Him." My
God, who hast first afforded me the help of Thy call, that I might be able to
hope in Thee. "My defender, and the horn of My salvation, and My redeemer." My
defender, because I have not leant upon Myself, lifting up as it were the horn of
pride against Thee; but have found Thee a horn indeed, that is, the sure height
of salvation: and that I might find it, Thou redeemedst Me. 4. "With praise
will I call upon the Lord, and I shall be safe from Mine enemies" (ver. 3).
Seeking not My own but the Lord's glory, I will call upon Him, and there shall be
no means whereby the errors of ungodliness can hurt Me.
5. "The pains of death," that is, of the flesh, have "compassed Me about.
And the overflowings of ungodliness have troubled Me" (ver. 4). Ungodly
troubles(1)stirred up for a time, like torrents of rain which will soon subside, have
come on to trouble Me.
6. "The pains of hell compassed Me about" (ver. 5). Among those that
compassed Me about to destroy Me, were pains of envy, which work death, and lead on
to the hell of sin. "The snares of death prevented Me." They prevented Me, so
that they wished to hurt Me first, which shall afterwards be recompensed unto
them. Now they seize unto destruction such men as they have evilly persuaded by
the boast of righteousness: in the name but not in the reality of which they
glory against the Gentiles.
7. "And in Mine oppression I called upon the Lord, and cried unto My God.
And He heard My voice from His holy temple" (ver. 6). He heard from My heart,
wherein He dwelleth, My voice. "And My cry in His sight entered into His ears;"
and My cry, which I utter, not in the ears of men, but inwardly before Him
Himself, "entered into His ears."
8. "And the earth was moved and trembled" (ver. 7). When the Son of Man
was thus glorified, sinners were moved and trembled. "And the foundations of the
mountains were troubled." And the hopes of the proud, which were in this life,
were troubled. "And were moved, for God was wroth with them." That is, that the
hope of temporal goods might have now no more establishment in the hearts of
men.
9. "There went up smoke in His wrath" (ver. 8). The tearful supplication
of penitents went up, when they came to know God's threatenings against the
ungodly. "And fire burneth from His face." And the ardour of love after repentance
burns by the knowledge of Him. "Coals were kindled from Him." They, who were
already dead, abandoned by the fire of good desire and the light of
righteousness, and who remained in coldness and darkness, re-enkindled and enlightened, have
come to life again.
10. "And He bowed the heaven, and came down" (ver. 9). And He humbled the
just One, that He might descend to men's infirmity. "And darkness under His
feet." And the ungodly, who savour of things earthly, in the darkness of their own
malice, knew not Him: for the earth under His feet is as it were His footstool.
11. "And He mounted above the cherubim, and did fly" (ver. 10). And He was
exalted above the fulness of knowledge, that no man should come to Him but by
love: for "love is the fulfilling of the law."(2) And full soon He showed to
His lovers that He is incomprehensible, lest they should suppose that He is
comprehended by corporeal imaginations. "He flew above the wings of the winds." But
that swiftness, whereby He showed Himself to be incomprehensible, is above the
powers of souls, whereon as upon wings they raise themselves from earthly fears
into the air of liberty.
12. "And hath made darkness His hiding place" (ver. 11). And hath settled
the obscurity of the Sacraments, and the hidden hope in the heart of believers,
where He may lie hid, and not abandon them. In this darkness too, wherein "we
yet walk by faith, and not by sight,"(3) as long as "we hope for what we see
not, and with patience wait for it."(4) Round about Him is His tabernacle." Yet
they that believe Him turn to Him and encircle Him; for that He is in the midst
of them, since He is equally the friend of all, in whom as in a tabernacle He
at this time dwells. "Dark water in clouds of air." Nor let any one on this
account, if he understand the Scripture, imagine that he is already in that light,
which will be when we shall have come out of faith into sight: for in the
prophets and in all the preachers of the word of God there is obscure teaching.
13. "In respect of the brightness in His sight" (ver. 12): in comparison
with the brightness, which is in the sight of His manifestation. "His clouds
have passed over." The preachers of His word are not now bounded by the confines
of Judaea, but have passed over to the Gentiles. "Hail and coals of fire."
Reproofs are figured,(5) whereby, as by hail, the hard hearts are bruised: but if a
cultivated and genial soil, that is, a godly mind, receive them, the hail's
hardness dissolves into water, that is, the terror of the lightning-charged,(6)
and as it were frozen, reproof dissolves into satisfying doctrine; and hearts
kindled by the fire of love revive. All these things in His clouds have passed
over to the Gentiles.
14. "And the Lord hath thundered from heaven" (ver. 13). And in confidence
of the Gospel the Lord hath sounded forth from the heart of the just One. "And
the Highest gave His voice;" that we might entertain it, and in the depth of
human things, might hear things heavenly.
15. "And He sent out His arrows, and scattered them" (ver. 14). And He
sent out Evangelists traversing straight paths on the wings of strength, not in
their own power, but His by whom they were sent. And "He scattered them," to whom
they were sent, that to some of them they should be "the savour of life unto
life, to others the savour of death unto death."(1) "And He multiplied
lightnings, and troubled them." And He multiplied miracles, and troubled them.
16. "And the fountains of water were seen. And the fountains of water
springing up into everlasting life,"(2) which were made in the preachers, were
seen. "And the foundations of the round world were revealed" (ver. 15). And the
Prophets, who were not understood, and upon whom was to be built the world of
believers in the Lord, were revealed. "At Thy chiding, O Lord:" crying out, "The
kingdom of God is come nigh unto you."(3) "At the blasting of the breath of Thy
displeasure;" saying, "Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."(4)
17. "He hath sent down from on high, and hath fetched Me (ver. 16): by
calling out of the Gentiles for an inheritance "a glorious Church, not having
spot, or wrinkle."(5) "He hath taken Me out of the multitude of waters." He hath
taken Me out of the multitude of peoples.
18. "He hath delivered Me from My strongest enemies" (ver. 17). He hath
delivered Me from Mine enemies, who prevailed to the afflicting and overturning
of this temporal life of Mine. "And from them which hate Me; for they are too
strong for Me:" as long as I am under them knowing not God.
19. "They have prevented Me in the day of My affliction" (ver. 18). They
have first injured Me, in the time when I am bearing a mortal and toilsome body.
"And the Lord hath become My stay." And since the stay of earthly pleasure was
disturbed and torn up by the bitterness of misery, the Lord hath become My
stay.
20. "And hath brought Me forth into a broad place" (ver. 19). And since I
was enduring the straits of the flesh, He brought Me forth into the spiritual
breadth of faith. "He hath delivered Me, because He desired Me." Before that I
desired Him, He delivered Me from My most powerful enemies (who were envious of
Me when I once desired Him), and from them that hated Me, because I do desire
Him.
21. "And the Lord shall reward Me according to My righteousness" (vet.
20). And the Lord shall reward Me according to the righteousness of My good will,
who first showed mercy, before that I had the good will. "And according to the
cleanness of My hands He will recompense Me." And according to the cleanness of
My deeds He will recompense Me, who hath given Me to do well by bringing Me
forth into the broad place of faith.
22. "Because I have kept the ways of the Lord" (ver. 21). That the breadth
of good works, that are by faith, and the long-suffering of perseverance
should follow after.
23. "Nor have I walked impiously apart from My God." "For all His
judgments are(6) in My sight" (ver. 22). "For" with persevering contemplation I weigh
"all His judgments," that is, the rewards of the righteous, and the punishments
of the ungodly, and the scourges of such as are to be chastened, and the trials
of such as are to be proved. "And I have not cast out His righteousness from
Me:" as they do that faint under their burden of them, and return to their own
vomit.
24. "And I shall be undefiled with Him, and I shall keep Myself from Mine
iniquity" (ver. 23 ).
25. "And the Lord shall reward Me according to My righteousness (ver. 24).
Accordingly not only for the breadth of faith, which worketh by love; but also
for the length of perseverance, will the Lord reward Me according to My
righteousness. "And according to the cleanness of My hands in the sight of His eyes."
Not as men see, but "in the sight of His eyes." For "the things that are seen
are temporal; but the things that are not seen are eternal:"(7) whereto the
height of hope appertains.
26. "With the holy Thou shalt be holy" (ver. 25). There is a hidden depth
also, wherein Thou art known to be holy with the holy, for that Thou makest
holy. "And with the harmless Thou shalt be harmless." For Thou harmest no man, but
each one is bound by the bands of his own sins.(8)
27. "And with the chosen Thou shalt be chosen." (ver. 26). And by him whom
Thou choosest, Thou art chosen. "And with the froward Thou shalt be froward."
And with the froward Thou seemest froward: for they say, "The way of the Lord
is not right: "(9) and their way is not right.
28. "For Thou wilt make whole the humble people" (ver. 27). Now this seems
froward to the froward, that Thou wilt make them whole that confess their
sins. "And Thou wilt humble the eyes of the proud." But them that are "ignorant of
God's righteousness, and seek to establish their own,"(10) Thou wilt humble.
29. "For thou wilt light My candle, O Lord" (ver. 28). For our light is
not from ourselves; but "Thou wilt light my candle, O Lord. O my God, Thou wilt
enlighten my darkness." For we through our sins are darkness; but "Thou, O my
God, wilt enlighten my darkness."
30. "For by Thee shall I be delivered from temptation" (ver. 29). For not
by myself, but by Thee, shall I be delivered from temptation. "And in my God
shall I leap over the wall." And not in myself, but in my God shall I leap over
the wall, which sin has raised between men and the heavenly Jerusalem.
31. "My God, His way is undefiled "(ver. 30). My God cometh not unto men,
except they shall have purified the way of faith, whereby He may come to them;
for that" His way is undefiled." "The words of the Lord have been proved by
fire." The words of the Lord are tried by the fire of tribulation. "He is the
Protector of them that hope in Him." And all that hope not in themselves, but in
Him, are not consumed by that same tribulation. For hope followeth faith.
32. "For who is God, but the Lord?" (ver. 31) whom we serve. "And who God,
but our God?" And who is God, but the Lord? whom after good service we sons
shall possess as the hoped-for inheritance.
33. "God, who hath girded me with strength" (ver. 32). God, who hath
girded me that I might be strong, lest the loosely flowing folds of desire hinder my
deeds and steps. "And hath made my way undefiled." And hath made the way of
love, whereby I may come to Him, undefiled, as the way of faith is undefiled,
whereby He comes to me.
34. "Who hath made my feet perfect like harts' feet" (ver. 33). Who hath
made my love perfect to surmount the thorny and dark entanglements of this
world. "And will set me up on high." And will fix my aim on the heavenly habitation,
that "I may be filled with all the fulness of God."(1)
35. "Who teacheth my hands for battle" (ver. 34). Who teacheth me to work
for the overthrow of mine enemies, who strive to shut the kingdom of heaven
against us. "And Thou hast made mine arms as a bow of steel." And Thou hast made
my earnest striving after good works unwearied.
36. "And Thou hast given me the defence of my salvation, and Thy right
hand hath held me up" (ver. 35). And the favour of Thy grace hath held me up. "And
Thy discipline hath directed me to the end." And Thy correction, not suffering
me to wander from the way, hath directed me that whatsoever I do, I refer to
that end, whereby I may cleave to Thee. "And this Thy discipline, it shall teach
me." And that same correction of Thine shall teach me to attain to that,
whereunto it hath directed me.
37. "Thou hast enlarged my steps under me" (ver. 36). Nor shall the
straits of the flesh hinder me; for Thou hast enlarged my love, working in gladness
even with these mortal things and members which are under me. "And my footsteps
have not been weakened." And either my goings, or the marks which I have
imprinted for the imitation of those that follow, have not been weakened.
38. "I will follow up mine enemies, and seize them" (ver. 37). I will
follow up my carnal affections, and will not be seized by them, but will seize
them, so that they may be consumed. "And I will not turn, till they fail." And from
this purpose I will not turn myself to rest, till they fail who make a tumult
about me.
39. "I will break them, and they shall not be able to stand" (ver. 38):
and they shall not hold out against me. "They shall fall under my feet." When
they are cast down, I will place before me the loves(2) whereby I walk for
evermore.
40. "And Thou hast girded me with strength to the war" (ver. 39). And the
loose desires of my flesh hast Thou bound up with strength, that in such a
fight I may not be encumbered. "Thou hast supplanted under me them that rose up
against me." Thou hast caused them to be deceived, who followed upon me, that they
should be brought under me, who desired to be over me.
41. "And thou hast given mine enemies the back to me" (ver. 40). And thou
hast turned mine enemies, and hast made them to be a back to me, that is, to
follow me. "And Thou hast destroyed them that hate me." But such other of them as
have persisted in hatred, Thou hast destroyed.
42. "They have cried out, and there was none to save them" (ver. 41). For
who can save them, whom Thou wouldest not save? "To the Lord, and He did not
hear them." Nor did they cry out to any chance one, but to the Lord: and He did
not judge them worthy of being heard, who depart not from their wickedness.
43. "And I will beat them as small as dust before the face of the wind"
(ver. 42). And I will beat them small; for dry they are, receiving not the shower
of God's mercy; that borne aloft and puffed up with pride they may be hurried
along from firm and unshaken hope, and as it were from the earth's solidity and
stability. "As the clay of the streets I will destroy them." In their wanton
and loose course along the broad ways of perdition, which many walk, will I
destroy them.
44. "Thou wilt deliver Me from the contradictions of the people" (ver.
43). Thou wilt deliver Me from the contradictions of them who said, "If we send
Him away, all the world will go after Him."(1)
45. "Thou shall make Me the head of the Gentiles. A people whom I have not
known have served Me." The people of the Gentiles, whom in bodily presence I
have not visited, have served Me. "At the hearing of the ear they have obeyed
Me" (ver. 44). They have not seen Me with the eye: but, receiving my preachers,
at the hearing of the ear they have obeyed Me.
46. "The strange children have lied unto Me." Children, not to be called
Mine, but rather strange children, to whom it is rightly said, "Ye are of your
father the devil,"(2) have lied unto Me. "The strange children have waxen old"
(ver. 45). The strange children, to whom for their renovation I brought the new
Testament, have remained in the old man. "And they have halted from their own
paths." And like those that are weak in one foot, for holding the old they have
rejected the new Testament, they have become halt, even in their old Law,
rather following their own traditions, than God's. For they brought frivolous
charges of unwashen hands,(3) because such were the paths, which themselves had made
and worn by long use, in wandering from the ways of God's commands.
47. "The Lord liveth, and blessed be my God." "But to be carnally minded
is death:"(4) for "the Lord liveth, and blessed be my God. And let the God of my
salvation be exalted" (ver. 46). And let me not think after an earthly fashion
of the God of my salvation; nor look from Him for this earthly salvation, but
that on high.
48. "O God, who givest Me vengeance, and subduest the people under Me"
(ver. 47). O God, who avengest Me by subduing the people under Me. "My Deliverer
from My angry enemies:" the Jews crying out, "Crucify Him, Crucify Him."(5)
49. "From them that rise up against Me Thou wilt exalt Me" (ver. 48). From
the Jews that rise up against Me in My passion, Thou wilt exalt Me in My
resurrection. "From the unjust man Thou wilt deliver Me."From their unjust rule Thou
wilt deliver Me.
50. "For this cause will I confess to Thee among the Gentiles, O Lord"
(ver. 49). For this cause shall the Gentiles confess to Thee through Me, O Lord.
"And I will sing unto Thy Name." And Thou shall be more widely known by My good
deeds.
51. "Magnifying the salvation of His King" (ver. 50). God, who magnifieth,
so as to make wonderful, the salvation, which His Son giveth to believers.(6)
"And showing mercy to His Christ: "God, who showeth mercy to His Christ: "To
David and to His seed for evermore:" to the Deliverer Himself strong of hand, who
hath overcome this world; and to them whom, as believers in the Gospel, He
hath begotten for evermore. What things soever are spoken in this Psalm which
cannot apply to the Lord Himself personally, that is to the Head of the Church,
must be referred to the Church. For whole Christ speaks here, in whom are all His
members.