ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS LXXXIX TO XCII.
PSALM LXXXIX.(6)
1. Understand, beloved, this Psalm, which I am about to explain, by the
grace of God, of our hope in the Lord Jesus Christ, and be of good cheer, because
He who promised, will fulfil all, as He has fulfilled much: for it is not our
own merit, but His mercy, that gives us confidence in Him. He Himself is meant,
in my belief, by "the understanding of AEthan the Israelite:"(7) which has
given this Psalm its title. You see then, who is meant by AEthan: but the meaning
of the word is "strong." No man in this world is strong, except in the hope of
God's promises: for as to our own deservings, we weak, in His mercy we are
strong. Weak then in himself, strong in God's mercy, the Psalmist thus begins: "I
will sing of Thy mercies, O Lord, for ever: with my mouth will I make known Thy
truth unto all generations" (ver. 1).
2. Let my limbs, he saith, serve the Lord: I speak, but it is of Thine I
speak. "With my mouth will I make known Thy truth:" if I obey not Thee, I am not
Thy servant: if I speak on my own part, I am a liar. To speak then from
Thee,(8) and in my own person, are two things: one mine, one Thine: Truth Thine,
language mine. Let us hear then what faithfulness he maketh known, what mercies he
singeth.
3. "For Thou hast said, Mercy shall be built up for ever" (ver. 2). It is
this that I sing: this is Thy truth, for the making known of which my mouth
serveth. In such wise Thou sayest, I build, as not to destroy: for some Thou
destroyest and buildest not; and some whom Thou destroyest Thou dost rebuild. For
unless there were some who were destroyed to be rebuilt, Jeremiah would not have
written, "See, I have this day set thee to throw down and to build."(9) And
indeed all who formerly worshipped images and stones could not be built up in
Christ, without being destroyed as to their old error. While, unless some were
destroyed not to be built up, it would not be written, "He shall destroy them, and
not build them up."(10)... In what follows, he joins these two words, mercy and
faithfulness; "For Thou hast said, Mercy shall be built up for ever: Thy truth
shall be established in the Heavens:" in which mercy and truth are repeated,
"for all the ways of the Lord are mercy and truth,"(11) for truth in the
fulfilment of promises could not be shown, unless mercy in the remission of sins
preceded. Next, as many things were promised in prophecy even to the people of
Israel that came according to the flesh from the seed of Abraham, and that people
was increased that the promises of God might be fulfilled in it; while yet God
did not close the fountain of His goodness even to the Gentiles, whom He had
placed under the rule of the Angels, while He reserved the people of Israel as His
own portion: the Apostle expressly mentions the Lord's mercy and truth as
referring to these two parties. For he calls Christ "a minister of the Circumcision
for the truth of God, to confirm the promises made unto the fathers."(1) See
how God deceived not; see how He cast not off His people, whom He foreknew. For
while the Apostle is treating of the fall of the Jews, to prevent any from
believing them so far disowned(2) of God, that no wheat from that floor's fanning
could reach the granary, he saith, "God hath not cast away His people, whom He
foreknew; for I also am an Israelite."(3) If all that nation are thorns, how am I
who speak unto you wheat? So that the truth of God was fulfilled in those
Israelites who believed, and one wall from the circumcision is thus brought to meet
the corner stone. But this stone would not form a corner, unless it received
another wall from the Gentiles: so that the former wall relates in a special
manner to the truth, the latter to the mercy of God. "Now I say," says the
Apostle, "that Jesus Christ was a minister of the Circumcision for the truth of God,
to confirm the promise made unto the fathers: and that the Gentiles might
glorify God for His mercy."(4) Justly then is it added, "Thy truth shall Thou
stablish in the Heavens:" for all those Israelites who were called to be Apostles
became as Heavens which declare the glory of God: as it is written by them, "The
Heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament showeth His handywork."(5) .
. . Since, although they were taken up from hence before the Church tilled the
I whole world, yet as "their words reached to the ends of the world," we are
right in supposing this which we have just read, "Thy truth shalt Thou stablish
in the Heavens," fulfilled in them.
4. "Thou hast said, I have made a covenant with My chosen" (ver. 3). What
covenant, but the new, by which we are renewed to a fresh inheritance, in our
longing desire and love of which we sing a new song. "I have made a covenant
with My chosen," saith the Psalmist: "I have sworn unto David My servant." How
confidently does he speak, who understands, whose mouth serves truth! I speak
without fear; since "Thou hast said." If Thou makest me fearless, because Thou hast
said, how much more so dost Thou make me, when Thou hast sworn! For the oath
of God is the assurance of a promise. Man is justly forbidden to swear:(6) lest
by the habit of swearing, since a man may be deceived, he fall into perjury.
God alone swears securely, because He alone is infallible.
5. Let us see then what God hath sworn. "I have sworn," He saith, "to
David My servant; thy seed will I establish for ever" (ver. 4). But what is the
seed of David, but that of Abraham. And what is the seed of Abraham? "And to thy
seed," He saith, "which is Christ."(7) But perhaps that Christ, the Head of the
Church, the Saviour of the body,(8) is the seed of Abraham, and therefore of
David; but we are not Abraham's seed? We are assuredly; as the Apostle saith,
"And if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the
promise."(9) In this sense, then, let us take the words, brethren, "Thy seed will
I stablish for ever," not only of that Flesh of Christ, born of the Virgin
Mary, but also of all of us who believe in Christ, for we are limbs of that Head.
This body cannot be deprived of its Head: if the Head is in glory for ever, so
are the limbs, so that Christ remains entire for ever. "Thy seed will I stablish
for ever: and set up thy throne to generation and generation." We suppose he
saith, "for ever," because it is "to generation and generation:" since he has
said above, with "my mouth will I ever be showing Thy truth to generation and
generation." What is "to generation and generation"? To every generation: for the
word needed not as many repetitions, as the coming and passing away of the
several generations. The multiplication of generations is signified and set forth
to notice by the repetition. Are possibly two generations to be understood, as
ye are aware, my beloved brethren, and as I have before explained? for there is
now a generation of flesh and blood: there will be a future generation in the
resurrection of the dead. Christ is proclaimed here: He will be proclaimed(10)
there: here He is proclaimed, that He may be believed in: there, He will be
welcomed, that He may be seen. "I will set up Thy throne from one generation to
another." Christ hath now a throne in us, His throne is set up in us: for unless
he sate enthroned within us, He would not rule us: but if we were not ruled by
Him, we should be thrown down by ourselves. He therefore sits within us,
reigning over us: He sits also in another generation, which will come from the
resurrection of the dead. Christ will reign for ever over His Saints. God has promised
this; He hath said it: if this is not enough, God hath sworn it. As then the
promise is certain, not on account of our deservings, but of His pity, no one
ought to be afraid in proclaiming that which he cannot doubt of. Let that
strength then inspire our hearts, whence AEthan received his name, "strong in heart:"
let us preach the truth of God, the utterance of God, His promises, His oath;
and let us, strengthened on every side by these means, glorify God, and by
bearing Him along with us, become Heavens.
6. "O Lord, the very Heavens shall praise Thy wondrous works" (ver. 5).
The Heavens will not praise their own merits, but Thy wondrous works, O Lord. For
in every act of mercy on the lost, of justification of the unrighteous, what
do we praise but the wondrous works of God? Thou praisest Him, because the dead
have risen: praise Him yet more, because the lost are redeemed. What grace,
what mercy of God! Thou seest a man yesterday a whirlpool of drunkenness, to-day
an ornament of sobriety: a man yesterday the sink of luxury, to-day the beauty
of temperance: yesterday a blasphemer of God, to-day His praiser: yesterday the
slave of the creature, to-day the worshipper of the Creator. From all these
desperate states men are thus converted: let them not look at their own merits:
let them become Heavens, and praise the wondrous works of Him by whom they were
made Heavens. ...
7. "For who is he among the clouds, who shall be compared unto Thee,
Lord!" (ver. 6). Is this to be the praise of the Heavens, is this to be their rain?
What? are the preachers confident, because "none among the clouds shall be
compared unto the Lord"? Does it appear to you, brethren, a high ground of praise,
that the clouds cannot be compared with their Creator? If it is taken in its
literal, not in its mystical meaning, it is not so: what? are the stars that are
above the clouds to be compared with the Lord? what? can the Sun, Moon, Angels,
Heavens, be even compared with the Lord? Why is it then that he says, as if he
meant some high praise, "For who is he among the clouds?" etc. We understand,
my brethren, those clouds, as the Heavens, to be the preachers of truth;
Prophets, Apostles, the announcers of the word of God. ... If therefore the clouds
are the preachers of the truth, let us first enquire why they are clouds. For the
same men are Heavens and clouds: Heavens from the brightness of the truth,
clouds from the hidden things of the flesh: for all clouds are obscure, owing to
their mortality: and they come and go. It is on account of these very
obscurities of the flesh, that is, of the clouds, that the Apostle saith, "Therefore
judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who will bring to light the
hidden things of darkness."(1) You see at this moment what a man is saying: but
what he has in his heart, you cannot see: what is forced from the cloud, you see,
what is kept within the cloud, you see not. For whose eyes pierce the cloud?
The clouds therefore are the preachers of the truth in the flesh. The Creator of
all things Himself came in the flesh. ... We are called clouds on account of
the flesh, and we are preachers of the truth on account of the showers of the
clouds: but our flesh comes in one way, His by another. We too are called sons of
God, but He is the Son of God in another sense. His cloud comes from a Virgin,
He is the Son from eternity, co-eternal(2) with the Father. "Who is he then
among the clouds, that shall be compared unto the Lord? and what is he among the
sons of God, that shall be like unto the Lord?" Let the Lord Himself say
whether He can find one like unto Himself. "Whom do men say that I the Son of Man
am?" Because I appear, because I am seen, because I walk among you, and perhaps at
present I am become common; say, whom do men say that I the Son of Man am?
Surely when they see a son of man, they see a cloud; but say, "Whom do men say
that I am?" In answer they gave Him the reports of men; "Some say that Thou art
John the Baptist: some Elias, and others Jeremias, or one of the prophets." Many
clouds and sons of God are here mentioned: for because they were righteous and
holy, as the sons of God, Jeremias, Elias, and John are called also sons of
God: in their character of preachers of God, they are styled clouds. Ye have said
what clouds men imagine Me to be: do ye too say, "Whom say ye that I am?" Peter
replying in behalf of all, one for those who were one,(3) answered, "Thou art
the Christ, the Son of the living God;"(4) not like those sons of God who are
not made equal to Thee: Thou hast come in the flesh: but not as the clouds, who
are not to be compared unto Thee.
8. ... "God is very greatly to be feared in the counsel of the righteous,
and to be had in dread of all them that are round about Him" (ver. 7). God is
everywhere; who therefore are round about Him, who is everywhere? For if He has
some round about Him, He is represented as finite on every side. Moreover, if
it is truly said to God s and of God, "of His greatness there is no end;"(6) who
remain, who are round about Him, except because He who is everywhere, chose to
be born of the flesh on one spot, to dwell among one nation, in one place to
be crucified, from one spot to rise again and ascend into Heaven. Where He did
this, the Gentiles are round about Him. If He remained where He did these
things, He would not be "great, and be had in dread of all them that are round about
Him;" but since He preached when there in such a manner as to send preachers of
His own name through all nations over the whole world; by working miracles
among His servants, He is become "great, and to be had in dread of all them that
are round about Him."
9. "O Lord God of Hosts, who is like unto Thee? Thy truth, most mighty
Lord, is on every side" (ver. 8). Great is Thy power Thou hast made Heaven and
earth, and all things that in them are: but greater still is thy loving-kindness,
which has shown forth Thy truth to all around Thee. For if Thou hadst been
preached only on the spot where Thou didst deign to be born, to suffer, to rise
again, to ascend; the truth of that promise of God would have been fulfilled, to
confirm the promises made unto the fathers: but the promise, "that the Gentiles
may glorify God for His mercy,"(1) would not have been fulfilled, had not that
truth been explained, and diffused to those around Thee from the spot where
Thou didst deign to appear. On that spot Thou didst thunder out of Thy own cloud:
but to scatter rain upon the Gentiles round about, Thou hast sent other clouds.
Truly in Thy power hast Thou fulfilled what Thou hast said, "Hereafter shall
ye see the Son of Man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the
clouds of Heaven."(2)
10. ... For ye have heard, like men accustomed to the watering of the
clouds of God, "Thy truth" then "is in the circuit of Thee." But when without
persecutions, when without opposition, since it is said, that "He was born for a
sign which shall be spoken against"?(3) Since then that nation, where Thou didst
deign to be born, and to dwell, was as a land separated from the waves of the
heathen, so that it appeared dry and ready for watering with rain, while the rest
of the nations were as a sea in the bitterness of their sterility; what do Thy
preachers who scatter Thy truth in circuit of Thee, when the waves of that sea
rage furiously? "Thou rulest the power of the sea" (ver. 9). For what was the
result of the sea raging thus, but the day which we are now keeping holy? It
slew Martyrs, scattered seeds of blood, the harvest of the Church sprang up.
Safely then let the clouds go forth: let them diffuse Thy truth in circuit of Thee,
let them not fear the savage waves. "Thou rulest the power of the sea." The
sea swells, buffets, and roars: but "God is faithful, who will not suffer you to
be tempted beyond what ye are able:"(4) and so, "Thou stillest the waves
thereof when they rise."
11. Lastly, what hast Thou done in the sea itself, to pacify its rage, and
to weaken it? "Thou hast humbled the proud(5) as one that is wounded" (ver.
10). There is a certain proud serpent in the sea, of which another passage of
Scripture speaks, "I will command the serpent, and he shall bite him;"(6) and
again, "There is that Leviathan, whom Thou hast made to mock him,"(7) whose head He
bruises above the water. "Thou," he says," hast humbled the proud, as one that
is wounded." Thou hast humbled Thyself, and the proud was humbled: for the
proud held the proud ones through pride: but the great One is humbled, and by
believing in Him become small. While the little one is nourished by the example of
One who from greatness descended to humility, the devil has lost what he held:
because the proud held only the proud. When such an example of humility was
displayed before them, men learned to condemn their own pride, and to imitate the
humility of God. Thus also the devil, by losing those whom he had in his power,
has even himself been humbled; not chastened, but thrown prostrate. "Thou hast
humbled the proud like one that is wounded." Thou hast been humbled, and hast
humbled others: Thou hast been wounded, and hast wounded others: for Thy blood,
as it was shed to blot the handwriting of sins,(8) could not but wound him.
For what was the ground of his pride, except the bond which he held against us.
This bond, this handwriting, Thou hast blotted out with Thy blood: him therefore
hast Thou wounded, from whom Thou hast rescued so many victims. You must
understand the devil wounded, not by the piercing of the flesh, which he has not,
but by the bruising of his proud heart. "Thou hast scattered Thine enemies abroad
with Thy mighty arm."
12. "The heavens are thine, the earth also is Thine" (ver. 11). From Thee,
over Thy earth they rain. Thine are the heavens, by whom is preached Thy truth
in circuit of Thee; "Thine is the earth," which has received Thy truth in
circuit of Thee; and what has resulted from that rain? "Thou hast laid the
foundation of the round world, and all that therein is." "Thou hast created the north
and the seas" (ver. 12). For nothing has any power against Thee, against its
Creator. The world indeed may rage through its own malice, and the perversity of
its will; does it nevertheless pass over the bound laid down by the Creator, who
made all things? Why then do I fear the north wind? Why do I fear the seas? In
the north indeed is the devil, who said, "I will sit in the sides of the
north; I will be like the Most High;"(1) but Thou hast humbled, as one wounded, the
proud one. Thus what Thou hast done in them has more force for Thy dominion,
than their own will has for their wickedness. "Thou hast created the north and
the seas."
13. "Thabor and Hermon shall rejoice in Thy name." Those mountains are
here understood, but they have a meaning. "Thabor and Hermon shall rejoice in Thy
name." Thabor, when interpreted, signifies an approaching light. But whence
comes the light of which it is said, "Ye are the light of the world,"(2) unless
from Him concerning whom it is written, "That was the true light, which lighteth
every man coming into the world"?(3) The light then which is the light of the
world comes from that light which is not kindled from any other source, so that
there is no fear lest it be extinguished. The light then comes from Him, who is
that candle which is not set beneath the bushel, but on a candlestick, Thabor
the coming light. Hermon means his curse. Justly the light comes and is made
the curse of him. Of whom but the devil, the wounded one, the proud one? Our
illumination then is given from Thee; that he is held accursed of us, who kept us
in his own error and pride, is from Thee. "Thabor and Hermon, therefore, shall
rejoice," not in their own merits, "but in Thy name." For they shall say, "Not
unto us, Lord, not unto us, but to Thy name give the praise," on account of the
raging sea: lest "the heathen say, Where is now their God?"(4)
14. "Thou hast a mighty arm" (ver. 13). Let no man arrogate anything to
himself. "Thou hast a mighty arm:" by Thee we were created, by Thee we have been
defended. "Thou hast a mighty arm: strong be Thy hand, and high be Thy right
hand."
15. "Righteousness and judgment are the preparation of Thy seat" (ver.
14). Thy righteousness and judgment will appear in the end: they are now hidden.
Of Thy righteousness it is treated in another Psalm,(5) "on the hidden things of
the Son." There will then be a manifestation of Thy righteousness and
judgment: some will be set on the right, others on the left hand:(6) and the
unbelieving will tremble, when they see what now they mock at, and believe not: the
righteous will rejoice, when they shall see what they now see not, yet believe.
"Righteousness and judgment are the preparation of Thy seat:" especially in the Day
of Judgment. What then now? "mercy and truth go before Thy face." I should
fear the preparation of Thy seat, Thy justice, and Thy coming judgment, did not
mercy and truth go before Thee: why should I at the end fear Thy righteousness,
when with Thy mercy going before Thee Thou blottest out my sins, and by showing
forth Thy truth fulfillest Thy promises? "Mercy and truth go before Thy face."
For "all the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth."(7)
16. In all these things shall we not rejoice? or shall we contain our joy?
or shall words suffice for our gladness? or shall the tongue be able to
express our rejoicing? If therefore no words suffice, "Blessed is the people, O Lord,
that knoweth glad shouting" (ver. 15). O blessed people! dost thou conceive
aright, dost thou understand, glad shouting? For except thou understand glad
shouting, thou canst not be blessed. What do I mean by understanding glad shouting?
Whether thou knowest the source of that rejoicing which is beyond words to
express. For this joy is not of thyself, since "he that glorieth, let him glory in
the Lord."(8) Rejoice not then in thy own pride, but in God's grace. See that
that grace is such, that the tongue fails to express its greatness, and then
thou understandest glad shouting. ... O Lord, "they shall walk in the light of
Thy countenance." "They shall rejoice in Thy name all the day "(ver. 16). That
Thabor and Hermon shall rejoice in Thy name: all day shall they rejoice, if they
will, in Thy name; but if they will rejoice in their own name, they hall not
rejoice all day: for they shall not continue in their joy, when they shall
delight in themselves, and fall through pride. That they may rejoice all day,
therefore, "they shall rejoice in Thy name, and in Thy righteousness shall they be
exalted." Not in their own, but in Thine: lest they have a zeal of God, but not
according to knowledge. For some are noted by the Apostle, that they have a zeal
of God, but not according to knowledge, "being ignorant of God's righteousness,
and going about to establish their own," and not rejoicing in Thy light, and
thus "not submitting themselves unto the righteousness of God."(9) And why?
because "they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge." But the people
who knoweth glad shouting (for the former err from want of knowledge, but
blessed is the people not that knoweth not, but that knoweth glad shouting), whence
ought it to shout, whence to rejoice, but in Thy name, walking in the light of
Thy countenance? And it shall deserve to be exalted, but in Thy righteousness:
let every man take away altogether his own righteousness, and be trembled: the
righteousness of God shall come, and he shall be exalted, "and in Thy
righteousness shall they be exalted."
17. "For Thou art the glory of their strength: and in Thy good pleasure
Thou shall lift up our horns" (ver. 17): because it has seemed good to Thee, not
because we are worthy.
18. "For of the Lord is our taking up" (ver. 18). For I was moved like a
heap of sand, that I might fall; and I should have fallen, had not the Lord
taken me up. "For of the Lord is (our(1)) taking up: and of the Holy One of Israel
our King." Himself is thy taking up, Himself thy illumination: in His light
thou art safe, in His light thou walkest, in His righteousness thou art exalted.
He took thee up, He, guards thy weakness: He gives thee strength of Himself, not
of thyself.
19. "Thou spakest sometime in vision unto Thy sons, and saidst" (ver. 19).
Thou spakest in thy vision. Thou didst reveal this to Thy Prophets. For this
reason Thou spakest in vision, that is, in revelation: whence Prophets were
called seers. They saw something within, which they were to speak without: and
secretly they heard what they preached openly.(2) Then "Thou spakest in vision unto
Thy sons, and saidst, I have laid help upon One that is mighty." Ye understand
Who is meant by mighty? "I have exalted One chosen out of the people." And Who
is meant by chosen? One who, ye rejoice, is already exalted.
20. "I have found David My servant:" that David from David's seed: "with
My holy oil have I anointed Him" (ver. 20): for it is said of Him, "God, even
Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness above Thy fellows."(3)
21. "My hand shall hold Him fast, and My arm shall strengthen Him" (ver.
21): because there was a taking up of man; because flesh was assumed in the
Virgin's womb,(4) because by Him who in the form of God is coequal with the Father,
the form of a servant was taken, and He became obedient unto death, even the
death of the Cross.(5)
22. "The enemy shall not be able to do him violence" (ver. 22). The enemy
rages indeed but he shall not be able to do Him violence: he is wont to hurt,
but he shall not hurt. How then shall he afflict Him? he will exercise Him, but
he shall not hurt Him. There shall be profit in his raging; for those against
whom he rages shall be crowned in their conquering. For how is he conquered, if
he rages not against us? or where is God our helper, if we fight not? The enemy
therefore shall do what is in his power; but "he shall not be able to do Him
violence: the son of wickedness shall not come nigh to hurt Him."
23. "I will cut in pieces His enemies before His face" (ver. 23). They are
cut in pieces from their conspiracy, and in that they believe they are cut in
pieces; for they believe by degrees; as when the calf's head was ground small,
they will come to be the drink of God's people. For Moses ground down the
calf's head, and sprinkled it upon the water, and made the children of Israel drink
it.(6) All the unbelieving are ground: they believe by degrees; and they are
drunk by the people of God, and pass into Christ's body. "I will cut in pieces
His foes before His face: and put to flight them that hate Him."
24. "My truth also and My mercy is with Him" (ver. 24). All the paths of
the Lord are mercy and truth. Remember, as much as ye can, how often these two
attributes are urged upon us, that we render them back to God. For as He showed
us mercy that He might blot out our sins, and truth in fulfilling His promises;
so also we, walking in His path, ought to give back to Him mercy and truth;
mercy, in pitying the wretched; truth, in not judging unjustly. Let not truth rob
you of mercy, nor mercy hinder truth: for if through mercy you shall have
judged contrary to truth, or by rigorous truth shall have forgotten mercy, you will
not be walking in the path of God, where "mercy and truth meet together."(7)
"And in My name shall His horn be exalted." Why should I say more? Ye are
Christians, recognise Christ.
25. "I will set His hand also in the sea" (ver. 25): that is, He shall
rule over the Gentiles; "and His right hand in the floods." Rivers run into the
sea: avaricious men roll onwards into the bitterness of this world: yet all these
kinds of men will be subject to Christ.
26. "He shall call me, Thou art My Father, and the lifter up of My
salvation" (ver. 26).
"And I will make Him my first-born; higher than the kings of the earth"
(ver. 27). Our Martyrs, whose birthdays we are celebrating, shed their blood on
account of these things, which were believed though not yet seen; how much more
brave ought we to be, as we see what they believed? For they had not yet seen
Christ raised on high among the kings of the earth: as yet princes were taking
counsel together against the Lord and His Anointed: what follows in the same
Psalm was not then fulfilled, "Be wise now therefore, O ye kings: be learned, ye
that are judges of the earth."(8) Now indeed Christ has been exalted among the
kings of the earth.
27. "My mercy will I keep for Him for ever: and my Testament faithful with
Him" (ver. 28). On His account, the Testament is faithful: in Him the
Testament is mediated: He is the Sealer, the Mediator of the Testament, the Surety of
the Testament, the Witness of the Testament, the Heritage of the Testament, the
Coheir of the Testament.
28. "His seed will I make to endure world without end" (ver. 29). Not only
for this world, but unto the world without end:(1) whither His seed, which is
His heritage, the seed of Abraham, which is Christ, will pass.(2) But if ye are
Christ's, ye are also Abraham's seed: and if ye are destined His heirs for
ever, "He will establish His seed unto world without end: and His throne as the
days of Heaven." The thrones of earthly kings are as the days of the earth:
different are the days of Heaven from those of earth. The days of Heaven are those
years of which it is said, "Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not fail."(3)
The days of the earth are soon overtaken by their successors: those which
precede are shut out from us: nor do those which succeed remain: but they come that
they may go, and are almost gone before they are come. Such are the days of
earth. But the days of Heaven, which are also the "One day" of Heaven,(4) and the
never failing years, have neither beginning nor end: nor is any day there
narrowed between yesterday and to-morrow: no one there expects the future, nor
loses the past: but the days of Heaven are always present, where His throne shall
be for ever and ever.(5) ...
29. This is a strong pledge of the promise of God. The sons of this David
are the children of the Bridegroom; all Christians therefore are called His
sons. But it is much indeed that God promises, that if Christians, that is, "If
his children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments" (ver. 30); "if they
profane My statutes, and keep not My commandments" (ver. 31); I will not spurn
them, nor will I send them away from Me in perdition: but what will I do? "I will
visit their offences with the rod, and their sin with scourges" (ver. 32). It
is not the mercy of one that calls them only; but also that chastises and
scourges them. Let therefore thy Father's hand be upon thee, and if thou art a good
son, repel not chastening; for "what son is there, to whom his father giveth
not chastening?"(6) Let Him chasten him, so long as He takes not from him His
mercy: let Him beat him when obstinate, as long as He does not disinherit him. If
thou hast well understood the promises of thy Father, fear not to be scourged,
but to be disinherited: "for whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth: and scourgeth
every son whom He receiveth."(7) Does the sinful son spurn chastening, when he
sees the only Son without sin scourged? "I will visit their offences with the
rod." Thus too the Apostle threatens: "What will ye? shall I come unto you with
a rod?"(8) Let not pious sons say, if Thou art coming with a rod, come not at
all. For it is better to be taught with the Father's rod, than to perish in the
caresses of the robber.
30. "Nevertheless, My mercy will I not utterly take from Him" (ver. 33).
From whom? From that David to whom I gave these promises, whom "I anointed with
my holy oil of gladness above His fellows."(9) Do you recognise Him from whom
God will not utterly take away His mercy? That no one may anxiously say, since
He speaks of Christ as Him from whom He will not take away His mercy, What then
will become of the sinner? Did He say anything like this, "I will not take My
loving-kindness utterly from them"? "I will visit," He saith, "their offences
with the rod, and their sin with scourges." Thou didst expect for thy own
security, "I will not utterly take my loving-kindness from" them. And indeed this is
the reading of some books, but not of the most accurate: though, where they have
it, it is a reading by no means inconsistent with the real meaning. For how
can it be said that He will not utterly take His mercy from Christ? Has the
Saviour of the body committed aught of sin either in Heaven or in earth, "who
sitteth even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us"?(10) Yet
it is from Christ: but from His members, His body which is the Church. For in
this sense He speaks of it as a great thing that He will not take away His
mercies from Him, supposing us not to recognise the only Son, who is in the bosom of
the Father;(11) for there the Man is not counted for His Person, but the One
Person is God and Man. He therefore does not utterly take His mercies from Him,
when He takes not His mercy from His body, His members,(12) in which, even
while He was enthroned in Heaven, He was still suffering persecutions on earth; and
when He cried from Heaven, "Saul, Saul," not why persecutest thou My servants,
nor why persecutest thou My saints, nor My disciples, but, "why persecutest
thou Me?" 13 As then, while no one persecuted Him when sitting in Heaven, He
cried out, "Why persecutest thou Me?" when the Head recognised its limbs, and His
love allowed not the Head to separate Himself from the union of the body: so,
when He taketh not away His mercies from Him, it is surely that He taketh it not
from us, who are His limbs and body. Yet ought we not on that account to sin
not without apprehension, and perversely to assure ourselves that we shall not
perish, be our actions what they may. For there are certain sins and certain
offences, to define and discourse of which it is either impossible for me, or if it
were possible, it would be too tedious for the time we have at present. For no
man can say that he is without sin; for if he says so, he will lie; "if we say
that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us."(1)
Each one therefore is needfully scourged for his own sins; but the mercy of God is
not taken away from him, if he be a Christian. Certainly if thou committest
such offences as to repel the hand of Him who chasteneth, the rod of Him who
scourgeth thee, and art angry at the correction of God, and fliest from thy Father
when He chasteneth thee, and wilt not suffer Him to be thy Father, because He
spares thee not when thou dost sin; thou hast estranged thyself from thy
heritage, He has not thrown thee off; for if thou wouldest abide being scourged, thou
wouldest not abide disinherited. "Nor will I do hurt in My truth." For His
mercy in setting free shall not be taken away, lest His truth in taking vengeance
do harm.
31. "My covenant will I not profane, nor reject the thing that is gone out
of my lips" (ver. 34). Because his sons sin, I will not on this account be
found false: I have promised; I will do. Suppose they choose to sin even as past
hope, and so fall into sins as to offend their Father's countenance, and deserve
to be disinherited; is it not still God Himself, of whom it is said, "From
these stones" He "will raise up sons to Abraham"?(2) Therefore I tell you,
brethren, many Christians sin venially,(3) many are scourged and so corrected for
their sin, chastened, and cured; many turn away altogether, striving with a stiff
neck against the discipline of the Father, even wholly refusing God as their
Father, though they have the mark of Christ, and so fall into such sins, that it
can only be announced against them, "that they who do such things shall not
inherit the kingdom of God."(4) Nevertheless, Christ shall not be destitute of an
inheritance on their account: not for the chaff's sake shall the wheat also
perish:(5) nor on account of bad fish shall nothing be cast into the vessels from
that net.(6) "The Lord knows them that are His."(7) For He who predestined us
before we were born, promised undoubtingly: "For whom He did predestinate, them.
He also called: and whom He called, them He also justified: and whom He
justified, them He also glorified."(8) Let desperate sinners sin as far as they
choose: let the members of Christ reply, "If God is with us, who shall be against
us?" God will not therefore do hurt in His truth, nor will He "profane His
Testament." His Testament remains immovable, because in His foreknowledge He
predestined His heirs; and "He will not reject the thing that is gone out of His lips."
32. Listen for thy confirmation in hope, for thy security, if thou knowest
thyself to be among the members of Christ. "I have sworn once by My holiness
that I will not lie unto David" (ver. 35). Dost thou wait till God swear a
second time? How often is He to swear, if in one oath He is false? One oath He made
for our life, who sent His Only One to die for us. "I have sworn once by My
holiness, that I will not lie unto David." "His seed shall endure for ever" (ver.
36). His seed endures for ever; because the Lord knows them that are His. "And
His seat is like as the sun before me:" "and as the moon perfect for evermore:
and the faithful witness in heaven" (ver. 37). They are His seat, in whom He
sits and reigns. But if His seat, His members also; because even our members are
the seat of our head. See how all our other members sustain our head: but the
head supports nothing above itself, but is itself supported by the rest of our
limbs, as if the whole body of a man were the seat of his head. His seat,
therefore, all in whom God reigns, "shall be like as the sun before Me," He saith:
because the righteous in the kingdom of My Father "shall shine like the sun."(9)
But the sun is meant in a spiritual, not a bodily sense, as that which shines
from Heaven, which He maketh to rise upon the just and unjust.(10) Finally, that
sun is not before men's eyes only, but even those of cattle and the smallest
insects; for which of the vilest animals sees not that sun? What does he say to
distinguish the sun meant here? "Like as the sun before Me." Not before men,
before the flesh, before mortal animals, but "before Me, and as the moon." But
what moon? one "that is perfect for evermore." For although that moon which we
know becomes perfect, the next day she begins to wane, after her orb is full. "He
shall be as the moon perfect for evermore," He saith. His seat shall be made
perfect as the moon, but that moon is one which will be perfect for evermore. If
as the sun, why also as the moon? the Scriptures usually signify by the moon
the mortality of this flesh, because of its increasings and decreasings, because
of its transitory nature. The moon is also interpreted as Jericho: one who was
descending from Jerusalem to Jericho fell among robbers:(11) for he was
descending from immortality to mortality. Similar then is the flesh to that moon,
which every month suffers increase and decrease: but that flesh of ours will be
perfect in the resurrection: "and a faithful witness in heaven." Thus then, if it
was our mind only that would be perfected, he would compare us only to the
sun: if our body only, to the moon; but as God will perfect us in both, in respect
of the mind it is said, "like as the sun before Me," because God only seeth
the mind: and "as the moon," so is the flesh: which "shall be made perfect for
evermore," in the resurrection of the dead: "and a faithful witness in Heaven,"
because all that was asserted of the resurrection of the dead was true. I
beseech you, hear this again more clearly, and remember it: for I know that some
understated, while others are yet enquiring perhaps what I meant. There is no
article of the Christian faith which has encountered such contradiction as that of
the resurrection of the flesh. Finally, He who was born for a sign that should
be spoken against,(1) resumed His own flesh after death to meet the caviller;
and He who could have so completely cured His wounds that their scars would have
entirely vanished, retained those scars in His body, that He might cure the
wounds of doubt in the heart. Indeed nothing has been attacked with the same
pertinacious, contentious contradiction, in the Christian faith, as the resurrection
of the flesh. On the immortality of the soul many Gentile philosophers have
disputed at great length, and in many books they have left it written that the
soul is immortal: when they come to the resurrection of the flesh, they doubt not
indeed, but they most openly deny it, declaring it to be absolutely impossible
that this earthly flesh can ascend to Heaven. Thus that moon shall be perfect
for evermore, and shall be the faithful witness in heaven against all
gain-sayers.
33. These promises, so sure, so firm, so open, so unquestioned, were made
concerning Christ. For although some are mysteriously veiled, yet some are so
clear, that all that is obscure is easily revealed by them. Such being the case,
see what follows: "But Thou hast approved and brought to nothing and forsaken
Thine Anointed" (ver. 38). "Thou hast overthrown the testament of Thy servant,
and profaned His holiness on the ground" (ver. 39). "Thou hast broken down all
His hedges, and made His strongholds a terror" (ver. 40). ... How is this? Thou
hast promised all those things: and Thou hast brought to pass their reverse.
Where are now the promises which but a little before filled us with delight?
which we so joyfully applauded, which we so fearlessly made our boast of? It is as
if one promised, and another destroyed. And this is the mystery: for the words
are not "another," but "Thou," Thou who didst promise, who didst even swear in
condescension to human doubt, Thou hast promised this, and done thus! Whence
shall I get Thy oath, where shall I find Thy promise fulfilled? Would then God
promise, or swear thus falsely? and yet why then these promises, and these acts?
I answer, that He acted thus in fulfilment of those promises. But who am I, to
say this? Let us see therefore whether it is the language of the Truth; what I
say will not then be without foundation. It was David to whom the fulfilment
of these promises in his seed, that is, in Christ, was promised: and as they
were addressed to David, men expected their completion in David. Further, lest
when any Christian asserted these promises to have referred to Christ, another by
applying them to David, because he described the fulfilment of all of them in
David, might thus err; He cancelled them in David, thus obliging us when we see
them unfulfilled in David, to look to another quarter for their fulfilment.
Thus also in the case of Esau and Jacob, we find the elder worshipped by the
younger, though it is written, "The eider shall serve the younger;"(12) so when you
see it unfulfilled in those two brothers, you look for two peoples in whom to
discover the completion of what God in His truth deigns to promise. "From the
fruit of thy body," saith the Lord unto David, "shall I set upon thy sea."(3) He
promised from his seed something for evermore: and, Solomon, born to him,
became master of such wisdom? that the promise of God respecting the fruit of
David's body was believed to have been fulfilled in him; but Solomon fell,(5) and
gave room for hoping for Christ; that since God can neither be deceived nor
deceive, He might not make His promise to rest in one who He knew would fall, but you
might after the fall of Solomon look back to God, and demand His promise. Hast
Thou, O Lord, deceived? Hast Thou failed to fulfil Thy promise? Dost Thou not
exhibit what Thou hast sworn? Perhaps God might reply, I swore and promised:
but Solomon would not persevere. What then? Didst not Thou, Lord God, know
beforehand that he would not persevere? Indeed Thou didst know. Why then didst Thou
promise me what should be eternal in one who would not persevere? Hast Thou not
answered; "But if his children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments; if
they keep not My statutes, and profane My testament;" yet My promise shall
remain, and My oath shall be fulfilled: "I have sworn once in My Holiness,"
within, in a certain mystery, in the very spring whence the Prophets drank, whence
they burst forth to us of these things, "I have sworn once "that I will not fail
David. Show forth then what Thou hast sworn, give us what Thou hast promised.
The fulfilment is taken from that David, that it might not be looked for in that
David: wait therefore for what I have promised.
34. Even David himself knew this. Consider his words; "Thou hast rejected
and brought him down to nothing." Where then is Thy promise? "Thou hast put off
Thine anointed." This expression cheers us, among much that is sorrowful: for
the promise of God is still valid; for(1) Thou hast put off Thine Anointed, not
taken Him away. See then what was the fate of that David, in whom the ignorant
hoped for the fulfilment of the promises of God, in order that those promises
might be more firmly relied upon for their fulfilment in another. "Thou hast
put off Thine Anointed: Thou hast overthrown the testament of Thy servant." For
where is the Old Testament of the Jews? where that land of promise, in which
they sinned while they dwelt in it, on the overthrow of which they wandered afar?
Ask you for the kingdom of the Jews; it exists not: you ask for the altar of
the Jews; it is not: you ask for the sacrifice of the Jews; it is not: you ask
for the priesthood of the Jews; it is not. "Thou hast overthrown the testament of
Thy servant, and profaned his holiness on the earth." Thou hast shown that
what they thought holy, was earthly. "Thou hast broken down all his hedges," with
which Thou hast entrenched him: for how could he have been spoiled unless his
hedges had been broken down? "Thou hast made his strongholds a terror." Why
terror? That it should be said to the sinners, "For if God spared not the natural
branches, take heed lest He also spare not thee."(2)
"All they that go by the way have spoiled him:" that is, all the heathen
that go by the way, meaning, all who pass through this life, have spoiled
Israel, have spoiled David. First of all, see his fragments in all nations: for it is
of the Jews that it is said, "They shall be a portion for foxes."(3) For the
Scripture calls wicked, crafty, and cowardly kings, whom another's virtue
terrifies, foxes. Thus when our Lord Himself was speaking of the threatening Herod,
He said, "Go ye, and tell that fox."(4) The king who fears no man, is not a fox:
like that Lion of Judah, of whom it is said, "Stooping down Thou didst rise
up, and didst sleep as a lion."(5) At Thy will Thou didst stoop down, at Thy will
didst rise; because Thou wouldest, Thou didst sleep. And thus in another Psalm
he says, "16 slept."(7) Was not the sentence complete, "I slept, and took
rest, and rose up again, because the Lord shall uphold Me"? Why is the word ego
added? and thus with a strong emphasis on the word I, they raged against Me, they
troubled Me: but had I not willed, I had not slept. Those then concerning whom
it was declared that they should be a portion for foxes, are now spoken of as
follows; "All they that go by have spoiled him: and he is become a reproach to
his neighbours" (ver. 41). "Thou hast set up the right hand of his enemies, and
made all his adversaries to rejoice" (ver. 42). Look at the Jews, and see all
things fulfilled that were predicted. "Thou hast turned away the help of his
sword." How they were used to fight few in number, and to strike down many. "Thou
hast turned away the help of his sword, and Thou givest him not victory in the
battle" (ver. 43). Naturally(8) then is he conquered, naturally taken prisoner,
naturally made an outcast from his kingdom, naturally scattered abroad: for he
lost that land, for which he slew the Lord. "Thou hast loosed him from
cleansing" (ver. 44). What is this? Amongst all the evils, this is a matter for great
fear; for howsoever God may beat, howsoever He may be wroth, howsoever He may
flog and scourge, yet let Him scourge him bound, whom He is to cleanse, not
"loose him from cleansing." For if He loose him from being purified, he becomes
incapable of cleansing, and must be an outcast. From what cleansing then is the
Jew loosed? From faith; for by faith we live:(9) and it is said of faith,
"purifying their hearts by faith:"(10) and as it is only the faith of Christ that
cleanses; by disbelief in Christ, they are loosed from purification. "Thou hast
loosed him from cleansing, and cast his throne down to the ground." And so Thou
hast broken it. "The days of his seat hast Thou shortened" (ver. 45). They
imagined that they should reign for ever. "And covered him with confusion." All these
things happened to the Jews, Christ yet not being taken away, but His advent
deferred.
35. Let us therefore see whether God fulfils His promises. After these
stern penalties which have been recorded as having been inflicted upon this people
and kingdom, that God might not be supposed to have fulfilled His promises in
it, and so not to grant another kingdom in Christ, of which kingdom there shall
be no end; the Prophet addresses Him in these words, "Lord, how long wilt Thou
hide Thyself unto the end?" (ver. 46). For possibly it was not from them and
to the end; because "blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness
of the Gentiles be come in, and so all Israel shall be saved."(1) But in the
mean while "shall Thy wrath burn like fire."
36. "O remember what my substance is" (ver. 47). That David, who was
placed among the Jews in the flesh, in Christ in hope, speaks "Remember what is my
substance." For not because the Jews fell away, did my substance fail: for from
that people came the Virgin Mary, and from her the flesh of Christ; that Flesh
sins not, but purifies sins; there, saith David, is my substance. "O remember
what my substance is." For the root has not entirely perished; the seed shall
come to whom the promise was made, ordained by Angels in the hand of a
Mediator.(2) "For Thou hast not made all the sons of men for nought" (ver. 47). Lo! all
the sons of men have gone into vanity: yet Thou hast not made them for nought.
If then all went into vanity, whom Thou hast not made for nought; hast Thou not
reserved some instrument to purify them from vanity? This which Thou hast
reserved to Thyself to cleanse men from vanity is Thy Holy One, in Him is my
substance: for from Him are all, whom Thou hast not made for nought, purified from
their own vanity. To them it is said, "O ye sons of men, how long are ye heavy in
heart? Wherefore have ye such pleasure in vanity, and seek after leasing?"(3)
Perhaps they might become anxious, and turn from their vanity, and when they
found themselves polluted with it, might seek for purification from it: then help
them, make them secure. "Know this also, that the Lord hath made wonderful His
Holy One."(4) He has made His Holy One to be admired: thence He has purified
all from their vanity: there, saith David, is my substance: O remember it! "For
Thou hast not made all the sons of men for nought." Thou hast therefore reserved
something to purify them: and who is He whom Thou hast reserved? "What man is
he that liveth, and shall not see death?" This man then who shall live and not
see death, shall purify them from nothingness. For He made not all men for
nought, nor can He who made them so despise His own creatures, as not to convert
and purify them.
37. "What man is he that shall live, and shall not see death?" (ver. 48).
For being raised from the dead He dieth no more, and death hath no more
dominion over Him.(5) And as in another Psalm it is said, "Thou shalt not leave my
soul in Hell, neither shalt Thou suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption,"(6) the
Apostolic teaching takes up this testimony, and in the Acts of the Apostles(7)
thus argues against the unbelieving; Men and brethren, we know that the patriarch
David is dead and buried, and his flesh hath seen corruption. Therefore it
cannot be said of him, "neither shall Thou suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption."
Of whom then is it said? "What man is he that shall live, and shall not see
death?" Perhaps there is no man such. Nay, but "who is it?" is said to make thee
inquire, not despair. But perhaps there may be some man "that shall live, and
shall not see death," and yet perhaps he did not speak of Christ, who died?
There is no man "that shall live, and shall not see death," except Him who died for
mortals. That thou mayest be assured that it is said of Him, consider the
sequel; "What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death?" Did He never die
then? He did. How then shall He live, and never see death? "He shall deliver His
own soul from the hands of Hell." He is spoken of alone indeed, in that He alone
of all others "shall live, and shall not see death: He shall deliver His own
soul from the hand of Hell," because although the rest of His faithful shall
rise from the dead, and shall themselves live for evermore, without seeing death;
yet they shall not themselves deliver their own souls from the hands of Hell.
He who delivers His own soul from the hands of Hell, Himself delivers those of
His believers: they cannot do so of themselves. Prove that He delivers His own
soul. "I have power to lay down My life, and I have power to take it again. No
man taketh 'it from Me;' for I Myself slept, but I lay it down of Myself, and
take it again,"(8) because it is He Himself who delivers His own soul from the
hands of Hell.
38. But in the very faith in Christ great difficulties occurred, and the
heathen in their rage long said, "When shall he die, and his name perish?" On
account of these then who have now long believed in Christ, but were destined to
doubt for some time, these words follow, "Lord, where are Thy old
loving-kindnesses?" (ver. 49). We have now acknowledged Christ our purifier, we now possess
Him in whom Thy promises were to be fulfilled; show forth in Him what Thou hast
promised. It is He Himself that shall live, and not see death: Himself who
delivers His own soul from the hand of Hell: and yet we are still in suffering.
Thus spoke the Martyrs, whose birthdays we are celebrating. He shall live, and
not see death: He delivers His soul from the hands of Hell: yet "for Thy sake we
are killed all the day long: and are counted as sheep appointed to be
slain."(9) "Lord, where are Thy old loving-kindnesses which Thou swarest unto David in
Thy truth?"
39. "Remember, Lord, the rebuke that Thy servants have" (ver. 50). Even
while Christ was living, and while He was sitting on His Father's right hand,
reproaches were cast against the Christians: they long were reproached with the
name of Christ. That widowed one who brought forth, and whose children were more
than those of the married wife,(1) heard ill names, heard reproaches: but the
Church, multiplied as she is, extending right and left, no longer remembers the
reproach of her widowhood. "Remember, Lord," in the memory of whom there is
abundant sweetness. "Remember," forget not. Remember what? "the rebuke that Thy
servants have: and how I do bear in my bosom the rebukes of many people." I went,
saith he, to preach of Thee, and I heard reproaches, and bore them in my
bosom, because I was fulfilling the prophecy. "Being defamed we entreat: we are made
as the filth of the earth, and are the offscouring of all things unto this
day."(2) Long the Christians bore reproaches in their bosom, in their heart: nor
dared resist their revilers; before, when it was a crime to answer a heathen: it
is now a crime to remain a heathen. Thanks be to the Lord! He remembered our
rebukes: He raised the horn of His Anointed on high, He made Him the Wonderful
among the kings of the earth. Now no one insults Christians, or if he does, it
is not in public: he speaks as if he were still more fearful of being heard,
than anxious to be believed. "I bear in my bosom the rebukes of many people."
40. "Wherewith Thine enemies have blasphemed Thee, O Lord" (ver. 51), both
Jews and Pagans. "Wherewith they have blasphemed." Wherewith have they
blasphemed Thee? "With the change of Thine Anointed."(3) They objected that Christ
died, and was crucified. Madmen, what is your reproach? Although there is now no
one to use it: yet supposing some still remaining that so speak, what is your
reproach? that Christ died? He was not destroyed, but changed. He is styled
"dead" on account of the three days. Wherewith then have thine enemies blasphemed
Thee? Not with the loss, not with the perdition of Thine Anointed, but with His
"change." He was changed from temporal to eternal life: He was changed from the
Jews to the Gentiles; He was changed from earth to heaven. Let then Thy vain
enemies blaspheme Thee still for the change of Thine Anointed. Would that they
may be changed: they will not in that case blaspheme the change of Christ, which
displeases them since they themselves will not be changed. "For there is no
change with them, and they fear not God."(4)
41. They have blasphemed the change of Christ; but what dost thou answer?
"The blessing of(5) the Lord for evermore. Amen and Amen" (ver. 52). Thanks to
His mercy,(6) thanks to His grace. We express our thanks: we do not give them,
nor return them, nor repay them: we express our thanks in words, while in fact
we retain our sense of them.(7) He saved us for no reward, He heeded not our
impieties: He searched us out when we searched not for Him, He found, redeemed,
emancipated us from the bondage of the devil and the power of his wicked angels:
He drew us to Him to purify us by that faith, from which He releases those
enemies only who believe not, and who for that reason cannot be purified. Let
those who still remain infidels say every day what they choose; day by day they
shall be fewer and fewer that remain; let them revile, mock, accuse, not the
death, but the change of Christ. Do they not see that, when they say these things,
they fail in purpose either by believing or by dying? For their curse is
temporal: but the blessing of the Lord "for evermore." To confirm that blessing is
added, "Amen and Amen." This is the signature of the bond of God. Secure then of
His promises, let us believe the past, recognise the present, hope for the
future. Let not the enemy lead us astray from the way, that He, who gathers us like
chickens under His wings, may foster us: lest we stray from His wings, and the
hawk of the air carry us off while yet unfledged. For the Christian ought not
to hope in himself: if he hopes to be strong, let him be reared by his mother's
warmth. This is the hen who gathers her young together; whence is the reproach
of our Saviour against the unbelieving Jerusalem. "Behold, your house shall be
left unto you desolate."(8) Hence was it said, "Thou hast made his strongholds
a terror." Since then they would not be gathered together under the wings of
this hen, and have given as a warning to teach us to dread the unclean spirits
that fly in the air, seeking daily what they may devour; let us gather ourselves
under the wings of this hen, the divine Wisdom, since she is weakened even unto
death of her chickens. Let us love our Lord God, let us love His Church: Him
as a Father, Her as a Mother: Him as a Lord, Her as His Handmaid, as we are
ourselves the Handmaid's sons. But this marriage is held together by a bond of
great love: no man offends the one, and wins favour of the other. Let no man say,
"I go indeed to the idols, I consult possessed ones and fortune-tellers: yet I
abandon not God's Church; I am a Catholic." While thou holdest to thy Mother,
thou hast offended thy Father. Another says, Far be it from me; I consult no
sorcerer, I seek out no possessed one, I never ask advice by sacrilegious
divination, I go not to worship idols, I bow not before stones; though I am in the party
of Donatus. What does it profit you not to have offended your Father, if he
avenges your offended Mother? what does it serve you, if you acknowledge the
Lord, honour God, preach His name, acknowledge His Son, confess that He sitteth by
His right hand; while you blaspheme His Church? Does not the analogy of human
marriages convince you? Suppose you have some patron, whom you court every day,
whose threshold you wear with your visits, whom you daily not only salute, but
even worship, to whom you pay the most loyal courtesy; if you utter one calumny
against his wife, could you re-enter his house? Hold then, most beloved, hold
all with one mind to God the Father, and the Church our Mother. Celebrate with
temperance the birthdays of the Saints, that we may imitate those who have gone
before us, and that they who pray for you may rejoice over you; that "the
blessing of the Lord may abide on you for evermore. Amen and Amen."
PSALM XC.(1)
1. This Psalm is entitled, "The prayer of Moses the man of God," through
whom, His man, God gave the law to His people, through whom He freed them from
the house of slavery, and led them forty years through the wilderness. Moses was
therefore the Minister of the Old, and the Prophet of the New Testament. For
"all these things," saith the Apostle, "happened unto them for ensamples: and
they are written for our admonition, unto whom the ends of the world come."(2) In
accordance therefore with this dispensation which was vouchsafed to Moses,
this Psalm is to be examined, as it has received its title from his prayer.
2. "Lord," he saith, "Thou hast been our refuge from one generation to
another" (ver. 1): either in every generation, or in two generations, the old and
new: because, as I said, he was the Minister of the Testament that related to
the old generation, and the Prophet of the Testament which appertained to the
new. Jesus Himself, the Surety of that covenant, and the Bridegroom in the
marriage which He entered into in that generation, saith, "Had ye believed Moses, ye
would have believed Me: for he wrote of Me."(3) Now it is not to be believed
that this Psalm was entirely the composition of that Moses, as it is not
distinguished by any of those of his expressions(4) which are used in his songs: but
the name of the great servant of God is used for the sake of some intimation,
which should direct the attention of the reader or listener. "Lord," he saith,
"Thou hast been our refuge from one generation to the other."
3. He adds, how He became our refuge, since He began to be that, viz. a
refuge, to us which He had not been before, not that He had not existed before He
became our refuge: "Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever the earth
and the world were made: and from age even unto age Thou art" (ver. 2). Thou
therefore who art for ever, and before we were, and before the world was, hast
become our refuge ever since we turned to Thee. But the expression, "before the
mountains," etc., seems to me to contain a particular meaning; for mountains
are the higher parts of the earth, and if God was before even the earth were
formed (or, as some books have it, from the same Greek word, "framed"(5)) , since
it was by Him that it was formed, what is the need of saying that He was before
the mountains, or any certain parts of it, since God was not only before the
earth, but before heaven and earth, and even the whole bodily and spiritual
creation? But it may certainly be that the whole rational creation is marked by this
distinction; that while the loftiness of Angels is signified by the mountains,
the lowliness of man is meant by the earth. And for this reason, although all
the works of creation are not improperly said to be either made or formed;
nevertheless, if there is any propriety in these words, the Angels are "made;" for
as they are enumerated among His heavenly works, the enumeration itself is thus
concluded: "He spake the word, and they were made; He commanded, and they were
created;"(6) but the earth was "formed," that man might thence be created in
the body. For the Scripture uses this word, where we read, God made, or "God
formed man out of the dust of the ground."(7) Before then the noblest parts of the
creation (for what is higher than the rational part of the Heavenly creation)
were made: before the earth was made, that Thou mightest have worshippers upon
the earth; and even this is little, as all these had a beginning either in or
with time; but "from age to age Thou art." It would have been better, from
everlasting to everlasting: for God, who is before the ages, exists not from a
certain age, nor to a certain age, which has an end, since He is without end. But it
often happens in the Scripture, that the equivocal Greek word causes the Latin
translator to put age for eternity and eternity for age. But he very rightly
does not say, Thou wast from ages, and unto ages Thou shalt be: but puts the
verb in the present, intimating that the substance of God is altogether immutable.
It is not, He was, and Shall be, but only Is. Whence the expression, I Am that
I am; and, I am "hath sent me unto you;"(1) and, "Thou shalt change them, and
they shall be changed: but Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not fail."(2)
Behold then the eternity that is our refuge, that we may fly thither from the
mutability of time, there to remain for evermore.
4. But as our life here is exposed to numerous and great temptations, and
it is to be feared lest we may be turned aside by them from that refuge, let us
see what in consequence of this the prayer of the man of God seeks for. "Turn
not Thou man to lowness" (ver. 3): that is, let not man, turned aside from Thy
eternal and sublime things, lust for things of time, savour of earthly things.
This prayer is what God has Himself enjoined us, in the Prayer, "Lead us not
into temptation,"(3) He adds, "Again Thou sayest, Come again, ye children of
men." As if he said, I ask of Thee what Thou hast commanded me to ask: giving glory
to His grace, that "he that glorieth, in the Lord he may glory:"(4) without
whose help we cannot by an exertion of our own will overcome the temptations of
this life. "Turn not Thou man to lowness: again thou sayest, Turn again, ye
children of men." But grant what Thou has enjoined, by hearing the prayer s of him
who can at least pray, and aiding the faith of the willing soul.
5. "For a thousand years in Thy sight are but as yesterday, which is past
by" (ver. 4): hence we ought to turn to Thy refuge, where Thou art without any
change, from the fleeting scenes around us; since however long a time may be
wished for for this life, "a thousand years in Thy sight are but as yesterday:"
not as to-morrow, which is to come: for all limited periods of time are reckoned
as having already passed. Hence the Apostle's choice is rather to aim at what
is before,(6) that is, to desire things eternal, and to forget things behind,
by which temporal matters should be understood. But that no one may imagine a
thousand years are reckoned by God as one day, as if with God days were so long,
when this is only said in contempt of the extent of time: he adds, "and as a
watch in the night:" which only lasts three hours. Nevertheless men have ventured
to assert their knowledge of times, to the pretenders to which our Lord said,
"It is not for you to know the times or seasons, which the Father hath put in
His own power:"(7) and they allege that this period may be defined six thousand
years, as of six days. Nor have they heeded the words, "are but as one day
which is past by:" for, when this was uttered, not a thousand years only had
passed, and the expression, "as a watch in the night," ought to have warned them that
they might not be deceived by the uncertainty of the seasons: for even if the
six first days in which God finished His works seemed to give some plausibility
to their opinion, six watches, which amount to eighteen hours, will not
consist with that opinion.
6. Next, the man of God, or rather the Prophetic spirit, seems to be
reciting some law written in the secret wisdom of God, in which He has fixed a limit
to the sinful life of mortals, and determined the troubles of mortality, in
the following words: "Their years are as things which are nothing worth: in the
morning let it fade away like the grass" (ver. 5). The happiness therefore of
the heirs of the old covenant, which they asked of the Lord their God as a great
boon, attained to receive this Law in His mysterious Providence. Moses seems to
be reciting it: "Their years shall be things which are esteemed as nothing."
Such are those things which are not before they are come: and when come, shall
soon not be: for they do not come to be here, but to be gone. "In the morning,"
that is, before they come, "as a heat(8) let it pass by;" but "in the evening,"
it means after they come, "let it fall, and be dried up, and withered" (ver.
6). It is "to fall" in death, be "dried up" in the corpse, "withered" in the
dust. What is this but flesh, wherein is the accursed lust of fleshly things? "For
all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness of man as the flower of the field;
the grass withereth, the flower fadeth: but the word of the Lord abideth for
ever."(9)
7. Making no secret that this fate is a penalty inflicted for sin, he adds
at once, "For we consume away in Thy displeasure, and are troubled at Thy
wrathful indignation" (ver. 7): we consume away in our weakness, and are troubled
from the fear of death; for we are become weak, and yet fearful to end that
weakness. "Another," saith He, "shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou
wouldest not:"(10) although not to be punished, but to be crowned, by martyrdom; and
the soul of our Lord, transforming us into Himself, was sorrowful even unto
death: for "the Lord's going out" is no other than in "death."
8. "Thou hast set our misdeeds before Thee" (ver. 8): that is, Thou hast
not dissembled Thine anger: "and our age in the light of Thy countenance." "The
light of Thy countenance" answers to "before Thee," and to "our misdeeds," as
above.
9. "For all our days are failed, and in Thine anger we have failed (ver.
9). These words sufficiently prove that our subjection to death is a punishment.
He speaks of our days failing, either because men fail in them from loving
things that pass away, or because they are reduced to so small a number; which he
asserts in the following lines: "our years are spent in thought like a
spider."(1) "The days of our age are threescore years and ten; and though men be so
strong that they come to fourscore years, yet is more of them but labour and
sorrow" (ver. 10). These words appear to express the shortness and misery of this
life: since those who have reached their seventieth year are styled old men. Up
to eighty, however, they appear to have some strength; but if they live beyond
this, their existence is laborious through multiplied sorrows. Yet many even
below the age of seventy experience an old age the most infirm and wretched: and
old men have often been found to be wonderfully vigorous even beyond eighty
years. It is therefore better to search for some spiritual meaning in these
numbers. For the anger of God is not greater on the sins of Adam (through whom alone
"sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all
men"),(2) because they live a much shorter time than the men of old; since even the
length of their days is ridiculed in the comparison of a thousand years to
yesterday that is past, and to three hours: especially since at the very time when
they provoked the anger of God to send the deluge in which they perished,
their life was at its longest span.
10. Moreover, seventy and eighty years equal a hundred and fifty; a number
which the Psalms clearly insinuate to be a sacred one. One hundred and fifty
have the same relative signification as fifteen, the latter number being
composed of seven and eight together: the first of which points to the Old Testament
through the observation of the Sabbath; the latter to the New, referring to the
resurrection of our Lord. Hence the fifteen steps in the Temple. Hence in the
Psalms, fifteen "songs of degrees." Hence the waters of the deluge overtopped
the highest mountains by fifteen cubits:(3) and many other instances of the same
nature. "Our years are passed in thought like a spider." We were labouring in
things corruptible, corruptible works were we weaving together: which, as the
Prophet Isaiah saith, by no means covered us.(4) "The days of our years are in
themselves," etc. A distinction is here made between themselves and their
strength:(5) "in themselves," that is, in the years or days themselves, may mean in
temporal things, which are promised in the Old Testament, signified by the number
seventy; "but if" not in themselves, but "in their strength," refers not to
temporal things, but to things eternal, "fourscore years," as the New Testament
contains the hope of a new life and resurrection for evermore: and what is
added, that if they pass this latter period,(6) "their strength is labour and
sorrow," intimates that such shall be the fate of him who goes beyond this faith, and
seeks for more. It may also be understood thus: because although we are
established in the New Testament, which the number eighty signifies, yet still our
life is one of labour and sorrow, while "we groan within ourselves, awaiting the
adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body; for we are saved by hope; and if
we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it."(7) This
relates to the mercy of God, of which he proceeds to say, "Since thy mercy cometh
over us,(8) and we shall be chastened:" for "the Lord chasteneth whom He
loveth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth,"(9) and to some mighty ones He
giveth a thorn in the flesh, to buffet them, that they may not be exalted above
measure through the abundance of the revelations, so that strength be made
perfect in weakness.(10) Some copies read, we shall be "taught," instead of
"chastened," which is equally expressive of the Divine Mercy; for no man can be taught
without labour and sorrow; since strength is made perfect in weakness.
11. "For who knoweth the power of Thy wrath: and for the fear of Thee to
number Thine anger?" (ver. 11). It belongs to very few men, he saith, to know
the power of Thy wrath; for when Thou dost spare, Thy anger is so far heavier
against most men; that we may know that labour and sorrow belong not to wrath, but
rather to Thy mercy, when Thou chastenest and teachest those whom Thou lovest,
to save them from the torments of eternal punishment: as it is said in another
Psalm,(11) "The sinner hath provoked the Lord: He will not require it of him
according to the greatness of His wrath." With this also is understood, "Who
knoweth?" Such is the difficulty of finding any one who knoweth how to number
Thine anger by Thy fear, that he adds this, meaning that it is to the purpose that
Thou appearest to spare some, with whom Thou art more angry, that the sinner
may be prospered in his path, and receive a heavier doom at the last. For when
the power of human wrath hath killed the body, it hath nothing more to do: but
God hath power both to punish here, and after the death of the body to send into
Hell, and by the few who are thus taught, the vain and seductive prosperity of
the wicked is judged to be greater wrath of God.(1) ...
12. "Make Thy right hand so well known" (ver. 12). This is the reading of
most of the Greek copies: not of some in Latin, which is thus, "Make Thy right
hand well known to me." What is, "Thy right hand," but Thy Christ, of whom it
is said, And to whom is the Arm of the Lord revealed?(2) Make Him so well known,
that Thy faithful may learn in Him to ask and to hope for those things rather
of Thee as rewards of their faith, which do not appear in the Old Testament,
but are revealed in the New: that they may not imagine that the happiness derived
from earthly and temporal blessings is to be highly esteemed, desired, or
loved, and thus their feet slip,(3) when they see it in men who honour Thee not:
that their steps may not give way, while they know not how to number Thine anger.
Finally, in accordance with this prayer of the Man that is His,(4) He has made
His Christ so well known as to show by His sufferings that not these rewards
which seem so highly prized in the Old Testament, where they are shadows of
things to come, but things eternal, are to be desired. The right hand of God may
also be understood in this sense, as that by which He will separate His saints
from the wicked: because that hand becomes well known, when it scourgeth every
son whom He receiveth, and suffers him not, in greater anger, to prosper in his
sins, but in His mercy scourgeth him with the left,(5) that He may place him
purified on His right hand.(6) The reading of most copies, "make Thy right hand
well known to me," may be referred either to Christ, or to eternal happiness: for
God has not a right hand in bodily shape, as He has not that anger which is
aroused into violent passion.
13. But what he addeth,(7) "and those fettered in heart in wisdom;" other
copies read, "instructed," not "lettered:" the Greek verb, expressing both
senses, only differing by a single syllable.(8) But since these also, as it is
said, put their "feet in the fetters" of wisdom, are taught wisdom (he means the
feet of the heart, not of the body), and bound by its golden chains(9) depart not
from the path of God, and become not runaways from him; whichever reading we
adopt, the truth in the meaning is safe. Them thus lettered, or instructed in
heart in wisdom, God makes so well known in the New Testament, that they despised
all things for the Faith which the impiety of Jews and Gentiles abhorred; and
allowed themselves to be deprived of those things which in the Old Testament
are thought high promises by those who judge after the flesh.
14. And as when they became so well known, as to despise these things, and
by setting their affections on things eternal, gave a testimony through their
sufferings (whence they are called witnesses or martyrs in the Greek), they
endured for a long while many bitter temporal afflictions. This man of God giveth
heed to this, and the prophetic spirit under the name of Moses continues thus,
"Return, O Lord, how long? and be softened concerning Thy servants" (ver. 13).
These are the words of those, who, enduring many evils in that persecuting age,
become known because their hearts are bound in the chain of wisdom so firmly,
that not even such hardships can induce them to fly from their Lord to the good
things of this world. "How long wilt Thou hide Thy face from me, O Lord?"(10)
occurs in another Psalm, in unison with this sentence, "Return, O Lord, how
long?" And that they who, in a most carnal spirit, ascribe to God the form of a
human body, may know that the "turning away" and "turning again" of His
countenance is not like those motions of our own frame, let them recollect these words
from above in the same Psalm, "Thou hast set our misdeeds before Thee, and our
secret sins in the light of Thy countenance." How then does he say in this
passage, "Return," that God may be favourable, as if He had turned away His face in
anger; when as in the former he speaks of God's anger in such a manner, as to
insinuate that He had not turned away His countenance from the misdeeds and the
course of life of those He was angry with, but rather had set them before Him,
and in the light of His countenance? The word, "How long," belongs to
righteousness beseeching, not indignant impatience. "Be softened," some have rendered by
a verb, "soften." But "be softened" avoids an ambiguity; since to soften is a
common verb: for he may be said to soften who pours out prayers, and be to whom
they are poured out: for we say, I soften thee, and I soften toward thee.(11)
15. Next, in anticipation of future blessings, of which he speaks as
already vouchsafed, he says, "We are satisfied with Thy mercy in the morning" (ver.
14). Prophecy has thus been kindled for us, in the midst of these toils and
sorrows of the night, like a lamp in the darkness, until day dawn, and the
Day-star arise in our hearts.(12) For blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God: then shall the righteous be filled with that blessing for which they
hunger and thirst now,(1) while, walking in faith, they are absent from the
Lord.(2) Hence are the words, "In Thy presence is fulness of joy:"(3) and, "Early in
the morning they shall stand by, and shall look up:"(4) and as other
translators have said it, "We shall be satisfied with Thy mercy in the morning;" then
they shall be satisfied. As he says elsewhere, "I shall be satisfied, when Thy
glory shall be revealed."(5) So it is said, "Lord, show us the Father, and it
sufficeth us:" and our Lord Himself answereth, "I will manifest Myself to Zion;"(6)
and until this promise is fulfilled, no blessing satisfies us, or ought to do
so, lest our longings should be arrested in their course, when they ought to be
increased until they gain their objects. "And we rejoiced and were glad all
the days of our life." Those days are days without end: they all exist together:
it is thus they satisfy us: for they give not way to days succeeding: since
there is nothing there which exists not yet because it has not reached us, or
ceases to exist because it has passed; all are together: because there is one day
only, which remains and passes not away: this is eternity itself. These are the
days respecting which it is written, "What man is he that lusteth to live, and
would fain see good days?"(7) These days in another passage are styled years:
where unto God it is said, "But Thou art the same, and Thy years shall not
fail:"(8) for these are not years that are accounted for nothing, or days that
perish like a shadow: but they are days which have a real existence, the number of
which he who thus spoke, "Lord, let me know mine end" (that is, after reaching
what term I shall remain unchanged, and have no further blessing to crave), "and
the number of my days, what it is" (what is, not what is not): prayed to know.
He distinguishes them from the days of this life, of which he speaks as
follows, "Behold, Thou hast made my days as it were a span long,"(9) which are not,
because they stand not, remain not, but change in quick succession: nor is there
a single hour in them in which our being is not such, but that one part of it
has already passed, another is about to come, and none remains as it is. But
those years and days, in which we too shall never fail, but evermore be
refreshed, will never fail. Let our souls long earnestly for those days, let them thirst
ardently for them, that there we may be filled, be satisfied, and say what we
now say in anticipation, "We have been satisfied," etc. "We have been comforted
again now, after the time that Thou hast brought us low, and for the years
wherein we have seen evil" (ver. 15).
16. But now in days that are as yet evil, let us speak as follows. "Look
upon Thy servants, and upon Thy works" (ver. 16). For Thy servants themselves
are Thy works, not only inasmuch as they are men, but as Thy servants, that is,
obedient to Thy commands. For we are His workmanship, created not merely in
Adam, but in Christ Jesus, unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we
should walk in them:(10) "for it is God which worketh in us both to will and to
do of His good pleasure."(11) "And direct their sons:" that they may be right
in heart, for to such God is bountiful; for "God is bountiful to Israel, to
those that are right in heart." ...
17. "And let the brightness of the Lord our God be upon us" (ver. 17);
whence the words, "O Lord, the light of Thy countenance is marked upon us."(12)
And, "Make Thou straight the works of our hands upon us:" that we may do them not
for hope of earthly reward: for then they are not straight, but crooked. In
many copies the Psalm goes thus far, but in some there is found an additional
verse at the end, as follows, "And make straight the work of our hands." To these
words the learned have prefixed a star, called an asterisk, to show that they
are found in the Hebrew, or in some other Greek translations, but not in the
Septuagint. The meaning of this verse, if we are to expound it, appears to me
this, that all our good works are one work of love: for love is the fulfilling of
the Law.(13) For as in the former verse he had said, "And the works of our hands
make Thou straight upon us," here he says "work," not works, as if anxious to
show, in the last verse, that all our works are one, that is, are directed with
a view to one work. For then are works righteous, when they are directed to
this one end: "for the end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and
of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned."(14) There is therefore one
work, in which are all, "faith which worketh by love:"(15) whence our Lord's words
in the Gospel, "This is the work of God, that ye believe in Him whom He hath
sent."(16) Since, therefore, in this Psalm, both old and new life, life both
mortal and everlasting, years that are counted for nought, and years that have the
fulness of loving-kindness and of true joy, that is, the penalty of the first
and the reign of the Second Man, are marked so very clearly; I imagine, that the
name of Moses, the man of God, became the title of the Psalm, that pious and
right-minded readers of the Scriptures might gain an intimation that the Mosaic
laws, in which God appears to promise only, or nearly only, earthly rewards for
good works, without doubt contains under a veil some such hopes as this Psalm
displays. But when any one has passed over to Christ, the veil will be taken
away:(1) and his eyes will be unveiled, that he may consider the wonderful things
in the law of God, by the gift of Him, to whom we pray, "Open Thou mine eyes,
and I shall see the wondrous things of Thy law.(2)
PSALM XCI.(3)
1. This Psalm is that from which the Devil dared to tempt our Lord Jesus
Christ: let us therefore attend to it, that thus armed, we may be enabled to
resist the tempter, not presuming in ourselves, but in Him who before us was
tempted, that we might not be overcome when tempted. Temptation to Him was not
necessary: the temptation of Christ is our learning, but if we listen to His answers
to the devil, in order that, when ourselves are tempted, we may answer in like
manner, we are then entering through the gate, as ye have heard it read in the
Gospel. For what is to enter by the gate? To enter by Christ, who Himself
said, "I am the door:"(4) and to enter through Christ, is to imitate His ways. ...
He urges us to imitate Him in those works which He could not have done had He
not been made Man; for how could He endure sufferings, unless He had become a
Man? How could He otherwise have died, been crucified, been humbled? Thus then do
thou, when thou sufferest the troubles of this world, which the devil, openly
by men, or secretly, as in Job's case, inflicts; be courageous, be of long
suffering; "thou shall dwell under the defence of the Most High," as this Psalm
expresses it: for if thou depart from the help of the Most High, without strength
to aid thyself, thou wilt fall.
2. For many men are brave, when they are enduring persecution from men,
and see them openly rage against themselves: imagining they are then imitating
the sufferings of Christ, in case men openly persecute them; but if assailed by
the hidden attack of the devil, they believe they are not being crowned by
Christ. Never fear when thou dost imitate Christ. For when the devil tempted our
Lord, there was no man in the wilderness; he tempted Him secretly; but he was
conquered, and conquered too when openly attacking Him. This do thou, if thou
wishest to enter by the door, when the enemy secretly assails thee, when he asks for
a man that he may do him some hurt by bodily troubles, by fever, by sickness,
or any other bodily sufferings, like those of Job. He saw not the devil, yet he
acknowledged the power of God. He knew that the devil had no power against
him, unless from the Almighty Ruler of all things he received that power: the
whole glory he gave to God, power to the devil he gave not. ...
3. He then who so imitates Christ as to endure all the troubles of this
world, with his hopes set upon God, that he falls into no snare, is broken down
by no panic fears, he it is "who dwelleth under the defence of the Most High,
who shall abide under the protection of God" (ver. 1), in the words with which
the Psalm, which you have heard and sung, begins. You will recognise the words,
so well known, in which the devil tempted our Lord, when we come to them. "He
shall say unto the Lord, Thou art my taker up, and my refuge: my God" (ver. 2).
Who speaks thus to the Lord? "He who dwelleth under the defence of the Most
High:" not under his own defence. Who is this? He dwelleth under the defence of the
Most High, who is not proud, like those who ate, that they might become as
Gods, and lost the immortality in which they were made. For they chose to dwell
under a defence of their own, not under that of the Most High: thus they listened
to the suggestions of the serpent? and despised the precept of God: and
discovered at last that what God threatened, not what the devil promised, had come to
pass in them.
4. Thus then do thou say also, "In Him will I trust. For He Himself shall
deliver me" (ver. 3), not I myself. Observe whether he teaches anything but
this, that all our trust be in God, none in man. Whence shall he deliver thee?
"From the snare of the hunter, and from a harsh word." Deliverance from the
hunter's net is indeed a great blessing: but how is deliverance from a harsh word so?
Many have fallen into the hunter's net through a harsh word. What is it that I
say? The devil and his angels spread their snares, as hunters do: and those
who walk in Christ tread afar from those snares: for he dares not spread his net
in Christ: he sets it on the verge of the way, not in the way. Let then thy way
be Christ, and thou shall not fall into the snares of the devil. ...
But what is, "from a harsh word"? The devil has entrapped many by a harsh
word: for instance, those who profess Christianity among Pagans suffer insult
from the heathen: they blush when they hear reproach, and shrinking out of their
path in consequence, fall into the hunter's snares. And yet what will a harsh
word do to you? Nothing. Can the snares with which the enemy entraps you by
means of reproaches, do nothing to you? Nets are usually spread for birds at the
end of a hedge, and stones are thrown into the hedge: those stones will not harm
the birds. When did any one ever hit a bird by throwing a stone into a hedge?
But the bird, frightened at the harmless noise, falls into the nets; and thus
men who fear the vain reproaches of their calumniators, and who blush at
unprovoked insults, fall into the snares of the hunters, and are taken captive by the
devil... Just as among the heathen, the Christian who fears their reproaches
falls into the snare of the hunter: so among the Christians, those who endeavour
to be more diligent and better than the rest, are doomed to bear insults from
Christians themselves. What then doth it profit, my brother, if thou
occasionally find a city in which there is no heathen? No one there insults a man because
he is a Christian, for this reason, that there is no Pagan therein: but there
are many Christians who lead a bad life, among whom those who are resolved to
live righteously, and to be sober among the drunken, and chaste among the
unchaste, and amid the consulters of astrologers sincerely to worship God, and to ask
after no such things, and among spectators of frivolous shows will go only to
church, suffer from those very Christians reproaches, and harsh words, when they
address such a one,"Thou art the mighty, the righteous, thou art Elias thou
art Peter: thou hast come from heaven." They insult him: whichever way he turns,
he hears harsh sayings on each side: and if he fears, and abandons the way of
Christ, he falls into the snares of the hunters. But what is it, when he hears
such words, not to swerve from the way? On hearing them, what comfort has he,
which prevents his heeding them, and enables him to enter by the door? Let him
say; What words am I called, who am a servant and a sinner? To my Lord Jesus they
said, "Thou hast a devil."(1) You have just heard the harsh words spoken
against our Lord: it was not necessary for our Lord to suffer this, but in doing so
He has warned thee against harsh words, lest thou fall into the snares of the
hunters.
5. "He shall defend thee between His shoulders, and thou shall hope under
His wings" (ver. 4). He says this, that thy protection may not be to thee from
thyself, that thou mayest not imagine that thou canst defend thyself; He will
defend thee, to deliver thee from the hunter's snare, and from an harsh word.
The expression, "between His shoulders," may be understood both in front and
behind: for the shoulders are about the head; but in the words, "thou shalt hope
under His wings," it is clear that the protection of the wings of God expanded
places thee between His shoulders, so that God's wings on this side and that have
thee in the midst, where thou shalt not fear lest any one hurt thee: only be
thou careful never to leave that spot, where no foe dares approach. If the hen
defends her chickens beneath her wings; how much more shalt thou be safe beneath
the wings of God, even against the devil and his angels, the powers who fly
about in mid air like hawks, to carry off the weak young one? For the comparison
of the hen to the very Wisdom of God is not without ground; for Christ Himself,
our Lord and Saviour, speaks of Himself as likened to a hen; "how often would
I have gathered thy children," etc.(2) That Jerusalem would not: let us be
willing. ... If you consider other birds, brethren, you will find many that hatch
their eggs, and keep their young warm: but none that weakens herself in sympathy
with her chickens, as the hen does. We see swallows, sparrows, and storks
outside their nests, without being able to decide whether they have young or no:
but we know the hen to be a mother by the weakness of her voice, and the
loosening of her feathers: she changes altogether from love for her chickens: she
weakens herself because they are weak. Thus since we were weak, the Wisdom of God
made Itself weak, when the Word was made flesh, and dwelt in us,(3) that we might
hope under His wings.
6. "His truth shall surround thee with a shield" (ver. 5). What are "the
wings," the same is "the shield:" since there are neither wings nor shield. If
either were literally, how could the one be the same as the other? can wings be
a shield or a shield wings? But all these expressions, indeed, are figuratively
used through likenesses. If Christ were really a Stone,(4) He could not be a
Lion; if a Lion,(5) He could not be a Lamb: but He is called both Lion, and
Lamb,(6) and Stone, and Calf, and anything else of the sort, metaphorically,
because He is neither Stone, nor Lion, nor Lamb, nor Calf, but Jesus Christ, the
Saviour of all of us, for these are likenesses, not literal names. "His truth shall
be thy shield," it is said: a shield to assure us that He will not confound
those whose trust is in themselves with those who hope in God. One is a sinner,
and the other a sinner: but suppose one that presumes upon himself is a
despiser, confesses not his sins, and he will say, if my sins displeased God, He would
not suffer me to live. But another dared not even raise his eyes, but beat upon
his breast, saying, "God be merciful to me a sinner."(7) Both this was a
sinner, and that: but the one mocked, the other mourned: the one was a despiser, the
other a confessor, of his sins. But the truth of God, which respects not
persons, discerns the penitent from him who denies his sin, the humble from the
proud, him who presumes upon himself from him who presumes on God. "Thou shall not
be afraid for any terror by night."
7. "Nor for the arrow that flieth by day, for the matter(1) that walketh
in darkness, nor for the ruin and the devil that is in the noonday" (ver. 6).
These two clauses above correspond to the two below; "Thou shall not fear" for
"the terror by night, from the arrow that flieth by day:" both because of "the
terror by night," from "the matter that walketh in darkness:" and because of "the
arrow that flieth by day," from "the ruin of the devil of the noon-day." What
ought to be feared by night, and what by day? When any man sins in ignorance,
he sins, as it were, by night: when he sins in full knowledge, by day. The two
former sins then are the lighter: the second are much heavier; but this is
obscure, and will repay your attention, if, by God's blessing, I can explain it so
that you may understand it. He calls the light temptation, which the ignorant
yield to, "terror by night:" the light temptation, which assails men who well
know, "the arrow that flieth by day." What are light temptations? Those which do
not press upon us so urgently, as to overcome us, but may pass by quickly if
declined. Suppose these, again, heavy ones. If the persecutor threatens, and
frightens the ignorant grievously, I mean those whose faith is as yet unstable, and
know not that they are Christians that they may hope for a life to come; as
soon as they are alarmed with temporal ills, they imagine that Christ has forsaken
them, and that they are Christians to no purpose; they are not aware that they
are Christians for this reason, that they may conquer the present, and hope
for the future: the matter that walketh in darkness has found and seized them.
But some there are who know that they are called to a future hope; that what God
has promised is not of this life, or this earth; that all these temptations
must be endured, that we may receive what God hath promised us for evermore; all
this they know: when however the persecutor urges them more strenuously, and
plies them with threats, penalties, tortures, at length they yield, and although
they are well aware of their sin, yet they fall as it were by day.
8. But why does he say, "at noon-day"? The persecution is very hot; and
thus the noon signifies the excessive heat. ... The demon that is "in the
noon-day," represents the heat of a furious persecution: for these are our Lord's
words, "The sun was up; and because they had no root, they withered away:" and when
explaining it, He applies it to those who are offended when persecution
ariseth, "Because they have not root in themselves." We are therefore right in
understanding by the demon that destroyeth in the noon-day, a violent persecution.
Listen, beloved, while I describe the persecution, from which the Lord hath
rescued His Church. At first, when the emperors and kings of the world imagined that
they could extirpate from the earth the Christian name by persecution, they
proclaimed, that any one who confessed himself a Christian, should be smitten. He
who did not choose to be smitten, denied that he was a Christian, knowing the
sin he was committing: the arrow that flieth by day reached him. But whoever
regarded not the present life, but had a sure trust in a future one, avoided the
arrow, by confessing himself a Christian; smitten in the flesh, he was
liberated in the spirit: resting with God, he began peacefully to await the redemption
of his body in the resurrection of the dead: he escaped from that temptation,
from the arrow that flieth by day. "Whoever professes himself a Christian, let
him be beheaded;" was as the arrow that flieth by day. The "devil that is in the
noon-day" was not yet abroad, burning with a terrible persecution, and
afflicting with great heat even the strong. For hear what followed; when the enemy saw
that many were hastening to martyrdom, and that the number of fresh converts
increased in proportion to that of the sufferers, they said among themselves, We
shall annihilate the human race, so many thousands are there who believe in
His Name; if we kill all of them, there will hardly be a survivor on earth. The
sun then began to blaze, and to glow with a terrible heat. Their first edict had
been, Whoever shall confess himself a Christian, let him be smitten. Their
second edict was, Whoever shall have confessed himself a Christian, let him be
tortured, and tortured even until he deny himself a Christian. ...Many therefore
who denied not,(2) failed amid the tortures; for they were tortured until they
denied. But to those who persevered in professing Christ, what could the sword
do, by killing the body at one stroke, and sending the soul to God? This was the
result of protracted tortures also: yet who could be found able to resist such
cruel and continued torments? Many failed: those, I believe, who presumed upon
themselves, who dwelt not under the defence of the Most High, and under the
shadow of the God of Heaven; who said not to the Lord, "Thou art my lifter up:"
who trusted not beneath the shadow of His wings, but reposed much confidence in
their own strength. They are thrown down by God, to show them that it is He
that protects them, He overrules their temptations, He allows so much only to
befall them, as each person can sustain.
9. Many then fell before the demon of the noon-day. Would ye know how
many? He goes on, and says, "A thousand shall fall beside thee, and ten thousand at
thy right hand; but it shall not come nigh thee" (ver. 7). To whom, brethren,
but to Christ Jesus, is this said? ... For the members, the body, and the head,
are not separate from one another: the body and the head are the Church and
her Saviour. How then is it said," A thousand shall fall beside thee, and ten
thousand by thy right hand"? Because they shall fall before the devil, that
destroyeth at noon. It is a terrible thing, my brethren, to fall from beside Christ,
from His right hand but how shall they fall from beside Him? Why the one beside
Him, the other at His right hand? Why a thousand beside Him, ten thousand at
His right hand? Why a thousand beside Him? Because a thousand are fewer than the
ten thousand who shall fall at His right hand. Who these are will soon be
clear in Christ's name; for to some He promised that they should judge with Him,
namely, to the Apostles, who left all things, and followed Him. ... Those judges
then are the heads of the Church, the perfect. To such He said, "If thou wilt
be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor."(1) What means the
expression, "if thou wilt be perfect"? it means, if thou wilt judge with Me,
and not be judged. ...Many such at that period, who had distributed their all to
the poor, and already promised themselves a seat beside Christ in judgment of
the nations, failed amid their torments under the blazing fire of persecution,
as before the demon of the noon-day, and denied Christ. These are they who have
fallen "beside" Him: when about to sit with Christ for the judgment of the
world, they fell.
10. I will now explain who are they who fall on the right hand of Christ.
... And because many have fallen from that hope of being judges, but yet many,
many more from that of being on His right hand, the Psalmist thus addresses
Christ, "A thousand shall fall beside Thee, and ten thousand at Thy right hand."
And since there shall be many, who regarded not all these things, with whom, as
it were with His own limbs, Christ is one, he adds, "But it shall not come nigh
Thee." Were these words addressed to the Head alone? Surely not; surely
neither (doth it come nigh) to Paul, nor Peter, nor all the Apostles, nor all the
Martyrs, who failed not in their torments. What then do the words," it shall not
come nigh," mean? Why were they thus tortured? The torture came nigh the flesh,
but it did not reach the region of faith. Their faith then was far beyond the
reach of the terrors threatened by their torturers. Let them torture, terror
will not come nigh; let them torture, but they will mock the torture, putting
their trust in Him who conquered before them, that the rest might conquer. And who
conquer, except they who trust not in themselves? ... Who will not fear? He who
trusts not in himself, but in Christ. But those who trust in themselves,
although they even hope to judge at the side of Christ, although they hoped they
should be at His right hand, as if He said to them, "Come, ye blessed of My
Father," etc.; yet the devil that is at noon overtook them, the raging heat of
persecution, terrifying with violence; and many fell from the hope of the seat of
judgment, of whom it is said, "A thousand shall fall beside thee;" many too fell
from the hope of reward for their duties,(2) of whom it was said, "And ten
thousand at thy right hand." But this downfall and devil that is at noon-day "shall
not come nigh thee," that is, the Head and the body; for the Lord knows who are
His.(3)
11. "Nevertheless, with thine eyes shall thou behold, and see the reward
of the ungodly" (ver. 8). What is this? Why "nevertheless"? Because the wicked
were allowed to tyrannize over Thy servants, and to persecute them. Will they
then have been allowed to persecute Thy servants with impunity? Not with
impunity, for although Thou hast permitted them, and Thine own have thence received a
brighter crown, "nevertheless," etc. For the evil which they willed, not the
good they unconsciously were the agents of, will be recompensed them. All that is
wanting is the eye of faith, by which we may see that they are raised for a
time only, while they shall mourn for evermore; and to those into whose hands is
given temporal power over the servants of God, it shall be said, "Depart into
everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels."(4) But if every man
have but eyes in the sense in which it is said, "With thine eyes shalt thou
behold," it is no unimportant thing to look upon the wicked flourishing in this life,
and to have an eye to him, to consider what will become of him in the end, if
he fail to reform his ways: for those who now would thunder upon others, will
afterwards feel the thunderbolt themselves.
12. "For Thou, Lord, art my hope" (ver. 9). He has now come to the power
Which rescues him from falling by the "downfall and the devil of the noon-day."
"For Thou, Lord, art my hope: Thou hast set Thy house of defence very high."
What do the words "very high" mean? For many make their house of defence in God a
mere refuge from temporal persecution; but the defence of God is on high, and
very secret, whither thou mayest fly from the wrath to come. Within "Thou hast
set thine house of defence very high. There shall no evil happen unto Thee:
neither shall any plague come nigh Thy dwelling" (ver. 10).
13. The Holy City is not the Church of this country only, but of the whole
world as well: not that of this age only, but from Abel himself down to those
who shall to the end be born and believe in Christ, the whole assembly of the
Saints, belonging to one city; which city is Christ's body, of which Christ is
the Head. There, too, dwell the Angels, who are our fellow-citizens: we toil,
because we are as yet pilgrims: while they within that city are awaiting our
arrival. Letters have reached us too from that city, apart from which we are
wandering: those letters are the Scriptures, which exhort us to live well. Why do I
speak of letters only? The King himself descended, and became a path to us in
our wanderings: that walking in Him, we may neither stray, nor faint nor fall
among robbers, nor be caught in the snares that are set near our path. This
character, then, we recognise in the whole Person of Christ, together with the
Church. ... He Himself is our Head, He is God, co-equal with the Father, the Word of
God, by whom all things were made:(1) but God to create, Man to renew; God to
make, Man to restore. Looking upon Him, then, let us hear the Psalm. Listen,
beloved. This is the teaching and doctrine of this school, which may enable you to
understand, not this Psalm only, but many, if ye keep in mind this rule.
Sometimes a Psalm, and all prophecy as well, in speaking of Christ, praises the Head
alone, and sometimes from the Head goes to the Body, that is, the Church, and
without apparently changing the Person spoken of: because the Head is not
separate from the Body, and both are spoken of as one ...
14. What then, my brethren, what is said of our Head? "For Thou, Lord, art
my hope," etc. Of this we have spoken, "for He hath given His angels charge
over Thee, to keep Thee in all Thy ways" (ver. 11). You heard these words but
now, when the Gospel was being read; attend therefore. Our Lord, after He was
baptized, fasted. Why was He baptized? That we might not scorn to be baptized. For
when John said to our Lord, "Comest Thou to me to be baptized? I ought to be
baptized by Thee;" and our Lord replied, "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it
becometh us to fulfil all righteousness;"(2) He wished to fulfil all humility, so
that He should be washed, who had no defilement. ... Our Lord, then, was
baptized, and after baptism He was tempted; He fasted forty days, a number which has,
as I have often mentioned, a deep meaning. All things cannot be explained at
once, lest needful time be too much taken up. After forty days He was an
hungred. He could have fasted without ever feeling hunger; but then how could He be
tempted? or had He not overcome the tempter, how couldest thou learn to struggle
with him? He was hungry; and then the tempter said, "If Thou be the Son of God,
command that these stones be made bread." Was it a great thing for our Lord
Jesus Christ to make bread out of stones, when He satisfied so many thousands
with five loaves? He made bread out of nothing. For whence came that quantity of
food, which could satisfy so many thousands? The sources of that bread are in
the Lord's hands. This is nothing wonderful; for He Himself made out of five
loaves bread enough for so many thousands? who also every day out of a few seeds
raises up on earth immense harvests. These are the miracles of our Lord: but from
their constant operation they are disregarded. What then, my brethren, was it
impossible for the Lord to create bread out of stones? He made men even out of
stones, in the words of John the Baptist himself, "God is able of these stones
to raise up children unto Abraham."(4) Why then did He not so? That he might
teach thee how to answer the tempter, so that if thou wast reduced to any straits
and the tempter suggested, if thou wast a Christian and belongedst to Christ,
would He desert thee now? ... Listen to our Lord: "Man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Dost thou
think the word of God bread? If the Word of God, through which all things were
made, was not bread, He would not say, "I am the bread which came down from
heaven."(5) Thou hast therefore learnt to answer the tempter, when pressed with
hunger.
15. What if he tempt thee in these words: If thou wast a Christian, thou
wouldest do miracles, as many Christians have done? Thou, deceived by a wicked
suggestion, wouldest tempt the Lord thy God, so as to say to Him, If I am a
Christian, and am before Thine eyes, and Thou dost account me at all in the number
of Thine own, let me also do something like the many works which Thy Saints
have done. Thou hast tempted God, as if thou weft not a Christian, unless thou
didst this. Many who desired such things have fallen. For that Simon the sorcerer
desired such gifts of the Apostles, when he wished to buy the Holy Spirit for
money.(6) He loved the power of working miracles, but loved not the imitation of
humility. ... What then, if he tempt thee thus, "work miracles"? that thou
mayest not tempt God, what shouldest thou answer? What our Lord answered. The
devil said to Him, "Cast Thyself down; for it is written, He shall give His Angels
charge concerning Thee," etc. If Thou shalt cast Thyself down, Angels shall
receive Thee. And it might indeed, my brethren, happen, if our Lord had cast
Himself down, the attending Angels would receive our Lord's flesh; but what does He
say to him? "It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God."(1)
Thou thinkest Me a man. For the devil came to Him with this view, that he might
try whether He were the Son of God. He saw His Flesh; but His might appeared in
His works: the Angels had borne witness. He saw that He was mortal, so that he
might tempt Him, that by Christ's temptation the Christian might be taught.
What then is written? "Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God." Let us not then
tempt the Lord, so as to say, If we belong to Thee, let us work a miracle.
16. Let us return to the words of the Psalm. "They shall bear Thee in
their hands, lest at any time Thou hurt Thy foot against a stone" (ver. 12). Christ
was raised up in the hands of Angels, when He was taken up into heaven: not
that, if Angels had not sustained Him, He would have fallen: but because they
were attending on their King. Say not, Those who sustained Him are better than He
who was sustained. Are then cattle better than men, because they sustain the
weakness of men? And we ought not to speak thus either; for if the cattle
withdraw their support, their riders fall. But how ought we to speak of it? For it is
said even of God, "Heaven is My throne."(2) Because then heaven supports Him,
and God sits thereon, is therefore heaven the better? Thus also in this Psalm we
may understand it of the service of the Angels: it does not pertain to any
infirmity in our Lord, but to the honour they pay, and to their service. ...What
the finger of God is, the Gospel explaineth to us; for the finger of God is the
Holy Ghost. How do we prove this? Our Lord, when answering those who accused
Him of casting out devils in the name of Beelzebub, saith, "If I cast out devils
by the Spirit of God;"(3) and another Evangelist, in relating the same saying,
saith, "If I with the finger of God cast out devils."(4) What therefore is in
one stated clearly, is darkly expressed in another. Thou didst not know what was
the finger of God, but another Evangelist explains it by terming it the Spirit
of God. The Law then written by the finger of God was given on the fiftieth
day after the slaughter of the lamb, and the Holy Ghost descended on the fiftieth
day after the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ. The Lamb was slain, the
Passover was celebrated, the fifty days were completed, and the Law was given. But
that Law was to cause fear, not love: but that fear might be changed into love,
He who was truly righteous was slain: of whom that lamb whom the Jews were
slaying was the type. He arose from the dead: and from the day of our Lord's
Passover, as from that of the slaying of the Paschal lamb, fifty days are counted; and
the Holy Ghost descended, now in the fulness of love, not in the punishment of
fear.(5) Why have I said this? For this then our Lord arose, and was
glorified, that He might send His Holy Spirit. And I said long ago that this was so,
because His head is in heaven, His feet on earth. If His head is in heaven, His
feet on earth; what means our Lord's feet on earth? Our Lord's saints on earth.
Who are our Lord's feet? The Apostles sent throughout the whole world. Who are
our Lord's feet? All the Evangelists, in whom our Lord travelleth over all
nations. ... We need not therefore wonder that our Lord was raised up to heaven by
the hands of Angels, that His foot might not dash against a stone: lest those
who on earth toiled in His body, while they were travelling over the whole world
might become guilty of the Law, He took from them fear, and filled them with
love. Through fear Peter thrice denied Him,(6) for he had not yet received the
Holy Ghost: afterwards, when he had received the Holy Spirit, he began to preach
with confidence. ... Our Lord so dealt with him, as if He said, thrice thou
hast denied Me through fear: thrice confess Me through love. With that love and
that charity He filled His disciples. Why? Because He hath set His house of
defence very high: because when glorified He sent the Holy Ghost, He released the
faithful from the guilt of the Law, that His feet might not dash against a stone.
17. "Thou(7) shall go upon the asp and the basilisk; the lion and the
dragon shalt thou tread under thy feet" (ver. 13). Ye know who the serpent is, and
how the Church treadeth upon him, as she is not conquered, because she is on
her guard against his cunning. And after what manner he is a lion and a dragon, I
believe you know also, beloved. The lion openly rages, the dragon lies
secretly in covert: the devil hath each of these forces and powers. When the Martyrs
were being slain, it was the raging lion: when heretics are plotting, it is the
dragon creeping beneath us. Thou hast conquered the lion; conquer also the
dragon: the lion hath not crushed(8) thee, let not the dragon deceive thee. ... A
few women in the Church have bodily virginity: but the virginity of the heart
all the faithful have. In the very matter of faith he feared that the heart's
virginity would be corrupted by the devil: and those who have lost it, are
uselessly virgins in their bodies. What does a woman who is corrupt in heart preserve
in her body? Thus a Catholic married woman is before a virgin heretic. For the
first is not indeed a virgin in her body, but the second has become married in
her heart; and married not unto God as her husband, but unto the dragon. But
what shall the Church do? The basilisk is the king of serpents, as the devil is
the king of wicked spirits.
18. These are the words of God to the Church. "Because he hath set his
love in me, therefore will I deliver him" (ver. 14). Not only therefore the Head,
which now sits in heaven, because He hath set His house of defence very high,
to which no evil shall happen, neither shall any plague come nigh His dwelling;
but we also who are toiling on earth, and are still living in temptations,
whose steps are feared for, lest they fall into snares, may hear the voice of the
Lord our God consoling us, and saying to us, "Because he hath set his love upon
me, therefore will I deliver him: I will set him up, because he hath known my
name."
19. "He shall call upon me, and I will hear him: yea, I am with him in
trouble" (ver. 15). Fear not when thou art in trouble, as if the Lord were not
with thee. Let faith be with thee, and God is with thee in thy trouble. There are
waves on the sea, and thou art tossed in thy bark, because Christ sleepeth.
Christ slept in the ship, while the men were perishing.(1) If thy, faith sleep in
thy heart, Christ is as it were sleeping in thy ship: because Christ dwelleth
in thee through faith, when thou beginnest to be tossed, awake Christ sleeping:
rouse up thy faith, and thou shalt be assured that He deserts thee not. But
thou thinkest thou art forsaken, because He rescueth thee not when thou thyself
dost wish. He delivered the Three Children from the fire?(2) Did He, who did
this, desert the Maccabees?(3) God forbid! He delivered both of these: the first
bodily, that the faithless might be confounded; the last spiritually, that the
faithful might imitate them. "I will deliver him, and bring him to honour."
20. "With length of days will I satisfy him" (ver. 16). What is length of
days? Eternal life. Brethren, imagine not that length of days is spoken of in
the same sense as days are said to be long in summer, short in winter. Hath he
such days to give us? That length is one that hath no end, eternal life, that is
promised us in long days. And truly, since this sufficeth, with reason he
saith, "will I satisfy him." What is long in time, if it hath an end, satisfieth us
not: for that reason it should not be even called long. And if we are
covetous, we ought to be covetous of eternal life: long for such a life, as hath no
end. Lo, a line in which our covetousness may be extended. Dost thou wish money
without limit? Long for eternal life without limit. Dost thou wish that thy
possession may have no end? Seek for eternal life. "I will show him my salvation."
Nor is this, my brethren, to be briefly passed over. "I will show him my
salvation:" He means, I will show him Christ Himself. Why? Was He not seen on earth?
What great thing hath He to show us? But He did not appear such as we shall see
Him. He appeared in that shape in which those who saw Him crucified Him:
behold, those who saw Him, crucified Him: we have not seen Him, yet we have believed.
They had eyes, have not we? yea, we too have the eyes of the heart: but, as
yet we see through faith, not by sight. When will it be sight? When shall we, as
the Apostle saith, see Him "face to face"?(4) which God promiseth us as the
high reward of all our toils. Whatever thou toilest in, thou toilest for this
purpose, that thou mayest see Him. Some great thing it is we are to see, since all
our reward is seeing; and our Lord Jesus Christ is that very great sight. He
who appeared humble, will Himself appear great, and will rejoice us, as He is
even now seen of His Angels. ... Let us love and imitate Him: let us run after his
ointments, as is said in the Song of Solomon: "Because of the savour of thy
good ointments, we will run after thee."(5) For He came, and gave forth a savour
that filled the world. Whence was that fragrance? From heaven. Follow then
towards heaven, if thou do not answer(6) falsely when it is said, "Lift up your
hearts," lift up your thoughts, your love, your hope: that it may not rot upon the
earth. ... "For wherever thy treasure is, there will be thy heart also."(7)
PSALM XCII.(8)
1. ... We are not Christians, except on account of a future life: let no
one hope for present blessings, let no one promise himself the happiness of the
world, because he is a Christian: but let him use the happiness he hath, as he
may, in what manner he may, when he may, as far as he may. When it is present,
let him give thanks for the consolation of God: when it is wanting, let him
give thanks to the Divine justice. Let him always be grateful, never ungrateful:
let him be grateful to his Father, who soothes and caresses him: and grateful to
his Father when He chasteneth him with the scourge, and teacheth him: for He
ever loveth, whether He caress or threaten: and let him say what ye have heard
in the Psalm: "It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord; and to sing
praises unto Thy Name, Thou Most Highest" (ver. 1).
2. This Psalm is entitled, a Psalm to be sung on the Sabbath day. Lo, this
day is the Sabbath, which the Jews at this period observe by a kind of bodily
rest, languid and luxurious. They abstain from labours, and give themselves up
to trifles; and though God ordained the Sabbath, they spend it in actions which
God forbids. Our rest is from evil works, theirs from good; for it is better
to plough than to dance. They abstain from good, but not from trifling, works.
God proclaims to us a Sabbath. What sort of Sabbath? First consider, where it
is. It is in the heart, within us; for many are idle with their limbs, while they
are disturbed in conscience. ... That very joy in the tranquillity of our
hope, is our Sabbath. This is the subject of praise and of song in this Psalm, how
a Christian man is in the Sabbath of his own heart, that is, in the quiet,
tranquillity, and serenity of his conscience, undisturbed; hence he tells us here,
whence men are wont to be disturbed, and he teaches thee to keep Sabbath in
thine own heart.
3. ... Accuse thyself, and thou receivest indulgence. Besides, many do not
accuse Satan but their fate. My fate led me, saith one when you ask him, why
did you do it? why did you sin? he replies, by my evil fate. Lest he should say,
I did it; he points to God as the source of his sin: with his tongue he
blasphemes. He saith not this indeed openly as yet, but listen, and see that he saith
this. You ask of him, what is fate: and he replies, evil stars. You ask, who
made, who appointed the stars; he can only answer, God. It follows, then, that
whether he doth so directly or indirectly,(1) still he accuseth God, and when
God punisheth sins, he maketh God the author of his own sins. It cannot be that
God punishes what He hath wrought: He punisheth what thou doest, that He may set
free what He hath wrought. But sometimes, setting aside everything else, they
attack God directly: and when they sin, they say, God willed this; if God had
not willed it, I should not have sinned. Does He warn thee for this, that not
only He may not be listened to, to keep thee from sin, but even be accused
because thou dost sin? What then doth this Psalm teach us? "It is a good thing to
confess(2) unto the Lord." What is to confess unto the Lord? In both cases: both
in thy sins, because thou hast done them; and in thy good works, confess unto
the Lord, because He hath done them. Then shalt thou "sing unto the Name of God,
the Most Highest:" seeking the glory of God, not thine own; His Name, not
thine. For if thou seekest the Name of God, He also seeketh thy name; but if thou
hast neglected the Name of God, He also doth blot out thine. ...
4. "To tell of Thy mercy early in the morning, and of Thy truth in the
night season" (ver. 2). What is the meaning of this; that the mercy of God is to
be told us in the morning, and in the night the truth of God? The morning is,
when it is well with us; the night, the sadness of tribulation. What then did he
say in brief? When thou art prosperous, rejoice in God, for it is His mercy.
Now, perhaps thou wouldest say, If I rejoice in God, when I am prosperous,
because it is His mercy; what am I to do when I am in sorrow, in tribulation? It is
His mercy, when I am prosperous; is it then His cruelty, when I am in adversity?
If I praise His mercy when it is well with me, am I then to exclaim against
His cruelty when it is ill? No. But when it is well, praise His mercy: when ill,
praise His truth: because He scourgeth sins, He is not unjust. ... During the
night Daniel confessed the truth of God: he said in his prayer, "We have sinned,
and committed iniquity, and have done wickedly. O Lord, righteousness
belongeth unto Thee: but unto us confusion of face."(3) He told of the truth of God
during the night-season. What is it to tell of the truth of God in the
night-season? Not to accuse God, because thou sufferest aught of evil: but to attribute
it to thy sins, His correction: to tell of His loving-kindness early in the
morning, and of His truth in the night-season. When thou doest this, thou dost
always praise God, always confess to God, and sing unto His Name.
5. "Upon a psaltery of ten strings, with a song, and upon the harp" (ver.
3). Ye have not heard of the psaltery of ten strings for the first time: it
signifies the ten commandments of the Law. But we must sing upon that psaltery,
and not carry it only. For even the Jews have the Law: but they carry it: they
sing not. ... "And upon the harp." This means, in word and deed; "with a song,"
in word; "upon the harp," in work. If thou speakest words alone, thou hast, as
it were, the song only, and not the harp: if thou workest, and speakest not,
thou hast the harp only. On this account both speak well and do well, if thou
wouldest have the song together with the harp.
6. "For Thou, Lord, hast made me glad through Thy works; and I will
rejoice in giving praise for the operations of Thy hands" (ver. 4). Ye see what he
saith. Thou hast made me living well, Thou hast formed me: if by chance I do
aught of good, I will rejoice in the work of Thy hands: as the Apostle saith, "For
we are His workmanship, created unto good works."(1) For unless He formed thee
to good works, thou wouldest not know any works but evil. ... Because thou
canst not have truth from thy own self, it remains that thou drink it thence,
whence it floweth: as if thou hast gone back from the light, thou art in darkness:
as a stone glows not with its own heat, but either from the sun or fire, and if
thou withdraw it from the heat, it cools: there it appears, that the heat was
not its own; for it became heated either by the sun or by fire: thus thou also,
if thou withdraw from God, wilt become cold; if thou approach God, thou wilt
warm: as the Apostle saith "fervent in spirit."(2) Also what saith he of the
light? If thou approach Him, thou wilt be in light; therefore saith the Psalm,
"Look upon Him, and be lightened; and your faces shall not be ashamed."(3) Because
therefore thou canst do no good, unless lightened by the light of God, and
warmed by the spirit of God; when thou shalt see thyself working well, confess unto
God, and say what the Apostle saith; say unto thyself, that thou be not puffed
up, "For what hast thou that thou didst not receive?"(4) ...
7. That wretched man who doeth good, and suffereth evils, seeth him,
becometh disturbed, and saith, O God, the wicked, I imagine, please Thee, and Thou
hatest the good, and lovest those who work iniquity. ... The Sabbath being now
lost in the inner man, and the tranquillity of his heart being shut out, and
good thoughts repelled, he now beginneth to imitate him whom he seeth flourishing
amid his evil deeds; and turneth himself also to evil works. But God is
long-suffering, because He is eternal,(5) and he knoweth the day of His own judgment,
where He weigheth all things.
8. Teaching us this, what saith he?"O Lord, how glorious are Thy works:
Thy thoughts are made very deep" (ver. 5). Verily, my brethren, there is no sea
sodeep as these thoughts of God, who maketh the wicked flourish, and the good
suffer: nothing so profound, nothing so deep: therein every unbelieving soul is
wrecked, in that depth, in that profundity. Dost thou wish to cross this depth?
Remove not froth the wood of Christ's Cross: thou shall not sink: hold thyself
fast to Christ. What do I mean by this, hold fast to Christ? It was for this
reason that He chose to suffer on earth Himself. Ye have heard, while the prophet
was being read, how He "did not turn away His back from the smiters, and His
face from the spittings of men," how "He turned not His cheek from their
hands;"(6) wherefore chose He to stiffer all these things, but that He might console
the suffering? He could have raised His flesh at the last day: but then thou
wouldest not have had thy ground of hope, since thou hadst not seen Him. He
deferred not His resurrection, that thou mightest not still be in doubt. Suffer then
tribulation in the world with the same end as that which thou hast observed in
Christ: and let not those who do evil, and flourish in this life, move thee.
"Thy thoughts are very deep." Where is the thought of God? Rejoice not as the
fish who is exulting in his bait: the fisherman hath not drawn his hook: the fish
hath as yet the hook in his jaws. And what seemeth to thee long, is short; all
these things pass over quickly. What is the long life of man to the eternity of
God? Dost thou wish to be of long-suffering? Consider the eternity of God. For
thou regardest thy few days, and in thy few days thou dost wish all things to
be fulfilled. What things? The condemnation of all the wicked: and the crowning
of all the good: dost thou wish these things to be fulfilled in thy days? God
fulfilleth them in His own time. Why dost thou suffer weariness? He is eternal:
He waiteth: He is of long-suffering: but thou sayest, I am not of
long-suffering, because I am mortal. But thou hast it in thy power to become so: join thy
heart to the eternity of God, and with Him thou shalt be eternal. ...
9. For this reason, after saying," Thy thoughts are very deep," he at once
subjoins: "An unwise man doth not well consider this, and a fool doth not
understand it" (ver. 6). What are the things which an unwise man cloth not well
consider, and which a fool doth not understand? "When the ungodly are green as the
grass." What is, "as the grass"? They flourish when it is winter, but they
will wither in the summer. Thou observest the flower of the grass? What more
quickly passeth by? What is brighter? What is greener? Let not its verdure delight
thee, but fear its withering. Thou hast heard of the ungodly being green as the
grass: hear also of the righteous: "For lo." In the mean while, consider the
ungodly; they flourish as the grass; but who are they who understand it not? The
foolish and unwise. "When the ungodly are green as the grass, and all men look
upon the workers of iniquity" (ver. 7). All who in their heart think not aright
of God, look upon the ungodly when they are as green as grass, that is, when
they flourish for a time. Why do they look upon them ? "That they may be
destroyed for ever." For they regard their momentary bloom, they imitate them, and
wishing to flourish with them for a time, perish for evermore: this is, "That they
may be destroyed for ever."
10. "But Thou, Lord, art the Most Highest for evermore" (ver. 8). Waiting
above in Thy eternity until the season of the wicked be past, and that of the
just come. "For lo." Listen, brethren. Already he who speaketh (for he speaketh
in our person, in the person of Christ's body, for Christ speaketh in His own
body, that is, in His Church), hath joined himself unto the eternity of God: as
I a little before was saying unto you, God is long-suffering and patient, and
alloweth all those evil deeds which He seeth to be done by wicked men.
Wherefore? because He is eternal, and seeth what He keepeth for them. Dost thou also
wish to be long-suffering and patient? Join thyself to the eternity of God:
together with Him wait for those things which are beneath thee: for when thy heart
shall have cleaved unto the Most Highest, all mortal things will be beneath thee:
say then what follows, "For lo, thine enemies shall perish." Those who now
flourish, shall afterwards perish. Who are the enemies of God? Brethren, perhaps
ye think those only enemies of God who blaspheme? They indeed are so, and those
wicked men who neither in tongue nor in thought cease to injure God. And what
do they do to the eternal, most high God? If thou strike with thy fist upon a
pillar, thou art hurt: and thinkest thou that where thou strikest God with thy
blasphemy, thou art not thyself broken? for thou doest nothing to God. But the
enemies of God are openly blasphemers, and daily they are found hidden. Beware of
such enmities of God. For the Scripture revealeth some such secret enemies of
God: that because thou knowest them not in thy heart, thou mayest know in God's
Scriptures, and beware of being found with them. James saith openly in his
Epistle, "Know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God?"(1)
Thou hast heard. Dost thou wish not to be an enemy of God? Be not a friend of this
world: for if thou art a friend of this world, thou wilt be an enemy of God.
For as a wife cannot be an adulteress, unless she be an enemy to her own
husband: so a soul which is an adulteress through its love of worldly things, cannot
but be an enemy to God. It feareth, but loveth not: it feareth punishment but is
not delighted with righteousness. All lovers of the world, therefore, are
enemies of God, all the curious after trifles, all consulters of diviners
astrologers, and evil spirits. Let them enter, or not enter, Churches: they are enemies
of God. They may flourish for a season like grass, but they will perish, when
He beginneth to visit them, and pronounce His sentence upon all flesh. Join
thyself to the Scripture of God, and say with this Psalm, "For lo, thine enemies
shall perish" (ver. 9). Be not found there, where they shall perish. "And all the
workers of iniquity shall be destroyed."
11. ... "But mine horn shall be exalted like the horn of an unicorn" (ver.
10). Why did He say, "like the horn of an unicorn"? Sometimes an unicorn
signifies pride, sometimes it means the lifting up of unity; because unity is lifted
up, all heresies shall perish with the enemies of God. And" mine horn shall be
exalted like an unicorn." When will it be so? "And mine old age shall be in
the fatness of mercy."(2) Why did he say, "my old age"? He means, my last days;
as our old age is the last season in our lives, so the whole of what the body of
Christ at present suffereth in labours, in cares, in watchings, in hunger, in
thirst, in stumbling-blocks, in wickednesses, in tribulations, is its youth:
its old age, that is, its last days, will be in joy. And beware, beloved, that ye
think not death meant also, in that he hath spoken of old age: for man groweth
old in the flesh for this reason, that he may die. The old age of the Church
will be white with good works, but it shall not decay through death. What the
head of the old man is, that our works will be. Ye see how the head groweth old,
and whiteneth, as fast as old age approacheth. Thou sometimes dost seek in the
head of one who groweth old duly in his own course a black hair, yet thou
findest it not: thus when our life shall have been such, that the blackness of sins
may be sought, and none found, that old age is youthful, is green, and ever
will be green. Ye have heard of the grass of sinners, hear ye of the old age of
the righteous: "My old age shall be in the fathers of mercy."
12. "And Mine eye hath beheld on mine enemies" (vcr. 11). Whom doth he
call his enemies? All the workers of iniquity. Do not observe whether thy friend
be wicked: let an occasion come, and then thou provest him. Thou beginnest to go
contrary to his iniquity, and then thou shalt see that when he was flattering
thee, he was thy enemy; but thou hadst not yet knocked, not to raise in his
heart what was not there, but that what was there might break out. "Mine eye also
hath looked upon mine enemies: and mine ear shall hear his desire of the wicked
that rise up against me." When? In my old age. What is, in old age? In the
last times. And what shall our ear hear? Standing on the right hand, we shall hear
what shall be said to them that are on the left.(3)
13. The grass withereth, the flower of sinners dieth away: what of the
righteous? "The righteous shall flourish like a palm tree" (vcr. 12). The ungodly
are green as grass; "The righteous shall flourish like a palm tree." By the
palm tree he signifieth height. Possibly he had also this meaning in the palm,
that in its extremities it is beautiful: so that thou mayest trace its beginning
from the earth, its end in its topmost branches, wherein its whole beauty
dwelleth. The rough root appeareth in the earth, the beautiful foliage toward the
sky. Thy beauty too, then, shall be in the end. Thy root is fixed fast: but our
root is upward. For our root is Christ, who hath ascended into heaven. Humbled,
he shall be exalted; "he shall spread abroad like a cedar in Libanus." See what
trees he spoke of: the righteous shall flourish like a palm-tree: and shall
spread abroad like a cedar in Libanus. When the sun hath gone forth, doth the
palm-tree wither? Doth the cedar die? But when the sun hath been glowing for some
hours, the grass drieth up. The judgment, therefore, shall come, that sinners
may wither, and the faithful flourish.
14. "Such as are planted in the house of the Lord, shall flourish in the
courts of the house of our God" (vcr. 12). "They shall be yet more increased in
fruitful old age, and shall be quiet, that they may show it forth" (vcr. 13).
Such is the Sabbath, which but a little while ago I commended unto you, whence
the Psalm hath its title. "They shall be quiet, that they may show it forth."
Wherefore are they quiet that show it forth? The grass of sinners moveth them
not: the cedar and palm-tree not even in tempests are bent. They are therefore
quiet, that they may show it forth: and with reason, since at present they must
show it forth even unto men who mock at it. O wretched men, who are lovers of the
world! Those who are planted in the house of the Lord, show it to you: those
who praise the Lord with song and lute, in word and deed, show it forth to you,
and tell you. Be not seduced by the prosperity of the wicked, admire not the
flower of grass: admire not those who are happy only for a season, but miserable
unto eternity. ... If ye wish to flourish like a palm-tree, and to spread
abroad like a cedar in Libanus, and not to wither like grass when the sun is hot; as
those who appear to flourish when the sun is absent. If then ye wish not to be
as grass, but as the palm-tree and the cedar, what will ye show forth? "How
true the Lord my strength is: and that there is no unrighteousness in Him." How
is it there is no unrighteousness? A man committeth so great crimes; he is well,
he hath sons, a plentiful house, he is full of pride, is exalted by his
honours, is revenged on his enemies, and doeth every evil deed; another man,
innocent, attending to his own affairs, not robbing another's goods, doing nothing
against any one, suffereth in chains, in prison, tosseth and sigheth in poverty.
How is it that there is no unrighteousness in Him? Be quiet, and thou shall know:
for thou art disturbed, and in thy chamber thou dost darken thy light. The
eternal God doth wish to shine upon thee: do not then make thee cloudy weather
from thy own disturbed mind. Be quiet within thyself, and see what I say unto
thee. Because God is eternal, because for the present He spareth the bad, bringing
them to repentance: He scourgeth the good, instructing them in the way unto the
kingdom of heaven: "There is no unrighteousness in Him:" fear not. ...What, if
He leaveth this man unpunished now, because he is doomed to hear, "Depart into
everlasting fire." But when? when thou shalt be placed at the right hand, then
shall it be said to those placed on the left, "Depart into the everlasting
fire, which is prepared for the devil and his angels." Let not therefore those
things move thee: Be quiet, keep Sabbath, and show "how true the Lord my strength
is: and that there is no unrighteousness in Him."