ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS CXXXII TO CXXXVIII.
PSALM CXXXII.(5)
1. It was right indeed, most beloved, that we should rather hear our
Brother,(6) my colleague, when present before all of us. And just now he refused
not, but put us off; for he extorted from me that he might now listen to me, on
the condition that I also may listen to him, for in charity itself we are all
listening unto Him, who is our One Master in heaven. Attend therefore to the
Psalm, entitled A Song of Degrees; considerably longer than the rest under the same
title. Let us not therefore linger, save where necessity shall compel us: that
we may, if the Lord permit, explain the whole. For ye also ought not to hear
everything as men untaught; ye ought in some degree to aid us from your past
listenings, so that it may not be needful that everything should be declared to you
as though new.(7)
2. "Lord, remember David, and all his meekness" (ver. 1). David according
to the truth of history was one man, king of Israel, son of Jesse. He was
indeed meek, as the Divine Scriptures themselves mark and command him, and so meek
that he did not even render evil for evil to his persecutor Saul. He preserved
towards him so great humility, that he acknowledged him a king, and himself a
dog: and answered the king not proudly nor rudely, though he was more powerful in
God; but he rather endeavoured to appease him by humility, than to provoke him
by pride. Saul was even given into his power, and this by the Lord God, that
he might do to him what he listed: but since he was not commanded to slay him,
but had it only placed in his power (now a man is permitted to use his power),
he rather turned towards mercy what God gave him. ... The humility of David is
therefore commended, the meekness of David is commended; and it is said to God,
"Lord, remember David, and all his meekness." For what purpose? "How he sware
unto the Lord, and vowed a vow unto the Almighty God of Jacob" (ver. 2).
Therefore remember for this, that he may fulfil what he hath promised. David himself
vowed as though he had it in his power, and he prayeth God to fulfil his vow:
there is devotion in the vow, but there is humility in the prayer. Let no one
presume to think he fulfilled by his own strength what he hath vowed. He who
exhorteth thee to vow, Himself aideth thee to fulfil. Let us therefore see what he
vowed, and hence we comprehend how David should be understood in a figure.
"David" is interpreted, "Strong of hand," for he was a great warrior. Trusting
indeed in the Lord his God, he despatched all wars, he laid low all his enemies, God
helping him, according to the dispensation of that kingdom; prefiguring
nevertheless some One strong of hand to destroy His enemies, the devil and his
angels. These enemies the Church warreth against, and conquereth. ... What then doth
he mean, "How he sware," etc.? Let us see what vow is this. We can offer God
nothing more pleasing than to swear.(8) Now to swear is to promise firmly.(9)
Consider this vow, that is, with what ardour he vowed what he vowed, with what
love, with what longing; nevertheless, he prayeth the Lord to fulfil it in these
words, "O Lord, remember David, and all his meekness." In this temper he vowed
his vow, and there should be a house of God: "I will not come within the
tabernacle of mine house, nor climb up into my bed" (ver. 3). "I will not suffer mine
eyes to sleep, nor mine eyelids to slumber" (ver. 4). This seemeth not enough;
he adds, "Neither the temples of my head to take any rest, until I find out a
place for the Lord; an habitation for the God of Jacob" (ver. 5). Where did he
seek a place for the Lord? If he was meek, he sought it in himself. For how is
one a place for the Lord? Hear the Prophet: "Upon whom shall My Spirit rest?
Even upon him that is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at My
words."(1) Dost thou wish to be a place for the Lord? Be thou poor in spirit, and
contrite, and trembling at the word of God, and thou wilt thyself be made what thou
seekest. For if what thou seekest be not realized in thyself, what doth it
profit thee in another. ...
3. How many thousands believed, my brethren, when they laid down the price
of their possessions at the Apostles' feet! But what saith Scripture of them?
Surely they are become a temple of God; not only each respectively a temple of
God, but also all a temple of God together. They have therefore become a place
for the Lord. And that ye may know that one place is made for the Lord in all,
Scripture saith, They were of one heart and one soul toward God.(2) But many,
so as not to make a place for the Lord, seek their own things, love their own
things, delight in their own power, are greedy for their private interests.
Whereas he who wisheth to make a place for the Lord, should rejoice not in his
private, but the common good. ...
4. Let us therefore, brethren, abstain from the possession of private
property; or from the love of it, if we may not from its possession; and we make a
place for the Lord. It is too much for me, saith some one. But consider who
thou art, who art about to make a place for the Lord. If any senator wished to be
entertained at your house, I say not senator, the deputy of some great man of
this world, and should say, something offends me in thy house; though thou
shouldest love it, thou wouldest remove it, nevertheless, lest thou shouldest offend
him, whose friendship thou wast courting. And what doth man's friendship
profit thee? ... Desire the friendship of Christ without fear: He wishes to be
entertained at thy house; make room for Him. What is, make room for Him? Love not
thyself, love Him. If thou love thyself, thou shuttest the door against Him; if
thou love Him, thou openest unto Him: and if thou open and He enter, thou shalt
not be lost by loving thyself, but shalt find thyself with Him who loveth thee.
...
5. "Lo, we heard of the same at Ephrata" (ver. 6). What? A place for the
Lord. "We heard of it at Ephrata: and found it in the plains of the forests."(3)
Did he hear it where he found it? or did he hear it in one place, find it in
another? Let us therefore enquire what Ephrata is, where he heard it; let us
also enquire what mean the plains of the forests, where he found it. Ephrata, a
Hebrew word, is rendered in Latin by Speculum,(4) as the translators of Hebrew
words in the Scriptures have handed down to us, that we might understand them.
They have translated from Hebrew into Greek, and from Greek we have versions into
Latin. For there have been who watched in the Scriptures. If therefore Ephrata
meaneth a mirror, that house which was found in the woodland plains, was heard
of in a mirror. A mirror hath an image: all prophecy is an image of things
future. The future house of God, therefore, was declared in the image of prophecy.
"We have found it in the plains of the forests." What are the "plains of the
forests"?(5) Saltus is not here used in its common sense, as a plot of ground of
so many hundred acres;(6) saltus properly signifies a spot as yet untilled and
woody. For some copies read, in the plains of the wood. What then were the
woodland plains, save nations yet untilled? what were they, save regions yet
covered with the thorns of idolatry? Thus, though there were thorns of idolatry
there, still we find a place for the Lord there, a tabernacle for the God of Jacob.
What was declared in the image to the Jews, was manifested in the faith of the
Gentiles.
6. "We will go into His tabernacles" (ver. 7). Whose? Those of the Lord
God of Jacob. They who enter to dwell therein, are the very same who enter that
they may be dwelt in. Thou enterest into thy house, that thou mayest dwell
therein; into the house of God, that thou mayest be dwelt in. For the Lord is
better, and when He hath begun to dwell in thee, He will make thee happy. For if thou
be not dwelt in by Him, thou wilt be miserable. That son who said, "Father,
give me the portion of the goods," etc.,(7) wished to be his own master. It was
well kept in his father's hands, that it might not be wasted with harlots. He
received it, it was given into his own power; going to a far country, he
squandered it all with harlots. At length he suffered hunger, he remembered his father;
he returned, that he might be satisfied with bread. Enter therefore, that thou
mayest be dwelt in; and mayest be not thine own, so to speak, but His: "We
will go into His tabernacles. We will worship on the spot where His feet stood."
Whose feet? The Lord's, or those of the house of the Lord itself? For that is
the Lord's house, wherein he saith He ought to be worshipped. Beside His house,
the Lord heareth not unto eternal life; for he belongeth to God's house, who
hath in charity been built in with living stones. But he who hath not charity,
falleth; and while he falls, the house stands. ...
7. But if ye incline to understand it of the house itself, where the feet
of that house have stood; let thy feet stand in Christ. They will then stand,
if thou shall persevere in Christ. For what is said of the devil? "He was a
murderer from the beginning, and stood not in the truth."(1) The feet of the devil
therefore stood not. Also what saith he of the proud? "O let not the foot of
pride come against me; and let not the hand of the ungodly cast me down. There
are they fallen, all that work wickedness: they are cast down, and were not able
to stand."(2) That then is the house of God, whose feet stand. Whence John
rejoicing, saith: what? "He that hath the bride is the bridegroom: but the friend
of the bridegroom standeth and heareth him." If he stand not, he heareth him
not. Justly he standeth, because "he rejoiceth on account of the bridegroom's
voice." Now therefore ye see why they fell, who rejoice because of their own
voice.(3) That friend of the Bridegroom said, "The same is He which baptizeth."(4)
Some say, We baptize: rejoicing in their own voice, they could not stand; and
belong not to that house of which it is said, "where His feet stood."
8. "Arise, O Lord, into Thy resting place" (ver. 8). He saith unto the
Lord sleeping, "Arise." Ye know already who slept, and who rose again. ... "Thou,
and the ark of Thy sanctification:" that is, Arise, that the ark of Thy
sanctification, which Thou hast sanctified, may arise also. He is our Head; His ark is
His Church: He arose first, the Church will arise also. The body would not
dare to promise itself resurrection, save the Head arose first. The Body of
Christ, that was born of Mary, hath been understood by some to be the ark of
sanctification; so that the words mean, Arise with Thy Body, that they who believe not
may handle.
9. "Let Thy priests be clothed with righteousness, and let Thy saints sing
with joyfulness" (ver. 9). When Thou risest from the dead, and goest unto Thy
Father, let that royal Priesthood be clothed with faith, since "the righteous
liveth by faith;"(5) and, receiving the pledge of the Holy Spirit, let the
members rejoice in the hope of resurrection, which went before in the Head: for to
them the Apostle saith, "Rejoicing in hope."(6)
10. "For Thy servant David's sake, turn not away the face of Thine
Anointed" (ver. 10). These words are addressed unto God the Father. "For Thy servant
David's sake, turn not away the face of Thine Anointed." The Lord was crucified
in Judaea; He was crucified by the Jews; harassed by them, He slept. He arose
to judge those among whose savage hands He slept: and He saith elsewhere, "Raise
Thou Me up again, and I shall reward them."(7) He both hath rewarded them, and
will reward them. The Jews well know themselves how great were their
sufferings after the Lord's death. They were all expelled from the very city, where they
slew Him. What then? have all perished even from the root of David and from
the tribe of Judah? No: for some of that stock believed, and in fact many
thousands of men of that stock believed, and this after the Lord's resurrection. They
raged and crucified Him: and afterwards began to see miracles wrought in the
Name of Him Crucified; and they trembled still more that His Name should have so
much power, since when in their hands He seemed unable to work any; and pricked
at heart, at length believing that there was some hidden divinity in Him whom
they had believed like other men, and asking counsel of the Apostles, they were
answered, "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the Name of our LOrd
Jesus Christ."(8) Since then Christ arose to judge those by whom He had been
crucified, and turned away His Presence from the Jews, turning His Presence towards
the Gentiles; God is, as it seemeth, besought in behalf of the remnant of
Israel; and it is said unto Him, "For Thy servant David's sake, turn not away the
presence of Thine Anointed." If the chaff be condemned, let the wheat be
gathered together. May the remnant be saved, as Isaiah saith, "And the remnant hath"
clearly "been saved:"(9) for out of them were the twelve Apostles, out of them
more than five hundred brethren, to whom the Lord showed Himself after His
Resurrection:(10) out of their number were so many thousands baptized,(11) who laid
the price of their possessions at the Apostles' feet. Thus then was fulfilled
the prayer here made to God: "For Thy servant David's sake, turn not away the
presence of Thine Anointed."
11. "The Lord hath made a faithful oath unto David, and He shall not
repent "(ver. 11). What meaneth, "hath made an oath"? Hath confirmed a promise
through Himself. What meaneth, "He shall not repent"? He will not change. For God
suffereth not the pain of repentance, nor is He deceived in any matter, so that
He would wish to correct that wherein He hath erred. But as when a man repents
of anything, he wisheth to change what he hath done; thus where thou hearest
that God repenteth, look for an actual change. God doth it differently from thee,
although He calleth it by the name of repentance; for thou dost it, because
thou hadst erred; while He doth it, because He avengeth, or freeth. He changed
Saul's kingdom, when He repented, as it is said: and in the very passage where the
Scripture saith, "It repented Him;" it is said a little after, "for He is not
a man that He should repent."(1) When therefore He changeth His works through
His immutable counsel, He is said to repent on account of this very change, not
of His counsel, but of His work. But He promised this so as not to change it.
Just as this passage also saith: "The Lord sware, and will not repent, Thou art
a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedec;"(2) so also since this was
promised so that it should not be changed, because it must needs happen and be
permanent; he saith, "The Lord hath made a faithful oath unto David, and He shall
not repent; Of the fruit of thy body shall I set upon thy seat." He might have
said, "of the fruit of thy loins," wherefore did He choose to say, "Of the
fruit of thy body"? Had He said that also, it would have been true; but He chose
to say with a further meaning, Ex fructu ventris, because Christ was born of a
woman without the man.
12. What then? "The Lord hath made a faithful oath unto David, and He
shall not shrink from it; Of the fruit of thy body shall I set upon thy seat. If
thy children will keep My covenant and My testimonies that I shall learn them,
their children also shall sit upon thy seat for evermore" (ver. 12). If thy
children keep My covenant, their children also shall sit for evermore. The parents
establish a desert on behalf of their children. What if his children should keep
the covenant, and their children should not keep it? Why is the happiness of
the children promised in relation to their parents' deservings? For what saith
He, "If thy children will keep My covenant, their children also shall sit for
evermore"--He saith not, if thy children keep My covenant, they shall sit upon
thy seat; and if their children keep My covenant, they also shall sit upon thy
seat: but he saith, "If thy children keep My covenant, their children also shall
sit upon thy seat for evermore"--except because He here wished their fruit to
be understood by their children? "If thy children," He saith, "will keep My
covenant, and if thy children shall keep My testimonies that I shall learn them;
their children also shall sit upon thy seat:" that is, this will be their fruit,
that they sit upon thy seat. For in this life, brethren, do all of us who
labour in Christ, all of us who tremble at His words, who in any way endeavour to
execute His will, and groan while we pray His help that we may fulfil what He
commandeth; do we already sit in those seats of bliss which are promised us? No:
but holding His commandments, we hope this will come to pass. This hope is
spoken of under the figure of sons; because sons are the hope of man living in this
life, sons are his fruit. For this reason also men, when excusing their
avarice, allege that they are reserving for their children what they hoard up; and,
unwilling to give to the destitute, excuse themselves under the name of piety,
because their children are their hope. For all men who live according to this
world, declare it to be their hope, to be fathers of children they may leave
behind them. Thus then He describes hope generally under the name of children, and
saith, "If thy children will keep My covenant and My testimonies that I shall
learn them, their children also shall sit upon thy seat for evermore:" that is,
they shall have such fruits, that their hope shall not deceive them, that they
may come there where they hope to come. At present therefore they are as
fathers, men of hope for the future; but when they have attained what they hope, they
are children; because they have brought forth and produced in their works that
which they gain. And this is preserved unto them for the future,(3) because
futurity(4) itself commonly signifieth children.
13. Or if thou understand actual men to be meant by children, the words,
"If thy children will keep My covenant and My testimonies that I shall teach
them," may mean, "If thy children will keep My covenant and testimonies that I
shall teach them, and their children also;" that is, if they too keep My covenant;
so that here thou must make a slight pause, and then infer that "they shall
sit upon thy seat for evermore;" that is, both thy children and their children,
but all if they keep My covenant. What then, if they keep it not? Hath the
promise of God failed? No: but it is said and promised for this reason, that God
foresaw: what, save that they would believe? But that no man should as it were
threaten God's promises, and prefer to place in his own power the fulfilment of
what God promised: for this reason he saith, "He made an oath:" whereby he
showeth that it will without doubt take place. How then hath He said here, "If they
will keep My covenant"? Glory not in the promises, and leave out thy failing to
keep the covenant. Then wilt thou be the son of David, if thou shalt keep the
covenant; but if thou dost not keep it, thou wilt not be David's son. God
promised to the sons of David. Say not, I am David's son if thou degenerate. If the
Jews, who were born of this very stock, say not this (nay, they say it, but they
are under a delusion. For the Lord saith openly, "If ye were Abraham's
children, ye would do the works of Abraham."(1) He thereby denied them to be children,
because they did not the works), how do we call ourselves David's children,
who are not of his race according to the flesh? It follows then that we are not
children, save by imitating his faith, save by worshipping God, as he
worshipped. If therefore what thou hopest not through descent, thou wilt not endeavour to
obtain by works; how shall the sitting upon David's seat be fulfilled in thee?
And if it shall not be fulfilled in thee, thinkest thou that it shall not be
fulfilled at all? And how hath He found it in the woodland tracts? and how did
His feet stand? Whatsoever then thou mayest be, that house will stand.
14. "For the Lord hath chosen Sion to be an habitation for Himself" (ver.
13). Sion is the Church Herself; She is also that Jerusalem unto whose peace we
are running, who is in pilgrimage not in the Angels, but in us, who in her
better part waiteth for the part that will return; whence letters have come unto
us, which are every day read. This city is that very Sion, whom the Lord hath
chosen.
15. "This shall be My rest for ever"(ver. 14). These are the words of God.
"My rest:" I rest there. How greatly doth God love us, brethren, since,
because we rest, He saith that He also resteth! For He is not sometimes Himself
disturbed, nor doth He rest as we do; but He saith that He resteth there, because we
shall have rest in Him. "Here will I dwell: for I have a delight therein."
16. "I will bless her widow with blessings, and will satisfy her poor with
bread" (ver. 15). Every soul that is aware that it is bereft of all help, save
of God alone, is widowed. For how doth the Apostle describe a widow? "She that
is a widow indeed and desolate, trusteth in God."(2) He was speaking of those
whom we all call Widows in the Church. He saith, "She that liveth in pleasure,
is dead while she liveth;" and he numbereth her not among the widows. But in
describing true widows, what saith he? "She that is a widow indeed and desolate,
trusteth in God, and continueth in supplications and prayers night and day."
Here he addeth, "but she that liveth in pleasure, is dead while she liveth." What
then makes a widow? That she hath no aid from any other source, save from God
alone. They that have husbands, take pride in the protection of their husbands:
widows seem desolate, and their aid is a stronger one. The whole Church
therefore is one widow, whether in men or in women, in married men or married women,
in young men or in old, or in virgins: the whole Church is one widow, desolate
in this world, if she feel this, if she is aware of her widowhood: for then is
help at hand for her. Do ye not recognise this widow in the Gospel, my
brethren, when the Lord declared "that men ought always to pray and not to faint"?
"There was in a city a judge," He said, "which feared not God, neither regarded
man. And there was a widow in that city; and she came unto him day by day, saying,
Avenge me of mine adversary." The widow, by daily importunity, prevailed with
him: for the judge said within himself, "Though I fear not God; neither regard
man, yet because this woman troubleth me, I will avenge her."(3) If the wicked
judge heard the widow, that he might not be molested; heareth not God His
Church, whom He exhorteth to pray?
17. Also, "I will satisfy her poor with bread;" what meaneth this,
brethren? Let us be poor, and we shall then be satisfied. Many who trust in the world,
and are proud, are Christians; they worship Christ, but are not satisfied; for
they have been satisfied, and abound in their pride. Of such it is said, "Our
soul is filled with the scornful reproof of the wealthy, and with the
despitefulness of the proud:"(4) these have abundance, and therefore eat, but are not
satisfied. And what is said of them in the Psalm? "All such as be fat upon the
earth have eaten and worshipped."(5) They worship Christ, they venerate Christ,
they pray unto Christ; but they are not satisfied with His wisdom and
righteousness. Wherefore? Because they are not poor. For the poor, that is the humble in
heart, the more they hunger, the more they eat; and the more empty they are of
the world, the more hungry they are. He who is full refuseth whatsoever thou
wilt give him, because he is full. Give me one who hungereth; give me one of whom
it is said, "Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for
they shall be filled:"(6) and these will be the poor of whom he hath just said,
"And will satisfy her poor with bread." For in the very Psalm where it is
said, "All such as be fat upon the earth have eaten and worshipped;" this is said
of the poor also, and exactly in the same manner as in this Psalm, "The poor
shall eat, and be satisfied: they that seek after the Lord shall praise Him."(1)
Where it is said, "All such as be fat upon earth have eaten and worshipped: "it
is said, "the poor shall eat, and be satisfied." Why, when the rich are said to
have worshipped, are they not said to be satisfied; yet when the poor are
mentioned, they are said to be satisfied? And whence are they satisfied? What is
the nature, brethren, of this satisfying? God Himself is their bread. The bread
came down upon the earth, that He might become milk unto us; and said to His
own," I am the Living Bread which came down from heaven."(2) Hence these words in
the Psalm, "The poor shall eat, and be satisfied." From what source shall they
be satisfied? Hear what followeth: "And they that seek after the Lord shall
praise Him."
18. Be ye therefore poor, be ye among the members of that widow, let your
help be solely in God alone. Money is nought; not thence will ye have aid. Many
have been cast headlong down for money's sake, many have perished on account
of money; many for the sake of their riches have been marked out by plunderers;
they would have been safe, had they not had what made men hunt for them. Many
have presumed in their more powerful friends: they in whom they presumed have
fallen, and have involved in their ruin those who trusted in them. Look back upon
the instances to be seen in the human race. Is it anything singular that I am
telling you? We speak these things not only from these Scriptures; read them in
the whole world. Take heed that ye presume not in money, in a friend, in the
honour and the boasting of the world. Take away all these things: but if thou
hast them, thank God if thou despisest them. But if thou art puffed up by them;
think not when thou wilt be the prey of men; already art thou the Devil's prey.
But if thou ham not trusted in these things, thou wilt be among the members of
that widow, who is the Church, of whom it is said, "I will bless her widow with
blessings;" thou wilt also be poor, and one of those of whom it is said, "And
will-satisfy her poor with bread."
19. Sometimes, however, and we must not pass over this without mention,
thou findest a poor man proud, and a rich man humble: we daily endure such
persons. Thou hearest a poor man groaning beneath a rich man, and when the more
powerful rich man presseth upon him, then thou seest him humble: sometimes not even
then, but even then proud; whence thou seest what he would have been, had he
any property. God's poor one is therefore poor in spirit, not in his purse.
Sometimes a man goeth forth having a full house, rich lands, many estates, much gold
and silver; he knoweth that he must not trust in these, he humbleth himself
before God, he doth good with them; thus his heart is raised unto God, so that he
is aware that not only dO riches themselves profit him nothing, but that they
even impede his feet, save He rule them, and aid them: and he is counted among
the poor who are satisfied with bread. Thou findest another a proud beggar, or
not proud only because he hath nothing, nevertheless seeking whereby he may be
puffed up. God doth not heed the means a man hath, but the wish he hath, and
judgeth him according to his wish for temporal blessings, not according to the
means which it is not his lot to have. Whence the Apostle saith of the rich,
"Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not highminded, nor trust in
uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us richly all things to
enjoy." What therefore should they do with their riches? He goeth on to say:
"That they be rich in good works, ready to distribute, willing to communicate."
And see that they are poor in this world: "Laying up in store for themselves," he
addeth, "a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on
eternal life."(3) When they have laid hold of eternal life, then will they be
rich; but since they have it not as yet, they should know that they are poor.
Thus it is that God counteth among His poor all the humble in heart, who are
established in that twofold charity,(4) whatever they may have in this
world--among His poor, whom He satisfieth with bread.
20. "I will clothe her priests with salvation, and her saints shall
rejoice and sing" (ver. 16). We are now at the end of the Psalm; attend for a short
space, Beloved. "I will clothe her priests with salvation, and her saints shall
rejoice and sing." Who is our salvation, save our Christ? What meaneth,
therefore, "I will clothe her priests with salvation"? "As many of you as have been
baptized into Christ, have put on Christ."(5) "And her saints shall rejoice and
sing." Whence shall they rejoice and sing? Because they have been clothed with
salvation: not in themselves. For they have become light, but in the Lord; for
they were darkness before.(6) Therefore he hath added, "There will I raise up
the horn of David" (ver. 17): this will be David's height, that trust be put in
Christ. For horn signifieth height: and what sort of height? Not carnal.
Therefore, while all the bones are wrapped up in flesh, the horn goeth beyond the
flesh. Spiritual altitude is a horn. But what is spiritual loftiness, save to trust
in Christ? not to say, It is my work, I baptize;(1) but, "He it is who
baptizeth."(2) There is the horn of David: and that ye may know that there is the horn
of David, heed what followeth: "I have ordained a lantern for mine Anointed."
What is a lantern? Ye already know the Lord's words concerning John: "He was a
burning and a shining light."(3) And what saith John? "He it is who baptizeth."
Herein therefore shall the saints rejoice, herein the priests shall rejoice:
because all that is good in themselves, is not of themselves, but of Him who
hath the power of baptizing. Fearlessly therefore doth every one who hath received
baptism come unto His temple; because it is not man's, but His who made the
horn of David to flourish.
21. "Upon Him shall My sanctification flourish" (ver. 18). Upon whom? Upon
Mine Anointed. For when He saith, "Mine anointed," it is the voice of the
Father, who saith, "I will bless her widow with blessings, and will satisfy her
poor with bread. I will clothe her priests with salvation, and her saints shall
rejoice and sing." He who saith, "There will I raise up the horn of David," is
God. He Himself saith," I have ordained a lantern for Mine Anointed," because
Christ is both ours and the Father's: He is our Christ, when He saveth us and
ruleth us, as He is also our Lord: He is the Son of the Father, but both our Christ
and the Father's. For if He were not the Father's Christ, it would not be said
above, "For Thy servant David's sake, turn not Thou away the presence of Thine
Anointed." "Upon Him shall My sanctification flourish." It flourisheth upon
Christ. Let none of men assume this to himself, that he himself sanctifieth:
otherwise it will not be true, "Upon Him shall My sanctification flourish." The
glory of sanctification shall flourish. The sanctification of Christ therefore in
Christ Himself, is the power of the sanctification of God in Christ. In that he
saith, "shall flourish," he refers to His glory: for when trees flourish, then
are they beautiful. Sanctification therefore is in Baptism: thence it
flourisheth, and is brightened. Why hath the world yielded to this beauty? Because it
flourisheth in Christ; for, put it in man's power, and how doth it then
flourish? since "all flesh in grass, and all the goodliness thereof as the flower of
the grass."
PSALM CXXXIII.(4)
1. This is a short Psalm, but one well known and quoted. "Behold, how good
and how pleasant is it, that brethren should dwell together in unity" (ver.
1). So sweet is that sound, that even they who know not the Psalter, sing that
verse. ...
2. For these same words of the Psalter, this sweet sound, that honeyed
melody, as well of the mind as of the hymn, did even beget the Monasteries. By
this sound were stirred up the brethren who longed to dwell together. This verse
was their trumpet. It sounded through the whole earth, and they who had been
divided, were gathered together. The summons of God, the summons of the Holy
Spirit, the summons of the Prophets, were not heard in Judah, yet were heard through
the whole world. They were deaf to that sound, amid whom it was sung; they
were found with their ears open, of whom it was said, "They shall see him, who
were not told of him; they shall understand who heard not."(5) Yet, most beloved,
if we reflect, the very blessing hath sprung from that wall(6) of circumcision.
For have all the Jews perished? and whence were the Apostles, the sons of the
Prophets, the sons of the exiles?(7) He speaks as to them who know. Whence
those five hundred, who saw the Lord after His resurrection, whom the Apostle Paul
commemorates?(8) Whence those hundred and twenty,(9) who were together in one
place after the resurrection of the Lord, and His ascension into heaven, on whom
when gathered into one place the Holy Spirit descended on the day of
Pentecost, sent down from heaven, sent, even as He was promised?(10) All were from
thence, and they first dwelt together in unity; who sold all they had, and laid the
price of their goods at the Apostles' feet, as is read in the Acts of the
Apostles.(11) And distribution was made to each one as he had need,(12) and none
called anything his own, but they had all things common. And what is "together in
unity"? They had, he saysays, one mind and one heart God-wards.(13) So they
were the first who heard, Behold how good and how pleasant is it, that brethren
dwell together. They were the first to hear, but heard it not alone. ...
3. From the words of this Psalm was taken the name of Monks, that no one
may reproach you who are Catholics by reason of the name. When you with justice
reproach heretics by reason of the Circelliones,(14) that they may be saved by
shame, they reproach you on the score of the Monks. ...
4. Moreover, beloved, there are they who are false Monks, and we know men
of this kind; but the pious brotherhood is not annulled, because of them who
profess to be what they are not. There are false Monks, as there are false men
among the Clergy, and among the faithful.(1) ...
5. Since the Psalm says, "Behold, how good and how pleasant is it, that
brethren should dwell together in one," why then should we not call Monks so? for
Monos(2) is one. Not one in any manner, for a man in a crowd is one, but
though he can be called one along with others, he cannot be Monos, that is, alone,
for Monos means "one alone." They then who thus live together as to make one
man, so that they really possess what is written, "one mind and one heart,"(3)
many bodies, but not many minds; many bodies, but not many hearts; can rightly be
called Monos, that is, one alone.(4) ...
6. Let the Psalm tell us what they are like. "As the ointment on the head,
which descended to the beard, to Aaron's beard, which descended to the fringe
of his garment" (ver. 2). What was Aaron? A priest. Who is a priest, except
that one Priest, who entered into the Holy of Holies? Who is that priest, save
Him, who was at once Victim and Priest? save Him who when he found nothing clean
in the world to offer, offered Himself? The ointment is on his head, because
Christ is one whole with the Church, but the ointment comes from the head. Our
Head is Christ crucified and buried; He rose again, and ascended into heaven; and
the Holy Spirit came from the head. Whither? To the beard. The beard signifies
the courageous; the beard distinguishes the grown men, the earnest, the active,
the vigorous. So that when we describe such, we say, he is a bearded man. Thus
that ointment descended first upon the Apostles, descended upon those who bore
the first assaults of the world, and therefore the Holy Spirit descended on
them. For they who first began to dwell together in unity, suffered persecution.
but because the ointment descended to the beard, they suffered, but were not
conquered. ...
7. "As the dew of Hermon, which fell upon the hills of Sion" (ver. 3). He
would have it understood, my brethren, that it is of God's grace that brethren
dwell together in unity. ...
8. But ye should know what Hermon is. It is a mountain far distant from
Jerusalem, that is, from Sion. And so it is strange that he says thus: As the dew
of Hermon, which fell upon the mountains of Sion, since mount Hermon is far
distant from Jerusalem, for it is said to be over Jordan. Let us then seek out
some interpretation of Hermon. The word is Hebrew, and we learn its meaning from
them who know that language. Hermon is said to mean, a light set on a high
place. For from Christ comes the dew. No light is set on a high place, save Christ.
How is He set on high? First on the cross, afterwards in heaven. Set on high
on the cross when He was humbled; humbled, but His humiliation could not but be
high. The ministry of man grew less and less, as was signified in John; the
ministry of God in our Lord Jesus Christ increased, as was shown at their birth.
The former was born, as the tradition of the Church shows, on the 24th of June,
when the days begin to shorten. The Lord was born on the 25th of December, when
the days begin to lengthen. Here John himself confessing, "He must increase,
but I must decrease."(5) And the passion of each shows this. The Lord was
exalted on the cross; John was diminished by beheading. Thus the light set on high is
Christ, whence is the dew of Hermon. ... But if he have the dew of Hermon,
which fell on the hill of Sion, he is quiet, peaceable, humble, submissive,
pouring forth prayer in place of murmuring. For murmurers are admirably described in
a certain passage of the Scriptures, "The heart of a fool is as the wheel of a
cart."(6) What is the meaning of "the heart of a fool is as the wheel of a
cart"? It carries hay, and creaks. The wheel of a cart cannot cease from creaking.
Thus there are many brethren, who do not dwell together, save in the body. But
who are they who dwell together? They of whom it is said, "And they had one
mind and one heart towards God."(3)
9. "Because there the Lord commanded blessing." Where did He command it?
Among the brethren who dwell together. There He enjoined blessing, there they
who dwell with one heart bless God. For thou blessest not God in division of
heart. ... Art thou straitened on earth? Depart, have thy habitation in heaven. How
shall I, a man clothed in flesh, enslaved to the flesh, thou wilt say, have my
habitation in heaven. First go in heart, whither thou wouldest follow in the
body. Do not hear, "Lift up your hearts," with a deaf ear. Keep thy heart lifted
up, and no one will straiten thee in heaven.
PSALM CXXXIV.(1)
1. "Behold, now, bless ye the Lord, all ye servants of the Lord" (ver. 1),
"who stand in the house of the Lord, in the courts of the house of our God"
(ver. 2). Why has he added, "in the courts"? Courts mean the wider spaces of a
house. He who stands in the courts is not straitened, is not confined, in some
fashion is enlarged. Remain in this enlargement, and thou canst love thy enemy,
because thou lovest not things in which an enemy could straiten thee. How canst
thou be understood to stand in the courts? Stand in charity, and thou standest
in the courts.Breadth lies in charity, straitness in hatred.
2. "Lift up your hands by night in the sanctuary, and bless the Lord"
(ver. 2). It is easy to bless by day. What is "by day"? In prosperity. For night is
a sad thing, day a cheerful. When it is well with thee, thou dost bless the
Lord. Thy son was sick, and he is made whole, thou dost bless the Lord. Thy son
was sick, perchance thou hast sought an astrologer, a soothsayer, perchance a
curse against the Lord has come, not from thy tongue, but from thy deeds, from
thy deeds and thy life. Boast not, because thou blessest with thy tongue, if thou
cursest with thy life. Wherefore bless ye the Lord. When? By night. When did
Job bless? When it was a sad night. All was taken away which he possessed; the
children for whom his goods were stored were taken away. How sad was his night!
Let us however see whether he blesseth not in the night. "The Lord gave, the
Lord hath taken away; it is as the Lord willed; blessed be the name of the
Lord."(2) And black was the night. ...
3. "The Lord out of Zion bless thee, who made heaven and earth" (ver. 3).
He exhorts many to bless, and Himself blesseth one, because He maketh one out
of many, since "it is good and pleasant for brethren to dwell together in
one."(3) It is a plural number, brethren, and yet singular, to dwell together in one.
Let none of you say, It cometh not to me. Knowest thou of whom he speaks, "the
Lord bless thee out of Zion." He blessed one. Be one,(4) and the blessing
cometh to thee.
PSALM CXXXV.(5)
1. Very pleasant ought it be to us, and we should rejoice because it is
pleasant, to which this Psalm exhorteth us. For it says, "Praise the name of the
Lord" (ver. 1). And it forthwith appends the reason, why it is just to praise
the name of the Lord. "Praise the Lord, ye servants." What more just? what more
worthy? what more thankful? ... For if He teaches His own servants who have
deserved well of Him, the preachers of His Word, the rulers of His Church, the
worshippers of His name, the obeyers of His command, that in their own conscience
they should possess the sweetness of their life, lest they be corrupted by the
praise or disheartened by the reproach of men; how much the more is He above
all, the unchangeable One, who teacheth these things, neither the greater if thou
praisest, or the less if thou reproachest. ... For ye will do nothing out of
place, by praising your Lord, as servants. And if ye were to be for ever only
servants, ye ought to praise the Lord; how much more ought ye servants to praise
the Lord, that ye may hereafter gain the privilege of sons?
2. ... Therefore, "Ye who stand in the house of the Lord, in the courts of
the house of our God, praise the Lord" (ver. 2). Be thankful; ye were without,
and ye stand within. Since then ye stand, is it a small thing for you to think
where He should be praised, who raised you when you were cast down, and caused
you to stand in His house, to know Him, and to praise Him? Is it a small boon,
that we stand in the house of the Lord? ... If one thinks of this, and is not
unthankful, he will utterly despise himself in comparison with the love of his
Lord, who hath done so great things for him. And since he hath nothing
wherewith to repay God for so great benefits, what remains for him but to give Him
thanks, not to repay Him? It belongs to the very act of thanksgiving, to "receive
the cup of the Lord, and to call upon His name."(6) For what can the servant
repay the Lord for all that He hath given him?(7)
3. What reason shall I give why you should praise Him? "Because the Lord
is good" (ver. 3). Briefly in one word is here explained the praise of the Lord
our God. "The Lord is good;" good, not in the same manner as the things which
He here made are good. For God made all things very good;(8) not only good, but
also very good. He made the sky and earth, and all things which are in them
good, and He made them very good. If He made all these things good, of what sort
is He who made them? ...
4. How far can we speak of His goodness? Who can conceive in his heart, or
apprehend how good the Lord is? Let us however return to ourselves, and in us
recognise Him, and praise the Maker in His works, because we are not fit to
contemplate Him Himself. And in hope that we may be able to contemplate Him, when
our heart hath been purified by faith, that hereafter it may rejoice in the
Truth; now as He cannot be seen by us, let us look at His works, that we may not
live without praising Him. So I(1) have said, "Praise the Lord, for He is good;
sing praises unto His Name, for He is sweet. ... He is Mediator, and thereupon
is sweet. What is sweeter than angels' food? How can God not be sweet, since
man ate angels' food? For men and angels live not on different meat. That is
truth, that is wisdom, that is the goodness of God, but thou canst not enjoy it in
like wise with the angels. ... That man might eat angels' food, the Creator of
the angels was made man.(2) If ye taste, sing praises; if ye have tasted how
sweet the Lord is, sing praises; if that which ye have tasted has a good savour,
praise it; who is so unthankful to cook or purveyor, as not to return thanks by
praising what he tastes, if he be pleased by any food. If we are not silent on
such occasions, shall we be silent concerning Him, who has given us all
things? ...
5. "For the Lord hath chosen Jacob to Himself, Israel for His own
possession" (ver. 4). ... Let not Jacob therefore extol himself, let him not boast
himself, or ascribe it to his own merits. He was known before, predestinated
before, elected before, not elected for his own merits, but found out, and gifted
with life by the grace of God. So with all the Gentiles; for how did the
wild-olive deserve, that it should be grafted in, from the bitterness of its berries,
the barrenness of its wildness? It was the wood of the wilderness, not of the
Lord's field, and yet He of His mercy grafted the wild-olive into the (true)
olive. But up to this time the wild-olive was not grafted in.
6. ... "Because," says he," I know that the Lord is great, and our God is
above all gods" (ver. 5). If we should say to him, we ask thee, explain to us
His greatness; would he not perchance answer us, He whom I see is not so very
great, if He be able to be expounded by me. Let him then return to His works, and
tell us. Let him hold in his conscience the greatness of God, which he has
seen, which he has committed to our faith, whither he could not lead our eyes, and
enumerate some of the things which the Lord hath done here; that unto us, who
cannot see His greatness as he can, He may become sweet through the works of
His which we can comprehend. ...
7. "All whatsoever the Lord willed, He made in the heaven, and in the
earth, in the sea, and in all its deep places" (ver. 6). Who can comprehend these
things? Who can enumerate the works of the Lord in the heaven and earth, in the
sea, and in all deep places? Yet if we cannot comprehend them all, we should
believe and hold them without question, because whatever creature is in heaven,
whatever is in earth, whatever is in the sea and in all deep places, has been
made by the Lord. ...
8. "Raising the clouds from the ends of the earth" (ver. 7). We see these
works of God in His creation. For the clouds come from the ends of the earth to
the midst thereof, and rain; thou scannest not whence they arise. Hence the
prophet signifies this, from "the ends of the earth," whether it be from the
bottom, or from the circumference of the ends of the earth, whencesoever He wills
He raises the clouds. only from the earth. "He hath made lightnings into rain."
For lightnings without rain would frighten thee, and bestow nothing on thee.
"He maketh lightnings unto rain." It lightens, and thou tremblest; it rains, thou
rejoicest. "He hath made lightnings unto rain." He who terrified thee, Himself
causest that thou shouldest rejoice. "Who bringeth the winds out of His
treasures," their causes are hidden, thou knowest not whence they come. When the wind
blows, thou feelest it; why it blows, or from what treasure of His wisdom it
is brought forth, thou knowest not;(3) yet thou owest to God the worship of
faith, for it would not blow unless He had bidden who made it, unless He had
brought it forth who created it.
9. We see therefore these things in that work of His; we praise, we marvel
at, we bless God; let us see what He has done among men for His people. "Who
smote the first-born of Egypt" (ver. 8). But withal those divine doings are told
which thou mightest love, those are not told which thou mightest fear. Attend,
and see that also when He is angry, He doeth what He willeth. "From man even
unto beast. He sent signs and wonders into the midst of thee, O Egypt!" (ver.
9). Ye know, ye have read what the hand of the Lord did by Moses in Egypt, to
crush and cast down the proud Egyptians, "on Pharaoh and on all his servants."
Little did He in Egypt: what did He after His people was led out thence? "Who
smote many nations (ver. 10), who possessed that land, which God willed to give His
people. "And slew mighty kings, Sehon king of the Amorites, and Og the king of
Bashan, and all the kingdoms of Canaan" (ver. 11). All these things which the
Psalm records simply, do we read likewise in others of the Lord's books, and
there the hand of the Lord is great. When thou seest what has been done to the
wicked, take heed lest it be done to thee. ... But when the good man sees what
the wicked has suffered, let him cleanse himself from all iniquity, lest he fall
into a like punishment, a like chastisement. Then ye have thoroughly understood
these things. What did God then? He drove out the wicked, "And he gave their
land for an inheritance, even an inheritance to Israel His servant" (ver. 12).
10. Then follows the loud cry of His praise. "Thy Name, O Lord, is for
ever and ever" (ver. 13), after all these things which Thou hast done. For what do
I see that Thou hast done? I behold Thy creation which Thou hast made in
heaven, I behold this lower part, where we dwell, and here I see Thy gifts of
clouds, and winds, and rain. I regard Thy people; Thou leddest them from the house of
bondage, and didst signs and wonders upon their enemies. Thou punishedst those
who caused them trouble, Thou dravest the wicked from their land, Thou
killedst their kings, Thou gavest their land to Thy people: I have seen all these
things, and filled with joy have said," Lord, Thy Name is for ever and ever." ...
11. All these things then did God overthrow, in the body at that time,
when our fathers were led out of the land of Egypt, in the spirit now. Nor does
His Hand cease until the end. Therefore deem not that these mighty deeds of God
were then finished and have ceased. "Thy Name, O Lord," he says, "is for
ever."(1) That is, Thy loving-kindness ceaseth not, Thy hand ceaseth not for ever from
doing these things, which then Thou didst afore declare in a figure. "But they
are written for our admonition, on whom the end of the ages is come."(2) One
generation and another generation; the generation by which we are made the
faithful, and are born again by baptism; the generation by which we shall rise again
from the dead, and shall live with the Angels for ever. Thy Memorial, O Lord,
is above this generation, and above that; for neither doth He now forget to
call us, nor then will He forget to crown us.
12. "The Lord hath judged His people, and will be called upon among His
servants" (ver. 14). Already hath He judged the people. Save the final judgment,
the people of the Jews is judged. What is "judged"? The just are taken away,
the unjust are left. But if I lie, or am thought to lie, because I have said, it
is already judged, hear the Lord saying, "I have come for judgment into this
world, that they who see not may see, and they who see may be made blind."(3) The
proud are made blind, the lowly are enlightened. Therefore, "He hath judged
His people." Isaiah spake the judgment. "And now, thou house of Jacob, come ye,
let us walk in the light of the Lord."(4) This is a small matter; but what
follows? "For He hath put away His people, the house of Israel." The house of Jacob
is the house of Israel; for he who is Jacob, the same is Israel. ... Therefore
God had judged His people, by separating the evil and the good; that is to say,
"He shall be called upon among His servants." By whom? By the Gentiles. For
how vast are the nations who have come in by faith. How many farms and desert
places now come in to us? They come thence no one can tell how numerously; they
would believe. We say to them, What will ye? They answer, To know the glory of
God. Believe, my brethren, that we wonder and rejoice at such a claim of these
rustic people. They come I know not whither, roused up by I know not whom. How
shall I say, I know not by whom? I know indeed by whom, because He says, "No one
cometh to Me, save whom the Father draweth."(5) They come suddenly from the
woods, the desert, the most distant and lofty mountains, to the Church; and many
of them, nay, near all hold this language, so that we see of a truth that God
teacheth them within.(6) The prophecy of Scripture is fulfilled, when it says,
"And they shall all be taught of God."(7) We say to them, What do ye long for?
And they answer, To see the glory of God.(8) "For all have sinned, and come short
of the glory of God."(9) They believe, they are sanctified, they will to have
clergy ordained for them. Is it not fulfilled, "and He will be called upon
among His servants"?
13. Lastly, after all that arrangement and dispensation, the Spirit of God
turns itself to reproaching and ridiculing those idols, which are now
ridiculed by their very worshippers. "The idols of the Gentiles are silver and gold"
(ver. 15). As God made all these things, who made whatever He would in heaven and
earth, what can anything that man maketh be, but an object of ridicule, not
adoration? Was He perchance about to speak of "the idols of the Gentiles," that
we might despise them all? was He about to speak of the idols of the heathen,
stones and wood, plaster and pottery? I say not these, they are mean materials. I
speak of that which they specially love, that which they specially honour.
"The idols of the Gentiles are silver and gold, the work of men's hands." Surely
it is gold, surely it is silver: because silver glitters, and gold glitters,
have they therefore eyes, or do they see? ... But as these things are senseless,
why make ye men of silver and gold to be gods? See ye not that the gods which ye
make see not? "They have a mouth, and will not speak; they have eyes, and will
not see" (ver. 16); "they have ears, and will not hear; neither is there any
breath in their mouth" (ver. 17); "they have nostrils, and will not smell; they
have hands, and will not work; they have feet, and will not walk." All these
things could the carpenter, the silversmith, the goldsmith make, both eyes, and
ears, and nostrils, and mouth, and hands, and feet, but he could give neither
sight to the eyes, nor hearing to the ears, nor speech to the mouth, nor smell to
the nostrils, nor motion to the hands, or going to the feet.
14. And man, thou laughest doubtless at what thou hast made, if thou
knowest by whom thou art made. But of them who know not, what is said? "All they who
make them, and all they who trust in them, are like them" (ver. 18). And ye
believe, brethren, that there is a likeness to these idols expressed not in their
flesh, but in their inner man. For "they have ears, and hear not." GOd calls
to them indeed, "He who hath ears to hear, let him hear."(1) They have eyes, and
see not, for they have the eyes of the body, and not the eyes of faith.
Lastly, this prophecy is fulfilled among all the nations. ... Is it not fulfilled? Is
it not seen, as it is written? And they who remain have eyes, and see not;
have nostrils, and smell not. They perceive not that savour. "We are a good savour
of Christ,"(2) as the apostle says everywhere. What profiteth it, that they
have nostrils, and smell not that so sweet savour of Christ? Truly it is done in
them, and truly it is said of them, "All they who make them," etc.
15. But daily do men believe through the miracles of Christ our Lord;
daily the eyes of the blind, the ears of the deaf are opened, the nostrils of the
senseless are breathed into, the tongues of the dumb are loosed, the hands of
the palsied are strengthened, the feet of the lame are guided; sons of Abraham
are raised up of these stones? to all of whom be it said, "Bless the Lord, ye
house of Israel" (ver. 19). All are sons of Abraham; and if sons of Abraham are
raised up from these stones, it is plain that they are rather the house of Israel
who belong to the house of Israel, the seed of Abraham, not by the flesh, but
by faith. But even granting that it is said of that house, and the people of
Israel is meant, from thence did the Apostles and thousands of the circumcised
believe? "Bless the Lord, ye house of Aaron. Bless the Lord, ye house of Levi"
(ver. 20). Bless the Lord, ye nations, this is, the "house of Israel" generally;
bless Him, ye leaders, this is, the "house of Aaron;" bless Him, ye servants,
this is, the "house of Levi." What of the other nations? "Ye that fear the Lord,
bless the Lord."
16. Let us also with one voice say what follows: "Blessed be the Lord out
of Zion, who dwelleth in Jerusalem" (ver. 21). Out of Zion is Jerusalem too.
Zion is "watching," Jerusalem the "vision of peace." In what Jerusalem will He
dwell now? In that which has fallen? Nay, but in that which is our mother, which
is in the heavens, of which it is said, "The desolate hath more children than
she which hath a husband."(4) For now the Lord is from Zion, because we watch
when He will come; now as long as we live in hope, we are in Zion. When our way
is ended, we shall dwell in that city which will never fall, because the Lord
dwelleth in her, and keepeth her, which is the vision of peace, the eternal
Jerusalem; for the praise of which, my brethren, language sufficeth not; where we
shall find no enemy, either within the Church or without the Church, neither in
our flesh, nor in our thoughts. For "death shall be swallowed up in victory,"(5)
and we shall be free to see God in eternal peace, being made citizens of
Jerusalem, the city of God.
PSALM CXXXVI.(6)
1. "Give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good, for His mercy endureth for
ever" (ver. 1). This Psalm contains the praise of God, and all its verses
finish in the same way. Wherefore although many things are related here in praise of
God, yet His mercy is most commended;(7) for without this plain commendation,
he, whom the Holy Spirit used to utter this Psalm, would have no verse be
ended. Although after the judgment, by which at the end of the world the quick and
the dead must be judged, the just being sent into life eternal, the unjust into
everlasting fire,(8) there will not afterwards be those, whom God will have
mercy on, yet rightly may His future mercy be understood to be for ever, which He
bestows on His saints and faithful ones, not because they will be miserable for
ever, and therefore will need His mercy for ever, but because that very
blessedness, which He mercifully bestows on the miserable, that they cease to be
miserable, and begin to be happy, will have no end, and therefore "His mercy is for
ever." For that we shall be just from being unjust, whole from being unsound,
alive from being dead, immortal from being mortal, happy from being wretched,
is of His mercy. But this that we shall be, will be for ever, and therefore "His
mercy is for ever." Wherefore, "give thanks to the Lord;" that is, praise the
Lord by giving thanks, "for He is good:" nor is it any temporal good you will
gain from this confession, for, "His mercy endureth for ever;" that is, the
benefit which He bestows mercifully upon you, is for ever.(1)
2. Then follows, "Give thanks to the God of gods, for His mercy endureth
for ever" (ver. 2). "Give thanks to the Lord of lords, for His mercy endureth
for ever" (ver. 3). We may well enquire, Who are these gods and lords, of whom He
who is the true God is God and Lord? And we find written in another Psalm,
that even men are called gods.(2) The Lord even takes note of this testimony in
the Gospel, saying, "Is it not written in your Law, I have said, Ye are gods?"(3)
... It is not therefore because they are all good, but because "the word of
God came tO them," that they were called gods. For were it because they are all
good, He would not thus distinguish between them. He saith, "He judgeth between
the gods." Then follows, "How long do ye judge iniquity!"(4) and the rest,
which He says certainly not to all, but to some, because He saith it in
distinguishing, and yet He distinguisheth between the gods.
3. But it is asked, If men are called gods to whom the word of the Lord
came, are the Angels to be called gods, when the greatest reward which is
promised to just and holy men is the being equal to Angels? In the Scriptures I know
not whether it can, at least easily, be found, that the Angels are openly called
gods; but when it had been said of the Lord God, "He is terrible, above all
gods," he adds, as by way of exposition Thy he says this, "for the gods of the
heathen are devils,"(5) that we might understand what had been expressed in the
Hebrew, "the gods of the Gentiles are idols," meaning rather the devils which
dwell in the idols.(6) For as regards images, which in Greek are called idols, a
name we now use in Latin, they have eyes and see not, and all the other things
which are said of them, because they are utterly without sense; wherefore they
cannot be frightened, for nothing which has no sense can be frightened. How
then can it be said of the Lord, "He is terrible above all gods, because the gods
of the Gentiles are idols," if the devils which may be terrified are not
understood to be in these images. Whence also the Apostle says, "We know that an idol
is nothing."(7) This refers to its earthy senseless material. But that no one
may think, that there is no living and sentient nature, which delights in the
Gentile sacrifices, he adds, "But what the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to
devils, and not to God: I would not have you partaken with devils."(8) If
therefore we never find in the divine words that the holy Angels are called gods, I
think the best reason is, that men may not be induced by the name to pay that
ministry and service of religion (which in Greek is called
<greek>leitourgia</greek> or <greek>latria</greek>) to the holy Angels, which neither would they
have paid by man at all, save to that God, who is the God of themselves and
men.(9) Hence they are much more correctly called Angels, which in Latin is Nuntii,
that by the name of their function, not their substance, we may plainly
understand that they would have us worship the God, whom they announce. The whole then
of that question the Apostle has briefly expounded, when he says, "For though
there be who are called gods, whether in heaven or in earth, as there are gods
many and lords many; yet we have one God the Father, from whom are all, and we
in Him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him."(10)
4. Let us therefore "give thanks to the God of gods, and the Lord of
lords, for His mercy," etc. "Who alone did wonderful things" (ver. 4). As at the
last part of every verse, it is written, "For His mercy endureth for ever," so we
must understand at the beginning of each, though it be not written, "Give
thanks." Which indeed in the Greek is very plain. It would be so in Latin, if our
translators had been able to make use of that expression. Which indeed they
could have done in this verse, if they had said, "To Him who doeth(11) wonderful
things." For where we have," who did wonderful things," the Greek has
<greek>tp</greek> <greek>poihQanti</greek>, where we must necessarily understand, "give
thanks." And I would they had added the pronoun, and said to Him, "who did," or
to Him "who doeth," or to Him "who made sure;" because then one might easily
understand, "let us give thanks." For now it is so obscurely rendered, that he who
either knows not or cares not to examine a Greek manuscript may think, "who
made the heavens, who made sure the earth, who made the luminaries, for His mercy
endureth for ever,"(12) has been so said, because He did these things for this
reason, "because His mercy endureth for ever:" whereas they, whom He has freed
from misery, belong to His Mercy: but not that we should believe that He makes
sky, earth, and luminaries, of His Mercy; since they are marks of His
Goodness, who created all things very good.(1) For He created all things, that they
might have their being;(2) but it is the work of His Mercy, to cleanse us from our
sins, and deliver us from everlasting misery. And so the Psalm thus addresses
us, "Give thanks unto the God of gods, give thanks unto the Lord of lords."
Give thanks to Him, "who alone doeth great wonders;" give thanks to Him, "who by
His wisdom made the heavens;" give thanks to Him, "who stretched out the earth
above the waters;" give thanks to Him, "who alone made great lights." But why we
are to praise, he setteth down at the end of all the verses, "for His mercy
endureth for ever."
5. But what meaneth, "who alone doeth great wonders"? Is it because many
wonderful things He hath done by means of angels and men? Some wonderful things
there are which God doeth alone, and these he enumerates, saying, "who by His
wisdom made the heavens" (ver. 5), "who stretched out the earth above the
waters" (ver. 6), "who alone made great lights" (ver. 7). For this reason did he add
"alone" in this verse also, because the other wonders which he is about to tell
of, God did by means of man. For having said," who alone made great lights,"
he goes on to explain what these are, "the sun to rule the day" (ver. 8), "the
moon and stars to govern the night" (ver. 9); then he begins to tell the wonders
which He did by means of angels and men: "who smote Egypt with their
first-born" (ver. 10), and the rest. The whole creation then God manifestly made, not by
means of any creature, but "alone;" and of this creation he hath mentioned
certain more eminent parts, that they might make us think on the whole; the
heavens we can understand,(3) and the earth we see. And as there are visible heavens
too, by mentioning the lights in them, he has bid us look on the whole body of
the heavens as made by Him.
6. However, whether by what he saith, "who made the heavens in
understanding," or, as others have rendered it, "in intelligence," he meant to signify,
the heavens we can understand, or that He in His understanding or intelligence,
that is, in His wisdom made the heavens (as it is elsewhere written, "in wisdom
hast Thou made them all"(4)), implying thereby the only-begotten Word, may be a
question. But if it be so, that we are to understand that "God by His wisdom
made the heavens," why saith He this only of the heavens, whereas God made all
things by the same wisdom? It is that it needed only to be expressed there, so
that in the rest it might be understood without being written. How then could it
be "alone," if "in understanding" or "in intelligence" means "by His wisdom,"
that is, by the only-begotten Word? Is it that, inasmuch as the Trinity is not
three Gods, but one God, he states that God made these things alone, because He
made not creation by means of any creature?
7. But what is, "who laid out the earth above the waters"? For it is a
difficult question, because the earth seemeth to be the heavier, so that it should
be believed not so much to be borne on the waters, as to bear the waters. And
that we may not seem contentiously to maintain our Scriptures against those who
think that they have discovered these matters on sure principles, we have a
second interpretation to give, that the earth which is inhabited by men, and
contains the living creatures of the earth, is "laid out above the waters" because
it stands out above the waters which surround it. For when we speak of a city
on the sea being built "above the waters," it is not meant that the sea is under
it in the same way as the waters are under the chambers of caverns, or under
ships sailing over them; but it is said to be "above" the sea, because it stands
up above the sea below it.
8. But if these words further signify something else which more closely
concerns us, God "by His wisdom made the heavens," that is, His saints, spiritual
men, to whom He has given not only to believe, but also to understand things
divine; those who cannot yet attain to this, and only hold their faith firmly,
as being beneath the heavens, are figured by the name of earth. And because they
abide with unshaken belief upon the baptism they have received, therefore it
is said, "He laid out the earth above the waters." Further, since it is written
of our Lord Jesus Christ, that "in Him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge,"(5) and that these two, wisdom and knowledge, differ somewhat from
one another is testified by other utterances of Scripture, especially in the
words of holy Job,(6) where both are in a manner defined; not unsuitably then do
we understand wisdom to consist in the knowledge and love of That which ever is
and abideth unchangeable, which is God. For where he saith, "piety(7) is
wisdom," in Greek is <greek>qeoQebeia</greek>, and to express the whole of this in
Latin, we may call it worship of God.(8) But to depart from evil, which he calls
knowledge, what else is it but to walk cautiously and heedfully "in the midst
of a crooked and perverse generation,"(9) in the night, as it were, of this
world, that each one by keeping himself from iniquity may avoid being confounded
with the darkness, distinguished by the light of his proper gift. ...
9. "Who brought out Israel from the midst of them" (ver. 11). He brought
out also His saints and faithful ones from the midst of the wicked. "With a
mighty Hand and stretched-out Arm" (ver. 12). What more powerful, what more
out-stretched, than that of which is said "To whom is the Arm of the Lord
revealed?"(1) "Who divided the Red Sea in two parts" (ver. 13). He divided also in such
wise, that the same baptism should be to some unto life, to others unto death.
"And brought out Israel through the midst of it" (ver. 14). So too He brings out
His renewed people through the layer of regeneration. "And overthrew Pharaoh and
his power in the Red Sea" (ver. 15). He quickly destroyeth both the sin of
His people and the guilt thereof by baptism. "Who led His people through the
wilderness" (ver. 16). Us too He leadeth through the drought and barrenness of this
world, that we perish not therein. "Who smote great kings" (ver. 17), "and
slew famous kings" (ver. 18). From us too He smites and slays the deadly powers of
the devil. "Sehon king of the Amorites" (ver. 19), an "useless shoot," or
"fiery temptation," for so is Sehon interpreted: the king of "them who cause
bitterness," for such is the meaning of Amorites. "And Og, the king of Basan" (ver.
20). The "heaper-together," such is the meaning of Og, and, king of "confusion,"
which Basan signifies. For what else doth the devil heap together but
confusion? "And gave away their land for an heritage" (ver. 21), "even an heritage unto
Israel His servant" (ver. 22). For He giveth them, whom once the devil owned,
for an heritage to the seed of Abraham, that is, Christ. "Who remembered us in
our low estate" (ver. 23), "and redeemed us from our enemies" (ver. 24) by the
Blood of His only-begotten Son. "Who giveth food to all flesh" (ver. 25), that
is, to the whole race of mankind, not Israelites only, but Gentiles too; and of
this Food is said, "My Flesh is meat indeed." "Give thanks unto the God of
Heaven" (ver. 26). "Give thanks unto the Lord of lords" (ver. 27). For what he
here says, "the God of Heaven," I suppose that he meant to express in other words
what He had before said, "the God of gods." For what there he subjoined, he has
here also repeated. "Give thanks unto the Lord of lords." "But to us there is
but one God," etc., "and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we
by Him;"(2) to whom we confess that "His mercy endureth for ever."
PSALM CXXXVII.(3)
1. ...But to-day we have sung, "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and
wept, when we remembered Sion" (ver. 1). ...
2. Observe "the waters of Babylon." "The waters of Babylon" are all things
which here are loved, and pass away. One man, for example, loveth to practise
husbandry, to grow rich thereby, to employ his mind therein, thence to gain
pleasure: let him observe the issue, and see that what he hath loved is not a
foundation of Jerusalem, but a stream of Babylon. Another saith, It is a grand
thing to be a soldier: all husbandmen fear those who are soldiers. ...
3. But then other citizens of the holy Jerusalem, understanding their
captivity, mark how the natural wishes and the various lusts of men hurry and drag
them hither and thither, and drive them into the sea; they see this, and they
throw not themselves into the waters of Babylon, but "sit down and weep," either
for those who are being carried away by them, or themselves whose deserts have
placed them in Babylon, but sitting, that is, humbling themselves. O holy
Sion, where all stands firm and nothing flows! Who hath thrown us headlong into
this? Why have we left thy Founder and thy society? Behold, placed where all
things are flowing and gliding away, scarce one, if he can grasp the tree, shall be
snatched from the stream and escape. Humbling ourselves then in our captivity,
let us "sit by the waters of Babylon," let us not dare to plunge ourselves in
those streams, nor to be proud and lifted up in the evil and sadness of our
captivity, but let us sit, and so weep. Let us sit "by" the waters, not beneath the
waters, of Babylon; such be our humility, that it overwhelm us not. Sit "by"
the waters, not "in" the waters, not "under" the waters; but yet sit, in humble
fashion, talk not as thou wouldest in Jerusalem. ...
4. For many weep with the weeping of Babylon, because they rejoice also
with the joy of Babylon. When men rejoice at gains and weep at losses, both are
of Babylon. Thou oughtest to weep, but in the remembrance of Sion. If thou
weepest in the remembrance of Sion, thou oughtest to weep even when it is well with
thee in Babylon. ...
5. "On the willows in the midst thereof we hung up our instruments of
music" (ver. 2). The citizens of Jerusalem have their "instruments of music," God's
Scriptures, God's commands, God's promises, meditation on the life to come;
but while they are dwelling "in Babylon," they "hang up their instruments."
Willows are unfruitful trees, and here so placed, that no good whatever can be
understood of them: elsewhere perhaps there may. Here understand barren trees,
growing by the waters of Babylon. These trees are watered by the waters of Babylon,
and bring forth no fruit; just as there are men greedy, covetous, barren in
good works, citizens of Babylon in such wise, that they are even trees of that
region; they are fed there by these pleasures of transitory things, as though
watered by "the waters of Babylon." Thou seekest fruit of them, and nowhere findest
it. ... Therefore by deferring to apply the Scriptures to them, "we hang up
our instruments of music upon the willows." For we hold them not worthy to carry
our instruments. We do not therefore insert our instruments into them and bind
them to them, but defer to use them, and so hang them up. For the willows are
the unfruitful trees of Babylon, fed by temporal pleasures, as by the "waters of
Babylon."
6. "For there they that led us captive demanded of us words of songs, and
they that led us away, an hymn" (ver. 3). They demanded of us words of songs
and an hymn, who led us captive. ... We are tempted by the delights of earthly
things, and we struggle daily with the suggestions of unlawful pleasures; scarce
do we breathe freely even in prayer: we understand that we are captives. But
who led us captive? what men? what race? what king? If we are redeemed, we once
were captives. Who hath redeemed us? Christ. From whom hath He redeemed us? From
the devil. The devil then and his angels led us captive: and they would not
lead us, unless we consented. ...
7. "Those" then" who have led us captive," the devil and his angels, when
have they spoken unto us: "Sing us one of the songs of Sion"? What answer we?
Babylon beareth thee, Babylon containeth thee, Babylon nourisheth thee, Babylon
speaks by thy mouth, thou knowest not to take in save what glitters for the
present, thou knowest not how to meditate on things of eternity, thou takest not
in what thou askest. "How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land?"
(ver. 4). Truly, brethren, so it is. Begin to wish to preach the truth in such
measure as ye know it, and see how needful it is for you to endure such mockers,
persecutors of the truth, full of falsehood. Reply to them, when they ask of you
what they cannot take in, and say in full confidence of your holy song, "How
shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land!"
8. But take heed how thou dwellest among them, O people of God, O body of
Christ, O high-born band of wanderers (for thy home is not here, but
elsewhere), lest when thou lovest them, strivest for their friendship, and fearest to
displease such men, Babylon begin to delight thee and thou forget Jerusalem. In
fear then of this, see what the Psalmist subjoins, see what follows. "If I forget
thee, O Jerusalem" (ver. 5), amid the speeches of those who hold me captive,
amid the speeches of treacherous men, amid the speeches of men who ask with ill
intent, asking, yet unwilling to learn. ... What then? "If I forget thee, O
Jerusalem, let my right hand forget me."
9. "Let my tongue cleave to my jaws, if I remember not thee" (ver. 6).
That is, let me be dumb, he saith, if I remember not thee. For what word, what
sound doth he utter, who uttereth not songs of Sion? That is our tongue, the song
of Jerusalem. The song of the love of this world is a strange tongue, a
barbarous tongue, which we have learnt in our captivity. Dumb then will he be to God,
who forgetteth Jerusalem. And it is not enough to remember: for her enemies too
remember her, desiring to overthrow her. "What is that city?" say they; "who
are the Christians? what sort of men are the Christians? would they were not
Christians." Now the captive band hath conquered its capturers; still they murmur,
and rage, and desire to slay the holy city that dwells as a stranger among
them. Not enough then is it to remember: take heed how thou rememberest. For some
things we remember in hate, some in love. And so, when he had said, "If I
forget thee, O Jerusalem," etc., he added at once, "if I prefer not Jerusalem in the
height of my joy." For there is the height of joy where we enjoy God, where we
are safe of united brotherhood, and the union of citizenship. There no tempter
shall assail us, no one be able so much as to urge us on to any allurement:
there nought will delight us but good: there all want will die, there perfect
bliss will dawn on us.
10. Then he turneth to God in prayer against the enemies of that city.
"Remember, O Lord, the children of Edom" (ver. 7). Edom is the same who is also
called Esau: for ye heard just now the words of the Apostle read, "Jacob have I
loved, but Esau have I hated."(1) ... Esau then signifieth all the carnal, Jacob
all the spiritual. ... All carnal persons are enemies to spiritual persons,
for all such, desiring present things, persecute those whom they see to long for
things eternal. Against these the Psalmist, looking back to Jerusalem, and
beseeching God that he may be delivered from captivity, saith--what? "Remember, O
Lord, the children of Edom." Deliver us from carnal men, from those who imitate
Esau, who are elder brethren, yet enemies. They were first-born, but the
last-born have won the pre-eminence, for the lust of the flesh hath cast down the
former, the contempt of lust hath lifted up the latter. The other live, and envy,
and persecute. "In the day of Jerusalem." The day of Jerusalem, wherein it was
tried, wherein it was held captive, or the day of Jerusalem's happiness,
wherein it is freed, wherein it reaches its goal, wherein it is made partaker of
eternity? "Remember," saith he, "O Lord," forget not those "who said, Rase it, rase
it, even to the foundation thereof." Remember then, it means, that day wherein
they willed to overthrow Jerusalem. For how great persecutions hath the Church
suffered I How did the children of Edom, that is, carnal men, servants of the
devil and his angels, who worshipped stocks and stones, and followed the lusts
of the flesh, how did they say, "Extirpate the Christians, destroy the
Christians, let not one remain, overthrow them even to the foundation!" Have not these
things been said? And when they were said, the persecutors were rejected, the
martyrs crowned. ...
11. Then he turneth himself to her, "0 daughter of Babylon, unhappy;"
unhappy in thy very exulting, thy presumption, thine enmity; "unhappy daughter of
Babylon!" (ver. 8). The city is called both Babylon, and daughter of Babylon:
just as they speak of "Jerusalem" and "the daughter of Jerusalem," "Sion" and
"the daughter of Sion," "the Church" and "the daughter of the Church." As it
succeedeth the other, it is called "daughter;" as it is preferred before the other,
it is called "mother." There was a former Babylon; did the people remain in it?
Because it succeedeth to Babylon, it is called daughter of Babylon. O daughter
of Babylon, "unhappy" thou! ...
12. "Happy shall he be that repayeth thee, as thou hast served us." What
repayment meaneth he? Herewith the Psalm closeth, "Happy, that taketh and
dasheth thy little ones against the rock" (ver. 9). Her he calleth unhappy, but him
happy who payeth her as she hath served us. Do we ask, what reward? This is the
repayment. For what hath that Babylon done to us? We have already sung in
another Psalm, "The words of the wicked have prevailed against us."(1) For when we
were born, the confusion of this world found us, and choked us while yet infants
with the empty notions of divers errors. The infant that is born destined to
be a citizen of Jerusalem, and in God's predestination already a citizen, but
meanwhile a prisoner for a time, when learneth he to love ought, save what his
parents have whispered into his ears? They teach him and train him in avarice,
robbery, daily lying, the worship of divers idols and devils, the unlawful
remedies of enchantments and amulets. What shall one yet an infant do, a tender soul,
observing what its elders do, save follow that which it seeth them doing.
Babylon then has persecuted us when little, but God hath given us when grown up
knowledge of ourselves, that we should not follow the errors of our parents.
...How shall they repay her? As she hath served us. Let her little ones be choked in
turn: yea let her little ones in turn be dashed, and die. What are the little
ones of Babylon? Evil desires at their birth. For there are, who have to fight
with inveterate lusts. When lust is born, before evil habit giveth it strength
against thee, when lust is little, by no means let it gain the strength of evil
habit; when it is little, dash it. But thou fearest, lest though dashed it die
not; "Dash it against the Rock; and that Rock is Christ."(2)
13. Brethren, let not your instruments of music rest in your work: sing
one to another songs of Sion. Readily have ye heard; the more readily do what ye
have heard, if ye wish not to be willows of Babylon fed by its streams, and
bringing no fruit. But sigh for the everlasting Jerusalem: whither your hope goeth
before, let your life follow; there we shall be with Christ. Christ now is our
Head; now He ruleth us from above; in that city He will fold us to Himself; we
shall be equal to the Angels of God. We should not dare to imagine this of
ourselves, did not the Truth promise it. This then desire, brethren, this day and
night think on. Howsoever the world shine happily on you, presume not, parley
not willingly with your lusts. Is it a grown-up enemy? let it be slain upon the
Rock. Is it a little enemy? let it be dashed against the Rock. Slay the
grown-up ones on the Rock, and dash the little ones against the Rock. Let the Rock
conquer. Be built upon the Rock, if ye desire not to be swept away either by the
stream, or the winds, or the rain. If ye wish to be armed against temptations in
this world, let longing for the everlasting Jerusalem grow and be strengthened
in your hearts. Your captivity will pass away, your happiness will come; the
last enemy shall be destroyed, and we shall triumph with our King, without death.
PSALM CXXXVIII.(3)
1. The title of this Psalm is brief and simple, and need not detain us;
since we know whose resemblance David wore, and since in him we recognise
ourselves also, for we too are members of that Body. The whole title is, "To David
himself." Let us see then, what is to David himself. The title of the Psalm is
wont to tell us what is treated of within it: but in this, since the title informs
us not of this, but tells us only to Whom it is chanted, the first verse tells
us what is treated of in the whole Psalm, "I will confess to Thee." This
confession then let us hear. But first I remind you, that the term confession in
Scripture, when we speak of confession to God, is used in two senses, of sin, and
of praise. But confession of sin all know, confession of praise few attend to.
So well known is confession of sin, that, wherever in Scripture we hear the
words, "I will confess to Thee, O Lord," or, "we will confess to Thee," forthwith,
through habitually understanding in this way, our hands hurry to beating our
breast: so entirely are men wont not to understand confession to be of aught,
save of sin. But was then our Lord Jeans Christ Himself too a sinner, who saith
in the Gospel, "I confess to Thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth "?(1) He
goeth on to say what He confesseth, that we might understand His confession to be
of praise, not of sin, "I confess to Thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth,
because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed
them unto babes." He praised the Father, he praised God, because He despiseth
not the humble, but the proud. And such confession are we now going to hear, of
praise of God, of thanksgiving. "With my whole heart." My whole heart I lay upon
the altar of Thy praise, an whole burnt-offering(2) of praise I offer to Thee.
... "I will confess to Thee, 0 Lord, with my whole heart: for Thou hast heard
the words of my mouth" (ver. 1). What mouth, save my heart? For there have we
the voice which God heareth, which ear of man knoweth not at all. We have then a
mouth within, there do we ask, thence do we ask, and if we have prepared a
lodging or an house for God, there do we speak, there are we heard. "For He is not
far from every one of us, for in Him we live, and move, and have our
being."(3) Nought maketh thee far off from God, save sin only. Cast down the middle wall
of sin, and thou art with Him whom thou askest.
2. "And before the Angels will I sing unto Thee." Not before men will I
sing, but before the Angels. My song is my joy; but my joy in things below is
before men, my joy in things above before the Angels. For the wicked knoweth not
the joy of the just: "There is no joy. saith my God, to the wicked."(4) The
wicked rejoiceth in his tavern, the martyr in his chain. In what did that holy
Crispina rejoice, whose festival is kept to-day? She rejoiced when she was being
seized, when she was being carried before the judge, when she was being put into
prison, when she was being brought forth bound, when she was being lifted up on
the scaffold,(5) when she was being heard, when she was being condemned: in
all these things she rejoiced; and the wretches thought her wretched, when she
was rejoicing before the Angels.
3. "I will worship toward Thy holy Temple" (ver. 2). What holy Temple?
That where we shall dwell, where we shall worship. For we hasten that we may
adore· Our heart is pregnant and cometh to the birth, and seeketh where it may bring
forth. What is the place where God is to be worshipped? ... "The Temple of God
is holy," saith the Apostle, "which Temple ye are."(6) But assuredly, as is
manifest, God dwelleth in the Angels. Therefore when our joy, being in spiritual
things, not in earthly, taketh up a song to God, to sing before the Angels,
that very assembly of Angels is the Temple of God, we worship toward God's Temple.
There is a Church below, there is a Church above also; the Church below, in
all the faithful; the Church above, in all the Angels. But the God of Angels came
down to the Church below, and Angels ministered to Him on earth? while He
ministered to us; for, "I came not," saith He, "to be ministered unto, but to
minister."(8) ... The Lord of Angels died for man. Therefore, "I will worship toward
Thy holy Temple;" I mean, not the temple made with hands, but that which Thou
hast made for Thyself.
4. "And I will confess to Thy Name in Thy mercy and Thy truth." ... These
also which Thou hast given to me, do I according to my power give to Thee in
return: mercy, in siding others; truth, in judging. By these God aideth us, by
these we win God's favour. Rightly, therefore, "All the ways of the Lord are
mercy and truth." No other ways are there whereby He can come to us, no other
whereby we can come to Him. "For Thou hast magnified Thy holy Name over everything."
What sort of thanksgiving is this, brethren? He hath magnified His holy Name
over Abraham. Of Abraham was born Isaac; over that house God was magnified; then
Jacob; God was magnified, who said, "I am the God of Abraham, and the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob." Then came his twelve sons. The name of the Lord
was magnified over Israel. Then came the Virgin Mary. Then Christ our Lord,
"dying for our sins, rising again for our justification,"(9) filling the faithful
with His Holy Spirit, sending forth men to proclaim throughout the Gentiles,
"Repent ye," etc.(10) Behold, "He hath magnified His holy Name above all things."
5. "In what day soever I call upon Thee, do Thou quickly hear me" (ver.
3). Wherefore, "quickly "? Because Thou hast said, "While yet thou art speaking I
will say, Lo, here I am."(11) Wherefore, "quickly "? Because now I seek not
earthly happiness, I have learnt holy longings from the New Testament. I seek not
earth, nor earthly abundance, nor temporal health, nor the overthrow of my
enemies, nor riches, nor rank: nought of these do I seek: therefore "quickly hear
me." Since Thou hast taught me what to seek, grant what I seek. ...
6. Let us see then what he seeketh, with what right he hath said, "quickly
hear me." For what seekest thou, that thou shouldest quickly be heard? "Thou
shalt multiply me." In many ways may multiplication be understood. ... For men
are multiplied in their soul with cares: a man seemeth to be multiplied in soul,
in whom vices even are multiplied. That is the multiplication of want, not of
fulness. What then dost thou desire, thou who hast said, "quickly hear me," and
hast withdrawn thyself entirely from the body, from every earthly thing, from
every earthly desire, so as to say to God, "Thou shalt multiply me in my soul"?
Explain yet further what thou desirest. Thou shalt multiply me, saith he, in
my soul "with virtue." ...
7. "Let all the kings of the earth confess to Thee, O Lord" (ver. 4). So
shall it be, and so it is, and that daily; and it is shown that it was not said
in vain, save that it was future. But neither let them, when they confess to
Thee, when they praise Thee, desire earthly things of Thee. For what shall the
kings of the earth desire? Have they not already sovereignty? Whatever more a man
desire on earth, sovereignty is the highest point of his desire. What more can
he desire? It must needs be some loftier eminence. But perhaps the loftier it
is, the more dangerous. And therefore the more exalted kings are in earthly
eminence, the more ought they to humble themselves before God. What do they do?
"Because they have heard all the words of Thy mouth." In a certain nation were
hidden the Law and the Prophets, "all the words of Thy mouth:" in the Jewish
nation alone were "all the words of Thy mouth," the nation which the Apostle
praiseth, saying, "What advantage hath the Jew? Much every way; chiefly because that
unto them were committed the oracles of God." These were the words of God.(1)
... What meant Gideon's fleece? It is like the nation of the Jews in the midst
of the world, which had the grace of sacraments, not indeed openly manifested,
but hidden in a cloud, or in a veil, like the dew in the fleece? The time came
when the dew was to be manifested in the floor; it was manifested, no longer
hidden. Christ alone is the sweetness of dew: Him alone thou recognisest not in
Scripture, for whom Scripture was written. But yet, "they have heard all the
words of thy mouth."
8. "And let them sing in the paths of the Lord, that great is the glory of
the Lord" (ver. 5). Let all the kings of the earth sing in the paths of the
Lord. In what paths? Those that are spoken of above, "in Thy mercy and Thy
truth." Let not then the kings of the earth be proud, let them be humble. Then let
them sing in the ways of the Lord, if they be humble: let them love, and they
shall sing. We know travellers that sing; they sing, and hasten to reach the end
of their journey. There are evil songs, such as belong to the old man; to the
new man belongeth a new song. Let then the kings of the earth too walk in Thy
paths, let them walk and sing in Thy paths, Sing what? that "great is the glory of
the Lord," not of kings.
9. See how he willed that kings should sing on their way, humbly bearing
the Lord, not lifting themselves up against the Lord. For if they lift
themselves up, what follows? "For the Lord is high, and hath respect unto the lowly"
(ver. 6). Do kings then desire that He have respect unto them? Let them be humble.
What then? if they lift themselves up to pride, can they escape His eyes? Lest
perchance, because thou hast heard, "He hath respect unto the lowly," thou
choose to be proud, and say in thy soul, God hath respect unto the lowly, He hath
not respect unto me, I will do what I will. O foolish one! wouldest thou say
this, if thou knewest what thou oughtest to love? Behold, even if God willeth not
to see thee, dost thou not fear this very thing, that He willeth not to see
thee? ... The lofty then, it seemeth, He hath not respect unto, for it is the
lowly He respecteth. "The lofty"--what? "He considereth from afar." What then
gaineth the proud? To be seen from afar, not to escape being seen. And think not
that thou must needs be safe on that account, for that He seeth less clearly, who
seeth thee from afar. For thou indeed seest not clearly, what thou seest from
afar; God, although He see thee from afar, seeth thee perfectly, yet is He not
with thee. This thou gainest, not that thou art less perfectly seen, but that
thou art not with Him by whom thou art seen. But what doth the lowly gain? "The
Lord is nigh unto them that are of a contrite heart." Let the proud then lift
himself up as much as he will, certainly God dwelleth on high, God is in heaven:
wishest thou that He come nigh to thee? Humble thyself. For the higher will He
be above thee, the more thou liftest thyself up.
10. "If I walk in the midst of tribulation, Thou shalt revive me" (ver.
7). True it is: whatsoever tribulation thou art in, confess, call on Him; He
freeth thee, He reviveth thee. ... Love the other life, and thou shalt see that
this life is tribulation, whatever prosperity it shine with, whatever delights it
abound and overflow with; since not yet have we that joy most safe and free
from all temptation, which God reserveth for us in the end, without doubt it is
tribulation. Let us understand then what tribulation he meaneth here too,
brethren. Not as though he said, "If perchance there shall any tribulation have
befallen me, Thou shall free me therefrom." But how saith he? "If I walk," etc.; that
is, otherwise Thou wilt not revive me, unless I walk in the midst of
tribulation.
11. "Thou hast stretched forth Thine hand over the wrath of mine enemies,
and Thy right hand hath made me safe." Let mine enemies rage: what can they do?
They can take my money, strip, proscribe, banish me; afflict me with grief and
tortures; at last, if they be allowed, even kill me: can they do aught more?
But over that which mine enemies can do, Thou hast stretched forth Thine hand.
For mine enemies cannot separate me from Thee: but Thou avengest me the more,
the more Thou as yet delayest. ... Yet not to make me despair; for it follows,
"and Thy right hand hath made me safe."
12. "Thou, Lord, shalt recompense for me (ver. 8). I recompense not: Thou
shalt recompense. Let mine enemies rage their full: Thou shall recompense what
I cannot. ... "Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves," saith the Apostle, "but
rather give place unto wrath; for it is written, Vengeance is Mine, I will
repay, saith the Lord."(1) There is here another sense not to be neglected, perhaps
even to be preferred. "Lord" Christ, "Thou shall repay for me." For I, if I
repay, have seized; Thou hast paid what Thou hast not seized. Lord, Thou shall
"repay for me." Behold Him repaying for us. They came to Him, who exacted
tribute:(2) they used to demand as tribute a didrachma, that is, two drachmas for one
man; they came to the Lord to pay tribute; or rather, not to Him, but to His
disciples, and they said to them, "Doth not your Master pay tribute?" They came
and told Him. He saith unto Peter, "lest we should offend them, go thou to the
sea, and cast an hook, and take up the fish that first cometh up: and when thou
hast opened his mouth, thou shall find a staler:(3) that take, and give for Me
and thee." The first that riseth from the sea, is the First-begotten from the
dead. In His mouth we find two didrachmas, that is, four drachmas: in His mouth
we find the four Gospels. By those four drachmas we are free from the claims of
this world, by the four Evangelists we remain no longer debtors; for there the
debt of all our sins is paid. He then hath repaid for us, thanks to His mercy.
He owed nothing: He repaid not for Himself: He repaid for us. ...
13. "Lord, Thy mercy is for everlasting." ... Not for a time only do I
desire to be freed. "Thy mercy is for everlasting," wherewith Thou hast freed the
martyrs, and so hast quickly taken them from this life. "Despise not Thou the
works of Thine own hands." I say not, Lord, "despise not the works of my hands:"
of mine own works I boast not. "I sought," indeed, "the Lord with my hands in
the night season before Him, and have not been deceived;" but yet I praise not
the works of mine own hands; I fear lest, when Thou shall look into them, Thou
find more sins in them than deserts. Behold in me Thy Work, not mine: for mine
if Thou seest, Thou condemnest; Thine, if Thou seest, Thou crow nest. For
whatever good works there be of mine, from Thee are they to me; and so they are
more. Thine than mine.(4) Therefore whether in regard that we are men, or in regard
that we have been changed and justified from our iniquity, Lord, "despise not
Thou the works of Thine own hands."