227 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
227 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
Psalm 28
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Commentary
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The former part of this psalm is the prayer of a saint militan and now
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in distress (v. 1-3), to which is added the doom of God\'s implacable
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enemies (v. 4, 5). The latter part of the psalm is the thanksgiving of a
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saint triumphant, and delivered out of his distresses (v. 6-8), to which
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is added a prophetical prayer for all God\'s faithful loyal subjects (v.
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9). So that it is hard to say which of these two conditions David was in
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when he penned it. Some think he was now in trouble seeking God, but at
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the same time preparing to praise him for his deliverance, and by faith
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giving him thanks for it, before it was wrought. Others think he was now
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in triumph, but remembered, and recorded for his own and others\'
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benefit, the prayers he made when he was in affliction, that the mercy
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might relish the better, when it appeared to be an answer to them.
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A psalm of David.
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### Verses 1-5
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In these verses David is very earnest in prayer.
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`I.` He prays that God would graciously hear and answer him, now that, in
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his distress, he called upon him, v. 1, 2. Observe his faith in prayer:
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O Lord, my rock, denoting his belief of God\'s power (he is a rock) and
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his dependence upon that power-\"He is my rock, on whom I build my
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hope.\" Observe his fervency in prayer: \"To thee will I cry, as one in
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earnest, being ready to sink, unless thou come in with seasonable
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succour.\" And observe how solicitous he is to obtain an answer: \"Be
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not silent to me, as one angry at my prayers, Ps. 80:4. Lord, speak to
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me, answer me with good words and comfortable words (Zec. 1:13); though
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the thing I pray for has not been given me, yet let God speak to me joy
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and gladness, and make me to hear them. Lord, speak for me, in answer to
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my prayers, plead my cause, command deliverances for me, and thus hear
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and answer the voice of my supplications.\" Two things he pleads:-1. The
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sad despair he should be in if God slighted him: \"If thou be silent to
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me, and I have not the tokens of thy favour, I am like those that go
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down into the pit (that is, I am a dead man, lost and undone); if God be
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not my friend, appear not to me and appear not for me, my hope and my
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help will have perished.\" Nothing can be so cutting, so killing, to a
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gracious soul, as the want of God\'s favour and the sense of his
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displeasure. I shall be like those that go down to hell (so some
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understand it); for what is the misery of the damned but this, that God
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is ever silent to them and deaf to their cry? Those are in some measure
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qualified for God\'s favour, and may expect it, who are thus possessed
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with a dread of his wrath, and to whom his frowns are worse than death.
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2. The good hopes he had that God would favour him: I lift up my hands
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towards thy holy oracle, which denotes, not only an earnest desire, but
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an earnest expectation, thence to receive an answer of peace. The most
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holy place within the veil is here, as elsewhere, called the oracle;
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there the ark and the mercy-seat were, there God was said to dwell
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between the cherubim, and thence he spoke to his people, Num. 7:89. That
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was a type of Christ, and it is to him that we must lift up our eyes and
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hands, for through him all good comes from God to us. It was also a
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figure of heaven (Heb. 9:24); and from God as our Father in heaven we
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are taught to expect an answer to our prayers. The scriptures are called
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the oracles of God, and to them we must have an eye in our prayers and
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expectations. There is the word on which God hath caused and encouraged
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us to hope.
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`II.` He deprecates the doom of wicked people, as before (Ps. 26:9,
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\"Gather not my soul with sinners): Lord, I attend thy holy oracle, draw
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me not away from that with the wicked, and with the workers of
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iniquity,\" v. 3. 1. \"Save me from being entangled in the snares they
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have laid for me. They flatter and cajole me, and speak peace to me; but
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they have a design upon me, for mischief is in their heart; they aim to
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disturb me, nay, to destroy me. Lord, suffer me not to be drawn away and
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ruined by their cursed plots; for they have, can have, no power, no
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success, against me, except it be given them from above.\" 2. \"Save me
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from being infected with their sins and from doing as they do. Let me
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not be drawn away by their fallacious arguments, or their allurements,
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from the holy oracle (where I desire to dwell all the days of my life),
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to practise any wicked works;\" see Ps. 141:4. \"Lord, never leave me to
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myself, to use such arts of deceit and treachery for my safety as they
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use to my ruin. Let no event of Providence be an invincible temptation
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to me, to draw me either into the imitation or into the interest of
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wicked people.\" Good men dread the way of sinners; the best are
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sensible of the danger they are in of being drawn aside into it; and
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therefore we should all pray earnestly to God for his grace to keep us
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in our integrity. 3. \"Save me from being involved in their doom; let me
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not be led forth with the workers of iniquity, for I am not one of those
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that speak peace while war is in their hearts.\" Note, Those that are
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careful not to partake with sinners in their sins have reason to hope
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that they shall not partake with them in their plagues, Rev. 18:4.
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`III.` He imprecates the just judgments of God upon the workers of
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iniquity (v. 4): Give them according to their deeds. This is not the
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language of passion or revenge, nor is it inconsistent with the duty of
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praying for our enemies. But, 1. Thus he would show how far he was from
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complying with the workers of iniquity, and with what good reason he had
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begged not to be drawn away with them, because he was convinced that
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they could not be made more miserable then to be dealt with according to
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their deeds. 2. Thus he would express his zeal for the honour of God\'s
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justice in the governing world. \"Lord, they think all well that they
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do, and justify themselves in their wicked practices. Lord, give them
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after the work of their hands, and so undeceive those about them, who
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think there is no harm in what they do because it goes unpunished,\" Ps.
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94:1,2. 3. This prayer is a prophecy that God will, sooner or later,
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render to all impenitent sinners according to their deserts. If what has
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been done amiss be not undone by repentance, there will certainly come a
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reckoning day, when God will render to every man who persists in his
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evil deeds according to them. It is a prophecy particularly of the
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destruction of destroyers: \"They speak peace to their neighbours, but
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mischief is in their hearts; Lord, give them according to their deeds,
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let the spoilers be spoiled, and let those be treacherously dealt with
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who have thus dealt treacherously;\" see Isa. 33:1; Rev. 18:6; 13:10.
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Observe, He foretels that God will reward them, not only according to
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their deed, but according to the wickedness of their endeavours; for
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sinners shall be reckoned with, not only for the mischief they have
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done, but for the mischief they would have done, which they designed,
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and did what they could to effect. And, if God go by this rule in
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dealing with the wicked, surely he will do so in dealing with the
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righteous, and will reward them, not only for the good they have done,
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but for the good they have endeavoured to do, though they could not
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accomplish it.
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`IV.` He foretels their destruction for their contempt of God and his
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hand (v. 5): \"Because they regard not the works of the Lord and the
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operations of his hands, by which he manifests himself and speaks to the
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children of men, he will destroy them in this world and in the other,
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and not build them up.\" Note, A stupid regardlessness of the works of
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God is the cause of their ruin. Why do men question the being or
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attributes of God, but because they do not duly regard his handiworks,
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which declare his glory, and in which the invisible things of him are
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clearly seen? Why do men forget God, and live without him, nay, affront
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God, and live in rebellion against him, but because they consider not
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the instances of that wrath of his which is revealed from heaven against
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all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men? Why do the enemies of God\'s
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people hate and persecute them, and devise mischief against them, but
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because they regard not the works God has wrought for his church, by
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which he has made it appear how dear it is to him? See Isa. 5:12.
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In singing this we must arm ourselves against all temptations to join
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with the workers of iniquity, and animate ourselves against all the
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troubles we may be threatened with by the workers of iniquity.
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### Verses 6-9
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In these verses,
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`I.` David gives God thanks for the audience of his prayers as
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affectionately as a few verses before he had begged it: Blessed be the
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Lord, v. 6. How soon are the saints\' sorrows turned into songs and
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their prayers into praises! It was in faith that David prayed (v. 2),
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Hear the voice of my supplications; and by the same faith he gives
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thanks (v. 6) that God has heard the voice of his supplications. Note,
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`1.` Those that pray in faith may rejoice in hope. \"He hath heard me
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(graciously accepted me) and I am as sure of a real answer as if I had
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it already.\" 2. What we win by prayer we must wear by praise. Has God
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heard our supplications? Let us then bless his name.
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`II.` He encourages himself to hope in God for the perfecting of every
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thing that concerned him. Having given to God the glory of his grace (v.
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6), he is humbly bold to take the comfort of it, v. 7. This is the
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method of attaining peace: let us begin with praise that is attainable.
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Let us first bless God and then bless ourselves. Observe, 1. His
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dependence upon God: \"The Lord is my strength, to support me, and carry
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me on, through all my services and sufferings. He is my shield, to
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protect me from all the malicious designs of my enemies against me. I
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have chosen him to be so, I have always found him so, and I expect he
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will still be so.\" 2. His experience of the benefits of that
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dependence: \"My heart trusted in him, and in his power and promise; and
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it has not been in vain to do so, for I am helped, I have been often
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helped; not only God has given to me, in his due time, the help I
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trusted to him for, but my very trusting in him has helped me, in the
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mean time, and kept me from fainting.\" Ps. 27:13. The very actings of
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faith are present aids to a dropping spirit, and often help it at a dead
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lift. 3. His improvement of this experience. `(1.)` He had the pleasure of
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it: Therefore my heart greatly rejoices. The joy of a believer is seated
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in the heart, while, in the laughter of the fool, the heart is
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sorrowful. It is great joy, joy unspeakable and full of glory. The heart
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that truly believes shall in due time greatly rejoice; it is joy and
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peace in believing that we are to expect. `(2.)` God shall have the praise
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of it: when my heart greatly rejoices, with my song will I praise him.
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This must we express our gratitude; it is the least we can do; and
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others will hereby be invited and encouraged to trust in him too.
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`III.` He pleases himself with the interest which all good people,
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through Christ, have in God (v. 8): \"The Lord is their strength; not
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mine only, but the strength of every believer.\" Note, The saints
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rejoice in their friends\' comforts as well as their own; for, as we
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have not the less benefit from the light of the sun, so neither from the
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light of Gods\' countenance, for others\' sharing therein; for we are
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sure there is enough for all and enough for each. This is our communion
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with all saints, that God is their strength and ours, Christ their Lord
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and ours, 1 Co. 1:2. He is their strength, the strength of all Israel,
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because he is the saving strength of his anointed, that is, 1. Of David
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in the type. God, in strengthening him that was their king and fought
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their battles, strengthened the whole kingdom. He calls himself God\'s
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anointed because it was the unction he had received that exposed him to
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the envy of his enemies, and therefore entitled him to the divine
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protection. 2. Of Christ, his anointed, his Messiah, in the anti-type.
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God was his saving strength, qualified him for his undertaking and
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carried him through it; see Ps. 89:21; Isa. 49:5; 50:7, 9. And so he
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becomes their strength, the strength of all the saints; he strengthened
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him that is the church\'s head, and from him diffuses strength to all
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the members, has commanded his strength, and so strengthens what he has
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wrought for us; Ps. 68:28; 80:17, 18.
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`IV.` He concludes with a short but comprehensive prayer for the church
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of God, v. 9. He prays for Israel, not as his people (\"save my people,
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and bless my inheritance\"), though they were so, but, \"thine.\" God\'s
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interest in them lay nearer his heart than his own. We are thy people is
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a good plea, Isa. 64:9; 63:19. I am thine, save me. God\'s people are
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his inheritance, dear to him, and precious in his eyes; what little
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glory he has from this world he has from them. The Lord\'s portion is
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his people. That which he begs of God for them is, 1. That he would save
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them from their enemies and the dangers they were exposed to. 2. That he
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would bless them with all good, flowing from his favour, in performance
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of his promise, and amounting to a happiness for them. 3. That he would
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feed them, bless them with plenty, and especially the plenty of his
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ordinances, which are food to the soul. Rule them; so the margin.
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\"Direct their counsels and actions aright, and overrule their affairs
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for good. Feed them, and rule them; sets pastors, set rulers, over them,
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that shall do their office with wisdom and understanding.\" 4. That he
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would lift them up for ever, lift them up out of their troubles and
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distresses, and do this, not only for those of that age, but for his
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people in every age to come, even to the end. \"Lift them up into thy
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glorious kingdom, lift them up as high as heaven.\" There, and there
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only, will the saints be lifted up for ever, never more to sink or be
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depressed. Observe, Those, and those only, whom God feeds and rules, who
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are willing to be taught, and guided, and governed, by him, shall be
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saved, and blessed, and lifted up for ever.
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