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Psalm Two
Psalm 2
Chapter Contents
Threatenings against the enemies of Christ's kingdom.
(1-6) Promise to Christ as the Head of this kingdom. (7-9) Counsel to all
to
espouse its interests. (10-12)
Commentary on Psalm 2:1-6
(Read Psalm 2:1-6)
We are here told who would appear as adversaries to
Christ. As this world is the kingdom of Satan
unconverted men
of every rank
party
and character
are stirred up by him to oppose the cause of God. But the
rulers of the earth generally have been most active. The truths and precepts of
Christianity are against ambitious projects and worldly lusts. We are told what
they aim at in this opposition. They would break asunder the bands of
conscience
and the cords of God's commandments; they will not receive
but
cast them away as far as they can. These enemies can show no good cause for
opposing so just and holy a government
which
if received by all
would bring
a heaven upon earth. They can hope for no success in so opposing so powerful a
kingdom. The Lord Jesus has all power both in heaven and in earth
and is Head
over all things to the church
notwithstanding the restless endeavours of his
enemies. Christ's throne is set up in his church
that is
in the hearts of all
believers.
Commentary on Psalm 2:7-9
(Read Psalm 2:7-9)
The kingdom of the Messiah is founded upon an eternal
decree of God the Father. This our Lord Jesus often referred to
as what he
governed himself by. God hath said unto him
Thou art my Son
and it becomes
each of us to say to him
Thou art my Lord
my Sovereign'. The Son
in asking
the heathen for his inheritance
desires their happiness in him; so that he
pleads for them
ever lives to do so
and is able to save to the uttermost
and
he shall have multitudes of willing
loyal subjects
among them. Christians are
the possession of the Lord Jesus; they are to him for a name and a praise. God
the Father gives them to him
when
by his Spirit and grace
he works upon them
to submit to the Lord Jesus.
Commentary on Psalm 2:10-12
(Read Psalm 2:10-12)
Whatever we rejoice in
in this world
it must always be
with trembling
because of the uncertainty of all things in it. To welcome
Jesus Christ
and to submit to him
is our wisdom and interest. Let him be very
dear and precious; love him above all
love him in sincerity
love him much
as
she did
to whom much was forgiven
and
in token of it
kissed his feet
Luke 7:38. And with a kiss of loyalty take this
yoke upon you
and give up yourselves to be governed by his laws
disposed of
by his providence
and entirely devoted to his cause. Unbelief is a sin against
the remedy. It will be utter destruction to yourselves; lest ye perish in the
way of your sins
and from the way of your vain hopes; lest your way perish
lest you prove to have missed the way of happiness. Christ is the way; take
heed lest ye be cut off from Him as your way to God. They thought themselves in
the way; but neglecting Christ
they perish from it. Blessed will those be in
the day of wrath
who
by trusting in Christ
have made him their Refuge.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 2
Verse 1
[1] Why
do the heathen rage
and the people imagine a vain thing?
Heathen —
Who did so against David
2 Samuel 5:6
17; 1 Chronicles 14:8
and against Christ
Luke 18:32; Acts 4:25
etc.
Verse 2
[2] The kings of the earth set themselves
and the rulers take counsel
together
against the LORD
and against his anointed
saying
The kings —
Herod
and Pilate and others with or after them.
Earth — So
called in way of contempt and to shew their madness in opposing the God of
heaven.
Set —
The word denotes the combination of their counsels and forces.
Anointed —
Against the king whom God hath chosen and exalted.
Verse 3
[3] Let
us break their bands asunder
and cast away their cords from us.
And cast —
The same thing expressed with more emphasis. Let us not only break off their
yoke and the cords by which it is fastened upon us
but let us cast them far
away.
Verse 4
[4] He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision.
Sitteth — As
the king of the whole world.
Heavens — As
an evidence both of God's clear and certain knowledge of all things that are
done below
and of his sovereign and irresistible power.
Laugh —
Shall despise them and all their crafty devices.
Verse 6
[6] Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion.
Yet —
Notwithstanding all their artifices and combinations.
My king —
Who ruleth in my stead
and according to my will
and for my glory.
Zion —
Over my church and people. Zion strictly taken
was an hill on the north part
of Jerusalem
where there was a strong fort
called the city of David
but in a
more large sense it is put for the city of Jerusalem
for the temple of
Jerusalem
built upon the hill of Moriah
which was either a part of mount
Sion
or adjoining to it; for the church of the Jews
and for the Christian
church.
Verse 7
[7] I
will declare the decree: the LORD hath said unto me
Thou art my Son; this day
have I begotten thee.
The decree —
The will and appointment of God concerning this.
My sin —
Which tho' it may in some sort be said to
or of David
yet much more properly
belongs to Christ
who is commonly known by this title both in the Old and New
Testament
and to whom this title is expressly appropriated by the holy ghost
who is the best interpreter of his own words
Acts 13:33; Hebrews 1:5.
This day —
This may be understood either
1. Of his eternal generation. This day
from all
eternity
which is well described by this day
because in eternity there is no
succession
no [yesterday
] no [tomorrow
] but it is all as one continued day
or moment without change or flux; or
2. Of the manifestation of Christ's
eternal son-ship in time; which was done both in his birth and life
when his
being the son of God was demonstrated by the testimony of the angel
Luke 1:32
and of God the Father
Matthew 3:17; 17:5
and by his own words and works; and in his
resurrection
which seems to be here mainly intended
of which day this very
place is expounded
Acts 13:33. When Christ was in a most solemn
manner declared to be the son of God with power
Romans 1:4.
Verse 8
[8] Ask
of me
and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance
and the
uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession.
Earth —
Not only the Jewish nation
but the whole world.
Verse 9
[9] Thou
shalt break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a
potter's vessel.
Them —
Those that will not quietly submit to thee
shall be crushed and destroyed by
thee. This was in part fulfilled
when the Jews who persisted in unbelief
were
destroyed by the Romans power: And in the destruction of the Pagan power
when
the Christian religion came to be established. But it will not be compleatly
fulfilled
'till all opposing power and principality be put down.
Verse 10
[10] Be
wise now therefore
O ye kings: be instructed
ye judges of the earth.
Now —
While you have time for repentance and submission.
Verse 11
[11]
Serve the LORD with fear
and rejoice with trembling.
Fear —
With an awful sense of his great and glorious majesty.
Rejoice — Do
not esteem his yoke your dishonour and grievance; but rejoice in this
inestimable grace and benefit.
Trembling —
This is added to warn them of taking heed that they do not turn this grace of
God into wantonness.
Verse 12
[12] Kiss
the Son
lest he be angry
and ye perish from the way
when his wrath is
kindled but a little. Blessed are all they that put their trust in him.
Kiss — In
token of your subjection and adoration; whereof this was a sign among the
eastern nations.
The son —
The son of God.
Ye perish — Be
taken out of the way by death or destruction.
Wrath —
The least degree of his anger is terrible.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Psalm 2 - The Ultimate Victory Of The Messiah
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
1) To note the Messianic nature of this psalm
2) To consider its fulfillment as expounded by Jesus and His apostles
in the New Testament
3) To take comfort in knowing that the Messiah has ultimate control
over world affairs
SUMMARY
This psalm is Messianic in nature
with its theme being "The Ultimate
Victory Of The Lord's Anointed." It is quoted by the apostles and
early church in their prayer for help against persecution (cf. Ac 4:24-
30) in which they applied it to the efforts of Pontius Pilate along
with Gentiles and those of Israel who crucified Christ. From this
reference in Acts we also learn that David was the author.
The psalm is divided into four sections (or strophes)
in each of which
there is a different voice that speaks. The first strophe begins with
the psalmist observing the efforts of the nations and their leaders to
resist the Lord and His Anointed. They declare their desire to break
away from the cords that bind them (1-3). The second strophe depicts
the Lord in heaven as laughing in derision over their futile efforts.
In righteous anger He declares that despite their resistance He has
installed His King (i.e.
His Anointed One) on Zion
His holy hill (4-
6).
In the third stanza or strophe
the Anointed One speaks
in which He
declares the decree of the Lord. He is God's begotten Son
who upon
request is given the nations and ends of the earth as an inheritance
which He will rule with a rod of iron (7-9). From Jesus and His
apostles
we learn that this rule began when He ascended to heaven and
sat down at the right hand of God (cf. Mt 28:18; Ep 1:20-22; 1 Pe 3:22;
Re 1:5; 2:26-27).
The psalm ends with the fourth strophe containing the psalmist's
counsel of what the leaders of the nations should do: Worship the Lord
with reverence
and do homage to the Son lest they incur His righteous
anger. For all who put their trust in the Anointed One
they shall be
blessed (10-12).
OUTLINE
I. THE NATIONS' RESISTANCE (2:1-3)
A. THE PSALMIST'S INQUIRY (1)
1. Why do the nations rage?
2. Why do the people plot a vain thing?
B. THE PSALMIST'S OBSERVATION (2-3)
1. Against the Lord and His Anointed...
a. The kings of the earth set themselves
b. The rulers take counsel together
2. Against the Lord and His Anointed they say...
a. "Let us break Their bonds in pieces"
b. "(Let us) cast away Their cords from us"
II. THE LORD'S REJOINDER (2:4-6)
A. THE LORD'S REACTION (4)
1. He who sits in the heaven shall laugh
2. The Lord shall hold them in deep derision
B. THE LORD'S REPLY (5-6)
1. He shall speak to them in His wrath
2. He will distress them in His deep displeasure
3. He will proclaim: "Yet I have set My King on My holy hill Of
Zion "
III. THE MESSIAH'S RESPONSE (2:7-9)
A. THE DECREE GIVEN HIM (7)
1. "You are My Son"
2. "Today I have begotten You"
B. THE AUTHORITY GIVEN HIM (8-9)
1. The extent of His rule
a. "The nations for Your inheritance"
b. "The ends of the earth for Your possession"
2. The power of His rule
a. "You shall break them with a rod of iron"
b. "You shall dash them to pieces like a potter's vessel"
IV. THE PSALMIST'S REPROACH (2:10-12)
A. TO KINGS AND JUDGES (10-11)
1. Be wise
be instructed
2. Serve the LORD with fear
3. Rejoice with trembling
B. TO THEM AND ALL (12)
1. Kiss the Son lest He be angry
a. And you perish [in] the way
b. When His wrath is kindled but a little.
2. Blessed are all those who put their trust in Him.
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
- The nations' resistance (1-3)
- The Lord's rejoinder (4-6)
- The Messiah's response (7-9)
- The psalmist's reproach (10-12)
2) Against whom are the kings and rulers taking counsel? (2)
- The Lord and His Anointed
3) What are the kings and rulers saying? (3)
- Let us break Their bonds in pieces
and cast away Their cords
4) What reaction does this prompt from the Lord in heaven? (4-5)
- Laughter and derision
- Wrath and displeasure
5) What will the Lord say to these kings and rulers? (6)
- I have set My King on My holy hill of Zion
6) How will the Anointed One (i.e. the Messiah) respond? (7)
- He will declare the decree spoken to Him by the Lord (God)
7) Who is the Anointed One? (7)
- God's begotten Son
8) As applied by Paul
what "day" was the Messiah "begotten" by God?
(7; cf. Ac 13:33)
- The day of His resurrection from the dead
9) What did the Lord promise His Anointed One? (8)
- The nations and ends of the earth for His inheritance and
possession
10) According to Jesus and His apostles
has He been given this
authority? If so
when? (cf. Mt 28:18; Ep 1:20-22; 1 Pe 3:22;
Re 1:5; 2:26-27)
- Yes; when He ascended to heaven and set down at the right hand of
God
11) What will He do to the nations with this authority? (9; cf. Re 2:
26-27)
- Break them with a rod of iron
- Dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel
12) What wisdom and instruction does the psalmist give to kings and
judges? (10-12)
- Serve the Lord with fear
- Rejoice with trembling
- Kiss (do homage to) the Son
- Lest He be angry and you perish when His wrath is kindled
13) What of those who put their trust in the Son? (12)
- They will be blessed
--《Executable
Outlines》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. We
shall not greatly err in our summary of this sublime Psalm if we call it
THE PSALM OF MESSIAH THE PRINCE; for it sets forth
as in a wondrous vision
the tumult of the people against the Lord's anointed
the determinate purpose
of God to exalt his own Son
and the ultimate reign of that Son over all his
enemies. Let us read it with the eye of faith
beholding
as in a glass
the
final triumph of our Lord Jesus Christ over all his enemies. Lowth has the
following remarks upon this Psalm: "The establishment of David upon his
throne
notwithstanding the opposition made to it by his enemies
is the subject
of the Psalm. David sustains in it a twofold character
literal and
allegorical. If we read over the Psalm
first with an eye to the literal David
the meaning is obvious
and put beyond all dispute by the sacred history. There
is indeed an uncommon glow in the expression and sublimity in the figures
and
the diction is now and then exaggerated
as it were on purpose to intimate
and
lead us to the contemplation of higher and more important matters concealed
within. In compliance with this admonition
if we take another survey of the
Psalm as relative to the person and concerns of the spiritual David
a noble
series of events immediately rises to view
and the meaning becomes more
evident
as well as more exalted. The colouring which may perhaps seem too bold
and glaring for the king of Israel
will no longer appear so when laid upon his
great Antitype. After we have thus attentively considered the subjects apart
let us look at them together
and we shall behold the full beauty and majesty
of this most charming poem. We shall perceive the two senses very distinct from
each other
yet conspiring in perfect harmony
and bearing a wonderful
resemblance in every feature and lineament
while the analogy between them is
so exactly preserved
that either may pass for the original from whence the
other was copied. New light is continually cast upon the phraseology
fresh
weight and dignity are added to the sentiments
till
gradually ascending from
things below to things above
from human affairs to those that are Divine
they
bear the great important theme upwards with them
and at length place it in the
height and brightness of heaven."
DIVISION.
This Psalm will be best understood if it be viewed as a four-fold picture.
(In verses 1
2
3) the Nations are raging; (4 to 6) the Lord in heaven derides
them; (7 to 9) the Son proclaims the decree; and (from 10 to end) advice is
given to the kings to yield obedience to the Lord's anointed. This division is
not only suggested by the sense
but is warranted by the poetic form of the
Psalm
which naturally falls into four stanzas of three verses each.
EXPOSITION
Verse 1. We
have
in these first three verses
a description of the hatred of human nature
against the Christ of God. No better comment is needed upon it than the apostolic
song in Acts 4:27
28: "For of a truth against thy holy child Jesus
whom
thou hast anointed
both Herod
and Pontius Pilate
with the Gentiles
and the
people of Israel
were gathered together
for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy
counsel determined before to be done." The Psalm begins abruptly with an
angry interrogation; and well it may: it is surely but little to be wondered
at
that the sight of creatures in arms against their God should amaze the
psalmist's mind. We see the heathen raging
roaring like the sea
tossed
to and fro with restless waves
as the ocean in a storm; and then we mark the
people in their hearts imagining a vain thing against God. Where there
is much rage there is generally some folly
and in this case there is an excess
of it. Note
that the commotion is not caused by the people only
but their
leaders foment the rebellion. "The kings of the earth set
themselves." In determined malice they arrayed themselves in
opposition against God. It was not temporary rage
but deep-seated hate
for
they set themselves resolutely to withstand the Prince of Peace. "And
the rulers take counsel together." They go about their warfare
craftily
not with foolish haste
but deliberately. They use all the skill
which art can give. Like Pharaoh
they cry
"Let us deal wisely with
them." O that men were half as careful in God's service to serve him
wisely
as his enemies are to attack his kingdom craftily. Sinners have their
wits about them
and yet saints are dull. But what say they? what is the meaning
of this commotion? "Let us break their bands asunder."
"Let us be free to commit all manner of abominations. Let us be our own
gods. Let us rid ourselves of all restraint." Gathering impudence by the
traitorous proposition of rebellion
they add—"let us cast away;"
as if it were an easy matter — "let us fling off 'their cords from us.'"
What! O ye kings
do ye think yourselves Samsons? and are the bands of
Omnipotence but as green withs before you? Do you dream that you shall snap to
pieces and destroy the mandates of God—the decrees of the Most High—as if they
were but tow? and do ye say
"Let us cast away their cords from us?"
Yes! There are monarchs who have spoken thus
and there are still rebels upon
thrones. However mad the resolution to revolt from God
it is one in which man
has persevered ever since his creation
and he continues in it to this very
day. The glorious reign of Jesus in the latter day will not be consummated
until a terrible struggle has convulsed the nations. His coming will be as a
refiner's fire
and like fuller's soap
and the day thereof shall burn as an
oven. Earth loves not her rightful monarch
but clings to the usurper's sway:
the terrible conflicts of the last days will illustrate both the world's love
of sin and Jehovah's power to give the kingdom to his only Begotten. To a
graceless neck the yoke of Christ is intolerable
but to the saved sinner it is
easy and light. We may judge ourselves by this
do we love that yoke
or do we
wish to cast it from us?
Verse
4. Let us now turn our eyes from the wicked counsel-chamber and raging tumult
of man
to the secret place of the majesty of the Most High. What doth God say?
What will the King do unto the men who reject his only-begotten Son
the Heir
of all things?
Mark
the quiet dignity of the Omnipotent One
and the contempt which he pours upon
the princes and their raging people. He has not taken the trouble to rise up
and do battle with them—he despises them
he knows how absurd
how irrational
how futile are their attempts against him—he therefore laughs at them.
Verse
5. After he has laughed he shall speak; he needs not smite; the breath
of his lips is enough. At the moment when their power is at its height
and
their fury most violent
then shall his Word go forth against them. And
what is it that he says?—it is a very galling sentence— "Yet
"
says he
"despite your malice
despite your tumultuous gatherings
despite
the wisdom of your counsels
despite the craft of your lawgivers
'yet have
I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion'." Is not that a grand
exclamation! He has already done that which the enemy seeks to prevent. While
they are proposing
he has disposed the matter. Jehovah's will is done
and
man's will frets and raves in vain. God's Anointed is appointed
and shall not
be disappointed. Look back through all the ages of infidelity
hearken to the
high and hard things which men have spoken against the Most High
listen to the
rolling thunder of earth's volleys against the Majesty of heaven
and then
think that God is saying all the while
"Yet have I set my kimg upon my
holy hill of Zion." Yet Jesus reigns
yet he sees the travail of his soul
and "his unsuffering kingdom yet shall come" when he shall take unto
himself his great power
and reign from the river unto the ends of the earth.
Even now he reigns in Zion
and our glad lips sound forth the praises of the
Prince of Peace. Greater conflicts may here be foretold
but we may be confident
that victory will be given to our Lord and King. Glorious triumphs are yet to
come; hasten them
we pray thee
O Lord! It is Zion's glory and joy that her
King is in her
guarding her from foes
and filling her with good things. Jesus
sits upon the throne of grace
and the throne of power in the midst of his
church. In him is Zion's best safeguard; let her citizens be glad in him.
"Thy walls
are strength
and at thy gates
A guard of heavenly warriors waits;
Nor shall thy deep foundations move
Fixed on his counsels and his love.
Thy
foes in vain designs engage;
Against his throne in vain they rage
Like rising waves
with angry roar
That dash and die upon the shore."
Verse
7. This Psalm wears something of a dramatic form
for now another person is
introduced as speaking. We have looked into the council-chamber of the wicked
and to the throne of God
and now we behold the Anointed declaring his rights
of sovereignty
and warning the traitors of their doom.
God
has laughed at the counsel and ravings of the wicked
and now Christ the
Anointed himself comes forward
as the Risen Redeemer
"declared to be the
Son of God with power
according to the spirit of holiness
by the resurrection
from the dead." Romans 1:4. Looking into the angry faces of the rebellious
kings
the Anointed One seems to say
"If this sufficeth not to make you
silent
'I will declare the decree'." Now this decree is directly
in conflict with the device of man
for its tenour is the establishment of the
very dominion against which the nations are raving. "Thou art my
Son." Here is a noble proof of the glorious Divinity of our Immanuel.
"For unto which of the angels said he at any time
Thou art my Son
this
day have I begotten thee?" What a mercy to have a Divine Redeemer in whom
to rest our confidence! "This day have I begotten thee." If
this refers to the Godhead of our Lord
let us not attempt to fathom it
for it
is a great truth
a truth reverently to be received
but not irreverently to be
scanned. It may be added
that if this relates to the Begotten One in his human
nature
we must here also rejoice in the mystery
but not attempt to violate
its sanctity by intrusive prying into the secrets of the Eternal God. The
things which are revealed are enough
without venturing into vain speculations.
In attempting to define the Trinity
or unveil the essence of Divinity
many
men have lost themselves: here great ships have foundered. What have we to do in
such a sea with our frail skiffs?
Verse
8. "Ask of me." It was a custom among great kings
to give to
favoured ones whatever they might ask. (See Esther 5:6; Matthew 14:7.) So Jesus
hath but to ask and have. Here he declares that his very enemies are his
inheritance. To their face he declares this decree
and "Lo! here
"
cries the Anointed One
as he holds aloft in that once pierced hand the sceptre
of his power
"He hath given me this
not only the right to be a king
but
the power to conquer." Yes! Jehovah hath given to his Anointed a rod of
iron with which he shall break rebellious nations in pieces
and
despite their
imperial strength
they shall be but as potters' vessels
easily dashed into
shivers
when the rod of iron is in the hand of the omnipotent Son of God.
Those who will not bend must break. Potters' vessels are not to be restored if
dashed in pieces
and the ruin of sinners will be hopeless if Jesus shall smite
them.
"Ye
sinners seek his grace
Whose wrath ye cannot bear;
Fly to the shelter of his cross
And find salvation there."
Verse
10. The scene again changes
and counsel is given to those who have taken
counsel to rebel. They are exhorted to obey
and give the kiss of homage and
affection to him whom they have hated.
"Be
wise."—It is always wise to be willing to be instructed
especially
when such instruction tends to the salvation of the soul. "Be wise now
therefore;" delay no longer
but let good reason weigh with you. Your
warfare cannot succeed
therefore desist and yield cheerfully to him who will
make you bow if you refuse his yoke. O how wise
how infinitely wise is
obedience to Jesus
and how dreadful is the folly of those who continue to be his
enemies! "Serve the Lord with fear;" let reverence and
humility be mingled with your service. He is a great God
and ye are but puny
creatures; bend ye
therefore
in lowly worship
and let a filial fear mingle
with all your obedience to the great Father of the Ages. "Rejoice with
trembling
"—There must ever be a holy fear mixed with the Christian's
joy. This is a sacred compound
yielding a sweet smell
and we must see to it
that we burn no other upon the altar. Fear
without joy
is torment; and joy
without holy fear
would be presumption. Mark the solemn argument for
reconciliation and obedience. It is an awful thing to perish in the
midst of sin
in the very way of rebellion; and yet how easily could his
wrath destroy us suddenly. It needs not that his anger should be heated
seven times hotter; let the fuel kindle but a little
and we are
consumed. O sinner! Take heed of the terrors of the Lord; for "our God is
a consuming fire." Note the benediction with which the Psalm closes:—"Blessed
are all they that put their trust in him." Have we a share in this
blessedness? Do we trust in him? Our faith may be slender as a spider's
thread; but if it be real
we are in our measure blessed. The more we trust
the more fully shall we know this blessedness. We may therefore close the Psalm
with the prayer of the apostles:—"Lord
increase our faith."
The
first Psalm was a contrast between the righteous man and the sinner; the second
Psalm is a contrast between the tumultuous disobedience of the ungodly world
and the sure exaltation of the righteous Son of God. In the first Psalm
we saw
the wicked driven away like chaff; in the second Psalm we see them broken in
pieces like a potter's vessel. In the first Psalm
we beheld the righteous like
a tree planted by the rivers of water; and here
we contemplate Christ the
Covenant Head of the righteous
made better than a tree planted by the rivers
of water
for he is made king of all the islands
and all the heathen
bow before him and kiss the dust; while he himself gives a blessing to all
those who put their trust in him. The two Psalms are worthy of the very deepest
attention; they are
in fact
the preface to the entire Book of Psalms
and were
by some of the ancients
joined into one. They are
however
two Psalms; for
Paul speaks of this as the second Psalm. (Acts 13:33.) The first shows us the
character and lot of the righteous; and the next teaches us that the Psalms are
Messianic
and speak of Christ the Messiah—the Prince who shall reign from the
river even unto the ends of the earth. That they have both a far-reaching
prophetic outlook we are well assured
but we do not feel competent to open up
that matter
and must leave it to abler hands.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Verse 1. "Why
do nations make a noise
" tumultuate
or rage? The Hebrew verb is not
expressive of an internal feeling
but of the outward agitation which denotes
it. There may be an allusion to the rolling and roaring of the sea
often used
as an emblem of popular commotion
both in the Scriptures and the classics. The
past tense of this verb (Why have they raged?) refers to the commotion
as already begun
while the future in the next clause expresses its continuance.
J. A. Alexander
D.D.
1850.
Verse 1. "Rage."
The word with which Paul renders this in the Greek denotes rage
pride
and
restiveness
as of horses that neigh
and rush into the battle. 'Efruaxag
from
Fruassw
to snort or neigh
properly applied to a high-mettled horse. See Acts
4:25.
Verse 1. "A
vain thing." A medal was struck by Diocletian
which still remains
bearing the inscription
"The name of Christians being extinguished."
And in Spain
two monumental pillars were raised
on which were written:—I.
"Diocletian Jovian Maximian Herculeus Caesares Augusti
for having
extended the Roman Empire in the east and the west
and for having extinguished
the name of Christians
who brought the Republic to ruin." II.
"Diocletian Jovian Maximian Herculeus Caesares Augusti
for having adopted
Galerius in the east
for having everywhere abolished the superstition of
Christ
for having extended the worship of the gods." As a modern writer
has elegantly observed: "We have here a monument raised by Paganism
over
the grave of its vanquished foe. But in this 'the people imagined a vain
thing;' so far from being deceased
Christianity was on the eve of its final
and permanent triumph
and the stone guarded a sepulchre empty as the urn which
Electra washed with her tears. Neither in Spain
nor elsewhere
can be pointed
out the burial place of Christianity; it is not
for the living have no
tomb.'"
Verses 1-4. Herod
the fox
plotted against Christ
to hinder the course of his ministry and
mediatorship
but he could not perform his enterprise; 'tis so all along
therefore it is said
"Why do the heathen imagine a vain thing?"
A vain thing
because a thing successless
their hands could not perform it. It
was vain
not only because there was no true ground of reason why they should
imagine or do such a thing
but vain also because they laboured in vain
they
could not do it
and therefore it follows
"He that sitteth in the
heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision." The Lord
sees what fools they are
and men (yea
themselves) shall see it. The prophet
gives us a elegant description to this purpose. Isaiah 59:5
6. "They
weave the spider's web . . . Their webs shall not become garments
neither shall they cover themselves with their works." As if he had said
they have been devising and setting things in a goodly frame to catch flies;
they have been spinning a fine thread out of their brains
as the spider doth
out of her bowels; such is their web
but when they have their web they cannot
cut it out
or make it up into a garment. They shall go naked and cold
notwithstanding all their spinning and weaving
all their plotting and
devising. The next broom that comes will sweep away all their webs and the
spiders too
except they creep apace. God loves and delights to cross worldly
proverbs and worldly craft. Joseph Caryl
1647.
Verse 2. The many
had done their part
and now the mighty show themselves. John Trapp.
Verse 2. "They
banded themselves against the Lord
and against his Anointed." But why
did they band themselves against the Lord
or against his Anointed? What was
their desire of him? To have his goods? No
he had none for himself; but they
were richer than he. To have his liberty? Nay
that would not suffice them
for
they had bound him before. To bring the people unto dislike of him? Nay
that
would not serve them
for they had done so already
until even his disciples
were fled from him. What would they have
then? his blood? Yea
"they took
counsel
" saith Matthew
"to put him to death." They had the
devil's mind
which is not satisfied but with death. And how do they contrive
it? He saith
"they took counsel about it." Henry Smith
1578
Verse 2. "Against
Jehovah and against his Anointed." What an honour it was to David to
be thus publicly associated with Jehovah! And because he was HIS anointed
to
be an object of hatred and scorn to the ungodly world! If this very
circumstance fearfully augmented the guilt
and sealed the doom of these
infatuated heathen
surely it was that which above everything else would
preserve the mind of David calm and serene
yea
peaceful and joyful
notwithstanding the proud and boastful vauntiness of his enemies. . . .When
writing this Psalm David was like a man in a storm
who hears only the roaring
of the tempest
or sees nothing but the raging billows threatening destruction
on every side of him. And yet his faith enabled him to say
"The people
imagine a vain thing." They cannot succeed. They cannot defeat the
counsels of heaven. They cannot injure the Lord's Anointed. David Pitcairn
1851.
Verse 3. Resolved
they were to run riot
as lawless
and aweless
and therefore they slander the
sweet laws of Christ's kingdom as bonds and thick cords
which are signs of
slavery. Jeremiah 27: 2
6
7. But what saith our Saviour? "My yoke is
easy
and my burden is light." It is no more burden to a regenerate man
than wings to a bird. The law of Christ is no more as bands and cords
but as
girdles and garters which gird up his loins and expedite his course. John
Trapp.
Verse 4. "He
that sitteth in the heavens." Hereby it is clearly intimated
(1) that
the Lord is far above all their malice and power
(2) that he seeth all their
plots
looking down on all; (3) that he is of omnipotent power
and so can do
with his enemies as he lists. "Our God is in the heavens: he hath done
whatsoever he pleased." Psalm 115:3. Arthur Jackson
1643.
Verse 4. "He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh
" etc. Sinners' follies are
the just sport of God's infinite wisdom and power; and those attempts of the
kingdom of Satan
which in our eyes are formidable
in his are despicable. Matthew
Henry.
Verse 4. "He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh." They scoff at us
God laughs
at them. Laugh? This seems a hard word at the first view: are the injuries of
his saints
the cruelties of their enemies
the derision
the persecution of
all that are round about us
no more but matter of laughter? Severe Cato
thought that laughter did not become the gravity of Roman consuls; that it is a
diminution of states
as another told princes
and it is attributed to the
Majesty of heaven? According to our capacities
the prophet describes God
as
ourselves would be in a merry disposition
deriding vain attempts. He laughs
but it is in scorn; he scorns
but it is with vengeance. Pharaoh imagined that
by drowning the Israelite males
he had found a way to root their name from the
earth; but when at the same time
his own daughter
in his own court gave
princely education to Moses
their deliverer
did not God Laugh?
Short
is the joy of the wicked. Is Dagon put up to his place again? God's smile shall
take off his head and his hands
and leave him neither wit to guide nor power
to subsist. . . . . We may not judge of God's works until the fifth act: the
case
deplorable and desperate in outward appearance
may with one smile from
heaven find a blessed issue. He permitted his temple to be sacked and rifled
the holy vessels to be profaned and caroused in; but did not God's smile make
Belshazzar to tremble at the handwriting on the wall? Oh
what are his frowns
if his smiles be so terrible! Thomas Adams.
Verse 4. The
expression
"He that sitteth in the heavens
" at once fixes
our thoughts on a being infinitely exalted above man
who is of the earth
earthy. And when it is said
"HE shall laugh
" this word is
designed to convey to our minds the idea
that the greatest confederacies
amongst kings and peoples
and their most extensive and vigorous preparations
to defeat HIS purposes or to injure HIS servants
are in HIS sight altogether
insignificant and worthless. HE looks upon their poor and puny efforts
not
only without uneasiness or fear
but HE laughs at their folly; HE treats their
impotency with derision. He knows how HE can crush them like a moth when HE
pleases
or consume them in a moment with the breath of HIS mouth. How
profitable it is for us to be reminded of truths such as these! Ah! it is
indeed "a vain thing" for the potsherds of the earth to strive
with the glorious Majesty of Heaven. David Pitcairn.
Verse 4. "The
Lord
" in Hebrew
Adonai
mystically signifieth my stays
or my
sustainers—my pillars. Our English word "Lord" hath much the same
force
being contracted of the old Saxon word "Llaford
" or
"Hlafford
" which cometh from "Laef
" to sustain
refresh
cherish. Henry Ainsworth.
Verse 4. "He
that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh at them: the Lord shall have them in
derision." This tautology or repetition of the same thing
which is
frequent in the Scriptures
is a sign of the thing being established: according
to the authority of the patriarch Joseph (Genesis 41:32)
where
having
interpreted the dreams of Pharaoh
he said
"and for that the dream was
doubled unto Pharaoh twice; it is because the thing is established by God
and
God will shortly bring it to pass." And therefore
here also
"shall
laugh at them
" and "shall have them in derision
" is
a repetition to show that there is not a doubt to be entertained that all these
things will most surely come to pass. And the gracious Spirit does all this for
our comfort and consolation
that we may not faint under temptation
but lift
up our heads with the most certain hope; because
"he that shall come will
come
and will not tarry." Hebrews 10:37. Martin Luther.
Verse 5. "Vex
them;" either by horror of conscience
or corporal plagues; one way or
the other he will have his pennyworths of them
as he always has had the
persecutors of his people. John Trapp.
Verses 5
9. It is easy
for God to destroy his foes. . . . . Behold Pharaoh
his wise men
his hosts
and his horses plouting and plunging
and sinking like lead in the Red sea.
Here is the end of one of the greatest plots ever formed against God's chosen.
Of thirty Roman emperors
governors of provinces
and others high in office
who distinguished themselves by their zeal and bitterness in persecuting the
early Christians
one became speedily deranged after some atrocious cruelty
one was slain by his own son
one became blind
the eyes of one started out of
his head
one was drowned
one was strangled
one died in a miserable
captivity
one fell dead in a manner that will not bear recital
one died of so
loathsome a disease that several of his physicians were put to death because
they could not abide the stench that filled his room
two committed suicide
a
third attempted it
but had to call for help to finish the work
five were
assassinated by their own people or servants
five others died the most
miserable and excruciating deaths
several of them having an untold
complication of diseases
and eight were killed in battle
or after being taken
prisoners. Among these was Julian the apostate. In the days of his prosperity
he is said to have pointed his dagger to heaven defying the Son of God
whom he
commonly called the Galilean. But when he was wounded in battle
he saw that
all was over with him
and he gathered up his clotted blood
and threw it into
the air
exclaiming
"Thou hast conquered
O thou Galilean." Voltaire
has told us of the agonies of Charles IX. of France
which drove the blood
through the pores of the skin of that miserable monarch
after his cruelties
and treachery to the Hugenots. William S. Plumer
D.D.
L.L.D.
1867.
Verse 6. "Yet
have I set my King." Notice—1. The royal office and character of our
glorious Redeemer: he is a King
"This name he hath on his vesture and on
his thigh." Revelation 19:16. 2. The authority by which he reigns; he is "my
King
" says God the Father
and I have set him up from everlasting:
"The Father judgeth no man; but hath committed all judgment unto the
Son." The world disowns his authority
but I own it; I have set him
I
have "given him to be head over all things to the church." 3. His
particular kingdom over which he rules; it is over "my holy hill of
Zion" — an eminent type of the gospel church. The temple was built
upon Mount Zion and therefore called a holy hill. Christ's throne is in
his church
it is his head-quarters
and the place of his peculiar residence.
Notice the firmness of the divine purpose with respect unto this matter. "Yet
have I set" him "King;" i.e.
whatever be the
plots of hell and earth to the contrary
he reigns by his Father's ordination. Stephen
Charnock
1628-1680.
Verse 6. "Yet
have I set my KING
" etc.—Jesus Christ is a threefold King. First
his enemies' King; secondly
his saints' King; thirdly
his
Father's King.
First
Christ is his enemies' King
that is
he is King over his enemies. Christ is a
King above all kings. What are all the mighty men
the great
the honourable
men of the earth to Jesus Christ? They are but like a little bubble in the
water; for if all the nations
in comparison to God
be but as the drop of the
bucket
or the dust of the balance
as the prophet speaks in Isaiah 40:15
how
little then must be the kings of the earth! Nay
beloved
Christ Jesus is not
only higher than kings
but he is higher than the angels; yea
he is the head
of angels
and
therefore
all the angels in heaven are commanded to worship
him. Colossians 2:12; Hebrews 1:6. . . . . He is King over all kingdoms
over
all nations
over all governments
over all powers
over all people. Daniel
7:14. . . . . The very heathen are given to Christ
and the uttermost parts of
the earth for his possession. Psalm 2:8.
Secondly.
Jesus Christ is his saints' King. He is King of the bad
and of the good; but
as for the wicked
he rules over them by his power and might; but the saints
he rules in them by his Spirit and graces. Oh! this is Christ's spiritual
kingdom
and here he rules in the hearts of his people
here he rules over
their consciences
over their wills
over their affections
over their
judgments and understandings
and nobody hath anything to do here but Christ.
Christ is not only the King of nations
but the King of saints; the one he
rules over
the other he rules in.
Thirdly.
Jesus Christ is his Father's King too
and so his Father calls him: "I
have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion." Well may he be our King
when he is God's King. But you may say
how is Christ the Father's King?
Because he rules for his Father. There is a twofold kingdom of God committed to
Jesus Christ; first
a spiritual kingdom
by which he rules in the
hearts of his people
and so is King of saints; and
secondly
a
providential kingdom
by which he rules the affairs of this world
and so he is
King of nations. Condensed from William Dyer's Christ's Famous Titles
1665.
Verse 6. "Zion."
The name "Zion" signifies a "distant view" (speculam).
And the church is called "a distant view" (specula)
not only
because it views God and heavenly things by faith (that is
afar off)
being
wise unto the things that are above
not unto those that are of the earth; but
also
because there are within her true viewers
or seers
and watchmen in the
spirit
whose office is to take charge of the people under them
and to watch
against the snares of enemies and sins; and such are called in the Greek
bishops (episkopoi)
that is
spyers or seers; and you may for the same
reason give them
from the Hebrew
the appellation of Zionists or Zioners. Martin
Luther.
Verse 7. The dispute
concerning the eternal filiation of our Lord betrays more of presumptuous
curiosity than of reverent faith. It is an attempt to explain where it is far
better to adore. We could give rival expositions of this verse
but we forbear.
The controversy is one of the most unprofitable which ever engaged the pens of
theologians. C. H. S.
Verse 8. "Ask
of me." The priesthood doth not appear to be settled upon Christ by
any other expression than this
"Ask of me." The Psalm speaks of his
investiture in his kingly office; the apostle refers this to his priesthood
his commission for both took date at the same time; both bestowed
both
confirmed by the same authority. The office of asking is grounded upon the same
authority as the honour of king. Ruling belonged to his royal office
asking to
his priestly. After his resurrection
the Father gives him a power and command
of asking. Stephen Charnock.
Verse 8. As the
limner looks on the person whose picture he would take
and draws his lines to
answer him with the nearest similitude that he can
so God looks on Christ as
the archtype to which he will conform the saint
in suffering
in grace
in
glory; yet so that Christ hath the pre-eminence in all. Every saint must
suffer
because Christ suffered: Christ must not have a delicate body under a
crucified head; yet never any suffered
or could
what he endured. Christ is
holy
and therefore so shall every saint be
but in an inferior degree; an
image cut in clay cannot be so exact as that engraved on gold. Now
our
conformity to Christ appears
that as the promises made to him were performed
upon his prayers to his Father
his promises made to his saints are given to
them in the same way of prayer: "Ask of me
" saith God to his
Son
"and I shall give thee." And the apostle tells us
"Ye have not
because ye ask not." God hath promised support to
Christ in all his conflicts. Isaiah 42:1. "Behold my servant
whom I
uphold;" yet he prayed "with strong cries and tears
" when his
feet stood within the shadow of death. A seed is promised to him
and victory
over his enemies
yet for both these he prays. Christ toward us acts as a king
but toward his Father as a priest. All he speaks to God is by prayer and intercession.
So the saints
the promise makes them kings over their lusts
conquerors over
their enemies; but it makes them priests toward God
by prayer humbly to sue
out these great things given in the promise. William Gurnall
1617-1679.
Verse 8. It will be
observed in our Bible that two words of verse eight are in italics
intimating
that they are not translations of the Hebrew
but additions made for the
purpose of elucidating the meaning. Now if the "thee" and the "for"
are left out
the verse will read thus
"Ask of me
and I shall give the
heathen
thine inheritance
and thy possession
the uttermost parts of the
earth." And this reading is decidedly preferable to the other. It implies
that by some previous arrangement on the part of God
he had already assigned
an inheritance of the heathen
and the possession of the earth
to the person
of whom he says
"Thou art my Son." And when God says
"I will
give
" etc.
he reveals to his Anointed
not so much in what the
inheritance consisted
and what was the extent of possession destined for him
as the promise of his readiness to bestow it. The heathen were already
"the inheritance
" and the ends of the earth "the
possession
" which God had purposed to give to his Anointed. Now he
says to him
"Ask of me
" and he promises to fulfil his
purpose. This is the idea involved in the words of the text
and the importance
of it will become more apparent
when we consider its application to the spiritual
David
to the true Son of God
"whom he hath appointed heir of all
things."
Verse 9. The "rod"
has a variety of meanings in Scripture. It might be of different materials
as
it was employed for different purposes. At an early period
a wooden rod came
into use as one of the insignia of royalty
under the name of sceptre. By
degrees the sceptre grew in importance
and was regarded as characteristic of
an empire
or of the reign of some particular king. A golden sceptre denoted
wealth and pomp. The right
or straight sceptre
of which we read in Psalm
45:6
is expressive of the justice and uprightness
the truth and equity
which
shall distinguish Messiah's reign
after his kingdom on earth has been
established. But when it is said in Revelation 19:15
that he
"whose name
is called the Word of God
" will smite the nations
and "rule them
with a rod of iron
" if the rod signifies "his sceptre
" then
the "iron" of which it is made must be designed to express the
severity of the judgments which the omnipotent "King of kings" will
inflict on all who resist his authority. But to me it appears doubtful whether
the "rod of iron" symbolises the royal sceptre of the Son of God at
his second advent. It is mentioned in connection with "a sharp
sword
" which leads me to prefer the opinion that it also ought to be regarded
as a weapon of war; at all events
the "rod of iron" mentioned in the
Psalm we are endeavouring to explain. is evidently not the emblem of sovereign
power
although represented as in the hands of a king
but an instrument of
correction and punishment. In this sense the word "rod" is often
used. . . . .When the correcting rod
which usually was a wand or cane
is
represented as in this second Psalm
to be of "iron
" it only
indicates how weighty
how severe
how effectual the threatened chastisement will
be—it will not merely bruise
but it will break. "Thou shalt break them
with a rod of iron."
Now
it is just such a complete breaking as would not readily be effected excepting
by an iron rod
that is more fully expressed in the following clause of
the verse
"Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel."
The completeness of the destruction
however
depends on two things. Even an
iron rod
if gently used
or used against a hard and firm substance
might
cause little injury; but
in the case before us
it is supposed to be applied
with great force
"Thou shalt dash them;" and it is applied to
what will prove as brittle and frangible as "a potter's vessel"
— "Thou shalt dash them in pieces." . . . . Here
as in other
respects
we must feel that the predictions and promises of this Psalm were but
very partially fulfilled in the history of the literal David. Their real
accomplishment
their awful completion
abides the day when the spiritual David
shall come in glory and in majesty as Zion's King
with a rod of iron to dash
in pieces the great antichristian confederacy of kings and peoples
and to take
possession of his long-promised and dearly-purchased inheritance. And the signs
of the times seem to indicate that the coming of the Lord draws nigh. David
Pitcairn.
Verse 10. "Be
wise now
therefore
O ye kings
" etc. As Jesus is King of kings and
Judge of judges
so the gospel is the teacher of the greatest and wisest. If
any are so great as to spurn its admonitions
God will make little of them; and
if they are so wise as to despise its teachings
their fancied wisdom shall
make fools of them. The gospel takes a high tone before the rulers of the
earth
and they who preach it should
like Knox and Melvill
magnify their
office by bold rebukes and manly utterances even in the royal presence. A
clerical sycophant is only fit to be a scullion in the devil's kitchen. C.
H. S.
Verse 11. "Serve
the Lord with fear." This fear of God qualifies our joy. If you
abstract fear from joy
joy will become light and wanton; and if you abstract
joy from fear
fear then will become slavish. William Bates
D.D.
1625-1699.
Verse 11. "Serve
the Lord with fear
and rejoice with trembling." There are two kinds of
serving and rejoicing in God. First
a serving in security
and a rejoicing in
the Lord without fear; these are peculiar to hypocrites
who are secure
who
please themselves
and who appear to themselves to be not unuseful servants
and to have great merit on their side
concerning whom it is said (Psalm 10:5)
"Thy judgments are far above out of his sight;" and also afterwards
(Psalm 36:1)
"There is no fear of God before his eyes." These do
righteousness without judgment at all times; and permit not Christ to be the
Judge to be feared by all
in whose sight no man living is justified. Secondly
a serving with fear and a rejoicing with trembling; these are peculiar to the
righteous who do righteousnesses at all times
and always rightly attemper
both; never being without judgments
on the one hand
by which they are
terrified and brought to despair of themselves and of all their own works; nor
without that righteousness on the other
on which they rest
and in which they
rejoice in the mercy of God. It is the work of the whole lives of these
characters to accuse themselves in all things
and in all things to justify and
praise God. And thus they fulfil that word of Proverbs 28:14
"Blessed is
the man that feareth alway;" and also that of Philippians 4:4
"Rejoice
in the Lord alway." Thus
between the upper and nether millstone
(Deuteronomy 24:6)
they are broken in pieces and humbled
and the husks being
thus bruised off
they come forth the all-pure wheat of Christ. Martin
Luther.
Verse 11. The fear
of God promotes spiritual joy; it is the morning star which ushers in the
sunlight of comfort. "Walking in the fear of God
and in the comfort of
the Holy Ghost." God mingles joy with fear
that fear may not be slavish. Thomas
Watson
1660.
Verse 12. "Kiss
"
a sign of love among equals: Genesis 33:4; 1 Samuel 20:41; Romans 16:16; 1
Corinthians 16:20. Of subjection in inferiors: 1 Samuel 10:1. Of religious
adoration in worshippers: 1 Kings 19:18; Job 31:27. John Richardson
Bishop
of Ardagh
1655.
Verse 12. "Kiss
the Son
lest he be angry." From the Person
the Son
we shall
pass to the act (Osculamini
kiss the Son); in which we shall see
that
since this is an act which licentious men have depraved (carnal men do it
and
treacherous men do it—Judas betrayed his Master by a kiss)
and yet God
commands this
and expresses love in this; everything that hath
or may be
abused
must not therefore be abandoned; the turning of a thing out of the way
is not a taking of that thing away
but good things deflected to ill uses by
some
may be by others reduced to their first goodness. Then let us consider
and magnify the goodness of God
that hath brought us into this distance
that
we may kiss the Son
that the expressing of this love lies in our hands
and that
whereas the love of the church
in the Old Testament
even in the
Canticle
went no farther but to the Osculator me (O that he would kiss me
with the kisses of his mouth! Canticles 1:1)
now
in the Christian church
and in the visitation of a Christian soul
he hath invited us
enables us to
kiss him
for he is presentially amongst us. This leads us to give an earnest
persuasion and exhortation to kiss the Son
with all those affections
which we shall there find to be expressed in the Scriptures
in that testimony
of true love
a holy kiss. But then
lest that persuasion by love should
not be effectual and powerful enough to us
we shall descend from that duty
to
the danger
from love
to fear
"lest he be angry;" and
therein see first
that God
who is love
can be angry; and then
that this God
who is angry here
is the Son of God
he that hath done so much for us
and
therefore in justice may be angry; he that is our Judge
and therefore in
reason we are to fear his anger: and then
in a third branch
we shall see how
easily this anger departs—a kiss removes it.
Verse 12. "Kiss
the Son." That is
embrace him
depend upon him all these ways: as thy
kinsman
as thy sovereign; at thy going
at thy coming; at thy reconciliation
in the truth of religion in thyself
in a peaceable unity with the church
in a
reverent estimation of those men
and those means
whom he sends. Kiss him
and
be not ashamed of kissing him; it is that which the spouse desired
"I
would kiss thee
and not be despised." Canticles 7:1. If thou be
despised for loving Christ in his Gospel
remember that when David was thought
base
for dancing before the ark
his way was to be more base. If thou be
thought frivolous for thrusting in at service
in the forenoon
be more
frivolous
and come again in the afternoon: "Tanto major requies
quanto ab amore Jesu nulla requies;" (Gregory) "The more thou
troublest thyself
or art troubled by others for Christ
the more peace thou
hast in Christ." . . . . "Lest he be angry." Anger
as it
is a passion that troubles
and disorders
and discomposes a man
so it is not
in God; but anger
as it is a sensible discerning of foes from friends
and of
things that conduce
or disconduce to his glory
so it is in God. In a word
Hilary hath expressed it well: "Poena patientis
ira decernentis;"
"Man's suffering is God's anger." When God inflicts such punishments
as a king justly incensed would do
then God is thus angry. Now here
our case
is heavier; it is not this great
and almighty
and majestical God
that may be
angry—that is like enough; but even the Son
whom we must kiss
may be angry; it is not a person whom we consider merely as God
but as
man; may not as man neither
but a a worm
and no man
and he may be
angry
and angry to our ruin. . . . "Kiss the Son
" and he
will not be angry; if he be
kiss the rod
and he will be angry no
longer—love him lest he be: fear him when he is angry: the preservative is
easy
and so is the restorative too: the balsamum of this kiss is all
to suck
spiritual milk out of the left breast
as well as out of the right
to find
mercy in his judgments
reparation in his ruins
feasts in his lents
joy in
his anger. From Sermons of John Donne
D.D.
Dean of St. Paul's
1621-1631.
Verse 12. "Kiss
the Son." To make peace with the Father
kiss the Son. "Let him
kiss me
" was the church's prayer. Canticles 1:2. Let us kiss him — that
be our endeavour. Indeed
the Son must first kiss us by his mercy
before we
can kiss him by our piety. Lord
grant in these mutual kisses and interchangeable
embraces now
that we may come to the plenary wedding supper hereafter; when
the choir of heaven
even the voices of angels
shall sing epithalamiums
nupital songs
at the bridal of the spouse of the Lamb. Thomas Adams.
Verse 12. "If
his wrath be kindled but a little;" the Hebrew is
if his nose or
nostril be kindled but a little; the nostril
being an organ of the body in
which wrath shows itself
is put for wrath itself. Paleness and snuffling of
the nose are symptoms of anger. In our proverbials
to take a thing in snuff
is to take it in anger. Joseph Caryl.
Verse 12. "His
wrath." Unspeakable must the wrath of God be when it is kindled fully
since perdition may come upon the kindling of it but a little. John
Newton.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Whole Psalm. Shows us the
nature of sin
and the terrible results of it if it could reign.
Verse 1. Nothing
is more irrational than irreligion. A weighty theme.
The
reasons why sinners rebel against God
stated
refuted
lamented
and repented
of.
The
crowning display of human sin in man's hatred of the Mediator.
Verses 1 and
2. Opposition to the gospel
unreasonable and ineffectual. Two sermons by
John Newton.
Verses 1 and
2. These verses show that all trust in man in the service of God is vain.
Inasmuch as men oppose Christ
it is not good to hang our trust upon the
multitude for their number
the earnest for their zeal
the
mighty for their countenance
or the wise for their counsel
since
all these are far oftener against Christ than for him.
Verse 2.
"Spurgeon's Sermons
" No. 495
"The Greatest Trial on
Record."
Verse 3. The true
reason of the opposition of sinners to Christ's truth
viz.: their hatred of
the restraints of godliness.
Verse 4. God's
derision of the rebellious
both now and hereafter.
Verse 5. The
voice of wrath. One of a series of sermons upon the voices of the divine attributes.
Verse 6. Christ's
Sovereignty.
1.
The opposition to it: "yet."
2.
The certainty of its existence: "Yet have I set."
3.
The power which maintains it: "have I set."
4.
The place of its manifestation: "my holy hill of Zion."
5.
The blessings flowing from it.
Verse 7. The divine
decree concerning Christ
in connection with the decrees of election and
providence. The Sonship of Jesus.
This
verse teaches us faithfully to declare
and humbly to claim
the gifts and
calling that God hath bestowed upon us. Thomas Wilcocks.
Verse 8. Christ's
inheritance. William Jay.
Prayer
indispensable.—Jesus must ask.
Verse 9. The ruin
of the wicked. Certain
irresistible
terrible
complete
irretrievable
"like a potter's vessel."
The
destruction of systems of error and oppression to be expected. The gospel
an iron rod quite able to break mere pots of man's making.
Verse 10. True
wisdom
fit for kings and judges
lies in obeying Christ.
The
gospel
a school for those who would learn how to rule and judge well. They may
consider its principles
its exemplar
its spirit
etc.
Verse 11. Mingled
experience. See the case of the women returning from the sepulchre. Matthew
28:8. This may be rendered a very comforting subject
if the Holy Spirit direct
the mind of the preacher.
True
religion
a compound of many virtues and emotions.
Verse 12. An
earnest invitation.
1.
The command.
2.
The argument.
3.
The benediction upon the obedient. "Spurgeon's Sermons
" No.
260.
Last
clause.—Nature
object
and blessedness of saving faith.
WORK UPON THE
SECOND PSALM
Zion's King:
the Second Psalm expounded in the Light of History and Prophecy. By the Rev.
DAVID PITCAIRN. 1851.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》