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Psalm One
Hundred Twenty-one
Psalm 121
Chapter Contents
The safety of the godly.
We must not rely upon men and means
instruments and
second causes. Shall I depend upon the strength of the hills? upon princes and
great men? No; my confidence is in God only. Or
we must lift up our eyes above
the hills; we must look to God who makes all earthly things to us what they
are. We must see all our help in God; from him we must expect it
in his own
way and time. This psalm teaches us to comfort ourselves in the Lord
when
difficulties and dangers are greatest. It is almighty wisdom that contrives
and almighty power that works the safety of those that put themselves under
God's protection. He is a wakeful
watchful Keeper; he is never weary; he not
only does not sleep
but he does not so much as slumber. Under this shade they
may sit with delight and assurance. He is always near his people for their
protection and refreshment. The right hand is the working hand; let them but
turn to their duty
and they shall find God ready to give them success. He will
take care that his people shall not fall. Thou shalt not be hurt
neither by the
open assaults
nor by the secret attempts of thine enemies. The Lord shall
prevent the evil thou fearest
and sanctify
remove
or lighten the evil thou
feelest. He will preserve the soul
that it be not defiled by sin
and
disturbed by affliction; he will preserve it from perishing eternally. He will
keep thee in life and death; going out to thy labour in the morning of thy
days
and coming home to thy rest when the evening of old age calls thee in. It
is a protection for life. The Spirit
who is their Preserver and Comforter
shall abide with them for ever. Let us be found in our work
assured that the
blessings promised in this psalm are ours.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 121
Verse 1
[1] I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills
from whence
cometh my help.
Hills — To Sion and Moriah
which are called the holy
mountains.
Verse 5
[5] The LORD is thy keeper: the LORD is thy shade upon thy
right hand.
Shade — To keep thee from the burning heat of the sun.
Verse 6
[6] The sun shall not smite thee by day
nor the moon by
night.
Smite — With excessive heat.
Moon — With that cold and moisture which come into the air by
it. Intemperate heats and colds are the springs of many diseases.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE
ETC. This bears no
other title than "A Song of degrees". It is several steps in advance
of its predecessor
for it tells of the peace of God's house
and the guardian
care of the Lord
while Psalm 120 bemoans the departure of peace from the good
man's abode
and his exposure to the venomous assaults of slanderous tongues.
In the first instance his eyes looked around with anguish
but here they look
up with hope. From the constant recurrence of the word keep
we are led to name
this song "a Psalm to the keeper of Israel". Were it not placed among
the Pilgrim Psalms we should regard it as a martial hymn
fitted for the
evensong of one who slept upon the tented field. It is a soldier's song as well
as a traveller's hymn. There is an ascent in the psalm itself which rises to
the greatest elevation of restful confidence.
Verse
1. I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills
from whence cometh my
help. It is wise to look to the strong for strength. Dwellers in valleys
are subject to many disorders for which there is no cure but a sojourn in the
uplands
and it is well when they shake off their lethargy and resolve upon a
climb. Down below they are the prey of marauders
and to escape from them the
surest method is to fly to the strongholds upon the mountains. Often before the
actual ascent the sick and plundered people looked towards the hills and longed
to be upon their summits. The holy man who here sings a choice sonnet looked
away from the slanderers by whom he was tormented to the Lord who saw all from
his high places
and was ready to pour down succour for his injured servant. Help
comes to saints only from above
they look elsewhere in vain: let us lift up
our eyes with hope
expectance
desire
and confidence. Satan will endeavour to
keep our eyes upon our sorrows that we may be disquieted and discouraged; be it
ours firmly to resolve that we will look out and look up
for there is good
cheer for the eyes
and they that lift up their eyes to the eternal hills shall
soon have their hearts lifted up also. The purposes of God; the divine
attributes; the immutable promises; the covenant
ordered in all things and
sure; the providence
predestination
and proved faithfulness of the Lord—these
are the hills to which we must lift up our eyes
for from these our help must
come. It is our resolve that we will not be bandaged and blindfolded
but will
lift up our eyes. Or is the text in the interrogative? Does he ask
"Shall
I lift up mine eyes to the hills?" Does he feel that the highest places of
the earth can afford him no shelter? Or does he renounce the idea of recruits
hastening to his standard from the hardy mountaineers? and hence does he again
enquire
"Whence cometh my help?" If so
the next verse answers the
question
and shows whence all help must come.
Verse
2. My help cometh from the LORD
which made heaven and earth.
What we need is help
—help powerful
efficient
constant: we need a very
present help in trouble. What a mercy that we have it in our God. Our hope is
in Jehovah
for our help comes from him. Help is on the road
and will not fail
to reach us in due time
for he who sends it to us was never known to be too
late. Jehovah who created all things is equal to every emergency; heaven and
earth are at the disposal of him who made them
therefore let us be very joyful
in our infinite helper. He will sooner destroy heaven and earth than permit his
people to be destroyed
and the perpetual hills themselves shall bow rather
than he shall fail whose ways are everlasting. We are bound to look beyond
heaven and earth to him who made them both: it is vain to trust the creatures:
it is wise to trust the Creator.
Verse
3. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved. Though the paths
of life are dangerous and difficult
yet we shall stand fast
for Jehovah will
not permit our feet to slide; and if he will not suffer it we shall not suffer it.
If our foot will be thus kept we may be sure that our head and heart will be
preserved also. In the original the words express a wish or prayer
—"May
he not suffer thy foot to be moved." Promised preservation should be the
subject of perpetual prayer; and we may pray believing; for those who have God
for their keeper shall be safe from all the perils of the way. Among the hills
and ravines of Palestine the literal keeping of tim feet is a great mercy; but
in the slippery ways of a tried and afflicted life
the boon of upholding is of
priceless value
for a single false step might cause us a fall fraught with
awful danger. To stand erect and pursue the even tenor of our way is a blessing
which only God can give
which is worthy of the divine hand
and worthy also of
perennial gratitude. Our feet shall move in progress
but they shall not be
moved to their overthrow. He that keepeth thee will not slumber
—or "thy
keeper shall not slumber". We should not stand a moment if our keeper were
to sleep; we need him by day and by night; not a single step can be safely
taken except under his guardian eye. This is a choice stanza in a pilgrim song.
God is the convoy and body guard of his saints. When dangers are awake around
us we are safe
for our Preserver is awake also
and will not permit us to be
taken unawares. No fatigue or exhaustion can cast our God into sleep; his
watchful eyes are never closed.
Verse
4. Behold
he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor
sleep. The consoling truth must be repeated: it is too rich to be dismissed
in a single line. It were well if we always imitated the sweet singer
and
would dwell a little upon a choice doctrine
sucking the honey from it. What a
glorious title is in the Hebrew—"The keeper of Israel
"and how
delightful to think that no form of unconsciousness ever steals over him
neither the deep slumber nor the lighter sleep. He will never suffer the house
to be broken up by the silent thief; he is ever on the watch
and speedily
perceives every intruder. This is a subject of wonder
a theme for attentive
consideration
therefore the word "Behold" is set up as a waymark.
Israel fell asleep
but his God was awake. Jacob had neither walls
nor
curtains
nor body guard around him; but the Lord was in that place though Jacob
knew it not
and therefore the defenceless man was safe as in a castle. In
after days he mentioned God under this enchanting name—"The God that led
me all my life long": perhaps David alludes to that passage in this
expression. The word "keepeth" is also full of meaning: he keeps us
as a rich man keeps his treasures
as a captain keeps a city with a garrison
as a royal guard keeps his monarch's head. If the former verse is in strict
accuracy a prayer
this is the answer to it; it affirms the matter thus
"Lo
he shall not slumber nor sleep—the Keeper of Israel". It may
also be worthy of mention that in verse three the Lord is spoken of as the
personal keeper of one individual
and here of all those who are in his chosen
nation
described as Israel: mercy to one saint is the pledge of blessing to
them all. Happy are the pilgrims to whom this psalm is a safe conduct; they may
journey all the way to the celestial city without fear.
Verse
5. The Lord is thy keeper. Here the preserving One
who had
been spoken of by pronouns in the two previous verses
is distinctly
named—Jehovah is thy keeper. What a mint of meaning lies here: the sentence is
a mass of bullion
and when coined and stamped with the king's name it will
bear all our expenses between our birthplace on earth and our rest in heaven.
Here is a glorious person—Jehovah
assuming a gracious office and fulfilling it
in person
—Jehovah is thy keeper
in behalf of a favoured individual—thy
and a
firm assurance of revelation that it is even so at this hour—Jehovah is thy
keeper. Can we appropriate the divine declaration? If so
we may journey onward
to Jerusalem and know no fear; yea
we may journey through the valley of the
shadow of death and fear no evil. The Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand. A
shade gives protection from burning heat and glaring light. We cannot bear too
much blessing; even divine goodness
which is a right hand dispensation
must
be toned down and shaded to suit our infirmity
and this the Lord will do for
us. He will bear a shield before us
and guard the right arm with which we
fight the foe. That member which has the most of labour shall have the most of
protection. When a blazing sun pours down its burning beams upon our heads the
Lord Jehovah himself will interpose to shade us
and that in the most
honourable manner
acting as our right hand attendant
and placing us in
comfort and safety. "The Lord at thy right hand shall smite through
kings". How different this from the portion of the ungodly ones who have
Satan standing at their right hand
and of those of whom Moses said
"their defence has departed from them". God is as near us as our
shadow
and we are as safe as angels.
Verse
6. The sun shall not smite thee by day
nor the moon by night.
None but the Lord could shelter us from these tremendous forces. These two
great lights rule the day and the night
and under the lordship of both we
shall labour or rest in equal safety. Doubtless there are dangers of the light
and of the dark
but in both and from both we shall be preserved—literally from
excessive heat and from baneful chills; mystically from any injurious effects
which might follow from doctrine bright or dim; spiritually from the evils of
prosperity and adversity; eternally from the strain of overpowering glory and from
the pressure of terrible events
such as judgment and the burning of the world.
Day and night make up all time: thus the ever present protection never ceases.
All evil may be ranked as under the sun or the moon
and if neither of these
can smite us we are indeed secure. God has not made a new sun or a fresh moon
for his chosen
they exist under the same outward circumstances as others
but
the power to smite is in their case removed from temporal agencies; saints are
enriched
and not injured
by the powers which govern the earth's condition; to
them has the Lord given "the precious things brought forth by the sun
and
the precious things put forth by the moon
"while at the same moment he
has removed from them all glare and curse of heat or damp
of glare or chill.
Verse
7. The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil
or keep thee
from all evil. It is a great pity that our admirable translation did not keep
to the word keep all through the psalm
for all along it is one. God not only
keeps his own in all evil times but from all evil influences and operations
yea
from evils themselves. This is a far reaching word of covering: it
includes everything and excludes nothing: the wings of Jehovah amply guard Iris
own from evils great and small
temporary and eternal. There is a most
delightful double personality in tiffs verse: Jehovah keeps the believer
not
by agents
but by himself; and the person protected is definitely pointed out
by the word thee
—it is not our estate or name which is shielded
but the proper
personal man. To make this even more intensely real and personal another
sentence is added
"The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil:" he
shall preserve thy soul
—or Jehovah will keep thy soul. Soul keeping is the
soul of keeping. If the soul be kept all is kept. The preservation of the
greater includes that of the less so far as it is essential to the main design:
the kernel shall be preserved
and in order thereto the shell shall be
preserved also. God is the sole keeper of the soul. Our soul is kept from the
dominion of sin
the infection of error
the crush of despondency
the puffing
up of pride; kept from the world
the flesh
and the devil; kept for holier and
greater things; kept in the love of God; kept unto the eternal kingdom and
glory. What can harm a soul that is kept of the Lord?
Verse
8. The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from
this time forth
and even for evermore. When we go out in the morning to
labour
and come home at eventide to rest
Jehovah shall keep us. When we go
out in youth to begin life
and come in at the end to die
we shall experience
the same keeping. Our exits and our entrances are under one protection. Three
times have we the phrase
"Jehovah shall keep"
as if the sacred
Trinity thus sealed the word to make it sure: ought not all our fears to be
slain by such a threefold flight of arrows? What anxiety can survive this
triple promise? This keeping is eternal; continuing from this time forth
even
for evermore. The whole church is thus assured of everlasting security: the
final perseverance of the saints is thus ensured
and the glorious immortality
of believers is guaranteed. Under the aegis of such a promise we may go on
pilgrimage without trembling
and venture into battle without dread. None are so
safe as those whom God keeps; none so much in danger as the self secure. To
goings out and comings in belong peculiar dangers since every change of
position turns a fresh quarter to the foe
and it is for these weak points that
an especial security is provided: Jehovah will keep the door when it opens and
closes
and this he will perseveringly continue to do so long as there is left
a single man that trusteth in him
as long as a danger survives
and
in fact
as long as time endures. Glory be unto the Keeper of Israel
who is endeared to
us under that title
since our growing sense of weakness makes us feel more
deeply than ever our need of being kept. Over the reader we would breathe a
benediction
couched in the verse of Keble.
"God
keep thee safe from harm and sin
Thy Spirit keep; the Lord watch o'er
Thy going out
thy coming in
From this time
evermore."
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. "A Song
of Degrees." It has been ingeniously pointed out that these
"degrees" or "steps" consist in the reiteration of a word
or thought occurring in one clause
verse
or stanza
which in the next verse
or stanza is used
as it were
as a step (or degree) by which to ascend to
another and higher truth. Thus in our psalm
the idea of "my help"
expressed in Ps 121:1
is repeated in Ps 121:2. This has now become a step by
which in Ps 121:3 we reach the higher truth or explanation of "nay
help"
as: "He that keepeth thee will not slumber
"the same
idea being with slight modification reembodied in Ps 121:4. Another
"degree" is then reached in Ps 121:5
when "He who slumbers
not" is designated as Jehovah
the same idea once more enlarged upon being
(the word occurring twice in Ps 121:5) in Ps 121:6. The last and highest degree
of this song is attained in Ps 121:7
when the truth implied in the word
Jehovah unfolds itself in its application to our preservation
which
with
further enlargement
is once more repeated in Ps 121:8. Perhaps some internal
connexion might be traced between all the fifteen Psalms of Degrees. At any
rate
it will not be difficult to trace the same structure if each of the
psalms "of Degrees"
making allowance for occasional devotions and
modifications.—Alfred Edersheim
in "The Golden Diary
"
1877.
Whole
Psalm. According to Ps 121:1 this psalm was designed to be sung in view
of the mountains of Jerusalem
and is manifestly an evening song for the sacred
band of pilgrims
to be sung in the last night watch
the figures of which are
also peculiarly suitable for a pilgrim song; and with Psalm 122
which
according to the express announcement in the introduction
was sung
when the
sacred pilgrim trains had reached the gates of Jerusalem
and halted for the
purpose of forming in order
for the solemn procession into the Sanctuary
Ps.
134. . . . The idea is a very probable one
that the psalm was the evening song
of the sacred pilgrim band
sung on retiring to rest upon the last evening
when the long wished for termination of their wandering
the mountains of
Jerusalem
had come into view in the distance. In this we obtain a suitable
connection with the following psalm
which would be sung one station further on
when the pilgrims were at the gates of Jerusalem. In this case we find an
explanation of the fact
that in the middle point of the psalm there stands the
Lord as the "keeper" of Israel
with reference to the declaration.
"I keep thee"
which was addressed to the patriarch as he slept on
his pilgrimage: and in this case also "he neither slumbereth nor sleepeth"
is seen in its true light.—E.W. Hengstenberg.
It
has been said Mr. Romaine read this psalm every day; and sure it is
that every
word in it is calculated to encourage and strengthen our faith and hope in
God.—Samuel Eyles Pierce.
Verse
1. I will lift up mine eyes
etc. Since we
being burdened
with the effects of worldly pleasures
and also with other cares and troubles
can by no means ascend to thee that art on the top of so high a mountain
accompanied with so many legions of angels that still attend upon thee
we have
no remedy
but with thy prophet David now to lift up the eyes of our hearts and
minds towards thee
and to cry for help to come down from thee to us
thy poor
and wretched servants.—Sir Anthony Cope
in "Meditations on
Twenty Select Psalms
" 1547.
Verse
1. I will lift up mine eyes
etc. In thy agony of a troubled
conscience always look upwards unto a gracious God to keep thy soul steady; for
looking downward on thyself thou shalt find nothing but what will increase thy
fear
infinite sins
good deeds few
and imperfect: it is not thy faith
but
God's faithfulness thou must rely upon; casting thine eyes downwards on
thyself
to behold the great distance betwixt what you deserve and what thou
desirest
is enough to make thee giddy
stagger
and reel into despair. Ever
therefore lift up thine eyes unto the hills
from whence cometh thy help
never
viewing the deep dale of thy own unworthiness
but to abate thy pride when
tempted to presumption.—Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)
in "The Cause
and Cure of a Wounded Conscience."
Verse
1. The hills. There can be no doubt that in Palestine we are
in the "Highlands" of Asia. This was the more remarkable in
connection with the Israelites
because they were the only civilized nation
then existing in the world
which dwelt in a mountainous country... The Hebrew
people was raised above the other ancient states
equally in its moral and in
its physical relations. From the Desert of Arabia to Hebron is a continual
ascent
and from that ascent there is no descent of any importance
except to
the pains of the Jordan
Esdraelon
and the coast. From a mountain sanctuary
as it were
Israel looked over the world... It was to the "mountains"
of Israel that the exile lifted up his eyes
as the place from whence his help
came.—Arthur Penrhyn Stanley.
Verse
1. The hills
from whence cometh my help. See no riches but
in grace
no health but in piety
no beauty but in holiness
no treasure but in
heaven
no delight but in "the things above."—Anthony Farindon.
Verse
1. From whence cometh my help. The natives of India used to
say that when Sir Henry Laurence looked twice to heaven and then to earth he
knew what to do.
To
Heaven I lift mine eye
To Heaven
Jehovah's throne
For there my Saviour sits on high
And thence shall strength and aid supply
To all He calls His own.
He
will not faint nor fail
Nor cause thy feet to stray:
For him no weary hours assail
Nor evening darkness spreads her veil
O'er his eternal day.
Beneath
that light divine
Securely shalt thou move;
The sun with milder beams shall shine
And eve's still queen her lamp incline
Benignant from above.
For
he
thy God and Friend
Shall keep thy soul from harm
In each sad scene of doubt attend
And guide thy life
and bless thy end
With his almighty arm.
—John Bowtiler
1814.
Verses
1
2. Faint at the close of life's journey
a Christian pilgrim
repeated the line
—"Will he not his help afford?" She quoted it
several times
trying to recall the song in which it occurs
and asked that the
once familiar hymn
part of the voice of which she caught
might be all fetched
home to her mind again; and she was greatly refreshed and comforted when we
read at her bedside Charles Wesley's spirited paraphrase
beginning
—
"To
the hills I lift mine eyes
The everlasting hills;
Streaming thence in fresh supplies
My soul the Spirit feels.
Will he not his help afford?
Help
while yet I ask
is given:
God comes down; the God and Lord
That made both earth and heaven."
—Edward Jewitt Robinson
in "The Caravan and the Temple"
1878.
Verses
1-3.
Look
away to Jesus
Look away from all!
Then we need not stumble
Then we shall not fall.
From each snare that lures
Foe or phantom grim.
Safety this ensures
Look away to him!
—Frances Ridley Havergal.
Verse
2. My help cometh from the Lord. I requite to remember that
my
help cometh from the Lord
not only when seemingly there is no outward help
from men or otherwise
but also and especially when all seems to go well with
me
—when abundance of friends and help are at hand. For then
surely
I am most
in danger of making an arm of flesh my trust
and thus reaping its curse; or
else of saying to my soul
"Take thine ease"
and finding the
destruction which attends such folly.—Alfred Edersheim.
Verse
2. Maker of heaven and earth
and therefore mighty to help.—James
G. Murphy.
Verse
3. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved. The sliding of
the foot is a frequent description of misfortune
for example
Ps 38:16
Ps
66:9
and a very natural one in mountainous Canaan. Where a single slip of the
foot was often attended with great danger. The language here naturally refers
to complete
lasting misfortune.—E.W. Hengstenberg.
Verse
3. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved. A man cannot go
without moving of his feet; and a man cannot stand whose feet are moved. The
foot by a synechdoche is put for the whole body
and the body for the whole
outward estate; so that
"He will not suffer thy foot to be moved"
is
he will not suffer thee or thine to be moved or violently cast down. The
power of thine opposers shall not prevail over thee
for the power of God
sustains thee. Many are striking at thy heels
but they cannot strike them up
while God holds thee up. If the will of thine enemies might stand
thou
shouldest quickly fall; but God "will not suffer thy foot to be moved".—Joseph
Caryl.
Verses
3-8. There is something very striking in the assurance that the Lord
with not suffer the foot even of the most faint and wearied one to be moved.
The everlasting mountains stand fast
and we feel as if
like Mount Zion
they
could not be removed for ever; but the step of man—how feeble in itself
how
liable to stumble or trip even against a pebble in the way! Yet that foot is as
firm and immoveable in God's protection as the hills themselves. It is one of
his own sweet promises
that he will give his angels charge over every child Of
his
that lie come to no harm by the way. But
oh
how immeasurably beyond even
the untiring wings of angels is the love promised here! that love which engages
to protect from every danger
as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings.
In the hours of occupation and hurry
in the conflicts and perils of the day
in the helplessness of sleep
in the glare and heat of the noonday
amid the
damps and dews of night
that wakeful eye is still over every child for his
good. Man
indeed
goeth forth to his work and to his labour till the evening;
but alike as he goes forth in the morning
and as he returns in the evening
the Lord still holds him up in all his goings forth and his comings in; no
manner of evil shall befall him. And oh! what a sweet addition is it to the
promise
"He shall preserve thy soul". It is the very argument of the
apostle
and the very inference he draws
"The eyes of the Lord are upon
the righteous
and his ears are open unto their cry"
—"He neither
slumbereth nor sleepeth"
—and then he asks
"Who is he that will harm
you
if ye be followers of that which is good?" From the very dawn of life
to its latest close
even for evermore
"He will preserve thee from all
evil; he will preserve thy soul."—Barton Bouchier.
Verses
3
4
5. A great practical difficulty is to find a keeper who will remain
awake during the whole night. The weariness of those who keen a faithful watch
and their longing for day during the tedious lonely hours of darkness
is
alluded to in a graphic and beautiful figure of the Psalmist—
"My
soul waiteth for the Lord
More than keepers for the morning
More than keepers for the morning."
The
usual method adopted to secure due vigilance is to require the man to call out
loudly
or to blow a whistle
every quarter of an hour... Yet
notwithstanding
all precautions
as soon as sleep falls on the tired camp
it is too often the
case that the hireling keeper lies down on the ground
wraps around him his
thick "abaiyeh"
or cloak
and
careless of his charge
or overcome
with weariness yields himself up to his drowsy propensities. Viewed in the
light of these facts
how full of condescension and cheer is the assurance of
God's never ceasing care—
"He
who keepeth thee will not slumber.
Behold
he who keepeth Israel
Doth not slumber or sleep.
Jehovah is thy keeper."
While
the services of the keeper constitute at all times a marked feature of life in
Palestine
they are perhaps more needed when travelling through the country
than at any other time. Then
when the moving camp is nightly pitched in
strange fields
it becomes absolutely necessary to apply to the nearest
authorities for a nocturnal guardian
before one can safely lie down to rest.
Now this Psalm 121 being one of "the Songs of Degrees
"was probably
composed to be sung on the way to Jerusalem
as a pilgrim hymn
when the
Israelites were coming up annually to keep the three great feasts. As a
journeying psalm
it would therefore have peculiar significance in its allusion
to the keeper by night.—James Neil
in "Palestine
Explored
" 1882.
Verses
3
4. When one asked Alexander how he could sleep so soundly and
securely in the midst of danger
he told him that Parmenlo watched
Oh
how
securely may they sleep over whom he watcheth that never slumbers nor sleeps!—From
"The Dictionary of Illustrations
" 1873.
Verses
3
4. A poor woman
as the Eastern story has it
came to the Sultan one
day
and asked compensation for the loss of some property. "How did you
lose it?" said the monarch. "I fell asleep"
was the reply
"and a robber entered my dwelling". "Why did you fall
asleep?" "I fell asleep because I believed that you were awake".
The Sultan was so much delighted with the answer of the woman
that he ordered
her loss to be made up. But what is true
only by a legal fiction
of human
governments
that they never sleep is true in the most absolute sense with
reference to the divine government. We can sleep in safety because our God is
ever awake. We are safe because he never slumbers. Jacob had a beautiful
picture of the ceaseless care of Divine Providence on the night when he fled
from his father's house. The lonely traveller slept on the ground
with the
stones for his pillow
and the sky for his canopy. He had a wondrous vision of a
ladder stretching from earth to heaven
and on which angels were seen ascending
and descending. And he heard Jehovah saying to him
"Behold
I am with
thee
and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest."—N.
McMichael.
Verse
4. It is necessary
observes S. Bernard
that "he who keepeth
Israel" should "neither slumber nor sleep"
for he who assails
Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps. And as the One is anxious about us
so is
the other to slay and destroy us
and his one care is that he who has once been
turned aside may never come back.—Neale and Littledale.
Verse
4. Slumber. Sleep. There is no climax in these words
as some
have supposed. Etymologically
the first is the stronger word
and it occurs in
Ps 76:5 6 of the sleep of death. In this instance there is no real
distinction between the two. Possibly there may be an allusion to the nightly
encampment
and the sentries of the caravan.—J.J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
4. He... shall neither slumber nor sleep. This form of
expression
he will not slumber nor sleep
would be improper in other
languages
according to the idiom of which it should rather be
He will not
sleep
yea
he will not slumber: but when the Hebrews invert this order
they
argue from the greater to the less. The sense then is
that as God never
slumbers even in the smallest degree
we need not be afraid of any harm
befalling us while he is asleep.—John Calvin.
Verse
4. He that keepeth Israel. With an allusion to Jacob
who
slept at Bethel
and to whom the promise of God took this form
"And
behold
I am with thee
and will keep thee in all places whither thou
guest": Ge 28:15.—Aben Ezra
quoted by H.T. Armfield.
Verse
4. Shall neither slumber nor sleep. Man sleeps; a sentinel
may slumber on his post by inattention
by long continued wakefulness
or by
weariness; a pilot may slumber at the helm; even a mother may fall asleep by
the side of the sick child; but God is never exhausted
is never weary
is
never inattentive. He never closes his eyes on the condition of his people
on
the wants of the world.—Albert Barnes.
Verse
4. A number of years ago Captain D. commanded a vessel sailing from
Liverpool to New York
and on one voyage he had all his family with him on
board the ship. One night
when all were quietly asleep
there arose a sudden
squall of wind
which came sweeping over the waters until it struck the vessel
and instantly threw her on her side
tumbling and crashing everything that was
moveable
and awakening the passengers to a consciousness that they were in
imminent peril. Everyone on board was alarmed and uneasy
and some sprang from
their berths and began to dress
that they might be ready for the worst.
Captain D. had a little girl on board
just eight years old
who
of course
awoke with the rest.
"What's
the matter?" said the frightened child.
They told her a squall had struck the ship.
"Is father on deck?" said she.
"Yes; father's on deck."
The
little thing dropped herself on her pillow again without a fear
and in a few
moments was sleeping sweetly in spite of winds or waves.
Fear
not the windy tempests wild
Thy bark they shall not wreck;
Lie down and sleep
O helpless child!.
Thy Father's on the deck.
—"The Biblical Treasury
" 1873.
Verses
4
5. The same that is the protector of the church in general
is
engaged for the preservation of every particular believer; the same wisdom
the
same power
the same promises. "He that keepeth Israel" (verse 4)
"is thy keeper" (verse 5). The Shepherd of the flock is the Shepherd
of every sheep
and will take care that not one
even of the little ones
shall
perish.—Matthew Henry.
Verse
5. The Lord is thy keeper. Two principal points are asserted
in these previous words.
1.
Jehovah
and Jehovah alone
the omnipotent and self existent God
is the Keeper
and Preserver of his people.
2.
The people of God are kept
at all times and in all circumstances
by his
mighty power unto everlasting salvation; they are preserved even "for
evermore." In the first particular
the divinity of the great Keeper is
declared; and
in the second
the eternal security of his people through his
omnipotence and faithfulness. This was the Psalmist's gospel. He preached it to
others
and he felt it himself. He did not speculate upon what he did not
understand; but he had a clear evidence
and a sweet perception
of these two
glorious doctrines
which he delivered to the people... This character
under
the name of Jehovah
is the character of Christ. Just such a one is Jesus
the
Shepherd of Israel. He says of himself to the Father
"Those that thou
gavest me I have kept
and none of them is lost
but the Son of Perdition
that
the Scripture might be fulfilled." ...From what has been premised
it
seems evident
that the keeper of the faithful is no other than Jehovah. This
the Psalmist has proved. It appears equally evident that Christ is their Keeper
and Preserver. This he hath declared himself; and his apostles have repeatedly
declared it of him. It follows
therefore
that Christ is truly and essentially
Jehovah. All the sophistry in the world cannot elude this conclusion; nor all
the heretics in the world destroy the premises. And
if Christ be Jehovah
he
is all that supreme
eternal
omnipotent being
which Arians
Socinians
and
others deny him to be.—Ambrose Serle
in "Hora Sotitarice
"
1815.
Verse
5. Keeper. Shade. The titles of God are virtually promises.
When he is called a sun
a shield
a strong tower
a hiding place
a portion.
The titles of Christ
light of the world
bread of life
the way
the truth
and life; the titles of the Spirit
the Spirit of truth
of holiness
of glory
of grace
and supplication
the sealing
witnessing Spirit; faith may conclude
as much out of these as out of promises. Is the Lord a sun? then he will
influence me
etc. Is Christ life? then he will enliven me
etc.—David
Clarkeon
1621-1686.
Verse
5. Thy shade upon thy right hand. That is
always present
with thee; or
as the Jewish Arab renders it
"Closer than thy shadow at
or from thy right hand."—Thomas Benton
in "Annotations on the
Book of Job and the Psalms
" 1732.
Verse
5. Thy shade. In eastern countries the sun's burning rays are
often arrows by which premature death is inflicted; and when the Psalmist
speaks of Jehovah as a shady covert for the righteous that imagery suggests the
idea of the "coup de soleil" or sunstroke as the evil avoided.—J.F.
in The Baptist Magazine
1831.
Verse
5. Shade. The Hebrew word is tsel
"a shadow
"and
hence it has been supposed that the words
"thy shadow at thy right hand
"are a figurative expression
referring to the protection afforded by the
shade of a tree against the scorching rays of the sun
or to the custom which
prevails in tropical climates especially
of keeping off the intense heat of
the sun by a portable screen
such as an umbrella or parasol. The word is often
put for defence in general. Compare Nu 14:9; Isa 30:2; Jer 48:45.—James
Anderson.
Verses
5-8. How large a writ or patent of protection is granted here! No time
shall be hurtful
neither "day nor night
"which includes all times.
Nothing shall hurt
neither sun nor moon
nor heat nor cold. These should
include all annoyances. Nothing shall be hurt. "Thy soul shall be
preserved
thy outgoings and thy comings in shall be preserved." These
include the whole person of man
and him in all his just affairs and actions.
Nothing of man is safe without a guard
and nothing of man can be unsafe which
is thus guarded. They should be kept who can say
"The Lord is our
keeper"; and they cannot be kept
no
not by legions of angels
who have
not the Lord for their keeper. None can keep us but he
and he hath promised to
keep us "for evermore."—Joseph Caryl.
Verse
6. The sun shall not smite thee. hrh of the sun signifies to
smite injuriously (Isa 49:10)
plants
so that they wither (Ps 102:5)
and the
head (Joh 4:8)
so that symptoms of sunstroke (2Ki 4:19; Jud 8:2 seq.) appear.
The transferring of the word to the word is not zeugmatic. Even the moon's rays
may become insupportable
may affect the eyes injuriously
and (more
particularly in the equatorial regions) produce fatal inflammation of the
brain. From the hurtful influences of nature that are round about him the
promise extends in verses 7
8 in every direction. Jahve
says the poet to
himself
will keep (guard) thee against all evil
of whatever kind it may be and
whencesoever it may threaten; he will keep thy soul
and therefore thy life
both inwardly and outwardly; he will keep thy going out and coming in
i.e.
all thy business and intercourse of life... everywhere and at all times; and
that from this time forth even for ever.—Franz Delitzsch.
Verse
6. The sun shall not smite thee by day
etc. A promise made
with allusion unto
and application of that care which God had over his people
when he brought them out of Egypt through the wilderness
when he guarded them
from the heat of the sun by a cloud by day
and from the cold and moistness of
the night and moon by a pillar of fire by night.—David Dickson.
Verse
6. Nor the moon by night.
The
moon
the governess of floods
Pale in her anger
washes all the air
That rheumatic diseases do abound.
—William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
in "The Midsummer Night's
Dream."
Verse
6. Joseph Hart in one of his hymns speaks of some who "travel
much by night." To such this promise is precious.—Biblical Treasury.
Verse
6. Nor the moon by night. The effect of the moonlight on the
eyes in tiffs country is singularly injurious... The moon here really strikes
and affects the sight
when you sleep exposed to it
much more than the sun
a
fact of which I had a very unpleasant proof one night
and took care to guard
against it afterwards; indeed
the sight of a person who should sleep with his
face exposed at night would soon be utterly impaired or destroyed.—John
Carne
in "Letters from the East
" 1826.
Verse
6. Nor the moon by night. In the cloudless skies of the East
where the moon shines with such exceeding clearness
its effects upon the human
frame have been found most injurious. The inhabitants of these countries are
most careful in taking precautionary measures before exposing themselves to its
influence. Sleeping much in the open air
they are careful to cover well their
heads and faces. It has been proved beyond a doubt that the moon smites as well
as the sun
causing blindness for a time
and even distortion of the features. Sailors
are well aware of this fact; and a naval officer relates that he has often
when Sailing between the tropics
seen the commanders of vessels waken up young
men who have fallen asleep in the moonlight. Indeed
he witnessed more than
once the effects of a moonstroke
when the mouth was drawn on one side and the
sight injured for a time. He was of opinion that
with long exposure
the mind
might become seriously affected. It is supposed that patients suffering under
fever and other illnesses are affected by this planet
and the natives of India
constantly affirm that they will either get better or worse
according to her
changes.—C.W.
in
"The Biblical Treasury."
Verse
7. The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil. Lawyers
when
they are drawing up important documents
frequently conclude with some general
terms to meet any emergency which may possibly occur. They do this on the
principle
that what is not in may be supposed to be intentionally left out. In
order to guard against this inference
they are not content with inserting a
number of particular cases; they conclude with a general statement
which
includes everything
whether expressed or not. A similar formula is inserted
here. It is of great Importance
that the feet of travellers be kept from sliding
as they pursue their journey. It is of great importance
that they be preserved
from heat by day
and from cold by night. But other dangers await them
from
which they require protection; and lest the suspicion be entertained
that no
provision is made for these being surmounted
they are all introduced in the
saving and comprehensive clause. No matter what may be their character
no
matter from what quarter they may appear
no matter when they may nome
and no
matter how long they may continue
the declaration covers them all. Divine
grace changes the nature of everything it handles
and transforms everything it
touches into gold. Afflictions are overruled for good; and the virtues of the
Christian life are developed with unusual lustre. "The Lord shall preserve
thee from all evil."—N. McMichael.
Verse
7. The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil
etc. It is an
absolute promise
there are no conditions annexed; it honours God for us simply
to believe it
and rest on the Lord for the performance of it. As we view it
what have we to fear? The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it
his word is
immutable. Jesus preserves body and soul
he is the Saviour of the body as well
as of the soul.—Samuel Eyles Pierce.
Verses
7
8. The threefold expression
"shall keep thee...thy soul...thy
going out and thy coming in
"marks the completeness of the protection
vouchsafed
extending to all that the man is and that he does.—J.J. Stewart
Perowne.
Verses
7
8. It is of importance to mark the reason why the prophet repeats so
often what he had so briefly and in one word expressed with sufficient
plainness. Such repetition seems at first sight superfluous: but when we
consider how difficult it is to correct our distrust
it will be easily
perceived that he does not improperly dwell upon the commendation of the divine
providence. How few are to be found who yield to God the honour of being a
"keeper"
in order to their being thence assured of their safety
and
led to call upon him in the midst of their perils! On the contrary
even when
we seem to have largely experienced what this protection of God implies
we yet
instantly tremble at the noise of a leaf falling from a tree
as if God had
quite forgotten us. Being then entangled in so many unholy misgivings
and so
much inclined to distrust
we are taught from the passage that if a sentence
couched in a few words does not suffice us
we should gather together whatever
may be found throughout tim whole Scriptures concerning the providence of God
until this doctrine—"That God always keeps watch for us"—is deeply
rooted in our hearts; so that
depending upon his guardianship alone
we may
bid adieu to all the vain confidences of the world.—John Calvin.
Verse
8. The Lord shall preserve. The word "shamar"
imports a most tender preservation; from it comes "shemuroth"
signifying the eyelids
because they are the keepers of the eye
as the Lord is
called in the verse preceding—shomer Ishrael
"the keeper of Israel".
If the lids of the eye open
it is to let the eye see; if they close
it is to
let it lest
at least to defend it; all their motion is for the good of the
eye. O
what a comfort is here! The Lord calls his Church "the apple of
his eye": "he that toucheth you
touches the apple of mine eye".
The Church is the apple of God's eye
and the Lord is the covering of it. O
how well are they kept whom "the keeper of Israel" keepeth! The Lord
was a buckler to Abraham
none of his enemies could harm him; for his buckler
covered him thoroughly. The Lord was a hedge unto Job; Satan himself confessed
he could not get through it
howsoever many a time he assayed it
to have done
evil unto Job. . . . But seeing this same promise of preservation was made
before (for from the third verse to the end of the Psalm
six sundry times
is
the word of keeping or preserving repeated)
why is it now made over again? Not
without cause; for this doubling and redoubling serves
first
for a remedy of
our ignorance. Men
if they be in any good estate
are ready to "sacrifice
to their own net
"or "to cause their mouth to kiss their own hand
"as if their own hand had helped them: thus to impute their
"deliverance" to their "calf
"and therefore often is this
resounded
"The Lord
" "The Lord." Is thy estate advanced?
The Lord hath done it. Hast thou been preserved from desperate dangers? Look up
to the Lord
thy help is from on high
and to him let the praise be returned.
Secondly
it is for a remedy of our natural diffidence: the word of the Lord in
itself is as sure when it is spoken
as when it is sworn; as sure spoken once
as when it is oftener repeated; yet is not the Lord content to speak only
but
to swear also; nor to speak once
but often
one and the selfsame thing. The
reason is showed us by the apostle
that hereby he may "declare to the
heirs of promise the stability of his counsel." Heb 6:1 Ge 21:32. As
Joseph spake of Pharaoh his vision
"It was doubled
because the thing is
established by God
and God hasteth to perform it"; so is it with every
word of the Lord
when it is repeated; it is because it is established
and God
hastens to perform it.—From a Sermon by Bishop Couper
entitled "His
Majesties Coming in
" 1623.
Verse
8. The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in.
All actions being comprehended under one of these two sorts
"going
out" to more public
and "coming in" to more private affairs; or
again
"going out" to begin
and "coming in" at the end of
the work. But by this expression may here perhaps be more particularly
signified that God would protect David
even to the end of his days
whenever
he marched out with his armies
or brought them home.—Thomas Fenton.
Verse
8. From this time forth
and even for evermore. He has not
led me so tenderly thus far to forsake me at the very gate of heaven.—Adoniram
Judson.
Verse
1. The window opened towards Jerusalem.
1.
The hills we look to.
2. The help we look for.
3. The eyes we look with.
Verse
1. Whence cometh my help? A grave question; for
1.
I need it
greatly
in varied forms
constantly
and now.
2. In few directions can I look for it
for men are feeble
changeable
hostile
etc.
3. I must look above. To Providence
to Grace
to my God.
Verse
2. The Creator the creature's helper.
Verse
2.
1.
God is his people's "help."
2.
He helps them in proportion as they feel their need of his help.
3.
His help is never ill vain. "My help cometh." not from the earth
merely
or the skies
but "from the Lord
which made heaven and
earth". Isa 40:26-31.—G.R.
Verse
3 (First clause). The preservation of saintly character the care of
the Creator.
Verse
3. Comfort for a pilgrim along the 'mauvais pas' of life. We have a
Guide omniscient
omnipotent
never slumbering
unchanging.
Verse
3. He that keepeth thee will not slumber.
1.
The Lord's care is personal in its objects. The keeper of Israel is the keeper
of the individual. God deals with us individually.
(a)
This is implied in his care of the church
which is composed of individuals.
(b)
It is involved in the nature of our religion
which is a personal thing.
(c)
It is affirmed in Scripture. Examples; promises; experiences. "He loved
me
"etc.
etc.
(d)
It is confirmed by experience.
2.
The Lord's care is unwearied in its exercise: "Will not slumber."
(a)
He is never unacquainted with our condition.
(b)
He is never indifferent to it.
(c)
He is never weary of helping us. We sometimes think he sleeps
but this is our
folly.
—Frederick
J. Benskin
of Reading
1882.
Verse
4.
1.
The suspicion—that God sleeps.
2. The denial.
3. The implied opposite—he is ever on the watch to bless.
Verse
4. He keepeth Israel
1.
As his chief treasure
most watchfully.
2. As his dearest spouse
most tenderly.
3. As the apple of his eye
most charily and warily.
—Daniel Featley
1582-1645.
Verse
5. The Lord Keeper.
1.
Blessings included in this title.
2. Necessities which demand it.
3. Offices which imply it
—Shepherd
King
Husband
Father
etc.
4. Conduct suggested by it.
Verse
5 (last clause). God as near us
and as indivisible from us as our
shadow.
Verse
5. The Lord is thy keeper
not angels.
1.
He is able to keep thee. He has infinite knowledge
power
etc.
2.
He has engaged to keep thee.
3.
He has kept thee.
4.
He will keep thee. In his love; in his covenant
etc.
as his sheep
his
children
his treasures
as the apple of his eye
etc.—F.J.B.
Verse
5. The Lord is thy keeper.
1.
Wakeful: "Will not slumber."
2. Universal: "Thy going out and thy coming in:" "From all
evil."
3. Perpetual: "Day:" "night: ...evermore."
4. Special: "Thy:" "Israel."—W.J.
Verse
6. The highest powers
under God
prevented from hurting believers
and even made to serve them.
Verse
6. Our Horoscope.
1.
Superstitious fears removed.
2. Sacred assurances supplied.
Verse
7.
1.
Personal agency of God in providence.
2. Personal regard of providence to the favoured individual.
3. Special care over the centre of the personality—"thy soul."
Verse
8. Who? "The Lord." What? "Shall preserve thee."
When? "Going out and coming in from this time forth." How long?
"For evermore." What then? "I will lift up mine eyes."
Verse
8.
1.
Changing—going out and coming in.
2. Unchanging—"The Lord shall preserve
" etc.
WORKS
UPON THE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIRST PSALM
In
"Letters on Spiritual Subjects . . ." by SAMUEL EYLES PIERCE...
London: 1862
Vol. I.
pp. 359-370
there are "Some Observations on the
Hundred and Twenty first Psalm."
In
"Meditations on Twenty select Psalms
" by Sir ANTHONY COPE
Chamberlain to Queen Katherine Parr. Reprinted from the edition of 1547; ...By
WILLIAM H. COPE
M.A. 1848
there is a Meditation on this psalm.
See
also List of Works upon the Gradual Psalms
in notes on Psalm 120.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》