Verse 1
Psalms 8:1. How excellent is thy
name — That is, thy glory, as it
is explained in the next clause;
in all the earth — The works of
creation and providence evince
and proclaim to all the world
that there is an infinite Being,
the fountain of all being,
power, and perfection; the
sovereign Ruler, powerful
Protector, and bountiful
Benefactor of all creatures. How
great, how illustrious, how
magnificent is the glory of this
Being in all the earth! The
light of it shines in men’s
faces everywhere, Romans 1:20;
if they shut their eyes against
it, that is their fault. There
is no speech nor language, but
the voice of God’s glory is
heard, or may be heard in it.
The psalmist, however, seems to
look forward to the times of the
gospel, when the name of God,
which was before great in Israel
only, should be made known by
divine revelation to all the
earth, the very ends of which
are to see his great salvation.
Who hast set thy glory above the
heavens — Why do I speak of the
earth? Thy glory or praise
reacheth to the heavens, and
indeed above all the visible
heavens, even to the heaven of
heavens; where thy throne of
glory is established, where the
blessed angels celebrate thy
praises, where Christ sitteth at
thy right hand in glorious
majesty, from whence he poureth
down excellent gifts upon babes,
as it follows.
Verse 2
Psalms 8:2. Out of the mouth of
babes and sucklings — Children
in age, and children in power
and knowledge, persons
comparatively ignorant and
foolish, weak and contemptible,
but simple, humble, and
teachable; thou hast ordained
strength — Hebrew, יסדת עז,
jissadta gnoz, literally, hast
founded, or constituted
strength, hast laid a foundation
for effecting, and hast actually
effected, great and important
purposes. Bishop Patrick, Dr.
Hammond, Dr. Dodd, and some
others think that there is an
allusion in these words to the
case of David himself, who,
though but a mere child, in
comparison of Goliath, yet,
being assisted by the power of
God, gained a complete victory
over that gigantic champion;
which was not only a proper
punishment of his proud
boastings, and defiance of the
armies of the living God, but
likewise sufficient to make the
whole army of the Philistines
acknowledge and adore the
omnipotence of the God of Israel
in reverential silence, at the
same time that it discomfited
and put them to flight. Our
Lord, however, applies the words
to little children in the
temple, and to the poor and the
illiterate people, who, being
simple, teachable, and
unprejudiced, acknowledged Jesus
for the Messiah, and cried,
“Hosannah to the son of David,”
when the learned scribes, and
self-righteous, self- sufficient
Pharisees, despised and rejected
him. The passage may also be
applied, and, probably, was
primarily intended to be
applied, to the apostles and
first preachers of the gospel,
who, though looked upon but as
babes, unlearned and ignorant
men, Acts 4:13, mean and
despicable, destitute both of
power and interest; yet
triumphed over all the wisdom of
the wise and the power of the
mighty; and overthrew the
devil’s kingdom, as the walls of
Jericho were thrown down by the
sounding of rams’ horns. Thus
the gospel, called the arm of
the Lord, and the rod of his
strength, has wrought wonders in
different ages, not out of the
mouths of philosophers or
orators, or by means of
politicians or statesmen, but by
persons viewed by the world as
babes in literature and human
attainments, and who actually
lay under very great
disadvantages. And the power of
God still brings to pass great
things in his church by very
weak and unlikely instruments;
and confounds the noble, wise,
and mighty, by the base, and
weak, and foolish things of the
world, that no flesh may glory
in his presence, but the
excellence of the power may the
more evidently appear to be of
God, and not of man, 1
Corinthians 1:27-28. Because of
thine enemies — Because they are
insolent and haughty; that thou
mightest still the enemy and the
avenger — Mightest put them to
silence and put them to shame;
and so be justly avenged on the
avengers: see Acts 4:14; Acts
6:10. The devil is the great
enemy and avenger, and by the
preaching of the gospel he was
in a great measure stilled, his
oracles were silenced, the
advocates of his cause were
confounded, and unclean spirits
themselves not suffered to
speak.
Verse 3-4
Psalms 8:3-4. When I consider
thy heavens — Thine by creation,
as it follows; the work of thy
fingers — Of thy hands, as it is
expressed Psalms 102:25, a part
being here put for the whole,
and God’s hand and finger being
indifferently used to denote his
power, Exodus 8:19; Luke 11:20.
The moon and stars which thou
hast ordained — Hebrew כוננתה,
chonantah, hast established,
directed, or disposed; that is,
placed in such admirable and
unalterable order, and directed
to their several motions,
courses, and uses. At the time
of enditing this Psalm, David
seems to have had before his
eyes the heavens, as they appear
by night, and therefore does not
notice the sun, but only
mentions the moon and stars,
which, though not altogether so
serviceable to man as the sun,
yet are no less demonstrations
of the wisdom, power, and
goodness of the Creator. What is
man! — How mean and
inconsiderable a thing is man if
compared with these thy other
works, and especially with thy
own glorious majesty, whose
infinite wisdom and power thus
shine forth from the structure
of the heavens! when we consider
how the glory of God shines in
the upper world, we may well
wonder he should regard or take
any notice of so mean a creature
as man; that he who is resident
in, and president over, that
bright and blessed part of the
creation, should so much humble
himself as to behold the things
done on earth, Psalms 113:5-6.
Again, when we consider of what
great use the heavens are to men
on earth, and how the lights of
heaven are divided unto all
nations, we may well say, Lord,
what is man, that thou shouldst
settle the ordinances of heaven
with an eye to him and to his
benefit; and that his comfort
and convenience should be so
much consulted in the making of
the lights of heaven, and
directing their motions?
But the Hebrew מה אנושׁ, mah
enosh, means, What is infirm, or
miserable man! By which it is
apparent that he speaks of man,
not according to his condition
when first created, but as
fallen into a state of sin, and
misery, and mortality. That thou
art mindful of him — Takest
cognizance of him and of his
actions and affairs, and carest
for him, and conferrest such
favours upon him. And the son of
man — Hebrew, אדם בן, ben Adam,
the son of Adam, that great
apostate from, and rebel against
thee, the sinful son of a sinful
father, his son by likeness of
disposition and manners, no less
than by procreation. All which
tends to magnify the following
mercy. That thou visitest him —
Not in anger, as that word is
sometimes used but in and with
thy grace and mercy? dost not
only feed and clothe him,
protect and provide for him, in
common with other creatures, but
even visitest him as one friend
visits another, conversest with
him, and showest thyself to be
infinitely concerned for his
salvation and happiness, and
providest so richly and
graciously for his attainment of
these blessings. What is man, so
mean a creature, that he should
be thus honoured; so sinful a
creature, that he should be thus
countenanced and favoured? Thus
the psalmist, having before his
eyes “the awful magnificence of
the wide extended firmament,
adorned by the moon walking in
brightness, and rendered
brilliant by the vivid lustre of
a multitude of shining orbs,
differing from each other in
magnitude and splendour;” and
turning from the survey of this
beauty of the heavens with their
glorious show, “to take a view
of the creature man, is still
more affected by the mercy than
he had before been by the
majesty of the Lord; since far
less wonderful it is that God
should make such a world as this
than that he who made such a
world should be mindful of man
in his fallen estate, and should
visit human nature with his
salvation.” — Horne.
Verse 5
Psalms 8:5. Thou hast made him a
little lower than the angels —
Such was man as he came out of
the hands of his Maker, in his
primeval state. He was lower
than the angels, because, by his
body, he was allied to the
earth, and to the beasts that
perish; but as by his soul,
which was spiritual and
immortal, he was near akin to
the angels; he might be truly
said to be but a little lower
than they, and was in order next
to them. And hast crowned him
with glory and honour — Endued
him with noble faculties and
capacities. He that gave man his
being, distinguished him from
the inferior creatures, and
qualified him for dominion over
them, by making him wiser than
the beasts of the earth and the
fowls of the heaven, Job 35:1.
Man’s reason is his crown of
glory, and he should take care
not to profane that crown by
perverting the use of it, nor
forfeit it by acting contrary to
its dictates.
Verses 6-8
Psalms 8:6-8. Thou madest him to
have dominion over the work of
thy hands — Didst constitute him
lord of the inferior creatures,
and invest him with a sovereign
dominion over them. The charter
whereby man was to hold this
royalty bore date with his
creation, Genesis 1:28; and
though it was forfeited by his
fall, it was, in a great degree,
renewed after the flood; since
which time man has had all
things, in such a sense, under
his feet, that he can not only
serve himself of the labour, but
also of the products and lives
of the inferior creatures, which
are delivered into his hands for
that purpose. All sheep and
oxen, &c. — Thus he instances in
some of the inferior creatures,
and among others, names even the
beasts of the field, the fowls
of the air, and the fishes of
the sea. For, though many of
them are much stronger, and many
of them much swifter than man;
yet, man’s superior knowledge
enables him, one way or other,
to reduce them under his power,
and to exercise dominion over
them. It must be carefully
observed, however, that this
refers, in a special manner, to
the Lord Jesus Christ, and has
its perfect accomplishment only
in him. For, as the author of
the Epistle to the Hebrews
argues, Hebrews 2:6-8, “We see
not yet all things put under”
man in that complete and
absolute sense which the
psalmist’s words seem to imply;
but we see Jesus, who was made a
little lower than the angels, or
was made lower for a little
while, as the Hebrew may be
rendered, for the suffering of
death, that is, that he might be
capable of suffering death; we
see him crowned with the glory
and honour of having all things,
yea, and persons, put under him,
in the completest and most
absolute sense; exalted to the
Father’s right hand, far above
all principality and power, and
every name that is named;
invested with all power in
heaven and on earth; constituted
not only the head of the church
but head over all things to the
church, and intrusted with the
administration of the kingdom of
providence, in conjunction with,
and subserviency to, the kingdom
of grace. Now we must remember
that, as it was our common human
nature that Christ assumed; so
our common human nature is thus
exalted in him to that glory and
honour, and complete dominion
over the creatures, which Adam
possessed in paradise, but which
he lost for himself, and all his
race, by the fall. Nay, in
Christ our nature is raised to
the possession of dignity and
glory, power and dominion,
riches and felicity,
incomparably greater than was
conferred on man at his
creation. And through Christ the
fallen children of men may rise;
and all believers in Christ, and
members of his mystical body,
shall rise to a participation of
this honour and happiness, and
not only be made but a little
lower than the angels, but as
our blessed Lord testifies,
ισαγγελοι, equal to the angels,
if not even superior to them. |