Verse 1-2
Psalms 116:1-2. I love the Lord
— Hebrew, I love, because the
Lord hath heard my voice. “The
soul, transported with gratitude
and love, seems, at first, to
express her affection without
declaring its object, as
thinking that all the world must
know who is the person intended.
Thus Mary Magdalene, at the
sepulchre, though no previous
mention had been made of Jesus,
says to one, whom she thought to
be the gardener, Sir, if thou
hast borne him hence, &c. John
20:15. And ought not the love of
God to be excited in all our
hearts by the consideration,
that when we were not able to
raise ourselves up to him, he
mercifully and tenderly inclined
and bowed down his ear to us?” —
Horne. Therefore will I call
upon him as long as I live —
Hebrew, בימי אקרא, bejamai ekra,
in my days, that is, as long as
I have a day to live, as this
phrase is used 2 Kings 20:19;
Isaiah 39:8.
Verse 3-4
Psalms 116:3-4. The sorrows of
death compassed me — Dangerous
and deadly calamities as bitter
as death: Hebrew, חבלי מות,
cheblee maveth, the cords, or
bands of death: see note on
Psalms 18:4-5. The pains of hell
— Or of the grave, or of death;
either cutting, killing pains,
or such agonies and horrors as
dying persons often feel within
themselves; gat hold upon me —
Hebrew, מצאוני, found me, that
is, surprised me. Having been
long pursuing me, at last they
overtook and seized upon me, and
I gave up myself for lost. Then
called I upon the name of the
Lord — Being brought to the last
extremity, I made use of this,
not as the last remedy, but as
the old and only remedy which I
had found, a balm for every
wound.
Verse 5-6
Psalms 116:5-6. Gracious is the
Lord — Therefore he will
maintain my just cause against
my unrighteous oppressors, will
perform his promises, and save
those who faithfully serve and
trust in him. The Lord
preserveth the simple — That is,
those who are upright and
sincere, and make use of no
crafty arts or counsels, no
indirect or unlawful means for
their deliverance; who, as the
original word implies, depend
wholly upon God, as little
children do upon their parents.
I was brought low — Plunged into
the depth of distress and
misery; and he helped me —
Patiently to bear what was laid
upon me, and to hope for
deliverance at the proper time.
Verse 7-8
Psalms 116:7-8. Return unto thy
rest, O my soul — Unto that
tranquillity of mind, and
cheerful confidence in God’s
providence and promises, which
thou didst once enjoy. Repose
thyself in God; seek not for
that rest in the creature which
is to be found only in the
Creator. God is thy rest; in him
only canst thou dwell at ease;
to him therefore thou must
retire. For the Lord hath dealt
bountifully, &c. — Hath many
ways expressed his bounty most
liberally to thee, and provided
sufficiently for thy comfort and
refreshment. Thou hast delivered
my soul — Myself; from death —
From threatening and approaching
death; or from spiritual death,
the death of sin, and from
eternal death, the death of
hell. Thou hast caused me to
pass from death unto life. Mine
eyes from tears — That is, my
heart, from inordinate grief.
When God comforts those that are
cast down, when he looses the
mourners’ sackcloth, and girds
them with gladness, then he
delivers their eyes from tears;
which yet will not be perfectly
done till we come to that world
where God shall wipe away all
tears from our eyes, And my feet
from failing — Namely, from
falling into sin, and so into
misery.
Verse 9
Psalms 116:9. I will walk —
Hebrew, אתהלךְ, ethhalleck, I
will set myself to walk; before
the Lord — I determine, in the
strength of divine grace, to set
him before me; to live as in his
presence, and as under his eye;
to speak and act in a manner
becoming his presence, and the
relation in which I stand to him
as his servant and worshipper,
his son and heir; to walk worthy
of him unto all pleasing. It is
the psalmist’s promise and
resolution, in return for the
blessings acknowledged in the
preceding verse. In the land of
the living — Among living men in
this world. Observe, reader, the
land of the living is a land of
mercy, which we ought to be very
thankful for; it is a land of
opportunity, which we ought to
improve; and the consideration
that we are in this land should
engage and quicken us to walk
before God.
Verse 10
Psalms 116:10. I have believed —
God’s promise of deliverance;
therefore have I spoken — What I
have now said; or, I have firmly
believed, and trusted in God’s
almighty power, and ever
watchful providence, and
therefore have addressed my
prayer unto him with confidence
in my greatest dangers and
distresses. In this, or a
similar sense, this clause is
quoted by St. Paul, 2
Corinthians 4:13, with
application to himself and his
fellow-ministers, who, though
they were exposed everywhere to
sufferings for Christ’s sake,
and were even in danger of being
put to death wherever they came;
yet were neither ashamed nor
afraid to own him, because they
confided in the promise he had
made them of a blessed
resurrection.
Verse 11
Psalms 116:11. I said in my
haste — Yet once, I confess, I
spoke very unadvisedly, through
precipitation of mind, for want
of due consideration, as the
same phrase, בחפזי, bechophzi,
is used Psalms 31:22. It may,
however, be rendered, in my
terror, or amazement, that is,
when I was discomposed, and
almost distracted with the
greatness of my troubles. All
men are liars — There is no
credit to be given to their
promises of deliverance; I am
lost and undone. Thus
understood, he questions the
truth of God’s promises, yet so
that he does not reflect
directly on God, but only on the
instrument by whom the promises
were declared. Some render the
clause, All men are a lie, or
lies, are vain, a thing of
nothing, a mere phantom without
any solidity; all human help
fails me; so that my case is
desperate if God do not help me.
Verses 12-14
Psalms 116:12-14. What shall I
render unto the Lord — Yet,
notwithstanding all my dangers,
and my distrust of God also, he
hath conferred so many and great
blessings upon me, that I can
never make sufficient returns to
him for them. I will take the
cup of salvation — Or of
deliverance, as Bishop Patrick
renders ישׁועות, thus
interpreting the clause: “I will
call my friends together to
rejoice with me, and taking the
cup, which we call the cup of
deliverance, (because, when
blessed and set apart, we are
thus wont to commemorate the
blessings we have received,) I
will magnify the power,
goodness, and faithfulness of
God my Saviour before all the
company.” The phrase is
doubtless taken from the common
practice of the Jews in their
thank-offerings, in which a
feast was made of the remainder
of the sacrifices, and the
offerers, together with the
priests, did eat and drink
before the Lord; and among other
rites, the master of the feast
took a cup of wine into his
hand, and solemnly blessed God
for it, and for the mercy which
was then acknowledged, and then
gave it to all the guests, who
drank successively of it.
According to Dr. Hammond, this
cup, among the Jews, was
two-fold; one offered in a more
solemn manner in the temple,
Numbers 28:7, the other more
private in families, called the
cup of thanksgiving, or
commemoration of any deliverance
received. This the master of the
family was wont to begin, and
was followed by all his guests.
On festival days it was attended
with a suitable hymn, such as
that sung by our Lord and his
disciples on the night when he
advanced that cup into the
sacrament of his blood, which
hath ever since been to
Christians the cup of salvation;
and which all penitents should
now receive in the church of
Christ, with invocation,
thanksgiving, and payment of
their vows made in time of
trouble.
Verse 15
Psalms 116:15. Precious, &c., is
the death of his saints — He
sets a high price upon it: he
will not easily grant it to the
will of their enemies. If any
son of violence procure it, he
will make him pay very dearly
for it. And when the saints
suffer it for God’s sake, as
they frequently do, it is a most
acceptable sacrifice to him, and
highly esteemed by him. Thus the
blood of God’s people is said to
be precious in his sight, Psalms
72:14. And in the same sense the
life of a man is said to be
precious in the eyes of him who
spares and preserves it, 1
Samuel 26:21; 2 Kings 1:13.
God’s people are precious in his
eyes both living and dying, for,
whether they live, they live
unto the Lord, or whether they
die, they die unto the Lord,
Romans 14:8.
Verse 16
Psalms 116:16. O Lord, truly I
am thy servant — This is a
thankful acknowledgment of his
great obligations to God,
whereby he was in duty bound to
be his perpetual servant. The
son of thy handmaid — The son of
a mother who was devoted, and
did devote me to thy service.
Thou hast loosed my bonds — Thou
hast rescued me from my enemies,
whose captive and vassal I was,
and therefore hast a just right
to me and to my service. |