Verse 1-2
Psalms 92:1-2. It is a good
thing to give thanks, &c. — It
is a good work, and a just debt,
which is due from us to God; to
show forth thy loving- kindness,
&c. — To adore and celebrate thy
goodness and truth continually,
and especially at those two
solemn times of morning and
evening, which, on every day,
and particularly upon the
sabbath day, were devoted to the
worship and service of God.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 92:4-5. For thou hast
made me glad through thy work,
&c. — Which thou didst create by
thine almighty power, and dost
still govern with infinite
wisdom. “A prospect of creation,
in the vernal season,” says Dr.
Horne, “fallen as it is,
inspires the mind with joy,
which no words can express. But
how doth the regenerate soul
exult and triumph at beholding
that work of God’s hands whereby
he creates all things anew in
Christ Jesus! If we can be
pleased with such a world as
this, where sin and death have
fixed their habitation; shall we
not much rather admire those
other heavens and that other
earth wherein dwell
righteousness and life? What are
we to think of the palace, since
even the prison is not without
its charms!” O Lord, how great
are thy works! — Great beyond
expression, beyond conception!
The products of boundless power
and unsearchable wisdom; men’s
works are nothing to them. We
cannot comprehend the greatness
of God’s works, and therefore
must reverently and awfully
wonder, and even stand amazed at
the magnificence of them. Thy
thoughts are very deep — Here he
assigns the reason of the
inconceivable greatness and
grandeur of God’s works. Mens’
works are little and trifling,
for their thoughts are shallow:
but God’s works are very great,
and such as cannot be measured,
because his thoughts are very
deep, and such as cannot be
fathomed. Or, he speaks of God’s
counsels and methods in the
government of the world and of
his church. All his counsels,
whether in creation or
providence, as much exceed the
contrivances of human wisdom as
his works do the efforts of
human power!
Verse 6
Psalms 92:6. A brutish man — Who
cannot, or doth not, seriously
consider things; whose mind is
corrupted by sensual and brutish
appetites; who is led by sense,
and not by reason and faith,
knoweth not — That thy works are
so inexpressibly great and
wonderful; neither doth a fool
understand this — The depth of
wisdom displayed in thy
counsels, and of power in thine
operations, or the particular
work of God, described Psalms
92:7. “Glorious are thy works,
profound thy counsels,
marvellous thy dispensations in
nature, in providence, in grace;
but all are lost to the man void
of spiritual discernment; who,
like his fellow-brutes, is bowed
down to earth, and knoweth no
pleasures but those of sense.
Here he hath chosen his
paradise, and set up his
tabernacle; not considering that
his tabernacle must shortly be
taken down, and he must remove
hence for ever.” — Horne.
Reader, is this thy character?
Verse 7-8
Psalms 92:7-8. When the wicked
spring, &c. — Many interpreters
connect this with the preceding
verse, thus: A brutish man
knoweth not, &c., that when the
wicked spring as the grass, and
when all the workers of iniquity
do flourish, it is that they
shall be destroyed for ever:
“they are only nourishing
themselves, like senseless
cattle, in plentiful pastures,
for the approaching day of
slaughter.” Their present
worldly prosperity is a presage
and occasion of their utter
ruin. But thou, O Lord, art most
high for evermore — That is,
they shall perish, but thou
shalt endure, as is said in a
like comparison, Psalms 102:26.
They flourish for a season, but
thou rulest for ever, to judge
and punish them. So this verse
is added by way of opposition to
the former.
Verse 9-10
Psalms 92:9-10. For lo, thine
enemies, &c., shall perish — He
represents their destruction as
certain, and as present, which
the repetition of the words
implies. But my horn shalt thou
exalt, &c. — But, as for me and
other righteous persons, (of
whom he says the same thing,
Psalms 92:12,) we shall be
advanced to true and everlasting
honour and felicity: I shall be
anointed with fresh oil — Oil,
sweet and uncorrupted; that is,
I shall have great cause of
rejoicing, and testifying my
joy, by anointing myself; as the
manner was in feasts, and all
joyful solemnities.
Verse 11
Psalms 92:11. Mine eye also
shall see my desire, &c. — The
words, my desire, are twice
inserted in this verse by our
translators, and it seems
improperly, as there is nothing
for them in the original, which
is literally, Mine eye also
shall look upon mine enemies,
and mine ears shall hear of the
wicked that rise up against me;
nor are they found in the
Septuagint, or in several other
versions ancient and modern.
There is indeed an ellipsis,
but, as Dr. Horne observes,
would it not be better to supply
it thus: “Mine eye shall behold
the fall of mine enemies; and
mine ears shall hear of the
destruction of the wicked?” &c.
The psalmist undoubtedly foresaw
their dreadful doom, but we
cannot infer, from that
circumstance, that he desired
it.
Verse 12
Psalms 92:12. The righteous
shall flourish like the
palm-tree — Which is constantly
green and flourishing, spreads
its branches very wide, and
grows to a vast size, affording
a most refreshing shade to
travellers. It also produces
dates, a very sweet, luscious,
and grateful kind of fruit; is a
most beautiful tree, and every
way an invaluable treasure to
the inhabitants of those hot
countries, and therefore a fit
emblem of the flourishing state
of a righteous man. He shall
grow like a cedar in Lebanon —
The cedars in Lebanon are
immensely large, being some of
them thirty-five, or even forty
feet in the girt, and
thirty-seven yards in the spread
of their boughs. They flourish
for ages, and are always green;
and, when cut down, yield a most
beautiful kind of wood,
inclining to a brown colour,
solid, durable, and, in some
sort, incorruptible. These then,
as well as the palm-trees,
compared with the short-lived
and withering grass, are a
striking illustration of the
well-founded, durable, and
continually increasing virtue
and happiness of the truly
righteous, in opposition to the
momentary, trifling, and
perpetually decaying prosperity
of the wicked.
Verse 13-14
Psalms 92:13-14. Those that be
planted in the house of the Lord
— In his church, of which all
righteous persons are real and
living members: those whom God,
by his gracious providence and
Holy Spirit, hath planted and
fixed there, and incorporated
with his people; shall flourish
in the courts of our God — Like
the trees just mentioned, they
shall retain their pleasant
verdure, extend their cooling
shade, refresh many by their
sweet and nourishing fruit, or
support and adorn them by their
useful qualities, and increase
continually in grace and
goodness. They shall still bring
forth fruit in old age — When
their natural strength decays it
shall be renewed: their last
days shall be their best days,
wherein, as they shall grow in
grace, so they shall increase in
comfort and blessedness. He
seems to allude to the
palm-trees above mentioned,
which produce, indeed, little
fruit till they be about thirty
years of age, but after that
time, while their juice
continues, the older they
become, are the more fruitful,
and will bear each three or four
hundred pounds of dates every
year. “Happy the man whose
goodness is always progressive,
and whose virtues increase with
his years; who loseth not, in
multiplying of worldly cares,
the holy fervours of his first
love, but goeth on, burning and
shining more and more, to the
end of his days!” — Horne.
Verse 15
Psalms 92:15. To show that the
Lord is upright, &c. — That he
is true to his promises, and
faithful to every word that he
hath spoken, and therefore does
not leave nor forsake those that
cleave to him, but carries on
the work which he has begun. As
it is by his promises that
believers first partake of a
divine nature, so it is by his
promises that that divine nature
is preserved and maintained, and
therefore the power it exerts is
an evidence that the Lord is
upright, and such he will show
himself to be with an upright
man, Psalms 18:25. He is my rock
— I have chosen him for my rock,
on which to build my confidence
and hopes for time and eternity,
and in the clefts of which to
take shelter in the time of
danger: and I have found him a
rock, strong and steadfast, and
his word firm and stable. And
there is no unrighteousness in
him — He is as able, and will be
as kind, as his word represents
him to be. All that ever trusted
in God have found him faithful
and all-sufficient, and none
were ever made ashamed of their
hope in him. He is just and
upright in his dealings with his
intelligent creatures,
“immoveable in his counsels, and
determined to punish the wicked
and reward the good; so that,
when his proceedings shall come
to be unfolded at the last day,
it will appear to men and angels
that there is no unrighteousness
in him.” — Horne. |