ARGUMENT.
WE have now before us one of the
choicest parts of the Old
Testament, wherein there is so
much of Christ and his gospel,
as well as of God and his law,
that it has been called the
summary of both Testaments. The
history of Israel, which we were
long upon, instructed us in the
knowledge of God. The book of
Job gave us profitable
disputations concerning God and
his providence. But this book
brings us into the sanctuary,
draws us off from converse with
men, with the philosophers or
disputers of this world, and
directs us into communion with
God. In the original it is
entitled, ספר תהלים, sepher
tehillim, that is, The Book of
Hymns, or Praises; because,
though it likewise contains
prayers, complaints, histories,
and descriptions, yet the
principal part of it is taken up
with the praises of God. The
Greeks call them ψαλμοι, Psalms,
which word signifies properly,
compositions set, or sung, to
music. St. Peter styles it, The
Book of Psalms, Acts 1:20. It is
a collection of Psalms, of all
the Psalms that were divinely
inspired, composed at different
times, on several occasions, and
here put together in one volume,
without any dependance on each
other. According to the Jewish
tradition this was done by Ezra,
after the return of the Jews
from the captivity of Babylon,
who also placed the volume among
the canonical books. Thus they
were preserved from being
scattered and lost, and kept in
readiness for the service of the
church. One of these is
expressly said to be The Prayer
of Moses. That some of them were
penned by Asaph, is intimated 2
Chronicles 29:36, where the
people are said to praise the
Lord in the words of David and
Asaph, who is there called a
seer or prophet. And some of
them seem to have been penned
long after, even during, or
subsequent to, the time of the
Babylonish captivity. But the
far greater part were
undoubtedly written by David,
who was raised up for
establishing the ordinance of
singing Psalms and Hymns in the
church of God, as Moses and
Aaron were for settling the
ordinance of sacrifice. Theirs
is superseded, but this remains,
and will remain, till it be
swallowed up in the songs of
eternity.
The Psalms are all written in a
poetical style; though it is
difficult, if not impossible, to
tell of what particular kind the
poetry of the Hebrews was. They
abound, however, with sublime
and figurative expressions,
sufficient to denominate them
truly poetical. As the style of
them is forcible and elevated,
so is it calculated most
powerfully to touch the human
mind, and to excite therein the
most noble and elevated
conceptions; on which account
this book has always been held
in the greatest veneration;
insomuch that, in the earlier
ages of the Christian Church,
the bishops, priests, and all
the religious, were expected to
have it by heart. Melancthon
says of it, that it is the most
elegant work extant in the
world: and St. Basil tells us,
that in it may be found a
complete body of divinity. “The
Psalms,” says Dr. Horne, in his
preface to his commentary on
them, “are an epitome of the
Bible, adapted to the purposes
of devotion. They treat
occasionally of the creation and
formation of the world; the
dispensations of Providence, and
the economy of grace; the
transactions of the patriarchs;
the exodus of the children of
Israel; their journey through
the wilderness, and settlement
in Canaan; their law,
priesthood, and ritual; the
exploits of their great men,
wrought through faith; their
sins and captivities; their
repentances and restorations;
the sufferings and victories of
David; the peaceful and happy
reign of Solomon; the advent of
Messiah, with its effects and
consequences; his incarnation,
birth, life, passion, death,
resurrection, ascension,
kingdom, and priesthood; the
effusion of the Spirit; the
conversion of the nations; the
rejection of the Jews; the
establishment, increase, and
perpetuity of the Christian
Church; the end of the world;
the general judgment; the
condemnation of the wicked, and
the final triumph of the
righteous with their Lord and
King. These are the subjects
here presented to our
meditations. We are instructed
how to conceive of them aright,
and to express the different
affections which, when so
conceived of, they must excite
in our minds. They are, for this
purpose, adorned with the
figures, and set off with all
the graces, of poetry; and
poetry itself is designed yet
further to be recommended by the
charms of music, thus
consecrated to the service of
God; that so delight may prepare
the way for improvement, and
pleasure become the handmaid of
wisdom, while every turbulent
passion is calmed by sacred
melody, and the evil spirit is
still dispossessed by the harp
of the son of Jesse.
This little volume, like the
paradise of Eden, affords us in
perfection, though in miniature,
every thing that groweth
elsewhere; every tree that is
pleasant to the sight, and good
for food; and, above all, what
was there lost, but is here
restored, the tree of life in
the midst of the garden.” “What
is there necessary for man to
know,” says the pious and
judicious Hooker, “which the
Psalms are not able to teach?
They are to beginners an easy
and familiar introduction, a
mighty augmentation to all
virtue and knowledge in such as
are entered before, a strong
confirmation to the most perfect
among others. Heroical
magnanimity, exquisite justice,
grave moderation, exact wisdom,
repentance unfeigned, unwearied
patience, the mysteries of God,
the sufferings of Christ, the
terrors of wrath, the comforts
of grace, the works of
Providence over this world, and
the promised joys of that world
which is to come; all good
necessarily to be either known,
or done, or had, this one
celestial fountain yieldeth. Let
there be any grief or disease
incident to the soul of man, any
wound or sickness named, for
which there is not, in this
treasure-house, a present
comfortable remedy at all times
ready to be found.” — Hooker,
Ecclesiast. Pol., b. 5. sect.
37. In fine, such and so useful
is the variety contained in this
book, that, by an easy
accommodation, it may be made to
serve every one of our
occasions. The Psalms are fitted
to all persons and ages, to all
manner of employments, and to
all conditions and circumstances
of life, whether of honour or
dishonour, prosperity or
adversity, health or sickness.
Whether we be mourning for sin,
thirsting after God, or
rejoicing in his salvation;
whether we be in heaviness
through manifold temptations, or
comforted by the experience of
deliverance from them; whether
we be earnestly seeking the
divine favour, or grateful and
happy that we have found that
inestimable blessing, and have
tasted that the Lord is
gracious; whether we be fighting
the good fight of faith, and
wrestling with our spiritual
enemies, or triumphing in
victory obtained, and reaping
the spoils of conquest; in
short, whether we be repenting
or believing, fearing or hoping,
doubting or confiding, sorrowing
or rejoicing, acting or
suffering, admiring and praising
God on earth, or expecting and
longing to enjoy him in heaven,
we may here find portions of
divine truth descriptive of, and
exactly adapted to, our state
and condition. Here, in
particular, we may learn what a
steady confidence we ought to
place in God under all our
afflictions and troubles, and
what transports of gratitude we
ought to feel for his mercies
and benefits conferred upon us;
here we have examples of God’s
dealings with his people, to
direct us in our Christian
experience and practice, and of
his faithfulness toward those
who trust in him, for our
comfort and encouragement. Here
we have devout and fervent
prayers, and sweet and joyful
songs of praise. So that, as
Bishop Patrick observes, “to
cure heaviness, to extirpate
grief, to take away sorrow, to
lay asleep troublesome thoughts
and passions, to ease us of our
cares, to recreate those who are
oppressed with any sort of
pains, to move compunction for
sin, to stir up a true spirit of
piety, and to inflame our hearts
with love and gratitude to God,
there is no book in the world to
be compared with it.” Hence it
is, as Dr. Horne further
observes, that, “in the language
of this divine book, the prayers
and praises of the church have
been offered up to the throne of
grace from age to age. And it
appears to have been the manual
of the Son of God in the days of
his flesh; who, at the
conclusion of his Last Supper,
is generally supposed, and that
upon good grounds, to have sung
a hymn taken from it;*
who pronounced on the cross the
beginning of the twenty-second
Psalm, My God, my God, why hast
thou forsaken me? And expired
with a part of the thirty-first
Psalm in his mouth, Into thy
hands I commend my spirit. Thus
he, who had not the Spirit by
measure, in whom were hidden all
the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge, and who spake as
never man spake, yet chose to
conclude his life, to solace
himself in his greatest agony,
and at last to breathe out his
soul in the psalmist’s form of
words rather than his own.” No
tongue of man or angel, as Dr.
Hammond justly observes, can
convey a higher idea of any
book, and of their felicity who
use it aright.
Only, then, let these Psalms be
read and considered with fervent
desires after, and a lively
dependance on, the illuminating
and sanctifying influences of
the Spirit which first dictated,
and can only enable us rightly
to understand, mark, learn, and
inwardly digest them, and we
shall find them able to make us
wise unto salvation, through
faith in Him whose person and
offices, whose love and
sufferings, whose humiliation
and exaltation, whose grace and
glory, they so amply and
excellently set forth. For to
this portion of ancient holy
writ, undoubtedly, so frequently
quoted by the Lord Jesus in the
days of his flesh, the apostle
had a peculiar reference, when,
in his second epistle to
Timothy, he bore so decided a
testimony to the divine
inspiration, excellence, and
usefulness of the Scriptures of
the Old Testament. And of these
Psalms especially may it be
affirmed, that they are
profitable for doctrine, for
reproof, for correction, for
instruction in righteousness,
that the man of God may be made
perfect, thoroughly furnished
unto all good works.
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