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Psalm One
Hundred Twenty-three
Psalm 123
Chapter Contents
Confidence in God under contempt.
Our Lord Jesus has taught us to look unto God in prayer
as our Father in heaven. In every prayer a good man lifts up his soul to God;
especially when in trouble. We desire mercy from him; we hope he will show us
mercy, and we will continue waiting on him till it come. The eyes of a servant
are to his master's directing hand, expecting that he will appoint him his
work. And also to his supplying hand. Servants look to their master or their
mistress for their portion of meat in due season. And to God we must look for
daily bread, for grace sufficient; from him we must receive it thankfully.
Where can we look for help but to our Master? And, further, to his protecting
hand. If the servant is wronged and injured in his work, who should right him,
but his master? And to his correcting hand. Whither should sinners turn but to
him that smote them? They humble themselves under God's mighty hand. And
lastly, to his rewarding hand. Hypocrites look to the world's hand, thence they
have their reward; but true Christians look to God as their Master and their
Rewarder. God's people find little mercy with men; but this is their comfort,
that with the Lord there is mercy. Scorning and contempt have been, are, and
are likely to be, the lot of God's people in this world. It is hard to bear;
but the servants of God should not complain if they are treated as his beloved
Son was. Let us then, when ready to faint under trials, look unto Jesus, and by
faith and prayer cast ourselves upon the mercy of God.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 123
Verse 2
[2] Behold, as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of
their masters, and as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress; so
our eyes wait upon the LORD our God, until that he have mercy upon us.
Look — For supply of their wants, and for help and defence
against their oppressors.
Until — Until he help and save us.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
TITLE. A Song of
degrees. We are climbing. The first step (Ps. 120) saw us lamenting our
troublesome surroundings, and the next saw us lifting or eyes to the hills and
resting in assured security; from this we rose to delight in the house of the
Lord; but here we look to the Lord himself, and this is the highest ascent of
all by many degrees. The eyes are now looking above the hills, and above
Jehovah's footstool on earth, to his throne in the heavens. Let us know it as
"the Psalm of the eyes". Old authors call it Oculus
"Sperans", or the eye of hope. It is a short Psalm, written with
singular art, containing one thought, and expressing if in a most engaging
manner. Doubtless it would be a favourite song among the people of God. It has
been conjectured that this brief song, or rather sigh, may have first been
heard in the days of Nehemiah, or under the persecutions of Antiochus. It may
be so, but there is no evidence of it; it seems to us quite as probable that
afflicted ones in all periods after David's time found this psalm ready to
their hand If it appears to describe days remote from David, it is all the more
evident that the Psalmist was also a prophet, and sang what he saw in vision.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Unto thee lift I up mine eyes. It is good to have some one
to look up to. The Psalmist looked so high that he could look no higher. Not to
the hills, but to the God of the hills he looked. He believed in a personal God,
and knew nothing of that modern pantheism which is nothing more than atheism
wearing a fig leaf. The uplifted eyes naturally and instinctively represent the
state of heart which fixes desire, hope, confidence, and expectation upon the
Lord. God is everywhere, and yet it is most natural to think of him as being
above us, in that glory land which lies beyond the skies. "O thou that
dwellest in the heavens", just sets forth,the unsophisticated idea of a
child of God in distress: God is, God is in heaven, God resides in one place,
and God is evermore the same, therefore will I look to him. When we cannot look
to any helper on a level with us, it is greatly wise to look above us; in fact,
if we have a thousand helpers, our eyes should still be toward the Lord. The
higher the Lord is the better for our faith, since that height represents
power, glory, and excellence, and these will be all engaged on our behalf. We
ought to be very thankful for spiritual eyes; the blind men of this world,
however much of human learning they may possess, cannot behold our God, for in
heavenly matters they are devoid of sight. Yet we must use our eyes with
resolution, for they will not go upward to the Lord of themselves, but they
incline to look downward, or inward, or anywhere but to the Lord: let it be our
firm resolve that the heavenward glance shall not be lacking. If we cannot see
God, at least we will look towards him. God is in heaven as a king in his
palace; he is here revealed, adored, and glorified: thence he looks down on the
world and sends succours to his saints as their needs demand; hence we look up,
even when our sorrow is so great that we can do no more. It is a blessed
condescension on God's part that he permits us to lift up our eyes to his
glorious high throne; yea, more, that he invites and even commands us so to do.
When we are looking to the Lord in hope, it is well to tell him so in prayer:
the Psalmist uses his voice as well as his eye. We need not speak in prayer; a
glance of the eye will do it all; for—
"Prayer
is the burden of a sigh,
The falling of a tear,
The upward glancing of an eye
When none but God is near."
Still,
it is helpful to the heart to use the tongue, and we do well to address
ourselves in words and sentences to the God who heareth his people. It is no
small joy that our God is always at home: he is not on a journey, like Baal,
but he dwells in the heavens. Let us think no hour of the day inopportune for
waiting upon the Lord; no watch of the night too dark for us to look to him.
Verse
2. Behold—for it is worthy of regard among men, and O that
the Majesty of heaven would also note it, and speedily send the mercy which our
waiting spirits seek. See, O Lord, how we look to thee, and in thy mercy look
on us. This Behold has, however, a call to us to observe and consider. Whenever
saints of God have waited upon the Lord their example has been worthy of
earnest consideration. Sanctification is a miracle of grace; therefore let us
behold it. For God to have wrought in men the spirit of service is a great
marvel, and as such let all men turn aside and see this great sight. "As
the eyes of servants (or slaves) look unto the hand of their masters."
They stand at the end of the room with their hands folded watching their lord's
movements. Orientals speak less than we do, and prefer to direct their slaves
by movements of their hands: hence, the domestic must fix his eyes on his
master, or he might miss a sign, and so fail to obey it: even so, the
sanctified man lifts his eyes unto God, and endeavours to learn the divine will
from every one of the signs which the Lord is pleased to use. Creation,
providence, grace; these are all motions of Jehovah's hand, and from each of
them a portion of our duty is to be learned; therefore should we carefully
study them, to discover the divine will. "And as the eyes of a maiden unto
the hand of her mistress, "this second comparison may be used because
Eastern women are even more thorough than the men in the training of their
servants. It is usually thought that women issue more commands, and are more
sensitive of disobedience, than the sterner sex. Among the Roman matrons female
slaves had a sorry time of it, and no doubt it was the same among the
generality of Eastern ladies. "Even so our eyes wait upon the Lord our
God." Believers desire to be attentive to each and all of the directions
of the Lord; even those which concern apparently little things are not little
to us, for we know that even for idle words we shall be called to account, and
we are anxious to give in that account with joy, and not with grief. True
saints, like obedient servants, look to the Lord their God reverentially: they
have a holy awe and inward fear of the great and glorious One. They watch,
obediently, doing his commandments, guided by his eye. Their constant gaze is
fixed attentively on all that comes from the Most High; they give earnest heed,
and fear lest they should let anything slip through inadvertence or drowsiness.
They look continuously, for there never is a time when they are off duty; at all
times they delight to serve in all things: Upon the Lord they fix their eyes
expectantly, looking for supply, succour, and safety from his hands, waiting
that he may have mercy upon them. To him they look singly, they have no other
confidence, and they learn to look submissively, waiting patiently for the
Lord, seeking both in activity and suffering to glorify his name. When they are
smitten with the rod they turn their eyes imploringly to the hand which
chastens, hoping that mercy will soon abate the rigour of the affliction. There
is much more in the figure than we can display in this brief comment; perhaps
it will be most profitable to suggest the question.—Are we thus trained to
service? Though we are sons, have we learned the full obedience of servants?
Have we surrendered self, and bowed our will before the heavenly Majesty? Do we
desire in all things to be at the Lord's disposal? If so, happy are we. Though
we are made joint heirs with Christ, yet for the present we differ little from
servants, and may be well content to take them for our model.
Verse
3. Have mercy upon us, O Lord, have mercy upon us. He hangs
upon the word "mercy, "and embodies it in a vehement prayer: the very
word seems to hold him, and he harps upon it. It is well for us to pray about
everything, and turn everything into prayer; and especially when we are
reminded of a great necessity we should catch at it as a keynote, and pitch our
tune to it. The reduplication of the prayer before us is meant to express the
eagerness of the Psalmist's spirit and his urgent need: what he needed speedily
he begs for importunately. Note that he has left the first person singular for
the plural. All the saints need mercy; they all seek it; they shall all have
it, therefore we pray—"have mercy upon us". A slave when corrected
looks to his master's hand that the punishment may cease, and even so we look
to the Lord for mercy, and entreat for it with all our hearts. Our contemptuous
opponents will have no mercy upon us; let us not ask it at their hands, but
turn to the God of mercy, and seek his aid alone. "For we are exceedingly
filled with contempt, "and this is an acid which eats into the soul.
Observe the emphatic words. Contempt is bitterness, wormwood mingled with gall;
he that feels it may well cry for mercy to his God. Filled with contempt, as if
the bitter wine had been poured in till it was up to the brim. This had become
the chief thought of their minds, the peculiar sorrow of their hearts.
Excluding all other feelings, a sense of scorn monopolized the soul and made it
unutterably wretched. Another word is added adverbially—exceedingly filled.
Filled even to running over, as if pressed down and then heaped up. A little
contempt they could bear, but now they were satiated with it, and weary of it.
Do we wonder at the threefold mention of mercy when this master evil was in the
ascendant? Nothing is more wounding, embittering, festering than disdain. When
our companions make little of us we are far too apt to make little of ourselves
and of the consolations prepared for us. Oh to be filled with communion, and
then contempt will run off from us, and never be able to fill us with its
biting vinegar.
Verse
4. Our soul is exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that
are at ease. Knowing no troubles of their own, the easy ones grow cruel and
deride the people of the Lord. Having the godly already in secret contempt,
they show it by openly scorning them. Note those who do this: they are not the
poor, the humble, the troubled, but those who have a merry life of it, and are
self content. They are in easy circumstances; they are easy in heart through a
deadened conscience, and so they easily come to mock at holiness; they are easy
from needing nothing, and from having no severe toil exacted from them; they
are easy as to any anxiety to improve, for their conceit of themselves is
boundless. Such men take things easily, and therefore they scorn the holy
carefulness of those who watch the hand of the Lord. They say, Who is the Lord
that we should obey his voice? and then they turn round with a contemptuous
look and sneer at those who fear the Lord. Woe unto them that are at case in
Zion; their contempt of the godly shall hasten and increase their misery. The
injurious effect of freedom from affliction is singularly evident here. Place a
man perfectly at case and he derides the suffering godly, and becomes himself
proud in heart and conduct. "And with the contempt of the proud". The
proud think so much of themselves that they must needs think all the less of those
who are better than themselves. Pride is both contemptible and contemptuous.
The contempt of the great ones of the earth is often peculiarly acrid: some of
them, like a well known statesman, are "masters of gibes and flouts and
sneers", and never do they seem so much at home in their acrimony as when
a servant of the Lord is the victim of their venom. It is easy enough to write
upon this subject, but to be selected as the target of contempt is quite
another matter. Great hearts have been broken and brave spirits have been
withered beneath the accursed power of falsehood, and the horrible blight of
contempt. For our comfort we may remember that our divine Lord was despised and
rejected of men, yet he ceased not from his perfect service till he was exalted
to dwell in the heavens. Let us bear our share of this evil which still rages
under the sun, and let us firmly believe that the contempt of the ungodly shall
turn to our honour in the world to come: even now it serves as a certificate
that we are not of the world, for if we were of the world the world would love
us as its own.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. This psalm (as ye see) is but short, and therefore a very fit
example to show the force of prayer not to consist in many words, but in
fervency of spirit. For great and weighty matters may be comprised in a few
words, if they proceed from the spirit and the unspeakable groanings of the
heart, especially when our necessity is such as will not suffer any long
prayer. Every prayer is long enough if it be fervent and proceed from a heart
that understandeth the necessity of the saints.—Martin Luther.
Whole
Psalm. The change of performers in this psalm is very evident; the
pronoun in the first distich is in the first person singular, in the rest of
psalm the first plural is used.—Stephen Street.
Whole
Psalm. This psalm has one distinction which is to be found in
"scarcely any other piece in the Old Testament." In the Hebrew it has
many rhymes. But these rhymes are purely accidental. They result simply from
the fact that many words are used in it with the same inflections, and
therefore with the same or similar terminations. Regularly recurring and
intentional rhymes are not a characteristic of Hebrew poetry, any more than
they were of Greek or Latin poetry.—Samuel Cox.
Verse
1. Unto thee lift I up mine eyes. He who previously lifted
his eyes unto the hills, now hath raised his heart's eyes to the Lord himself.—The
Venerable Bede (672-735), in Neale and Littledale.
Verse
1. Unto thee lift I up mine eyes, etc. This is the sigh of
the pilgrim who ascendeth and loveth, and ascendeth because he loveth. He is
ascending from earth to heaven, and while he is ascending, unto whom shall he
lift his eyes, but unto him that dwelleth in heaven? We ascend to heaven each
time we think of God. In that ascent lies all goodness: if we would repent, we
must look not on ourselves, but on him; if we would be humble, we must look not
on ourselves, but on him; if we would truly love, we must look not on ourselves,
but on him who dwelleth in the heavens. If we would have him turn his eyes from
our sins, we must turn our eyes unto his mercy and truth.—Plain Commentary.
Verse
1. Unto thee lift I up mine eyes. Praying by the glances of
the eye rather than by words; mine afflictions having swollen my heart too big
for my mouth.—John Trapp.
Verse
1. Unto thee do I lift up mine eyes. You feel the greatness
of the contrast these words imply. Earth and heaven, dust and deity; the poor,
weeping, sinful children of mortality, the holy, ever blessed, eternal God: how
wide is the interval of separation between them! But over the awful chasm,
broader than ocean though it be, love and wisdom in the person of Jesus Christ,
have thrown a passage, by which the most sinful may repair unafraid to his
presence, and find the shame and the fears of guilt exchanged for the peace of
forgiveness and the hope that is full of immortality.—Robert Nisbet.
Verse
1. There are many testimonies in the lifting up of the eyes to
heaven. 1. It is the testimony of a believing, humble heart. Infidelity will
never carry a man above the earth. Pride can carry a man no higher than the
earth either. 2. It is the testimony of an obedient heart. A man that lifts up
his eye to God, he acknowledgeth thus much,—Lord, I am thy servant. 3. It is
the testimony of a thankful heart; acknowledging that every good blessing,
every perfect gift, is from the hand of God. 4. It is the testimony of a
heavenly heart. He that lifts up his eyes to heaven acknowledgeth that he is
weary of the earth; his heart is not there; his hope and desire is above. 5. It
is the testimony of a devout heart: there is no part of the body besides the
tongue that is so great an agent in prayer as the eye.—Condensed from
Richard Holdsworth.
Verse
1. O thou that dwellest in the heavens. "That
sittest." The Lord is here contemplated as enthroned in heaven, where he
administers the affairs of the Universe, executes judgment, and hears prayer.—James
G. Murphy.
Verses
1, 2. The lifting up the eyes, implies faith and confident persuasion
that God is ready and willing to help us. The very lifting up of the bodily
eyes towards heaven is an expression of this inward trust: so David in effect
saith, From thee, Lord, I expect relief, and the fulfilling of thy promises. So
that there is faith in it, that faith which is the evidence of things not seen.
How great soever the darkness of our calamities be, though the clouds of
present troubles thicken about us, and hide the Lord's care and loving kindness
from us, yet faith must look through all to his power and constancy of truth
and love. The eye of faith is a clear, piercing, eagle eye: Moses
"endured, as seeing him who is invisible:" Heb 11:27. Faith seeth
things afar off in the promises (Heb 11:13), at a greater distance than the eye
of nature can reach to. Take it either for the eye of the body, or the mind,
faith will draw comfort not only from that which is invisible, but also from
that which is future as well as invisible; its supports lie in the other world,
and in things which are yet to come.—Thomas Manton.
Verses
1, 2. In the first strophe the poet places himself before us as
standing in the presence of the Majesty of Heaven, with his eyes fixed on the
hand of God, absorbed in watchful expectation of some sign or gesture, however
slight, which may indicate the divine will. He is like a slave standing silent
but alert, in the presence of the Oriental "lord", with banns folded
on his breast, and eyes fixed on his master, seeking to read, and to
anticipate, if possible, his every wish. He is like a maiden in attendance on
her mistress, anxiously striving to see her mind in her looks, to discover and
administer to her moods and wants. The grave, reserved Orientals, as we know,
seldom speak to their attendants, at least on public occasions. They intimate
their wishes and commands by a wave of the hand, by a glance of the eye, by
slight movements and gestures which might escape notice, were they not watched
for with eager attention. Their slaves "hang upon their faces;
"they" fasten their eyes" on the eyes of their master; they
watch and obey every turn of his hand, every movement of his finger. Thus the
Psalmist conceives of himself as waiting on God, looking to him alone, watching
for the faintest signal, bent on catching and obeying it.—Samuel Cox.
Verse
2. Behold. An ordinary word, but here it hath an
extraordinary position. Ordinarily it is a term of attention, used for the
awakening of men, to stir up their admiration and audience; but here it is a
word not only prefixed for the exciting of men, but of God himself. David is
speaking to God in his meditations. "Behold, " saith he. As we take
it with respect to God, so it is a precatory particle: he beseeches God to look
down upon him, while he looks up unto God: Look on us, as we look to thee;
"Behold, Lord, as the eyes of servants, "etc. If we take it as it
hath respect to man, so it is an exemplary particle, to stir them up to do the
like. "Behold" what we do, and do likewise; let your eyes be like
ours. "Behold, as the eyes of servants are to the hand of their masters,
so are our eyes to the Lord our God." Let yours have the same fixing. So
it is a word that draws all eyes after it to imitation.—Richard Holdsworth.
Verse
2. Behold as the eyes of servants look, etc. For direction,
defence, maintenance, mercy in time of correction, help when the service is
over hard, etc., "so do our eyes wait upon the Lord our God, "viz.,
for direction and benediction.—John Trapp.
Verse
2. Eyes of servants unto the hand, etc. Our eyes ought to be
to the hand of the Lord our God:—First, that we may admire his works. Secondly,
that we may show that our service is pleasant to us; and to show our dependence
on such a benign, mighty, and bountiful hand. Thirdly, that we may evince to
him our love, and devoted willingness to do all things which he shall command
by the slightest movement of a finger. Fourthly, that from him we may receive
food, and all things necessary for sustenance. Fifthly, that he may be a
defence for us against the enemies that molest us, either by smiting them with
the sword, or by shooting of arrows; or by repelling others by the movement of
a finger; or, at least, by covering us with the shield of his goodwill. Sixthly
and lastly, that, moved by mercy, he would cease from chastisement.—Condensed
from Le Blanc.
Verse
2. As the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their masters,
etc. A traveller says, "I have seen a fine illustration of this passage in
a gentleman's house at Damascus. The people of the East do not speak so much or
so quick as those in the West, and a sign of the hand is frequently the only
instructions given to the servants in waiting. As soon as we were introduced
and seated on the divan, a wave of the master's hand indicated that sherbet was
to be served. Another wave brought coffee and pipes; another brought
sweetmeats. At another signal dinner was made ready. The attendants watched
their master's eye and hand, to know his will and do it instantly." Such
is the attention with which we ought to wait upon the Lord, anxious to fulfil
his holy pleasure,—our great desire being, "Lord, what wilt thou have me
to do?" An equally pointed and more homely illustration may be seen any
day, on our own river Thames, or in any of our large seaport towns, where the
call boy watches attentively the hand of the captain of the boat, and conveys
his will to the engine men.—The Sunday at Home.
Verse
2. As the eyes of slaves, watching anxiously the least
movement, the Smallest sign of their master's will. The image expresses
complete and absolute dependence. Savary (in his Zetters on Egypt, p. 135),
says, "The slaves stand silent at the bottom of the rooms with their hands
crossed over their breasts. With their eyes fixed upon their master they seek
to anticipate every one of his wishes." ...In the Psalm the eye directed
to the hand of God is the "oculus sperans", the eye which waits, and
hopes, and is patient, looking only to him and none other for help.—J.J.
Stewart Perowne.
Verse
2. As the eyes of servants, etc. The true explanation, I
should apprehend, is this: As a slave, ordered by a master or mistress to be
chastised for a fault, turns his or her imploring eyes to that superior, till
that motion of the hand appears that puts an end to the bitterness that is felt;
so our eyes are up to thee, our God, till thy hand shall give the signal for
putting an end to our sorrows: for our enemies, O Lord, we are sensible, are
only executing thy orders, and chastening us according to thy pleasure.—Thomas
Harmer.
Verse
2. Servants. Note how humbly the faithful think of themselves
in the sight of God. They are called and chosen to this dignity, to be the
heirs and children of God, and are exalted above the angels, and yet,
notwithstanding, they count themselves no better in God's sight than
"servants." They say not here, Behold, like as children look to the
hand of their fathers, but "as servants" to the hand of their
masters. This is the humility and modesty of the godly, and it is so far off
that hereby they lose the dignity of God's children, to the which they are
called, that by this means it is made to them more sure and certain.—Martin
Luther.
Verse
2. From the everyday conduct of domestic servants we should learn
our duty Godwards. Not without cause did our Saviour take his parables from
common, everyday things, from fields, vines, trees, marriages, etc., that thus
we might have everywhere apt reminders.—Martin Geier.
Verse
2. Servants. "A Maiden". Consider that there be two
sorts of servants set down here, man servants and maid servants; and this is to
let us know that both sexes may be confident in God. Not only may men be
confident in the power of God, but even women also, who are more frail and
feeble. Not only may women mourn to God for wrongs done to them, and have
repentance for sin, but they may be confident in God also. And therefore see,
in that rehearsal of believers and cloud of witnesses, not only is the faith of
men noted and commended by the Spirit of God, but also the faith of women: and
among the judges, Deborah, Jael, etc., are commended as worthies, and
courageous in God. And the women also in the New Testament are noted for their
following of Christ—even when all fled from him, then they followed him.—From
a Sermon by Alexander Henderson, 1583-1646.
Verse
2. Servants. "A Maiden". We know how shamefully
servants were treated in ancient times, and what reproaches must be cast upon
them, whilst yet they durst not move a finger to repel the outrage. Being
therefore deprived of all means of defending themselves, the only thing which
remained for them to do was, what is here stated, to crave the protection of
their masters. The same explanation is equally applicable to the case of
handmaids. Their condition was indeed shameful and degrading; but there is no reason
why we should be ashamed of, or offended at, being compared to slaves, provided
God is our defender, and takes our lives under his guardianship; God, I say,
who purposely disarms us and strips us of all worldly aid, that we may learn to
rely upon his grace, and to be contented with it alone. It having been
anciently a capital crime for bondmen to carry a sword or any other weapon
about them, and as they were exposed to injuries of every description, their
masters were wont to defend them with so much the more spirit, when anyone
causelessly did them violence. Nor can it be doubted that God, when he sees us
placing an exclusive dependence upon his protection, and renouncing all
confidence ib our resources, will, as our defender, encounter and shield us from
all the molestation nthat shall be offered to us.—John Calvin
Observe
the covenant name, "Jehovah our God": it is sweet to wait upon a
covenant God. Because of that covenant he will show mercy to us; but we may
have to wait for it. "Until that he have mercy upon us:". God hath
his time and season, and we must wait until it cometh. For the trial of our
faith our blessed Lord may for awhile delay, but in the end the vision will be
fulfilled. Mercy is that which we need, that which we look for, that which our
Lord will manifest to us. Even those who look to the Lord, with that holy look
which is here described, still need mercy, and as they cannot claim it by right
they wait for it till sovereign grace chooses to vouchsafe it. Blessed are
those servants whom their Master shall find so doing. Waiting upon the Lord is
a posture suitable both for earth and heaven: it is, indeed, in every place the
right and fitting condition for a servant of the Lord. Nor may we leave the
posture so long as we are by grace dwellers in the realm of mercy. It is a
great mercy to be enabled to wait for mercy, so much the more spirit, when
anyone causelessly did them violence. Nor can it be doubted that God, when he
sees us placing an exclusive dependence upon his protection, and renouncing all
confidence in our own resources, will, as our defender, encounter and shield us
from all the molestation that shall be offered to us.—John Calvin.
Verse
2. Hand. With the hand we demand, we promise, we call,
dismiss, threaten, entreat, supplicate, deny, refuse, interrogate, admire,
reckon, confess, repent; express fear, express shame, express doubt; we
instruct, command, unite, encourage, swear, testify, accuse, condemn, acquit,
insult, despise, defy, disdain, flatter, applaud, bless, abase, ridicule,
reconcile, recommend, exalt, regale, gladden, complain, afflict, discomfort,
discourage, astonish; exclaim, indicate silence, and what not? with a variety
and a multiplication that keep pace with the tongue.—Michael de Montaigne,
1533-1592.
Verse
2. Masters. It is said of Mr. George Herbert, that divine
poet, that, to satisfy his independency upon all others, and to quicken his
diligence in God's service, he used in his ordinary speech, when he made
mention of the blessed name of Jesus, to add, "my Master." And,
without any doubt, if men were unfeignedly of his mind, their respects would be
more to Christ's command, to Christ's will, to Christ's pleasure.—From
Spencer's "Things New and Old."
Verse
2. Our eyes wait. Here the Psalmist uses another word: it is
the eye waiting. What is the reason of the second word? Now he leaves the
similitude in the first line; for in the first line it is thus,—"As the
eyes of servants look, and the eyes of a maiden look"; here it is the eye
waits. There is good reason: to wait is more than to look: to wait is to look
constantly, with patience and submission, by subjecting our affections and
wills and desires to God's will; that is to wait, David in the second part, in
the second line, gives a better word, he betters his copy. There is the duty of
a Christian, to better his example; the eyes of servants look, David's eyes
shall wait: "So our eyes wait". It is true, indeed this word is not
in the original, therefore you may observe it is in a small letter in your
Bibles, to note that it is a word of necessity, added for the supply of the
sense, because the Holy Ghost left it not imperfect, but more perfect, that lie
put not in the verb; because it is left to every man's heart to supply a verb
to his own comfort, and a better he cannot than this. And that this word must
be added appears by the next words: "until that he have mercy upon
us". To look till he have mercy on us is to wait; so there is good reason
why this word is added. If we look to the thing begged—"mercy"—it is
so precious that we may wait for it. It was "servants" that he
mentioned, and it is their duty to wait upon their masters; they wait upon
their trenchers at meat; they wait when they go to bed and when they rise; they
wait in every place. Therefore, because he had mentioned the first word, he
takes the proper duty; there is nothing more proper to servants than waiting,
and if we are the servants of God we must wait. There is good reason in that
respect, because it is a word so significant, therefore the Spirit of God
varies it; he keeps not exactly to the line, "So do our eyes look,
"but he puts it, "So do our eyes wait."—Richard Holdsworth.
Verse
3. —Have mercy upon us, O Lord, have mercy upon us! Note how
a godly man speaks. He does not say, "Have mercy upon me, O Lord have
mercy upon me! because I am disgraced; "but, "Have mercy upon us, O
Lord, for we are filled with contempt!" The godly man is not so grieved
for his own and individual contempt as he is for the general contempt of the
good and faithful. There is an accord of the godly, not only in the cross, but
also in groanings, and in the invocation of divine grace.—Wolfgang Musculus.
Verse
3. For we are exceedingly filled. The Hebrew word here used
means "to be saturated"; to have the appetite fully satisfied—as
applied to one who is hungry or thirsty. Then it comes to mean to be entirely
full, and the idea here is, that as much contempt had been thrown upon them as
could be: they could experience no more.—Albert Barnes.
Verse
3. We are exceedingly filled with contempt. Men of the world
regard the Temple Pilgrims and their religion with the quiet smile of disdain,
wondering that those who have so much to engage them in a present life should
be weak enough to concern themselves about frames and feelings, about an unseen
God, and unknown eternity; and this is a trial they find it hard to bear. Their
soul, too, is filled exceedingly with the scorning of those that are at ease.
The prosperous of their neighbours declare that they have found the world a
generous and happy scene to all who deserve its gifts. Poverty and sorrow they
attribute to unworthiness alone. "Let them exert themselves" is the
unfeeling cry; "let them bestir themselves instead of praying, and with
them as with us it will soon be well"; and these words of harsh and
unfeeling ignorance aye like poison to the wounds of the bleeding heart. They
have further "the contempt of the proud" to mourn; of those who give
expression to their fierce disdain by assailing them with words of contumely,
and who seek to draw them by reproaches both from peace and from piety. These
are still the trials of Zion's worshippers: silent contempt, open
misrepresentation, fierce opposition. Religion, their last comfort, is
despised; peace, their first desire, is denied. Anxious to devote themselves in
the spirit of humble and earnest piety to the duties of their appointed sphere,
they find enemies in open outcry and array against them. But God is their
refuge, and to him they go.—Robert Nisbet.
Verses
3,4. The second strophe takes up the "have mercy upon us, "
as it were in echo. It begins with a "Kyrie eleison", which is
confirmed in a crescendo manner after the form of steps.—Franz Delitszch.
Verse
4. Exceedingly filled, or perhaps, "has long been
filled." (Comp. Ps 120:6). This expression, together with the earnestness
of the repeated prayer, "Be gracious unto us", shows that the
"scorn" and "contempt" have long pressed upon the people,
and their faith has accordingly been exposed to a severe trial. The more remarkable
is the entire absence of anything like impatience in the language of the
psalm.—J.J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse
4. The scorning of those that are at ease. When men go on
prosperously, they are apt wrongfully to trouble others, and then to shout at them
in their misery, and to despise the person and cause of God's people. This is
the sure effect of great arrogancy and pride. They think they may do what they
please; they have no changes, therefore they fear not God, but put forth their
hands against such as be at peace with them (Ps 4:19,20); whilst they go on
prosperously and undisturbed, they cannot abstain from violence and oppression.
This is certainly pride, for it is a lifting up of the heart above God and
against God and without God. And they do not consider his providence, which
alternately lifts up and eases down, that adversity may not be without a
cordial, nor prosperity without a curb and bridle. When men sit fast, and are
well at ease, they are apt to be insolent and scornful. Riches and worldly
greatness make men insolent and despisers of others, and not to care what
burdens they impose upon them; they are entrenched within a mass of wealth and
power and greatness, and so think none can call them to an account.—Thomas
Manton.
Verse
4. Those that are at ease. The word always means such as are
recklessly at their ease, the careless ones, such as those whom Isaiah bids,
"rise up, tremble, be troubled; "for "many days and years shall
ye be troubled" (Ps 32:9-11). It is that luxury and ease which sensualise
the soul, and make it dull, stupid, hard hearted.—Edward Bonyerie Pusey
(1800—), in "The Minor Prophets".
Verse
4. Those that are at ease, who are regardless of the troubles
of others. and expect none of their own.—James G. Murphy.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Whole
Psalm. We have here,
1.
The prayer of dependence, Ps 123:2.
2. The prayer of apprehension: "Unto thee", etc.
3. The spirit of obedience: "As the eyes of servants:" etc.
4. The patience of the saints: "Until he have mercy upon us."
—R. Nisbet.
Whole
Psalm. Eyes and no eyes.
1.
EYES.
(a)
Upward, in confidence, in prayer, in thought.
(b) "Unto, "in reverence, watchfulness, obedience.
(c) Inward, producing a cry for mercy.
2.
No EYES.
(a)
NO sight of the excellence of the godly.
(b) No sense of their own danger: "at ease."
(c) No humility before God: "proud."
(d) No uplifted eyes in hope, prayer, expectation.
Verse
1. The eyes of faith.
1.
Need uplifting.
2.
See best upward.
3.
Have always something to see upward.
4.
Let us look up, and so turn our eyes from too much introspection and
retrospection.
Verse
1.
1.
The language of Adoration: "Thou that dwellest in the heavens."
2.
The language of Confession.
(a)
Of need.
(b) Of Helplessness.
3.
The language of Supplication: "Unto thee, "etc.
4.
The language of Expectation; as shown in Ps 123:2.—G.R.
Verse
2. (Ps 121:4 with this verse.) Two beholds.
1.
God's watchful eye over us.
2. The saint's watchful eye upon God.
Verse
2. "Our eyes wait upon the Lord our God."
1.
What it is to wait with the eye.
2.
What peculiar aspect of the Lord suggests such waiting: "Jehovah our
God." The covenant God is the trusted God.
3.
What comes of such waiting—"mercy."
Verse
2. The guiding hand.
1.
A beckoning hand—to go near.
2. A directing hand—to go here and there.
3. A quiescent hand—to remain where we are.—G.R.
Verse
2. Homely metaphors, or what may be learned from maids and their
mistresses.
Verse
3 (first portion). The Sinner's Litany. The Saint's Entreaty.
Verse
3 (second portion). The world's contempt, the abundance of it, the
reason of it, the bitterness of it, the comfort under it.
Verses
3, 4.
1.
The occasion of the prayer: the contempt of men. This is often the most
difficult to bear.
(a)
Because it is most unreasonable. Why ridicule men for yielding to their own
convictions of what is right?
(b)
Most undeserved. True religion injures no man, but seeks the good of all.
(c)
Most profane. To reproach the people of God because they are his people is to
reproach God himself.
2.
The subject of the prayer.
(a)
The prayer: is not for justice, which might be desired, but for mercy.
(b)
The plea: "For we are, "etc. The reproaches of men are an
encouragement to look for special help from God. The harp hung upon the willows
sends forth its sweetest tones. The less it is in human hands the more freely
it is played upon by the Spirit of God.—G.R.
Verse
4. Those that are at ease.
1.
Explain their state: "at ease."
2. Show their ordinary state of mind: "proud."
3. Denounce their frequent sin: scorn of the godly.
4. Exhibit their terrible danger.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》