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church fathers 17
ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS I TO VII.
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ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS.
PSALM I.
1. "Blessed is the man that hath not gone away in the counsel of the
ungodly" (ver. 1). This is to be understood of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Lord Man.(1) "Blessed is the man that hath not gone away in the
counsel of the ungodly," as "the man of earth did,"(2) who consented to
his wife deceived by the serpent, to the transgressing the commandment
of God. "Nor stood in the way of sinners." For He came indeed in the
way of sinners, by being born as sinners are; but He "stood" not
therein, for that the enticements of the world held Him not. And hath
not sat in the seat of pestilence." He willed not an earthly kingdom,
with pride, which is well taken for "the seat of pestilence;" for that
there is hardly any one who is free from the love of rule, and craves
not human glory. For a "pestilence" is disease widely spread, and
involving all or nearly all. Yet "the seat of pestilence" may be
more appropriately understood of hurtful doctrine; "whose word
spreadeth as a canker."(3) The order too of the words must be
considered: "went away, stood, sat." For he "went away," when he drew
back from God. He "stood," when he took pleasure in sin. He "sat,"
when, confirmed in his pride, he could not go back, unless set free by
Him, who neither "hath gone away in the counsel of the ungodly, nor
stood in the way of sinners, nor sat in the seat of pestilence.
2. "But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and in His law will he
meditate by day and by night (ver. 2). The law is not made for a
righteous man," 4 says the Apostle. But it is one thing to be in the
law, another under the law. Whoso is in the law, acteth according to
the law; whoso is under the law, is acted upon according to the law:
the one therefore is free, the other a slave. Again, the law, which is
written and imposed upon the servant, is one thing; the law, which is
mentally discerned by him who needeth not its "letter," is another
thing. "He will meditate by day and by night," is to be understood
either as without ceasing; or "by day" in joy," by night" in
tribulations. For it is said, "Abraham saw my day, and was glad:"(5)
and of tribulation it is said, "my reins also have instructed me, even
unto the night."(6)
3. "And he shall be like a tree planted hard by the running streams of
waters" (ver. 3); that is either Very "Wisdom,"(7) which vouchsafed to
assume man's nature for our salvation; that as man He might be "the
tree planted hard by the running streams of waters;" for in this sense
can that too be taken which is said in another Psalm, "the river of God
is full of water."(8) Or by the Holy Ghost, of whom it is said, "He
shall baptize you in the Holy Ghost;"(9) and again, "If any man thirst,
let him come unto Me, and drink;"(10) and again, "If thou knewest the
gift of God, and who it is that asketh water of thee, thou wouldest
have asked of Him, and He would have given thee living water, of which
whoso drinketh shall never thirst, but it shall be made in him a well
of water springing up into everlasting life."(11) Or, "by the running
streams of waters" may be by the sins of the people,
because first the waters are called "peoples" in the Apocalypse;(12)
and again, by "running stream" is not unreasonably understood "fall,"
which hath relation to sin. That "tree" then, that is, our Lord, from
the running streams of water, that is, from the sinful people's drawing
them by the way into the roots of His discipline, will "bring forth
fruit," that is, will establish Churches; "in His season," that is,
after He hath been glorified by His Resurrection and Ascension into
heaven. For then, by the sending of the Holy Ghost to the Apostles, and
by the confirming of their faith in Him, and their mission to the
world, He made the Churches to "bring forth fruit." "His leaf also
shall not fall," that is, His Word shall not be in vain. For, "all
flesh is grass, and the glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass
withereth, and the flower falleth, but the word of the Lord abideth for
ever.(1) And whatsoever He doeth shall prosper" that is, whatsoever
that tree shall bear; which all must be taken of fruit and leaves, that
is, deeds and words.
4. "The ungodly are not so," they are not so, "but are like the dust
which the wind casteth forth from the face of the earth" (ver. 4). "The
earth" is here to be taken as that stedfastness in God, with a view to
which it is said, "The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, yea, I
have a goodly heritage."(2) With a view to this it is said, "Wait on
the Lord and keep His ways, and He shall exalt thee to inherit the
earth."(3) With a view to this it is said, "Blessed are the meek, for
they shall inherit the earth."(4) A comparison too is derived hence,
for as this visible earth supports and contains the outer man, so that
earth invisible the inner man. "From the face of" which "earth the wind
casteth forth the ungodly," that is, pride, in that it puffeth him up.
On his guard against which he, who was inebriated by the richness of
the house of the Lord, and drunken of the torrent
stream of its pleasures, saith, "Let not the foot of pride come against
me."(5) From this earth pride cast forth him who said, "I will place my
seat in the north, and I will be like the Most High."(6) From the face
of the earth it cast forth him also who, after that he had consented
and tasted of the forbidden tree that he might be as God, hid himself
from the Face of God.(7) That his earth has reference to the inner man,
and that man(8) is cast forth thence by pride, may be particularly seen
in that which is written, "Why is earth and ashes proud ? Because, in
his life, he cast forth his bowels."(9) For, whence he hath been cast
forth, he is not unreasonably said to have cast forth himself.
5. "Therefore the ungodly rise not in the judgment" (ver. 5):
"therefore," namely, because "as dust they are cast forth from the face
of the earth." And well did he say that this should be taken away from
them, which in their pride they court, namely, that they may judge; so
that this same idea is more clearly expressed in the following
sentence, "nor sinners in the counsel of the righteous." For it is
usual for what goes before,(10) to be thus repeated more clearly. So
that by "sinners" should be understood the "ungodly;" what is before
"in the judgment," should be here "in the counsel of the righteous." Or
if indeed the ungodly are one thing, and sinners another, so that
although every ungodly man is a sinner, yet every sinner is not
ungodly; "The ungodly rise not in the judgment," that is, they shall
rise indeed, but not that they should be judged, for they are already
appointed
to most certain punishment. But "sinners" do not rise "in counsel of
the just" that is that the may, judge, but perad venture that they may
be judged; so as of these it were said, "The fire shall try every man's
work of what sort it is. If any man's work abide, he shall receive a
reward. If any man's work shall be burned, he shall then suffer loss:
but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire."
6. "For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous" (ver. 6). As it is
said, medicine knows health, but knows not disease, and yet disease is
recognised by the art of medicine. In like manner can it be said that
"the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous," but the way of the ungodly
He knoweth not. Not that the Lord is ignorant of anything, and yet He
says to sinners, "I never knew you."(11) "But the way of the ungodly
shall perish;" is the same as if it were said, the way of the ungodly
the Lord knoweth not. But it is expressed more plainly that this should
be not to be known of the Lord, namely, to "perish;" and this to be
known of the Lord, namely, to "abide;" so as that to be should
appertain to the knowledge of God, but to His not knowing not to be.
For the Lord saith, "I AM that I AM," and, "I AM hath sent me."(12)
PSALM II.
1. "Why do the heathen rage, and the people meditate vain things?"
(ver. 1). "The kings of the earth have stood up, and the rulers taken
counsel together, against the Lord, and against His Christ" (ver. 2).
It is said, "why?" as if it were said, in vain. For what they wished,
namely, Christ's destruction, they accomplished not; for this is spoken
of our Lord's persecutors, of whom also mention is made in the Acts of
the Apostles.(13)
2. "Let us break their bonds asunder, and cast away their yoke from us"
(ver. 3). Although it admits of another acceptation, yet is it more
fitly understood as in the person of those who are said to "meditate
vain things." So that "let us break their bonds asunder, and cast away
their yoke from us," may be, let us do our endeavour, that the
Christian religion do not bind us, nor be imposed upon us.
3. "He that dwelleth in the heavens shall laugh them to scorn, and the
Lord shall have them in derision" (ver. 4). The sentence is repeated;
for "He who dwelleth in the heavens," is afterwards put, "the Lord;"
and for "shall laugh them to scorn," is afterwards put, "shall have
them in derision." Nothing of this however must be taken in a carnal
sort, as if God either laugheth with cheek, or derideth with nostril;
but it is to be understood of that power which He giveth to His saints,
that they seeing things to come, namely, that the Name and rule of
Christ is to pervade posterity and possess all nations, should
understand that those men "meditate a vain thing." For this power
whereby these things are foreknown is God's "laughter" and "derision."
"He that dwelleth in the heavens shall laugh them to scorn." If by
"heavens" we understand holy souls, by these God, as foreknowing what
is to come, will "laugh them to scorn, and have them in derision."
4. "Then He shall speak unto them in His wrath, and vex them in His
sore displeasure" (ver. 5). For showing more clearly how He will "speak
unto them," he added, He will "vex them;" so that "in His wrath," is,
"in His sore displeasure." But by the "wrath and sore displeasure" of
the Lord God must not be understood any mental perturbation; but the
might whereby He most justly avengeth, by the subjection of all
creation to His service. For that is to be observed and remembered
which is written in the Wisdom of Solomon, "But Thou, Lord of power,
judgest with tranquillity, and with great favour orderest us." The
"wrath" of God then is an emotion which is produced in the soul which
knoweth the law of God, when it sees this same law transgressed by the
sinner. For by this emotion of righteous souls many things are avenged.
Although the "wrath" of God can be well understood of that darkening of
the mind, which overtakes those who transgress the law of God.
5. "Yet am I set by Him as King upon Sion, His holy hill, preaching His
decree" (ver. 6). This is clearly spoken in the Person of the very Lord
our Saviour Christ. But if Sion signify, as some interpret, beholding,
we must not understand it of anything rather than of the Church, where
daily is the desire raised of beholding the bright glory of God,
according to that of the Apostle, "but we with open face beholding the
glory of the Lord."(2) Therefore the meaning of this is, Yet I am set
by Him as King over His holy Church; which for its eminence and
stability He calleth a mountain. "Yet I am set by Him as King." I, that
is, whose "bands" they were meditating "to break asunder," and whose
"yoke" to "cast away." "Preaching His decree." Who doth not see the
meaning of this, seeing it is daily practised?
6. "The Lord hath said unto me, Thou artMy Son, to-day have I begotten
Thee" (ver. 7)., Although that day may also seem to be prophetically
spoken of, on which Jesus Christ was born according to the flesh ;. and
in eternity there is nothing past as if it had ceased to be, nor future
as if it were not yet, but present only, since whatever is eternal,
always is; yet as "today" intimates presentiality, a divine
interpretation is given to that expression, "To-day have I begotten
Thee," whereby the uncorrupt and Catholic faith proclaims the eternal
generation of the power and Wisdom of God, who is the Only-begotten
Son.
7. "Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the nations for Thine inheritance"
(ver. 8). This has at once a temporal sense with reference to the
Manhood which He took on Himself, who offered up Himself as a Sacrifice
in the stead of all sacrifices, who also maketh intercession for us; so
that the words, "ask of Me," may be referred to all this temporal
dispensation, which has been instituted for mankind, namely, that the
"nations" should be joined to the Name of Christ, and so be redeemed
from death, and possessed by God. "I shall give Thee the nations for
Thine inheritance," which so possess them for their salvation, and to
bear unto Thee spiritual fruit. "And the uttermost parts of the earth
for Thy possession." The same repeated, "The uttermost parts of the
earth," is put for "the nations;" but more clearly, that we might
understand all the nations. And "Thy possession" stands for "Thine
inheritance."
8. "Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron," with inflexible justice,
and "Thou shall break them like a potter's vessel" (ver. 9); hat is,
"Thou shalt break" in them earthly lusts, and the filthy doings of the
old man, and whatsoever hath been derived and inured from the sinful
clay. "And now understand, ye kings" (ver. 10). "And now;" that is,
being now renewed, your covering of clay worn out, that is, the carnal
vessels of error which belong to your past life, "now understand," ye
who now are "kings;" that is, able now to govern all that is servile
and brutish in you, able now too to fight, not as "they who beat the
air, but chastening your bodies, and bringing them into subjection."(3)
"Be instructed, all ye who judge the earth." This again is a
repetition; "Be instructed" is instead of "understand; and" ye who
judge the earth instead of ye kings. For He signifies the
spiritual by "those who judge the earth." For whatsoever we judge, is
below us; and whatsoever is below the spiritual man, is with good
reason called "the earth;" because it is defiled with earthly
corruption.
9. "Serve the Lord with fear;" lest what is said, "Ye kings and judges
of the earth," turn into pride: "And rejoice with trembling" (ver. 11).
Very excellently is "rejoice" added, lest "serve the Lord with fear"
should seem to tend to misery. But again, lest this same rejoicing
should run on to unrestrained inconsiderateness, there is added "with
trembling," that it might avail for a warning, and for the careful
guarding of holiness. It can also be taken thus, "And now ye kings
understand;" that is, And now that I am set as King, be ye not sad,
kings of the earth, as if your excellency were taken from you, but
rather "understand and be instructed." For it is expedient for you,
that ye should be under Him, by whom understanding and instruction are
given you. And this is expedient for you, that ye lord it not with
rashness, but that ye "serve the Lord" of all "with fear," and
"rejoice"
in bliss most sure and most pure, with all caution and carefulness,
lest ye fall therefrom into pride.
10. "Lay hold of discipline,(1) lest at any time the Lord be angry, and
ye perish from the righteous way" (ver. 12). This is the same as,
"understand," and, "be instructed." For to understand and be
instructed, this is to lay hold of discipline. Still in that it is
said, "lay hold of," it is plainly enough intimated that there is some
protection and defence against all things which might do hurt unless
with so great carefulness it be laid hold of. "Lest at any time the
Lord be angry," is expressed with a doubt, not as regards the vision of
the prophet to whom it is certain, but as regards those who are warned;
for they, to whom it is not openly revealed, are wont to think with
doubt of the anger of God. This then they ought to say to themselves,
let us "lay hold of discipline, lest at any time the Lord be angry, and
we perish from the righteous way." Now, how "the Lord be angry" is
to be taken, has been said above. And "ye perish from the righteous
way." This is a great punishment, and dreaded by those who have had any
perception of the sweetness of righteousness; for he who perisheth from
the way of righteousness, in much misery will wander through the ways
of unrighteousness.
11. "When His anger shall be shortly kindled, blessed are all they who
put their trust in Him;" that is, when the vengeance shall come which
is prepared for the ungodly and for sinners, not only will it not light
on those "who put their trust in" the Lord, but it will even avail for
the foundation and exaltation of a kingdom for them. For he said not,
"When His anger shall be shortly kindled," safe "are all they who put
their trust in Him," as though they should have this only thereby, to
be exempt from punishment; but he said, "blessed ;" in which there is
the sum and accumulation of all good things. Now the meaning of
"shortly" I suppose to be this, that it will be something sudden,
whilst sinners will deem it far off and long to Come.
PSALM III.(2)
A PSALM OF DAVID, WHEN HE FLED FROM THE FACE OF ABESSALON HIS SON.
1. The words, "I slept, and took rest; and rose, for the Lord will take
me up," lead us to believe that this Psalm is to be understood as in
the Person of Christ; for they sound more applicable to the Passion and
Resurrection of our Lord, than to that history in which David's flight
is described from the face of his rebellious son. And, since it is
written of Christ's disciples, "The sons of the bridegroom fast not as
long as the bridegroom is with them;"(3) it is no wonder if by his
undutiful(4) son be here meant that undutiful(4) disciple who betrayed
Him. From whose face although it may be understood historically that He
fled, when on his departure He withdrew with the rest to the mountain;
yet in a spiritual sense, when the Son of God, that is the Power and
Wisdom of God, abandoned the mind of Judas; when the Devil wholly
occupied him; as it is written, "The Devil entered into
his heart,"(5) may it be well understood that Christ fled from his
face; not that Christ gave place to the Devil, but that on Christ's
departure the Devil took possession. Which departure, I suppose, is
called a flight in this Psalm, because of its quickness; which is
indicated also by the word of our Lord, saying, "That thou doest, do
quickly."(5) So even in common conversation we say of anything that
does not come to mind, it has fled from me; and of a man of much
learning we say, nothing flies from him. Wherefore truth fled from the
mind of Judas, when it ceased to enlighten him. But Absalom, as some
interpret, in the Latin tongue signifies, Patris pax, a father's peace.
And it may seem strange, whether in the history of the kings, when
Absalom carried on war against his father; or in the history of the New
Testament, when Judas was, the betrayer of our Lord; how "father's
peace" can
be understood. But both in the former place they who read carefully,
see that David in that war was at peace with his son, who even with
sore grief lamented his death, saying, "O Absalom, my son, would God I
had died for thee!"(6) And in the history of the New Testament by that
so great and so wonderful forbearance of our Lord; in that He bore so
long with him as if good, when He was not ignorant of his thoughts; in
that He admitted him to the Supper in which He committed and delivered
to His disciples the figure of His Body and Blood; finally, in that He
received the kiss of peace at the very time of His betrayal; it is
easily understood how Christ showed peace to. His betrayer, although he
was laid waste by the intestine war of so abominable a device. And
therefore is Absalom called "father's peace," because his father had
the peace, which he had not.
2. "O Lord, how are they multiplied that trouble me!" (ver. 1). So
multiplied indeed were they, that one even from the number of His
disciples was not wanting, who was added to the number of His
persecutors. "Many rise up against me; many say unto my soul, There is
no salvation for him in his God" (ver. 2). It is clear that if they had
had any idea that He would rise again, assuredly they would not have
slain Him. To this end are those speeches, "Let Him come down from the
cross, if He be the Son of God;" and again, "He saved others, Himself
He cannot save."(1) Therefore, neither would Judas have betrayed Him,
if he had not been of the number of those who despised Christ, saying,
"There is no salvation for Him in His God."
3. "But Thou, O Lord, art my taker."(2) It is said to God in the nature
of man, for the taking of man is, the Word made Flesh. "My glory." Even
He calls God his glory, whom the Word of God so took, that God became
one with Him. Let the proud learn, who unwillingly hear, when it is
said to them, "For what hast thou that thou didst not receive ? Now if
thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not
received it?"(3) " And the lifter up of my head" (ver. 3). I think that
this should be here taken of the human mind, which is not unreasonably
called the head of the soul;(4) which so inhered in, and in a sort
coalesced with, the supereminent excellency of the Word taking man,
that it was not laid aside by so great humiliation of the Passion.
4. "With my voice have I cried unto the Lord" (ver. 4); that is, not
with the voice of the body, which is drawn out with the sound of the
reverberation of the air; but with the voice of the heart, which to men
speaks not, but with God sounds as a cry. By this voice Susanna was
heard; (5) and with this voice the Lord Himself commanded that prayer
should be made in closets,(6) that is, in the recesses of the heart
noiselessly. Nor would one easily say that prayer is not made with this
voice, if no sound of words is uttered from the body; since even when
in silence we pray within the heart, if thoughts interpose alien from
the mind of one praying, it cannot yet be said, "With my voice have I
cried unto the Lord." Nor is this rightly said, save when the soul
alone, taking to itself nothing of the flesh, and nothing of the aims
of the flesh, in prayer, speaks to God, where He only hears.
But even this is called a cry by reason of the strength of its
intention. "And He heard me out of His holy mountain." We have the Lord
Himself called a mountain by the Prophet, as it is written, "The stone
that was cut out without hands grew to the size of a mountain."(7) But
this cannot be taken of His Person, unless peradventure He would speak
thus, out of myself, as of His holy mountain He heard me, when He dwelt
in me, that is, in this very mountain. But it is more plain and
unembarrassed, if we understand that God out of His justice heard. For
it was just that He should raise again from the dead the Innocent who
was slain, and to whom evil had been recompensed for good, and that He
should render to the persecutor a meet reward, who repaid Him evil for
good. For we read, "Thy justice is as the mountains of God."(8)
5. "I slept, and took rest"(9) (ver. 5). It may be not unsuitably
remarked, that it is expressly said," I," to signify that of His own
Will He underwent death, according to that, "Therefore doth My Father
love Me, because I lay down My life, that I might take it again. No man
taketh it from Me; I have power to lay it down, and I have power to
take it again."(10) Therefore, saith He, you have not taken Me as
though against My will, and slain Me; but "I slept, and took rest; and
rose, for the Lord will take me up." Scripture contains numberless
instances of sleep being put for death; as the Apostle says, "I would
not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are
asleep."(11) Nor need we make any question why it is added, "took
rest," seeing that it has already been said, "I slept." Repetitions of
this kind are usual in Scripture, as we have pointed out many in the
second Psalm. But some copies have, "I slept, and was cast into a deep
sleep."(12) And different copies express it differently, according to
the possible renderings of the Greek words,
<greek>egw</greek> <greek>de</greek>
<greek>ekokoimhQhn</greek> <greek>kei</greek>
<greek>upnwse</greek>. Unless perhaps sleeping(13) may be
taken of one dying, but sleep(1) of one dead: so that sleeping may be
the transition into sleep, as awakening is the transition into
wakefulness. Let us not deem these repetitions in the sacred writings
empty ornaments of speech. "I slept, and took rest," is therefore well
understood as "I gave Myself up to My Passion, and death ensued." "And
I rose, for the Lord will take Me up."(2) This is the more to be
remarked, how that in one sentence the Psalmist has used a verb of past
and future time. For he has
said, both "I rose," which is the past, and "will take Me up," which is
the future; seeing that assuredly the rising again could not be without
that taking up. But in prophecy the future is well joined to the past,
whereby both are signified. Since things which are prophesied of as yet
to come in reference to time are future; but in reference to the
knowledge of those who prophesy they are already to be viewed as done.
Verbs of the present tense are also mixed in, which shall be treated of
in their proper place when they occur.
6. "I will not fear the thousands of people that surround me" (ver. 6).
It is written in the Gospels how great a multitude stood around Him as
He was suffering, and on the cross. "Arise, O Lord, save me, O my God"
(ver. 7). It is not said to God, "Arise," as if asleep or lying down,
but it is usual in holy Scripture to attribute to God what He doeth in
us; not indeed universally, but where it can be done suitably; as when
He is said to speak, when by His gift Prophets speak, and Apostles, or
whatsoever messengers of the truth. Hence that text, "Would you have
proof of Christ, who speaketh in me?"(3) For he doth not say, of
Christ, by whose enlightening or order I speak; but he attributes at
once the speaking itself to Him, by whose gift he spake.
7. "Since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a cause." It is
not to be pointed as if it were one sentence, "Arise, O Lord, save me,
O my God; since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a cause."
For He did not therefore save Him, because He smote His enemies; but
rather He being saved, He smote them. Therefore it belongs to what
follows, so that the sense is this; "Since Thou hast smitten all who
oppose me without a cause, Thou hast broken the teeth of the sinners;"
that is, thereby hast Thou broken the teeth of the sinners, since Thou
hast smitten all who oppose me. It is for-sooth the punishment of the
opposers, whereby. their teeth have been broken, that is, the words of
sinners rending with their cursing the Son of God, brought to nought,
as it were to dust; so that we may understand "teeth" thus, as words of
cursing. Of(4) which teeth the Apostle speaks, "If ye
bite one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another."(5)
The teeth of sinners can also be taken as the chiefs of sinners; by
whose authority each one is cut off from the fellowship of godly
livers, and as it were incorporated with evil livers. To these teeth
are opposed the Church's teeth, by whose authority believers are cut
off from the error of the Gentiles and divers opinions, and are
translated into that fellowship which is the body of Christ. With these
teeth Peter was told to eat the animals when they bad been killed, that
is, by killing in the Gentiles what they were, and changing them into
what he was himself. Of these teeth too of the Church it is said, "Thy
teeth are as a flock of shorn sheep, coming up from the bath, whereof
every one beareth twins, and there is not one barren among them."(6)
These are they who prescribe rightly, and as they prescribe, live;
who do what is written, "Let your works shine before men, that they may
bless your Father which is in heaven."(7) For moved by their authority,
they believe God who speaketh and worketh through these men; and
separated from the world, to which they were once conformed, they pass
over into the members of the Church. And rightly therefore are they,
through whom such things are done, called teeth like to shorn sheep;
for they have laid aside the burdens of earthly cares, and coming up
from the bath, from the washing away of the filth of the world by the
Sacrament of Baptism, every one beareth twins. For they fulfil the two
commandments, of which it is said, "On these two commandments hang all
the Law and the Prophets;"(8) loving God with all their heart, and with
all their soul, and with all their mind, and their neighbour as
themselves. "There is not one barren among them," for much fruit
they render unto God. According to this sense then it is to be thus
understood, "Thou hast broken the teeth of the sinners," that is, Thou
hast brought the chiefs of the sinners to nought, by smiting all who
oppose Me without a cause. For the chiefs according to the Gospel
history persecuted Him, whilst the lower people honoured Him.
8. "Salvation is of the Lord; and upon Thy people be Thy blessing"
(ver. 8). In one sentence the Psalmist has enjoined men what to
believe, and has prayed for believers. For when it is said, "Salvation
is of the Lord," the words are addressed to men. Nor does it follow,
"And upon Thy people" be" Thy blessing," in such wise as that the whole
is spoken to men, but there is a change into prayer addressed to God
Himself, for the very people to whom it was said, "Salvation is of the
Lord." What else r then doth he say but this? Let no man presume on
himself, seeing that it is of the Lord to save from the death of sin;
for, "Wretched man that
I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? The grace of
God through Jesus Christ our Lord."(1) But do Thou, O Lord, bless Thy
people, who look for salvation from Thee.
9. This Psalm can be taken as in the Person of Christ another way;
which is that whole Christ should speak? I mean by whole, with His
body, of which He is the Head, according to the Apostle, who says, "Ye
are the body of Christ, and the members."(3) He therefore is the Head
of this body; wherefore in another place be saith, "But doing the truth
in love, we may increase in Him in all things, who is the Head, Christ,
from whom the whole body is joined together and compacted.(4) In the
Prophet then at once, the Church, and her Head (the Church rounded
amidst the storms of persecution throughout the whole world, which we
know already to have come to pass), speaks, "O Lord, how are they
multiplied that trouble me! many rise up against me;" wishing to
exterminate the Christian name. "Many say unto my soul, There is no
salvation for him in his God." For they would not otherwise hope that
they could destroy the Church, branching out so very far and wide,
unless they believed that God had no care thereof. "But Thou, O Lord,
art my taker;" in Christ of course. For into that flesh s the Church
too hath been taken by the Word," who was made flesh, and dwelt in
us;"(6) for that "In heavenly places hath He made us to sit together
with Him."(7) When the Head goes before, the other members will follow;
for, "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?"(8) Justly then
does the Church say, "Thou art my taker. My glory;" for she doth not
attribute her excellency to herself, seeing that she knoweth by whose
grace and mercy she is what she is. "And the lifter up of my head," of
Him, namely, who, "the First-born from the dead,"(9) ascended up into
heaven. "With my voice have I cried unto the Lord, and He heard me out
of His holy mountain." This is the prayer of all the Saints, the
odour of sweetness, which ascends up in the sight of the Lord. For now
the Church is heard out of this mountain, which is also her head; or,
out of that justice of God, by which both His elect are set free, and
their persecutors punished. Let the people of God also say, "I slept,
and took rest; and rose, for the Lord will take me up; "that they may
be joined, and cleave to their Head? For to this people is it said,
"Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall
lay hold on thee."(11) Since they are taken out of sinners, of whom it
is said generally," But they that sleep, sleep in the night."(12) Let
them say moreover, "I will not fear the thousands of people that
surround me;" of the heathen verily that compass me about to extinguish
everywhere, if they could, the Christian name. But how should they be
feared, when by the blood of the martyrs in Christ, as by oil,
the ardour of love is inflamed? "Arise, O Lord, save me, O my God." The
body can address this to its own Head. For at His rising the body was
saved; who "ascended up on high, led captivity captive, gave gifts unto
men."(13) For this is said by the Prophet, in the secret purpose of
God,(14) until that ripe harvest ,s which is spoken of in the Gospel,
whose salvation is in His Resurrection, who vouchsafed to die for us,
shed out our Lord to the earth. "Since Thou hast smitten all who oppose
me without a cause, Thou hast broken the teeth of the sinners." Now
while the Church hath rule, the enemies of the Christian name are
smitten with confusion; and, whether their curses or their chiefs,
brought to nought. Believe then, O man, that "salvation is of the Lord:
and," Thou, O Lord, may "Thy blessing" be "upon Thy people."
10. Each one too of us may say, when a multitude of vices and lusts
leads the resisting mind in the law of sin, "O Lord, how are they
multiplied that trouble me! many rise up against me." And, since
despair of recovery generally creeps in through the accumulation of
vices, as though these same vices were mocking the soul, or even as
though the Devil and his angels through their poisonous suggestions
were at work to make us despair, it is said with great truth, "Many say
unto my soul, There is no salvation for him in his God. But Thou, O
Lord, art my taker." For this is our hope, that He hath vouchsafed to
take the nature of man in Christ. "My glory;" according to that rule,
that no one should ascribe ought to himself. "And the lifter up of my
head;" either of Him, who is the Head of us all, or of the spirit of
each several one of us, which is the head of the soul and body. For
"the
head of the woman is the man, and the head of the man is Christ."(16)
But the mind is lifted up, when it can be said already, "With the mind
I serve the law of God;" (17) that the rest of man may be reduced to
peaceable submission, when in the resurrection of the flesh "death is
swallowed up in victory."(1) With my voice I have cried unto the Lord;"
with that most inward and intensive voice. "And He heard me out of His
holy mountain;"(2) Him, through whom He hath succoured us, through
whose mediation He heareth us. "I slept, and took rest; and rose, for
the Lord will take me up." Who of the faithful is not able to say this,
when he calls to mind the death of his sins, and the gift of
regeneration? "I will not fear the thousands of people that surround
me." Besides those which the Church universally hath borne and beareth,
each one also hath temptations, by which, when compassed about, he
may speak these words, "Arise, O Lord; save me, O my God:" that is,
make me to arise. "Since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a
cause:" it is well in God's determinate a purpose said of the Devil and
his angels; who rage not only against the whole body of Christ, but
also against each one in particular. "Thou hast broken the teeth of the
sinners." Each man hath those that revile him, he hath too the prime
authors of vice, who strive to cut him off from the body of Christ. But
"salvation is of the Lord." Pride is to be guarded against, and we must
say, "My soul cleaved after Thee."(4) "And upon Thy people" be "Thy
blessing:" that is, upon each one of us.
PSALM IV.
TO THE END, A PSALM SONG TO(5) DAVID.
1. "Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that
believeth."(6) For this "end" signifies perfection, not consumption.
Now it may be a question, whether every Song be a Psalm, or rather
every Psalm a Song; whether there are some Songs which cannot be called
Psalms, and some Psalms which cannot be called Songs. But the Scripture
must be attended to, if haply "Song" do not denote a joyful theme. But
those are called Psalms which are sung to the Psaltery; which the
history as a high mystery declares the Prophet David to have used.(7)
Of which matter this is not the place to discourse; for it requires
prolonged inquiry, and much discussion. Now meanwhile we must look
either for the words of the Lord Man s after the Resurrection, or of
man in the Church believing and hoping on Him.
2. "When I called, the God of my righteousness heard me" (ver. 1). When
I called, God heard me, the Psalmist says, of whom is my righteousness.
"In tribulation Thou hast enlarged me." Thou hast led me from the
straits of sadness into the broad ways of joy. For, "tribulation and
straitness is on every soul of man that doeth evil."(9) But he who
says, "We rejoice in tribulations, knowing that tribulation worketh
patience;" up to that where he says, "Because the love of God is shed
abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us;"(10) he
hath no straits of heart, they be heaped on him outwardly by them that
persecute him. Now the change of person, for that from the third
person, where he says, "He heard," he passes at once to the second,
where he says, "Thou hast enlarged me;" if it be not done for the sake
of variety and grace, it is strange why the Psalmist should first
wish to declare to men that he had been heard, and afterwards address
Him who heard him. Unless perchance, when he had declared how he was
heard, in this very enlargement of heart he preferred to speak with
God; that he might even in this way show what it is to be enlarged in
heart, that is, to have God already shed abroad in the heart, with whom
he might hold converse interiorly. Which is rightly understood as
spoken in the person of him who, believing on Christ, has been
enlightened; but in that of the very Lord Man, whom the Wisdom of God
took, I do not see how this can be suitable. For He was never deserted
by It. But as His very prayer against trouble is a sign rather of our
infirmity, so also of that sudden enlargement of heart the same Lord
may speak for His faithful ones, whom He has personated also when He
said, "I was an hungered, and ye gave Me no meat; I was thirsty, and ye
gave Me no drink,"(11) and so forth. Wherefore here also He can say,
"Thou hast enlarged me," for one of the least of His, holding converse
with God, whose "love" he has "shed abroad in his heart by the Holy
Ghost, which is given unto us."(12) "Have mercy upon me and hear my
prayer." Why does he again ask, when already he declared that he had
been heard and enlarged? It is for our sakes, of whom it is said, "But
if we hope for that we see not, we wait in patience;"(13) or is it,
that in him who has believed that which is begun may be perfected?
3. "O ye sons of men, how long heavy in heart" (ver. 2). Let your(14)
error, says he, have lasted at least up to the coming of the Son of
God; why then any longer are ye heavy in heart? When will ye make an
end of crafty wiles, if now when the truth is present ye make it not?
"Why do ye love vanity, and seek a lie?" Why would ye be blessed by the
lowest things? Truth alone, from which all things are true, maketh
blessed. For, "vanity is of deceivers, and all is vanity."(1) "What
profit hath a man of all his labour, wherewith he laboureth under the
sun?" Why then are ye held back by the love of things temporal? Why
follow ye after the last things, as though the first, which is vanity
and a lie? For you would have them abide with you, which all pass away,
as doth a shadow.
4. "And know ye that the Lord hath magnified his Holy One" (ver. 3).
Whom but Him, whom He raised up from below, and placed in heaven at His
right hand? Therefore doth he chide mankind, that they would turn at
length from the love of this world to Him. But if the addition of the
conjunction (for he says, "and know ye") is to any a difficulty, he may
easily observe in Scripture that this manner of speech is usual in that
language, in which the Prophets spoke. For you often find this
beginning, "And" the Lord said unto him, "And" the word of the Lord
came to him. Which joining by a conjunction, when no sentence has gone
before, to which the following one may be annexed, peradventure
admirably conveys to us, that the utterance of the truth in words is
connected with that vision which goes on in the heart. Although in this
place it may be said, that the former sentence, "Why do ye love
vanity, and seek a lie?" is as if it were written, Do not love vanity,
and seek a lie. And being thus read, it follows in the most direct
construction, "and know ye that the Lord hath magnified His Holy One."
But the interposition of the Diapsalma forbids our joining this
sentence with the preceding one. For whether this be a Hebrew word, as
some would have it, which means, so be it; or a Greek word, which marks
a pause in the psalmody (so as that Psalma should be what is sung in
psalmody, but Diapsalma an interval of silence in the psalmody; that as
the coupling of voices in singing is called Sympsalma, so their
separation Diapsalma, where a certain pause of interrupted continuity
is marked): whether I say it be the former, or the latter, or something
else, this at least is probable, that the sense cannot rightly be
continued and joined, where the Diapsalma intervenes.(2)
5. "The Lord will hear me, when I cry unto Him." I believe that we are
here warned, that with great earnestness of heart, that is, with an
inward and incorporeal cry, we should implore help of God. For as we
must give thanks for enlightenment in this life, so must we pray for
rest after this life. Wherefore in the person, either of the faithful
preacher of the Gospel, or of our Lord Himself, it may be taken, as if
it were written, the Lord will hear you, when you cry unto Him.
6. "Be ye angry, and sin not" (ver. 4) For the thought occurred, Who is
worthy to be heard? or how shall the sinner not cry in vain unto the
Lord? Therefore, "Be ye angry," saith he, "and sin not." Which may be
taken two ways: either, even if ye be angry, do not sin; that is, even
if there arise an emotion in the soul, which now by reason of the
punishment of sin is not in our power, at least let not the reason and
the mind, which is after God regenerated within, that with the mind we
should serve the law of God, although with the flesh we as yet serve
the law of sin? consent thereunto; or, repent ye, that is, be ye angry
with yourselves for your past sins, and henceforth cease to sin. "What
you say in your hearts:" there is understood, "say ye:" so that the
complete sentence is, "What ye say in your hearts, that say ye;" that
is, be ye not the people of whom it is said, "with their
lips they honour Me, but their heart is far from Me.(4) In your
chambers be ye pricked." This is what has been expressed already "in
heart." For this is the chamber, of which our Lord warns us, that we
should pray within, with closed doors.(5) But, "be ye pricked," refers
either to the pain of repentance, that the soul in punishment should
prick itself, that it be not condemned and tormented in God's judgment;
or, to arousing, that we should awake to behold the light of Christ, as
if pricks were made use of. But some say that not, "be ye pricked,"
but, "be ye opened," is the better reading; because in the Greek
Psalter it is <greek>katanughte</greek>, which refers to
that enlargement of the heart, in order that the shedding abroad of
love by the Holy Ghost may be received.
7. "Offer the sacrifice of righteousness, and hope in the Lord" (ver.
5). He says the same in another Psalm, "the sacrifice for God is a
troubled spirit."(6) Wherefore that this is the sacrifice of
righteousness which is offered through repentance it is not
unreasonably here understood. For what more righteous, than that each
one should be angry with his own sins, rather than those of others, and
that in self-punishment he should sacrifice himself unto God? Or are
righteous works after repentance the sacrifice of righteousness? For
the interposition of Diapsalma(7) not unreasonably perhaps intimates
even a transition from the old life to the new life: that on the old
man being destroyed or weakened by repentance, the sacrifice of
righteousness, according to the regeneration of the new man, may be
offered to God; when the soul now cleansed offers and places itself on
the altar of
faith, to be encompassed by heavenly fire, that is, by the Holy Ghost.
So that this may be the meaning, "Offer the sacrifice of righteousness,
and hope in the Lord;" that is, live uprightly, and hope for the gift
of the Holy Ghost, that the truth, in which you have believed, may
shine upon you.
8. But yet, "hope in the Lord," is as yet expressed without(1)
explanation. Now what is hoped for, but good things? But since each one
would obtain from God that good, which he loves; and they are not easy
to be found who love interior goods, that is, which belong to the
inward man, which alone should be loved, but the rest are to be used
for necessity, not to be enjoyed for pleasure; excellently did he
subjoin, when he had said, "hope in the Lord" (ver. 6), "Many say, Who
showeth us good things?" This is the speech, and this the daily inquiry
of all the foolish and unrighteous; whether of those who long for the
peace and quiet of a worldly life, and from the frowardness of mankind
find it not; who even in their blindness dare to find fault with the
order of events, when involved in their own deservings they deem the
times worse than these which are past: or, of those who doubt and
despair of that future life, which is promised us; who are often
saying, Who knows if it's true? or, who ever came from below, to tell
us this? Very exquisitely then, and briefly, he shows (to those, that
is, who have interior sight), what good things are to be sought;
answering their question, who say, "Who showeth us good things?" "The
light of Thy countenance," saith he, "is stamped on us, O Lord." This
light is the whole and true good of man, which is seen not with the
eye, but with the mind. But he says, "stamped on us," as a penny is
stamped with the king's image. For man was made after the image and
likeness of God,(2) which he defaced by sin: therefore it is his true
and eternal good, if by a new birth he be stamped. And I believe this
to be the bearing of that which some understand skilfully; I mean, what
the Lord said on seeing Caesar's tribute money, "Render to Caesar the
things that are Caesar's; and to God the things that are God's."(3) As
if He had said, In like manner as Caesar exacts from you the impression
of his image, so also does God: that as the tribute money is rendered
to him, so should the soul to God, illumined and stamped with the light
of His countenance. (Ver. 7.)"Thou hast put gladness into my heart."
Gladness then is not to be sought without by them, who, being still
heavy in heart, "love vanity, and seek a lie;" but within, where the
light of God's countenance is stamped. For Christ dwelleth in the inner
man,(4) as the Apostle says; for to Him doth it appertain to see truth,
since He hath said, "I am the truth."(5) And again, when He spake in
the Apostle, saying, "Would you receive a proof of Christ, who speaketh
in me?"(6) He spake not of course from without to him, but in his very
heart, that is, in that chamber where we are to pray.
9. But men (who doubtless are many) who follow after things temporal,
know not to say aught else, than, "Who showeth us good things?" when
the true and certain good within their very selves they cannot see. Of
these accordingly is most justly said, what he adds next: "From the
time of His corn, of wine, and oil, they have been multiplied." For the
addition of His, is not superfluous. For the corn is God's: inasmuch as
He is "the living bread which came down from heaven."(7) The wine too
is God's: for, "they shall be inebriated," he says, "with the fatness
of thine house."(8) The oil too is God's: of which it is said, "Thou
hast fattened my head with oil." But those many, who say, "Who showeth
us good things?" and who see not that the kingdom of heaven is within
them: these, "from the time of His corn, of wine, and oil, are
multiplied." For multiplication does not always betoken
plentifulness, and not, generally, scantiness: when the soul, given up
to temporal pleasures, burns ever with desire, and cannot be satisfied;
and, distracted with manifold and anxious thought, is not permitted to
see the simple good. Such is the soul of which it is said, "For the
corruptible body presseth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle
weigheth down the mind that museth on many things."(10) A soul like
this, by the departure and succession of temporal goods, that is, "from
the time of His corn, wine, and oil," filled with numberless idle
fancies, is so multiplied, that it cannot do that which is commanded,
"Think on the Lord in goodness, and in simplicity of heart seek
Him."(11) For this multiplicity is strongly opposed to that simplicity.
And therefore leaving these, who are many, multiplied, that is, by the
desire of things temporal, and who say, "Who showeth us good
things?" which are to be sought not with the eyes without, but with
simplicity of heart within, the faithful man rejoices and says, "In
peace, together, I will sleep, and take rest" (ver. 8). For such men
justly hope for all manner of estrangement of mind from things mortal,
and forgetfulness of this world's miseries; which is beautifully and
prophetically signified under the name of sleep and rest, where the
most perfect peace cannot be interrupted by any tumult. But this is not
had now in this life, but is to be hoped for after this life. This even
the words themselves, which are in the future tense, show us. For it is
not said, either, I have slept, and taken rest; or, I do sleep, and
take rest; but, "I will sleep, and take rest." Then shall "this
corruptible put on incorruption, and this mortal shall put on
immortality; then shall death be swallowed up in victory."(1) Hence it
is said, "But if we hope for that we see not, we wait in patience."(2)
10. Wherefore, consistently with this, he adds the last words, and
says, "Since Thou, O Lord, in singleness hast made me dwell in hope."
Here he does not say, wilt make; but, "hast made." In whom then this
hope now is, there will be assuredly that which is hoped for. And well
does he say, "in singleness." For this may refer in opposition to those
many, who being multiplied from the time of His corn, of wine, and oil,
say, "Who showeth us good things?" For this multiplicity perishes, and
singleness is observed among the saints: of whom it is said in the Acts
of the Apostles, "and of the multitude of them that believed, there was
one soul, and one heart."(3) In singleness, then, and simplicity,
removed, that is, from the multitude and crowd of things, that are born
and die, we ought to be lovers of eternity, and unity, if we desire to
cleave to the one God and our Lord.
PSALM V.
1. The title of the Psalm is, "For her who receiveth the inheritance."
The Church then is signified, who receiveth for her inheritance eternal
life through our Lord Jesus Christ; that she may possess God Himself,
in cleaving to whom she may be blessed, according to that, "Blessed are
the meek, for they shall possess the earth."(4) What earth, but that of
which it is said, "Thou art my hope, my portion in the land of the
living"?(5) And again more clearly, "The Lord is the portion of mine
inheritance and of my cup."(6) And conversely the word Church is said
to be God's inheritance according to that, "Ask of Me, and I shall give
thee the heathen for thine inheritance."(7) Therefore is God said to be
our inheritance, because He feedeth and sustaineth(8) us: and we are
said to be God's inheritance, because He ordereth and ruleth us.
Wherefore it is the voice of the Church in this Psalm called to her
inheritance, that she too may herself become the inheritance of the
Lord.
2. "Hear my words, O Lord" (ver. 1). Being called she calleth upon the
Lord; that the same Lord being her helper, she may pass through the
wickedness of this world, and attain unto Him. "Understand my cry." The
Psalmist well shows what this cry is; how from within, from the chamber
of the heart, without the body's utterance,(9) it reaches unto God: for
the bodily voice is heard, but the spiritual is understood. Although
this too may be God's hearing, not with carnal ear, but in the
omnipresence of His Majesty.
3. "Attend Thou to the voice of my supplication;" that is, to that
voice, which he maketh request that God would understand: of which what
the nature is, he hath already intimated, when he said, "Understand my
cry. Attend Thou to the voice of my supplication, my King, and my God"
(ver. 2). Although both the Son is God, and the Father God, and the
Father and the Son together One God; and if asked of the Holy Ghost, we
must give no other answer than that He is God; and when the Father, and
the Son, and the Holy Ghost are mentioned together, we must understand
nothing else, than One God; nevertheless Scripture is wont to give the
appellation of King to the Son. According then to that which is said,
"By Me man cometh to the Father,"(10) rightly is it first, "my King;"
and then, "my God." And yet has not the Psalmist said, Attend Ye; but,
"Attend Thou." For the Catholic faith preaches not
two or three Gods, but the Very Trinity, One God. Not that the same
Trinity can be together, now the Father, now the Son, now the Holy
Ghost, as Sabellius believed: but that the Father must be none but the
Father, and the Son none but the Son, and the Holy Ghost none but the
Holy Ghost, and this Trinity but One God. Hence when the Apostle had
said, "Of whom are all things, by whom are all things, in whom are all
things,"(11) he is believed to have conveyed an intimation of the Very
Trinity; and yet he did not add, to Them be glory; but, "to Him be
glory."
4. "Because I will pray unto Thee (ver. 3). O Lord, in the morning Thou
wilt hear my voice." What does that, which he said above, "Hear Thou,"
mean, as if he desired to be heard immediately? But now he saith," in
the morning Thou wilt hear;" not, hear Thou: and, "I will pray unto
Thee;" not, I do pray unto Thee: and, as follows, "in the morning I
will stand by Thee, and will see;" not, I do stand by Thee, and do see.
Unless perhaps his former prayer marks the invocation itself: but being
in darkness amidst the storms of this world, he perceives that he does
not see what he desires, and yet does not cease to hope," For hope that
is seen, is not hope."(1) Nevertheless, he understands why he does not
see, because the night is not yet past, that is, the darkness which our
sins have merited. He says therefore, "Because I will pray unto Thee, O
Lord;" that is, because Thou art so mighty to
whom I shall make my prayer, "in the morning Thou wilt hear my voice."
Thou art not He, he says, that can be seen by those, from whose eyes
the night of sins is not yet withdrawn: when the night then of my error
is past, and the darkness gone, which by my sins I have brought upon
myself, then "Thou wilt hear my voice." Why then did he say above not,
"Thou wilt hear," but "hear Thou"? Is it that after the Church cried
out, "hear Thou," and was not heard, she perceived what must needs pass
away to enable her to be heard? Or is it that she was heard above, but
doth not yet understand that she was heard, because she doth not yet
see by whom she hath been heard; and what she now says, "In the morning
Thou wilt hear," she would have thus taken, In the morning I shall
understand that I have been heard? Such is that expression, "Arise, O
Lord,"(2) that is, make me arise. But this latter is taken
of Christ's resurrection: but at all events that Scripture, "The Lord
your God proveth you, that He may know whether ye love Him,(3) cannot
be taken in any other sense, than, that ye by Him may know, and that it
may be made evident to yourselves, what progress ye have made in His
love.
5. "In the morning I will stand by Thee, and will see" (ver. 3). What
is, "I will stand," but "I will not lie down"? Now what else is, to lie
down, but to take rest on the earth, which is a seeking happiness in
earthly pleasures? "I will stand by," he says, "and will see." We must
not then cleave to things earthly, if we would see God, who is beheld
by a clean heart. "For Thou art not a God who hast pleasure in
iniquity. The malignant man shall not dwell near Thee, nor shall the
unrighteous abide before Thine eyes. Thou hast hated all that work
iniquity, Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie. The man of blood, and
the crafty man, the Lord will abominate" (vers. 4-6). Iniquity,
malignity, lying, homicide, craft, and all the like, are the night of
which we speak: on the passing away of which, the morning dawns, that
God may be seen. He has unfolded the reason, then, why he will
stand by in the morning, and see: "For," he says, "Thou art not a God
who hast pleasure in iniquity." For if He were a God who had pleasure
in iniquity, He could be seen even by the iniquitous, so that He would
not be seen in the morning, that is, when the night of iniquity is
over.
6. "The malignant man shall not dwell near Thee:" that is, he shall not
so see, as to cleave to Thee. Hence follows, "Nor shall the unrighteous
abide before Thine eyes." For their eyes, that is, their mind is beaten
back by the light of truth, because of the darkness of their sins; by
the habitual practice of which they are not able to sustain the
brightness of right understanding. Therefore even they who see
sometimes, that is, who understand the truth, are yet still
unrighteous, they abide not therein through love of those things, which
turn away from the truth. For they carry about with them their night,
that is, not only the habit, but even the love, of sinning. But if this
night shall pass away, that is, if they shall cease to sin, and this
love and habit thereof be put to flight, the morning dawns, so that
they not only understand, but also cleave to the truth.
7. "Thou hast hated all that work iniquity." God's hatred may be
understood from that form of expression, by which every sinner hates
the truth. For it seems that she too hates those, whom she suffers not
to abide in her. Now they do not abide, who cannot bear the truth.
"Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie." For this is the opposite to
truth. But lest any one should suppose that any substance or nature is
opposite to truth, let him understand that "a lie" has relation to that
which is not, not to that which is. For if that which is be spoken,
truth is spoken: but if that which is not be spoken, it is a lie.(4)
Therefore saith he, "Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie;" because
drawing back from that which is, they turn aside to that which is not.
Many lies indeed seem to be for some one's safety or advantage, spoken
not in malice, but in kindness: such was that of those
midwives in Exodus,(5) who gave a false report to Pharaoh, to the end
that the infants of the children of Israel might not be slain.(6) But
even these are praised not for the fact, but for the disposition shown;
since those who only lie in this way, will attain in time to a freedom
from all lying. For in those that are perfect, not even these lies are
found. For to these it is said, "Let there be in your mouth, yea, yea;
nay, nay; whatsoever is more, is of evil."(7) Nor is it without reason
written in another place, "The mouth that lieth slayeth the soul:"(8)
lest any should imagine that the perfect and spiritual man ought to lie
for this temporal life, in the death of which no soul is slain, neither
his own, nor another's. But since it is one thing to lie, another to
conceal the truth (if indeed it be one thing to say what is false,
another not to say what is true), if haply one does
not wish to give a man up even to this visible death, he should be
prepared to conceal what is true, not to say what is false; so that he
may neither give him up, nor yet lie, lest he slay his own soul for
another's body. But if he cannot yet do this, let him at all events
admit only lies of such necessity, that he may attain to be freed even
from these, if they alone remain, and receive the strength of the Holy
Ghost, whereby he may despise all that must be suffered for the truth's
sake. In fine, there are two kinds of lies, in which there is no great
fault,(1) and yet they are not without fault, either when we are in
jest, or when we lie that we may do good. That first kind, in jest, is
for this reason not very hurtful, because there is no deception. For he
to whom it is said knows that it is said for the sake of the jest. But
the second kind is for this reason the more inoffensive,
because it carries with it some kindly intention. And to say truth,
that which has no duplicity, cannot even be called a lie. As if, for
example, a sword be intrusted to any one, and he promises to return it,
when he who intrusted it to him shall demand it: if he chance to
require his sword when in a fit of madness, it is clear it must not be
returned then, lest he kill either himself or others, until soundness
of mind be restored to him. Here then is no duplicity, because he, to
whom the sword was intrusted, when he promised that he would return it
at the other's demand, did not imagine that he could require it when in
a fit of madness. But even the Lord concealed the truth, when He said
to the disciples, not yet strong enough, "I have many things to say
unto you, but ye cannot bear them now:"(2) and the Apostle Paul when he
said, "I could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as
unto carnal."(3) Whence it is clear that it is not blamable, sometimes
not to speak what is trite. But to say what is false is not found to
have been allowed to the perfect.
8. "The man of blood, and the crafty man, the Lord will abominate."
What he said above, "Thou hast hated all that work iniquity, Thou wilt
destroy all that speak a lie," may well seem to be repeated here: so
that one may refer "the man of blood" to "the worker of iniquity," and
"the crafty man" to; the "lie." For it is craft, when one thing is
done, another pretended. He used an apt word too, when he said, "will
abominate." For the disinherited are usually called: abominated. Now
this Psalm is, "for her who receiveth the inheritance;" and she adds
the exulting joy of her hope, in saying, "But I, in the multitude of
Thy mercy, will enter into Thine house" (vet. 7). "In the multitude of
mercy:" perhaps he means in the multitude of perfected and blessed men,
of whom that city shall consist, of which the Church is now in travail,
and is bearing few by few. Now that many men regenerated
and perfected, are rightly called the multitude of God's mercy, who can
deny; when it is most truly said, "What is man that Thou art mindful of
him, or the son of man that Thou visitest him?(4) I will enter into
Thine house:" as a stone into a building, I suppose, is the meaning.
For what else is the house of God than the Temple of God, of which it
is said, "for the temple of God is holy,(5) which temple ye are"? Of
which building He is the cornerstone,(6) whom the Power and Wisdom of
God coeternal with the Father assumed.
9. "I will worship at Thy holy temple, in Thy fear." "At the temple,"
we understand as, "near" the temple. For he does not say, I will
worship "in" Thy holy temple; but, "I will worship at Thy holy temple."
It must be understood too to be spoken not of perfection, but of
progress toward perfection: so that the words, "I will enter into Thine
house," should signify perfection. But that this may come to a happy
issue, "I will" first, he says, "worship at Thy holy temple." And
perhaps on this account he added, "in Thy fear;" which is a great
defence to those that are advancing toward salvation. But when any one
shall have arrived there, in him comes to pass that which is written,
"perfect love casteth out fear."(7) For they do not fear Him who is now
their friend, to whom it is said, "henceforth I will not call you
servants, but friends,"(8) when they have been brought through to that
which was promised.
10. "O Lord, lead me forth in Thy justice because of mine enemies"
(ver. 8). He has here sufficiently plainly declared that he is on his
onward road, that is, in progress toward perfection, not yet in
perfection itself, when he desires eagerly that he may be led forth.
But, "in Thy justice," not in that which seems so to men. For to return
evil for evil seems justice: but it is not His justice of whom it is
said, "He maketh His sun to rise on the good and on the evil:" for even
when God punishes sinners, He does not inflict His evil on them, but
leaves them to their own evil. "Behold," the Psalmist says, "he
travailed with injustice, he hath conceived toil, and brought forth
iniquity: he hath opened a ditch, and digged it, and hath fallen into
the pit which he wrought: his pains shall be turned on his own head,
and his iniquity shall descend on his own pate."(1) When then God
punishes, He punishes as a judge those that transgress the law, not by
bringing evil upon them from Himself, but driving them on to that which
they have chosen, to fill up the sum of their misery. But man, when he
returns evil for evil, does it with an evil will: and on this account
is himself first evil, when he would punish evil.
11. "Direct in Thy sight my way." Nothing is clearer, than that he here
sets forth that time, in which he is journeying onward. For this is a
way which is traversed not in any regions of the earth, but in the
affections of the heart. "In Thy sight," he says, "direct my way:" that
is, where no man sees; who are not to be trusted in their praise or
blame. For they can in no wise judge of another man's conscience,
wherein the way toward God is traversed. Hence it is added, "for truth
is not in their mouth" (ver. 9). To whose judgment of course then there
is no trusting, and therefore must we fly within to conscience, and the
sight of God. "Their heart is vain." How then can truth be in their
mouth, whose heart is deceived by sin, and the punishment of sin?
Whence men are called back by that voice, "Wherefore do ye love vanity,
and seek a lie?"
12. "Their throat is an open sepulchre." It may be referred to signify
gluttony, for the sake of which men very often lie by flattery. And
admirably has he said, "an open sepulchre:" for this gluttony is ever
gaping with open mouth, not as sepulchres, which, on the reception of
corpses, are closed up. This also may be understood hereby, that with
lying and blind flattery men draw to themselves those whom they entice
to sin; and as it were devour them, when they turn them to their own
way of living. And when this happens to them, since by sin they die,
those by whom they are led along, are rightly called open sepulchres:
for themselves too are in a manner lifeless, being destitute of the
life of truth; and they take in to themselves dead men, whom having
slain by lying words and a vain heart, they turn unto themselves. "With
their own tongues they dealt craftily:" that is, with evil
tongues. For this seems to be signified, when he says "their own." For
the evil have evil tongues, that is, they speak evil, when they speak
craftily. To whom the Lord saith, "How can ye, being evil, speak good
things?"(2)
13. "Judge them, O God: let them fall from their own thoughts" (ver.
10). It is a prophecy, not a curse. For he does not wish that it should
come to pass; but he perceives what will come to pass. For this happens
to them, not because he appears to have wished for it, but because they
are such as to deserve that it should happen. For so also what he says
after wards, "Let all that hope in Thee rejoice," he says by way of
prophecy; since he perceives that they will rejoice. Likewise is it
said prophetically, "Stir up Thy strength, and come:"(3) for he saw
that He would come. Although the words, "Let them fall from their own
thoughts," may be taken thus also, that it may rather be believed to be
a wish for their good by the Psalmist, whilst they fall from their evil
thoughts, that is, that they may no more think evil. But what follows,
"drive them out," forbids this interpretation. For
it can in no wise be taken in a favourable sense, that one is driven
out by God. Wherefore it is understood to be said prophetically, and
not of ill will; when this is said, which must necessarily happen to
such as chose to persevere in those sins, which have been mentioned.
"Let them," therefore, "fall from their own thoughts," is, let them
fall by their self-accusing thoughts, "their own conscience also
bearing witness," as the Apostle says, "and their thoughts accusing or
excusing, in the revelation of the just judgment of God."(4)
14. "According to the multitude of their ungodlinesses drive them out:"
that is, drive them out far away. For this is "according to the
multitude of their ungodlinesses,"(5) that they should be driven out
far away. The ungodly then are driven out from that inheritance, which
is possessed by knowing and seeing God: as diseased eyes are driven out
from the shining of the light, when what is gladness to others is pain
to them. Therefore these shall not stand in the morning,(6) and see.
And that expression is as great a punishment, as that which is said,
"But for me it is good to cleave to the Lord,"(7) is a great reward. To
this punishment is opposed, "Enter thou into the joy of Thy Lord;"(8)
for similar to this expulsion is, "Cast him into outer darkness."(9)
15. "Since they have embittered Thee, O Lord: I am," saith He, "the
Bread which came down from heaven;"(10) again, "Labour for the meat
which wasteth not;"(11) again, "Taste and see that the Lord is
sweet."(12) But to sinners the bread of truth is bitter. Whence they
hate the mouth of him that speaketh the truth. These then have
embittered God, who by sin have fallen into such a state of sickliness,
that the food of truth, in which healthy souls delight, as if it were
bitter as gall, they cannot bear.
16. "And let all rejoice that hope in Thee;" those of course to whose
taste the Lord is sweet. "They will exult for evermore, and Thou wilt
dwell in them" (ver. 11). This will be the exultation for evermore,
when the just become the Temple of God, and He, their Indweller, will
be their joy. "And all that love Thy name shall glory in Thee:" as when
what they love is present for them to enjoy. And well is it said, "in
Thee," as if in possession of the inheritance, of which the title of
the Psalm speaks: when they too are His inheritance, which is intimated
by, "Thou wilt dwell in them." From which good they are kept back, whom
God, according to the multitude of their ungodlinesses, driveth out.
17. "For Thou wilt bless the just man" (ver. 12). This is blessing, to
glory in God, and to be inhabited by God. Such sanctification is given
to the just. But that they may be justified, a calling goes before:
which is not of merit, but of the grace of God. "For all have sinned,
and want the glory of God."(1) "For whom He called, them He also
justified; and whom He, justified, them He also glorified."(2) Since
then calling is not of our merit, but of the goodness and mercy of God,
he went on to say, "O Lord, as with the shield of Thy good will Thou
hast crowned us." For God's good will goes before our good will, to
call sinners to repentance. And these are the arms whereby the enemy is
overcome, against whom it is said, "Who will bring accusation against
God's elect?" Again, "if God be for us, who can be against us? Who
spared not His Only Son, but delivered Him up for us all."(3)
"For if, when we were enemies, Christ died for us; much more being
reconciled shall we be saved from wrath through Him."(4) This is that
unconquerable shield, whereby the enemy is driven back, when he
suggests despair of our salvation through the multitude of tribulaions
and temptations.
18. The whole contents of the Psalm, then, are a prayer that she may be
heard, from the words, "hear my words, O Lord," unto, "my King, and my
God." Then follows a view of those things which hinder the sight of
God, that is, a knowledge that she s is heard, from the words, "because
I shall pray unto Thee, O Lord, in the morning Thou wilt hear my
voice," unto, "the man of blood and the crafty man the Lord will
abominte." Thirdly, she hopes that she, who is to be the house of God,
even now begins to draw near to Him in fear, before that perfection
which casteth out fear, from the words, "but I in the multitude of Thy
mercy," unto, "I will worship at Thy holy temple in Thy fear."
Fourthly, as she is progressing and advancing amongst those very things
which she feels to hinder her, she prays that she may be assisted
within, where no man seeth, lest she be turned aside by evil tongues,
for the words, "O Lord, lead me forth in Thy justice because of my
enemies," unto, "with their tongues they dealt craftily." Fifthly, is a
prophecy of what punishment awaits the ungodly, when the just man shall
scarcely be saved; and of what reward the just shall obtain, who, when
they were called, came, and bore all things manfully, till they were
brought to the end, from the words, "judge them, O God," unto the end
of the Psalm.
PSALM VI.
TO THE END, IN THE HYMNS OF THE EIGHTH,(6) A PSALM TO DAVID.(7)
1. "Of the eighth," seems here obscure. For the rest of this title is
more clear. Now it has seemed to some to intimate the day of judgment,
that is, the time of the coming of our Lord, when He will come to judge
the quick and dead. Which coming, it is believed, is to be, after
reckoning the years from Adam, seven thousand years: so as that seven
thousand years should pass as seven days, and afterwards that time
arrive as it were the eighth day. But since it has been said by the
Lord, "It is not yours to know the times, which the Father hath put m
His own power:"(8) and, "But of the day and that hour knoweth no man,
no, neither angel, nor Power, neither the Son, but the Father
alone:"(9) and again, that which is written, "that the day of the Lord
cometh as a thief,"(10) shows clearly enough that no man should
arrogate to himself the knowledge of that time, by any computation of
years. For if that day is to come after seven thousand years, every man
could learn its advent by reckoning the years. What comes then of the
Son's even not knowing this? Which of course is said with this meaning,
that men do not learn this by the Son, not that He by Himself doth not
know it: according to that form of speech, "the Lord your God trieth
you that He may know;"(11) that is, that He may make you know: and,
"arise, O Lord;"(12) that is, make us arise. When therefore the Son is
thus said not to know this day; not because He knoweth it not, but
because He causeth those to know it not, for whom it is not expedient
to know it, that is, He doth not show it to them; what does that
strange presumption mean, which, by a reckoning up of years, expects
the day of the Lord as most certain after seven thousand years?(13)
2. Be we then willingly ignorant of that which the Lord would not have
us know: and let us inquire what this title, "of the eighth," means.
The day of judgment may indeed, even without any rash computation of
years, be understood by the eighth, for that immediately after the end
of this world, life eternal being attained, the souls of the righteous
will not then be subject unto times: and, since all times have their
revolution in a repetition of those seven days, that per-adventure is
called the eighth day, which will not have this variety. There is
another reason, which may be here not unreasonably accepted, why the
judgment should be called the eighth, because it will take place after
two generations, one relating to the body, the other to the soul, For
from Adam unto Moses the human race lived of the body, that is,
according to the flesh: which is called the outward and the old
man,(1) and to which the Old Testament was given, that it might
prefigure the spiritual things to come by operations, albeit religious,
yet carnal. Through this entire season, when men lived according to the
body, "death reigned," as the Apostle saith, "even over those that had
not sinned." Now it reigned "after the similitude of Adam's
transgression,"(2) as the same Apostle saith; for it must be taken of
the period up to Moses, up to which time the works of the law, that is,
those sacraments of carnal observance, held even those bound, for the
sake of a certain mystery, who were subject to the One God. But from
the coming of the Lord, from whom there was a transition from the
circumcision of the flesh to the circumcision of the heart, the call
was made, that man should live according to the soul, that is,
according to the inner man, who is also called the "new man"(3) by
reason of the
new birth and the renewing of spiritual conversation. Now it is plain
that the number four has relation to the body, from the four well known
elements of which it consists, and the four qualities of dry, humid,
warm, cold. Hence too it is administered by four seasons, spring,
summer, autumn, winter. All this is very well known. For of the number
four relating to the body we have treated elsewhere somewhat subtilly,
but obscurely: which must be avoided in this discourse, which we would
have accommodated to the unlearned. But that the number three has
relation to the mind may be understood from this, that we are commanded
to love God after a threefold manner,(4) with the whole heart, with the
whole soul, with the whole mind:(5) of each of which severally we must
treat, not in the Psalms, but in the Gospels: for the present, for
proof of the relation of the number three to the mind, I think
what has been said enough. Those numbers then of the body which have
relation to the old man and the Old Testament, being past and gone, the
numbers too of the soul, which have relation to the new man and the New
Testament, being past and gone, a septenary so to say being passed;
because everything is done in time, four having been distributed to the
body, three to the mind; the eighth will come, the day of judgment:
which assigning to deserts their due, will transfer at once the saint,
not to temporal works, but to eternal life; but will condemn the
ungodly to eternal punishment.
3. In fear of which comdemnation the Church prays in this Psalm, and
says," Reprove me not, O Lord, in Thine anger" (ver. 1). The Apostle
too mentions the anger of the judgment; "Thou treasurest up unto
thyself," he says, "anger against the day of the anger of the just
judgment of God."(6) In which he would not be reproved, whosoever longs
to be healed in this life. "Nor in Thy rage chasten me." "Chasten,"
seems rather too mild a word; for it availeth toward amendment. For for
him who is reproved, that is, accused, it is to be feared lest his end
be condemnation. But since "rage" seems to be more than "anger," it may
be a difficulty, why that which is milder, namely, chastening, is
joined to that which is more severe, namely, rage. But I suppose that
one and the same thing is signified by the two words. For in the Greek
<greek>qumos</greek>, which is in the first verse,
means the same as <greek>orgh</greek>, which is in the
second verse.(7) But when the Latins themselves too wished to use two
distinct words, they looked out for what was akin to "anger," and
"rage"(8) was used. Hence copies vary. For in some "anger" is found
first, and then "rage:" in others, for "rage," "indignation" or
"choler" is used. But whatever the reading, it is an emotion of the
soul urging to the infliction of punishment. Yet this emotion must not
be attributed to God, as if to a soul, of whom it is said, "but Thou, O
Lord of power, judgest with tranquillity."(9) Now that which is
tranquil, is not disturbed. Disturbance then does not attach to God as
judge: but what is done by His ministers, in that it is done by His
laws, is called His anger. In which anger, the soul, which now prays,
would not only not be reproved, but not even chastened, that is,
amended or
instructed. For in the Greek it is,
<greek>Paideuhs</greek>, that is, instruct. Now in the day
of judgment all are "reproved" that hold not the foundation, which is
Christ. But they are amended, that is, purged, who "upon this
foundation build wood, hay, stubble. For they shall suffer loss, but
shall be saved, as by fire."(10) What then does he pray, who would not
be either reproved or amended in the anger of the Lord? what else but
that he may be healed? For where sound health is, neither death is to
be dreaded, nor the physician's hand with caustics or the knife.
4. He proceeds accordingly to say, "Pity me, O Lord, for I am weak:
heal me, O Lord, for my bones are troubled" (ver. 2), that is, the
support of my soul, or strength: for this is the meaning of "bones."
The soul therefore says, that her strength is troubled, when she speaks
of bones. For it is not to be supposed, that the soul has bones, such
as we see in the body. Wherefore, what follows tends to explain it,"
and my soul is troubled exceedingly" (ver. 3), lest because he
mentioned bones, they should be understood as of the body. "And Thou, O
Lord, how long?" Who does not see represented here a soul struggling
with her diseases; but long kept back by the physician, that she may be
convinced what evils she has plunged herself into through sin? For what
is easily healed, is not much avoided: but from the difficulty of the
healing, there will be the more careful keeping of recovered
health. God then, to whom it is said, "And Thou, O Lord, how long?"
must not be deemed as if cruel: but as a kind convincer of the soul,
what evil she hath procured for herself. For this soul does not yet
pray so perfectly, as that it can be said to her, "Whilst thou art yet
speaking I will say, Behold, here I am."(1) That she may at the same
time also come to know, if they who do turn meet with so great
difficulty, how great punishment is prepared for the ungodly, who will
not turn to God: as it is written in another place, "If the righteous
scarcely be saved, where shall the sinner and ungodly appear?"(2)
5. "Turn, O Lord, and deliver my soul" (ver. 4). Turning herself she
prays that God too would turn to her: as it is said, "Turn ye unto Me,
and I will turn unto you, saith the Lord."(3) Or is it to be understood
according to that way of speaking, "Turn, O Lord," that is make me
turn, since the soul in this her turning feels difficulty and toil? For
our perfected turning findeth God ready, as says the Prophet, "We shall
find Him ready as the dawn."(4) Since it was not His absence who is
everywhere present, but our turning away that made us lose Him; "He was
in this world," it is said, "and the world was made by Him, and the
world knew Him not."(5) If, then, He was in this world, and the world
knew Him not, our impurity doth not endure the sight of Him. But whilst
we are turning ourselves, that is, by changing our old life are
fashioning our spirit; we feel it hard and toilsome to be
wrested back from the darkness of earthly lusts, to the serene and
quiet and tranquillity of the divine light. And in such difficulty we
say, "Turn, O Lord," that is, help us, that that turning may be
perfected in us, which findeth Thee ready, and offering Thyself for the
fruition of them that love Thee. And hence after he said, "Turn, O
Lord," he added, "and deliver my soul:" cleaving as it were to the
entanglements of this world, and suffering, in the very act of turning,
from the thorns, as it were, of rending and tearing desires. "Make me
whole," he says, "for Thy pity's sake." He knows that it is not of his
own merits that he is healed: for to him sinning, and transgressing a
given command, was just condemnation due. Heal me therefore, he says,
not for my merit's sake, but for Thy pity's sake.
6. "For in death there is no one that is mindful of Thee" (ver. 5). He
knows too that now is the time for turning unto God: for when this life
shall have passed away, there remaineth but a retribution of our
deserts.(6) "But in hell who shall confess to Thee?"(7) That rich man,
of whom the Lord speaks, who saw Lazarus in rest, but bewailed himself
in torments, confessed in hell, yea so as to wish even to have his
brethren warned, that they might keep themselves from sin, because of
the punishment which is not believed to be in hell. Although therefore
to no purpose, yet he confessed that those torments had deservedly
lighted upon him; since he even wished his brethren to be instructed,
lest they should fall into the same. What then is, "But in hell who
will confess to Thee?" Is hell to be understood as that place, whither
the ungodly will be cast down after the judgment, when by
reason of that deeper darkness they will no more see any light of God,
to whom they may confess aught? For as yet that rich man by raising his
eyes, although a vast gulf lay between, could still see Lazarus
established in rest: by comparing himself with whom, he was driven to a
confession of his own deserts. It may be understood also, as if the
Psalmist calls sin, that is committed in contempt of God's law, death:
so as that we should give the name of death to the sting of death,
because it procures death. "For the sting of death is sin."(8) In which
death this is to be unmindful of God, to despise His law and
commandments: so that by hell the Psalmist would mean that blindness of
soul which overtakes and enwraps the sinner, that is, the dying. "As
they did not think good," the Apostle says, "to retain God in "their"
knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind."(1) From this
death, and this hell, the soul earnestly prays that she may be kept
safe, whilst she strives to turn to God, and feels her difficulties.
7. Wherefore he goes on to say, "I have laboured in my groaning." And
as if this availed but little, he adds, "I will wash each night my
couch" (ver. 6). That is here called a couch, where the sick and weak
soul rests, that is, in bodily gratification and in every worldly
pleasure. Which pleasure, whoso endeavours to withdraw himself from it,
washes with tears. For he sees that he already condemns carnal lusts;
and yet his weakness is held by the pleasure, and willingly lies down
therein, from whence none but the soul that is made whole can rise. As
for what he says, "each night," he would perhaps have it taken thus:
that he who, ready in spirit, perceives some light of truth, and yet,
through weakness of the flesh, rests sometime in the pleasure of this
world, is compelled to suffer as it were days and nights in an
alternation of feeling: as when he says, "With the mind I serve the
law of God," he feels as it were day; again when he says, "but with the
flesh the law of sin,"(2) he declines into night: until all night
passeth away, and that one day comes, of which it is said, "In the
morning I will stand by Thee, and will see."(3) For then he will stand,
but now he lies down, when he is on his couch; which he will wash each
night, that with so great abundance of tears he may obtain the most
assured remedy from the mercy of God. "I will drench my bed with
tears." It is a repetition.(4) For when he says, "with tears," he shows
with what meaning he said above, "I will wash." For we take "bed" here
to be the same as "couch" above. Although, "I will drench," is
something more than, "I will wash:" since anything may be washed
superficially, but drenching penetrates to the more inward parts; which
here signifies weeping to the very bottom of the heart. Now the variety
of
tenses which he uses; the past, when he said, "I have laboured in my
groaning;" and the future, when he said, "I will wash each night my
couch;" the future again, "I will drench my bed with tears;" this shows
what every man ought to say to himself, when he labours in groaning to
no purpose. As if he should say, It hath not profited when I have done
this, therefore I will do the other.
8. "Mine eye is disordered by anger" (ver. 7): is it by his own, or
God's anger, in which he maketh petition that he might not be reproved,
or chastened? But if anger in that place intimate the day of judgment,
how can it be understood now? Is it a beginning of it, that men here
suffer pains and torments, and above all the loss of the understanding
of the truth; as I have already quoted that which is said, "God gave
them over to a reprobate mind"?(1) For such is the blindness of the
mind. Whosoever is given over thereunto, is shut out from the interior
light of God: but not wholly as yet, whilst he is in this life. For
there is "outer darkness,"(5) which is understood to belong rather to
the day of judgment; that he should rather be wholly without God,
whosoever whilst there is time refuses correction. Now to be wholly
without God, what else is it, but to be in extreme blindness? If
indeed God "dwell in inaccessible light,"(6) whereinto they enter, to
whom it is said, "Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."(7) It is then
the beginning of this anger, which in this life every sinner suffers.
In fear therefore of the day of judgment, he is in trial and grief;
lest he be brought to that, the disastrous commencement of which he
experiences now. And therefore he did not say, mine eye is
extinguished, but, "mine eye is disordered by anger." But if he mean
that his eye is disordered by his own anger, there is no wonder either
in this. For hence perhaps it is said, "Let not the sun go down upon
your wrath;"(8) because the mind, which, from her own disorder, is not
permitted to see God, supposes that the inner sun, that is, the wisdom
of God, suffers as it were a setting in her.
9. "I have grown old in all mine enemies." He had only spoken of anger
(if it were yet of his own anger that he spoke): but thinking on his
other vices, he found that he was entrenched by them all. Which vices,
as they belong to the old life and the old man, which we must put off,
that we may put on the new man,(9) it is well said, "I have grown old."
But "in all mine enemies," he means, either amidst these vices, or
amidst men who will not be converted to God. For these, even if they
know them not, even if they bear with them, even if they use the same
tables and houses and cities, with no strife arising between them, and
in frequent converse together with seeming concord: notwithstanding, by
the contrariety of their aims, they are enemies to those who turn unto
God. For seeing that the one love and desire this world, the others
wish to be freed from this world, who sees not that
the first are enemies to the last? For if they can, they draw the
others into punishment with them. And it is a great grace, to be
conversant daily with their words, and not to depart from the way of
God's commandments. For often the mind which is striving to go on to
God-ward, being rudely handled in the very road, is alarmed; and
generally fulfils not its good intent, lest it should offend those with
whom it lives, who love and follow after other perishable and transient
goods. From such every one that is whole is separated, not in space,
but in soul. For the body is contained in space, but the soul's space
is her affection.
10. Wherefore after the labour, and groaning, and very frequent showers
of tears, since that cannot be ineffectual, which is asked so earnestly
of Him, who is the Fountain of all mercies, and it is most truly said,
"the Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart:"(1) after
difficulties so great, the pious soul, by which we may also understand
the Church, intimating that she has been heard, see what she adds:
"Depart from me, all ye that work iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the
voice of my weeping" (ver. 8). It is either spoken prophetically, since
they will depart, that is, the ungodly will be separated from the
righteous, when the day of judgment arrives, or, for this time present.
For although both are equally found in the same assemblies, yet on the
open floor the wheat is already separated from the chaff, though it be
hid among the chaff. They can therefore be associated together, but
cannot be carried away by the wind together.
11. "For the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping; The Lord hath
heard my supplication; the Lord hath received my prayer" (ver. 9). The
frequent repetition of the same sentiments shows not, so to say, the
necessities of the narrator, but the warm feeling of his joy. For they
that rejoice are wont so to speak, as that it is not enough for them to
declare once for all the object of their joy. This is the fruit of that
groaning in which there is labour, and those tears with which the couch
is washed, and-bed drenched: for, "he that sows in tears, shall reap in
joy:"(2) and, "blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be
comforted."
12. "Let all mine enemies be ashamed and vexed" (ver. 10). He said
above, "depart from me all ye:" which can take place, as it has been
explained, even in this life: but as to what he says, "let them be
ashamed and vexed," I do not see how it can happen, save on that day
when the rewards of the righteous and the punishments of the sinners
shall be made manifest. For at present so far are the ungodly from
being ashamed, that they do not cease to insult us. And for the most
part their mockings are of such avail, that they make the weak to be
ashamed of the name of Christ. Hence it is said, "Whosoever shall be
ashamed of Me before men, of him will I be ashamed before My
Father."(3) But now whosoever would fulfil those sublime commands, to
disperse, to give to the poor, that his righteousness may endure for
ever;(4) and selling all his earthly goods, and spending them on the
needy, would
follow Christ, saying, "We brought nothing into this world, and truly
we can carry nothing out; having food and raiment, let us be therewith
content;"(5) incurs the profane raillery of those men, and by those who
will not be made whole, is called mad; and often to avoid being so
called by desperate men, he fears to do, and puts off that, which the
most faithful and powerful of all physicians hath ordered. It is not
then at present that these can be ashamed, by whom we have to wish that
we be not made ashamed, and so be either called back from our proposed
journey, or hindered, or delayed. But the time will come when they
shall be ashamed, saying as it is written, "These are they whom we had
sometimes in derision, and a parable of reproach: we fools counted
their life madness, and their end to be without honour: how are they
numbered among the children of God, and their lot is among the
saints? Therefore have we erred from the way of truth, and the light of
rightousness hath not shined into us, nor the sun risen upon us: we
have been filled with the way of wickedness and destruction, and have
walked through rugged deserts, but the way of the Lord we have not
known. What hath pride profited us, or what hath the vaunting of riches
brought us? All those things are passed away like a shadow."(6)
13. But as to what he says, "Let them be turned and confounded," who
would not judge it to be a most righteous punishment, that they should
have a turning unto confusion, who would not have one unto salvation?
After this he added, "exceeding quickly." For when the day of judgment
shall have begun to be no longer looked for, when they shall have said,
"Peace, then shall sudden destruction come upon them."(7) Now
whensoever it come, that comes very quickly, of whose coming we give up
all expectation; and nothing makes the length of this life be felt but
the hope of living. For nothing seems more quick, than all that has
already passed in it. When then the day of judgment shall come, then
will sinners feel how that all the life which passeth away is not long.
Nor will that any way possibly seem to them to have come tardily, which
shall have come without their desiring, or rather
without their believing. Although it can too be taken in this place
thus, that inasmuch as God has heard, so to say, her groans, and her
long and frequent tears, she may be understood to be freed from her
sins, and to have tamed every disordered impulse of carnal affection:
as she saith, "Depart from me, all ye that work iniquity, for the Lord
hath heard the voice of my weeping:" and when she has had this happy
issue, it is no marvel if she be already so perfect as to pray for her
enemies. The words then, "Let all mine enemies be ashamed, and vexed,"
may have this meaning; that they should repent of their sins, which
cannot be effected without confusion and vexation. There is then
nothing to hinder us from taking what follows too in this sense, "let
them be turned and ashamed," that is, let them be turned to God, and be
ashamed that they sometime gloried in the former darkness of their
sins; as the Apostle says, "For what glory had ye sometime in those
things of which ye are now ashamed?"(2) But as to what he added,
"exceeding quickly," it must be referred either to the warm affection
of her wish, or to the power of Christ; who converteth to the faith of
the Gospel in such quick time the nations, which in their idols' cause
did persecute the Church.
PSALM VII.
A PSALM TO DAVID HIMSELF, WHICH HE SUNG TO THE LORD, FOR THE WORDS OF CHUSI, SON OF JEMINI.(2)
1. Now the story which gave occasion to this prophecy may be easily
recognised in the second book of Kings.(3) For there Chusi, the friend
of king David, went over to the side of Abessalon, his son, who was
carrying on war against his father, for the purpose of discovering and
reporting the designs which he was taking against his father, at the
instigation of Achitophel, who had revolted from David's friendship,
and was instructing by his counsel, to the best of his power, the son
against the father. But since it is not the story itself which is to be
the subject of consideration in this Psalm, from which the prophet hath
taken a veil of mysteries, if we have passed over to Christ, let the
veil be taken away.(4) And first let us inquire into the signification
of the very names, what it means. For there have not been wanting
interpreters, who investigating these same words, not
carnally according to the letter, but spiritually, declare to us that
Chusi should be interpreted silence; and Gemini, right-handed;
Achitophel, brother's ruin. Among which interpretations, Judas, that
traitor, again meets us, that Abessalon should bear his image,
according to that interpretation of it as a father's peace; in that his
father was full of thoughts of peace toward him: although he in his
guile had war in his heart, as was treated of in the third Psalm. Now
as we find in the Gospels that the disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ
are called sons,(5) so in the same Gospels we find they are called
brethren also. For the Lord on the resurrection saith, "Go and say to
My brethren."(6) And the Apostle calls Him "the first begotten among
many brethren." The ruin then of that disciple, who betrayed Him, is
rightly understood to be a brother's ruin, which we said is the
interpretation
of Achitophel. Now as to Chusi, from the interpretation of silence, it
is rightly understood that our Lord contended against that guile in
silence, that is, in that most deep secret, whereby "blindness happened
in part to Israel,"(7) when they were persecuting the Lord, that the
fulness of the Gentiles might enter in, and "so all Israel might be
saved." When the Apostle came to this profound secret and deep silence,
he exclaimed, as if struck with a kind of awe of its very depth, "O the
depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how
unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who
hath known the wind of the Lord, or who hath been His counsellor?"(8)
Thus that great silence he does not so much discover by explanation, as
he sets forth its greatness in admiration. In this silence the Lord,
hiding the sacrament of His adorable passion, turns the brother's
voluntary ruin, that is, His betrayer's impious wickedness, into the
order of His mercy and providence: that what he with perverse mind
wrought for one Man's destruction, He might by providential overruling
dispose for all men's salvation. The perfect soul then, which is
already worthy to know the secret of God, sings a Psalm unto the Lord,
she sings" for the words of Chusi," because she has attained to know
the words of that silence: for among unbelievers and persecutors there
is that silence and secret. But among His own, to whom it is said," Now
I call you no more servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord
doeth; but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard
of My Father I have made known unto you:(9) among His friends, I say,
there is not the silence, but the words of the silence, that is, the
meaning of that silence set forth and manifested. Which silence,
that is, Chusi, is called the son of Gemini, that is, righthanded. For
what was done for the Saints was not to be hidden from them. And yet He
saith," Let not the left hand know what the right hand doeth."(10) The
perfect soul then, to which that secret has been made known, sings in
prophecy "for the words of Chusi," that is, for the knowledge of that
same secret. Which secret God at her fight hand, that is,
favourable(11) and propitious unto her, has wrought. Wherefore this
silence is called the Son of the right hand, which is, "Chusi, the son
of Gemini."
2. "O Lord my God, in Thee have I hoped: save me from all them that
persecute me, and deliver me" (ver. 1). As one to whom, already
perfected, all the war and enmity of vice being overcome, there
remaineth no enemy but the envious devil, he says, "Save me from all
them that persecute me, and deliver me (ver. 2): lest at any time he
tear my soul as a lion." The Apostle says, "Your adversary the devil,
as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.'' (1)
Therefore when the Psalmist said in the plural number, "Save me from
all them that persecute me:" he afterwards introduced the singular,
saying, "lest at any time he tear my soul as a lion." For he does not
say, lest at any time they tear: he knew what enemy and violent
adversary of the perfect soul remained. "Whilst there be none to
redeem, nor to save:" that is, lest he tear me, whilst Thou redeemest
not, nor savest. For, if God redeem not, nor save, he tears.(2)
3. And that it might be clear that the already perfect soul, which is
to be on her guard against the most insidious snares of the devil only,
says this, see what follows. "O Lord my God, if I have done this" (ver.
3). What is it that he calls "this"? Since he does not mention the sin
by name, are we to understand sin generally? If this sense displease
us, we may take that to be meant which follows: as if we had asked,
what is this that you say, "this"? He answers, "If there be iniquity in
my hands." Now then it is clear that it is said of all sin," If I have
repaid them that recompense me evil" (ver. 4). Which none can say with
truth, but the perfect. For so the Lord says, "Be ye perfect, as your
Father which is in heaven; who maketh His sun to rise upon the good and
the evil, and raineth on the just and the unjust."(3) He then who
repayeth not them that recompense evil, is perfect.
When therefore the perfect soul prays "for the words of Chusi, the son
of Jemini," that is, for the knowledge of that secret and silence,
which the Lord, favourable to us and merciful, wrought for our
salvation, so as to endure, and with all patience bear, the guiles of
this betrayer: as if He should say to this perfect soul, explaining the
design of this secret, For thee ungodly and a sinner, that thine
iniquities might be washed away by My blood-shedding, in great silence
and great patience I bore with My betrayer; wilt not thou imitate me,
that thou too mayest not repay evil for evil? Considering then, and
understanding what the Lord has done for him, and by His example going
on to perfection, the Psalmist says, "If I have repaid them that
recompense me evil:" that is, if I have not done what Thou hast taught
me by Thy example: "may I therefore fall by mine enemies empty." And he
says well, not, If I have repaid them that do me evil; but, who
"recompense." For who so recompenseth, had received somewhat already.
Now it is an instance of greater patience, not even to repay him evil,
who after receiving benefits returns evil for good, than if without
receiving any previous benefit he had had a mind to injure. If
therefore he says, "I have repaid them that recompense me evil:" that
is, If I have not imitated Thee in that silence, that is, in Thy
patience, which Thou hast wrought for me, "may I fall by mine enemies
empty." For he is an empty boaster, who, being himself a man, desires
to avenge himself on a man; and whilst he openly seeks to overcome a
man, is secretly himself overcome by the devil, rendered empty by vain
and proud joy, because he could not, as it were, be conquered. The
Psalmist knows then where a greater victory may be obtained, and where
"the Father
which seeth in secret will reward."(4) Lest then he repay them that
recompense evil, he overcomes his anger rather than another man, being
instructed too by those writings, wherein it is written, "Better is he
that overcometh his anger, than he that taketh a city."(5) "If I have
repaid them that recompense me evil, may I therefore fall by my enemies
empty." He seems to swear by way of execration, which is the heaviest
kind of oath, as when one says, If I have done so and so, may I suffer
so and so. But swearing in a swearer's mouth is one thing, in a
prophet's meaning another. For here he mentions what will really befall
men who repay them that recompense evil; not what, as by an oath, he
would imprecate on himself or any other.
4. "Let the enemy" therefore "persecute my soul and take it" (ver. 5).
By again naming the enemy in the singular number, he more and more
clearly points out him whom he spoke of above as a lion. For he
persecutes the soul, and if he has deceived it, will take it. For the
limit of men's rage is the destruction of the body; but the soul, after
this visible death, they cannot keep in their power: whereas whatever
souls the devil shall have taken by his persecutions, he will keep.
"And let him tread my life upon the earth:" that is, by treading let
him make my life earth, that is to say, his food. For he is not only
called a lion, but a serpent too, to whom it was said, "Earth shalt
thou eat."(6) And to the sinner was it said, "Earth thou art, and into
earth shalt thou go."(1) "And let him bring down my glory to the dust."
This is that dust which "the wind casteth forth from the face of
the earth,"(2) to wit, vain and silly boasting of the proud, puffed up,
not of solid weight, as a cloud of dust carried away by the wind.
Justly then has he here spoken of the glory, which he would not have
brought down to dust. For he would have it solidly established in
conscience before God, where there is no boasting. "He that glorieth,"
saith the Apostle, "let him glory in the Lord."(3) This solidity is
brought down to the dust if one through pride despising the secrecy of
conscience, where God only proves a man, desires to glory before men.
Hence comes what the Psalmist elsewhere says, "God shall bruise the
bones of them that please men."(4) Now he that has well learnt or
experienced the steps in overcoming vices, knows that this vice of
empty glory is either alone, or more than all, to be shunned by the
perfect. For that by which the soul first fell, she overcomes the last.
"For
the beginning of all sin is pride:" and again, "The beginning of man's
pride is to depart from God."(5)
5. "Arise, O Lord, in Thine anger" (ver. 6). Why yet does he, who we
say is perfect, incite God to anger? Must we not see, whether he rather
be not perfect, who, when he was being stoned, said, "O Lord, lay not
this sin to their charge"?(6) Or does the Psalmist pray thus not
against men, but against the devil and his angels, whose possession
sinners and the ungodly are? He then does not pray against him in
wrath, but in mercy, whosoever prays that that possession may be taken
from him by that Lord "who justifieth the ungodly."(7) For when the
ungodly is justified, from ungodly he is made just, and from being the
possession of the devil he passes into the temple of God. And since it
is a punishment that a possession, in which one longs to have rule,
should be taken away from him: this punishment, that he should cease to
possess those whom he now possesses, the Psalmist calls the anger
of God against the devil. "Arise, O Lord; in Thine anger." "Arise" (he
has used it as "appear"), in words, that is, human and obscure; as
though God sleeps, when He is unrecognised and hidden in His secret
workings. "Be exalted in the borders of mine enemies." He means by
borders the possession itself, in which he wishes that God should be
exalted, that is, be honoured and glorified, rather than the devil,
while the ungodly are justified and praise God. "And arise, O Lord my
God, in the commandment that Thou hast given:" that is, since Thou hast
enjoined humility, appear in humility; and first fulfil what Thou hast
enjoined; that men by Thy example overcoming pride may not be possessed
of the devil, who against Thy commandments advised to pride, saying,
"Eat, and your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods."(8)
6. "And the congregation of the people shall surround Thee." This may
be understood two ways. For the congregation of the people can be
taken, either of them that believe, or of them that persecute, both of
which took place in the same humiliation of our Lord: in contempt of
which the multitude of them that persecute surrounded Him; concerning
which it is said, "Why have the heathen raged, and the people meditated
vain things?"(9) But of them that believe through His humiliation the
multitude so surrounded Him, that it could be said with the greatest
truth, "blindness in part is happened unto Israel, that the fulness of
the Gentiles might come in:"(10) and again, "Ask of me, and I will give
Thee the Gentiles for Thine inheritance, and the boundaries of the
earth for Thy possession."(11) "And for their sakes return Thou on
high:" that is, for the sake of this congregation return Thou
on high: which He is understood to have done by His resurrection and
ascension into heaven. For being thus glorified He gave the Holy Ghost,
which before His exaltation could not be given, as it is written in the
Gospel, "for the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because that Jesus was
not yet glorified."(12) Having then returned on high for the sake of
the congregation of the people, He sent the Holy Ghost: by whom the
preachers of the Gospel being filled, filled the whole world with
Churches.
7. It can be taken also in this sense: "Arise, O Lord, in Thine anger,
and be exalted in the borders of mine enemies:" that is, arise in Thine
anger, and let not mine enemies understand Thee; so that to "be
exalted," should be this, become high,(13) that Thou mayest not be
understood; which has reference to the silence spoken of above. For it
is of this exaltation thus said in another Psalm, "And He ascended upon
Cherubim, and flew:" and, "He made darkness His secret place."(14) In
which exaltation, or concealment, when for their sins' desert they
shall not understand Thee, who shall crucify Thee, "the congregation"
of believers "shall surround Thee." For in His very humiliation He was
exalted, that is, was not understood. So that, "And arise, O Lord my
God, in the commandment that Thou hast given:" may have reference to
this, that is, when Thou showest Thyself, be high or deep that
mine enemies may not understand Thee. Now sinners are the enemies of
the just man, and the ungodly of the godly man. "And the congregation
of the people shall surround Thee:" that is, by this very circumstance,
that those who crucify Thee understand Thee not, the Gentiles shall
believe on Thee, and so "shall the congregation of the people surround
Thee." But what follows, if this be the true meaning, has in it more
pain, that it begins already to be perceived, than joy that it is
understood. For it follows, "and for their sakes return Thou on high,"
that is, and for the sake of this congregation of the human race,
wherewith the Churches are crowded, return Thou on high, that is, again
cease to be understood. What then is, "and for their sakes," but that
this congregation too will offend Thee, so that Thou mayest most truly
foretell and say, "Thinkest Thou when the Son of man shall come,
He will find faith on the earth?"(1) Again, of the false prophets, who
are understood to be heretics, He says, Because of their iniquity the
love of many shall wax cold."(2) Since then even in the Churches, that
is, in that congregation of peoples and nations, where the Christian
name has most widely spread, there shall be so great abundance of
sinners, which is already, in great measure, perceived; is not that
famine of the word(3) here predicted, which has been threatened by
another prophet also? Is it not too for this congregation's sake, who,
by their sins, are estranging from themselves that light of truth, that
God returns on high, that is, so that faith, pure and cleansed from the
corruption of all perverse opinions, is held and received, either not
at all, or by the very few of whom it was said, "Blessed is he that
shall endure to the end, the same shall be saved"?(4) Not without
cause then is it said, "and for the sake of this" congregation "return
Thou on high:" that is, again withdraw into the depth of Thy secrecy,
even for the sake of this congregation of the peoples, that hath Thy
name, and doeth not Thy deeds.
8. But whether the former exposition of this place, or this last be the
more suitable, without prejudice to any one better, or equal, or as
good, it follows very consistently, "the Lord judgeth the people." For
whether He returned on high, when, after the resurrection, He ascended
into heaven, well does it follow, "The Lord judgeth the people: "for
that He will come from thence to judge the quick and the dead. Or
whether He return on high, when the understanding of the truth leaves
sinful Christians, for that of His coming it has been said, "Thinkest
thou the Son of Man on His coming will find faith on the earth?"(1)
"The Lord" then "judgeth the people." What Lord, but Jesus Christ? "For
the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the
Son."(5) Wherefore this soul which prayeth perfectly, see how she fears
not the day of judgment, and with a truly secure longing
says in her prayer, "Thy kingdom come: judge me," she says, "O Lord,
according to my righteousness." In the former Psalm a weak one was
entreating, imploring rather the mercy of God, than mentioning any
desert of his own: since the Son of God came "to call sinners to
repentance.(6)Therefore he had there said," Save me, O Lord, for Thy
mercy's sake;"(7) that is, not for my desert's sake. |
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