|  | In this section the Psalmist seems to take firm hold upon God himself; appropriating him (57), crying out for him (58), returning to him (59), solacing himself in him (61, 62), associating with his people (63), and sighing for his personal instruction (64). Note how the first verse of this octave is linked to the last of the former one, of which indeed it is an expansion. “This I had because I kept thy precepts. Thou art my portion,  O LORD: I have said that I would keep thy words.” Being many, these verses are still but one bread. 57. “Thou art my portion, O Lord: I have said that I would keep thy words.”“Thou art my portion, O Lord.” A broken expression. The translators
 have mended it by insertions, but perhaps it had been better to have left it
 alone, and then it would have appeared as n exclamation  “My portion,
 O Lord!” The poet’s lost in wonder while he sees that the great and
 glorious God is all his own! Well might he be so, for there is no possession
 like Jehovah himself. The form of the sentence expresses joyous
 recognition and appropriation  “My portions. O Jehovah!” David had
 often seen the prey divided, and heard the victor shouting over it; here he
 rejoices as one who seizes his share of the spoil; he chooses the Lord to be
 his part of the treasure. Like the Levites, he took God to be his portion,
 and left other matters to those who coveted them. This is a large and
 lasting heritage, for it includes all, and more than all, and it outlasts all; and
 yet no man chooses it for himself until God has chosen and renewed him.
 Who that is truly wise could hesitate for a moment when the infinitely
 blessed God is set before him to be the object of his choice? David leaped
 at the opportunity, and grasped the priceless boon. Our author here dares
 exhibit the title-deeds of his portion before the eye of the Lord himself, for
 he addresses his joyful utterance directly to God, whom he boldly calls his
 own. With much else to choose from, for he was a king, and a man of great
 resources, he deliberately tums from all the treasures of the world, and
 declares that the Lord, even Jehovah, is his portion.
 
 “I have said that I would keep thy words.” We cannot always look backwith comfort upon what we have said, but in this instance David had
 spoken wisely and well. He had declared his choice; he preferred the word
 of God to the wealth of worldlings. It was his firm resolve to keep  that
 is, treasure up and observe  the words of his God; and as he had
 aforetime solemnly expressed it: in the presence of the Lord himself, so
 here he confesses the binding obligation of his former vow. Jesus said, “If
 a man love me, he will keep my words,” and this is a case which he might
 have quoted as an illustration; for the Psalmist’s love to God as his portion
 led to his keeping the words of God. David took God to be his Prince as
 well as his Portion. He was confident as to his interest in God, and
 therefore he was resolute in his obedience to him. Full assurance is a
 powerful source of holiness. The very words of God are to be stored up;
 for whether they relate to doctrine, promise, or precept, they are most
 precious. When the heart is determined to keep these words, and has
 registered its purpose in the court of heaven, it is prepared for all the
 temptations and trials that may befall it; for, with God as its heritage, it is
 always in good case. Top of Page
 
 58. “I intreated thy favor with my whole heart: be merciful unto me according to thy word.”“I intreated thy favor with my whole heart.” A fully assured possession of
 God does not set aside prayer, but rather urges us to it; he who knows God
 to be his God will seek his face, longing for his presence. Seeking God’s
 presence is the idea conveyed by the marginal reading, “thy face,” and
 this is true to the Hebrew. The presence of God is the highest form of his
 favor, and therefore it is the most urgent desire of gracious souls: the light
 of his countenance gives us an antepast of heaven. Oh that we always
 enjoyed it! The good man entreated God’s smile as one who begged for his
 life, and the entire strength of his desire went with the entreaty. Such eager
 pleadings are sure of success; that which comes from our heart will
 certainly go to God’s heart. The whole of God’s favors are ready for those
 who seek them with their whole hearts.
 
 “Be merciful unto me according to thy word.” He has entreated favor,and the from in which he most needs it is that of mercy; for he is more a
 sinner than anything else. He asks nothing beyond the promise, he only
 begs for such mercy as the word reveals. And what more could he want or
 wish for? God has revealed such an infinity of mercy in his word, that it
 would be impossible to conceive of more. See how the Psalmist dwells
 upon favor and mercy, he never dreams of merit. He does not demand, but
 entreat; for he feels his own unworthiness. Note how he remains a
 suppliant, though he knows that he has all things in his God. God is his
 portion, and yet he begs for a look at his face. The idea of any other
 position before God than that of an undeserving though favored one never
 entered his head. Here we have his “Be merciful unto me” rising with as
 much intensity of humble pleading as if he still remained among the most
 trembling of penitents.. The confidence of faith makes us bold in prayer,
 but it never teaches us to live without prayer, or justifies us in being other
 than humble beggars at mercy’s gate. Top of Page
 
 59. “I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto thy testimonies.”While studying the word he was led to study his own life, and this caused a
 mighty revolution. He came to the word, and then he came to himself, and
 this made him arise and go to his Father. Consideration is the
 commencement of conversion: first we think, and then we turn. When the
 mind repents of ill ways, the feet are soon led into good ways; but there
 will be no repenting until there is deep, earnest: thought. Many men are
 averse to thought of any kind, and as to thought upon their ways, they
 cannot endure it, for their ways will not bear thinking of. David’s ways had
 not been all that he could have wished them to be, and so his thoughts
 were sobered o’er with the pale cast of regret; but he did not end with idle
 lamentations, he set about a practical amendment; he turned and returned,
 he sought the testimonies of the Lord, and hastened to enjoy once more the
 conscious favor of his heavenly Friend. Action without thought is folly, and
 thought without action is sloth: to think carefully and then to act promptly
 is a happy combination. He had en-treated for renewed fellowship, and
 now he proved the genuineness of his desire by renewed obedience. If we
 are in the dark, and mourn an absent God, our wisest method will be not so
 much to think upon our sorrows as upon our ways: though we cannot turn
 the course of providence, we can turn the way of our walking, and this will
 soon mend matters. If we can get our feet right as to holy walking, we shall
 soon get our hearts right as to happy living. God will turn to his saints
 when they turn to him; yea, he has already favored them with the light of
 his face when they begin to think and turn.
 
 60. “I made haste, and delayed not to keep thy commandments.” Hemade all speed to get back into the royal road from which he had
 wandered, and to run in that road upon the King’s errands. Speed in
 repentance and speed in obedience are two excellent things. We are too
 often in haste to sin. Oh that we may be in a greater hurry to obey! Delay
 in repentance is increase of sin. To be slow to keep the commands is to
 break them. There is much evil in a lagging pace when God’s command is
 to be followed. A holy alacrity in service is much to be cultivated. It is
 wrought in us by the Spirit of God, and the preceding verses describe the
 method of it: we are made to perceive and mourn our errors, we are led to
 return to the right path, and then we are eager to make up for lost time by
 dashing forward to fulfil the precept.
 
 Whatever may be the slips and wanderings of an honest heart, thereremains enough of true life in it to produce ardent piety when once it is
 quickened by the visitations of God. The Psalmist entreated for mercy, and
 when he received it he became eager and vehement in the Lord’s ways. He
 had always loved them, and hence when he was enriched with grace he
 displayed great vivacity and delight in them. He made double speed; for
 positively he “made haste,” and negatively he refused to yield to any
 motive which suggested procrastination  he “delayed not.” Thus he
 made rapid advances and accomplished much service, fulfilling thereby the
 vow which is recorded in the 57th verse: “I said that I would keep thy
 words.” The commands which he was so eager to obey were not
 ordinances of man, but precepts of the Most High. Many are zealous to
 obey custom and society, and yet they are slack in serving God. It is a
 crying shame that men should be served post-haste, and that God’s work
 should have the, go-by, or be performed with dreamy negligence. Top of Page
 
 61. “The bands of the wicked have robbed me: but I have not forgotten thy law.”“The bands of the wicked have robbed me.” Afore-time they derided him,
 and now they have defrauded him. Ungodly men grow worse, and become
 more and more daring, so that they go from ridicule to robbery. Much of
 this bold opposition arose from their being banded together: men will dare
 to do in company what they durst not have thought of alone. When
 firebrands are laid together, there is no telling what a flame, they will
 create. It seems that whole bands of men assailed this one child of God;
 they are cowardly enough for anything: though they could not kill him,
 they robbed him; the dogs of Satan will worry saints if they cannot devour
 them. David’s enemies did their utmost: first the serpents hissed, and then
 they stung. Since words availed not, the wicked fell to blows. How much
 the ungodly have plundered the saints in all ages, and how often have the
 righteous borne gladly the spoiling of their goods!
 
 “But I have not forgotten thy law.” This was well. Neither his sense ofinjustice, nor his sorrow at his losses, nor his attempts at defense, diverted
 him from the ways of God. He would not do wrong to prevent the
 suffering of wrong, nor do ill to avenge ill. He carried the law in his heart,
 and therefore no disturbance of mind could take him off from following it.
 He might have forgotten himself if he had forgotten the law: as it was, he
 was ready to forgive and forget the injuries done him, for his heart was
 taken up with the word of God. The bands of the wicked had not robbed
 him of his choicest treasure, since they had left him his holiness and his
 happiness.
 
 Some read this passage, “The bands of the wicked environ me.” Theyhemmed him in, they cut him off from succor, they shut up every avenue of
 escape; but; the man of God had his protector with him; a clear conscience
 relied upon the promise, and a brave resolve stuck to the precept. He could
 not be either bribed or bullied into sin. The cordon of the ungodly could
 not keep God from him, nor him from God: this was because God was his
 portion, and none could deprive him of it, either by force or fraud. That is
 true grace which can endure the test: some are barely gracious among the
 circle of their friends, but this man was holy amid a ring of foes. Top of Page
 
 62. “At midnight I will rise to give thanks unto thee because of thy righteous judgments.” He was not afraid of the robbers; he rose, not to watch his house, but to praise his God. Midnight is the hour for burglars, and there were bands of them around David, but they did not occupy his thoughts; these were all up and away with the Lord his God. He thought not of thieves, but of thanks; not of what they would steal, but of what he would give to his God. A thankful heart is such a blessing that it drives out fear and makes room for praise. Thanksgiving turns night into day, and consecrates all hours to the worship of God. Every hour is canonical to a saint.
 
 The Psalmist: observed posture; he did not lie in bed and praise. There isnot much in the position of the body, but there is something, and that
 something is to be observed whenever it is helpful to devotion and
 expressive of our diligence: or humility. Many kneel without praying, some
 pray without kneeling; but the best is to kneel and pray: so here, it would
 have been no virtue to rise without giving thanks, and it would have been
 no sin to give thanks without rising; but to rise and give thanks is a happy
 combination. As for the season, it was quiet, lonely, and such as proved his
 zeal. At midnight he would be unobserved and undisturbed; it was his own
 time which he saved from his sleep, and so he would be free from the
 charge of sacrificing public duties to private devotions. Midnight ends one
 day and begins another, it was therefore meet to give the solemn moments
 to communion with the Lord. At the turn of the night he turned to his God.
 He had thanks to give for mercies which God had given: he had on his
 mind the truth of verse fifty-seven,“Thou art my portion,” and if anything
 can make a man sing in the middle of the night, that is it.
 
 The righteous doings of the great Judge gladdened the heart of this godlyman. His judgments are the terrible side of God, but they have no terror to
 the righteous; they admire them, and adore the Lord for them: they rise at
 night to bless God that he will avenge his own elect. Some hate the very
 notion of divine justice, and in this they are wide as the poles asunder from
 this man of God, who was filled with joyful gratitude at the memory of the
 sentences of the Judge of all the earth. Doubtless in the expression, “thy
 righteous judgments,” David refers also to the written judgments of God
 upon various points of moral conduct; indeed, all the divine precepts may
 be viewed in that light; they are all of them the legal decisions of the
 Supreme Arbiter of right and wrong. David was charmed with these
 judgments. Like Paul, he could say, “I delight in the law of God after the
 inward man.” He could not find time enough by day to study the words of
 divine wisdom, or to bless God for them, and so he gave up his sleep that
 he might tell out his gratitude for such a law and such a Lawgiver.
 
 This verse is an advance upon the sense of verse fifty-two, and contains inaddition the essence of fifty-five. Our author never repeats himself: though
 he runs up and down the same scale, his music has an infinite variety. The
 permutations and combinations which may be formed in connection with a
 few vital truths are innumerable. Top of Page
 
 63. “I am a companion of all them that fear thee, and of them that keep thy precepts.”“I am a companion of all them that fear thee.” The last verse said, “I
 will,” and this says, “I am.” We can hardly hope to be right in the future
 unless we are right now. The holy man spent his nights with God and his
 days with God’s people. Those who fear God love those who fear him, and
 they make small choice as to the rank of their companions so long as they
 are truly God-fearing men. David was a king, and yet he consorted with
 “all” who feared the Lord, whether they were obscure or famous, poor
 or rich. He was a fellow-commoner of the College of All-saints.
 
 He did not select a few specially eminent saints and leave ordinary believersalone. No, he was glad of the society of those who had only the beginning
 of wisdom in the shape of  “the fear of the Lord”: he was pleased to sit
 with them on the lower forms of the school of faith. He looked for inward
 godly fear, but he also expected to see outward piety, in those whom he
 admitted to his society; hence he adds, “and of them that keep thy
 precepts.” If they would keep the Lord’s commands, the Lord’s servant
 would keep their company. David was known to be on the godly side, he
 was ever of the Puritanic party: the men of Belial hated him for this, and no
 doubt despised him for keeping such unfashionable company as that of
 humble men and women who were strait-laced and religious; but the man
 of God is by no means ashamed of his associates; so far from this, he even
 glories to avow his union with them, let his enemies make what they can of
 it. He found both pleasure and profit in saintly society; he grew better by
 consorting with tile good, and derived honor from keeping right honorable
 company. What says the reader? Does he relish holy society? Is he at home
 among gracious people? If so, he may derive comfort from the fact. Birds
 of a feather flock together. A man is known by his company. Those who
 have no fear of God before their eyes seldom desire the society of saints; it
 is too slow, too dull for them. Be this our comfort, that when we are let go
 by death we shall go to our own company, and those who loved the saints
 on earth shall be numbered with them in heaven.
 
 There is a measure of parallelism between this seventh of its octave and theseventh of Teth (71) and of Jod (79); but, as a rule, the similarities which
 were so manifest in earlier verses are now becoming dim. As the sense
 deepens, the artificial form of expression is less regarded. Top of Page
 
 64. “The early, O Lord, is full of thy mercy: teach me thy statutes.”“The earth, O Lord, is full of thy mercy.” David had been exiled, but he
 had never been driven beyond the range of mercy, for he found the world
 to be everywhere filled with it. He had wandered in deserts and hidden in
 caves, and there he had seen and felt the lovingkindness of the Lord. He
 had learned that far beyond the bounds of the land of promise and the race
 of Israel the love of Jehovah extended, and in this verse he expressed that
 large-hearted idea of God which is so seldom seen in the modern Jew.
 How sweet it is to us to know that not only is there mercy all over the
 world, but there is such an abundance of it that the earth is “full” of it! It
 is little wonder that: the Psalmist, since he knew the Lord to be his portion,
 hoped to obtain a measure of his mercy for himself. He desired to know
 more of one so good; and as the Lord has so freely revealed himself in
 nature, he felt encouraged to pray, “teach me thy statutes.” It was to him
 the beau-ideal of mercy to be taught of God, and taught in God’s own law.
 He could not think of a greater mercy than this. Surely, he who fills the
 universe with his grace will grant such a request as this to his own child,
 Let us breathe the desire to the All-merciful Jehovah, and we may be
 assured of its fulfillment.
 
 The first verse of this eight is fragrant with full assurance and strongresolve, and this last verse overflows with a sense of the divine fullness,
 and of the Psalmist’s personal dependence. This is an illustration of the fact
 that: full assurance neither damps prayer nor hinders humility. It would be
 no error if we said that it creates lowliness and suggests supplication.
 “Thou art my portion, O Lord,” is well followed by “teach me”; for the
 heir of a great estate should be thoroughly educated, that his behavior may
 comport with his fortune. What manner of disciples ought we to be whose
 inheritance is the Lord of hosts! Those who have God for their Portion
 long to have him for their Teacher. Moreover, those who have resolved to
 obey are the most eager to be taught. “I have said that I would keep thy
 words” is beautifully succeeded by “teach me thy statutes.” Those who
 wish to keep a law are anxious to know all its clauses and provisions, lest
 they should offend through inadvertence. He who does not care to be
 instructed of the Lord has never honestly resolved to be holy. Top of Page
 
 
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