Charles H. Spurgeon Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings Hints to the Village Preacher Psalm 13 Verse 1-6OCCASION. The Psalm cannot be referred to any especial event or period in David's history. All attempts to find it a birthplace are but guesses. It was, doubtless, more than once the language of that much tried man of God, and is intended to express the feelings of the people of God in those ever-returning trials which beset them. If the reader has never yet found occasion to use the language of this brief ode, he will do so ere long, if he be a man after the Lord's own heart. We have been wont to call this the "How Long Psalm." We had almost said the Howling Psalm, from the incessant repetition of the cry "how long?"DIVISION. This Psalm is very readily to be divided into three parts: the question of anxiety, 1, 2; the cry of prayer, 3, 4; the song of faith, 5, 6. "How long?" Ah! how long do our days appear when our soul is cast down within us!
O'er sadness! How the time Delights to linger in its flight!" Time flies with full-fledged wing in our summer days, but in our winters he flutters painfully. A week within prison-walls is longer than a month at liberty. Long sorrow seems to argue abounding corruption; for the gold which is long in the fire must have had much dross to be consumed, hence the question "how long?" may suggest deep searching of heart. "How long wilt thou forget me?" Ah, David! how like a fool thou talkest! Can God forget? Can Omniscience fail in memory? Above all, can Jehovah's heart forget his own beloved child? Ah! brethren, let us drive away the thought, and hear the voice of our covenant God by the mouth of the prophet, "But Zion said, The Lord hath forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me. Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee. Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are continually before me." "For ever?" Oh, dark thought! It was surely bad enough to suspect a temporary forgetfulness, but shall we ask the ungracious question, and imagine that the Lord will for ever cast away his people? No, his anger may endure for a night, but his love shall abide eternally. "How long wilt thou hide thy face from me?" This is a far more rational question, for God may hide his face, and yet he may remember still. A hidden face is no sign of a forgetful heart. It is in love that his face is turned away; yet to a real child of God, this hiding of his Father's face is terrible and he will never be at ease until, once more he hath his Father's smile.
Verse 2. "How long shall I take counsel, in my soul, having sorrow
in my heart daily?" There is in the original the idea of "laying
up" counsels in his heart, as if his devices had become innumerable
but unavailing. Herein we have often been like David, for we have
considered and reconsidered day after day, but have not discovered
the happy device by which to escape from our trouble. Such store is a
sad sore. Ruminating upon trouble is bitter work. Children fill their
mouths with bitterness when they rebelliously chew the pill which
they ought obediently to have taken at once. "How long shall my
enemy be exalted over me?" This is like wormwood in the gall, to
see the wicked enemy exulting while our soul is bowed down within us.
The laughter of a foe grates horribly on the ears of grief. For the
devil to make mirth of our misery is the last ounce of our complaint,
and quite breaks down our patience; therefore let us make it one
chief argument in our plea with mercy.
Verse 3. But now prayer lifteth up her voice, like the watchman who
proclaims the daybreak. Now will the tide turn, and the weeper shall
dry his eyes. The mercy-seat is the life of hope and the death of
despair. The gloomy thought of God's having forsaken him is still
upon the psalmist's soul, and he therefore cries, "Consider and
hear me." He remembers at once the root of his woe, and cries
aloud that it may be removed. The final absence of God is Tophet's
fire, and his temporary absence brings his people into the very
suburbs of hell. God is here entreated to see and hear,
that so he may be doubly moved to pity. What should we do if we had
no God to turn to in the hour of wretchedness?
Verse 4. Another plea is urged in the fourth verse, and it is one
which the tried believer may handle well when on his knees. We make
use of our arch-enemy for once, and compel him, like Samson, to grind
in our mill while we use his cruel arrogance as an argument in
prayer. It is not the Lord's will that the great enemy of our souls
should overcome his children. This would dishonour God, and cause the
evil one to boast. It is well for us that our salvation and God's
honour are so intimately connected, that they stand or fall
together. Verse 5. What a change is here! Lo, the rain is over and gone, and the time of the singing of birds is come. The mercy-seat has so refreshed the poor weeper, that he clears his throat for a song. If we have mourned with him, let us now dance with him. David's heart was more often out of tune than his harp, He begins many of his psalms sighing, and ends them singing; and others he begins in joy and ends in sorrow; "so that one would think," says Peter Moulin, "that those Psalms had been composed by two men of a contrary humour." It is worthy to be observed that the joy is all the greater because of the previous sorrow, as calm is all the more delightful in recollection of the preceding tempest.
Here is his avowal of his confidence:
"But I have trusted in thy mercy." For many a year it had been
his wont to make the Lord his castle and tower of defence, and he
smiles from behind the same bulwark still. He is sure of his faith,
and his faith makes him sure; had he doubted the reality of his trust
in God, he would have blocked up one of the windows through which the
sun of heaven delights to shine. Faith is now in exercise, and
consequently is readily discovered; there is never a doubt in our
heart about the existence of faith while it is in action: when the
hare or partridge is quiet we see it not, but let the same be in
motion and we soon perceive it. All the powers of his enemies had not
driven the psalmist from his stronghold. As the shipwrecked mariner
clings to the mast, so did David cling to his faith; he neither could
nor would give up his confidence in the Lord his God. O that we may
profit by his example and hold by our faith as by our very life!
Now thine anger's past away; Comfortable thoughts arise From the bleeding sacrifice." Verse 6. The Psalm closes with a sentence which is a refutation of the charge of forgetfulness which David had uttered in the first verse, "He hath dealt bountifully with me." So shall it be with us if we wait awhile. The complaint which in our haste we utter shall be joyfully retracted, and we shall witness that the Lord hath dealt bountifully with us.
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