Charles H. Spurgeon Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings Hints to the Village Preacher Psalm 21 Verse 1-13SUBJECT. The title gives us but little information; it is simply, To the chief Musician, a Psalm of David. Probably written by David, sung by David, relating to David, and intended by David to refer in its fullest reach of meaning to David's Lord. It is evidently the fit companion of Psalm Twenty, and is in its proper position next to it. Psalm Twenty anticipates what this regards as realized. If we pray to-day for a benefit and receive it, we must, ere the sun goes down, praise God for that mercy, or we deserve to be denied the next time. It has been called David's triumphant song, and we may remember it as The Royal Triumphal Ode. "The king" is most prominent throughout, and we shall read it to true profit if our meditation of him shall be sweet while perusing it. We must crown him with the glory of our salvation; singing of his love, and praising his power, The next psalm will take us to the foot of the cross, this introduces us to the steps of the throne.DIVISION. The division of the translators will answer every purpose. A thanksgiving for victory, verses 1 to 6. Confidence of further success, verses 7 to 13.
Verse 1. "The king shall joy in thy strength, O Lord." Jesus is a Royal
Personage. The question, "Art thou a King then?" received a full answer
from the Saviour's lips: "Thou sayest that I am a King. To this end was I
born, and for this purpose came I into the world, that I might bear witness
unto the truth." He is not merely a King, but the King; King over minds
and hearts, reigning with a dominion of love, before which all other rule is
but mere brute force. He was proclaimed King even on the cross, for there,
indeed, to the eye of faith, he reigned as on a throne, blessing with more
than imperial munificence the needy sons of earth. Jesus has wrought out
the salvation of his people, but as a man he found his strength in Jehovah
his God, to whom he addressed himself in prayer upon the lonely mountain's
side, and in the garden's solitary gloom. That strength so abundantly given
is here gratefully acknowledged, and made the subject of joy. The Man of
Sorrows is now anointed with the oil of gladness above his fellows.
Returned in triumph from the overthrow of all his foes, he offers his own
rapturous Te Deum in the temple above, and joys in the power of the Lord.
Herein let every subject of King Jesus imitate the King; let us lean upon
Jehovah's strength, let us joy in it by unstaggering faith, let us exult in
it in our thankful songs. Jesus not only has thus rejoiced, but he shall
do so as he sees the power of divine grace bringing out from their sinful
hiding-places the purchase of his soul's travail; we also shall rejoice more
and more as we learn by experience more and more fully the strength of the
arm of our covenant God. Our weakness unstrings our harps, but his strength
tunes them anew. If we cannot sing a note in honour of our own strength, we
can at any rate rejoice in our omnipotent God.
Verse 2. "Thou hast given him his heart's desire." That desire he ardently
pursued when he was on earth, both by his prayer, his actions, and his
suffering; he manifested that his heart longed to redeem his people, and now
in heaven he has his desire granted him, for he sees his beloved coming to
be with him where he is. The desires of the Lord Jesus were from his heart,
and the Lord heard them; if our hearts are right with God, he will in our
case also "fulfil the desires of them that fear him."
Verse 3. "For thou preventest him with the blessings of goodness." The
word prevent formerly signified to precede or go before, and assuredly
Jehovah preceded his Son with blessings. Before he died saints were saved
by the anticipated merit of his death, before he came believers saw his day
and were glad, and he himself had his delights with the sons of men. The
Father is so willing to give blessings through his Son, that instead of his
being constrained to bestow his grace, he outstrips the Mediatorial march of
mercy. "I say not that I will pray the Father for you, for the Father
himself loveth you." Before Jesus calls the Father answers, and while he is
yet speaking he hears. Mercies may be bought with blood, but they are also
freely given. The love of Jehovah is not caused by the Redeemer's
sacrifice, but that love, with its blessings of goodness, preceded the great
atonement, and provided it for our salvation. Reader, it will be a happy
thing for thee if, like thy Lord, thou canst see both providence and grace
preceding thee, forestalling thy needs, and preparing thy path. Mercy, in
the case of many of us, ran before our desires and prayers, and it ever
outruns our endeavours and expectancies, and even our hopes are left to lag
behind. Prevenient grace deserves a song; we may make one out of this
sentence; let us try. All our mercies are to be viewed as "blessings;"
gifts of a blessed God, meant to make us blessed; they are "blessings of
goodness," not of merit, but of free favour; and they come to us in a
preventing way, a way of prudent foresight, such as only preventing love
could have arranged. In this light the verse is itself a sonnet! Verse 4. "He asked life of thee, and thou gavest it him, even length of days for ever and ever." The first words may suit King David, but the length of days for ever and ever can only refer to the King Messiah. Jesus, as man, prayed for resurrection and he received it, and now possesses it in immortality. He died once, but being raised from the dead he dieth no more. "Because I live, ye shall live also," is the delightful intimation which the Saviour gives us, that we are partakers of his eternal life. We had never found this jewel, if he had not rolled away the stone which covered it.
Verse 5. "His glory is great in thy salvation." Immanuel bears the palm;
he once bore the cross. The Father has glorified the Son, so that there is
no glory like unto that which surroundeth him. See his person as it is
described by John in the Revelation; see his dominion as it stretches from
sea to sea; see his splendour as he is revealed in flaming fire. Lord, who
is like unto thee? Solomon in all his glory could not be compared with
thee, thou once despised Man of Nazareth! Mark, reader: salvation is
ascribed to God; and thus the Son, as our Saviour, magnifies his Father; but
the Son's glory is also greatly seen, for the Father glorifies his Son.
Who bowed his head to death, And be his honours sounded high By all things that have breath."
Verse 6. "For thou hast made him most blessed for ever." He is most
blessed in himself, for he is God over all, blessed for ever; but this
relates to him as our Mediator, in which capacity blessedness is given to
him as a reward. The margin has it, thou hast set him to be blessings; he
is an overflowing wellspring of blessings to others, a sun filling the
universe with light. According as the Lord sware unto Abraham, the promised
seed is an everlasting source of blessings to all the nations of the earth.
He is set for this, ordained, appointed, made incarnate with this very
design, that he may bless the sons of men. Oh that sinners had sense enough
to use the Saviour for that end to which he is ordained, viz., to be a
Saviour to lost and guilty souls.
Verse 7. "For the king trusteth in the Lord." Our Lord, like a true King
and leader, was a master in the use of the weapons, and could handle well
the shield of faith, for he has set us a brilliant example of unwavering
confidence in God. He felt himself safe in his Father's care until his hour
was come, he knew that he was always heard in heaven; he committed his cause
to him that judgeth right, and in his last moments he committed his spirit
into the same hands. The joy expressed in the former verses was the joy of
faith, and the victory achieved was due to the same precious grace. A holy
confidence in Jehovah is the true mother of victories. This psalm of
triumph was composed long before our Lord's conflict began, but faith
overleaps the boundaries of time, and chants her "Io triumphe," while yet
she sings her battle song. Verse 8. "Thine hand shall find out all thine enemies: thy right hand shall find out those that hate thee." The destruction of the wicked is a fitting subject for joy to the friends of righteousness; hence here, and in most scriptural songs, it is noted with calm thanksgiving. "Thou hast put down the mighty from their seats," is a note of the same song which sings, "and hast exalted them of low degree." We pity the lost for they are men, but we cannot pity them as enemies of Christ. None can escape from the wrath of the victorious King, nor is it desirable that they should. Without looking for his flying foes he will find them with his hand, for his presence is about and around them. In vain shall any hope for escape, he will find out all, and be able to punish all, and that too with the ease and rapidity which belong to the warrior's right hand. The finding out relates, we think, not only to the discovery of the hiding places of the haters of God, but to the touching of them in their tenderest parts, so as to cause the severest suffering. When he appears to judge the world hard hearts will be subdued into terror, and proud spirits humbled into shame. He who has the key of human nature can touch all its springs at his will, and find out the means of bringing the utmost confusion and terror upon those who aforetime boastfully expressed their hatred of him.
Verse 9. "Thou shalt make them as a fiery oven in the time of thine
anger." They themselves shall be an oven to themselves, and so their own
tormentors. Those who burned with anger against thee shall be burned by
thine anger. The fire of sin will be followed by the fire of wrath. Even
as the smoke of Sodom and Gomorrah went up to heaven, so shall the enemies
of the Lord Jesus be utterly and terribly consumed. Some read it, "thou
shalt put them as it were into a furnace of fire." Like faggots cast into
an oven they shall burn furiously beneath the anger of the Lord; "they shall
be cast into a furnace of fire, there shall be weeping and gnashing of
teeth." These are terrible words, and those teachers do not well who
endeavour by their sophistical reasonings to weaken their force. Reader,
never tolerate slight thoughts of hell, or you will soon have low thoughts
of sin. The hell of sinners must be fearful beyond all conception, or such
language as the present would not be used. Who would have the Son of God to
be his enemy when such an overthrow awaits his foes? The expression, "the
time of thine anger," reminds us that as now is the time of his grace, so
there will be a set time for his wrath. The judge goes upon assize at an
appointed time. There is a day of vengeance of our God; let those who
despise the day of grace remember this day of wrath. Verse 10. "Their fruit shalt thou destroy from the earth." Their life's work shall be a failure, and the result of their toil shall be disappointment. That in which they prided themselves shall be forgotten; their very names shall be wiped out as abominable, "and their seed from among the children of men." Their posterity following in their footsteps shall meet with a similar overthrow, till at last the race shall come to an end. Doubtless the blessing of God is often handed down by the righteous to their sons, as almost a heirloom in the family, while the dying sinner bequeaths a curse to his descendants. If men will hate the Son of God, they must not wonder if their own sons meet with no favour.
Verse 11. "For they intended evil against thee." God takes notice of
intentions. He who would but could not is as guilty as he who did.
Christ's church and cause are not only attacked by those who do not
understand it, but there are many who have the light and yet hate it.
Intentional evil has a virus in it which is not found in sins of ignorance;
now as ungodly men with malice aforethought attack the gospel of Christ,
their crime is great, and their punishment will be proportionate. The words
"against thee" show us that he who intends evil against the poorest
believer means ill to the King himself: let persecutors beware. Verse 12. "Therefore shalt thou make them turn their back, when thou shalt make ready thine arrows upon thy strings against the face of them." For a time the foes of God may make bold advances, and threaten to overthrow everything, but a few ticks of the clock will alter the face of their affairs. At first they advance impudently enough, but Jehovah meets them to their teeth, and a taste of the sharp judgment of God speedily makes them flee in dismay. The original has in it the thought of the wicked being set as a butt for God to shoot at, a target for his wrath to aim at. What a dreadful situation! As an illustration upon a large scale, remember Jerusalem during the siege; and for a specimen in an individual, read the story of the death-bed of Francis Spira. God takes sure aim; who would be his target? His arrows are sharp and transfix the heart; who would wish to be wounded by them? Ah, ye enemies of God, your boastings will soon be over when once the shafts begin to fly!
Verse 13. "Be thou exalted, Lord, in thine own strength." A sweet
concluding verse. Our hearts shall join in it. It is always right to
praise the Lord when we call to remembrance his goodness to his Son, and the
overthrow of his foes. The exaltation of the name of God should be the
business of every Christian; but since such poor things as we fail to honour
him as he deserves, we may invoke his own power to aid us. Be high, O God,
but do thou maintain thy loftiness by thine own almightiness, for no other
power can worthily do it.
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