Psalms 63:1
In this text there is a prostration, an appropriation, an obedience,
and a _now._
I. It is a great thing to have grand views of God, to get some
approach to an idea of the exceeding greatness of God. We go to God
too much for what we want to get. We ought to go to God, and meditate
upo... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 63:1
Notice:
I. Some of the characteristics of public worship. (1) The text
suggests the promise of special nearness to God. The expression of the
Psalmist is not only that he desires to see the power and glory of God
in the sanctuary, but that he may realise communion with God Himself.
In t... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 63:1
This Psalm, with its passion of love and mystic rapture, is a monument
for us of how the writer's sorrows had brought to him a closer union
with God, as our sorrows may do for us, like some treasure washed to
our feet by a stormy sea. The key to the arrangement of the Psalm will
be foun... [ Continue Reading ]