Psalms 88:1
This Psalm is written under feelings of affliction and deep heaviness
of spirit. But its peculiarity is not that it is written under these
feelings, but that these feelings are never once interrupted or
relieved throughout it. Other psalms are expressions of grief, but
they rise to joy e... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 88:5
The freedom of which the author of this Psalm writes so despairingly
must have been, for him at least, a freedom of isolation, of
solitariness, of exile and expulsion, rather than of release,
independence, and joy.
I. We are all conscious of the possibility of a freedom which should
hav... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 88:15
What is it that the psalmist declares of himself in these words but
that God's judgments have always and habitually possessed his mind;
that the fear of them has hung like a weight upon him; that even from
his youth it has been present with him? If we look into any books of
prayers or... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 88:18
I. Look at the threefold loss bewailed in the text. There are, or
ought to be, three circles round every man like the belts or rings
round a planet: love, friendship, and acquaintanceship. Love is the
nearest, while, at the same time, it lends its value to the other two.
Friendship and... [ Continue Reading ]