1._Blessed is the man. _(19) The meaning of the Psalmist, as I have
stated above, is, that it shall be always well with God’s devout
servants, whose constant endeavor it is to make progress in the study
of his law. The greater part of mankind being accustomed to deride the
conduct of the saints as m... [ Continue Reading ]
In the second verse, the Psalmist does not simply pronounce those
happy who fear God, as in other places, but designates godliness _by
the study of the law, _teaching us that God is only rightly served
when had law is obeyed. It is not left to every man to frame a system
of religion according to his... [ Continue Reading ]
The Psalmist here illustrates, and, at the same time, confirms by a
metaphor the statement made in the preceding verse; for he shows in
what respect those who fear God are to be accounted happy, namely, not
because they enjoy an evanescent and empty gladness, but because they
are in a desirable cond... [ Continue Reading ]
The Psalmist might, with propriety, have compared the ungodly to a
tree that speedily withers, as Jeremiah likens them to the heath which
grows in the wilderness, (Jeremiah 17:6) But not reckoning this figure
sufficiently strong, he debases them by employing another, which
represents them in a light... [ Continue Reading ]
In the fifth verse, the prophet teaches that a happy life depends on a
good conscience, and that, therefore, it is not wonderful, if the
ungodly suddenly fall from the happiness of which they fancied
themselves in possession. And there is implied in the words a kind of
concession; the prophet tacitl... [ Continue Reading ]
Even in this world the prosperity of the ungodly begins to pass away
as often as God manifests the tokens of his judgment; (for then, being
awakened out of sleep, they are constrained to acknowledge, whether
they will or no, that they have no part with the assembly of the
righteous;) but because thi... [ Continue Reading ]