The fear of the LORD is clean, enduring for ever: the
judgments of the LORD are true and righteous altogether. (Psalm 19:9)
By the fear of God we are here to understand the way
in which God is to be served; and therefore it is taken in an active sense for
the doctrine which prescribes to us the manner in which we ought to fear God.
The way in which men generally manifest their fear of God, is by inventing
false religions and a vitiated worship; in doing which they only so much the
more provoke his wrath. David, therefore, here indirectly condemns these
corrupt inventions, about which men torment themselves in vain, and which often
sanction impurity; and in opposition to them he justly affirms, that in the
keeping of the law there is an exemption from every thing which defiles.
He adds, that it endures for ever; as if he had said,
This is the treasure of everlasting happiness. We see how mankind, without well
thinking what they are doing, pursue, with impetuous and ardent affections, the
transitory things of this world; but, in thus catching at the empty shadow of a
happy life, they lose true happiness itself.
In the second clause, by calling the commandments of God truth,
David shows that whatever men undertake to do at the mere suggestion of
their own minds, without having a regard to the law of God as a rule, is error
and falsehood. And, indeed, he could not have more effectually stirred us up to
love, and zealously to live according to the law, than by giving us this
warning, that all those who order their life, without having any respect to the
law of God, deceive themselves, and follow after mere delusions. Those who
explain the word judgments, as referring only to the commandments of the
second table, are, in my opinion, mistaken: for David’s purpose was to commend,
under a variety of expressions, the advantages which the faithful receive from
the law of God.
When he says, They are justified together, the
meaning is, They are all righteous from the greatest to the least, without a
single exception. By this commendation he distinguishes the law of God from all
the doctrines of men, for no blemish or fault can be found in it, but it is in
all points absolutely perfect. (Commentaries)
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