Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of
my life: and I will dwell in the house of the LORD for ever. (Psalm 23:6)
Having recounted the blessings which God had bestowed upon
him, he now expresses his undoubted persuasion of the continuance of them to
the end of his life. But whence proceeded this confidence, by which he assures
himself that the beneficence and mercy of God will accompany him for ever, if
it did not arise from the promise by which God is accustomed to season the
blessings which he bestows upon true believers, that they may not
inconsiderately devour them without having any taste or relish for them? When
he said to himself before, that even amidst the darkness of death he would keep
his eyes fixed in beholding the providence of God, he sufficiently testified
that he did not depend upon outward things, nor measured the grace of God according
to the judgment of the flesh, but that even when assistance from every earthly
quarter failed him, his faith continued shut up in the word of God.
I will dwell in the house of Jehovah. By this
concluding sentence he manifestly shows that he does not confine his thoughts
to earthly pleasures or comforts; but that the mark at which he aims is fixed
in heaven, and to reach this was his great object in all things. It is as if he
had said, I do not live for the mere purpose of living, but rather to exercise
myself in the fear and service of God, and to make progress daily in all the
branches of true godliness. He makes a manifest distinction between himself and
ungodly men, who take pleasure only in filling their bellies with luxuriant
fare. And not only so, but he also intimates that to live to God is, in his
estimation, of so great importance, that he valued all the comforts of the
flesh only in proportion as they served to enable him to live to God. He
plainly affirms, that the end which he contemplated in all the benefits which
God had conferred upon him was, that he might dwell in the house of the Lord.
It is, therefore, certain that the mind of David, by the aid
of the temporal prosperity which he enjoyed, was elevated to the hope of the
everlasting inheritance. From this we conclude, that those men are brutish who
propose to themselves any other felicity than that which arises from drawing
near to God. (Commentaries)
No comments:
Post a Comment