Then will I visit their transgression with the rod, and
their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless my lovingkindness will I not utterly
take from him, nor suffer my faithfulness to fail (Ps. 89:32–33).
Since God does not adopt us as his children, to encourage us
to take liberty to commit sin with the greater boldness, mention is here made
at the same time of chastisement, by which he shows that he hates the sins of
his children, and, warning them of what they have deserved in offending him,
invites and exhorts them to repentance. This fatherly chastisement then, which
operates as medicine, holds the medium between undue indulgence, which is an
encouragement to sin, and extreme severity, which precipitates persons into
destruction.
Whenever God punishes the sins of true believers, he will
observe a wholesome moderation; and it is therefore our duty to take all the
punishments which he inflicts upon us, as so many medicines. But God has
nothing else in view than to correct the vices of his children, in order that,
after having thoroughly purged them, he may restore them anew to his favor and
friendship; according to the words of Paul in 1 Corinthians 11:33, which affirm
that the faithful “are chastened of the Lord, that they should not be condemned
with the world.” For this reason, lest they should be overwhelmed with the
weight of chastisement, he restrains his hand, and makes considerate allowance
for their infirmity.
Thus the promise is fulfilled, That he does not withdraw
his loving-kindness from his people, even when he is angry with them; for,
while he is correcting them for their profit and salvation, he does not cease
to love them. (Commentaries)
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