Remember me, O LORD, with the favour that thou bearest
unto thy people: O visit me with thy salvation (Ps. 106:4).
By these words the prophet declares it to be his chief
desire, that God would extend to him that love which he bore towards the
Church, that he might thus become a participator of all the blessings which,
from the very first, he bestows upon his chosen, and which day by day he
continues with them. Nor does he desire this for himself alone, but in name of
the Church Catholic, offers up a prayer alike for all, that, by his example, he
might stimulate the faithful to present similar petitions.
Remember me, says he, with the good will which
thou bearest towards thy people; that is to say, grant to me the same
unmerited kindness which thou art pleased to confer upon thy people, that so I
may never be cut off from thy Church, but always be included among the number
of thy children; for the phrase, good will towards thy people, is to be
understood passively of that love which God graciously bears to his elect. It
is, however, by a metonymy employed by the prophet to point out the marks of
God’s love. For from this gracious source flows that proof which he actually
and experimentally gives of his grace.
But the prophet, if accounted to belong to the number of the
people of God, would consider this to be the summit of true happiness; because,
by this means, he would feel that God was reconciled to him, (than which
nothing is more desirables) and thus, too, he would experience that he was
bountiful. The term, remember, relates to the circumstance of time, as
we shall see towards the end of the psalm that it was penned when the people
were in a state so sad and calamitous, that the faithful might entertain some
secret apprehension that their God had forgotten them. (Commentaries)
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