That which is commanded him, he
hath in himself, as it is elsewhere said, Thy vows are upon Ps.
hath in himself, as it is elsewhere said, Thy vows are upon Ps.
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v1
And all the strength 1 l virtus of them by the Breath of His Mouth.
And all their faith
by His Holy Spirit.
7. Ver. 7. He gathereth the waters of the sea together as into a bottle : He gathereth the people of the world together, to confession of mortified sin, lest through pride they flow too freely. He layeth up the deep in storehouses: and keepeth in them His secrets for riches.
8. Ver. 8. Let all the earth fear the Lord: let every sinner fear, that so he may cease to sin. Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him : not of the terrors of men, or of any creature, but of Him let them stand in awe.
9. Ver. 9. For He spake, and they were made: for no other one made those things which are to fear; but He spake, and they were made. He commanded, and they were created: He commanded by His Word1, and they were created.
' ad Lit. * See S. Aug. on Faith and Works, our 1st and 2d as one, dividing theb. i. ? .
? . 17. Tr. p. 52. note h. He takes 10th. 5,6.
X 0
SeeDe
306 None blessed save in God, Who cares for all His.
Psalm
io. Ver. 10. The Lord bringeth the counsel of the Heathen Exp. I. to nought; of them that seek not His Kingdom, but kingdoms of their own. He maketh the devices of the people of none
1 Cor. 1'
14. Ver. 14. From His prepared habitation: from His habitation of assumed Humanity, which He prepared for Himself. He looketh upon all the inhabitants of the earth: He looketh mercifully upon all who live in the flesh, that He may be over them in ruling them.
15. Ver. 15. He fashioneth their hearts singly : He giveth spiritually to their hearts their proper gifts, so that neither the whole body may be eye, nor the whole hearing ; but that one in this manner, another in that manner, may be incor porated with Christ. He understandeth all their works. Before Him are all their works understood.
16. Ver. 16. A king shall not be saved by much strength : he shall not be saved who ruleth his own flesh, if he pre sume much upon his own strength. Neither shall a giant be saved by much strength : nor shall he be saved whoever warreth against the habit of his own lust, or against the devil and his angels, if he trust much to his own might.
#
effect : of them that covet earthly happiness. And reproveth the counsels of princes : of them that seek to rule over such
peoples.
11. Ver. 11. But the counsel of the Lord standeth for
ever ; but the counsel of the Lord, whereby He maketh none blessed but him that submitteth unto Himself, standeth for ever. The thoughts of His Heart to all generations: the
thoughts of His Wisdom are not mutable, but endure to all
generations.
12. Ver. 12. Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord:
one nation is blessed, belonging to the heavenly city, which hath not chosen save the Lord for their God : And the people whom He hath chosen for His own inheritance : and which not of itself, but by the gift of God, hath been chosen, that He by possessing it may not suffer it to be uncared for and miserable.
13. Ver. 13. The Lord looketh from Heaven ; He beholdeth all the sons of men. From the souls of the righteous, the Lord looketh mercifully upon all who would rise to newness of life.
Hope in creatures vain. Trust and joy in God. 307
17. Ver. 17. A horse is a deceitful thing for safety: he is Ver. deceived, who thinketh either that through men he gaineth ------? salvation received among men, or that by the impetuosity of
his own courage he is defended from destruction. In the abundance of his strength shall he not be saved.
18. Ver. 18. Behold, the Eyes of the Lord are upon them that fear Him : because if thou seek salvation, behold, the love of the Lord is upon them that fear Him. Upon them that hope in His mercy : that hope not in their own strength, but in His mercy.
19. Ver. 19. To deliver their souls from death, and to keep them alive in famine. To give them the nourishment of the Word, and of Everlasting Truth, which they lost while presuming on their own strength, and therefore have not even their own strength, from lack of righteousness.
20. Ver. 20. My soul shall be patient for the Lord: that hereafter it may be filled with dainties incorruptible, mean while, whilst here it remaineth, my soul shall be patient for the Lord. For He is our Helper and Defender : our Helper He is, while we endeavour after Him ; and our Defender, while we resist the adversary.
21. Ver. 21. For our heart shall rejoice in Him: for not in ourselves, wherein without Him there is great need ; but in Himself shall our heart rejoice. And we have trusted in His holy Name : and therefore have we trusted that we shall come to God, because unto us absent hath He sent, through faith, His own Name.
22. Ver. 22. Let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, accord ing as we have hoped in Thee: let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us ; for hope confoundeth not, because we have hoped in Thee.
SECOND EXPOSITION.
Discourse the Firtt. On the first part of the Psalm.
1. This Psalm admonishes us to rejoice in the Lord. It is entitled, Of David himself. Whoever then belong to the most holy seed of David, let them hearken to their own
308 Man ought to take God's Will as best, against his own.
Psalm words, and speak their own words, and let them rejoice in Exp. IIithe Lord. But thus it begins, (ver. Rejoice in the Lord, ye righteous: let the unrighteous rejoice in the world;
with the world ended ended the rejoicing of the un righteous. But let the righteous rejoice in the Lord be cause while the Lord remaineth, remaineth also the rejoicing of the righteous. But meet so to rejoice in the Lord, as to praise Him, Who alone has not any thing which can displease us and has many things, none so many, which displease the unfaithful. And that short precept, He pleaseth God whom God pleaseth. And think not lightly of this, dearly beloved. For ye see how many dispute against
God, how many are displeased with His works. For when He would do contrary to the will of men, because He the Lord, and knoweth what He doth, and regardeth not so much our will as our benefit they who would have rather their own will to be fulfilled than God's, would bend God to their will, not make right their will unto God. Such men, unfaithful, ungodly, unrighteous --though grieveth me to
say yet will say for ye know how truly say more easily pleased with pantomime than with God.
--are
2. Therefore when he had said, Rejoice in the Lord, ye righteous; because to rejoice in Him except by praising Him we cannot, and we praise One Whom we please the more, the more He pleaseth us For praise, saith he, comely to the upright. Who are the upright They who direct their heart according to the will of God and whom,
human frailty disturb them, Divine Justice consoleth. For although in their mortal heart they may privately wish something, which may suit their own immediate case, or interest, or their present necessity, yet when they have un derstood and learned that God willeth otherwise, they prefer the will of The Better, to their own will
Omnipotent, to the will of the weak the will of God, to the will of man. For far as God differs from man, so far the will of God from the will of man. Wherefore Christ having put on Man, and proposing rule to us, teaching us to live, and granting us to live, shewed also man's private will whereby He figured both His own and ours, because He is our Head, and we, as ye know, belong to Him as real
the will of The
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Our Lord's Human Will. Submission due to a Father.
members. Father, saith He, if it be possible, let this cup Ver. pass from Me ; this was the human Will, wishing something ----
proper to itself, and as it were private. But because He ' ' 39.
willed man to be right in heart, that whatever in him was somewhat crooked, He might make straight toIHim, Who is
ever Right; Nevertheless, saith He, not as
Thou, Father. But what evil could Christ will ? What, in
short, could He will other than the Father. Whose Divinity is one, Their Will can not be different. But in the person of Man, transforming His Own into Himse/lf ; whom He had transformed into Himself when He said,
was an hungred, Mat. 25, and ye gave Me meat : whom He transformed into Himself,
when to Saul raging, and persecuting the Saints, He cried
from Heaven, though none touched Him, Saul, Saul, why Acts 9,
'
will, but as
309
persecutest Thou Me ? He shewed as it were man's proper will ; He shewed thee, and corrected thee. Behold, saith He, thyself in Me ; for thou also canst will something proper to thyself, though God will otherwise ; this is granted to human frailty, it is granted to human infirmity : to have a proper will, it is difficult that this should not happen to thee: but think straightway Who is above thee; think of Him above thee, thyself below Him ; Him the Creator, thyself the creature ; Him the Lord, thyself the servant ; Him Omni potent, thyself weak ; correcting thyselfI, submitting to His Will, and saying, Nevertheless, not as
will, but as Thou wilt. Wherein art thou severed from God, who now willest that which God willeth ? Then shalt thou be upright, and praise shall be comely to thee, for, praise is comely to the
upright.
3. But if thou art crooked, thou praisest God when it is
well with thee, blasphemest when it is ill : which ill indeed, ifitbejust,isnotill; butjustitis,sinceitisdonebyHim,
Who can do nothing unjust : and so thou wilt be a foolish
boy in the house of thy father, loving thy father if he
fondle thee, and hating him when he scourgeth thee : as if
he were not, both when fondling and when scourging, pre
paring for thee the inheritance. But see how praise is comely to the upright ; hear the voice of the upright praising
from another Psalm, / will bless the Lord at all times, HisP<<. 34,\. praise shall continually be in my mouth. What is at all
310 77ie Righteous encouraged to rejoice in all cases.
Psalm times, that is, continually ; and what is, I will bless, that is>
'Exp. ll. be in XXX11I. His praise shall
my mouth.
At and con all times,
Joh 1,
tinually, whether in prosperity or in adversity. For if in prosperity and not in adversity, how at all times ? how con tinually ? And we have heard many such words from many : when any good fortune befals them, they exult, they rejoice, they sing to God, they praise God ; nor are they to be dis approved, nay, we must rejoice in them, for many praise Him not even then. But they who have now begun to praise God on account of their prosperity, must be taught to acknowledge their Father also when scourging them, and not to murmur against the hand of Him correcting ; lest remain ing ever perverse they deserve to be disinherited, so that being now made upright, (what is upright? so that nothing which God doth, displease them,) they may be able to praise God even in adversity, and to say, The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away ; as the Lord pleased, so is it come to
Vuig.
pass.
Blessed be the name of the Lord. To such upright, praise is comely, not to them that will first praise, and after wards blame.
4. Therefore, ye righteous upright, rejoice in the Lord r for your praise is comely. Let none say, Who am I, that am righteous? or, When am I righteous? Cast not yourselves away, and despair not of yourselves. Ye are men, in the image of God were ye created: He Who made you men, for you also was made Man : that ye, being many sons, might be adopted to an eternal inheritance, the Blood of the Only-Begotten was shed for you. If ye unto your selves have become vile through earthly frailty, according to your own price weigh yourselves : What ye eat, What ye drink, Whereto ye subscribe Amen, consider as is meet. Do we give you this warning, that ye may be proud, and dare to claim to yourselves some perfection? No: but neither again ought ye to think yourselves to be exiled from all righteousness. For I will not question you of your righ teousness ; for perhaps none of you would dare to answer, I am righteous : but I question you of your faith. As none of you dares to say, I am righteous, so none dares to say, I am not faithful. I ask not yet how thou livest, but how thou believest. Thou wilt answer, that thou believest in Christ.
Thefaithful may do so. The Psaltery and Harp. 311
Hast thou not heard the Apostle, The just shall live by faith ? Ver. Thy faith is thy righteousness, because truly if thou dost 2 believe, thou dost beware ; if thou dost beware, thou dost ' '
17. endeavour ; and God knoweth thy endeavour, and beholdest
thy will, and considereth the wrestling with the flesh, and exhorteth thee to fight, and assisteth thee to conquer, and contending watcheth thee, and fainting, lifteth thee up, and conquering, crowneth thee. Therefore, Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous : or this I would say, Rejoice in the Lord, O ye faithful, because the just shall live by faith. Praise is comely to the upright. Learn to give thanks unto God, both in prosperity and in tribulation. Learn to have in thy heart what every man hath in his tongue ; The will of God be done. The common speech of the people is mostly saving doctrine. Who saith not daily, What God willeth, that let Him do ? And so the upright will be among those, who rejoice in the Lord, and to whom praise is comely, whom
the Psalm addresseth, in the words following, and saith, (ver. 2. ) Praise the Lord with harp : sing unto Him with the psaltery of ten strings. For this even now we sang, this expressing with one mouth, we instructed your hearts.
5. Hath not the institution of these Vigils b in the name of Christ brought it to pass that harps should be banished out of this place ? And, lo, the same are bid to sound. Praise the Lord, saith he, with harp; sing unto Him with the
0xf'
psaltery of ten strings. Let none turn his heart to instru
ments of the theatre.
That which is commanded him, he
hath in himself, as it is elsewhere said, Thy vows are upon Ps. 56,
Iwill render praises unto Thee.
me, O God;
ber, who some while since were present, when what difference '>>"? ' there between the psaltery and harp, as best could, explained in my discourse0, and tried withal to bring home
to the understanding of all but how much effected, they know best who heard. And now in due season repeat
that in this diversity of two musical instruments, we may
find the diversity of human actions signified by the same,
SeeSer. 115, de Diversis, (al. 311. ) delivered in the Church which con- c. 5. where the same more clearly re- tained the remains of the Martyr lated from which passage, and from the Cyprian. Bet. The religious Vigil following exposition, c. appears superseded a revel of dancing, &c.
that these discourses on Ps. 33. were On Ps. 43. and on Ps. 71. Exp. 2.
They'remem-
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312 Our earthly state, should ' harp" to God in joy and sorrow.
chords lean, so that when touched they sound. I speak not of the staff wherewith they are touched, but that hollow board I mean, over which they are laid, upon which in some wise they lean, so that from thence trembling at the touch, and from that concavity conceiving sound, they are rendered more harmonious; this board then the harp hath in the lower, the psaltery in the upper part. This is the distinction between them. Now in this place we are bidden to praise the Lord with harp, and to sing to Him with a psaltery of
ten strings. He saith not, with a harp often strings, neither in this Psalm, nor, if I mistake not, in any other place. My sons, the readers may read and examine more thoroughly and leisurely for themselves ; but as far as I myself remem ber, I have found in many places a psaltery of ten strings, a harp of ten strings no where occurs, that I have read. Re member that the harp hath that wherefrom it sounds in the lower part, the psaltery in the higher. In our lower life, that is, our earthly, we have prosperity and adversity: wherefore must we praise God in both, that His praise may be con-
Ps. 34,1. tinnally in our mouth, and that we may bless the Lord at all times. For there is an earthly prosperity, and there is an earthly adversity : in both must God be praised, that so we may harp. What then is earthly prosperity ? When we are sound in body ; when all things abound whereby we live ; when our safety is sure ; when the fruits come in largely ;
Matt. 5, when He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. All these things contribute to earthly life. Whoever therefrom praiseth not God, is ungrateful. Because they are earthly
things, are they therefore not of God ? Or is therefore an other to be thought to give them, because they are given also to the evil. For manifold is the mercy of God, patient is long-suffering. Thereby sheweth He the more what things He reserveth for the good, when He sheweth what great things He giveth even to the evil. And adversities there are, forsooth from the lower part, from the frailty of the human race, in griefs, in weariness, in pressures, in tribulations, in temptations. In all these let him praise God
Psalm and to be fulfilled in our life. The harp hath that hollow XXXIII.
Exp. II. board, like a tabor, covered with tortoiseshell, on which the
it,
The spiritual man, a psaltery of ten strings for God. 313
who barpeth. Let him consider, not that they are from Ver. below, but that they cannot be ruled and governed but by ?
that Wisdom, which reacheth from end to end mightily,Wisd. and sweetly ordereth all things. For He doth not rule ' heavenly things, and leave alone earthly; or it would not be
said unto Him, Whither shall I go Thy
from whither shall Ijtee from Thy presence ?
I Spirit? ascend
or^s. l39, up
into heaven, Thou art there;
art there. Where then is He wanting, Who no where is not? Praise then the Lord on the harp. Whether any earthly thing abound to thee, give thanks to Him Who gave
if
I If
go down into hell, Thou
or whether ought be wanting to thee, or haply by mis fortune be taken from thee, harp without care. For He
not taken from thee, Who gave, though that be taken from thee which He gave. Even so, say, harp without care. Assured in thy God, touch the strings in thy heart, and say,
as to an harp sounding well in the lower part, The LordJoh gave, and the Lord hath taken away, whatever the Lordy^
pleased that did He. Blessed be the Name of the Lord.
6. But now, when thou considerest the superior gifts of God, what Commandments He hath given thee, with what
heavenly doctrine He hath imbued thee, what things He hath commanded thee from above, from the fountain of His Truth turn also to the psaltery, sing unto the Lord with psaltery of ten strings. For the Commandments of the
Law are ten in the ten Commandments of the Law thou
hast the psaltery. The thing complete. Therein thou
hast the love of God in three, and the love of thy neighbour see p. in seven. And truly thou knowest, the Lord Himself having
said that On these two commandments hang all the Law Mat. 22, and the Prophets. Saith God unto thee from above, Tke D'at
Lord thy God one Lord; thou hast one string. Thou4. shall not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain 20 thou hast another string Remember the Sabbath day, to keep holy, not carnally, not with their Jewish delights,
who abuse rest unto wickedness. For better were that
they should dig the whole day, than the whole day dance.
But thou, thinking on rest in thy God, and for that rest doing all things, abstain from servile work. Now, Whosoever John committeth sin, the servant ofsin; and would that could34.
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314 Three ' strings' of love to God, seven of love to man.
Psalm say, of man, and not of sin ! These three relate to the love XXXIII.
Exp. II. of God: of Whom consider thou the unity, the truth, and the pleasantness, for there is a pleasantness in the Lord, where there is a true Sabbath, a true rest11 ; wherefore it is
Ps. 37,4. said, Delight thyself also in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of thine heart. For who giveth such de light, as lie Who maketh all things which delight? In
Ex. 20, these three is the love of God, in the other seven is the love of our neighbour, that thou do not to another, what thou wouldest not suffer. Honour thy father and thy mother: because thou also wouldest be honoured by thy children. Thou shall not commit adultery: because thou wouldest not that thy wife should commit adultery, behind thy back. Tltou shall not kill: because thou also wouldest not be killed. Thou shalt not steal: because thou also wouldest not suffer robbery. Thou shalt not bear false witness: because thou hatest him that beareth false witness against thee. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife; because thou wouldest not thy wife to be coveted by another. Thou shalt not covet any thing that is thy neighbour's : because if any other covet aught that is thine, thou art displeased. Direct thy tongue to thyself also, when thou art displeased at him who injures thee. All these are the commandments of God ; by Wisdom Herself were they given ; their sound cometh from above. Touch the psaltery, fulfil the Law
Matt. 5, which the Lord thy God came not to destroy but to fulfil. By love wilt thou fulfil, what by fear thou couldest not. For he who through fear doth not evil, would fain do it if he could : and so though the power is not given, the will remained). I do it not, saith he. Wherefore ? Because I fear. Not yet lovest thou righteousness ; thou art still a servant : be a son. But of a good servant is made a good son : now do it not through fear ; thou wilt learn also to do it not through love : for there is a beauty in righteousness : punishment may deter thee, but righteousness hath its own comeliness ; it seeketh men's eyes, it inflameth its lovers.
d It appears from this that St. as most Churches have since applied Augustine did not consider the fourth it. Of the views of the Fathers re- Commandment directly applicable to specting the Lord's Day, see a note
the Lord's day, and perhaps also that at the end of the Rhythms of St. he did consider it to apply indirectly, Ephrem.
Love not to be quenched, butfixed on Righteousness. 315
For this the Martyrs, treading under foot the world, shed Ver. their blood. What loved they when they renounced all ---- things ? For were they not lovers ? or say we this to you
that ye may love not ? Who loveth not, is cold, is dead.
Love we, but that beauty which seeketh the eyes of the heart. Love we, but that beauty which with praise of righteousness inflameth the mind. Men exclaim, they cry aloud, they say every where, How good ! How excellent !
What see they ? Righteousness they see, in which an old
man bowed down is beautiful. For neither if an old man
that is righteous walk abroad, is there any thing in his body
to be loved, and yet he is loved by all. Even there is he
loved where he is not seen : nay there is he loved where he
is seen, but with the heart. Let him then delight you, and
pray ye to the Lord, that He may delight you. For TliePs. 85, Lord shall give sweetness, and our land shall yield her increase: that through love ye may fulfil, what by fear it is
hard to fulfil. Why say I, it is hard? The mind is not yet
able : it would rather that there were not any commandment,
if to do, it is not led by love, but by fear constrained. Do
not steal ; fear hell1: he would rather that there were no'Geben- hell, into which he should be cast. When beginneth ana? ' man to love righteousness, but when he had rather that
there were no stealing, even though there were no hell into which thieves should be cast ? This it is, to love righteousness.
7. And what is righteousness herself like ? Who painteth
her? What beauty hath the Wisdom of God? Through
her are all things beautiful, that are pleasant to the eyes:
her to see, her to embrace, our hearts must be cleansed,
her lovers we profess ourselves; herself so dresseth3 us that8Co1"- we may not be displeasing to her. And when men reprove
us for those things, whereby we please her whom we love,
how is it that we so little regard our reprovers, how is it we
so despise them, and altogether care nothing for them ? Women's lovers, loose and worthy of condemnation, when
their mistresses dress them after their own fancy, if they
can but please them, care not for those whom they displease, thinking it sufficient for them that they please
their eyes, whom they court: and grave men they mostly
316 Please Him Who is worthy of love. New song for New Men.
Psai. m displease, nay, grave men they always displease, and by Exp. ii. better judgment are blamed. Thou art not well shorn, saith a grave man to a wanton youth, it becometh thee not to go
with such-like curls. He knoweth, however, that a certain person is pleased with those curls: he hateth thee that with true judgment blamest, and keepeth in himself that which pleaseth his perverse will. He thinketh thee his enemy,
1al. ' be. because thou wouldest take away3 his disgrace. He nieth loveth/thy eyes, and altogether careth not by what rule of righteous
ness he be blamed. If therefore these regard not their reprovers in truth, that they may be handsome in falsehood ; ought we, in those things whereby we please the Wisdom of God, ought we to regard unrighteous mockers, having no eyes wherewith they may see What we love ? These things considering, all ye upright in heart, Praise the Lord with harp; sing unto Him with a psaltery often strings.
8. Ver. 3. Sing unto Him a new song. Put off oldness : ye know the new song. A new man, a New Testament, a new song. A new song belongeth not to men that are old: none learn that but new men, renewed through Grace
from oldness, and belonging now to the New Testament, which is the kingdom of Heaven. For that sigheth all our love, and singeth a new song. A new song let it sing, not with the tongue, but with the life. Sing unto Him a new song: sing skilfully unto Him. Every man asketh how he should sing unto God. Sing unto Him, but sing not un
He would not that His Ears be offended. Sing skilfully, Brother. in the audience of any good musician, when said to thee, Sing, to please such an one, without some knowledge of the musical art, thou fearest to sing, lest thou shouldest displease master of the art, because, what an unskilful person nndeth not amiss in thee, master blameth who can undertake to sing skilfully before God, so judging of the singer, so examining every part, so exactly
hearing How canst thou shew so nice skill in singing, as in nothing to displease Ears so perfect Behold, he giveth as were the tune of thy song seek not words as thou couldesl explain whereby God is pleased. Sing with jubila tion for this to sing skilfully unto God, to sing with jubilation. What to sing with jubilation To be
skilfully.
is it
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it is
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Joy beyond words. Work of Faith. God, how Faithful. 317
unable to understand, to express in words, what is sung Ver. in the heart. For singers, either in the harvest, or in the '-- vineyard, or in any other busy work, after they have begun
in the words of their hymns to exult and rejoice, being
as it were filled with so great joy, that they cannot express
it in words, then turn from actual words, and proceed to sounds of jubilation. The jubilee is a sound signifying that
the heart laboureth with that which it cannot utter. And
whom beseemeth that jubilation, but the Ineffable God?
For He is Ineffable, Whom thou canst not speak; and if
thou canst not speak Him, and oughtest not to keep Him
silent, what remaineth to thee but jubilation ; that the heart may rejoice without words, and the boundless extent ofjoy may have no limits of syllables? Sing skilfully unto Him with jubilation.
9. Ver. 4. For the Word of the Lord is right, and all
His works are done in faith. In that even wherein He dis- pleaseth the not right, He is right. And all His works areTMSm. 1, done infaith. Let thy works be done in faith, for TIiejustU&b. 2, shall live by faith; and Faith worketh by love. Let thygal,5 works be done in faith, because by trusting in God thou art6- rendered faithful. How can the works of God be done in
faith, as though God also should live by faith ? We find
God also called faithful, and that not in our own words: hear
an Apostle ; God, saith He, is faithful, Who will not suffer i Cor.
you to be tempted above that ye are able, but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able
to bear it. Thus ye have heard God called faithful, hear it
also in another place. // we suffer, we shall also reign 2 Tim. with Him : ifwe deny Him, He also will deny us: If we ' ' believe not, yet He abideth Faithful : He cannot deny Him
We have then a Faithful God also: but let us well dis tinguish Faithful God from faithful man. Man is faithful
when he trusteth in God promising: God is Faithful because
He performeth what He promised to man.
by His Holy Spirit.
7. Ver. 7. He gathereth the waters of the sea together as into a bottle : He gathereth the people of the world together, to confession of mortified sin, lest through pride they flow too freely. He layeth up the deep in storehouses: and keepeth in them His secrets for riches.
8. Ver. 8. Let all the earth fear the Lord: let every sinner fear, that so he may cease to sin. Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him : not of the terrors of men, or of any creature, but of Him let them stand in awe.
9. Ver. 9. For He spake, and they were made: for no other one made those things which are to fear; but He spake, and they were made. He commanded, and they were created: He commanded by His Word1, and they were created.
' ad Lit. * See S. Aug. on Faith and Works, our 1st and 2d as one, dividing theb. i. ? .
? . 17. Tr. p. 52. note h. He takes 10th. 5,6.
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306 None blessed save in God, Who cares for all His.
Psalm
io. Ver. 10. The Lord bringeth the counsel of the Heathen Exp. I. to nought; of them that seek not His Kingdom, but kingdoms of their own. He maketh the devices of the people of none
1 Cor. 1'
14. Ver. 14. From His prepared habitation: from His habitation of assumed Humanity, which He prepared for Himself. He looketh upon all the inhabitants of the earth: He looketh mercifully upon all who live in the flesh, that He may be over them in ruling them.
15. Ver. 15. He fashioneth their hearts singly : He giveth spiritually to their hearts their proper gifts, so that neither the whole body may be eye, nor the whole hearing ; but that one in this manner, another in that manner, may be incor porated with Christ. He understandeth all their works. Before Him are all their works understood.
16. Ver. 16. A king shall not be saved by much strength : he shall not be saved who ruleth his own flesh, if he pre sume much upon his own strength. Neither shall a giant be saved by much strength : nor shall he be saved whoever warreth against the habit of his own lust, or against the devil and his angels, if he trust much to his own might.
#
effect : of them that covet earthly happiness. And reproveth the counsels of princes : of them that seek to rule over such
peoples.
11. Ver. 11. But the counsel of the Lord standeth for
ever ; but the counsel of the Lord, whereby He maketh none blessed but him that submitteth unto Himself, standeth for ever. The thoughts of His Heart to all generations: the
thoughts of His Wisdom are not mutable, but endure to all
generations.
12. Ver. 12. Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord:
one nation is blessed, belonging to the heavenly city, which hath not chosen save the Lord for their God : And the people whom He hath chosen for His own inheritance : and which not of itself, but by the gift of God, hath been chosen, that He by possessing it may not suffer it to be uncared for and miserable.
13. Ver. 13. The Lord looketh from Heaven ; He beholdeth all the sons of men. From the souls of the righteous, the Lord looketh mercifully upon all who would rise to newness of life.
Hope in creatures vain. Trust and joy in God. 307
17. Ver. 17. A horse is a deceitful thing for safety: he is Ver. deceived, who thinketh either that through men he gaineth ------? salvation received among men, or that by the impetuosity of
his own courage he is defended from destruction. In the abundance of his strength shall he not be saved.
18. Ver. 18. Behold, the Eyes of the Lord are upon them that fear Him : because if thou seek salvation, behold, the love of the Lord is upon them that fear Him. Upon them that hope in His mercy : that hope not in their own strength, but in His mercy.
19. Ver. 19. To deliver their souls from death, and to keep them alive in famine. To give them the nourishment of the Word, and of Everlasting Truth, which they lost while presuming on their own strength, and therefore have not even their own strength, from lack of righteousness.
20. Ver. 20. My soul shall be patient for the Lord: that hereafter it may be filled with dainties incorruptible, mean while, whilst here it remaineth, my soul shall be patient for the Lord. For He is our Helper and Defender : our Helper He is, while we endeavour after Him ; and our Defender, while we resist the adversary.
21. Ver. 21. For our heart shall rejoice in Him: for not in ourselves, wherein without Him there is great need ; but in Himself shall our heart rejoice. And we have trusted in His holy Name : and therefore have we trusted that we shall come to God, because unto us absent hath He sent, through faith, His own Name.
22. Ver. 22. Let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, accord ing as we have hoped in Thee: let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us ; for hope confoundeth not, because we have hoped in Thee.
SECOND EXPOSITION.
Discourse the Firtt. On the first part of the Psalm.
1. This Psalm admonishes us to rejoice in the Lord. It is entitled, Of David himself. Whoever then belong to the most holy seed of David, let them hearken to their own
308 Man ought to take God's Will as best, against his own.
Psalm words, and speak their own words, and let them rejoice in Exp. IIithe Lord. But thus it begins, (ver. Rejoice in the Lord, ye righteous: let the unrighteous rejoice in the world;
with the world ended ended the rejoicing of the un righteous. But let the righteous rejoice in the Lord be cause while the Lord remaineth, remaineth also the rejoicing of the righteous. But meet so to rejoice in the Lord, as to praise Him, Who alone has not any thing which can displease us and has many things, none so many, which displease the unfaithful. And that short precept, He pleaseth God whom God pleaseth. And think not lightly of this, dearly beloved. For ye see how many dispute against
God, how many are displeased with His works. For when He would do contrary to the will of men, because He the Lord, and knoweth what He doth, and regardeth not so much our will as our benefit they who would have rather their own will to be fulfilled than God's, would bend God to their will, not make right their will unto God. Such men, unfaithful, ungodly, unrighteous --though grieveth me to
say yet will say for ye know how truly say more easily pleased with pantomime than with God.
--are
2. Therefore when he had said, Rejoice in the Lord, ye righteous; because to rejoice in Him except by praising Him we cannot, and we praise One Whom we please the more, the more He pleaseth us For praise, saith he, comely to the upright. Who are the upright They who direct their heart according to the will of God and whom,
human frailty disturb them, Divine Justice consoleth. For although in their mortal heart they may privately wish something, which may suit their own immediate case, or interest, or their present necessity, yet when they have un derstood and learned that God willeth otherwise, they prefer the will of The Better, to their own will
Omnipotent, to the will of the weak the will of God, to the will of man. For far as God differs from man, so far the will of God from the will of man. Wherefore Christ having put on Man, and proposing rule to us, teaching us to live, and granting us to live, shewed also man's private will whereby He figured both His own and ours, because He is our Head, and we, as ye know, belong to Him as real
the will of The
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Our Lord's Human Will. Submission due to a Father.
members. Father, saith He, if it be possible, let this cup Ver. pass from Me ; this was the human Will, wishing something ----
proper to itself, and as it were private. But because He ' ' 39.
willed man to be right in heart, that whatever in him was somewhat crooked, He might make straight toIHim, Who is
ever Right; Nevertheless, saith He, not as
Thou, Father. But what evil could Christ will ? What, in
short, could He will other than the Father. Whose Divinity is one, Their Will can not be different. But in the person of Man, transforming His Own into Himse/lf ; whom He had transformed into Himself when He said,
was an hungred, Mat. 25, and ye gave Me meat : whom He transformed into Himself,
when to Saul raging, and persecuting the Saints, He cried
from Heaven, though none touched Him, Saul, Saul, why Acts 9,
'
will, but as
309
persecutest Thou Me ? He shewed as it were man's proper will ; He shewed thee, and corrected thee. Behold, saith He, thyself in Me ; for thou also canst will something proper to thyself, though God will otherwise ; this is granted to human frailty, it is granted to human infirmity : to have a proper will, it is difficult that this should not happen to thee: but think straightway Who is above thee; think of Him above thee, thyself below Him ; Him the Creator, thyself the creature ; Him the Lord, thyself the servant ; Him Omni potent, thyself weak ; correcting thyselfI, submitting to His Will, and saying, Nevertheless, not as
will, but as Thou wilt. Wherein art thou severed from God, who now willest that which God willeth ? Then shalt thou be upright, and praise shall be comely to thee, for, praise is comely to the
upright.
3. But if thou art crooked, thou praisest God when it is
well with thee, blasphemest when it is ill : which ill indeed, ifitbejust,isnotill; butjustitis,sinceitisdonebyHim,
Who can do nothing unjust : and so thou wilt be a foolish
boy in the house of thy father, loving thy father if he
fondle thee, and hating him when he scourgeth thee : as if
he were not, both when fondling and when scourging, pre
paring for thee the inheritance. But see how praise is comely to the upright ; hear the voice of the upright praising
from another Psalm, / will bless the Lord at all times, HisP<<. 34,\. praise shall continually be in my mouth. What is at all
310 77ie Righteous encouraged to rejoice in all cases.
Psalm times, that is, continually ; and what is, I will bless, that is>
'Exp. ll. be in XXX11I. His praise shall
my mouth.
At and con all times,
Joh 1,
tinually, whether in prosperity or in adversity. For if in prosperity and not in adversity, how at all times ? how con tinually ? And we have heard many such words from many : when any good fortune befals them, they exult, they rejoice, they sing to God, they praise God ; nor are they to be dis approved, nay, we must rejoice in them, for many praise Him not even then. But they who have now begun to praise God on account of their prosperity, must be taught to acknowledge their Father also when scourging them, and not to murmur against the hand of Him correcting ; lest remain ing ever perverse they deserve to be disinherited, so that being now made upright, (what is upright? so that nothing which God doth, displease them,) they may be able to praise God even in adversity, and to say, The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away ; as the Lord pleased, so is it come to
Vuig.
pass.
Blessed be the name of the Lord. To such upright, praise is comely, not to them that will first praise, and after wards blame.
4. Therefore, ye righteous upright, rejoice in the Lord r for your praise is comely. Let none say, Who am I, that am righteous? or, When am I righteous? Cast not yourselves away, and despair not of yourselves. Ye are men, in the image of God were ye created: He Who made you men, for you also was made Man : that ye, being many sons, might be adopted to an eternal inheritance, the Blood of the Only-Begotten was shed for you. If ye unto your selves have become vile through earthly frailty, according to your own price weigh yourselves : What ye eat, What ye drink, Whereto ye subscribe Amen, consider as is meet. Do we give you this warning, that ye may be proud, and dare to claim to yourselves some perfection? No: but neither again ought ye to think yourselves to be exiled from all righteousness. For I will not question you of your righ teousness ; for perhaps none of you would dare to answer, I am righteous : but I question you of your faith. As none of you dares to say, I am righteous, so none dares to say, I am not faithful. I ask not yet how thou livest, but how thou believest. Thou wilt answer, that thou believest in Christ.
Thefaithful may do so. The Psaltery and Harp. 311
Hast thou not heard the Apostle, The just shall live by faith ? Ver. Thy faith is thy righteousness, because truly if thou dost 2 believe, thou dost beware ; if thou dost beware, thou dost ' '
17. endeavour ; and God knoweth thy endeavour, and beholdest
thy will, and considereth the wrestling with the flesh, and exhorteth thee to fight, and assisteth thee to conquer, and contending watcheth thee, and fainting, lifteth thee up, and conquering, crowneth thee. Therefore, Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous : or this I would say, Rejoice in the Lord, O ye faithful, because the just shall live by faith. Praise is comely to the upright. Learn to give thanks unto God, both in prosperity and in tribulation. Learn to have in thy heart what every man hath in his tongue ; The will of God be done. The common speech of the people is mostly saving doctrine. Who saith not daily, What God willeth, that let Him do ? And so the upright will be among those, who rejoice in the Lord, and to whom praise is comely, whom
the Psalm addresseth, in the words following, and saith, (ver. 2. ) Praise the Lord with harp : sing unto Him with the psaltery of ten strings. For this even now we sang, this expressing with one mouth, we instructed your hearts.
5. Hath not the institution of these Vigils b in the name of Christ brought it to pass that harps should be banished out of this place ? And, lo, the same are bid to sound. Praise the Lord, saith he, with harp; sing unto Him with the
0xf'
psaltery of ten strings. Let none turn his heart to instru
ments of the theatre.
That which is commanded him, he
hath in himself, as it is elsewhere said, Thy vows are upon Ps. 56,
Iwill render praises unto Thee.
me, O God;
ber, who some while since were present, when what difference '>>"? ' there between the psaltery and harp, as best could, explained in my discourse0, and tried withal to bring home
to the understanding of all but how much effected, they know best who heard. And now in due season repeat
that in this diversity of two musical instruments, we may
find the diversity of human actions signified by the same,
SeeSer. 115, de Diversis, (al. 311. ) delivered in the Church which con- c. 5. where the same more clearly re- tained the remains of the Martyr lated from which passage, and from the Cyprian. Bet. The religious Vigil following exposition, c. appears superseded a revel of dancing, &c.
that these discourses on Ps. 33. were On Ps. 43. and on Ps. 71. Exp. 2.
They'remem-
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312 Our earthly state, should ' harp" to God in joy and sorrow.
chords lean, so that when touched they sound. I speak not of the staff wherewith they are touched, but that hollow board I mean, over which they are laid, upon which in some wise they lean, so that from thence trembling at the touch, and from that concavity conceiving sound, they are rendered more harmonious; this board then the harp hath in the lower, the psaltery in the upper part. This is the distinction between them. Now in this place we are bidden to praise the Lord with harp, and to sing to Him with a psaltery of
ten strings. He saith not, with a harp often strings, neither in this Psalm, nor, if I mistake not, in any other place. My sons, the readers may read and examine more thoroughly and leisurely for themselves ; but as far as I myself remem ber, I have found in many places a psaltery of ten strings, a harp of ten strings no where occurs, that I have read. Re member that the harp hath that wherefrom it sounds in the lower part, the psaltery in the higher. In our lower life, that is, our earthly, we have prosperity and adversity: wherefore must we praise God in both, that His praise may be con-
Ps. 34,1. tinnally in our mouth, and that we may bless the Lord at all times. For there is an earthly prosperity, and there is an earthly adversity : in both must God be praised, that so we may harp. What then is earthly prosperity ? When we are sound in body ; when all things abound whereby we live ; when our safety is sure ; when the fruits come in largely ;
Matt. 5, when He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. All these things contribute to earthly life. Whoever therefrom praiseth not God, is ungrateful. Because they are earthly
things, are they therefore not of God ? Or is therefore an other to be thought to give them, because they are given also to the evil. For manifold is the mercy of God, patient is long-suffering. Thereby sheweth He the more what things He reserveth for the good, when He sheweth what great things He giveth even to the evil. And adversities there are, forsooth from the lower part, from the frailty of the human race, in griefs, in weariness, in pressures, in tribulations, in temptations. In all these let him praise God
Psalm and to be fulfilled in our life. The harp hath that hollow XXXIII.
Exp. II. board, like a tabor, covered with tortoiseshell, on which the
it,
The spiritual man, a psaltery of ten strings for God. 313
who barpeth. Let him consider, not that they are from Ver. below, but that they cannot be ruled and governed but by ?
that Wisdom, which reacheth from end to end mightily,Wisd. and sweetly ordereth all things. For He doth not rule ' heavenly things, and leave alone earthly; or it would not be
said unto Him, Whither shall I go Thy
from whither shall Ijtee from Thy presence ?
I Spirit? ascend
or^s. l39, up
into heaven, Thou art there;
art there. Where then is He wanting, Who no where is not? Praise then the Lord on the harp. Whether any earthly thing abound to thee, give thanks to Him Who gave
if
I If
go down into hell, Thou
or whether ought be wanting to thee, or haply by mis fortune be taken from thee, harp without care. For He
not taken from thee, Who gave, though that be taken from thee which He gave. Even so, say, harp without care. Assured in thy God, touch the strings in thy heart, and say,
as to an harp sounding well in the lower part, The LordJoh gave, and the Lord hath taken away, whatever the Lordy^
pleased that did He. Blessed be the Name of the Lord.
6. But now, when thou considerest the superior gifts of God, what Commandments He hath given thee, with what
heavenly doctrine He hath imbued thee, what things He hath commanded thee from above, from the fountain of His Truth turn also to the psaltery, sing unto the Lord with psaltery of ten strings. For the Commandments of the
Law are ten in the ten Commandments of the Law thou
hast the psaltery. The thing complete. Therein thou
hast the love of God in three, and the love of thy neighbour see p. in seven. And truly thou knowest, the Lord Himself having
said that On these two commandments hang all the Law Mat. 22, and the Prophets. Saith God unto thee from above, Tke D'at
Lord thy God one Lord; thou hast one string. Thou4. shall not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain 20 thou hast another string Remember the Sabbath day, to keep holy, not carnally, not with their Jewish delights,
who abuse rest unto wickedness. For better were that
they should dig the whole day, than the whole day dance.
But thou, thinking on rest in thy God, and for that rest doing all things, abstain from servile work. Now, Whosoever John committeth sin, the servant ofsin; and would that could34.
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314 Three ' strings' of love to God, seven of love to man.
Psalm say, of man, and not of sin ! These three relate to the love XXXIII.
Exp. II. of God: of Whom consider thou the unity, the truth, and the pleasantness, for there is a pleasantness in the Lord, where there is a true Sabbath, a true rest11 ; wherefore it is
Ps. 37,4. said, Delight thyself also in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of thine heart. For who giveth such de light, as lie Who maketh all things which delight? In
Ex. 20, these three is the love of God, in the other seven is the love of our neighbour, that thou do not to another, what thou wouldest not suffer. Honour thy father and thy mother: because thou also wouldest be honoured by thy children. Thou shall not commit adultery: because thou wouldest not that thy wife should commit adultery, behind thy back. Tltou shall not kill: because thou also wouldest not be killed. Thou shalt not steal: because thou also wouldest not suffer robbery. Thou shalt not bear false witness: because thou hatest him that beareth false witness against thee. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife; because thou wouldest not thy wife to be coveted by another. Thou shalt not covet any thing that is thy neighbour's : because if any other covet aught that is thine, thou art displeased. Direct thy tongue to thyself also, when thou art displeased at him who injures thee. All these are the commandments of God ; by Wisdom Herself were they given ; their sound cometh from above. Touch the psaltery, fulfil the Law
Matt. 5, which the Lord thy God came not to destroy but to fulfil. By love wilt thou fulfil, what by fear thou couldest not. For he who through fear doth not evil, would fain do it if he could : and so though the power is not given, the will remained). I do it not, saith he. Wherefore ? Because I fear. Not yet lovest thou righteousness ; thou art still a servant : be a son. But of a good servant is made a good son : now do it not through fear ; thou wilt learn also to do it not through love : for there is a beauty in righteousness : punishment may deter thee, but righteousness hath its own comeliness ; it seeketh men's eyes, it inflameth its lovers.
d It appears from this that St. as most Churches have since applied Augustine did not consider the fourth it. Of the views of the Fathers re- Commandment directly applicable to specting the Lord's Day, see a note
the Lord's day, and perhaps also that at the end of the Rhythms of St. he did consider it to apply indirectly, Ephrem.
Love not to be quenched, butfixed on Righteousness. 315
For this the Martyrs, treading under foot the world, shed Ver. their blood. What loved they when they renounced all ---- things ? For were they not lovers ? or say we this to you
that ye may love not ? Who loveth not, is cold, is dead.
Love we, but that beauty which seeketh the eyes of the heart. Love we, but that beauty which with praise of righteousness inflameth the mind. Men exclaim, they cry aloud, they say every where, How good ! How excellent !
What see they ? Righteousness they see, in which an old
man bowed down is beautiful. For neither if an old man
that is righteous walk abroad, is there any thing in his body
to be loved, and yet he is loved by all. Even there is he
loved where he is not seen : nay there is he loved where he
is seen, but with the heart. Let him then delight you, and
pray ye to the Lord, that He may delight you. For TliePs. 85, Lord shall give sweetness, and our land shall yield her increase: that through love ye may fulfil, what by fear it is
hard to fulfil. Why say I, it is hard? The mind is not yet
able : it would rather that there were not any commandment,
if to do, it is not led by love, but by fear constrained. Do
not steal ; fear hell1: he would rather that there were no'Geben- hell, into which he should be cast. When beginneth ana? ' man to love righteousness, but when he had rather that
there were no stealing, even though there were no hell into which thieves should be cast ? This it is, to love righteousness.
7. And what is righteousness herself like ? Who painteth
her? What beauty hath the Wisdom of God? Through
her are all things beautiful, that are pleasant to the eyes:
her to see, her to embrace, our hearts must be cleansed,
her lovers we profess ourselves; herself so dresseth3 us that8Co1"- we may not be displeasing to her. And when men reprove
us for those things, whereby we please her whom we love,
how is it that we so little regard our reprovers, how is it we
so despise them, and altogether care nothing for them ? Women's lovers, loose and worthy of condemnation, when
their mistresses dress them after their own fancy, if they
can but please them, care not for those whom they displease, thinking it sufficient for them that they please
their eyes, whom they court: and grave men they mostly
316 Please Him Who is worthy of love. New song for New Men.
Psai. m displease, nay, grave men they always displease, and by Exp. ii. better judgment are blamed. Thou art not well shorn, saith a grave man to a wanton youth, it becometh thee not to go
with such-like curls. He knoweth, however, that a certain person is pleased with those curls: he hateth thee that with true judgment blamest, and keepeth in himself that which pleaseth his perverse will. He thinketh thee his enemy,
1al. ' be. because thou wouldest take away3 his disgrace. He nieth loveth/thy eyes, and altogether careth not by what rule of righteous
ness he be blamed. If therefore these regard not their reprovers in truth, that they may be handsome in falsehood ; ought we, in those things whereby we please the Wisdom of God, ought we to regard unrighteous mockers, having no eyes wherewith they may see What we love ? These things considering, all ye upright in heart, Praise the Lord with harp; sing unto Him with a psaltery often strings.
8. Ver. 3. Sing unto Him a new song. Put off oldness : ye know the new song. A new man, a New Testament, a new song. A new song belongeth not to men that are old: none learn that but new men, renewed through Grace
from oldness, and belonging now to the New Testament, which is the kingdom of Heaven. For that sigheth all our love, and singeth a new song. A new song let it sing, not with the tongue, but with the life. Sing unto Him a new song: sing skilfully unto Him. Every man asketh how he should sing unto God. Sing unto Him, but sing not un
He would not that His Ears be offended. Sing skilfully, Brother. in the audience of any good musician, when said to thee, Sing, to please such an one, without some knowledge of the musical art, thou fearest to sing, lest thou shouldest displease master of the art, because, what an unskilful person nndeth not amiss in thee, master blameth who can undertake to sing skilfully before God, so judging of the singer, so examining every part, so exactly
hearing How canst thou shew so nice skill in singing, as in nothing to displease Ears so perfect Behold, he giveth as were the tune of thy song seek not words as thou couldesl explain whereby God is pleased. Sing with jubila tion for this to sing skilfully unto God, to sing with jubilation. What to sing with jubilation To be
skilfully.
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Joy beyond words. Work of Faith. God, how Faithful. 317
unable to understand, to express in words, what is sung Ver. in the heart. For singers, either in the harvest, or in the '-- vineyard, or in any other busy work, after they have begun
in the words of their hymns to exult and rejoice, being
as it were filled with so great joy, that they cannot express
it in words, then turn from actual words, and proceed to sounds of jubilation. The jubilee is a sound signifying that
the heart laboureth with that which it cannot utter. And
whom beseemeth that jubilation, but the Ineffable God?
For He is Ineffable, Whom thou canst not speak; and if
thou canst not speak Him, and oughtest not to keep Him
silent, what remaineth to thee but jubilation ; that the heart may rejoice without words, and the boundless extent ofjoy may have no limits of syllables? Sing skilfully unto Him with jubilation.
9. Ver. 4. For the Word of the Lord is right, and all
His works are done in faith. In that even wherein He dis- pleaseth the not right, He is right. And all His works areTMSm. 1, done infaith. Let thy works be done in faith, for TIiejustU&b. 2, shall live by faith; and Faith worketh by love. Let thygal,5 works be done in faith, because by trusting in God thou art6- rendered faithful. How can the works of God be done in
faith, as though God also should live by faith ? We find
God also called faithful, and that not in our own words: hear
an Apostle ; God, saith He, is faithful, Who will not suffer i Cor.
you to be tempted above that ye are able, but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able
to bear it. Thus ye have heard God called faithful, hear it
also in another place. // we suffer, we shall also reign 2 Tim. with Him : ifwe deny Him, He also will deny us: If we ' ' believe not, yet He abideth Faithful : He cannot deny Him
We have then a Faithful God also: but let us well dis tinguish Faithful God from faithful man. Man is faithful
when he trusteth in God promising: God is Faithful because
He performeth what He promised to man.
