For
not, because out of the Gentiles are these sheep, have they therefore been made alien from that seed, which is Jacob
and Israel.
not, because out of the Gentiles are these sheep, have they therefore been made alien from that seed, which is Jacob
and Israel.
Augustine - Exposition on the Psalms - v4
1, 24.
2Cor. 2, 16'
for the path of His anger, whose eye, I pray, is sufficient to penetrate, so that it may understand and take in the sense lying hidden in so great a profundity ? For the path of the anger of God was that whereby He punished the ungodliness of the Egyptians with hidden justice : but for that same path He made a way, so that drawing them forth as it were from secret places by means of evil angels unto manifest offences, He most evidently inflicted punishment upon those that wero
Our spiritual passage into the promised land of Grace. 75
most evidently ungodly. From this power of evil angels Ver. nothing doth deliver man but the grace of God, whereof the62""68. Apostle speaketh, Who hath delivered us from the power of'Col. 1, darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of the
Son of His love : of which things that people did bear the figure, when they were delivered from the power of the Egyptians, and translated into the kingdom of the land of promise flowing with milk and honey, which doth signify the sweetness of grace.
31. The Psalm proceedeth then after the commemoration of the plagues of the Egyptians, and saith, (ver. 52. ) And He
took away like sheep His people, and He led them through like a flock in the desert. (Ver. 53. ) And He led them down in hope, and they feared not, and their enemies the sea covered. This cometh to pass to so much the greater good, as it is a more inward thing, wherein being delivered from the power of darkness, we are in mind translated into the Kingdom of God, and with respect to spiritual pastures we are made to become sheep of God, walking in this world as it were in a desert, inasmuch as to no one is our faith observable:
hath covered, He hath effaced them in baptism by the remission of sins.
3'2. In the next place there followeth, (ver. 54. ) And He
led them into the mountain of His sanctijication. How much
better into Holy Church ! The mountain ivhich His right
hand hath gotten. How much higher is the Church which
Christ hath gotten, concerning Whom has been said, " Andua. 63, to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed? ' (Ver. 55. ) I-
And He cast forth from the face of them the nations. And1 >Oxf. from the face of His faithful. For nations in a manner are jjj^' the evil spirits of Gentile errors. And by lot He divided' He did unto them the land in the cord of distribution. And in us nations( all things one and the same Spirit doth work, dividing \ c0r.
12, ll"
whence saith the Apostle, Your life is hidden with Christ Col. 3, in God. But we are being led home in hope, For by gom g
hope we are saved. Nor ought we to fear. For, If God 6e24. for us, who can be against us? And our enemies the sea3i.
''
severally to every one as He willeth.
33. And He made to dwell in their tabernacles the
tribes of Israel. In the tabernacles, he saith, of the Gentiles
76 Israel, turning from God, forfeited His protection.
Psalm He made the tribes of Israel to dwell, which I think can i. xxvm. better be explained spiritually, inasmuch as unto celestial glory, whence sinning angels have been cast forth and cast
^\<j? $
down, by Christ's grace we are being uplifted. For that generation crooked and embittering, inasmuch as for these corporal blessings they put not off the coat of oldness, (ver. 56. ) Did tempt yet, and provoked the high God, and His testimonies they kept not : (ver. 57. ) and they turned them away, and they kept not the covenant, like their fathers. ^or un(*er a sort of covenant an(J decree they said, All things which our Lord God hath spoken we will do, and we will hear. It is a remarkable thing indeed which he saith, like their fathers : while throughout the whole text of the Psalm he was seeming to speak of the same men as it were, yet now it appeareth that the words did concern those who were already in the land of promise, and that the fathers spoken of were of those who did provoke in the desert.
34. Ver. 57. They were turned, he saith, into a crooked, or, as some copies have it, into a perverse bow. But what this is doth better appear in that which followeth, where he saith, (ver. 58. ) And unto wrath they provoked Him with their hills. It doth signify that they leaped into idolatry. The bow then was perverted, not for the name of the Lord, but against the name of the Lord : Who said to the same
Exod. people, Thou shall have none other Gods hut Me. But by
20' 3'
the bow He doth signify the mind's intention. This same idea, lastly, more clearly working out, And in their graven idols, he saith, they provoked Him to indignation. .
35. Ver. 59. God heard, and He despised : that He gave heed and took vengeance. And unto nothing He brought Israel exceedingly. For when God despised, what were they who by God's help were what they were But doubtless he
commemorating the doing of that thing, when they were conquered by the Philistines in the time of Heli the priest,
Sam. and the Ark of the Lord was taken, and with great slaughter
? c10,
they were laid low. This that he speaketh of in ver. 60. And He rejected the tabernacle of Selom, His tabernacle, where He dwelled among men. He hath ele gantly explained why He rejected His tabernacle, when he saith, where He dwelled among men. When therefore
they
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Their sufferings. His judgment on the enemy. 77
were not worthy for Him to dwell among, why should He Ver. not reject the tabernacle, which indeed not for Himself Ho
had established, but for their sakes, whom now He judged unworthy for Him to dwell among.
36. Ver. 61. And He gave over vnto captivity their virtue, and their beauty unto the hands ofthe enemy. The very Ark whereby they thought themselves invincible, and whereon they plumed themselves, he calleth their ' virtue' and 'beauty. ' Lastly, also afterward, when they were living ill, and boasting of the temple of the LIord, He doth terrify them by a Prophet,
saying, See ye what tabernacle.
have done to Selom, where was MyJer. 7, 12-
37. Ver. 62. And He ended with the sword His people, and His inheritance He despised. Their young men the fire devoured: that is, wrath. (Ver. 63. ) And their virgins mourned not. For not even for this was there leisure, in fear
of the foe.
38. Ver. 64. Their priests fell by the sword, and their
widows were not lamented. For there fell by the sword the
sons of Heli, of one of whom the wife being widowed, and l Sam. presently dying in child-birth, because of the same confusion ' could not be mourned with the distinction of a funeral.
89. Ver. 65. And the Lord was awakened as one sleeping.
For He seemeth to sleep, when He giveth His people into
the hands of those whom He hateth, when there is said to
them, " Where is thy God. " He was awakened, then, like one Ps. 42, sleeping, like a mighty man drunken with wine. No one3' would dare to say this of God, save His Spirit. For he hath spoken, as it seemeth to ungodly men reviling; as if like a drunken man He sleepeth long, when He succoureth not so
speedily as men think '. 1 40. Ver. 66. And He smote His enemies in the hinder parts: those, to wit, who were rejoicing that they were able
*^ere-
to take His Ark : for they were smitten in their back -parts. 1 S""1- Which seemeth to me to be a sign of that punishment, ' wherewith a man will be tortured, if he shall have looked
back upon things behind ; which, as sailh the Apostle, he Phil. 3, ought to value as dung. For they that do so receive the8' Testament of God, as that they put not off from them the
old vanity, are like the hostile nations, who did place the
78 Why ' Joseph" and ( Ephraini' are named as passed over.
Puam captured Ark of the Testament beside their own idols. And l! "m"-yet those old things even though these be unwilling do fall :
Is. 40, 6'
for all Jlesh is hay, and the glory 0/ man as the flower of hay. The hay hath dried up, and the flower hath fallen off: but the Ark of the Lord abideth for everlasting, to wit, the secret
testament of the kingdom of Heaven, where is the eternal Word of God. But ihey that have loved things behind, because of these very things most justly shall be tormented. For everlasting reproach He hath given to them.
41. Ver. 67. And He rejected, he sailh, the tabernacle of Joseph, and the tribe of Ephrcem He chose not. (Ver. 68. ) And He chose the tribe of Juda. He hath not said, He re-
Gen. 49, jected the tabernacle of Reuben, who was the first-born son of Jacob nor them that follow, and precede Juda in order of birth so that they being rejected and not chosen, the tribe of Juda was chosen. For might have been said that they were deservedly rejected because even in the blessing
Gen. 49, of Jacob wherewith he blessed his sons, he mentioneth their sins, and deeply abhorreth them though among them the tribe Exod. 2, of Levi merited to be the priestly tribe, whence also Moses
was. Nor hath he said, He rejected the tabernacle of Ben jamin, or the tribe of Benjamin He chose not, out of which Sam. king already had begun to be for thence there had been chosen Saul whence because of the very proximity of the
Sam. time, when he had been rejected and refused, and David
16, '
Gen. 41, because of his piety, chastity, wisdom, he was most justly
exalted and Ephraem by the blessing of his grandfather Gen. 48, Jacob was preferred before his elder brother: and yet God 19. rejected the tabernacle of Joseph, and the tribe of Ephraem
He chose not. In which place by these names of renowned merit, what else do we understand but that whole people with old cupidity requiring of the Lord earthly rewards,
40'
chosen, this might conveniently have been said but yet was not said but he hath named those especially who seemed to excel for more surpassing merits. For Joseph fed in Egypt his father and his brethren, and having been impiously sold,
and refused, but the tribe of Juda chosen not for the sake of the merits of that same Juda For far greater are the merits of Joseph, but by the tribe of Juda, inasmuch as thence arose Christ according to the flesh, the Scripture doth
rejected
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The new Sanctuary, and Kingdom of David. 79
testify of the new people of Christ preferred before that old ? kr? people, the Lord opening in parables His mouth. Moreover, --'--- - thence also in that which followeth, the Mount Sion which
He chose, we do better understand the Church of Christ, not worshipping God for the sake of the carnal blessings of the present time, but from afar looking for future and eternal rewards with the eyes of faith: for Sion too is interpreted
a ' looking out. '
42. Lastly there followeth, (ver. 69. ) and He huilded like
as of unicorns His sanctification : or, as some interpreters
have made thereof a new word, His sanctifying'1. The uni-1 sancii. corns are rightly understood to be those, whose firm hope is^c""" uplifted unto thatIone thing, concerning which another Psalm
have sought the Lord, this I will require. Ps. 27, of
saith, One thing
But the sanctifying of God, according to the Apostle Peter,4,
is understood to be a holy people and a royal priesthood, l Pet. But that which followeth, in the land which He founded for2' 9' everlasting: which the Greek copies have eij tov aiwvct, whether
it be called by us for everlasting, or for an age, is at the
of the Latin translators ; forasmuch as it doth signify either: and therefore the latter is found in some Latin copies, the former in others. Some also have it in the plural, that for ages which in the Greek copies which we have had we have not found. But which of the faithful would doubt, that the Church, even though, some going, others coming, she doth pass out of this life in mortal manner, yet founded for everlasting
43. Ver. 70. And He chose David His servant. The tribe, say, of Juda, for the sake of David but David for the sake of Christ the tribe then of Juda for the sake of Christ. At
whose passing by blind men cried out, Have pity on us, Matt. Son of David: and forthwith by His pity they received light,20' 30, because true was the thing which they cried out. This then
the Apostle doth not cursorily speak of, but doth heedfully notice, writing to Timothy, Be thou mindful, that Christ Tim.
8-
pleasure
Jesus hath risen from the dead, of the seed of David, ac- cording to my Gospel, wherein suffer even unto bonds as an evil doer but the word of God not bound. Therefore the Saviour Himself, made according to the flesh of the seed of David, figured in this passage under the name of David,
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80 Christ, like David, went from following sheep.
Psalm the Lord opening in parables His mouth. And let it not move us, that when he had said, and He chose David, under which name he signified Christ, he hath added, His servant, not His Son. Yea even hence we may perceive, that not the substance of the Only-Begotten coeternal with the Father,
but the ' form of a servant' was taken of the seed of David. 44. Ver. 71. And He took him from the flocks of sheep, from behind the teeming sheep He received him : to feed
Jacob His servant, and Israel His inheritance. This David indeed, of whose seed the flesh of Christ is, from the pastoral care of cattle was translated to the kingdom of men : but our David, Jesus Himself, from men to men, from Jews to Gentiles, was yet according to the parable from sheep to sheep taken away and translated. For there are not now in that land Churches of Judcea in Christ, which belonged to them of the circumcision after the recent Passion andIRe-
made havoc, and in me they magnified the Lord. Already from hence those Churches of the circumcised people have passed away : and thus in Judaea, which now doth exist on the earth, there is not now Christ: He hath been removed thence, now He doth feed flocks of Gentiles. Truly from behind teeming sheep He hath been taken thence. For those former Churches were of such sort, as that of them it is said in the Song of Songs to the one Church which doth consist of many, that is, to the one flock, whereof the members are
Song of many flocks--of such, I say, it is said, Thy teeth--that Sol. 4, 2. ig, those whereby thou speakest, or by means whereof into Thy Body, like as it were by eating, Thou dost make others to pass; this then being signified by Thy teeth--are like a
' lava- flock of shorn ewes going up from the washing1, all of which cro do bear twins, and a barren one is not among them. For they Acts 2, then laid aside like as it were fleeces the burdens of the Acts 4 wor^>> when before the feet of the Apostles they laid the 34. 35. prices of their sold goods, going up from that Laver, concerning
which the apostle Peter doth admonish them, when they were troubled because they had shed the blood of Christ, and he
Gal, l, surrection of our Lord, of whom saith the Apostle, But
was 22' 23' unknown by face to the Churches of Judcea, which are in Christ, but thus much they heard, that he who sometime did persecute us, doth now preach the faith whereof sometime he
Gentiles in the Church are Christ's sheep, and Israel. 81
saith, Do ye penance, and let each one ofyou be baptized in Ver.
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and your sins shall be AJ^'2 ' forgiven you. But twins they begat, the works, to wit, of the 38.
two commandments of twin love, love of God, and love of
one's neighbour : whence a barren one there was not among
them. From behind these teeming sheep our David having
been taken, doth now feed other flocks among the Gentiles,
and those too 'Jacob' and ' Israel. ' For thus hath been said,
to feed Jacob His servant, and Israel His inheritance.
For
not, because out of the Gentiles are these sheep, have they therefore been made alien from that seed, which is Jacob
and Israel. For the seed of Abraham is the seed of the promise, concerning which the Lord said to him, In Isaac Gen. 21, thy seed shall be called. Which the Apostle expounding 12- saith, Not the sons of the flesh, but the sons of promise are^? m-9' reckonedfor a seed. For out of the Gentiles were believers,
to whom he said, but if ye are of Christ, then Abraham's Gal. 3. seed ye are, according to the promise heirs. But in this which he saith, Jacob His servant and Israel His inheritance,
in its usual manner the Scripture hath repeated the same sentiment. Unless perchance any one be willing to make
such a distinction as this; viz. that in this time Jacob serveth ;
but he will be the eternal inheritance of God, at that time
when he shall see God face to face, whence he hath received Gen. 32, the name Israel.
45. Ver. 73. And He fed them, he saith, in the innocence of His heart. What can be more innocent than He, Who not only had not any sin whereby to be conquered, but even not any to conquer ? And in the understanding of His hands He led them home : or, as some copies have in the understandings of His hands. Any other man might suppose that would have been better had been said thus, " in innocence of hands and understanding of heart;" but He Who knew better than others what He spake, preferred to join with the heart innocence, and with the hands understanding.
It for this reason, as far as judge because many men think themselves innocent, who do not evil things because they fear lest they should suffer they shall have done them but they have the will to do them, they could with impunity. Such men may seem to have innocence of hands, but yet not
VOL. iv. o
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82 By what ' understanding" our Lord leads His People.
Psalm that of heart. And what, I pray, or of what sort is that in- lxxv'"' nocence, if of heart it is not, where man was made after the Gen. 1, image of God ? But in this which he saith, in understanding
(or intelligence) of His hands He led them home, he seemeth to me to have spoken of that intelligence which He doth Himself make in believers : and so of His hands : for making doth belong to the hands, but in the sense wherein the hands of God may be understood ; for even Christ was a Man in such sort, that He was also God. This indeed that David, of whose seed He was, could not make in the people over whom he reigned as a man : but He doth make it, unto
Ps. 119, Whom rightly the faithful soul is able to say, Make me to
34,
understand, and I will search out Thy law. Henceforth that we may not stray from Him, while we confide in our own intelligence as if it were of ourselves ; to His hands let us subject ourselves by believing. May He make the same in us, in order that in the intelligence of His hands He may lead us home delivered from error, and bring us unto that place where we shall no longer be able to err ! This is the fruit of the people of God, who give heed to the law of God, and incline their ear unto the words of His mouth, in order that they may guide in Him their heart, and their spirit may be trusted with Him, lest they should be changed into 1 a generaU0n crooked and provoking. But all these things having been proclaimed to them, let them put their hope in God, not only for the present life, but also for life eternal, and not
only to receive the rewards of good works, but also for doing the good works themselves.
i ai. imitate
lTM.
PSALM LXXIX. EXPOSITION? .
1 Over the title of this Psalm, being so short and so simple, I think we need not tarry. But the prophecy which here we read sent before, we know to be evidently fulfilled.
? Pre>>ched after the Exposition of Psalm 78, referred to in ? . 8.
The Prophet may speak as in the times he foretells. 83
For when these things were being sung in the times of King Ver. David, nothing of such sort, by the hostility of the Gentiles, ----- as yet had befallen the city Jerusalem, nor ihe Temple of
God, which as yet was not even builded. For that after the
death of David hi3 son Salomon made a temple to God, who is ignorant? That is spoken of therefore as though past, which in the Spirit was seen to be future.
Ver. 1. O God, the Gentiles have come into Tliine inherit
ance. Under which form of expression this also was pro phesied of the Lord's Passion, They gave for My morsel gall, P*. 69, and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to drink ; and other 21 ' things which in the same Psalm, though having to come to
pass, are spoken of as having been done. Nor must this be wondered at, that these words are being spoken to God.
For they are not being represented to Him not knowing, by Whose revelation they are foreknown ; but the soul is speaking with God with that affection of godliness, of which
God knoweth\ For even the things which Angels proclaim
to men, they proclaim to them that know them not ; but the things which they proclaim to God, they proclaim to Him knowing, when they offer our prayersi and in ineffable manner consult the eternal Truth respecting their actions,
as an immutable law. And therefore this man of God is saying to God that which he is to learn of God, like a scholar to a master, not ignorant but judging ; and so either approving what he hath taught, or censuring what he hath not taught: especially because under the appearance of one praying, the Prophet is transforming into himself those who should be at the time when these things were to come to pass. But in praying it is customary to declare those things to God which He hath done in taking vengeance, and for a petition to be added, that henceforth He should pity and spare. In this
way here also by him the judgments are spoken of by whom they are foretold, as if they were being spoken of by those whom they befel, and the very lamentation and prayer is a prophecy.
2. Ver. 1. O God, there have come the nations into Thine inheritance : they have defiled Thy holy Temple, they have
b 1 Oxf. M*. ' love thou to speal with of which God Inoweth ;' al. 'For God with affection of godliness, thing* what things doth not God see ? '
G2
84 Many of Christ's People chosen from among the Jews.
Psai. m made Jerusalem for a keeping of apples. (Ver. 2. ) They have made the dead bodies of Thy servants morsels for the fowls of heaven, the fleshes of Thy saints for the beasts of
the earth. (Ver. 3. ) They have poured forth their blood like water in the circuit of Jerusalem, and there was no one to bury them. If in this prophecy any one of us shall have thought that there must be understood that laying waste of Jerusalem, which was made by Titus the Roman Emperor, when already the Lord Jesus Christ, after His Resurrection and Ascension, was being preached among the Gentiles, it doth not occur to me how that people could now have been called the inheritance of God, as not holding to Christ, Whom having rejected and slain, that people became reprobate, which not even after His Resurrection would believe in Him, and even killed His Martyrs. For out of that people Israel whosoever have believed in Christ; to whom the offer of Christ was made, and in a manner the healthful and fruitful fulfilment of th/e promise ; concerning
Mat. 16, whom even the Lord Himself saith, 84,
am not sent but to the sheep which have been lost of the house of Israel, the same are they that out of them are the sons of promise ; the same
Rom. 9, are counted for a seed ; the same do belong to the inherit- jiatf. 1,ance of God. From hence are Joseph that just man, and Luke l ' llie Virgin Maiy who bore Christ : hence John Baptist the 6. friend of the Bridegroom, and his parents Zacharias and
2, Elizabeth : hence Symeon the old, and Anna the widow, who heard not Christ speaking by the sense of the body; but while yet an infant not speaking, by the Spirit perceived
John l, Him: hence the blessed Apostles: hence Nathanael, in whom John19, guile was not: hence the other Joseph, who himself too looked Luke23 for the kingdom of God : hence that so great multitude who 6i. 'went before and followed after His beast, saying, Blessed is Mat. 21, jje tliaj comeih in tfle name of the Lord: among whom was
also that company of children, in whom He declared to have Ps. 8, 2. been fulfilled, Out of the mouth of infants and sucklings Thou Acts 2, hast perfected praise. Hence also were those after His 41; 4, 4. resurrection, of whom on one day three and on another five
Acts 4, thousand were baptized, welded into one soul and one heart
I^uke
32'
by the fire of love; of whom no one spoke of any thing as his own, but to them all things were common. Hence the holy
Special instances. The reprobate only a part. 85
deacons, of whom Stephen was crowned with martyrdom Vsn.
before the Apostles. Hence so many Churches of Judaea,- 21 1Acts 7,
which were in Christ, unto whom Paul was unknown by face, 69. but known for an infamous ferocity, and more known for G2al- Christ's most merciful grace. Hence even he, according to
the prophecy sent before concerning him, a wolf ravening, Gen. 49, in the morning carrying off, and in the evening dividing**' morsels; that first as persecutor carrying off unto death, afterwards as a preacher feeding unto life. These are they
that are out of that people the inheritance of God. Whence
also saith the same, the head of the Apostles, the teacher of
the Gentiles: say then, hath God cast off His people? Rom. it, Far be it. For also am an Israelite of the seed of1' Israel, of the tribe Benjamin. God hath not cast off His
people, whom He hath foreknown. This people, which out
of that nation was added to the Body of Christ, the inherit
ance of God. For that which the Apostle saith, God hath
not cast off His people whom He hath foreknown, doth really correspond with that Psalm, wherein written, For the Ps. 94, Lord shall not cast off His people. But in that place there 4, followuth, and His inheritance He shall not forsake where
evidently appeareth that such people the inheritance
of God. For when the Apostle was to say this, above he
had quoted the prophetic testimony concerning the foretold Rom. io, future unbelief of the people of Israel: All day long
spread out my hands to a people not believing and gainsay
ing. In this place then, lest any one, wrongly understanding
it, should judge the whole of that people to have been found
guilty of the charge of unbelief and gainsaying, he hath immediately added, Ilalh God cast off His people? Far be it. Rom. ll, For also am an Israelite, the tribe of Benjamin. Here
he shewing what people he spake of, to wit, belonging to
the former people, the whole whereof God had refused and condemned, he indeed would not himself have been Christ's Apostle, being an Israelite of the seed of Abraham, of the
tribe of Benjamin. But he applieth very necessary testi
mony, saying, Know ye not in Elias what saith the Scrip- Rom. 11, iure, how he intercedeth with God against Israel? Lot
Thy prophets they have slain, Thy altars they have digged |9, 10- down, and am left alone, and they are seeking my life.
have*lH'65
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86 What is God's ' Inheritance, ' now, and of old.
Psalm But what saith the answer of God to him ? I have left unto I,x*Ix' Me seven thousand men, who have not bowed their knees before Baal. So then even at this time a remnant through election of Grace have been saved. This remnant out of that nation doth belong to the inheritance * of God : not those concern- ing whom a little below- he saith, But the rest have been blinded. For thus he saith. What then? That which
Israel sought, this he hath not obtained: but the election hath obtained it: but the rest have been blinded. This election then, this remnant, that people of God, which God hath not cast off, is called His inheritance. But in that Israel, which hath not obtained this, in the rest that were blinded, there was no longer an inheritance of God, in reference to whom it is possible that there should be spoken, after the glorification of Christ in the Heavens, in the time of Titus the Emperor, O God, there have come the Gentiles unto Thine inheritance, and the other things which in this Psalm seem to have been foretold concerning the destruction of both the temple and city belonging to that people.
3. Furthermore herein we ought either to perceive those things which were done by other enemies, before Christ had 2 Kings come in the flesh: (for not different was the inheritance of 24' 14' God, at that time when there were even the holy prophets, when the carrying away into Babylon took place, and that nation was grievously afflicted, and at the time when under
2 Mace. Antiochus also the Maccabees, having endured horrible
'-
Rom, U' '
Sic on Ps. 78.
sufferings, most gloriously were crowned. For such things have been described in this Psalm, as are also wont to happen in the wasting of wars:) or certainly if after the Resurrection and Ascension of the Lord the inheritance of God must be understood to be here spoken of ; such things must be understood herein, as at the hands of worshippers of idols, and enemies of the name of Christ, His Church, in such a multitude of martyrs, endured. For although Asaph is interpreted Synagogue, which is congregation, and that name hath more usually been attached to the nation of the Jews : nevertheless that this Church also may be called a congregation, and that that old people hath been called a Church, already in another Psalm, we have clearly enough
>> One Ms. ' are the inherit>>nce. '
Our Lord called Jews Himself, Gentiles by others. 87
shewn. This Church then, this inheritance of God, out of Ver. circumcision and uncircumcision hath been congregated, -- that is, out of the people of Israel, and out of the rest of the nations, by means of the Stone which the builders rejected,
and which hath become for the Head of the corner, in which Ps. 118, corner as it were two walls coming from different quarters 22. were united. For Himself is our peace, Who hath made both ^pJ16"' one, that He might build two into Himself, making peace, '
and might unite together^ both in one Body unto God: 'mcoa'1"- which Body we are sons of God, crying, Abba Father. R0m. 8, Abba, on account of their language, Father, on account of16- ours. For AbbaIis the same as Father. Whence the Lord,
Who hath said, am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the Mat. 13, House of Israel, shewing to that nation the fulfilment of that24, promise of His presence, saith nevertheless in another place,
must needs John I o, / have other sheep, which are not of this fold, I lt,'
also bring them, in order that there may be one flock and one Shepherd : intimating the Gentiles whom He was going to bring, not indeed by means of H/is own' corporal presence,
am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the House of Israel ; but yet by means of His
Gospel, which was to be disseminated by the beautiful feet Rom. of them that proclaim peace, that proclaim good things. 10' 16' For, into every land there hath gone out the sound ofthem, Pn. 19,4. and unto the ends of the round world the uords ofthem. Hence also the Apostle saith, / say therefore that Christ R60TM-
'
in order that this might be true,
Jesus was a minister of the Circumcision, for the truth of /God, to confirm the promise to the fathers. Behold what is, am not sent but unto the lost sheep the House Israel.
of of
Secondly, the Apostle subjoinetl1, But that the Gentiles do^g^-
glorify God for His mercy. Behold what have other sheep, which are not of this fold, must needs also bring them, that there may be one flock and one Shepherd. Both which things have been briefly declared in that which the same Apostle quoteth from the Prophet; Rejoice, ye Gentiles,^? m'0 with His people. These then, being the one flock under the
one Shepherd, are the inheritance of God, not only of the Father, but also of the Son. For the Son's voice the Ps. 16,7. lines have fallen unto Me in goodly places,for My inherit-
Mss. might change. ' al. By Himself in corporal presence.
h
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88 The Spiritual Temple assailed by Persecutors.
Psalm ance is goodly to Me. And of that same inheritance the is~&,x' vo*ce m tne Prophet is, 0 Lord our God, possess us. This 13. inheritance the Father halh not by dying left to the Son : (LXX'^but the Son Himself hath wonderfully by His own death
acquired it; and hath possessed it by His Resurrection.
4. If then as relating to this must be understood what is sung in the prophecy of this Psalm, O God, there have come
the Gentiles into Thine inheritance, so that we should understand that the Gentiles have come into the Church, not as believing but as persecuting; that is, that they invaded Her with the will to efface and utterly to destroy Her, as the
examples
of so many persecutions have shewn : it must
needs be that what followeth, they have defiled Thy holy
Temple, must be found not in beams and stones, but in men
l Pet. 2, themselves, of whom, as of living stones, the Apostle Peter
5'
Ps. 61,2. voice is that, And from mine offending purge Thou me: and, Ps. 61, A clean heart create in me, O God, and a right spirit renew
affirmeth the House of God to be builded. Whence also i Cor. 3, the Apostle Paul most plainly declareth, the Temple of God 17' is holy, which Temple ye are. This Temple then persecutors
have indeed defiled in those whom they have constrained to deny Christ by threat or torment, and have made to worship idols by violently insisting ; of whom many penitence hath restored, and hath purged from that stain. For a penitent's
10'
in my bowels. But now in that which followeth, they have made Jerusalem for a keeping of apples ; even the Church herself is rightly understood under this name, even the free
Gal. 4, Jerusalem our mother, concerning whom hath been written, Ir. 64 i. Rejoice, thou barren that dost not bear ; break forth and cry out, thou that dost not travail: for many more are the sons of the forsaken, than of her that hath the husband. The expression, for a keeping of apples, I think must be
understood of the desertion which the wasting of persecution hath effected : that is, like a keeping of apples ; for the keeping of apples is abandoned, when the apples have passed away. And certes when through the persecuting Gentiles the Church seemed to be forsaken, unto the celestial table, like as it were many and exceeding sweet apples from the garden of the Lord, the spirits of the martyrs did pass away.
The bodies of Martyrs left to beasts and birds. 89
5. Ver. 2. They have made, he saith, the dead bodies of ver. Thy servants morsels for the fowls of heaven, the fleshes of -- 3' Thy saints for the beasts of the earth. The expression,
dead bodies, hath been repeated in fleshes: and the expres sion, ofThy servants, hath been repeated in, of Thy saints. This only hath been varied, to the fowls of heaven, and to the beasts of the earth. Better have they interpreted who have written dead, than as some have mortal. For dead
only said of those that have died but mortal term applied even to living bodies. When then, as have said,
to their Husbandman the spirits of martyrs like apples had
passed away, their dead bodies and their fleshes they set
before the fowls of heaven and the beasts of the earth as
any part of them could be lost to the resurrection, whereas
out of the hidden recesses of the natural world He will renew
the whole, by Whom even our hairs have been numbered. Mat. io,
6. Ver. 3. They have poured forth their blood like water, SO that is, abundantly and wantonly, in the circuit of Jeru salem. If we herein understand the earthly city Jerusalem,
we perceive the shedding of their blood in the circuit thereof, whom the enemy could find outside the walls.
2Cor. 2, 16'
for the path of His anger, whose eye, I pray, is sufficient to penetrate, so that it may understand and take in the sense lying hidden in so great a profundity ? For the path of the anger of God was that whereby He punished the ungodliness of the Egyptians with hidden justice : but for that same path He made a way, so that drawing them forth as it were from secret places by means of evil angels unto manifest offences, He most evidently inflicted punishment upon those that wero
Our spiritual passage into the promised land of Grace. 75
most evidently ungodly. From this power of evil angels Ver. nothing doth deliver man but the grace of God, whereof the62""68. Apostle speaketh, Who hath delivered us from the power of'Col. 1, darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of the
Son of His love : of which things that people did bear the figure, when they were delivered from the power of the Egyptians, and translated into the kingdom of the land of promise flowing with milk and honey, which doth signify the sweetness of grace.
31. The Psalm proceedeth then after the commemoration of the plagues of the Egyptians, and saith, (ver. 52. ) And He
took away like sheep His people, and He led them through like a flock in the desert. (Ver. 53. ) And He led them down in hope, and they feared not, and their enemies the sea covered. This cometh to pass to so much the greater good, as it is a more inward thing, wherein being delivered from the power of darkness, we are in mind translated into the Kingdom of God, and with respect to spiritual pastures we are made to become sheep of God, walking in this world as it were in a desert, inasmuch as to no one is our faith observable:
hath covered, He hath effaced them in baptism by the remission of sins.
3'2. In the next place there followeth, (ver. 54. ) And He
led them into the mountain of His sanctijication. How much
better into Holy Church ! The mountain ivhich His right
hand hath gotten. How much higher is the Church which
Christ hath gotten, concerning Whom has been said, " Andua. 63, to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed? ' (Ver. 55. ) I-
And He cast forth from the face of them the nations. And1 >Oxf. from the face of His faithful. For nations in a manner are jjj^' the evil spirits of Gentile errors. And by lot He divided' He did unto them the land in the cord of distribution. And in us nations( all things one and the same Spirit doth work, dividing \ c0r.
12, ll"
whence saith the Apostle, Your life is hidden with Christ Col. 3, in God. But we are being led home in hope, For by gom g
hope we are saved. Nor ought we to fear. For, If God 6e24. for us, who can be against us? And our enemies the sea3i.
''
severally to every one as He willeth.
33. And He made to dwell in their tabernacles the
tribes of Israel. In the tabernacles, he saith, of the Gentiles
76 Israel, turning from God, forfeited His protection.
Psalm He made the tribes of Israel to dwell, which I think can i. xxvm. better be explained spiritually, inasmuch as unto celestial glory, whence sinning angels have been cast forth and cast
^\<j? $
down, by Christ's grace we are being uplifted. For that generation crooked and embittering, inasmuch as for these corporal blessings they put not off the coat of oldness, (ver. 56. ) Did tempt yet, and provoked the high God, and His testimonies they kept not : (ver. 57. ) and they turned them away, and they kept not the covenant, like their fathers. ^or un(*er a sort of covenant an(J decree they said, All things which our Lord God hath spoken we will do, and we will hear. It is a remarkable thing indeed which he saith, like their fathers : while throughout the whole text of the Psalm he was seeming to speak of the same men as it were, yet now it appeareth that the words did concern those who were already in the land of promise, and that the fathers spoken of were of those who did provoke in the desert.
34. Ver. 57. They were turned, he saith, into a crooked, or, as some copies have it, into a perverse bow. But what this is doth better appear in that which followeth, where he saith, (ver. 58. ) And unto wrath they provoked Him with their hills. It doth signify that they leaped into idolatry. The bow then was perverted, not for the name of the Lord, but against the name of the Lord : Who said to the same
Exod. people, Thou shall have none other Gods hut Me. But by
20' 3'
the bow He doth signify the mind's intention. This same idea, lastly, more clearly working out, And in their graven idols, he saith, they provoked Him to indignation. .
35. Ver. 59. God heard, and He despised : that He gave heed and took vengeance. And unto nothing He brought Israel exceedingly. For when God despised, what were they who by God's help were what they were But doubtless he
commemorating the doing of that thing, when they were conquered by the Philistines in the time of Heli the priest,
Sam. and the Ark of the Lord was taken, and with great slaughter
? c10,
they were laid low. This that he speaketh of in ver. 60. And He rejected the tabernacle of Selom, His tabernacle, where He dwelled among men. He hath ele gantly explained why He rejected His tabernacle, when he saith, where He dwelled among men. When therefore
they
it is
l
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?
is,
Their sufferings. His judgment on the enemy. 77
were not worthy for Him to dwell among, why should He Ver. not reject the tabernacle, which indeed not for Himself Ho
had established, but for their sakes, whom now He judged unworthy for Him to dwell among.
36. Ver. 61. And He gave over vnto captivity their virtue, and their beauty unto the hands ofthe enemy. The very Ark whereby they thought themselves invincible, and whereon they plumed themselves, he calleth their ' virtue' and 'beauty. ' Lastly, also afterward, when they were living ill, and boasting of the temple of the LIord, He doth terrify them by a Prophet,
saying, See ye what tabernacle.
have done to Selom, where was MyJer. 7, 12-
37. Ver. 62. And He ended with the sword His people, and His inheritance He despised. Their young men the fire devoured: that is, wrath. (Ver. 63. ) And their virgins mourned not. For not even for this was there leisure, in fear
of the foe.
38. Ver. 64. Their priests fell by the sword, and their
widows were not lamented. For there fell by the sword the
sons of Heli, of one of whom the wife being widowed, and l Sam. presently dying in child-birth, because of the same confusion ' could not be mourned with the distinction of a funeral.
89. Ver. 65. And the Lord was awakened as one sleeping.
For He seemeth to sleep, when He giveth His people into
the hands of those whom He hateth, when there is said to
them, " Where is thy God. " He was awakened, then, like one Ps. 42, sleeping, like a mighty man drunken with wine. No one3' would dare to say this of God, save His Spirit. For he hath spoken, as it seemeth to ungodly men reviling; as if like a drunken man He sleepeth long, when He succoureth not so
speedily as men think '. 1 40. Ver. 66. And He smote His enemies in the hinder parts: those, to wit, who were rejoicing that they were able
*^ere-
to take His Ark : for they were smitten in their back -parts. 1 S""1- Which seemeth to me to be a sign of that punishment, ' wherewith a man will be tortured, if he shall have looked
back upon things behind ; which, as sailh the Apostle, he Phil. 3, ought to value as dung. For they that do so receive the8' Testament of God, as that they put not off from them the
old vanity, are like the hostile nations, who did place the
78 Why ' Joseph" and ( Ephraini' are named as passed over.
Puam captured Ark of the Testament beside their own idols. And l! "m"-yet those old things even though these be unwilling do fall :
Is. 40, 6'
for all Jlesh is hay, and the glory 0/ man as the flower of hay. The hay hath dried up, and the flower hath fallen off: but the Ark of the Lord abideth for everlasting, to wit, the secret
testament of the kingdom of Heaven, where is the eternal Word of God. But ihey that have loved things behind, because of these very things most justly shall be tormented. For everlasting reproach He hath given to them.
41. Ver. 67. And He rejected, he sailh, the tabernacle of Joseph, and the tribe of Ephrcem He chose not. (Ver. 68. ) And He chose the tribe of Juda. He hath not said, He re-
Gen. 49, jected the tabernacle of Reuben, who was the first-born son of Jacob nor them that follow, and precede Juda in order of birth so that they being rejected and not chosen, the tribe of Juda was chosen. For might have been said that they were deservedly rejected because even in the blessing
Gen. 49, of Jacob wherewith he blessed his sons, he mentioneth their sins, and deeply abhorreth them though among them the tribe Exod. 2, of Levi merited to be the priestly tribe, whence also Moses
was. Nor hath he said, He rejected the tabernacle of Ben jamin, or the tribe of Benjamin He chose not, out of which Sam. king already had begun to be for thence there had been chosen Saul whence because of the very proximity of the
Sam. time, when he had been rejected and refused, and David
16, '
Gen. 41, because of his piety, chastity, wisdom, he was most justly
exalted and Ephraem by the blessing of his grandfather Gen. 48, Jacob was preferred before his elder brother: and yet God 19. rejected the tabernacle of Joseph, and the tribe of Ephraem
He chose not. In which place by these names of renowned merit, what else do we understand but that whole people with old cupidity requiring of the Lord earthly rewards,
40'
chosen, this might conveniently have been said but yet was not said but he hath named those especially who seemed to excel for more surpassing merits. For Joseph fed in Egypt his father and his brethren, and having been impiously sold,
and refused, but the tribe of Juda chosen not for the sake of the merits of that same Juda For far greater are the merits of Joseph, but by the tribe of Juda, inasmuch as thence arose Christ according to the flesh, the Scripture doth
rejected
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The new Sanctuary, and Kingdom of David. 79
testify of the new people of Christ preferred before that old ? kr? people, the Lord opening in parables His mouth. Moreover, --'--- - thence also in that which followeth, the Mount Sion which
He chose, we do better understand the Church of Christ, not worshipping God for the sake of the carnal blessings of the present time, but from afar looking for future and eternal rewards with the eyes of faith: for Sion too is interpreted
a ' looking out. '
42. Lastly there followeth, (ver. 69. ) and He huilded like
as of unicorns His sanctification : or, as some interpreters
have made thereof a new word, His sanctifying'1. The uni-1 sancii. corns are rightly understood to be those, whose firm hope is^c""" uplifted unto thatIone thing, concerning which another Psalm
have sought the Lord, this I will require. Ps. 27, of
saith, One thing
But the sanctifying of God, according to the Apostle Peter,4,
is understood to be a holy people and a royal priesthood, l Pet. But that which followeth, in the land which He founded for2' 9' everlasting: which the Greek copies have eij tov aiwvct, whether
it be called by us for everlasting, or for an age, is at the
of the Latin translators ; forasmuch as it doth signify either: and therefore the latter is found in some Latin copies, the former in others. Some also have it in the plural, that for ages which in the Greek copies which we have had we have not found. But which of the faithful would doubt, that the Church, even though, some going, others coming, she doth pass out of this life in mortal manner, yet founded for everlasting
43. Ver. 70. And He chose David His servant. The tribe, say, of Juda, for the sake of David but David for the sake of Christ the tribe then of Juda for the sake of Christ. At
whose passing by blind men cried out, Have pity on us, Matt. Son of David: and forthwith by His pity they received light,20' 30, because true was the thing which they cried out. This then
the Apostle doth not cursorily speak of, but doth heedfully notice, writing to Timothy, Be thou mindful, that Christ Tim.
8-
pleasure
Jesus hath risen from the dead, of the seed of David, ac- cording to my Gospel, wherein suffer even unto bonds as an evil doer but the word of God not bound. Therefore the Saviour Himself, made according to the flesh of the seed of David, figured in this passage under the name of David,
is
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2' 2
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80 Christ, like David, went from following sheep.
Psalm the Lord opening in parables His mouth. And let it not move us, that when he had said, and He chose David, under which name he signified Christ, he hath added, His servant, not His Son. Yea even hence we may perceive, that not the substance of the Only-Begotten coeternal with the Father,
but the ' form of a servant' was taken of the seed of David. 44. Ver. 71. And He took him from the flocks of sheep, from behind the teeming sheep He received him : to feed
Jacob His servant, and Israel His inheritance. This David indeed, of whose seed the flesh of Christ is, from the pastoral care of cattle was translated to the kingdom of men : but our David, Jesus Himself, from men to men, from Jews to Gentiles, was yet according to the parable from sheep to sheep taken away and translated. For there are not now in that land Churches of Judcea in Christ, which belonged to them of the circumcision after the recent Passion andIRe-
made havoc, and in me they magnified the Lord. Already from hence those Churches of the circumcised people have passed away : and thus in Judaea, which now doth exist on the earth, there is not now Christ: He hath been removed thence, now He doth feed flocks of Gentiles. Truly from behind teeming sheep He hath been taken thence. For those former Churches were of such sort, as that of them it is said in the Song of Songs to the one Church which doth consist of many, that is, to the one flock, whereof the members are
Song of many flocks--of such, I say, it is said, Thy teeth--that Sol. 4, 2. ig, those whereby thou speakest, or by means whereof into Thy Body, like as it were by eating, Thou dost make others to pass; this then being signified by Thy teeth--are like a
' lava- flock of shorn ewes going up from the washing1, all of which cro do bear twins, and a barren one is not among them. For they Acts 2, then laid aside like as it were fleeces the burdens of the Acts 4 wor^>> when before the feet of the Apostles they laid the 34. 35. prices of their sold goods, going up from that Laver, concerning
which the apostle Peter doth admonish them, when they were troubled because they had shed the blood of Christ, and he
Gal, l, surrection of our Lord, of whom saith the Apostle, But
was 22' 23' unknown by face to the Churches of Judcea, which are in Christ, but thus much they heard, that he who sometime did persecute us, doth now preach the faith whereof sometime he
Gentiles in the Church are Christ's sheep, and Israel. 81
saith, Do ye penance, and let each one ofyou be baptized in Ver.
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and your sins shall be AJ^'2 ' forgiven you. But twins they begat, the works, to wit, of the 38.
two commandments of twin love, love of God, and love of
one's neighbour : whence a barren one there was not among
them. From behind these teeming sheep our David having
been taken, doth now feed other flocks among the Gentiles,
and those too 'Jacob' and ' Israel. ' For thus hath been said,
to feed Jacob His servant, and Israel His inheritance.
For
not, because out of the Gentiles are these sheep, have they therefore been made alien from that seed, which is Jacob
and Israel. For the seed of Abraham is the seed of the promise, concerning which the Lord said to him, In Isaac Gen. 21, thy seed shall be called. Which the Apostle expounding 12- saith, Not the sons of the flesh, but the sons of promise are^? m-9' reckonedfor a seed. For out of the Gentiles were believers,
to whom he said, but if ye are of Christ, then Abraham's Gal. 3. seed ye are, according to the promise heirs. But in this which he saith, Jacob His servant and Israel His inheritance,
in its usual manner the Scripture hath repeated the same sentiment. Unless perchance any one be willing to make
such a distinction as this; viz. that in this time Jacob serveth ;
but he will be the eternal inheritance of God, at that time
when he shall see God face to face, whence he hath received Gen. 32, the name Israel.
45. Ver. 73. And He fed them, he saith, in the innocence of His heart. What can be more innocent than He, Who not only had not any sin whereby to be conquered, but even not any to conquer ? And in the understanding of His hands He led them home : or, as some copies have in the understandings of His hands. Any other man might suppose that would have been better had been said thus, " in innocence of hands and understanding of heart;" but He Who knew better than others what He spake, preferred to join with the heart innocence, and with the hands understanding.
It for this reason, as far as judge because many men think themselves innocent, who do not evil things because they fear lest they should suffer they shall have done them but they have the will to do them, they could with impunity. Such men may seem to have innocence of hands, but yet not
VOL. iv. o
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82 By what ' understanding" our Lord leads His People.
Psalm that of heart. And what, I pray, or of what sort is that in- lxxv'"' nocence, if of heart it is not, where man was made after the Gen. 1, image of God ? But in this which he saith, in understanding
(or intelligence) of His hands He led them home, he seemeth to me to have spoken of that intelligence which He doth Himself make in believers : and so of His hands : for making doth belong to the hands, but in the sense wherein the hands of God may be understood ; for even Christ was a Man in such sort, that He was also God. This indeed that David, of whose seed He was, could not make in the people over whom he reigned as a man : but He doth make it, unto
Ps. 119, Whom rightly the faithful soul is able to say, Make me to
34,
understand, and I will search out Thy law. Henceforth that we may not stray from Him, while we confide in our own intelligence as if it were of ourselves ; to His hands let us subject ourselves by believing. May He make the same in us, in order that in the intelligence of His hands He may lead us home delivered from error, and bring us unto that place where we shall no longer be able to err ! This is the fruit of the people of God, who give heed to the law of God, and incline their ear unto the words of His mouth, in order that they may guide in Him their heart, and their spirit may be trusted with Him, lest they should be changed into 1 a generaU0n crooked and provoking. But all these things having been proclaimed to them, let them put their hope in God, not only for the present life, but also for life eternal, and not
only to receive the rewards of good works, but also for doing the good works themselves.
i ai. imitate
lTM.
PSALM LXXIX. EXPOSITION? .
1 Over the title of this Psalm, being so short and so simple, I think we need not tarry. But the prophecy which here we read sent before, we know to be evidently fulfilled.
? Pre>>ched after the Exposition of Psalm 78, referred to in ? . 8.
The Prophet may speak as in the times he foretells. 83
For when these things were being sung in the times of King Ver. David, nothing of such sort, by the hostility of the Gentiles, ----- as yet had befallen the city Jerusalem, nor ihe Temple of
God, which as yet was not even builded. For that after the
death of David hi3 son Salomon made a temple to God, who is ignorant? That is spoken of therefore as though past, which in the Spirit was seen to be future.
Ver. 1. O God, the Gentiles have come into Tliine inherit
ance. Under which form of expression this also was pro phesied of the Lord's Passion, They gave for My morsel gall, P*. 69, and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to drink ; and other 21 ' things which in the same Psalm, though having to come to
pass, are spoken of as having been done. Nor must this be wondered at, that these words are being spoken to God.
For they are not being represented to Him not knowing, by Whose revelation they are foreknown ; but the soul is speaking with God with that affection of godliness, of which
God knoweth\ For even the things which Angels proclaim
to men, they proclaim to them that know them not ; but the things which they proclaim to God, they proclaim to Him knowing, when they offer our prayersi and in ineffable manner consult the eternal Truth respecting their actions,
as an immutable law. And therefore this man of God is saying to God that which he is to learn of God, like a scholar to a master, not ignorant but judging ; and so either approving what he hath taught, or censuring what he hath not taught: especially because under the appearance of one praying, the Prophet is transforming into himself those who should be at the time when these things were to come to pass. But in praying it is customary to declare those things to God which He hath done in taking vengeance, and for a petition to be added, that henceforth He should pity and spare. In this
way here also by him the judgments are spoken of by whom they are foretold, as if they were being spoken of by those whom they befel, and the very lamentation and prayer is a prophecy.
2. Ver. 1. O God, there have come the nations into Thine inheritance : they have defiled Thy holy Temple, they have
b 1 Oxf. M*. ' love thou to speal with of which God Inoweth ;' al. 'For God with affection of godliness, thing* what things doth not God see ? '
G2
84 Many of Christ's People chosen from among the Jews.
Psai. m made Jerusalem for a keeping of apples. (Ver. 2. ) They have made the dead bodies of Thy servants morsels for the fowls of heaven, the fleshes of Thy saints for the beasts of
the earth. (Ver. 3. ) They have poured forth their blood like water in the circuit of Jerusalem, and there was no one to bury them. If in this prophecy any one of us shall have thought that there must be understood that laying waste of Jerusalem, which was made by Titus the Roman Emperor, when already the Lord Jesus Christ, after His Resurrection and Ascension, was being preached among the Gentiles, it doth not occur to me how that people could now have been called the inheritance of God, as not holding to Christ, Whom having rejected and slain, that people became reprobate, which not even after His Resurrection would believe in Him, and even killed His Martyrs. For out of that people Israel whosoever have believed in Christ; to whom the offer of Christ was made, and in a manner the healthful and fruitful fulfilment of th/e promise ; concerning
Mat. 16, whom even the Lord Himself saith, 84,
am not sent but to the sheep which have been lost of the house of Israel, the same are they that out of them are the sons of promise ; the same
Rom. 9, are counted for a seed ; the same do belong to the inherit- jiatf. 1,ance of God. From hence are Joseph that just man, and Luke l ' llie Virgin Maiy who bore Christ : hence John Baptist the 6. friend of the Bridegroom, and his parents Zacharias and
2, Elizabeth : hence Symeon the old, and Anna the widow, who heard not Christ speaking by the sense of the body; but while yet an infant not speaking, by the Spirit perceived
John l, Him: hence the blessed Apostles: hence Nathanael, in whom John19, guile was not: hence the other Joseph, who himself too looked Luke23 for the kingdom of God : hence that so great multitude who 6i. 'went before and followed after His beast, saying, Blessed is Mat. 21, jje tliaj comeih in tfle name of the Lord: among whom was
also that company of children, in whom He declared to have Ps. 8, 2. been fulfilled, Out of the mouth of infants and sucklings Thou Acts 2, hast perfected praise. Hence also were those after His 41; 4, 4. resurrection, of whom on one day three and on another five
Acts 4, thousand were baptized, welded into one soul and one heart
I^uke
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by the fire of love; of whom no one spoke of any thing as his own, but to them all things were common. Hence the holy
Special instances. The reprobate only a part. 85
deacons, of whom Stephen was crowned with martyrdom Vsn.
before the Apostles. Hence so many Churches of Judaea,- 21 1Acts 7,
which were in Christ, unto whom Paul was unknown by face, 69. but known for an infamous ferocity, and more known for G2al- Christ's most merciful grace. Hence even he, according to
the prophecy sent before concerning him, a wolf ravening, Gen. 49, in the morning carrying off, and in the evening dividing**' morsels; that first as persecutor carrying off unto death, afterwards as a preacher feeding unto life. These are they
that are out of that people the inheritance of God. Whence
also saith the same, the head of the Apostles, the teacher of
the Gentiles: say then, hath God cast off His people? Rom. it, Far be it. For also am an Israelite of the seed of1' Israel, of the tribe Benjamin. God hath not cast off His
people, whom He hath foreknown. This people, which out
of that nation was added to the Body of Christ, the inherit
ance of God. For that which the Apostle saith, God hath
not cast off His people whom He hath foreknown, doth really correspond with that Psalm, wherein written, For the Ps. 94, Lord shall not cast off His people. But in that place there 4, followuth, and His inheritance He shall not forsake where
evidently appeareth that such people the inheritance
of God. For when the Apostle was to say this, above he
had quoted the prophetic testimony concerning the foretold Rom. io, future unbelief of the people of Israel: All day long
spread out my hands to a people not believing and gainsay
ing. In this place then, lest any one, wrongly understanding
it, should judge the whole of that people to have been found
guilty of the charge of unbelief and gainsaying, he hath immediately added, Ilalh God cast off His people? Far be it. Rom. ll, For also am an Israelite, the tribe of Benjamin. Here
he shewing what people he spake of, to wit, belonging to
the former people, the whole whereof God had refused and condemned, he indeed would not himself have been Christ's Apostle, being an Israelite of the seed of Abraham, of the
tribe of Benjamin. But he applieth very necessary testi
mony, saying, Know ye not in Elias what saith the Scrip- Rom. 11, iure, how he intercedeth with God against Israel? Lot
Thy prophets they have slain, Thy altars they have digged |9, 10- down, and am left alone, and they are seeking my life.
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86 What is God's ' Inheritance, ' now, and of old.
Psalm But what saith the answer of God to him ? I have left unto I,x*Ix' Me seven thousand men, who have not bowed their knees before Baal. So then even at this time a remnant through election of Grace have been saved. This remnant out of that nation doth belong to the inheritance * of God : not those concern- ing whom a little below- he saith, But the rest have been blinded. For thus he saith. What then? That which
Israel sought, this he hath not obtained: but the election hath obtained it: but the rest have been blinded. This election then, this remnant, that people of God, which God hath not cast off, is called His inheritance. But in that Israel, which hath not obtained this, in the rest that were blinded, there was no longer an inheritance of God, in reference to whom it is possible that there should be spoken, after the glorification of Christ in the Heavens, in the time of Titus the Emperor, O God, there have come the Gentiles unto Thine inheritance, and the other things which in this Psalm seem to have been foretold concerning the destruction of both the temple and city belonging to that people.
3. Furthermore herein we ought either to perceive those things which were done by other enemies, before Christ had 2 Kings come in the flesh: (for not different was the inheritance of 24' 14' God, at that time when there were even the holy prophets, when the carrying away into Babylon took place, and that nation was grievously afflicted, and at the time when under
2 Mace. Antiochus also the Maccabees, having endured horrible
'-
Rom, U' '
Sic on Ps. 78.
sufferings, most gloriously were crowned. For such things have been described in this Psalm, as are also wont to happen in the wasting of wars:) or certainly if after the Resurrection and Ascension of the Lord the inheritance of God must be understood to be here spoken of ; such things must be understood herein, as at the hands of worshippers of idols, and enemies of the name of Christ, His Church, in such a multitude of martyrs, endured. For although Asaph is interpreted Synagogue, which is congregation, and that name hath more usually been attached to the nation of the Jews : nevertheless that this Church also may be called a congregation, and that that old people hath been called a Church, already in another Psalm, we have clearly enough
>> One Ms. ' are the inherit>>nce. '
Our Lord called Jews Himself, Gentiles by others. 87
shewn. This Church then, this inheritance of God, out of Ver. circumcision and uncircumcision hath been congregated, -- that is, out of the people of Israel, and out of the rest of the nations, by means of the Stone which the builders rejected,
and which hath become for the Head of the corner, in which Ps. 118, corner as it were two walls coming from different quarters 22. were united. For Himself is our peace, Who hath made both ^pJ16"' one, that He might build two into Himself, making peace, '
and might unite together^ both in one Body unto God: 'mcoa'1"- which Body we are sons of God, crying, Abba Father. R0m. 8, Abba, on account of their language, Father, on account of16- ours. For AbbaIis the same as Father. Whence the Lord,
Who hath said, am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the Mat. 13, House of Israel, shewing to that nation the fulfilment of that24, promise of His presence, saith nevertheless in another place,
must needs John I o, / have other sheep, which are not of this fold, I lt,'
also bring them, in order that there may be one flock and one Shepherd : intimating the Gentiles whom He was going to bring, not indeed by means of H/is own' corporal presence,
am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the House of Israel ; but yet by means of His
Gospel, which was to be disseminated by the beautiful feet Rom. of them that proclaim peace, that proclaim good things. 10' 16' For, into every land there hath gone out the sound ofthem, Pn. 19,4. and unto the ends of the round world the uords ofthem. Hence also the Apostle saith, / say therefore that Christ R60TM-
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in order that this might be true,
Jesus was a minister of the Circumcision, for the truth of /God, to confirm the promise to the fathers. Behold what is, am not sent but unto the lost sheep the House Israel.
of of
Secondly, the Apostle subjoinetl1, But that the Gentiles do^g^-
glorify God for His mercy. Behold what have other sheep, which are not of this fold, must needs also bring them, that there may be one flock and one Shepherd. Both which things have been briefly declared in that which the same Apostle quoteth from the Prophet; Rejoice, ye Gentiles,^? m'0 with His people. These then, being the one flock under the
one Shepherd, are the inheritance of God, not only of the Father, but also of the Son. For the Son's voice the Ps. 16,7. lines have fallen unto Me in goodly places,for My inherit-
Mss. might change. ' al. By Himself in corporal presence.
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88 The Spiritual Temple assailed by Persecutors.
Psalm ance is goodly to Me. And of that same inheritance the is~&,x' vo*ce m tne Prophet is, 0 Lord our God, possess us. This 13. inheritance the Father halh not by dying left to the Son : (LXX'^but the Son Himself hath wonderfully by His own death
acquired it; and hath possessed it by His Resurrection.
4. If then as relating to this must be understood what is sung in the prophecy of this Psalm, O God, there have come
the Gentiles into Thine inheritance, so that we should understand that the Gentiles have come into the Church, not as believing but as persecuting; that is, that they invaded Her with the will to efface and utterly to destroy Her, as the
examples
of so many persecutions have shewn : it must
needs be that what followeth, they have defiled Thy holy
Temple, must be found not in beams and stones, but in men
l Pet. 2, themselves, of whom, as of living stones, the Apostle Peter
5'
Ps. 61,2. voice is that, And from mine offending purge Thou me: and, Ps. 61, A clean heart create in me, O God, and a right spirit renew
affirmeth the House of God to be builded. Whence also i Cor. 3, the Apostle Paul most plainly declareth, the Temple of God 17' is holy, which Temple ye are. This Temple then persecutors
have indeed defiled in those whom they have constrained to deny Christ by threat or torment, and have made to worship idols by violently insisting ; of whom many penitence hath restored, and hath purged from that stain. For a penitent's
10'
in my bowels. But now in that which followeth, they have made Jerusalem for a keeping of apples ; even the Church herself is rightly understood under this name, even the free
Gal. 4, Jerusalem our mother, concerning whom hath been written, Ir. 64 i. Rejoice, thou barren that dost not bear ; break forth and cry out, thou that dost not travail: for many more are the sons of the forsaken, than of her that hath the husband. The expression, for a keeping of apples, I think must be
understood of the desertion which the wasting of persecution hath effected : that is, like a keeping of apples ; for the keeping of apples is abandoned, when the apples have passed away. And certes when through the persecuting Gentiles the Church seemed to be forsaken, unto the celestial table, like as it were many and exceeding sweet apples from the garden of the Lord, the spirits of the martyrs did pass away.
The bodies of Martyrs left to beasts and birds. 89
5. Ver. 2. They have made, he saith, the dead bodies of ver. Thy servants morsels for the fowls of heaven, the fleshes of -- 3' Thy saints for the beasts of the earth. The expression,
dead bodies, hath been repeated in fleshes: and the expres sion, ofThy servants, hath been repeated in, of Thy saints. This only hath been varied, to the fowls of heaven, and to the beasts of the earth. Better have they interpreted who have written dead, than as some have mortal. For dead
only said of those that have died but mortal term applied even to living bodies. When then, as have said,
to their Husbandman the spirits of martyrs like apples had
passed away, their dead bodies and their fleshes they set
before the fowls of heaven and the beasts of the earth as
any part of them could be lost to the resurrection, whereas
out of the hidden recesses of the natural world He will renew
the whole, by Whom even our hairs have been numbered. Mat. io,
6. Ver. 3. They have poured forth their blood like water, SO that is, abundantly and wantonly, in the circuit of Jeru salem. If we herein understand the earthly city Jerusalem,
we perceive the shedding of their blood in the circuit thereof, whom the enemy could find outside the walls.
