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25. Psalm 25

1 In you, LORD my God,
   I put my trust.

    2 I trust in you;
   do not let me be put to shame,
   nor let my enemies triumph over me.

3 No one who hopes in you
   will ever be put to shame,
but shame will come on those
   who are treacherous without cause.

    4 Show me your ways, LORD,
   teach me your paths.

5 Guide me in your truth and teach me,
   for you are God my Savior,
   and my hope is in you all day long.

6 Remember, LORD, your great mercy and love,
   for they are from of old.

7 Do not remember the sins of my youth
   and my rebellious ways;
according to your love remember me,
   for you, LORD, are good.

    8 Good and upright is the LORD;
   therefore he instructs sinners in his ways.

9 He guides the humble in what is right
   and teaches them his way.

10 All the ways of the LORD are loving and faithful
   toward those who keep the demands of his covenant.

11 For the sake of your name, LORD,
   forgive my iniquity, though it is great.

    12 Who, then, are those who fear the LORD?
   He will instruct them in the ways they should choose. Or ways he chooses

13 They will spend their days in prosperity,
   and their descendants will inherit the land.

14 The LORD confides in those who fear him;
   he makes his covenant known to them.

15 My eyes are ever on the LORD,
   for only he will release my feet from the snare.

    16 Turn to me and be gracious to me,
   for I am lonely and afflicted.

17 Relieve the troubles of my heart
   and free me from my anguish.

18 Look on my affliction and my distress
   and take away all my sins.

19 See how numerous are my enemies
   and how fiercely they hate me!

    20 Guard my life and rescue me;
   do not let me be put to shame,
   for I take refuge in you.

21 May integrity and uprightness protect me,
   because my hope, LORD, Septuagint; Hebrew does not have LORD. is in you.

    22 Deliver Israel, O God,
   from all their troubles!


8. Good and upright is Jehovah. Pausing for a little as it were in the prosecution of his prayer, he exercises his thoughts in meditation upon the goodness of God, that he may return with renewed ardor to prayer. The faithful feel that their hearts soon languish in prayer, unless they are constantly stirring themselves up to it by new incitements; so rare and difficult a thing is it to persevere steadfastly and unweariedly in this duty. And, indeed, as one must frequently lay on fuel in order to preserve a fire, so the exercise of prayer requires the aid of such helps, that it may not languish, and at length be entirely extinguished. David, therefore, desirous to encourage himself to perseverance, speaks to himself, and affirms that God is good and upright, that, gathering new strength by meditating on this truth, he may return with the more alacrity to prayer. But we must observe this consequence — that as God is good and upright, he stretches forth his hand to sinners to bring them back again into the way. To attribute to God an uprightness which he may exercise only towards the worthy and the meritorious, is a cold view of his character, and of little advantage to sinners, and yet the world commonly apprehends that God is good in no other sense. How comes it to pass that scarcely one in a hundred applies to himself the mercy of God, if it is not because men limit it to those who are worthy of it? No on the contrary, it is here said, that God gives a proof of his uprightness when he shows to transgressors the way; and this is of the same import as to call them to repentance, and to teach them to live uprightly. And, indeed, if the goodness of God did not penetrate even to hell, no man would ever become a partaker of it. Let the Papists then boast as they please of their imaginary preparations, but let us regard this as a sure and certain doctrine, that if God do not prevent men by his grace, they shall all utterly perish. David, therefore, here commends this preventing grace, as it is called, which is manifested either when God in calling us at first renews, by the Spirit of regeneration, our corrupt nature, or when he brings us back again into the right way, after we have gone astray from him by our sins. For since even those whom God receives for his disciples are here called sinners, it follows that he renews them by his Holy Spirit that they may become docile and obedient.


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