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116. Psalm 116

1 I love the LORD, for he heard my voice;
   he heard my cry for mercy.

2 Because he turned his ear to me,
   I will call on him as long as I live.

    3 The cords of death entangled me,
   the anguish of the grave came over me;
   I was overcome by distress and sorrow.

4 Then I called on the name of the LORD:
   “LORD, save me!”

    5 The LORD is gracious and righteous;
   our God is full of compassion.

6 The LORD protects the unwary;
   when I was brought low, he saved me.

    7 Return to your rest, my soul,
   for the LORD has been good to you.

    8 For you, LORD, have delivered me from death,
   my eyes from tears,
   my feet from stumbling,

9 that I may walk before the LORD
   in the land of the living.

    10 I trusted in the LORD when I said,
   “I am greatly afflicted”;

11 in my alarm I said,
   “Everyone is a liar.”

    12 What shall I return to the LORD
   for all his goodness to me?

    13 I will lift up the cup of salvation
   and call on the name of the LORD.

14 I will fulfill my vows to the LORD
   in the presence of all his people.

    15 Precious in the sight of the LORD
   is the death of his faithful servants.

16 Truly I am your servant, LORD;
   I serve you just as my mother did;
   you have freed me from my chains.

    17 I will sacrifice a thank offering to you
   and call on the name of the LORD.

18 I will fulfill my vows to the LORD
   in the presence of all his people,

19 in the courts of the house of the LORD—
   in your midst, Jerusalem.

   Praise the LORD. Hebrew Hallelu Yah


15. Precious in the eyes of Jehovah is the death of his meek ones. He goes on now to the general doctrine of God’s providential care for the godly, in that he renders them assistance in time of need; their lives being precious in his sight. With this shield he desires to defend himself from the terrors of death, which often pressed upon him, by which he imagined he would instantly be swallowed up. When we are in danger and God apparently overlooks us, we then consider ourselves to be contemned as poor slaves, and that our life is regarded as a thing of nought. And we are aware that when the wicked perceive that we have no protection, they wax the more bold against us, as if God took no notice either of our life or death. In opposition to their erroneous doctrine, David introduces this sentiment, that God does not hold his servants in so little estimation as to expose them to death casually. 384384     “For their death to be precious is, in effect, no more than that it is, so considered, rated at so high a price by God, as that he will not easily grant it to any one that most desires it of him. Absalom here hostilely pursued David and desired his death, he would have been highly gratified with it, taking it for the greatest boon that could have befallen him: but God would not thus gratify him; nor will he grant this desire easily to the enemies of godly men, especially of those that commit themselves to his keeping, as David here did.” — Hammond. We may indeed for a time be subjected to all the vicissitudes of fortune and of the world; we will nevertheless always have this consolation, that God will, eventually, openly manifest how dear our souls are to him. In these times, when innocent blood is shed, and the wicked contemners of God furiously exalt themselves, as if exulting over a vanquished God, let us hold fast by this doctrine, that the death of the faithful, which is so worthless, nay, even ignominious in the sight of men, is so valuable in God’s sight, that, even after their death, he stretches out his hand towards them, and by dreadful examples demonstrates how he holds in abhorrence the cruelty of those who unjustly persecute the good and simple. If he put their tears in a bottle, how will he permit their blood to perish? Psalm 56:8 At his own time he will accomplish the prediction of Isaiah, “that the earth shall disclose her blood,” Isaiah 26:21. To leave room for the grace of God, let us put on the spirit of meekness, even as the prophet, in designating the faithful meek ones, calls upon them to submit their necks quietly to bear the burden of the cross, that in their patience they may possess their souls, Luke 21:19

16 Come, O Jehovah! because I am thy servant. As, in the former verse, he gloried that in him God had given an example of the paternal regard which he has for the faithful, so here he applies, in an especial manner, to himself the general doctrine, by declaring that his fetters had been broken, in consequence of his being included among the number of God’s servants. He employs the term fetters, as if one, with hands and feet bound, were dragged by the executioner. In assigning, as the reason of his deliverance, that he was God’s servant, he by no means vaunts of his services, but rather refers to God’s unconditional election; for we cannot make ourselves his servants, that being an honor conferred upon us solely by his adoption. Hence David affirms, that he was not God’s servant merely, but the son of his handmaid. “From the womb of my mother, even before I was born, was this honor conferred upon me.” He therefore presents himself as a common example to all who shall dedicate themselves to the service of God, and place themselves under his protection, that they may be under no apprehension for their safety while they have him for their defense.


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