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135. Psalm 135

1 Praise the LORD. Hebrew Hallelu Yah; also in verses 3 and 21

   Praise the name of the LORD;
   praise him, you servants of the LORD,

2 you who minister in the house of the LORD,
   in the courts of the house of our God.

    3 Praise the LORD, for the LORD is good;
   sing praise to his name, for that is pleasant.

4 For the LORD has chosen Jacob to be his own,
   Israel to be his treasured possession.

    5 I know that the LORD is great,
   that our Lord is greater than all gods.

6 The LORD does whatever pleases him,
   in the heavens and on the earth,
   in the seas and all their depths.

7 He makes clouds rise from the ends of the earth;
   he sends lightning with the rain
   and brings out the wind from his storehouses.

    8 He struck down the firstborn of Egypt,
   the firstborn of people and animals.

9 He sent his signs and wonders into your midst, Egypt,
   against Pharaoh and all his servants.

10 He struck down many nations
   and killed mighty kings—

11 Sihon king of the Amorites,
   Og king of Bashan,
   and all the kings of Canaan—

12 and he gave their land as an inheritance,
   an inheritance to his people Israel.

    13 Your name, LORD, endures forever,
   your renown, LORD, through all generations.

14 For the LORD will vindicate his people
   and have compassion on his servants.

    15 The idols of the nations are silver and gold,
   made by human hands.

16 They have mouths, but cannot speak,
   eyes, but cannot see.

17 They have ears, but cannot hear,
   nor is there breath in their mouths.

18 Those who make them will be like them,
   and so will all who trust in them.

    19 All you Israelites, praise the LORD;
   house of Aaron, praise the LORD;

20 house of Levi, praise the LORD;
   you who fear him, praise the LORD.

21 Praise be to the LORD from Zion,
   to him who dwells in Jerusalem.

   Praise the LORD.


6. Whatsoever doth please him, etc. This is that immeasurable greatness of the divine being, of which he had just spoken. He not only founded heaven and earth at first, but governs all things according to his power. To own that God made the world, but maintain that he sits idle in heaven, and takes no concern in the management of it, is to cast an impious aspersion upon his power; and yet the idea, absurd as it is, obtains wide currency amongst men. They would not say, perhaps, in so many words, that they believed that God slept in heaven, but in imagining, as they do, that he resigns the reins to chance or fortune, they leave him the mere shadow of a power, such as is not manifested in effects; whereas Scripture teaches us that it is a real practical power, by which he governs the whole world as he does according to his will. The Psalmist expressly asserts every part of the world to be under the divine care, and that nothing takes place by Chance, or without determination. According to a very common opinion, all the power necessary to be assigned to God in the matter, is that of a universal providence, which I do not profess to understand. The distinction here made between the heavens, earth, and waters, denotes a particular governments. The term חפר, chaphets, is emphatical. The Holy Spirit declares that he does whatsoever pleases him. That confused sort of divine government which many talk of, amounts to no more than a certain maintenance of order in the world, without due counsel. No account whatever is made of his will in this way, for will implies counsel and method. Consequently there is a special providence exerted in the government of the various parts of the world, there is no such thing as chance, and what appears most fortuitous, is in reality ordered by his secret wisdom. We are not called to inquire why he wills events which contradict our sense of what his administration should be, but if we would not unsettle the very foundations of religion, we must hold by this as a firm principle, that nothing happens without, the divine will and decree. 161161     “Neantmoins si nous ne voulons arracher tons les rudimens de la vraye religion, ceci doit demeurer ferme,” etc. — Fr. His will may be mysterious, but it is to be regarded with reverence, as the fountain of all justice and rectitude, unquestionably entitled as it is to our supreme consideration. For farther information upon this subject the reader may consult Psalm 115.


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