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66. Psalm 66

1 Shout for joy to God, all the earth!
   
2 Sing the glory of his name;
   make his praise glorious.

3 Say to God, “How awesome are your deeds!
   So great is your power
   that your enemies cringe before you.

4 All the earth bows down to you;
   they sing praise to you,
   they sing the praises of your name.” The Hebrew has Selah (a word of uncertain meaning) here and at the end of verses 7 and 15.

    5 Come and see what God has done,
   his awesome deeds for mankind!

6 He turned the sea into dry land,
   they passed through the waters on foot—
   come, let us rejoice in him.

7 He rules forever by his power,
   his eyes watch the nations—
   let not the rebellious rise up against him.

    8 Praise our God, all peoples,
   let the sound of his praise be heard;

9 he has preserved our lives
   and kept our feet from slipping.

10 For you, God, tested us;
   you refined us like silver.

11 You brought us into prison
   and laid burdens on our backs.

12 You let people ride over our heads;
   we went through fire and water,
   but you brought us to a place of abundance.

    13 I will come to your temple with burnt offerings
   and fulfill my vows to you—

14 vows my lips promised and my mouth spoke
   when I was in trouble.

15 I will sacrifice fat animals to you
   and an offering of rams;
   I will offer bulls and goats.

    16 Come and hear, all you who fear God;
   let me tell you what he has done for me.

17 I cried out to him with my mouth;
   his praise was on my tongue.

18 If I had cherished sin in my heart,
   the Lord would not have listened;

19 but God has surely listened
   and has heard my prayer.

20 Praise be to God,
   who has not rejected my prayer
   or withheld his love from me!


5. Come and see the works of God An indirect censure is here passed upon that almost universal thoughtlessness which leads men to neglect the praises of God. Why is it that they so blindly overlook the operations of his hand, but just because they never direct their attention seriously to them? We need to be aroused upon this subject. The words before us may receive some explanation by referring to a parallel passage, Psalm 46:8. But the great scope of them is this, that the Psalmist would withdraw men from the vain or positively sinful and pernicious pursuits in which they are engaged, and direct their thoughts to the works of God. To this he exhorts them, chiding their backwardness and negligence. The expression, Come and see, intimates that what they blindly overlooked was open to observation; for were it otherwise with the works of God, this language would be inappropriate. He next points out what those works of God are to which he would have our attention directed; in general he would have us look to the method in which God governs the human family. This experimental or practical kind of knowledge, if I might so call it, is that which makes the deepest impression. 473473     “Haec enim experimentalis (ut ita loquar) notitia magis afficit.” — Lat. “Car ceste cognoissance d’experience et de prattique esmeut d’avantage.” — Fr. We find, accordingly, that Paul, (Acts 17:27) after speaking of the power of God in general, brings his subject to bear upon this one particular point, and calls upon us to descend into ourselves if we would discover the proofs of a present God. The last clause of the fifth verse I would not interpret with some as meaning that God was terrible above the children of men — superior to them in majesty — but rather that he is terrible towards them, evincing an extraordinary providence in their defense and preservation, as we have seen noticed, Psalm 40:5. Men need look no further, therefore, than themselves, in order to discover the best grounds for reverencing and fearing God. The Psalmist passes next from the more general point of his providence towards mankind at large, to his special care over his own Church, adverting to what he had done for the redemption of his chosen people. What he states here must be considered as only one illustration of many which he might have touched upon, and as intended to remind God’s people of the infinite variety of benefits with which their first and great deliverance had been followed up and confirmed. This appears obvious from what he adds, there we rejoiced in him It is impossible that the joy of that deliverance could have extended to him or any of the descendants of the ancient Israelites, unless it had partaken the nature of a pledge and illustration of the love of God to the Church generally. Upon that event he showed himself to be the everlasting Savior of his people; so that it proved a common source of joy to all the righteous.


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