iHijj m- i ii Wm PRESENTED TO THE LIBRARY OP PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINfiRY BY fRps. fllcj^andcf Pf oudfit. .H815 COMMENTARY THE BOOK OF PSALMS; IN WHICH THEIR LITERAL AND HISTORICAL SENSE, AS THEY RELATE TO KING DAVID AND THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL, IS ILLUSTRATED ; AND THEIR APPLICATION TO MESSIAH, TO THE CHURCH, AND TO INDIVIDUALS AS MEMBERS THEREOF, IS POINTED out; WITH ▲ VIEW TO RENDER THE USE OF THE PSALTER PLEASINa AND PROFITABLZ TO ALL ORDERS AND DEGREES OP CHRISTIANS. -, BY GEORGE HORNE, D.D., LORD BISHOP OF NORWICH, AND PRESIDENT OP MAGDALEN COLLEGE, OXFORD. TO WHICH IS PREFIXED, AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY, BY THE REV. EDWARD IRVING, MINISTER OF THE CALEDONIAN CHURCH, LONDON. AND A MEMOIR OF THE LIFE OF THE AUTHOR. NEW YORK: ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS, No. 285 BROADWAY. 1854. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. As in political affairs the enlightened Scottish patriot and statesman, iQ order to work upon the people, asked for the songs of a nation, rather than its profound and laborious literature ; and, in ecclesiastical affairs, the poli- tic churchmen of Rome apprehended more danger to their craft and mys- tery, from Luther's spiritual songs, than from all his writings of contro- versial and popular theology ; so, in spiritual affairs, it is to be believed that no book of the sacred canon seizeth such a hold upon the spiritual man, and engendereth in the church so much fruitfulness of goodness and truth, of comfort and joy, as doth the Book of Psalms. We say not that the Psalms are so well fitted as the pure light of the Gospel by John, and Paul's Epistles, which are the refraction of that pure light over the fields of human well-being, to break the iron bone, and bruise the mill- stone heart of the natural man ; but that they are the kindliest medicine for healing his wounds, and the most proper food for nourishing the new life which comes from the death and destruction of the old. For, as the songs and lyrical poems of a nation, which have survived the changes of time by being enshrined in the hearts of a people, contain the true form, and finer essence of its character, and convey the most genial moods of its spirit, whether in seasons of grief or joy, down to the children, and the children's children, perpetuating the strongest vitality of choice spirits, awakened by soul-moving events, and holding, as in a vessel, to the lips of posterity, the collected spirit of venerable antiquity: so the Psalms, which are the songs and odes, and lyrical poems of the people of God, inspired not of v/ine, or festal mirth, of war, or love, but spoken by holy men as they were moved by the HOLY GHOST, contain the words of GOD'S SPIRIT taught to the souls of his servants, when they were ex- ercised with the most intense experiences, whether of conviction, peni- tence, and sorrow : or faith, love, and joy ; and are fit not only to express the same most vital moods of every renewed soul, but also powerful to produce those broad awakenings of spirit, to create those overpowering emotions, and propagate that energy of spiritual life in which they had their birth. Be it observed, moreover, that these Songs of Zion express not only the most remarkable passages which have occurred in the spiritual ex- perience of the most gifted saints, but are the record of the most wonder- ful dispensations of God's providence unto his church : — containing pathetic dirges sung over her deepest calamities, jubilees over her mighty deliverances, songs of sadness for her captivity, and songs of mirth for her prosperity, prophetic announcement of her increase to the end of time, and splendid anticipations of her ultimate glory. Not indeed the exact narrative of the events as they happened, or are to happen, nor the pro IV INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. saic improvement of the same to the minds of men ; but the poetical form and monument of the event, where it is laid up and embalmed in honour- able-wise, after it had been incensed and perfumed with the spiritual odours of the souls of inspired men. And if they contain not the code of the divine law, as it is written in the Books of Moses, and more briefly, yet better written in our Lord's Sermon on the mount, they celebrate the excellency and glory of the Law, its light, life, wisdom, contentment, and blessedness, with the joys of the soul which keepeth it, and the miseries of the soul which keepeth it not. And if they contain not the argument of the simple doctrines, and the detail of the issues of the gospel, to reveal which the word of God became flesh, and dwelt among us : yet now that the key is given, and the door of spiritual life is opened, where do wc find such spiritual treasures as in the Book of Psalms, wherein are re- vealed the depths of the soul's sinfulness, the stoutness of her rebellion against God, the horrors of spiritual desertion, the agonies of contrition, the blessedness of pardon, the joys of restoration, the constancy of faith, and every other variety of Christian experience? And if they contain not the narrative of Messiah's birth, and life, and death ; or the labours of his apostolic servants, and the strugglings of his infant church, as these are written in the books of the New Testament; where, in the whole Scriptures, can we find such declarations of the work of Christ, in its humiliation and its glory, the spiritual agonies of his death, and glorious issues of his resurrectifjn, the wrestling of his kingdom with the powers of darkness, its triumph over the heathen, and the overthrow of all its enemies, until the heads of many lands shall have been wounded, and the people made willing in the day of his power? And where are there such outbursting representations of all the attri- butes of Jehovah, before whom, when he rideth through the heavens, the very heavens seem to rend in twain to give the vision of his going forth, and we seem to see the haste of the universe to do her homage, and to hear the quaking of nature's pillars, the shaking of her foundations, and the horrible outcry of her terror ? And oh ! it is sweet in the midst of these soarings into the third heavens of vision, to feel that you are borne upon the words of a man, not upon the wings of an archangel ; to hear ever and anon the frail but faithful voice of humanity, making her trust under the shadow of His wdngs, and her hiding-place m the secret of His tent ; and singing to Him in faithful strains, '* For as the heaven is high above the earth, so great is his mercy to them that fear him. As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us. Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him." So that, as well by reason of the matter which it contains, as of the form in which it is expressed, the Book of Psalms, take it all in all, may be safely pronounced one of the divinest books in all the Scrip- tures; which hath exercised the hearts and lips of all saints, and become dear in the sight of the church ; which is replenished w^ith the types of all possible spiritual feelings, and suggests the forms of all God-ward emo- tions, and furnishing the choice expressions of all true worship, the utter- ances of all divine praise, the confession of all spiritual humility, with the raptures of all spiritual joy. If now we turn ourselves to consider the manner or style of the Book and to draw it into comparison with the lyrical productions of cuhivated and classical nations, it may well be said, that as the heavens are high above the earth, so are the son^s of Zion high above the noblest strains INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. ^vhich have been sung in any land. For, take out of the lyrical poetry of Greece and Rome, the praises of women, and of wine, the flatteries of men, and idle invocations of the muse and lyre, and what have we left? What dedication of song and music is there to the noble and exalted powers of the human spirit — what to the chaste and honourable relations of human society— what to the excitement of tender emotions towards the widow and the fatherless, the stranger and the oppressed— what to the awful sanctity of law and government, and the practical forms of justice and equity' We know, that in the more ancient time, when men dwelt nearer to God, the lyre of Orpheus was employed to exalt and pacify the soul • that the Pythagorean verse contains the intimations of a deep theol- ogy a divine philosophy and a virtuous life ; that the lyre of Tyrtoeus was used by the wisdom of Lycurgus, for accomplishmg his great work of formino- a peculiar people, a nation of brave and virtuous men ; but in the times'^which we call classical, and with the compositions of which we embue our youth, we find little purity of sentiment, little elevation of soul, no spiritual representations of God, nothing pertaining to heavenly knowl- edcre or holy feeling : but, on the other hand, impurity of hfe, low sensual idelis of God, and the pollution of religion, so often as they touch it. ^ But the Sono-s of Zion are comprehensive as the human soul, and varied as human life ; where no possible state of natural feeling shall not find itself tenderly expressed and divinely treated with appropriate remedies; where no condition of human life shall not find its rebuke or consolation : be- cause they treat not life after the fashion of an age or people, but life m its rudiments, the life of the soul, with the joys and sorrows to which it is amenable, from concourse with the outward necessity of the fallen world Which breadth of application they compass not by the sacrifice of lyrical propriety, or poetical method : for if there be poems strictly lyrical, that is whose spirit and sentiment move congenial with the movements of music, and which, by their very nature, call for the accompaniment of music, these Odes of a people despised as illiterate, are such. For pure pathos and tenderness of heart, for sublime imaginations, for touchmg pic- tures of natural scenery, and genial sympathy with nature's various moods • for patriotism, whether in national weal or national wo, for beau- tiful im'ao-ery, whether derived from the relationship of human life or the forms of ''the created universe, and for the illustration, by their help, oi spiritual conditions: moreover, for those rapid transitions in which the lyrical muse delighteth, her lightsome graces at one lime her deep and full inspiration at another, her exuberance of joy and her lowest falls of ^rief and for every other form of the natural soul, which is wont to be shadowed forth by this kind of composition, we challenge anythiri^g to be produced from the literature of all ages and countries, worthy to be com- pared with what we find even in the English version of the Book ot Psalms • 1 Were the distinction of spiritual from natural life, the dream of mystical enthusiasts, and the theology of the Jews, a cunningly devised f^ble, like the mythologies of Greece and Rome, these few O^^^^^hould be dea.er to the man of true feeling and natural taste, than all which have been derived to us from classical times, though they could be lifted of the. abominations, and cleansed from the incrustation of impurity ^^'^ich ^emcs their most exquisite parts. But into these questions of style n e enter no further, our present aim being higher Paulo ..njora cammvs^ Let us employ the few pages which we have devoted to this Essay, on scmething TI INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. more noble than questions of taste, and more enduring than the gratifies tions of the natural man. These Songs of Zion have always been very dear unto Zion's children and the various churches of the Christian faith, as by one harmonious and universal consent, have adopted the Psalms as the outward form by which they shall express the inward feelings of the Christian life. However much the infinitely varying expositors of Christian doctrine may differ in* the opinions and views which they deduce from the Scripture at large, in this they are agreed, that the effusions of the inspired Psalmist must al- ways be the true and expressive language of the believing soul. An organ of utterance well and rightly attuned to every aspiration, and to every emotion of that soul which hath been quickened from spiritual death, and made alive in Christ Jesus the Lord. The pious ARMINIAN, who resteth content with the infant state of Christ, and seeth no more in the rich treasures of God's word than a free gift to all men, shrinking back with a feeling of dismay from such parts of the sacred volume as favour a system of doctrine suited to the manly state of Christian life, can yet trust himself without dismay or doubt to give back, from his inmost spirit, the sentiments and thoughts which he finds embodied in the Book of Psalms, veiled with no obscurity of speech, and perplexed with no form of controversy. He delighteth to read that "the Lord is loving unto every one, and that his tender mercy governs all his works." His spirit hath its liberty amidst those unlimited declara- tions of the divine beneficence, sung by Zion's King, when he calleth upon all nature's children to take part with him in his song of praise, and in his liberality includeth the lower creatures, and the very forms of inani- mate nature ; gathering the voice of all the earth into one, and joining it in symphony with the hosannas of the unfallen and redeemed spirits which are around the throne of God. And the more enlightened and not less pious CALVINIST, who is not content evermore to dwell in the outer court of the holy temple, but resolveth for his soul's better peace and higher joy, to enter into the holy and most holy place, which is no longer veiled and forbidden, finds in this Book of Psalms, a full declaration of the deepest secrets of his faith, expression for his inmost knowledo-e of the tiuth, and forms for his most profound feelings upon the peculiar, and appropriate, and never-failing love of a covenant God towards his own peculiar people ; and in concert with David, the fluher of a spiritual seed, he doth celebrate the praises of that God, who freely and for his own sake hath loved his people with an everlasting love ; "visiting their trans- gressions with a rod, and their iniquities with stripes, but not suffering his loving-kindness to fail, or his goodness to depart for evermore." And from whatever point between these two extremes of spiritual life (the former the infancy, the latter the mature and perfect manhood) any church hath contemplated the scheme of its doctrine — by whatever name they have thought good to designate themselves, and however bitterly opposed to one another in church government, observance of rites, or administra- tion of sacraments, you still find them with one voice consenting to employ those inspired songs, as well fitted to express the emotions of their spirits, when stirred up to devout and holy aspirations of prayer and praise. The reason why the Psalms have found such constant favour in the sight of the Christian church, and come to constitute a chief portion of every missal and liturgy, and form of worship, public or private, while forms of doctrine and discourse have undergone such manifold changes, ia INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. VU order to rej»resent the changing spirit of the ago, and the diverse condi-. lions of the human mind, is to be found in this — that they address them selves to the simple instinctive feelings of the renewed soul, which are its most constant and permanent part, whereas, the forms of doctrine and discourse address themselves to the spiritual understanding, which dif- fers in ages and countries according to the degree of spiritual illumina- tion, and the energy of spiritual life. For as those instincts of our nature, which put themselves forth in infancy and early life, towards our parents, and our kindred, and our friends, and derive thence the nourishment upon which they live, are far more constant, than those opinions which we afterwards form concerning society, civil polity, and the world in general ; and, as those impressions of place, and scene, and incident, which come in upon us in our early years, are not only more constant in their endu- rance, but more uniform in their effect upon the various minds which are submitted to them, than any which are afterwards made by objects better fitted to affect us both permanently and powerfully — so we reckon that there is an infancy of the spiritual man, which, with all its instincts, wanders abroad over the word of God, to receive the impressions thereof, and grow upon their wholesome variety, into a maturity of spiritual reason, when it becomes desirous to combine and arrange into conceptions, and systems of conceptions, the manifoldness and variety of those simple im- pressions which it hath obtained. During those days of its spiritual infancy, the soul rejoiceth as a little child at the breast of its mother; feeds upon the word of God with a constant relish ; delights in the views and prospects which open upon every side, and glories in its heavenly birth-right and royal kindred ; and considereth with wonder the kingdom of which it is become a denizen, its origin, its miraculous progress and everlasting glory: and as the infant life opens itself to the sun of right- eousness, it delights in its activity, and exhales on all around the odour of its breathing joy. To this season of the spiritual mind, the Psalms come most opportunely as its natural food. We say not that they quicken the life, to which no- thing is so appropriate as the words of our Lord recorded in the Gospels, but being quickened, they nourish up the life to manhood, and when its manly age is come, prepare it for the strong meat which is to be found in the writings of the prophets and the apostles. But ever afterwards the souls of believers recur to these Psalms as the home of their childhood, where they came to know the loving-kindness of their heavenly Father, the fatness of his house, and the full river of his goodness, his pastoral carefulness, his sure defence, and his eye slumbereth not, nor sleepeth, with every other simple representation of divine things, to the simple af- fections of the renewed soul. Therefore are these Psalms to the Chris- tian, what the love of parents and the sweet affections of home, and the clinging memory of infant scenes, and the generous love of country, are to men of every rank and order, and employment ; of every kindred, and tongue, and nation. This principle, which binds these Psalms with cords of love to the renewed soul, and the right use and application of theni to the bringing up of spiritual children, will be more clearly manifested, if, from the varieties of Christian experience, we select those great leading features, which are common to all, and show how fitly they are expressed in the Book of Psalms, with how much beauty and tenderness of feeling with how much richness of allusion to the ancient history of the church and with whatever other accompaniments which can make them sweet tc 6 Vlll INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. the present perusal of the soul, easy and delightful to it in its reiolloctive and reflective mood. Thereby we shall give, as it were, a fit spiritual in- troduction to the excellent Commentary of the good Bishop Horne, whose book is full of the particulars of such spiritual apphcation. Without dispute or controversy upon minor points ofdifference, the church of the first-born whose names are written in heaven, meet upon the com- mon ground of a fallen nature. Once they had supposed themselves up- right before God, strong in natural integrity, possessing an undoubted claim to the final approbation of a righteous judge. But it was in the days of their ignorance that they thus conceived of their own worth ; and now that the rays of divine light and truth have penetrated the darkness in which their souls were shrouded, they see an end of that perfection which was heretofore their boast. The breadth of the divine command- ment is revealed to them, and being sorely pressed with an ever present sense of their defilement, they afflict their souls together, falling prostrate before the thrice Holy Majesty, who is of purer eyes than to behold ini- quity ; and confess with the royal penitent, " Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me." Whatever point of faith or doctrine any one of Zion's children may seem to be deficient in, if he be but a babe of Christ, able to feed only upon the nourishment of babes, and rejecting the food of riper years, yet shall he have to come to the knowledge of the plagues of his own heart, and he moved to spread forth his hands in supplication towards the temple of the Lord, and tr say, " 1 acknowledge my transgression, and my sin is ever before me." The universal Church afflicteth her soul under the abiding sense of the loss of her original beauty, and under a deep feeling of her present misery, she deploreth her bondage to the powers of darkness and the God of this world ; and her children mingle their tears together by the waters of their captivity, and wail because of the oppression of their mother, and they cry out'of the depths of their desolation, " Let the sighing of the prison- ers come before thee, and according to the greatness of thy power preserve those that are appointed unto death." " Save us, O Lord, by thy name, judge us by thy strength, for strangers are risen up against us, and op- pressors seek after our souls." Oh, how do the true mourners with one accord come unto the Lord weeping and with supplication, " that their captivity may be turned, and salvation brought them out of Zion !" How do they beseech the Lord, " giving him no rest till he make Jacob to re- joice, and Israel to be glad ; till he do good in his good pleasure unto Zion, and build up again the walls of Jerusalem !" And when the Lord hath hearkened unto the voice of the cry of his people, and turned their captivity, delivering them from the strong enemy that held them, bringing them forth also into a large place, and subduing under them the foes that were too mighty for them ; how do they with one accord magnify the Lord, and extol his name together, and with one harmonious voice, cele- brate the praise of him who, strong to save them, hath trodden upon the lion and the adder, the young lion and the dragon hath trampled under foot. "Oh Lord of Hosts, who is a strong God like unto thee? Thou hast a mighty arm, strong is thy hand, and high is thy right hand. Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces, as one that was slain. Justice and judg- ment are the habitation of thy throne, mercy and truth shall go before thy face." The true Israel of God, the spiritual worshippers under the gos- pel dispensation, beinq- rescued from this worse than Egyptian bondage, by the strong hand and outstretched arm of the Goi of their salvation, com INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. IX memorate in many a song sung in Zion of old, the interposition of divine love and grace, and oft looking back upCiU .he raging sea, which was fain to yield them a safe passage ; they proceed onward in their course through the weary wilderness, to the abode of their rest, and the promised city of their habitation: and they had hoped they were safe from the power of their cruel adversary, and that their foot was safely planted upon their own land. But now they find, to the travail of their souls, that though they be no longer the willing slaves of Satan, but partakers of the glorious lib- erty wherewith Christ hath set his people free, they must use the arms of freemen to retain their newly acquired liberty, march militant, and build the wall of their city in troublous times, and abide unto the death the faithful soldiers of the Captain of their salvation. " Each one had said in his prosperity, I shall never be moved, thou, Lord, of thy favour hast made my mountain to stand strong." But ere long, each one for himself exclaims, " Oh, God, the heathen are come into thine inheritance, thy holy temple have they defiled, and made Jerusalem a heap of stones." — " Send thine hand from above, rid me and deliver me from the hand of strange children, whose mouth speaketh vanity, and their right hand is a right hand of falsehood." And oh, how do Zion's children cry out ever and anon together, in pain to be delivered from the remaining and continually reviving power of that sin which cleaveth to them with all the force of nature, and is only kept in check and brought under subjection, by the more powerful operation of the spirit of grace which dwelleth in them ! And they continually cry out with the king of Israel, " Create in me a clean heart, oh God, and renew a right spirit within me: purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean : wash me and I shall be whiter than snow." The experience of the Lord's saints is ever one. As face answereth to face in a glass, so the heart of man to man, whether it be the heart in its unrenewed or renewed state, its workings will not be found diverse, but the same, — moods of the mind common to every child of the second as of the first Adam. Whatever is wrkten in Moses and the Prophets, and the Psalms, concerning the former church, must be fulfilled in the experience of every saint of the present church ; and there is no spiritual song, which they do not appropriate and make their own. In them it is ful- filled. For it is but the spirit of Christ speaking at various times; of whom no word is mortal, but every word immortal. And it is their con- stant work to search out the personal application of the Spirit, and appro- priate it to themselves : and through every trial and stage of their spiritual life, they say, with the Psalmist, " Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path ; open thou mine eyes that I may discern wondrous things out of thy law." Ah, how they meditate thereon day and night! And truly can every child of David's kingdom say, " Lord, how I love thy law ; it is my meditation all the day ; mine eyes prevent the night- watches that I might meditate on thy word." And the anxious and diligent travail of Zion's children in the study of their Master's word, is repaid by the sweet and pleasant contemplations which they are continually de- riving thence, for the refreshment and consolation of their spirit. And the language of their soul is ever, " How sweet are thy words to my taste, yea sweeter than honey to my mouth ! The law of thy mouth is better to me than thousands of gold and silver." But the saints of God mourn not for themselves alone, nor do they re- joice only for themselves. Nor is it for their own solitary rescue from the jaws of the devouring lion, that they offer up strong cries unto the Lord ; X INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. nor for their single salvation, that they sing the praises of redeeming love. They are not altogether absorbed with the variety of their own spiritual conflicts, or swallowed up in the sense of their own manifold trials and temptacions ; nor for themselves alone do they study the precious word of God, or dig for its hid treasure with the avarice of the man who knovveth not the riches of communicated wealth. The utterances of individua, feeling, of whatever kind, form but a part, perhaps the lesser part, of the. spiritual exercises of the man of God. If he fears with a salutary fear lest it be said of him at any time, " The vineyard of others hath he kept but his own vineyard hath he not kept:" he hath yet a heart to mourr with those that mourn, and to rejoice with those that rejoice. He is » member of the mystical body of his Lord, whereof when any membei suffers, all the members suffer with it ; when any member is honoured, all the members rejoice. Therefore, it is a first instinct of the spiritual man, to have a deep and abiding sympathy, with every brother of human kind, upon whose renewed spirit he discovers the impress of his Master's image: and he says, "All my delight is in the saints that are upon the earth and upon such as excel in virtue." Unlike the natural man, who at his best estate is built up in selfish feeling or unholy emulation, the man of God looks, not only at his own things, but at the things of others. With the love that is peculiar to the true saint, he desires the well-being of his brother, and rejoiceth over it even as if it were his own. How doth he continually make supplication for all saints, that their faith and love may abound unto the glory of God: How earnestly doth he desire their increase of grace, and that they may be filled with all the knowledge of God ! and he ever prays for the peace of Jerusalem, saying evermore, " Peace be within thy walls, and prosperity within thy palaces. For my brethren and companions' sakes, I will now say, peace be with thee. Be- cause of the house of our God, I will seek thy good. Do good, O Lord, unto those that be good: and strengthen the upright in heart." In Zion's troubles his spirit is troubled, and he hangeth his harp upon the willows, refusmg the song of mirth, and preferring the cause of captive Zion, before his own chief joy. And he prayeth on her behalf continually, " The Lord hear thee in the day of trouble, the name of the God of Jacob defend thee. Send thee help from the sanctuary, and strengthen thee out of Zion. Remember all thy offerings, and accept all thy burnt sacrifices. Grant thee according to thy heart, and fulfil all thy counsel." Now there hath grown up in these lean years, a miserable notion, that the Psalms are not so appropriate for expressing the communion of the Christian church, for the reason that they contain allusions to places and events which are of Jewish, and not of Christian association. And some have gone so far as to weed out all those venerable associations, by intro- ducing modern names of places in their stead. Why do they not upon the same principle weed out the Jewish allusions of the Four Gospels and the Epistles ? But it is as poor in taste and wrong in feeling, as it is daring in the thought, and bold in the execution. In doing so, they con- sult for the homely feeling of the natural, not of the spiritual man, because the home of the spiritual was in Jerusalem, and Mount Zion and the temple of God, with which the soul connects her anticipations, no less than her recollections, being taught that the new Jerusalem is to come down from heaven like a bride decked for her bridegroom, and that those who are sealed are to stand upon Mount Zion with the Lamb of God. Every name in the Psalms, whether of person or of place, hath a mystical INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. Xl meaning- given to it in the Christian Scriptures. Jerusalem is not the Jerusalem that was, nor is Babylon the Babylon that was • and evea David hath lost his personality in the everlasting- David. Judah and Israel mean not now the cast-away root, but the branch that hath been grafted in. Besides, we hold at present only one cycle of the revolution of God's purpose ; tlie Jews shall yet be brought in, and Jerusalem be- come glorious, and the dwelling of God be again with men. Why then should any part of everlasting Scripture be made the property of an ao-e or place, which suppose every Christian nation to do, and where were the community of the Christian church ! It is heady innovation and leanness of spirit which hath brought this to pass, for no end that we can see, save to gratify a national vanity, and connect religion in a stranoe league with patriotism ; thereby breaking the continuity of God's dis- pensation, and destroying all lyrical propriety. As if you would render the Odes of Horace into English, with English names of men and places, in order to make them more edifying to the English reader. But more need not be said upon this blunder in piety, which will disappear when the lean years are over and gone. If we take not our forms for express- ing spiritual patriotism, from those inspired songs through which, in the old time, the Church breathed the spirit of her high privilege and separate community, where shall we obtain them of like unction and equal author- ity, in the experience of times during which no prophet hath arisen in the holy city? For though the Church hath been as sorely tried under the Gentile, as under the Jewish dispensation, it hath not pleased the Lord to bestow upon any of her priests or people, the garment of inspiration, with which to clothe in spiritual songs the depths of her sorrow, or the exultation of her joy. And we are shut up to the necessity either of responding to the voice of the Spirit in the ancient Psalmist, or to re-echo .he poetical effusions of uninspired men, — either to address the living God in the language of his own word, or in the language of some ver- nacular poet, whose taste and forms of thinking, Avhose forms of feehng, yea, and forms of opinion, we must make mediators between our soul and the ear of God, — which is a great evil to be avoided, whenever it can be avoided. For Christians must be forms of the everlasting and common Spirit, not mannerists of mortal and individual men. But to return. Not only do the personal instincts, and the social in- stincts of the child of God, find in these Psalms the milk and honey of their existence, a cradle and a home where to wax and grow, and a mul- tifarious world of imagery to awaken and entertain its various senses ; but also those instincts of piety, and compassion, and longing charity, which it hath towards the enemies of Christ, not indeed as his enemies, but as the hopeful prodigals of the human family, which he loveth in common with the rest, and would, in like manner, save. The true disci pies of the compassionate and tender-hearted Friend of sinners, adopt the language of Israel's King, when he pours out his soul in anxious long- ings for the salvation of the wicked, deprecating their stout-hearted rebel- lion against the King of kings, and exhorting to be timely wise, lest they fail of their final and everlasting rest. The new man in Christ Jesus, the regenerate, adopted child of the second Adam, who, under the sweet and enlightening influence of many newly awakened feelings, perceives himself to be linked in new and constraining bonds of sympathy \yith every kindred soul in Christ, is, nevertheless, not so absorbed in the joy- '"ul consciousness of those newly formed relations into which he hath been Xll INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. introduced by grace, as to forget that he is still united by many dear and tender ties to his brethren in the flesh. His original descent from the first Adam, he does not cease to recollect ; and the conviction that, in vir- tue of this descent, he was by nature a child of wrath even as others, stim- ulates his zeal in behalf of those who appear to be less highly favoured than himself, and will not suffer his love towards them to fail. If, tc the inexpressible peace and consolation of his soul, he finds himself to be now under the royal law of liberty, he grieveth to behold his kindred, his friends, his neighbours, the world at large, still oppressed with the yoke of bondage, heedless of their degradation, and careless to take up their purchased redemption. If the law of God be precious to him, and he discover in it a beauty, and excellence, and a goodness ever commend- ing it to the love and admiration of his enlightened spirit, how doth he weep and mourn on account of those by whom it is ignorantly set at nought and utterly despised ! He adopteth the language of Israel's king, " Horror hath taken hold upon me, because of the wicked that forsake thy law. Rivers of waters run down mine eyes, because they keep not thy law. Thou shalt break them with the rod of iron : Thou shalt dash .hem in pieces like a potter's vessel. Beware now, therefore, O ye kings; be instructed, ye judges of the earth. Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the right way, when his wrath is kindled but a little." There are many passages in the Psalms which seem to breathe an op- posite spirit of hostility and revenge upon the personal enemies of the Psalmist, and to heap upon their heads all the curses which are .written in the book of the law of God. Concerning this, and many other points, it is well stated in the preface to this Commentary, whereof we would not repeat any thing, but add, (or the further explication of this matter, that though the gospel law be "charity out of a pure heart," this charity doth manifest itself under various forms, some pleasant, but most of them pain- ful to the natural man. Rebuke is a form of charity; and censure, and excommunication, yea, and total abandonment for a while. Truth is ai- \A^ays a form of charity ; or, to speak more properly, truth is the soul of which charity is but the beautiful, graceful, and lovely member. Charity, therefore, is not to be known by soft words, and fair speeches and gentle actions, v/hich are oftener the forms of policy and courtesy; but must be sought in the principle of the heart, out of which all our words, speeches, and actions come forth. It is love to God producing love to all his fami-. ly, by which we are moved ; then is it charity, be its form commendation or blame, mildness or zeal, the soft and gentle mopds of mercy, or the stern inflictions of justice, or the hasty strokes of hot and fiery indigna- tion: and wisdom must determine the form which is proper to the occa- sion. Is not God a God of love? And how diversified are the moods of his providence even to his own beloved children ! Christ brought mercy to the earth, and in the gospel builded for her an ark, in which she might swim over the deluge of cruelty which covereth the earth. Yet how terrible is that gospel in its revelation to the wicked, how unsparing of the world, how cruel to the flesh, how contemptuous of good-natured formality, how awfully vindictive against hypocrisy ; taking every one of its children, and swearing him upon the altar to be an enemy, till death, against the world, the devil and the flesh ! Against the various forms then of the devil, the world and the flesh, we are sworn, and, in or- der to their destruction, must make war with the two-edged sword which proceedeth out of the mouth of the word of God. Of these strong actings INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. xiH of the soul against the vvickednes? of the wicked, the Psah-nist's languao-e of cursing is but the breath. The world is the heathen whom he prays God to break in pieces. And for ever let the Christian exercise himself with that warfare, else he shall never know the fellowship of the Redeem- er's sufferings. It is the capital principle of all sound doctrine. That the world is to be destroyed. It is the deep-rooted source of all heretical doc- trine, That the world is to be mended. And to keep the one in mind, the other out of mind, it is most necessary that no mean portion of the devotion of a Christian church should be to express the desires of their soul on his behalf Charity being unviolated; yea, charity being edified; for until the sceptre of the world is broken in pieces, charity can find no room, but is fain to flee into the wilderness. Out of the same charity, therefore, ought the Christian to adopt these expressions of his hatred to the form, and fruits of wickedness, that he expresseth his longing desire that the souls of the wicked should be set free and saved. Such is the food, exercise, and entertainment which the child of God receives in this precious portion of his word, to all those instincts of the renewed spirit which regard self-preservation, the communion of saints and the salvation of the world. But beyond these objects which dwell upon the earth, he is carried upward to hold communion with the God and Fa- ther of his spirit, from whom he hath obtained a new birth, and by whom this new principle is kept alive in its uncongenial habitation. Many are the conflicts of Zion's children in their way to the heavenly city, and great the travail of their souls, under the variety and might of which they need appropriate encouragement from Him who is greater than all their ene- mies, and in whom is their trust. Their own individual salvation, their own peculiar trials, their own besetting enemies, Zion's well-being, and the share of all her sorrows till her warfare is ended; the world's salva- tion, in which they must travail till the number of the elect is accomplished, and, as priests unto God, offer up continual supplication : how shall they prosper in such an arduous work, without constant communion and fellow- ship with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ? For which com- munion with the Godhead, these divine songs of Israel furnish the most sublime, the most pathetic, and the most varied forms. Here the perfec- tions of Jehovah are revealed to all his saints, whether in his strength as the God of Hosts, or in his righteousness, as before whom the heavens are not clean; or in his intelligence as the pure light in w-hom is no dark- ness at all ; or in his all prevading presence in the highest heavens, and the deepest hell, and the uttermost parts of the earth, and the dwelling place of darkness ; or as the Father of all life, and the Creator of all wealth, and the liberal Provider for the wants of every thing that liveth, as the Glory of the hosts above, and the Terror of the hosts beneath ; the Eternal, Unchangeable, without variableness or the shadow of turning ; who of old laid the foundations of the earth, and the heavens are the work of his hands ; which, w^hen they wax old, he shall fold up as a vesture, and cover them with a new garment of creation, while he remaineth the same and his years have no end. Oh, my soul! that thou couldst tell how thou hast been enlarged into the liberty of divine thought, and borne upon the wings of contemplation beyond the bounds of time and space, wrapt into the mysteries of the divine life, and with a strong heart and serene countenance, brought back to fight and to finish the warfiire, till thy change come, by the glorious representations of Jehovah and his acts, con- tained in the Book of Psalms, which truly are the fiery chariot, the vehi- XIV INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. cle sent from God to carry the saints into the third heavens, that they may breathe an imperial air, and return lightened of their troubles, and quick- ened in their spirit, to finish the heavy work which God hath given them to do. Of this, indeed, no one will doubt, be he spiritual or carnal, that these Psalms contain such representations of the great and mighty God, as mind of man never conceived, or pen of man indited ; but more mar- vellous is it still to find in these Psalms, which looked afar off at the day of Christ, all the perfections and peculiar attributes of Messiah, which form to his redeemed people the endless theme of praise, issuing from the heart, and returning into the heart again, like the waters which the firmament draweth from the earth, and droppeth again upon the earth in dews and refreshing showers. These are set forth in away most noble, most true, and most full of feeling. In such a wonderful way is the man Christ Jesus represented in these Psalms, uttering his soul unto his Father, unto his people, unto his persecutors, or unto his own bosom, that the chil- dren are able ro take part in them, and find to their inexpressible joy that he is one with them in mind, in heart, in deed and in very word. And now, let us take free scope to set forth this, the most soul-quieting, and soul-delighting virtue of these songs of Zion : that they contain the sym- phonies of Messiah and his children, of Immanuel and his people. But first, like the bride who loveth to look upon the face of the bride- groom, and to hear of all his excellence, that she may with the more glad- ness give herself into his bosom, and rejoice in his embrace ; the church doth well love and much delight to hear it said of him by Jehovah, " I will declare the decree. Thou art mine only Son ; this day have I begot- ten thee." " Thou wast set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was ;" '"from everlasting to everlasting thou art God,'' the same who did appoint the foundation of the earth, establish the clouds above, and strengthen the fountains of the deep ; of old thou hast laid the foundations of the earth, and the heavens are the work of thy hand." And how her glory rejoiceth to hear, that for the love of her that he might wash her in his blood, and present her without spot or Avrinkle in the pres- ence of his Father, he became a partaker of flesh and blood, and was formed m fashion as a man, yea, took upon him the form of a servant; that by toil, and servitude, and suffering, and death, he might purchase her love. Making request unto his Father, thus — " Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not, but a body hast thou prepared me; mine ears hast thou bored. Lo, I come to do thy will, O God!" Remembering how he ful- filled all righteousness for her sake, and redeemed her from the curse, by .becoming a curse for her, she thus sings her unbounded love, " And he bowed the heavens and came down, darkness was under his feet. He made darkness his secret place, his pavilion round about him w^as dark waters and thick clouds of the skies. He took me, he drew me out of many waters. Pie delivered me from my strong enemy, and from them which hated me." And looking on him whom she caused to be pierced, whose beauty was wasted by death, and the joy of his soul drunk up by the fierce arrows of his Father, she mourns and we-eps, and her eyes distil with tears, at the thought of those stripes by which she was healed ; and by the deepest of all sympathies, the sufferings of Messiah became the sufferings of the church and she crieth out, with her suffering Lord, '' My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me! O my God, I cry in the day-time, but thou INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XV hearest me not, and in the night season, and am not silent ! 1 am poured out like water, all my bones are out of joint. My strength is dried up like a potsherd, my tongue cleaveth to my jaws ; thou hast brought me to the dust of death." But the symphonies which the Church singcth with Christ out of this book are not all a fellowship of suffering. For not only by the shedding of his blood did Messiah make propitiation for her sins, and destroy her writing of condemnation, and put a new song in her mouth — "Who is ho that condennneth," but also for her hath he purchased the raiment of an everlasting righteousness, and the beauties of holiness, and the spirit of a perfect obedience, which, by previous justifying faith, she claimeth as her own, and over which she singeth other symphonies of gladness : " 1 have kept the ways of the Lord, and have not wickedly departed from my God. For all his judgments were before me, and I did not put away his statutes from me. I was upright before him, and 1 kept myself from mine iniquity. Therefore hath the Lord recompensed me according to my righteous dealing, according to the cleanness of my hands in his eye- sight." And in the greatness of her loyal love, how many a song sing- et?i the daughter of Zion, touching the things that belong unto the King, when her tongue is as the pen of a ready writer : " Thou art fairer than the children of men ; grace is poured upon thy lips, therefore God hath blessed thee for ever. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits, who redeemeth thy life from destruction, and crowneth thee with loving kindness, and tender mercies." And with what a brave pulse of glory doth her heart exult toward the accomplishment of Messiah's king^ dom, and the fulness of his power ; when all lands shall call upon hia^ name, and all nations shall bow before him, and there shall be given to him of Sheba's gold, and his name shall endure for ever, and last like the sun, and men shall be blest in him, and all nations shall call him blessed ! Then his people sing in high symphony with their triumphant King, and all-conquering Lord, in whom each one feeleth himself to be a conqueror and a king, seated on his throne, and sharing in his royal sovereignty, " Thou hast made me the head of the heathen ; a people whom I have not known shall serve me, as soon as they hear of me they shall obey me. The strangers shall submit themselves unto me." For what are the conquests of David, or the greater conquests of David's everlasting Son, over the kingdoms of the earth, but a shadow of that in- ward conquest which Christ worketh over his enemies within our soul, which is more valuable than the earth, and to conquer which is a higher achievement than to subdue the kingdoms of the earth! The history of the Church is such a shadow of soul-history, as creation is of the omnip- otent Spirit that made it. The soul is a thing for the Son of God to con- quer, the world is for Caesar, or the son of Philip. The soul, the bound- less world of the soul to recover, to reconcile its w^arring powers, to breathe the life of God over its chaotic wastes — this is a work whereof all outward works are only fit to be the emblems ; a w^ork, in the execution of which every spiritual man feels the going forth of his Saviour con- quering and to conquer. And he hath every outward action of holy writ realized inwardly, every groan of the conquered, every struggle of the conqueror, his toil, his sweat, his wounds, his death, his resurrection, his second going forth in the plenitude of the Spirit, his unconquered resolu- tion, his long-abiding labour, the turning of the tide of battle, his sword upon the neck of his enemies, the shout of victory, the treading of the c XV\ INTRODUCTORl ESSAY. nations in the wine-press of his fury, his shivering- them with his iron seep* tre h'ke a potsherd, his driving them with death, and the grave, and him that had the power of death, into the bottomless pit. His reign of peace, its joy, full contentment, and perfect assurance, what are they all, but let- ters, words, and similitudes, whereby the believer may better understand, and better express the spiritual work which is going on with his own soul, by the casting down of imaginations, and every high thing that exaltefh itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ ? If a company of musical and me- lodious souls feel in unison with the sounds that flow from chords touched by the hands of a master musician, and a company of rich and poetical souls feel in harmony, while the drama of a master poet is rehearsed with true action in their ears, shall not the souls of spiritual men be in har- mony, while perusing the outward action, whereof they are the subject? Be in harmony 1 aye, in truest harmony. For they are the end of it all, the meaning of it all. In them it hath its reality, and till realized in them, It is an incomprehensible world to words and images, a hieroglyphic with no interpretation ; a musical instrument, with no hand cunning enough to bring out its infinite streams of liquid music. Therefore, by no mys- tery but reality, though it be deep spiritual reality, deeper fir than nature's penetration, they sing, " He hath ascended up on high, leading captivity captive, and receiving gifts for us, even for the rebellious, that the Lord our God may dwell among us. Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in. Who is the King of glory? The Lord, strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle. Lift up your heads, O ye gates, even lift up ye ever- lasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in. Who is this King of glory? The Lord of Hosts, he is the King of glory." And in spirit they see the heavens to have opened their glorious gates, and behold the desire of their soul seated at the right hand of God, and they hear the welcome of Jehovah to the Son of man, " Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool, and thy people willing in the day of th}^ power, when the rod of thy strength shall be sent out of Zion." But the sympathy of the church with her glorified Head endeth not with his exakation to the right hand of the Highest, but from the new office to which she heareth him appointed — " Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek," she doth derive an assurance, a blessed confidence, that he standeth ever on high, to revive the drooping faith of his people. He is passed within the veil, to ofler the blood of his own sacrifice, and intercede for the sins of his people, whose hope has passed in along with him, and anchored within the veil. And when their souls languish even to the gates of death, and the adversary presseth sore upon them, that they mi2"ht fall, and for a moment darkness covertth their soul, and they say, Will the Lord cast off for ever, and will he be favourable no more? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? Doth his promise fail for evermore? Hath God forgotten to be gracious? Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies? Straightway, they remember their infirmity, and call to mind the years of the right hand of the Most High ; and are as- sured that Messiah ever liveth to make intercession for them, and that if any man sin, he has an advocate with the Most High, even Christ Jesus, the righteous. They remember the man of sorrows, who was acquainted with grief, and can be touched with the feeling of their infirmities, having been in all points tempted like as they are, yet without sin. And taking INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XVU heart, they exc.aim, " The Lord is the strength of ray life. Of whom shall I be afraid? Though a host should encamp against mo, my heart shall not fear. Though war should rise against me, in this will I "be con- fident, the Lord is my rock and my fortress, my strength in whom I will trust, my buckler, the horn also of my salvation, and my high tower." And thus the children of God are exercised between the troubles of life, and the consolations of faith, between a body of sin and death, and a life which is born of God, and hidden with Christ in God. The principali- ties and powers of darkness would fain overwhelm the light and life of their soul, but they know that the powers of the flesh cannot oppress the powers of the Spirit. They see the body of Christ, which was rescued by the power of the Spirit from the jaws of the grave, standing in the presence of God on high. And they are assured thereby that the holy seed, born within them of the same Spirit, will, in like manner, quicken their mortal flesh, and at length re-demand and rescue from the grave the bod\% that it may live and reign with Christ for evermore. At length cometh the end of all trial and experiences, for which there is an abundant preparation made in this storehouse of spiritual feeling. Messiah's spiritual seed, the heirs of many exceeding great and precious promises, who know that to them an abundant entrance shall be minis- tered into the everlasting kingdom of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, anticipate with hope and joy, not with fear and dismay, the time when their earthly house of this tabernacle being dissolved, they shall enter into the building of God, the house not made with hands, eternal in the heav- ens. Many a dark and gloomy valley have they passed through, since the time at which they find all their faces Zionward, and became pilgrims in the strait and narrow way which leadeth unto life. The last sad and dismal vale through which they have to pass, before their earthly pil- grimage be accomplished, is the valley of the shadow of death, which so many appalling shapes and forms of terror hover around. The deep shades of an eternal night seem evermore to rest upon it. Dark and por- tentous clouds hang round about it, and shut it in, impervious to mortal sight. Nature looks upon the gloom, and attempts in vain to discover the limits of the inhospitable region. Knowledge is baffled, and discovery is set at nought. Visions of terror trouble the eye which comes near it. Unearthly sounds of horror strike upon his ear who approacheth it. New and mysterious emotions seize upon the appalled spirit, which feels no capacity of dying, nor symptoms of death, while the tabernacle is all crumbling into dust, and she shrinks back aghast, and asks herself how she is to fare alone, with no one to cheer or accompany her. And though nature would fain nerve herself to it, she feels how utterly weak she is, how profitless strength, wealth, knowledge, friendship, and what else she boasted in. " My heart is sore pained within rae, and the terrors of death are fallen upon me. Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me, and an horrible dread hath overwhelmed my soul." None can wrestle with death but He who overcame death, and those to whom he giveth power to overcome that king of terrors ; whom he hath taught with the eye of faith to peruse the dark vale, and pierce its gloom, and know the bright and happy region which to them lies revealed within, though to others it be the mouth of the yawning pit. And as the man of God walks onwards through the valley, he says unto his God, " I will fear no evil, for thou art with me, thy rod and thy staff they comfort me. My heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth, my flesh also shall rest in hope. For thou wilt XVIU INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption." Now the man of God looks to the end of the race he has heen patiently running, and beholds the goal at hand. He looks upon the recompense of reward which is awaiting him, the prize of his high calling in Christ Jesus. The last enemy that he has to overcome is death. The king of terrors is to be met face to face. He cannot avoid the combat if he would, and he would not if he could. How often, in the travail of his soul, hath he exclaimed, "Wo is me that I am constrained to dwell in Meshech, and to have my habitation amongst the tents of Kedar ? O that I had the wings of a dove, for then would I flee away and be at rest !" How often hath he said, " In thy presence is fulness of joy, and at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore ! As for me, I shall behold thy face in right- eousness. When I awake, I shall be satisfied with thy likeness." And now that his conflicts are about to cease for ever, and his sorrows to have an end, he lifteth up his head, because the day of his redemption draweth nigh. In vision, his spirit, already winged to take its everlasting flight, discerneth the throne of God encircled by a thousand times ten thousand sons of light. In vision, he mingles with the glorious throng. He tunes his harp to the heavenly theme, and sings the song of Moses and the Lamb. Sprinkled with the blood of sprinkling, which speaketh better things than the blood of Abel, he ascends in spirit " to the Mount Zion, the city of the living God, making one of the innumerable company of angels, and general assembly and church of the first-born, whose names are written in heaven. Ah ! how doth it grieve his soul to wake once again out of the trance of bliss, to open his eyes once again upon the dull, cold, blank realities of life. The syren world hath no longer charms for him. He hath proved the falseness of her beauty : he hath seen the glory that excelleth, and hath no eye to look upon fictitious brightness. He hath seen the King in his beauty, and the land that is afar off: how shall he endure to soil his feet again with the base mould of the degenerate earth, to breathe any longer the polluted atmosphere of a world poisoned with sin, and full of the voices of sorrow ! In this tabernacle he groans, being burdened. And when the grisly king shakes against him his terrible dart, he openeth his bosom to receive the stroke of grace, saying the while, " O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?" And looking up to heaven, he takes his departure, saying, " Into thy hand I commend my spirit ; for thou hast redeemed me, O Lord God of truth !" It has been our purpose to show, by the above sketch and commentary of Christian life, that the multiphed experiences of the soul, the various states of mind through which the regenerate children of the second Adam pass, from their first entrance upon the life of faith, to the period when that life is swallowed up in light, are all exemplified in the Book of Psalms. So that the believer cannot be in any condition, whether of joy or sorrow, but he will find in this book most appropriate forms of utterance, ready prepared for the expression of his feelings, of Avhatever kind. We have only brought to light a portion of these feelings, tracing their genuine and expressive utterance, as it were with the Psalmist's pen. But it would not be difficult to show, that in the Psalms, the ex- pressions of spiritual feeling are infinitely varied, and correspond to every emotion, and to every aspiration of the soul, quickened to th-e life of faith and holiness, yet groaning still under the partial bondage of a fleshly na- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. xix ture, exposed to the assaults of innumerable enemies, and compassed upon every side with temptation and infirmity. So that this Book is to be regarded as a spiritual world, with which the new-born spirit may con- verse, and acquire the knowledge and use of its faculties, as well as the knowledge and use of those objects which are revealed therein. And hence it hath a charm it can never loose, being associated with the simple and true affections of the spirit, and with the joy and satisfaction which attend the revelation of any new faculty within us. And this charm must grow with our growth, and strengthen with our strength ; for accordino- as we increase in spiritual strength, we are able to make more of those feelings our own ; and the more we become acquainted with dialectic methods, the more we discern their difficulty and uncertainty, and desire to return to the simple impressions made upon the soul by the words of the Holy Spirit. And we reckon also that the more we advance in divine life, the simpler our discourse will become, and the more delivered from the forms of human learning, into the forms of the Spirit's teaching, until in the end, if by reason of extreme age or languor, we can say no more, we will say, as is reported of the Apostle John, " Little children, love one another :" and when speech is denied us to utter anything, we will occupy our spiritual musings with some simple forms of divine truth, as the learned Baxter is reported to have said upon his death-bed, that he had been meditating all night long upon the great wisdom of the Lord's prayer and the ten commandments. So that we very much question if these Psalms, whii^h have the charm of having unloosed to us the secrets of our own spiritual selves, may not, like a true and f:iithful friend, con- tinue to add to their first loveliness and value unto the end. For, as was said in the beginning, and hath been amply illustrated, the part of our being which they take hold upon, is notour opinions or our reasonings, or any of our peculiarities, but those universal feelings of the spiritual man, which being constant in all, we have denominated spiritual instincts ; in the abiding of which is the abiding of spiritual life, and upon the experi- ences of which all spiritual knowledge is built up. While executing this sketch of spiritual experience, in order to exhibit the proper character and true value of the Book of Psalms, several ques- tions arose to our mind besides those we touched in passing, from the consideration of which we withheld ourselves till we should have com- pleted the main purpose of our essay, but which cannot be omitted with- out leaving it, in a good measure hypothetical, and to which therefore we now address ourselves. The first is, how far we are justified in applying to Christian life in general those feelings and expressions of feeling, which, in the first in- stance, pertained to individuals, and in general to one individual — David, the son of Jesse. To this we answer, that spiritual men are the only proper judges of that which is appropriate to the expression of their feel- ings, who, from the beginning of the church in the days of Moses, even until now, have gathered up, and preserved, and appropriated these mor- sels of divine instruction, as they fell from tlie lips of the men who spake them; and that not in the Jewish church, but in the Christian church, and these not in latter days, but in primitive days, and the days of the Fathers, to an extent and depth of spirituality unknown in our times. The universal church of Christ hath therefore given its witness, that these Psahns are not made for one age, but for all ages ; not for one place, but for all places; not for one soul, but for all souls; time, place. XX ^ INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. and person, being only so far present in them, as to associate them with that generation to which they were first given, not to dissociate them from any other generation of spiritual children, which, in after ages, was to be born to the same Spirit by the seed of the word, which liveth and abideth for ever. The temptations of David's soul, and its experiences under them, are as much the property of every saint, and of every age of the church, as are the discourses, remonstrances, parables, and instructions of our Lord, to his untoward generation — as are the arguments, and demonstrations, and Epistles of Paul to the early churches which he planted or watered. They are all equally personal, (for the Son of God himself was a person) and the personal runneth like a thread of humanity through the heavenly hues of their discourse. They are all equally secular, and the conditions of the age are the frame-work upon which the tissue of the web is woven. Which presence of the personal, and intermixture of tlie temporary, in- stead of taking from the force and power of the revelations, do only apply them with the more force and power to the personality of every other saint and the 'peculiarity of every other age. For, had the revelations not breathed of the man who spoke them, and told of the condition of the age to which they were given, the former would have been an automaton, and the latter a looker upon the wonders which the automaton spoke ; neither the one nor the other feeling any interest or concern in the mar- vellous display of divine art. But God wished both prophet and people to take heed, and to stand in awe of fearful issues, if they heeded not ; therefore, he moulded man to his purpose, and cast him into the condi tions which suited his ends, and still he was a man, acted on by course of nature, and manifest to the people as a fellow-man, through whom, indeed, they heard soul-stirring truths uttered with ear-piercing words, and, when need was, sustained by attention-riveting works ; but still suit ed to their case, and thrust in their way, and spoken to their feelings, and pressed on their consciences, and riveted there by the most mighty sanc- tions of life and death, present and eternal. But they are not the less spoken to us. No, not the less, on that account, spoken to us. Yet, that we might have no shadow of excuse, nor shield of self-delusion, the Lord appointed a race of prophets, or ministers, to abide until his coming, who should be gifted of his Spirit, to apply the universal and unchangeable^ in all his revelation, to the condition of every time, place, and individual; and so far from abandoning the peculiarity of the revelation, to use that no less than the other, wherever it will accommodate itself to the case ia hand, and to bring it home with tenfold force, by the application of the parable, " Thou, even thou thyself, art the very man," — this, even this, is the very season — this, even this in which we live, is the very condition, to Vv'hich this revelation was given. We do admire how this automaton-inspiration can stand a thought, when it is the very rule of heaven's communications, that in every word of God there should be a humanity, as well as a divinity present. And as THE WORD which was in the beginning took not voice, nor intel- ligence, but flesh, human flesh, and the fulness of the Godhead was mani- fested bodily ; so, when that same Word came unto the Fathers by the prophets, and discovered a part of his fulness, it was through their flesh or their humanity, that is, through their present conditions of spirit, and mind, and body, and outward estate, that he discovered himself to the flesh or the humanity of the people, that is, their present conditions of INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XXI spirit, and body, and oi.tward estate. Whence, if it be said that Moses was Ciirist under the veil, and if Paul says of himself, that not he but Christ lived in him, then it may be said, that David was the humiliation and the exaltation of the church under the veil. Now, as the apostle, in writing to the Hebrews concerning the priest- hood of Christ, calls upon them to consider Melchizcdek, his solitary majesty, and singular condition, and remarkable honour; so call we upoli the church to consider David, the son of Jesse, his unexampled accumula- tion of gifts, his wonderful variety of conditions, his spiritual riches and his spiritual desolation, and the multifarious contingencies of his life ; with his faculty, his unrivalled faculty of expressing the emotions of his soul, under all the days of brightness and days of darkness which passed over his head. For thereby shall the church understand how this the law giver of her devotion was prepared by God for the ^vork which he accom- plished, and how it hath happened that one man should have brought forth that vast variety of experience, in which every soul rejoiceth to find itself reflected. For Moses was not more prepared by all the wisdom and learning of Egypt, for becoming a fit vehicle to carry from God unto the people an institution of law, than David was prepared, by the experiences of his life between the sheepcot and the throne, for becoming a fit vehicle to carry from God unto his church, an institution of spiritual experience, and devotional feeling. And we the more gladly enter upon the education and gifts of this saint, the great revealer of the moods of the renewed soul, that we may shame or silence the Rabshekas who rail upon this great type of Mes- siah's humiliation and exaltation, the man after God's own heart. We call upon the church, and all reasonable men, to consider this man David, how well furnished he was by nature, and educated by providence, for the great honour to which the Christian Church hath preferred him. There never was a specimen of manhood, so rich and ennobled as David, the son of Jesse, whom other saints haply may have equalled in single features of his character, but such a combination of manly, heroic quali- ties, such a flush of generous godlike excellencies, hath never yet been seen embodied in a single man. His Psalms, to speak as a man, do place him in the highest rank of lyrical poets, as they set him above all the in- spired writers of the Old Testament, — equalling in sublimity the flights of Isaiah himself, and revealing the cloudy mystery of Ezekiel; but in love of countr}?", and gloryings in its heavenly patronage, surpassing them all. And where are there such expressions of the varied conditions into which human nature is cast by the accidents of Providence, such delinea- tions of deep affliction, and inconsolable anguish, and anon such joy, sucli rapture, such revelry of emotion, in the worship of the living God I Such invocations to all nature, animate and inanimate, such summonings of the hidden powers of harmony, and of the breathing instruments of melody! Single hymns of this poet would have conferred immortality upon any mortal, and borne down his name as one of the most favoured, of the sons of men. But it is not the writings of the man, which strike us with such won- der, as the actions and events of his wonderful history. He was a hero without a peer, bold in battle, and generous in victory ; by distress or by triumph, never overcome. Though hunted like a wild beast among the mountains, and forsaken like a pelican in the wilderness, by the country whose arm'es he hal delivered from disgrace, and by the monarch whost XXll INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. daughter he had won — whose son he had bound to him with cords of brotherly love, and whose own soul he was wont to charm with the •sacredness of his minstrelsy — he never indulged malice or revenge against his unnatural enemies. Twice, at the peril of his life, he brought his blood -hunter within his power, and twice he spared him, and would not be persuaded to injure a hair upon his head, — who, when he fell in his high places, was lamented over by David, with the bitterness of a son, and his death avenged upon the sacrilegious man who had lifted his sword against the Lord's anointed. In friendship and love, and also in domestic affection, he was not less notable than in heroical endowments, and in piety towards God he was most remarkable of all. He had to flee from his bed-chamber in the dead of night, his friendly meetings had to be concerted upon the perilous edge of captivity and death — his food he had to seek at the risk of sacrilege — for a refuge from death, to cast himself upon the people of Gath — to counterfeit idiocy, and become the laughing- stock of his enemies. And who shall tell of his hidings in the cave of Adul- iam, and of his wanderings in the wilderness of Ziph ; in the weariness of which he had to stand before his armed enemy with all his host, and by the generosity of his deeds, and the affectionate language which flowed from his lips, to melt into childlike weeping the obdurate spirit of king Saul, which had the nerve to evoke the spirits of the dead ! King David was a man extreme in all his excellencies — a man of the highest strain, whether for counsel, for expression, or for action, in peace and in war, in exile and on the throne. That such a warm and ebullient spirit should have given way before the tide of its affections, we wonder not. We rather wonder that, tried by such extremes, his mighty spirit should not often have burst control, and enacted right forward tiie con- queror, the avenger, and the destroyer. But God, who anointed him from his childhood, had given him store of the best natural and inspired gifts, which preserved him from sinking under the long delay of his pron}ised crown, and kept him from contracting any of the craft or cruelty ■of a hunted, persecuted man. And adversity did but bring out the splen- dour of his character, which might have slumbered like the fire in the flint, or the precious metal in the dull and earthy ore. But to conceive aright of the gracefulness and strength of King David's character, we must draw him into comparison with men similarly con- ditioned, and then shall we see how vain the world is to cope with him. Conceive a man who had saved his country, and clothed himself with gracefulness and renown in the sight of all the people, by the chivalry of his deeds won for himself intermarriage with the royal line, and by unction of the Lord's prophet been set apart to the throne itself; such a -one conceive driven with fury from house and hold, and, through tedious years, deserted of every stay but heaven, with no soothing sympathies of quiet life, harassed for ever between famine and the edge of the sword, and kept in savage holds and deserts : and tell us, in the annals of men, of one so disappointed, so bereaved and straitened, maintaining not forti- tude alone, but sweet composure and a heavenly frame of soul, inditing praise to no aveng-ing deity, and couching songs in no revengeful mood according with his outcast and unsocial life ; but inditing praises to the God of mercy, and songs which soar into the third heavens of the soul: not, indeed, without the burst of sorrow, and the complaint of solitariness, and prophetic warnings to his blood-thirsty foes, but ever closing in sweet pieludes of good to come, and desire of present contentment. Find us INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XXIU such a one in the annals of men, and we yield the argument of this con- troversy. Men there have been, driven before the wrath of kings, to wander outlaws and exiles, whose musings and actings have been recorded to us in the minstrelsy of our native land. Draw these songs of the exile into comparison with the Psaims of David, and know the spirit of the man after God's own heart ; the stern defiance of the one, with the tran- quil acquiescence of the other ; the deep despair of the one, with the rooted trust of the other ; the vindictive imprecations of the one, with the tender regret and forgiveness of the other. Show us an outlaw who never spoiled the country which had forsaken him, nor turned his hand in self-defence or revenge upon his persecutors, who used the vigour of his arm only against the enemies of his country, yea, lifted up his arm in behalf of that mother, which had cast her son, crowned with salvation, away from her bosom, and held him at a distance from her love, and raised the rest of her family to hunt him to the death ; — in the defence of that thankless, unnatural, mother-country, find us such a repudiated son liftin.cr up his arm, and spending its vigour, in smiting and utterly dis- comfiting her enemies, whose spoils he kept not to enrich himself and his ruthless followers, but dispensed to comfort her and her happier children. Find us among the Themistocles and Coriolani, and Cromwells, and Napoleons of the earth such a man, and we will yield the argument of this controversy which we maintain for the peerless son of Jesse. But we fear that not such another man is to be found in the recorded annals of men. Though he rose from the peasantry to fill the throne, and enlarge the borders of his native land, he gave himself neither to ambition nor to glory ; though more basely treated than the sons of men, he gave not place to despondency or revenge ; though of the highest genius in poetry, he gave it not license to sing his own deeds, nor to depict loose and licentious life, nor to ennoble any worldly sentiment or attachment of the human heart, however virtuous and honourable, but constrained it to sing the praises of God, and the victories of the right hand of the Lord of Hosts, and his admirable works, which are of old from everlasting. And he hath dressed out religion in such a rich and beautiful garment of divine poesy as beseemeth her majesty, in which, being arrayed, she can stand up before the eyes even of her enemies, in more royal state, than any personification of love, or glor}'-, or pleasure, to which highly gifted mortals have devoted their genius. The force of his character was vast, and the scope of his life was im- mense. His harp was full-stringed, and every angel of joy and of sor- row swept over the chords as he past ; but the melody always breathed of heaven. And such oceans of afTection lay within his breast, as could not always slumber in their calmness. For the hearts of a hundred men strove and struggled together within the narrow continent of his single heart: and will the scornful men have no sympathy for one so condi- tioned, but scorn him, because he ruled not with constant quietness, the unruly host of divers natures which dwelt within his single soul? Of self-command surely he will not be held deficient, who endured Saul's javelin to be so often launched at him, while the people without were ready to hail him king ; who endured all bodily hardships, and taunts of his enemies, when revenge was in his hand ; and ruled his desperate band like a company of saints, and restrained them from their country s^ injury. But that he should not be able to enact all characters without a fault, the simple shepherd, the conquering hero, and the romantic lover ; D XXIV INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. the perfect friend, the innocent outlaw, and the royal monarch ; the poet, the propliet, and the regenerator of the church ; and, withal, the man^ the man of vast soul, who played not these parts by turns, but was the original of thetn all, and wholly present in them all. Oh! that he should have fulfilled this high priesthood of humanity, this universal ministry of manhood without an error, were more than human. With the defence of his backslidings, which he hath himself more keenly scrutinized, more clearly decerned against, and more bitterly lamented than any of his censors, we do not charge ourselves, because they were, in a manner, necessary, that he might be the full-orbed man which was needed to utter eveiy form of spiritual feeling: but if, when of these acts he became con- vinced, he be found less true to God, and to righteousness ; indisposed to repeiitance and sorrow, and anguish, exculpatory of himself, stout-hearted in his courses, a formalist in his penitence, or in any way less worthy of a spiritual man in those than in the rest of his mfinite moods, then, verily, strike him from the canon, and let his Psalms beconne monkish legends, or what you please. But if these penitential Psalms discover the soul's deepest hell of agony, and lay bare the iron ribs of misery, whereon the very lieart dissolvelh ; and if they, expressing the same in words which melt the soul that conceiveth, and bow the head that uttereth them, then, we say, let us keep these records of the Psalmist's grief and despondency, as the most precious of his utterances, and sure to be needed in the case of every man who essayeth to live a spiritual life. For, though the self- satislied moralist, and the diligent Pharisee, and all that pigmy breed of purists, who make unto themselves a small and puny theory of life, and please their meagre souls with the idea of keeping it thoroughly, smiting upon their thigh, and protesting by their unsullied honour and inviolate truth, and playing other tricks of selfsufficienc}^, will little understand v.-hat we are about to say, we will nevertheless, for truth's sake, utter it; that, until a man, however pure, honest, and honourable he may have thought himself, and been thought by others, discovereth himself to be utterly fallen, defiled, and sinful in the sight of God, a worm of the earth and no man, his soul cleaving to the dust, and bearing about with it a body of sin and death ; and until, for expressions of his utter woithless- ness, he seek those Psalms in which the Psalnsist describes the abasement of his soul, yea, and can make them his own, that man hath not known the beginnings of the spiritual life within the soul : for (let him that readeth understand) a man must break up before there is any hope of him ; he must be contrite and broken in spirit, before the Lord will dwell with him. Of all the delusions with which Satan lulls man into sweet security, this of our completeness and integrity is the most fatal. While we dwell in the idea of our rectitude, our unsullied purity, our inflexible honesty, our truth, our moral worth, and think that we implement any, the lowest, of God's commandments, (but they are all equally high) we are like the hard and baked earth, whose surface haply some sward of greenness may cover, but which will not wave with the rich and fruitful harvest, until you bury that first crop of nature under the share of the plough, and turn up the rough black mould to the heat of the sun, and the genial action of the air, and, the ancient roots being scorched up, sow it anew with pre- cious seed, and wait upon the same with diligent husbandry. Where this soul-tillage hath taken place and the integrity of selfisness is broken up, and the poisonous weeds of selfishness are cut down, and our shallow INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XX and insufficient righteousness trodden under foot; when the old man hath broken into pieces, and we feel ourselves murderers, adulterers, thieves, liars, in the sight of God, then shall we come to use, and thank God that we have at hand, the penitential Psalms of David ; the confes- sions, the groanings, the languishings of the desolate king of Israel. It booteth not that we have not committed the acts, we wanted power, we wanted opportunity, w^e wanted means ; but ah ! we wanted not will. It was in our heart, out of which proceed murders, adulteries, thefts, (also witness. It hath been all the while in our heart, and we knew it not. It was rooted there, and we fostered it. Ay, and it will cause us bitter groans, ere it will leave the place of its roots. But to return from these rebukes of the scorners, to the instruction of the Christian Church upon the -fitness of David to be their Psalmist.— Why were such oceans of feeling poured into David's soul, such true and graceful utterance of poetry infused into his lips, and such skill of music seated in his right hand ? Such oceans of feeling did God infuse into his soul, and such utterance of poetry he placed between his lips, and such skilful music he seated in his right hand, in order that he might conceive forms of feeling for all saints, and create an everlasting Psalmody, and hand down an'^organ for expressing the melody of the renewed soul. The Lord did not intend that his church should be without a rule for ut- tering its gladness and its glory, its lamentation and its grief; and to bring such a rule and institute into being, he raised up his servant DavTd, as formerly he raised up Moses to give to the Church an in- stitute of law. And to that end he led him the round of all human con- ditions, that he might catch the spirit proper to every one, and utter it ac- cording to truth ; he allowed him not to curtail his being by treading the round of one function, but by every variety of functions, he cultivated his whole being, and filled his soul with w'isdom and feeling. He found him objects for every affection, that the affection might not slumber and die. He brought him up in the sheep-pastures, that the groundwork of his character might be laid amongst the simple and universal forms of feeling. He took him to the camp, and made him a conqueror, that he might^'be filled with nobleness of soul and ideas of glory. He placed hirn in the palace, that he might be filled with ideas of majesty arid sovereign might. He carried him to the wilderness, and placed him in solitude's, that his soul might dwell alone in the sublime conceptions of God, and his mighty works ; and he kept him there for long years, with only one step between him and death, that he might be well schooled to trust and depend upon the Providence of God. And in none of these various conditions and avocations of life, did he take away from him his Holy Spirit. His trials were but the tuning of the instrument with which the Spirit might express the various melodies w^hich he designed to utter by him for the consolation and edification of spiritual men. It was the education of the man most appropriate for the divine vocation of the man. John the Baptist being to be used for rough work, was trained in the rough desert; Paul being to be used for contentions and learned work, was'trained at Gamaliel's feet; Daniel being to be used for judgment and revelation, was trained in the wisdom of the east ; Joseph bemg to be used as a providence to Egypt and his Father's house, was trained in the hardest school of ptovidence ; and every one hath been disciplined by the providence of God, as well as furnished in the fountains of his being, for that particular work for which the Spirit of God designed him. I here- XXVI INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. fore, David had that brilliant galaxy of natural gifts, that rich and varied education, in order to fit him for executing the high office to which he was called by the Spirit, of giving to the church those universal forms of spiritual feeling, whereof we have 'been endeavouring to set forth the ex- cellent applications. And, though we neither excuse his acts of wicked- ness, nor impute them to the temptation of God, who cannot be tempted of evil, neither tempteth any man, we will also add, that by his Loss the church has gained ; and that out of the evil of his ways, much good hath been made to arise ; and that if he had not passed through every valley of humiliation, and stumbled upon the dark mountains, we should not have had a language for the souls of the penitent, or an expression for the dark troubles which compass the soul, that feareth to be deserted by its God. So much for the fitness of the Psalmist to Have been made the organ of spiritual feeling unto the Church. There is another question which remains for resolution, before bring- ing this Essay to a close. In how far the good Bishop Home and others, are justified in referring so much of these Psalms to the Messiah. In maintaining for these Psalms the high place which the universal voice of the Christian church hath assigned to them, there is a tendency to pass into the extreme of applying them wholly to Christ, and finding some experience of Christ's soal in every experience of the Psalmist's soul. Now, while it is true, that of all these Psalms are still applicable to the saints and to the church, bevause the saints and the church are still compassed about with the same fleshly nature, and worldly dispositions, liable to the same backslidings, idolatries, and oppositions as heretofore, none of them which confess transgression, and lament over indwelling sin, are at any time applicable unto Christ, who suffered indeed as David, and all his seed have sufl^ered from the plottings of the world, and the enmity of the devil, and was in all points tempted as they are, — yet with- out sin, without sliding back, without opposing himself to his Father, without yielding to the temptation ; wherefore, it is little short of blas- phemy to apply unto the spotless and blameless Saviour, any or all of those spiritual experiences, any or all of those deep self-accusations, any or all of those entreaties for forgiveness which compose so large a portion of the Psalms of David, and the spiritual utterances of David's seed. Surely no spiritual man in these times would apply to Christ his personal experiences of sin and sorrow for sin. No more can the Psalmist's be applied unto Christ, without confounding the workings of the first Adam with the workings of the second Adam, and destroying all those distinc- tions between good and evil, which it is the end of revelation to define and demonstrate. The workings of the second Adam, by which we become con- vinced of sin, and desirous of holiness, separate from the world, and hated of it, united to God, and beloved of him, are in us as in David, all derived from Christ, and will apply to Christ's own experience in the flesh. For the word of God manifested in the Son of Mary, is the same word of God which came by the Spirit unto the prophets, and which is applied by the Spirit unto us who believe, Avho are only members of Christ, suffering and enjoying with our living and life giving Head. And, therefore, we may well apply to him, what by his Spirit is revealed in us. But that other part within us which holdeth of the first Adam, and which lusteth against the Spirit, loveth the world, and with all its instincts warreth against God, whose evil deeds a Christian, if he speak truth, must constantly confess, and seek grace to overcome ; — to apply any of the foul deeds, or wicked INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XXvH experiences thereof unto Christ, is a wonderful blindness which hath come over certain holy men in the church, from their eagerness to find Christ every where in these consecrated songs. And yet the path to this error is open, and very easily fallen upon. For in those Psalms which have been applied in the New Testament unto Christ, it is found difficult, if not impossible, to separate the Psalmist's personal experience from that of Christ, or to find how, without much violence, they can be wholly appropriate to Messiah. Now, with as little straining of interpretation, they judge that another and another, and at length all may be applied to Christ, in a typical, or in a real signification. But this is to err from ignorance of the prophetic Scriptures. Except the prophecies of Daniel, and the prophecies of the Apocalypse, the other prophecies are always of a mixed character, belonging partly to the times, and partly surpassing the conditions of the times, and occasionally glan- cing through to the very end of time. So that in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the other prophets, even in our Lord's prophecies of his second com- ing, and the Apostles' constant reference thereto, you cannot by any en- deavour make a clear separation between that which was then fulfilled, or hath since been fulfilled, and that which still standeth over to be ful- filled. The reason of which doubtless is explained by our Lord, that the times "and the seasons, the Father hath kept in his own power, so that even the Son himself was not permitted to reveal them. And Peter saith, that the prophets inquired diligently, but could not discover what and what manner of things the Spirit which was in them did signify. And I doubt not that the Apostles might themselves be as ignorant of the time of the second coming of Christ, as the prophets were of his first coming. Which taken together, is an illustration of this great law w^hich may be gathered from the very face of the prophetic writings, That they arose by the suggestion of some condition of the church, present in the days of the prophets, as the particular case, but passing beyond this in time, and pass- ing beyond it in aggravation of every circumstance, they give, as it were, a consecutive glance of all the like cases, and kindred passages in the his- tory of the church, and bring out the general law of God's providence and grace in the present, and in all the future parallel cases ; — yet with such mark of difl!erent times interspersed as may be suffiicient, by a skilful comparison w^ith the exact and historical prophecies of Daniel and the Revelations, to draw the attention of the wise to their coming, and suffice to the convictions of the unwise when they are past. Of this great law of prophetic writing, the confusion of David and Messiah in the Psalms referred to, are only one instance. David's prophecies of Messiah which are personal, arose by suggestion of the Spirit, from his own fersonal ex- periences, and include it. His prophecies of Messiah, which are royal and kingly, arose out of his kingly experience, and the two persons are interwoven with one another in such a manner as not to be separable, just as in the other prophecies, the first, and second, and third events to which they have reference, are, in like manner, interwoven. Which so far from being an evil, is a great beauty in the Psalms ; so far from being an inconvenience, is a great advantage to those who un- derstand aright. In connecting David with the Messiah, it connects the church and every particular saint who adopts David's feelings with Mes- siah, the children with their parents, the subjects with their king ; so that we cannot sing his praise or his triumphs, but we must take ourselves in as a part, and be embraced in the very praises of our great Head, and XXViii INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. are not permitted to separate ourselves from him ; but at once are we constrained to worship the objective Saviour, who is at the right hand of God ; and the subjective Saviour, who is in us ; the objective Saviour who humbled himself to the cross, and the subjective Saviour who humbled himself to behold and redeem his servant; the objective Saviour who as- cended up on high, leading captivity captive, and the subjective Saviour who in us hath triumphed over death, and raised us to newness of liJis, who liveth with us and is seated in the throne of our hearts. Which happy blending of our spiritual nature, suffering or enjoying with Christ suffering or enjoying, we should have lost, had we been able to separate between David and Christ in those Psalms which have a reference to Christ. For at one time we should have sung objectively of Christ, and at another subjectively of ourselves, as represented in David, and so lost the intermarriage of the object with the subject, which is the true propa- gation of religion in the soul ; — a loss this which the Christians are be- ginning to experience in those modern Hymms which are coming into use, and those metrical versions which have the boldness to paraphrase the Psalms, and new-model them to the present times, (a most daring in- novation upon a boolc of Scripture). Therefore, while Ave reject the puerile conceit, and most mischievous dogma which would make every word of these Psalms to be applicable to Christ, we feel greatly indebted to any commentator, who, preserving sound principles of interpretation, can find the Saviour present in the Psalms, which is to give not only more sacredness and spirituality to them, but to increase that happy blend- ing of subjective and objective religion, which is the best condition for true and spiritual worship. And if the commentary of Bishop Home be more valuable on one account than another, it is for this very reason, that his strong spiritual senses have been able to discern and point out the presence of Christ in many Psalms, where the reader had not per- ceived it before. In doing which, he hath not strained the sense of the passage, nor generalized and refined upon the person and character of Christ, but simply exercised that spiritual sense which was strong in him to perceive and to adore his Lord. And now that we are brought to speak of this commentary of Bishop Home, we would, before delivering our opinion of it, with which we shall conclude, beg it to be understood, that we have no such idea in our mind, as that any thing we can say should commend a book which hath commended itself to Christians ever since the time of its publication; and that we have had no such aim or intention before us in this Essay. But in a Series of Select Christian Author.-;, which should present to the Chris- tian world the spirit of Christian divinity in its most practical and profit- able form, we felt that it would have been a great blank indeed, if we did not offer some work which should contain an enlightened and spiritual exposition of the Gospel as it is written in the Book of Psalms ; for what are the Psalms but the poetical lyrical form of the Gospel 1 And \vhat work could we put into our Series so worthy of a place, and so fit to fill the blank, as the Commentary of Bishop Home, from which the souls of the pious have derived so much edification? It is a book of a most orthodox and evangelical odour, of great learning though not displayed, of a sufficient knowledge and of a pure classical taste, by which the whole man may be furnished to every good word and work; his soul elevated, his mind filled, his heart purified and refined ; his knowledge enlarged, his faith quickened, his new obedience enlarged ; but above all, his love INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. XXIX and affections drawn out and fixed upon the blessed Saviour and Re- deemer ot" his soul. With a too frequent reference to the Messiah he hath been charged, but this is the charge of those but half-enlightened in spiritual truth, and far short of the marlc of Christian doctrine, and which will of itself be forgot- ten, (as indeed it is already in a good measure forgotten) when they shall have risen into the comprehension of a more spiritual and enlarged theol- ogy, and the divines of the Church shal^ have constructed out of the ruins, the noble shafts, and columns, and massive remains of former systems of theology, another building, which may represent the glory of divine truth to the outward eye of these present times, which differ widely from the times in which those former buildings were erected. If, instead of ma- king collections of Hymns, many of them disgusting both to taste and feel- ing, and all of them beneath the mark of divine Psalmody: if, instead of making other editions of the Book of Psalms with improvements; if, in- stead of multiplying paraphrases and translations, the churches would re- quire of their ministers (what heretofore the ministers of their own accord were wont to do,) to 'preface upon the Psalms, or set forth their spiritual significations to the people, their prophetic anticipations, and their rich unction of heavenly poesy — that would be to do for the people every Sab- bath, whrt: Bishop Home hath done for the Church in this excellent book; then, from our old metrical versions of the Psalms, however bald, and especially from our Scottish version because of its very baldness, that is its want of what they call poetic diction, (but the simplest, truest diction is the most poetical,) we would anticipate infinitely more benefit to the spiritual life of the saints, and the conviction of the ungodl)^, than if you were to congregate a whole sanhedrim of poets, (as that name goes at present,) and requiring of them to work up the remnant of their wits into Psahns, and hymns, and spiritual songs. But there be a few poets of the ancient seed still extant in the land, and of these there are some who have shown themselves masters in the simple stanza of the old song, and who add thereto the faith and feeling of revealed religion,* to whom we would recommend it as an object worthy of their muse, to give to us an improved metrical version of the Psalms, whose improvement should consist in not sacrificing the true expression of the original to mere poetical language, but in a close adherence to the words of the original, even a more close condensation of them than in the prose version, of which condensation our Scottish version contains many admirable examples. But to return to the good Bishop Home. We know of no Commen- tary upon the Book of Psalms, more likely to be influential in awakening the natural heart to a due sense of their real signification, than that which he hath gathered from all sources, both of his own learning and experi- ence, and those of others, and combined together in this brief but suffi- cient Treatise. He was eminently qualified to perform the task which he had undertaken to execute. His spiritual elucidations, and deeply affect- ing applications, must approve themselves to every feeling and unpreju- diced heart; to every mind which is not altogether dead and callous to the words of spiritual truth; to every ear which is not deaf as the adder to the sweet and pleasant voice of the charmer. Here the man of polished taste will meet with nothing to discompose his nicest associations of intel- lectual refinement with religion, but will find himself addressed in the * We may only name Montgomery, Coleridge, and Wordsworth. ZXK INTRODUCTORY ESSAY. ano-uage of the schools with much beauty of style and harmony of die- ion. Good taste in the widest and fullest acceptation of the term, is a never-failing characteristic of the pious and classical Author of this Com mentary. Himself a high dignitary in the Church of England, and the president of one of the colleges of a learned university, our author is at once upon a level with his most critical and his most dignified readers. We cannot therefore but rejoice, that a Christian Bishop should be found consecrating his pen to the sacred cause of spiritual truth, and presenting its sane and salutary lessons to the religious votaries of rank, who love an outward dignity in the church as in the world. But the truly pious of all ranks will here find a food well suited to their spiritual taste, a nourishment proper to their growth in knowledge and in grace, many a rich and precious cordial for the support of their fainting spirits, many a sweet physician-like application of the balm that is in Gilead, and of the leaves which are for the healing of the nations. And if the man of criti- cal taste and dignified associations will never be shocked by vulgarity of style and homeliness of diction, but rather attracted by the grace and beauty of the discourse ; so also will the Christian, whose enlarged spirit hath been set free to soar far beyond the narrow confines of polemi- cal theology, never find himself aggrieved by the strait narrow moulds of a mind, or the angular points of controversial bigotry. Every senti- ment in this exposition he will find free of that sickening leaven which leaveneth many a loaf of wholesome food. Finally, we may venture to assert, that believers of all churches and denominations will be able to peruse, with satisfaction and delight, this spiritual exposition of the Book of Psalms, and that whilst they read they will find themselves identified after a new and delightful manner, with the inspired son of Jesse: above all, if they drink deep into the spirit of this Commentary, will they find themselves linked to the spiritual David by a thousand minute and tender ties, whose existence they may not hitherto have perceived, or of which they may at least have been but faintly conscious. For every line breathes of the Messiah, and every sentiment leads to him. In every thought the spiritual David hath a share, who is here, what in all Christian works he should be, the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, the first and the last of the Author's desire and delight. R I. London^ May, 1825 MEMOIR RIGHT REVEREND GEORGE HORNE, D.D LORD BISHOP OF NORWICH. This exemplary prelate was the son of the reverend Samuel Home, M. A. refX'ji of Brede, in Sussex, and of Otham, in Kent, in the last of which livings he was succeeded, in 1768, by his son William Home, M. A. formerly demy of Mag-daleu College, Oxford. The Bishop was born at Otham, and baptized in the parish church there, November 1, 1730. His early education was conducted by his worthy father, and next by the reverend Deodatus Bye, master of Maidstone grammar school, who observed, at his admission, that " he was fitter to go from school than to come to it." In March 1745-6, he was admitted at University College, Oxford, having been pre- viously chosen to a scholarship from Maidstone school ; and, in October 1749, he took his degree of bachelor of arts. The year following, he was elected to the fellowship of Magdalen College, which is appropriated to a. native of the county of Kent. He was a very laborious student, and he had an elegant taste in Greek, Latin, and En- glish poetry, of which he gave many admirable specimens, while he was no more than undergraduate in the university. His constant aim, however, was to render the acqui- sition of polite literature subservient to the study of theology and the illustration of the sacred writings. In the language of the early companion of his literary pursuits, and who became his chaplain and biographer, " he raised his thoughts from the poets and orators of Greece and Rome, to the contemplation of the great Creator's wisdom, in his word and in his works."* While at University College he became enamoured of the Hebrew language, which he studied with close application, and this brought him acquainted with the writings of the learned John Hutchinson, whose whole life was devoted to the great object of deducing from the Mosaic scriptures the principles of true philosophy. In 1751, Mr. Home manifested his attachment to this system, which was at that time exceedingly unpopular in our seats of learning, by publishing without his name, a tract entitled, " The Theology and Philosophy in Cicero's Somnium Scipionis explained ; or a brief attempt to demonstrate, that the Newtonian system is perfectly agreeable to the notions of the wisest ancients ; and that mathematical principles are the only sure ones." The chief merit of this pamphlet lies in its wit, the aim of it being to expose the received philosophy as no other than a revival of what was maintained ages ago by Cicero and the Stoics. In June 1752, Mr. Home took his degree of master of arts, and about the same time he engaged in a controversy, through the medium of the Gentleman's IMagazine, on the subject of the Cherubim, which he, in common with the followers of Hufchin- eon, held to be symbolical of the Trinity. The letters of our author were signed In- genius; but the publisher of the magazine, after suffering the discussion to commence in that work, put a stop to it, by decUning to insert the reply wiiich Mr. Horne drew up in defence of the doctrine he espoused, thus exercising an unwarrantable disposition over the privilege of inquiry, and the freedom of the press. The year following, Mr. * Dedication to the Rev. WiUiam Jones' Sermon " On the Natural History of the Earth and Iti Minerals." 8vo. 1787. 4 MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. Home published a masterly pamphlet, with this title, " M fair, candid, and impartial state of the case between Sir Isaac Newton and Mr. Hutchinson : In which is shown, how far a system of physics is capable of mathematical demonstration : how far Sir Isaac's, as such a system, has that demonstration ; and, consequently, what regard Mr. Hutchinson's claim may deserve to have paid to it." Of this luminous and closely reasoned production, which was never answered, a new edition appeared in 1795. In the year 1754, our author gave to the world, though anonymously, an ironical piece with this curious title, " Spicilegium Shuckfordianum, or a nosegay for the critics ; being some choice flowers of modern theology and criticism, gathered out of Dr. Shuck- ford's* supplemental discourse on the creation and fall of man, not forgetting Dr. Gar- net'st Vatikra." But religious controversy and philosophical pursuits were far from narrowing the mind and abating the cheerfulness of this amiable man ; for at this period we find him corresponding with Mr. Berkeley, son of the excellent bishop of Cloyne, in a strain of playful humour and fervent piety, of which the following letter is in admirable specimen. Mag. Coll. Oxon. May 10, 1755. My dearest George, It was with the greatest pleasure that I set my eyes on your hand-writing, and with no less do I now take up the pen to have some conversation with you upon paper, which is very sweet and comfortable when we are prevented from having it face to face. Without this, the hurry about us, and constant succession of fresh objects, insensibly deface the image of absent friends in our hearts, (such is our weakness and frailty) in spite of all our endeavours to the contrar}\ How lamentably would this be the case with regard to our best friend, our absent Lord and Master, were it not for those letters full of love, the Holy Scriptures, which come directed to every soul, though so few take the trouble to open the seals and read them. As he has been pleased (blessed be his holy name for it) to lead us to a knowledge of them, we should be taking all opportunities of comforting and encouraging one another in this our pil- grimage through the land of the dead, to the land of the living. When we cannot do it by talking, we must do it by writing. And those can never want a subject to write upon, who have an interest in him, and are concerned in the increase of his kingdom ; who, as members of the same body, have an intimate fellow-feeling, and all suffer or rejoice for the loss or recovery of a limb. Archdeacon Hamilton I know well, and am happy in calling him my old friend and companion. He is a Christian in head and heart, the one enlightened with knowledge, the other warm with love ; equally removed from a dead profession and a groundless enthusiasm, the two baneful plagues of this (I am afraid I must say falling) church. The news of his recovery, since attested by a kind and most excellent letter from him- self, we received with great joy. He comes forth hke gold tried and brightened in the furnace of sorrows and adversity, to enrich many with the riches of grace, the trea- sures of wisdom and knowledge, hid in Christ, and manifested by the preaching of the Gospel of God, I rejoice to hear you have other faithful labourers on that side of the water, which confirms to us the truth of that divine maxim, that God will never leave himself without a witness. There is always a call, if men had but ears to hear, which nothing but grace can furnish them with, — " The hearing ear and the seeing eye, the Lord hath made both of them." — I shall be glad to hear how Dr. Ellist goes on, and whether he builds up as well as he pulls down. You surprise me much with the ac- count of bishop Brown§ being an admirer of Hutchinson. Let us know a little of your confab together, and how that matter stands. When you see young Mrs. Brown, pre- sent my compliments to her, and likewise to the other sister, good Mrs. Breviter, a near relation of Mrs. Quickly of facetious memory. You mention nothing of Mr. Auchmuty, an old friend of mine at Edmund Hall, son, I think, of the late dean of Armagh. If * Samuel Shuckford, t . D. author of the "Connexions of Sacred and Profane History," and other works of great learning He was prebendary of Canterbury, and died in 1754. t John Garnet, D. D. vvhn. by going to Ireland with the Duke of Dorset, in 1751, obtained _the bishopric of Leighlin and Ferns, from whence he was translated to Clogher. He died in 1782. Bishop Garnet was the author of a vety ponderous treatise on the Book of Job, to which, like War- burton, he assiffns a date posterior to the captivity. % Dr. John Ellis, formerly of Brasennose College. Oxford, afterwards beneficed at Chester, and, lastly, in Dublin. He was the author of a very valuable treatise which cuts up infidelity by the roots. This work, entitled, " The Knowledge of Divine Things from Revelation, not from Reason or Nature," appeared first in one volume octavo, in 1743, and has since been reprinted three times. $ Dr. Peter Brown, bishop of Cork, and the author of "The Procedure of Human Understanding;* "Things Divine and Supernatural conceived by Analogy ;" "Sermons," 2 vols. &c. MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. 5 he be In Dublin's own self, touch him up. He knows the truth, but, I am afraid, sleep- eth. Give hiin a jog or so. Now for u dash at Oxford news. The plantation at Christ Church thrives and flou- rishes, liittle Charles by going to a play, (the Conscious Lovers, I think) and scamper- ing from hence again upon our friend Tie-ball, to dance upon iiis brotiier's birlh-niirjit, has pretty well got over the imputation of methodism, and things are quiet. I intend to exist with him often in a paradisaical way, in the neighbourhood of t!ie Wheat Sheaf, the prettiest retirement from the noise and hurry of the world that I know That most excellent youth ille noster, is m-ucli better in mind and body, having taken our advice concerning the nature, use and advantages, of an able-bodied servitor, to assist in the education of the Mr. L.'s men, more famous tlian they are likely to be useful in their generations. I have spent two or three evenings with Dr. Patten,* in whose manner and conver- sation the Spirit of Christianity breathes as strong as ever I saw it. He is quite a spiritual man, and has imbibed Law's piety without his whims.t We have had a pretty translation of Psalm cvii. from Bea Wheeler,! of Trinity, occasioned by reading Ro- maine,§ so that you see we are putting on ^J'r^'?!^ vH^'^-ll Going last Sunday evening to call upon Glasse,*!! I found him and Charles Poyntz,** instead of flaunting in our carnival walks, sitting together over the cordial bishop Hall. How acceptable to God are such young converts! It brought to my mind a sweet pas- sage in the Song ; " I went down into the garden, to see the fruits of the valley, to see whether the vine flourished, and the pomegranate budded." And now, my dear friend, what shall I say more ? It has pleased God to bring you up to an early piety, under the best of fathers, an ornament and honour to the Chris- tian church, to keep you steady in the communion, doctrine, and discipline of that church, committed to the saints by Jesus Christ, the glorious head of it ; to lead you to those living fountains of waters, the Holy Scriptures, which to so many are indeed " a fountain sealed," and not to be opened but by the keys of David, so graciously put into our hands ; to give you a noble courage, undaunted perseverance of mind, and great readiness of speech; and thus furnished, to throw you into a large acquaintance amongst the heads and rulers of our disordered affairs. Gird close, therefore, the ar- mour of God, pray earnestly for the wisdom of the Spirit to direct ; and his almighty power to strengthen you ; thus go forth in the name of Jesus Christ, the conqueror of sin, death, and hell, and — " the Lord prosper you, I wish you good luck in the name of the Lord." And oh ! in your prayers to the throne of grace, remember one, whose ardent desire it is, by giving you any assistance in his power, to prove himself, your sincere and affectionate brother in the faith of Christ, G. HORNE. Love to the Archdeacon, who shall hear soon from me. I am just told there is an apology come out for the clergy against Romaine. If we can once make them talk we shall do. " The dumb spake, and the people wondered I" To George Berkeley, Esq. Mary-street, Dublin. About this time our author published two sermons ; one preached in Magdalen Col- lege Chapel, on the anniversary of St. John the Baptist ; and the other, entitled, * Thomas Patten, D. D. then fellow of Corpus Chrlsti College, and afterwards rector of Childrey in Berkshire. He was the author of some excellent Sermons, and died in 1790. t William Law, A. M. He was a nonjurinsr divine, or one who refused to take the oaths to the reigning family. He was domesticated as chaplain in the family of Mr. Gibbon, the historian, who speaks highly of his piety and genius. It is however to be lamented that the author of " the Seri- ous Call to a devout and holy life," should have fallen into the very dregs of mysticism. He died in 1761. J Benjamin Wheeler, of Trinity College, and afterwards fellow of Magdalen College, took his doctor's degree in 1770, and died July 21, 1783. He was professor of poetry in the University; and of whom Dr. Johnson, in a letter to a young clergyman, relates the following anecdote ;—" My learned friend. Dr. Wheeler of Oxford, when he was a young man, had the care of a neighbouring parish, for which he was never paid ; but he counted it a convenience, that it compelled him to make a sermon weekly. One woman he could not bring to the communion ; and when he reproved or exhorted her, she only answered, that she was no scholar. He was advised to set some good woman or man of the parish, a little wiser then herself, to talk to her in language level to her mind." ^ The late celebrated William Romaine, M. A. rector of St. Anne, Blackfriars, who had just before published his Discourse on the 107th Psalm. II The covering of truth. IT Samuel Glasse, then a student of Christ Church, D. D. in 1769, and afterwards chaplain in or- dinary to his m-^jesty, and rector of Wanstead. Between this e.vcellent divine and bishop Home the closest intimacy subsisted during life. ** Charles Poyntz, was M. A. of Christ Church, in 1759, and D. D. in 1769. 6 MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. "Christ the Light of the World." It is very extraordinary, that neither of these vahiable discourses should have found a place in the collection of his works ; which unaccountable omission leads us to express our regret that a correct and uniform edi- tion of the productions of this sound divine and elegant writer, has not hitherto made its appearance. The publication of the sermon preached in the university pulpit, brought the author into a controversy, in which he distinguished himself not more by his zeal for truth, than by Christian meekness. In 1756, appeared a pamphlet with this title, " A Word to the Hutchinsonians ; or. Remarks on three extraordinary Sermons, lately preached before the University of Oxford, by the Rev. Dr. Patten, the Rev. Mr. Wetherell,* and the Rev. Mr. Home." About the same time was published, another tract to the same purpose, but to which the author had the candour of prefix- ing his name. This last piece bears the title of " The Use of Reason, asserted in mat- ters of Religion ; or. Natural Religion the foundation of Revealed. In answer to a Sermon preached before the University of Oxford, on Whit-Sunday, July 13, 1755 ; and lately published at the request of the Vice-Chanccllor, and other heads of houses, by T. Patten, D. D. Fellow of Corpus College; by Ralph Heathcote, M. A. of Jesus College, Cambridge, and assistant preacher at Lincoln's Inn." To these vio- lent attacks upon a set of respectable scholars, who had no otherwise rendered them- selves the object of censure, than by exerting themselves with peculiar energy in the revival of Hebrew literature, our author replied in " An Apology for certain Gentle- men in the University of Oxford, aspersed in a late anonymous pamphlet ; with a post- script concerning another pamphlet lately published by the Rev. Mr. Heathcote." The last of these adversaries had prudence enough to withdraw from a contest into which he had obtruded out of vanity, and to ingratiate himself into the favour of his friend, the redoubtable Dr. Warburton ; but the anonymous writer who had provoked the war- fare, continued it, though with a feeble hand, in a tract entitled, " True Censure no Aspersion ; or a vindication of a late seasonable admonition, called a Word to the Hutchinsonians, in a letter to the Rev. Mr. Home." It is now well known that this piece, and the one which it defends, came from the pen of Mr. Kennicott, the cele- brated collator of Hebrew manuscripts, whose learning lay contracted within very nar- row limits, but who compensated the want of genius and judgment by the most inde- fatigable industry. The illiberality with which this divine treated some of his con- temporaries, who were by much his superiors, not only in general knowledge, but even in that branch of study upon which he prided himself the most, very naturally excited their jealousy, when they saw him embark in a concern of such apparent hazard, as that of publishing an improved edition of the Old Testament. Estimating his abilities by what they knew of him, and of his spirit, by these intemperate publications, the persons who were stigmatized as a sect, by the name of Hutchinsonians, regarded the project of Kennicott in the light of a speculation pregnant with mischief to the cause of revelation. Among others, who took alarm on this occasion, was Blr. Home, whose apprehensions, instead of being removed by the publication of the plan, were increased by the petulance of its language, the confidence of the author, and the freedom of his censures. This work drew from Mr Horne one of the keenest of his perfomiances, under the title of " A View of Mr. Kennicott's method of correcting the Hebrew Text, with three queries formed thereupon, and twenty submitted to the consideration of the learned and Christian world." It is but justice, however, to these two eminent men, to observe in this place, that as the work which was the subject of animadversion in this tract proceeded, the opposition to it abated, in consequence of the circumspection adopted by the collator, who had the discretion to turn the hints of his opponents to the advantage of his literary labours. Thus controversy, when properly managed and duly improved, tends to put the one party upon his guard, and to direct him in a better course, while it acts as a stimulant to the other in detecting errors, and suggesting practical improvements. The province of science has been extended by those disputes, in which the world at large finds little interest, and of wliich superficial minds are apt to entertain an unfavourable judgment, as though it were nothing more than a waste of words and the ebullition of passion excited by the difference of opinion. But it should be considered, that truth is not elicited without inquiry, and that on subjects of importance, wlien men of ability contend, they of necessity bring forward their strong- est reasons, and examine every argument and testimony with a rigid and scrupulous severity. It is, however, happy when theological contests are conducted in the spirit which distinguished that great ornament of our church, the judicious Hooker, whose sharpest language to a captious disputant was this, " Your next argument consists of ♦ Nathan Wetherell, of University College, took his Master's Degree in 1750, and those of B. and D. D. in 1764. He became Master of his college, Prebendary of Westminster, and Dean of Hereford. MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. 7 railing and of reasons ; to your railing I say nothing ; to your reasons, I say what fol- lows." Such was the temper in which our autlior defended the principles he espoused: and it is pleasing to remark, that though he had received rather coarse treatment from Kennicott, and thought very little of his great scheme, a perfect friendship afterwards subsisted between them, which was not in the least disturbed till the death of tho col- lator, in 1783. In 1758, Mr. Home discharged the office of junior proctor of the University ; and the next year, he took his degree of Bachelor in Divinity, At this time he was a liberal correspondent of Dr. Dodd, who had then undertaken the management of the Christian Magazine, for Newberry. Some of the most valuable papers in that useful miscellany came from the pen of our author, under the signature of Acade- micus. In 1764, he took the degree of Doctor in Divinity ; but it is remarkable that he never had any benefice, or preferment, till, by the death of Dr. Jenner, President of Magda- len College, in 1768, he was elected to succeed him in that important station. This year he also entered into the marriage state, with the daughter of Philip Burton, Esq. of Hatton-street, in London, and of Eltham, in Kent. By this lady he had three daughters. The year following he testified his regard for the Junior members of his college, by publishing, with a view to their edification, " Considerations on the Life and Death of St. John the Baptist." This inestimable little work was the substance of several sermons, which were delivered by the author, before the University, in Magda- len Chapel, according to annual custom. In 1771 he was appointed Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty ; and in 1772, when an association was formed by those divines who inclined to the Arian or Socinian tenets, for the purpose of abolishing subscription to the Thirty-nine Articles, Dr. Home printed a letter, addressed to Lord North, " On the projected Reformation of the Church of England ;" in which he showed clearly, that the projected scheme, instead of promoting unity, and advancing the cause of Christianity, would be the occasion of discord, and the soui-se of infidelity. In 1776 appeared that great work which had for many years been his favourite employment, and to the perfection of which he brought all the stores of his multifari- ous studies, and the fruits of his retired meditations. This was his " Commentary on the Psalms," in tw^o volumes, quarto ; and when Mr. Prince the publisher, was carrying the first set to the college, some person who met him asked what he had got there. " It is," said the bookseller, " a new work of the President of Magdalen, whose former productions have given him a name, but this will render his name immortal." Of this Commentary it may be truly said, that it is equally adapted to edify the profound scholar and the unlearned Christian ; that it throws light upon dark passages, and clears up difficulties without the parade of criticism ; while in every elucidation, practi- cal improvement is consulted, and the reader of every description is enabled to draw spiritual instruction even from the dry subject of philological discussion. This year Dr. Home was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University, in which important station he continued till the close of 1780 ; and it may be truly said, that no person ever held that office with greater dignity and popularity. On the death of David Hume, his zealous admirer, Adam Smith, published an extravagant panegjTic upon the philosopher ; in which he was not contented with praising his friend for his meritorious qualities, as a moral character, and his splendid talents as a writer, but he coloured the picture in such a manner as to give his hero every virtue that could adorn human na- ture, and that obviously for the purpose of undervaluing the principles of revealed re- ligion, and of depreciating the motives of its professors. As an antidote to this perni- cious apology for the poison of infidelity, the Vice-Chancellor of Oxford publisbed " A Letter to Dr. Smith, on the Life, Death, and Philosophy of his Friend, David Hume, Esq. by one of the People called Christians." In this little piece, which happily blends the closest reasoning with the keenest wit, the character of Hume is faithfully delin- eated, and the malignant conduct of his panegyrist completely exposed. In 1779, Dr Home favoured the world with two volumes of admirable Sermons, in which line of composition it may safely be affirmed that he has been equalled by few and excelled by none ; for his style is remarkably vigorous, and yet so perfectly simple, that the plainest understanding cannot avoid being immediately convinced by the arguments, and affected by the exhortations. % On the advancement of Dr. Comwallis to the bishopric of Lichfield, in 1781, the President of Magdalen was appointed to succeed him in the deanery of Canterbury, from which period, till his elevation to a higher station in tho church, he divided his time in a regular course between the duties of the College and the Cathedral, to the 8 MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. equal satisfaction of all who had the happiness of living under his government. During his residence at Canterbur}^ he was ever ready to exert his services in the pul- pit on public occasions. The opening of a new organ in the Cathedral, the institution of Sunday Schools, the anniversary of the gentlemen educated in the King's School, and the visitation of the Archbishop, afforded liim opportunities of displaying in that city with what taste and feeling he could describe the power of music ; with what zeal he could plead for the indigent ; with what energy he could point out tlie means of ob- taining true wisdom ; and with what strength he could " contend for the faith once delivered unto the saints." While on these occasions he gratified the public as a preacher, his talents were also employed as a writer, in exposing the vain pretensions of " Science, falsely so called." In 1784 appeared, but Vv'ithout his name, a small volume entitled, "Letters on Infi- delity ;" in which the sj'stem of Hume is held up to just contempt, and the sophistry of that sceptic laid open in all its native deformity. With the same anxious concern for the cause of Christianity, our author next encountered the great champion of Socinian- ism, in " A. letter to the Rev. Dr. Priestley, by an Undergraduate." For while, in the judgment of the Dean, infidelity had a necessary tendency to destroy morality, by depriving it of the only sanction that can give it force for the regulation of human ac- tions, he also looked upon that which is called the Unitarian doctrine, especially as taught in the modern schools, in the light of an auxiliary, or ratlier guide to that enemy of God's image in the soul of man. At length, though too late for the benefit of the church, the great merit of Dr. Home was rewarded with the mitre, by his consecration to the bishopric of Norwich, June 7th, 1790 ; the sermon on which occasion being preached by his old and constant friend Dr. Berkley, Prebendary of Canterbury. Soon after this event, he resigned his station in Magdalen College ; but, though he repaired to his episcopal palace, he found it difficult to go up and down the steps, ov*nug to his increasing infirmities, for the alle- viation of which he was constrained to reside at Bath, where the use of the waters gave him temporary relief. At this time his eldest daughter was married to the reverend Mr. Selby Hele, rector of Colesworth, in Bedfordshire, and chaplain to his Royal High- ness the Prince of Wales. On this occasion, the Bishop wrote the following letter to Dr. Berkley, which evinces the same fervent piety and innocent gaiety that distinguished the accomplished ^vriter throughout life. Bath, May 21, 1791. My Dear Friend. In negotiations of the matrimonial kind, multa cederunt inter, «&c. and therefore I think it better to say nothing of the matter till the newspapers tell it every body at once that the thing is done, and there's an end of it. I always desired my girls to secure three points in a husband — good temper, good sense, and good principles : if they meet witJi a good person and a good fortune, they might be thrown in, and no harm. For the present instance, as far as I can judge, we are well off throughout, and all parties pleased, and so God bless them. To see a little of the world before they settle, they are gone for three or four months upon the Continent ; as to cake, we must there- fore wait, I believe, for a slice of right national, for they set off on the evening of the wedding-day ; and the trusty Betty, on her return to Eltham, deposed she had seen 'em under sail for the coast of France. Best thanks to Mrs. Berkeley, for her very kind letter, which has found its way hither. My wife is passing a few days at Otham, after the hurry and heat of Sackville street. I bless God the waters and weather here carry me on charmingly. I write, you see, nearly as well as ever I did ; and as to utterance, hope to be a match for Nor- wich Cathedral by the end of July, when I am engaged there for the infirmary. Once a year, by God's blessing, I propose to refresh nature at Bath, and keep things going. I hope, when we get rid of these cold winds, for such they are, notwithstanding the Bun this day, Mr. Berkeley's gout will melt away like ice in the fair weather. The doctors want me to have a fit ; but I wish to leave that matter to God's goodness, I soothe my mind, and settle my temper every night with a page or two of Boozy (i. e. Bosvvell's Life of Dr. Johnson,) and always meet with something to the purpose. My sleep i& sweet after it. God bless you all. So prayeth, my dear friend. Your affectionate friend and servant, G. NORWICH. This year the good prelate published the " Charge to the Clergy of his Diocess ; which, on account of the declining state of his health, he had been prevented from de MEMOIR OF BISHOP HORNE. 9 ?ivering personally, but which he now sent to them from the press, as he says in the preliminary advertisement, " that so, whenever he sliould be called hence, bo miglit leave some testimony of his regard for them, and attention to their concerns." This was the completion of all his public customs ; and the close was marked by the same Uveliness of sentiment, perspicuity of illustration, and zeal for evangelical truth, which distinguished him in every stage of his ministry. In this farewell discourse, he treats with a vigour of reasoning almost peculiar to himself, 'i the nature of God ; the nature of man ; the saving principle of faith ; the importance and use of llie church ; the obedience due to civil government ; and the necessity of a pure life and holy con- versation." The complication of disorders with which this excellent man was afflicted, compelled him to return to Bath ; but, on the road, he was attacked by a paralytic stroke, which, though it did not weaken his mental powers, deprived him of articulate utterance ; and it was but by slow degrees that he so far recovered his speech as to be understood by his attendants. Not long before his departure " to that rest which remaiiietli for the people of God," he signified a strong wish to have the sacrament of the Lord's Supper administered to him ; and when the solemn ordinance was over, he clasped his hands with an emotiojs of rapturous devotion,,and exclaimed, " Now am I blessed indeed !" He languished wn, froiu this time till January 17th, 1792, and tiien breathed his last, without a grofcM. " Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright, for the end of that man is pesze-i " The WT**)' i^mains of tlie bishop were interred in the family vault, belonging to his fathe-"^'• Viv, Philip Burton, Esq. at Eltham, in Kent; in the churc!i-yard of which pbf».-*> ic J. monument, with the following inscription, a copy of which, with some slight nJ^AUok,