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												Verses 1-3Psalms 135:1-3. O ye servants of 
												the Lord — Ye priests and 
												Levites, as in the former Psalm, 
												or the people; that stand in the 
												courts, &c. — Either in the 
												sanctuary or the inner court, 
												both which were appropriated to 
												the priests and Levites; or in 
												the outward court, which was for 
												the people. Praise, &c., for the 
												Lord is good — Bountiful and 
												gracious, especially to you, and 
												therefore he justly expects and 
												deserves your praises. Sing 
												praises, &c., for it is pleasant 
												— Thus two reasons are assigned 
												why they should praise the Lord, 
												first, his goodness, and, 
												secondly, the pleasantness of 
												the employment. “The latter of 
												these reasons hath a natural and 
												necessary dependance on the 
												former. A sense of the divine 
												mercy will tune our hearts and 
												voices to praise.”
 
 Verse 4-5
 Psalms 135:4-5. For the Lord 
												hath chosen Jacob, &c. — Here we 
												have a third reason why the 
												Israelites should praise the 
												Lord, namely, “the circumstance 
												of their having been selected 
												from among the nations to be his 
												church, to receive the law and 
												the promises, to have his 
												presence residing in the midst 
												of them, and to be the guardians 
												of the true faith and worship.” 
												For I know that the Lord is 
												great, &c. — Here he assigns a 
												fourth reason for their praising 
												God, “his superiority over the 
												gods of the heathen, and, 
												consequently, over those who 
												worshipped them; from whence 
												followed this comfortable 
												inference, that he was able to 
												protect and to defend his people 
												against every enemy.” — Horne.
 
 Verse 6
 Psalms 135:6. Whatsoever the 
												Lord pleased — Either in the 
												creation or government of the 
												world; that did he in heaven and 
												in earth — His power and 
												jurisdiction are universal, and 
												not like those of the heathen 
												gods, confined, as their 
												worshippers allowed, to their 
												several countries; in the seas, 
												and all deep places — In the 
												visible seas, and in the 
												invisible depths, both of the 
												earth and of the waters. Here, 
												then, the psalmist evinces the 
												pre-eminence of Jehovah above 
												the gods of the nations, by this 
												consideration, that he at the 
												beginning “created and formed 
												those powers of nature whose 
												operations in the heavens, the 
												earth, and the waters, led the 
												heathen world, after it had lost 
												the knowledge of the Creator, to 
												adore the creature as 
												independent.”
 
 Verse 7
 Psalms 135:7. He causeth the 
												vapours to ascend, &c. — “They 
												who in old time paid their 
												devotions to the elements, 
												imagined those elements to be 
												capable of giving or withholding 
												rain at pleasure. Therefore we 
												find the Prophet Jeremiah 
												reclaiming that power to 
												Jehovah, as the God who made and 
												governed the world, Jeremiah 
												14:22. Among the Greeks and 
												Romans we meet with a Jupiter, 
												possessed of the thunder and the 
												lightning, and an Ĉolus ruling 
												over the winds. The psalmist 
												teacheth us to restore the 
												celestial artillery to its 
												rightful owner. Jehovah, the God 
												of Israel, and Creator of the 
												universe, contrived the 
												wonderful machinery of light and 
												air, by which vapours are raised 
												from the earth, compacted into 
												clouds, and distilled into rain. 
												At his command the winds are 
												suddenly in motion, and as 
												suddenly at rest again; we hear 
												the sound, but cannot tell 
												whence they come, or whither 
												they go; as if they were taken 
												from the secret store- houses of 
												the Almighty, and then laid up 
												till their service was required 
												again.” He maketh lightnings for 
												the rain — He makes thick 
												clouds, which, being broken, 
												produce lightnings, and so are 
												dissolved into showers of rain. 
												Or, he maketh lightnings with 
												rain. “It is a great instance of 
												the divine wisdom and goodness 
												that lightning should be 
												accompanied by rain, to soften 
												its rage and prevent its 
												mischievous effects.” — Horne. 
												He bringeth the wind out of his 
												treasures — Out of those secret 
												places where he preserves them, 
												and whence he brings them as he 
												sees fit. Thus we read of 
												treasures of snow and hail, Job 
												38:22, not that they are 
												formally laid up in any certain 
												places, but to signify that God 
												hath them as much at his 
												disposal as any man hath that 
												which he hath laid up in his 
												stores.
 
 Verse 8
 Psalms 135:8. Who smote the 
												firstborn of Egypt — From the 
												general works of nature he comes 
												to God’s special works of 
												providence toward his people. 
												“Egypt was the theatre of the 
												grand contest between the God of 
												Israel and the gods of the 
												heathen. The superiority of the 
												former over the latter was shown 
												in every possible way, by the 
												miracles of Moses, which 
												demonstrated all the powers of 
												nature, to be under the dominion 
												of Jehovah, and to act at his 
												command, so that, instead of 
												being able to protect, they were 
												made to torment and destroy 
												their deluded votaries.”
 
 Verses 10-12
 Psalms 135:10-12. Who smote 
												great nations, &c. — “The 
												victories gained by Israel over 
												Sihon and Og, in their passage 
												to Canaan, and afterward over 
												the idolatrous kings of that 
												country, are further proofs of 
												the same point. For Israel 
												therefore conquered because 
												Jehovah fought for them, and put 
												them in possession of that good 
												land when the iniquity of its 
												old inhabitants was full, and 
												cried to heaven for vengeance.”
 
 Verse 13-14
 Psalms 135:13-14. Thy name, O 
												Lord, endureth for ever — These 
												wonderful works of thine shall 
												never be forgotten. They, 
												together with the land which 
												thou gavest us through them, and 
												which we yet enjoy, are an 
												everlasting monument of thy 
												power and goodness, and an 
												obligation upon, and an 
												encouragement to us, to trust in 
												thee, in all our present or 
												future difficulties. For the 
												Lord will judge his people — 
												Will, in due time, plead the 
												cause of his people, or give 
												judgment for them. And he will 
												repent himself, &c. — He will 
												recall that severe sentence 
												which for their sins he had 
												passed upon them.
 
 Verses 15-18
 Psalms 135:15-18. The idols of 
												the heathen are silver and gold 
												— Here he sets forth the 
												difference between the God of 
												Israel and the idols of the 
												nations, as also between the 
												worshippers of each, all tending 
												to confirm the truth of what was 
												asserted, Psalms 135:5, I know 
												that the Lord is great, and that 
												our Lord is above all gods. Of 
												these verses, see the notes on 
												Psalms 115:4-5.
 
 Verses 19-21
 Psalms 135:19-21. Bless the 
												Lord, O house of Israel — He who 
												proved himself to be infinitely 
												superior to the objects of 
												heathen idolatry, is no less 
												superior to every object on 
												which deluded men can place 
												their affections. Let the house 
												of Israel, therefore, the house 
												of Levi, and the house of Aaron, 
												the church, the ministers 
												thereof; and let all who fear 
												the Lord, though not of the 
												house of Israel, bless and 
												praise his holy name, in his 
												temple here below, until they 
												shall be admitted to do it for 
												evermore in that which is above: 
												see Horne.
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