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												Verse 1Psalms 65:1. Praise waiteth for 
												thee, O God, in Zion — Waits in 
												expectation of the mercy 
												desired; waits till it arrives, 
												that it may be received with 
												thankfulness at its first 
												approach. For, when God is 
												coming toward us with his 
												favours, we must go forth to 
												meet him with our praises. 
												Praise waits with an entire 
												satisfaction in thy holy will, 
												and in dependance on thy mercy. 
												When we stand ready in every 
												thing to give thanks, then 
												praise waits for God. Hebrew, לךְ 
												דמיה תהלה, lecha dumijah 
												tehillah, praise is silent unto 
												thee, as wanting words to 
												express thy great goodness, and 
												being struck with silent 
												admiration of it. As there are 
												holy groanings in prayer, which 
												cannot be uttered, so there are 
												holy adorations in praise which 
												cannot be expressed, and yet 
												shall be accepted by Him who 
												searcheth the heart, and knoweth 
												what is the mind of the Spirit. 
												Our praise is silent, that the 
												praises of the blessed angels, 
												that excel in strength, may be 
												heard. Before thee (thus the 
												Chaldee) praise is reputed as 
												silence. So far is God exalted 
												above all our blessing and 
												praise. Praise is due to God 
												from all the world; but it waits 
												for him in Sion only, in his 
												church among his people; all his 
												works praise him, that is, they 
												minister matter for praise, but 
												only his saints bless him by 
												actual adorations. Unto thee 
												shall the vow be performed — The 
												sacrifices and thank-offerings, 
												which thy people vowed unto 
												thee, in the time of their 
												danger, when they were 
												supplicating deliverance, and 
												other blessings, at thy hands, 
												shall be faithfully paid. We 
												shall not be accepted in our 
												thanksgivings to God for the 
												mercies we have received, unless 
												we make conscience of paying the 
												vows which we made when we were 
												in pursuit of these mercies; for 
												better is it not to vow than to 
												vow and not to pay.
 
 Verse 2-3
 Psalms 65:2-3. O thou that 
												hearest prayer — That usest and 
												delightest to hear and answer 
												the prayers of thy people in 
												Zion; which he justly mentions 
												as one of the chiefest of God’s 
												favours vouchsafed to his 
												church; unto thee shall all 
												flesh come — Men of all sorts 
												and nations, who were allured by 
												this and other singular 
												benefits, to unite themselves to 
												the Jewish Church, according to 
												Solomon’s prediction, 1 Kings 
												8:41-43. Or, rather, this may be 
												considered as a tacit prediction 
												of the conversion of the 
												Gentiles, namely, that on 
												account of God’s mercy in 
												hearing the prayers of his 
												people, all mankind, out of 
												every nation, should come and 
												make their supplications before 
												him in his church, when called 
												by his gospel. And the chief 
												subject of the prayers made by 
												all flesh to God being the 
												forgiveness of sin, in order to 
												this it is here confessed, 
												Iniquities prevail against me — 
												My iniquities are so many and so 
												great, that on account of them 
												thou mightest justly reject my 
												prayers, and destroy my person; 
												they are a burden too heavy for 
												me; but thou shalt purge them 
												away — This is another glorious 
												privilege granted to thy people, 
												that, in answer to their 
												prayers, thou dost graciously 
												pardon and take away their sins.
 
 Verse 4
 Psalms 65:4. Blessed is the man 
												— The particular person, how 
												poor and mean soever; whom thou 
												choosest — To be one of thy 
												peculiar people; and causest — 
												That is, permittest and 
												commandest; and by the disposal 
												of thy providence, and the 
												influence of thy grace, 
												inclinest and enablest, to 
												approach unto thee — To draw 
												near to thee in thy house and 
												ordinances, by prayer and 
												praise, and other acts of 
												communion with thee. That he may 
												dwell in thy courts — In the 
												courts of thy house; may 
												frequently resort thither, and 
												wait upon thee there, at all 
												opportunities, among thy people. 
												He mentions courts, because the 
												people were permitted to go no 
												further into God’s house. We 
												shall be satisfied with the 
												goodness of thy house — We shall 
												enjoy solid satisfaction, such 
												as all men desire, but which 
												only thy true and genuine people 
												obtain, in those spiritual and 
												everlasting blessings there 
												conferred upon them, namely, thy 
												grace, and favour, and 
												fellowship with thee. Observe, 
												reader! remission of sins, 
												renovation of heart and life, 
												the knowledge of God and of 
												ourselves, and of our duty and 
												true interest, joy and peace 
												through believing, with 
												well-grounded hopes of eternal 
												life, are the blessings included 
												in the goodness of God’s house, 
												or holy temple, which is here 
												mentioned, in comparison of 
												which all the enjoyments of this 
												world are but dross and dung.
 
 Verse 5
 Psalms 65:5. By terrible things, 
												&c. — Or, in a terrible manner; 
												that is, so as to strike thy 
												people with a holy awe and 
												reverence of thee, and of thy 
												judgments, and thine enemies 
												with dread and horror. The 
												Chaldee renders the word, נוראת, 
												noraoth, here used, in a 
												wonderful manner. This may be 
												understood of the rebukes which 
												God, in his providence, 
												sometimes gives to his own 
												people; he often answers them by 
												wonderful and terrible events, 
												for the awakening and quickening 
												of them; but always in 
												righteousness; he neither doth 
												them any wrong, nor intends them 
												any hurt; for even then he is 
												the God of their salvation. But 
												it is rather to be understood of 
												his judgments upon their 
												enemies; God answers his 
												people’s prayers by the 
												destructions made for their 
												sakes among those who reject his 
												truth; and the recompense which 
												he renders to their proud 
												oppressors as a righteous God, 
												the God to whom vengeance 
												belongs, and the God that 
												protects and saves his people. 
												The clause may be read, by 
												wonderful things wilt thou 
												answer us; things which are very 
												surprising, and which we looked 
												not for, Isaiah 64:3. Or by 
												things which strike an awe upon 
												us. “The ancient church here 
												foretels,” says Dr. Horne, “that 
												God would answer her prayers for 
												the coming of the Messiah, by 
												wonderful things in 
												righteousness, which were 
												brought to pass by the death and 
												the resurrection of Christ, the 
												overthrow of idolatry, and the 
												conversion of the nations.” Some 
												again, by these wonderful 
												things, understand the works of 
												God’s providence mentioned in 
												the following verses; “which, 
												however they may be disregarded 
												by us, through our familiarity 
												with them, are indeed most 
												stupendous, amazing, and awful; 
												such as will always engage the 
												inquiry and excite the wonder of 
												the most profound philosophers; 
												but will for ever surpass their 
												comprehension.” See Dodd. Who 
												art the confidence of all the 
												ends of the earth — Of all thy 
												saints all the world over, and 
												not only of those who are of the 
												seed of Israel. For he is the 
												God of the Gentiles as well as 
												of the Jews; the confidence of 
												them that are afar off from his 
												holy temple, that dwell in the 
												islands of the Gentiles, or that 
												are in distress upon the sea. 
												They trust in him, and cry to 
												him when they are at their wit’s 
												end. Nor is there any other in 
												whom they can safely trust, or 
												to whom they can have recourse 
												with any prospect of relief. For 
												this God of our salvation is the 
												only object of a safe and 
												undeceiving confidence; there is 
												no other person or thing in the 
												world that any man living can 
												trust to, without fear or 
												certainty of disappointment.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Psalms 65:6-7. Which setteth 
												fast the mountains — That they 
												are not overthrown by floods, or 
												earthquakes, or other natural 
												causes; which stability they 
												have only from God’s preserving 
												providence, which alone sustains 
												all persons and things; being 
												girded with power — Being able 
												to do it, and that with infinite 
												ease, having only to speak and 
												it is done. Which stillest the 
												noise of the sea — When it is 
												very tempestuous, and threatens 
												to swallow up ships and men that 
												are in it, or to overflow the 
												earth. And the tumults of the 
												people — As he stills the 
												natural, so he also quiets the 
												metaphorical seas, tumultuous 
												and unruly mobs and 
												insurrections of people, often 
												represented under this emblem in 
												the prophetical writings.
 
 Verse 8
 Psalms 65:8. They also that 
												dwell in the uttermost parts — 
												Namely, of the earth; are afraid 
												at thy tokens — Hebrew, 
												מאותתיךְ, meothotheicha, at thy 
												signs, at the great and terrible 
												judgments which thou inflictest 
												upon wicked men, and 
												particularly on the enemies of 
												thy people. Or rather, at such 
												occurrences as extraordinary 
												thunders, lightnings, and 
												meteors in the air, comets in 
												the heavens, or volcanic 
												eruptions and earthquakes on the 
												earth; all which are the works 
												of God, whatever secondary 
												causes he may use to produce 
												them. As if he had said, The 
												remotest and most barbarous 
												people are struck with the dread 
												of thee, when thou alarmest them 
												with any unusual tokens of thy 
												power. Thou makest the out 
												goings of the morning and 
												evening to rejoice — The 
												successive courses of the 
												morning and evening, or of the 
												sun and moon, which go forth at 
												those times, the one bringing 
												the light of the morning, and 
												the other the shades of the 
												evening, and both which are said 
												poetically to rejoice, because 
												they give men occasion of 
												rejoicing. For as it is God that 
												scatters the light of the 
												morning, and draws the curtains 
												of the evening, so he does both 
												in favour to man. And how 
												contrary soever light and 
												darkness are to each other, or 
												how inviolable soever the 
												partition between them may be, 
												both are equally welcome to the 
												world in their season. And it is 
												hard to say which is more 
												welcome to us, the light of the 
												morning, which befriends the 
												business of the day, or the 
												shadows of the evening, which 
												befriend the repose of the 
												night. Doth the watchman wait 
												for the morning? So doth the 
												hireling earnestly desire the 
												shadow. Thus, this whole verse 
												speaks of the natural works of 
												God; the former clause of such 
												as are extraordinary and 
												terrible, the latter of such as 
												are ordinary and delightful.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Psalms 65:9-10. Thou visitest — 
												In mercy, or with thy favour, 
												the earth, and waterest it — The 
												whole earth, which is full of 
												thy bounty. So understood, he 
												continues to speak of the 
												general providence of God over 
												all people. Or, he may mean, 
												Thou visitest the land — Namely, 
												the land of Israel; and so he 
												proceeds, from God’s general 
												providence over all places and 
												nations, to his particular and 
												special providence over his 
												people in the land of Canaan, 
												whereof he gives one eminent and 
												considerable instance, namely, 
												his giving them rain and 
												fruitful seasons, and that after 
												a time of drought and scarcity, 
												to which, it is not improbably 
												supposed, this Psalm refers. And 
												this may be the particular 
												occasion, for which the psalmist 
												said, that praise waited for God 
												in Zion. Thou enrichest it with 
												the river of God — With rain, 
												which he calls a river for his 
												plenty, and the river of God, 
												because it is of his immediate 
												providing; which is full of 
												water — The clouds, like a vast 
												river, are never exhausted, or, 
												if they empty themselves upon 
												the earth, they are soon and 
												easily replenished again. Thou 
												preparest them corn — By these 
												means thou causest the earth to 
												bring forth and ripen corn for 
												its inhabitants; when thou hast 
												so provided for it — Hebrew, כן 
												תכינה, cheen techineah, hast so 
												ordered, disposed, or prepared 
												it; namely, the earth by thus 
												watering it, which would 
												otherwise be hard and barren. 
												Thou settlest the furrows 
												thereof — Which are turned up by 
												the plough or spade. Or, thou 
												bringest them down, as נחת, 
												nachath, rather signifies: for 
												the rain dissolves the high and 
												hard clods of the earth. Thou 
												blessest the springing thereof — 
												When all is done, the 
												fruitfulness of the earth must 
												not be ascribed to the rain or 
												sun, or any second causes, but 
												to thy blessing alone.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Psalms 65:11-12. Thou crownest 
												the year with thy goodness — 
												Thou, by thy powerful goodness, 
												dost enrich and adorn all the 
												seasons of the year with their 
												proper fruits and blessings. And 
												thy paths — Either, 1st, Thy 
												clouds, (as the word מעגליךְ, is 
												rendered in the Liturgy 
												version,) upon which God is 
												frequently said to walk or ride, 
												and which drop fatness upon the 
												earth; or the outgoings, or ways 
												of the divine goodness. Wherever 
												God goes, speaking after the 
												manner of men, or works, he 
												leaves the tokens of his mercy 
												behind him, he dispenses rich 
												and salutary blessings, and thus 
												makes his paths to shine after 
												him. Mudge renders this verse, 
												Thou encirclest the year with 
												thy richness, and the tracks of 
												thy wheels drop fatness. God is 
												considered, he thinks, in his 
												chariot, riding round the earth, 
												and from that chariot, that is, 
												the clouds, everywhere 
												distilling fatness, fertility, 
												and increase. They — God’s 
												paths, the clouds; drop upon the 
												pastures of the wilderness — And 
												not only upon the pastures of 
												the inhabited land. The deserts, 
												which man takes no care of, and 
												receives no profit from, yet are 
												under the care of the divine 
												providence; and the produce of 
												them redounds to the glory of 
												God, as the great Benefactor of 
												the whole creation. For hereby 
												they are furnished with food for 
												wild beasts, which, being God’s 
												creatures, he thus takes care of 
												and provides for. And the little 
												hills — He intends chiefly the 
												hills of Canaan, which, for the 
												generality of them, were but 
												small, if compared with the 
												great and high mountains which 
												are in divers parts of the 
												world. He mentions the hills, 
												because, being most dry and 
												parched with the sun, they most 
												need, and are most benefited by 
												the rain; rejoice on every side 
												— That is, all around, as being 
												clothed with verdure, enamelled 
												with flowers, and rendered 
												fertile for the use of man and 
												beasts. Nothing can be more 
												elegant and poetical than the 
												personifying of the hills, the 
												pastures, and valleys in this 
												and the following verse. But, 
												indeed, as Dr. Delaney justly 
												observes, this whole paragraph, 
												from the 9th verse to the 13th, 
												is “the most rapturous, truly 
												poetic, and natural image of joy 
												that imagination can form.” The 
												reader of taste cannot but see 
												this in any translation of it, 
												however simple. “When the divine 
												poet had seen the showers 
												falling from heaven, and Jordan 
												overflowing his banks, all the 
												consequent blessings were that 
												moment present to his quick, 
												poetic sight, and he paints them 
												accordingly.”
 
 Verse 13
 Psalms 65:13. The pastures — 
												Which were bare before; are 
												clothed with flocks — As they 
												are with grass. They are so well 
												stocked that they seem covered 
												over with sheep and cattle, 
												feeding or resting in them; the 
												valleys also are covered with 
												corn — So that the face of the 
												earth cannot be seen for the 
												abundance of it. He mentions 
												valleys, or low grounds, as 
												being generally most fruitful, 
												but does not intend to exclude 
												other places. Such are some of 
												the good effects of these 
												refreshing, fertilizing rains. 
												They shout for joy: they also 
												sing — They are abundantly 
												satisfied with thy goodness, 
												and, in their manner, sing forth 
												the praises, and declare the 
												goodness of their great Creator 
												and Benefactor.
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