Showing posts with label psalms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psalms. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Live Dangerously: Sing Psalms

Recently, I ran across an article written by Chris Hume entitled Five Reasons Pastors Should Not Allow the Psalms to Be Sung. The satirical approach drove home the great need we have for singing Psalms in worship. His points are:
  1. You Will Make People Uncomfortable
  2. You Will Offend People
  3. You Will Have to Adjust Your Presentation of Christianity
  4. You Will Have to Deal with the Really Difficult Aspects of the Christian Life
  5. You Will Be Playing a Part in the Downfall of Modern Worship Music
I admit that the last was my favorite; however, each reveal that Christians do not understand Christianity. Admittedly, that statement is an over-generalization, but we must face the truth that most churches are more concerned with being culturally relevant than being Christian. Psalms provide inconvenient truths, providing a needed corrective concerning God and His work within a doctrinally perfect songbook. Why not use it in worship?

The benefits of knowing and using the Psalms became recognized as so important in the early church that the entire Psalter was to be memorized in order to be a bishop. From the Second Council of Nicaea (787 A.D.), Canon II states in part:

When we recite the Psalter, we promise God: "I will meditate upon thy statutes, and will not forget thy words." It is a salutary thing for all Christians to observe this, but it is especially incumbent upon those who have received the sacerdotal dignity. Therefore we decree, that every one who is raised to the rank of the episcopate shall know the Psalter by heart, so that from it he may admonish and instruct all the clergy who are subject to him.
While this directed toward the office of bishop, I would apply the requirement to the local priest or pastor. Is this too much? Might I offer the following notes from the above canon?
The Synod teaches in this canon that "all Christians" will find it most profitable to meditate upon God's justifyings and to keep His words in remembrance, and especially is this the ease with bishops.

And it should be noted that formerly not only the clergy, but also the lay people, learned the Psalms, that is the whole Psalter, by heart, and made a most sweet sound by chanting them while about their work.
This seems an overwhelming task, but how many hymns or worship songs do you have memorized right now? You learned these by hearing them on a regular basis and singing along. I dare say that consistent use of the Psalter in Sunday worship would implant such sound, beneficial knowledge that we could not but be transformed, personally and corporately, into the image of Christ.

When can we start?

Monday, January 10, 2022

Will It Go Round in Circles?



In 1972, musician Billy Preston released an album that included “Will It Go Round in Circles?” that rose to number one on the US charts with three paradoxical concoctions: a song without a melody, a story without a moral, and a dance without steps. The chorus then asks two important questions of each: “Will it go round in circles? Will it fly high like a bird up in the sky?” I do not know Preston’s original thoughts about the song, but it appears that he has no idea whether people will catch on to what he offers so that each will either fly high to be popular or just spin around but go nowhere. Either way he doesn’t care: all that matters is that something is produced.

While Preston’s lyrical intentions were likely whimsical to draw listeners and increase record sales, they do express an ethos of self-pursuing individual desire and fulfillment as the ultimate goal. These are those who go round in circles with eyes focused solely on this world with its limited vision for those things under the sun. Attitudes and actions are put forth with the sole purpose of pleasing and building up self. People are helped or hurt for the purpose of satisfying the individual. Conversely, others fly high because of their acceptance of what the Lord offers or desires, living in the light of Christ. Their perspective is not in what is gained but what is given: self is mortified for the benefit of family and community.

David, in Psalm 11 LXX (12 MT), presents the contrast between these groups.

1 Fᴏʀ ᴛʜᴇ Eɴᴅ, ᴄᴏɴᴄᴇʀɴɪɴɢ ᴛʜᴇ ᴇɪɢʜᴛʜ; ᴀ ᴘsᴀʟᴍ ʙʏ Dᴀᴠɪᴅ.
2(1) Save me, O Lord, for the holy man has ceased;
  The truthful are diminished from among the sons of men.
3(2) Each one speaks useless things to his neighbor;
  Deceptive lips speak with a double heart.
4(3) May the Lord destroy all deceptive lips
  And the tongue that speaks boastful things,
5(4) Saying, “We will make our tongue powerful;
  Our lips are our own;
  Who is lord over us?”
David sees this world oppressing souls in many ways and asks the Lord to be saved. Only He can provide true healing when no godly man can be found in such a crowd of evil. One might ask why this evil is so prevalent or in other words, “Where has the good man gone?” Holy men come to an end when truth (i.e., God’s Word) is diminished, when the perversity of sin stains the benefits of His good gifts. How is this manifest? Two different, but similar, ways are shown to undercut truth. First, the ungodly speak useless or vain words, which are fleeting. They please the ears with that which lacks substance having the intent of misleading or falsifying. The story is passed from one associate to another so that it becomes normative. We now see what David describes: they are duplicitous at heart and as a whole speak with forked tongue, saying what is needed for the moment, even if it alters or contradicts what had been stated previously, in order to push the narrative.

The ungodly spew forth evil as if the outcome of events was entirely in their control rather than providentially directed by a divine hand. Being caught up in the greatness of their rhetoric, they become swollen with pride and fail to understand that their own ability is supplied by the Creator. They fail to take in good sense and rush to their own destruction. In response to this deception, David calls for a general judgment by the Lord according to His Word (Deut 19:15–21), meting out the just penalty for their pride and self-glorification.

6(5) “Because of the suffering of the needy,
  And because of the groaning of the poor,
  Now I will arise,” says the Lord;
  “I will establish them in salvation;
  I will declare it boldly.”
7(6) The words of the Lord are pure words,
  Like silver fired in a furnace of earth,
  Purified seven times.
8(7) You shall guard us, O Lord;
  You shall preserve us from this generation forever.
9(8) The ungodly walk in a circle;
  In Your exaltation, You highly exalted the sons of men.
As the oppressed journey through this world, they pray for deliverance from the ungodliness around them, and because of their prayers and groaning, the Lord responds. He establishes the godly in salvation by arising to their circumstance to deliver them from tribulation. While the promise of salvation is given, there is no indication whence or when the rescue will come. We rely on the certainty of a God who cannot relent: He will rescue and vindicate with just judgment and punishment on the evil-doers. This promise is consummated in the Lord Jesus as He gains the ultimate victory over sin and death in His resurrection, exercising administration in the ascension, awaiting the final judgment wherein all is made right.

As opposed to the earlier boastful and deceptive human words, David praises the divine, which are not tainted or tarnished with inconsistency but are flawlessly pure more so than the finest precious metal. Accordingly, he promises that the Lord will preserve those who have believed His utterances with a pure heart. We cannot be guarded by our own strength, but we rest in His consolation both in this life and in the one to come supplying everlasting freedom from anxiety. He helps us here, and glorifies and crowns us there; He preserves us in this world lest we perish, and blesses us in the next so that we can be wholly free.

The psalmist ends with the reason for his request and, thus, the purpose for the opening video: the wicked continue to prowl or strut about. Their circuitous routes are always invested with evil deeds so that they never reach the right path, but when they are exalted in their deeds, vileness reigns among men. Their end is utter destruction on the last day. Conversely, those who believe the pure words of the Lord are exalted to heavenly places (Eph 2:6-7), not according to their merit but according to His immeasurable grace in Christ Jesus.

Monday, August 16, 2021

Know What You Believe: Sing Psalms


Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. (Col 3:16)

All scripture is inspired by God and is useful, composed by the Spirit for this reason, namely, that we men, each and all of us, as if in a general hospital for souls, may select the remedy for his own condition. For, it says, ‘care will make the greatest sin to cease.’ Now, the prophets teach one thing, historians another, the law something else, and the form of advice found in the proverbs something different still. But, the Book of Psalms has taken over what is profitable from all. It foretells coming events; it recalls history; it frames laws for life; it suggests what must be done; and, in general, it is the common treasury of good doctrine, carefully finding what is suitable for each one. The old wounds of souls it cures completely, and to the recently wounded it brings speedy improvement; the diseased it treats, and the unharmed it preserves. On the whole, it effaces, as far as is possible, the passions, which subtly exercise dominion over souls during the lifetime of man, and it does this with a certain orderly persuasion and sweetness which produces sound thoughts.

When, indeed, the Holy Spirit saw that the human race was guided only with difficulty toward virtue, and that, because of our inclination toward pleasure, we were neglectful of an upright life, what did He do? The delight of melody He mingled with the doctrines so that by the pleasantness and softness of the sound heard we might receive without perceiving it the benefit of the words, just as wise physicians who, when giving the fastidious rather bitter drugs to drink, frequently smear the cup with honey. Therefore, He devised for us these harmonious melodies of the psalms, that they who are children in age or, even those who are youthful in disposition might to all appearances chant but, in reality, become trained in soul. For, never has any one of the many indifferent persons gone away easily holding in mind either an apostolic or prophetic message, but they do chant the words of the psalms, even in the home, and they spread them around in the market place, and, if perchance, someone becomes exceedingly wrathful, when he begins to be soothed by the psalm, he departs with the wrath of his soul immediately lulled to sleep by means of the melody.

A psalm implies serenity of soul; it is the author of peace, which calms bewildering and seething thoughts. For, it softens the wrath of the soul, and what is unbridled it chastens. A psalm forms friendships, unites those separated, conciliates those at enmity. Who, indeed, can still consider as an enemy him with whom he has uttered the same prayer to God? So that psalmody, bringing about choral singing, a bond, as it were, toward unity, and joining the people into a harmonious union of one choir, produces also the greatest of blessings, charity. A psalm is a city of refuge from the demons; a means of inducing help from the angels, a weapon in fears by night, a rest from toils by day, a safeguard for infants, an adornment for those at the height of their vigor, a consolation for the elders, a most fitting ornament for women. It peoples the solitudes; it rids the marketplace of excesses; it is the elementary exposition of beginners, the improvement of those advancing, the solid support of the perfect, the voice of the Church. It brightens the feast days; it creates a sorrow that is in accordance with God. For, a psalm calls forth a tear even from a heart of stone. A psalm is the work of angels, a heavenly institution, the spiritual incense.

Oh! the wise invention of the teacher who contrived that while we were singing we should at the same time learn something useful; by this means, too, the teachings are in a certain way impressed more deeply on our minds. Even a forceful lesson does not always endure, but what enters the mind with joy and pleasure somehow becomes more firmly impressed upon it. What, in fact, can you not learn from the psalms? Can you not learn the grandeur of courage? The exactness of justice? The nobility of self-control? The perfection of prudence? A manner of penance? The measure of patience? And whatever other good things you might mention? Therein is perfect theology, a prediction of the coming of Christ in the flesh, a threat of judgment, a hope of resurrection, a fear of punishment, promises of glory, an unveiling of mysteries; all things, as if in some great public treasury, are stored up in the Book of Psalms. To it, although there are many musical instruments, the prophet adapted the so-called harp, showing, as it seems to me, that the gift from the Spirit resounded in his ears from above. With the cithara and the lyre the bronze from beneath responds with sound to the plucking, but the harp has the source of its harmonic rhythms from above, in order that we may be careful to seek the things above and not be borne down by the sweetness of the melody to the passions of the flesh. And I believe this, namely, that the words of prophecy are made clear to us in a profound and wise manner through the structure of the instrument because those who are orderly and harmonious in soul possess an easy path to the things above. Let us now see the beginning of the psalms.

Basil of Caesarea, Homilies on the Psalms 10.1–2

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Sing the "Mean" Psalms

Peter Leithart has written a post reminding Christians of the benefit of imprecatory psalms in worship. Consider the following:
As Laurence points out, this cry for justice and for deliverance from satanic powers embraces the entire Psalter. Psalm 1 shows Yahweh blowing away the wicked as chaff, and Psalm 2 introduces Yahweh’s royal Son who shatters nations and kings like pottery. Near the end of the Psalter, Psalm 149 promises that the saints will do the shattering, binding kings and executing justice. The Psalter hands the Son’s rod of iron over to us, because the Psalter is a rod of iron. Singing psalms, we break teeth, blunt arrows, disable unjust hands, silence lying tongues.

Singing the “mean” psalms is thus part of the church’s mission.…
Amen!

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Delighting in the King

I was reading Psalm 61 recently and noticed the flow of David’s poetry.  He begins by crying out to God while remembering His faithfulness, security of care, and blessings.  What follows next, though, intrigued me because David suddenly shifts from first person to third:
You will prolong the king’s life,
    His years as many generations.
He shall abide before God forever.
    Oh, prepare mercy and truth, which may preserve him!  (Ps 61:6-7)
Suddenly, it seems that David is no longer considering his own circumstances solely but wishes to pray for his royal house according to God’s promise of a never-ending lineage on the throne.  Theodore of Mopsuestia reflected on the passage this way:
You will grant us everything, and once more You will give us a gentle king, whom You will also make long-lived (a reference not to the person but to the position)—in other words, For a long time you will bring us under our own kings.  You will give him length of life to abide forever.… While You will provide [mercy and truth] in Your characteristic goodness, it would be a blessed thing for him also to give evidence of some disposition of his own in his regard for You, not losing hope in You, and seeking this from You.
One cannot help but wonder if David was thinking forward to a time when the everlasting Son of David would sit on His throne.  Theodoret of Cyrus picks up this thought nicely:
Now, at that time [the king] was ruling over them; but all the words of the inspired composition do not apply to him. … Instead, they apply to the One who out of great lovingkindness came of his line according to the flesh, as he himself knew.  Of Him, you see, were realized the words of the inspired composition.  He had no beginning to His days, nor will He experience an end.  I mean, even if He became a human being and accepted death for our sake, nevertheless “He was in the beginning, and was with God, and was God.” … Do you see that the One who accepted cross and death for our sake has also an unending kingship insofar as He coexists with the Father?
Yes, our Lord Jesus coexists with the Father, yet notice that the Father is requested to prepare mercy and truth to preserve Him.  There is an active bond of love in the Godhead that transcends understanding, and we are given the blessing of seeing that worked out through the Word.  The fullness of such matters are to great for us, but we are given a measure to look in awe at what things God has made known in part.  And we delight in them, as David wrote in the last verse of the psalm:
So I will sing praise to Your name forever,
    That I may daily perform my vows.
Worship is not an end in itself.  There is work to be done in the strength He supplies through His gifts as we gather together.  May we go out reinvigorated to the task of serving our neighbor.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Remain Fixed

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



I will meditate on your precepts
    and fix my eyes on your ways.
I will delight in your statutes;
    I will not forget your word.  (Ps 119:15-16)


And thus the Church exercises herself in the commandments of God against all the enemies of the Christian and catholic faith, by speaking in the abundant arguments of the learned—which are fruitful to those who compose them, if nothing but the ways of the Lord is regarded in them.  But all the ways of the Lord are, as it is written, mercy and truth*—the fullness of both being found in Christ.  Through this sweet exercise is gained also what he adds: My meditation shall be therein, that I may not forget them.  Thus the blessed man in the first psalm shall meditate in the law of the Lord day and night.†

Augustine, Exposition on the Book of Psalms 119.14

*  Psalm 25:10
†  Psalm 1:2

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Rejoicing in God's Instruction

Blessed are you, O Lᴏʀᴅ;
    teach me your statutes!
With my lips I declare
    all the rules of your mouth.
I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies,
    As much as in all riches.  (Ps 119:12-14)


You are gentle and loving, and worthy to be praised by all.  For this reason I beg to learn from You what can make me righteous.  Whatever I learn from Your goodness I shall teach to the ignorant.… The possession of Your testimonies is more satisfying to me than every kind of wealth.

Theodoret of Cyrus, Commentary of the Psalms 119.8-9

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Pay Attention!

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



How can a young man keep his way pure?
    By guarding it according to your word.  (Psalm 119:9)


Let us listen, then, to the master of precaution: “I said, I will pay attention to my ways”; that is, “I said to myself: in the silent biddings of my thoughts, that I should pay attention to my ways.”  Some ways there are that we ought to follow; others as to which we ought to pay attention.  We must follow the ways of the Lord and pay attention to our own ways,  lest they lead us into sin.  One can pay attention if one is not hasty in speaking.  The Law says, “Hear, O Israel, the Lord your God.”  It is not “speak” but “hear.”  Eve fell because she said to the man what she had not heard from the Lord her God.  The first word from God says to you, Hear! If you hear, pay attention to your ways; and if you have fallen, quickly amend your way.  For how does a young person amend his way; except by paying attention to the word of the Lord?  Be silent therefore first of all, and listen, so that you do not fail in your tongue.

Ambrose, Duties of the Clergy 1.2.7

Friday, April 22, 2016

Praise the God of All

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



Hallelouia.
Praise God among his saints;
    praise him in the firmament of his power!
Praise him for his acts of dominance;
    praise him according to the abundance of his greatness!

Praise him with trumpet sound;
    praise him with harp and lyre!
Praise him with drum and dance;
    praise him with strings and instrument!
Praise him with tuneful cymbals;
    praise him with loud clashing cymbals!
Let all breath praise the Lᴏʀᴅ!
Hallelouia.  (Psalm 150 LXX*)


He is God not only of Jews, according to the divine apostle, but also of nations.  Actually, in the hundred and forty-fourth psalm† he said, “Let all flesh bless his holy name,” and here, Let all breath praise the Lord.  In the former case, however, he did not summon only flesh, nor in this case only breath.  Rather, through both the one and the other he urges both body and spirit to sing the praises of the God of all.  The conclusion of the whole work of the Psalms is admirable, and in keeping with the purpose of inspired composition: inspired composition urges those who have attained it to sing the praises of the Benefactor.  We do not, however, only hear the words, but here we also perceive the realization: in each city and village, in fields and on borders, on mountains and hills, and in completely uninhabited wasteland, the praises of the God of all are sung.

Theodoret of Cyrus, Commentary on the Psalms 150

New English Translation of the Septuagint
†  I.e., Psalm 145.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Glorify Him!

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.




Let everything that has breath praise the Lᴏʀᴅ!
Praise the Lᴏʀᴅ!  (Ps 150:6)


But someone will say, “If the Divine substance is incomprehensible, why then do you discourse of these things?”  So then, because I cannot drink up all the river, am I not even to take in moderation what is expedient for me?  Because with eyes so constituted as mine I cannot take in all the sun, am I not even to look upon him enough to satisfy my wants?  Or again, because I have entered into a great garden, and cannot eat all the supply of fruits, would you have me go away completely hungry?  I praise and glorify Him that made us, for it is a divine command which says, Let every breath praise the Lord.  I am attempting now to glorify the Lord, but not to describe Him, knowing nevertheless that I shall fall short of glorifying Him worthily, yet deeming it a work of piety even to attempt it at all.  For the Lord Jesus encourages my weakness, by saying, No man has seen God at any time.

Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures 6.5

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

It Is Fitting That We Praise Him

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Florence, Italy
Praise the Lᴏʀᴅ!
Praise God in his sanctuary;
    praise him in his mighty heavens!
Praise him for his mighty deeds;
    praise him according to his excellent greatness!  (Ps 150:1-2)


We must carefully observe the pleasurable sweetness with which this book of psalms ends, and how it looks back to its beginning.  The prophet says that now that the saints have been received in the heavenly Jerusalem, it is right to praise the Lord, that is, it is right for those whom He has revealed the shape of right behavior.  Earlier it was said of Him: Blessed is the man who has not walked in the counsel of the ungodly, and the rest; for the saints are those who by His generosity have deserved to imitate Him.  There is a fitting explanation of the kind of reverence owed to the saints.  It is the Lord who is to be praised because they are justified, and not they themselves, for His glory should be hymned first since He permits the deeds which are to be acclaimed.  Veneration is however to be accorded to the just, because they have received divine gifts.… The strength of His power lies in the fact that He endured destruction for the salvation of all, and by virtue of His power overcame death itself, together with its most wicked founder.  He sundered the bars of hell, and led strong believers to the kingdom of heaven.

Cassiodorus, Explanation of the Psalms

Friday, April 15, 2016

The Strength of My Salvation

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



King David in Prayer - Pieter de Grebber
I say to the Lᴏʀᴅ, You are my God;
    give ear to the voice of my pleas for mercy, O Lᴏʀᴅ!
O Lᴏʀᴅ, my Lord, the strength of my salvation,
    you have covered my head in the day of battle.
Grant not, O Lᴏʀᴅ, the desires of the wicked;
    do not further their evil plot, or they will be exalted!  (Ps 140:6-8)


“For my part, on the contrary, I scorned all human things and dedicated myself to You.  I know You are Lord and God, and I await help from You.”  The repetition comes from a person of faith and longing: “In You, I place the hope of salvation, You alone being strong enough to provide salvation.  I learned this by experience, when I submitted to single combat with Goliath, and when I was engaged in battle with the Philistines, You protected me with Your aid as a shield.  Do not grant to the one hankering after my slaughter the realization of their desire.… They direct every thought to my murder, so do not strip me of Your providence lest You provide them with an occasion for deceit.”

Theodoret of Cyrus, Commentary on the Psalms 140.3-4

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Devious and Deadly

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



Deliver me, O Lᴏʀᴅ, from evil men;
    preserve me from violent men,
who plan evil things in their heart
    and stir up wars continually.
They make their tongue sharp as a serpent's,
    and under their lips is the venom of asps.  (Ps 140:1-3)


From them free me, from them let Your hand be most powerful to deliver me.  For it is easy to avoid open enmities and to turn aside from an open, declared enemy, while iniquity is in his lips as well as his heart.  He who bears good things in his lips, while in his heart he conceals evil things, is a troublesome enemy: he is secret; he is with difficulty avoided.

What is, “war”?  They made for me what I was to fight against all day long.  For from there, from such hearts as these, arises all that the Christian fights against.  Whether sedition, schism, heresy, or turbulent opposition, it does not spring except from these imaginings which were concealed, and while they spoke good words with their lips, “all the day long did they make war.”  You hear words of peace, yet war does not depart from their thoughts.  For the words, “all the day long,” signify without intermission, throughout the whole time.

If you still seek to make out the man, behold a comparison.  In the serpent above all beasts is there cunning and craft to hurt, for therefore does it creep.  It has no feet, so that its footsteps when it comes may be heard.  In its progress it draws itself, as it were, gently along, yet not straightly.  In this way do they creep and crawl to hurt, having poison hidden even under a gentle touch.  And so it follows, “the poison of asps is under their lips.”  Behold, it is “under” their lips, that we may perceive one thing under their lips, another in their lips.

Augustine, Expositions on the Psalms 140.5

Friday, April 8, 2016

Describing the Indescribable

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



To him who struck down the firstborn of Egypt,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
and brought Israel out from among them,
    for His steadfast love endures forever;
with a strong hand and an outstretched arm,
    for His steadfast love endures forever.  (Ps 136:10-12)


And although the heavenly Scripture often turns the divine appearance into a human form,—as when it says, “The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous;” or when it says, “The Lord God smelled the smell of a good savor;” or when there are given to Moses the tables “written with the finger of God;” or when the people of the children of Israel are set free from the land of Egypt “with a mighty hand and with a stretched out arm;” or when it says, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken these things;” or when the earth is set forth as “God’s footstool;” or when it says, “Incline your ear, and hear,”—we who say that the law is spiritual do not include within these features of our bodily nature any mode or figure of the divine majesty, but diffuse that character of unbounded magnitude over its plains without any limit.  For it is written, “If I shall ascend into heaven, You are there; if I shall descend into hell, You are there also; and if I shall take my wings, and go away across the sea, there Your hand shall lay hold of me, and Your right hand shall hold me.”  For we recognize the plan of the divine Scripture according to the proportion of its arrangement.  For the prophet then was still speaking about God in parables according to the period of the faith, not as God was, but as the people were able to receive Him.  And thus, that such things as these should be said about God, must be imputed not to God, but rather to the people.  Thus the people are permitted to erect a tabernacle, and yet God is not contained within the enclosure of a tabernacle.  Thus a temple is reared, and yet God is not at all bounded within the restraints of a temple.  It is not therefore God who is limited, but the perception of the people is limited; nor is God restricted, but the understanding of the reason of the people is held to be restricted.  Finally, in the Gospel the Lord said, “The hour shall come when neither in this mountain nor in Jerusalem shall you worship the Father;” and gave the reasons, saying, “God is a Spirit; and those therefore who worship, must worship in spirit and in truth.”  Thus the divine agencies are there exhibited by means of members; it is not the appearance of God nor the bodily features that are described.

Novation, On the Trinity VI

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Pity and Punishment Are Both Wrought in Righteousness

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



To him who struck down the firstborn of Egypt,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
and brought Israel out from among them,
    for His steadfast love endures forever;
with a strong hand and an outstretched arm,
    for His steadfast love endures forever.  (Ps 136:10-12)


Perhaps, however, you might be at a loss to explain how the provision for death is due to mercy.  Consider, then, the solution offered by the present words: He has pity on the wronged and punishes the wrongdoers, which is in fact what the inspired author added at this point.  Mercy in Israel’s regard inflicted punishment on the others, though even former and latter are regarded in righteousness.  It was righteous of Him to have mercy on the ones, and just of Him to punish the others.  He called His operation hand and His strength arm.  Through both, however, He indicated that by the salvation worked for the people He revealed His peculiar power.

            Theodoret of Cyrus, Commentary on the Psalms 136.5

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Adorned by Their Creator's Will

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



To him who by understanding made the heavens,
    for his steadfast love endures forever  (Ps 136:5)


To the very end of the psalm, praise is proclaimed in honorific narration, which consists of the collected explanation of His achievements, for recording the Lord's achievements is His praise.  So this is what is meant by the earlier words: Who alone has done great wonders, for He performed these things not through not through creatures but solely by the power of His divinity.  His words: He made the heavens in understanding, have delineated the very power of His dispensation.  He does not perform any actions by His sight or by emulating the constructions of others, but all that He has designated by the understanding of His majesty He brings to effect by the work of a moment.  His will embodies the consummation of events, His decree does not permit delay; as the previous psalm put it: Whatever the Lord pleased, He has done in heaven and earth.  So He made the heavens in understanding, for they were not fashioned in any confusion or disorder or misshapenness, but brought to completion well-fashioned and adorned by their Creator’s will.

Cassiodorus, Explanation of the Psalms

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Call on Him in Truth

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



The Lᴏʀᴅ is near to all who call on him,
    to all who call on him in truth.
He fulfills the desire of those who fear him;
    he also hears their cry and saves them.  (Ps 145:18-19)


But we must look attentively at this—that not everyone who seems to pray before other people is proven to ask or to seek or to knock at the entrance of the heavenly kingdom in the sight of the searcher of heaven.  The prophet would not have said, “The Lord is near to all who call on him in truth,” unless he recognized that there are some who call on the name of the Lord, but not in truth.  They do indeed call upon the Lord in truth who do not contradict in their lives what they say in their prayers.  They call on the Lord in truth who, as they are about to offer their petitions, first busy themselves with carrying out His orders.  Those who, as they are about to say to Him in prayer, “And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors,” have fulfilled that mandate of His that says, “And whenever you stand to pray, grant pardon if you have anything against anyone, so that your Father too, who is in heaven, may forgive you your sins.”  Hence about such persons the prophet appropriately says, “He will fulfill the will of those who fear him, and will hearken to their prayers and will save them.”  Accordingly, they call on the Lord in truth who are acknowledged to fear Him.  He listens to their prayers when they cry out.  He grants their pious desires when they long for Him.  He raises them up to eternal salvation when they have passed from this life.

Bede, Homilies on the Gospels 2.14

Friday, April 1, 2016

Faithful and Kind

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



The Lᴏʀᴅ is faithful in all his words
    and kind in all his works.
The Lᴏʀᴅ upholds all who are falling
    and raises up all who are bowed down.  (Ps 145:14 LXX)


His truthfulness in promises is matched by His holiness recognizable in all His activity.  This too undoubtedly refers to the Lord’s abundance, when those who fall are raised, the guilty pardoned, and the battered are restored.  It is then that recollection of His sweetness is noted when the power of such deeds is beheld, and there is an outburst in praise of Him who deigned to snatch the sinner from the devil’s control.  Note that here too two things are ascribed to the Lord: He raises up those who fall but as yet have not crashed down, and he restores those who are cast down, who are already seen to have sustained a fall.  This is well observed, for we are protected from falling by His protection, and equally raised by His power so that when prostrate we can rise.  Undoubtedly, these and similar events can come to pass through the abundance of His sweetness.

The eyes of all wait upon You;
    and You give them their food in due season.
You open Your hands,
    and fill every living thing with pleasure.  (Ps 145:15-16 LXX)


In the two verses here and the later one, a broader explanation is given: those who listen to the Lord of mercy must also tremble at the just Judge.  It is of the nature of His justice that those who do not cease to hope in Him attain obtain the gifts of fullness from Him.  The food mentioned here must be understood as embracing each and every thing; some things demand physical control, and others spiritual, but to all is dispensed as one food the generosity of the Creator.  So that you should not think that what is asked for will always be given, the psalmist added in due season.  Many make petitions, but they are happily rejected.  So let us pray diligently for this one thing, that the Lord in His kindness may grant only what He knows is helpful.  As Paul says: We do not know what to pray for as we ought.  We also know that all things are established in His power when He opens His hand and every living creature is filled with blessings.

Cassiodorus, Exposition of the Psalms

Thursday, March 31, 2016

He Is Good to All

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



The Lᴏʀᴅ is gracious and merciful,
    slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.
The Lᴏʀᴅ is good to all,
    and his mercy is over all that he has made.  (Ps 145:8-9)


Were He not such as this, there would be no seeking to recover us.  Consider yourself: what did you deserve, O sinner?  Despiser of God, what did you deserve?  See if anything occurs to you but penalty, if anything occurs to you but punishment.  You see, then, what was due to you, and what He has given, who gave freely.  There was given pardon to the sinner.  There was given the spirit of justification.  There was given charity and love, wherein you may do all good works.  And beyond this, He will give you also life everlasting, and fellowship with the angels: all of His mercy.… Hear the Scripture: “I do not desire the death of a sinner, but rather that he should turn, and live.”  By these words of God, he is brought back to hope, but there is another snare to be feared, lest through this very hope he sins all the more.  What then did you also say, you who through hope sins yet more?  “Whenever I shall turn, God will forgive me all; I will do whatever I desire.”  Do not say, “Tomorrow I will turn, tomorrow I will please God; and all today’s and yesterday’s deeds shall be forgiven me.”  You speak the truth: God has promised pardon to your conversion, but He has not promised a tomorrow to your delay.

Why then does He condemn?  Why does He scourge?  Are not they whom He condemns, whom He scourges, His works?  Plainly they are.  And will you know how “His compassions are over all His works”?  Thence is that long-suffering, whereby “He makes His sun to rise on the evil and on the good.”  Are not “His compassions over all His works, who sends rain upon the just and upon the unjust”?  In His long-suffering He waits for the sinner, saying, “Turn to Me, and I will turn to you.”  Are not “His compassions over all His works”?  And when He says, “Go into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels,” this is not His compassion, but His severity.  His compassion is given to His works.  His severity is not over His works, but over your works.  Lastly, if you remove your own evil works, and there remain in you nothing but His work, His compassion will not leave you, but if you do not leave your works, there will be severity over your works, not over His works.

Augustine, Expositions on the Book of Psalms 145.7-8

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

His Greatness Is Unsearchable

Continuing my posts of patristic texts coinciding with this Sunday’s Psalm study.



Great is the Lᴏʀᴅ, and greatly to be praised,
    and his greatness is unsearchable.  (Ps 145:3)


Now if any one should ask for some interpretation, and description, and explanation of the Divine essence, we are not going to deny that in this kind of wisdom we are unlearned, acknowledging only so much as this, that it is not possible that that which is by nature infinite should be comprehended in any conception expressed by words.  The fact that the Divine greatness has no limit is proclaimed by prophecy, which declares expressly that of His splendor, His glory, His holiness, “there is no end.”  And if His surroundings have no limit, much more is He Himself in His essence, whatever it may be, comprehended by no limitation in any way.  If then interpretation by way of words and names implies by its meaning some sort of comprehension of the subject, and if, on the other hand, that which is unlimited cannot be comprehended, no one could reasonably blame us for ignorance, if we are not bold in respect of what none should venture upon.  For by what name can I describe the incomprehensible?  By what speech can I declare the unspeakable?  Accordingly, since the Deity is too excellent and lofty to be expressed in words, we have learned to honor in silence what transcends speech and thought.

And if he who “thinks more highly than he ought to think,” tramples upon this cautious speech of ours making a jest of our ignorance of things incomprehensible, and recognizes a difference of unlikeness in that which is without figure, or limit, or size, or quantity (I mean in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit), and brings forward to reproach our ignorance that phrase which is continually alleged by the disciples of deceit, “‘You worship what you do not know,’ if you do not know the essence of what you worship,” we shall follow the advice of the prophet, and not fear the reproach of fools, nor be led by their reviling to talk boldly of things unspeakable, making that unpracticed speaker Paul our teacher in the mysteries that transcend knowledge, who is so far from thinking that the Divine nature is within the reach of human perception, that he calls even the judgments of God “unsearchable,” and His ways “past finding out,” and affirms that the things promised to them that love Him, for their good deeds done in this life, are above comprehension so that it is not possible to behold them with the eye, nor to receive them by hearing, nor to contain them in the heart.

Learning this, therefore, from Paul, we boldly declare that, not only are the judgments of God too high for those who try to search them out, but that the ways also that lead to the knowledge of Him are even until now untrodden and impassable.  For this is what we understand that the Apostle wishes to signify, when he calls the ways that lead to the incomprehensible “past finding out,” showing by the phrase that that knowledge is unattainable by human calculations, and that no one ever yet set his understanding on such a path of reasoning, or showed any trace or sign of an approach, by way of perception, to the things incomprehensible.

Gregory of Nyssa, Against Eunomius 3.5