Affiance
Psalm 31:15
My times are in your hand: deliver me from the hand of my enemies, and from them that persecute me.


There is nothing which more distinguishes the Christian from the ungodly man than the temper with which the experiences and possibilities of life are regarded. The Christian sees in all the hand of God, and submits; the other feels the stroke hardly knowing whence it comes. The one looks up with intelligent hope, the other looks down as it falls with a blind despair. How terrible are the calamities which the psalm portrays; but how beautiful the trust which, in the midst of them all, the psalmist displays.

I. WHAT LIES AT ITS BASIS — belief in the truth of a particular providence. Now, providence is the Divine reason of all things. Deny it, and you take away the ground of my trust and resignation. And why should any suppose that the control or agency of the Infinite should terminate with the first creating act? That He should create and then leave that which He has created to go on its way without further control or care? Yet many think this. They believe that God has formed a number of self-acting machines. He wound up the mighty herologe, and stood aside to see it go. They think it derogatory to His dignity to be constantly interfering with His works. But where is there less dignity in administering laws than in appointing them? And how do we know what is or is not worthy of His care? Apart from the plans and purposes of God, the entire universe is insignificant: in relation to them every atom is important, for upon any one atom the entire sequence may depend. It is told of Mahomet, how, when hard pressed by his pursuers, he took refuge in a cave, which they were about to enter, when they observed a spider's web spun over the mouth of it, and, therefore, turned away convinced that it could not have been lately entered. That spider's web changed the destiny of the world, inasmuch as it preserved the life of the man who exercised such immense influence over it. And how perpetually we are finding that vast results turn upon the most trivial and insignificant circumstances. Without providence, history would be an absurdity, the universe an enigma, and the Deity undeified. The Christian assigns to this doctrine a place among the primary truths of his religious faith. He devoutly and joyfully recognizes it. In the text the psalmist declares that his "times" — all the vicissitudes and changes of his life — are in God's hand; all under God's appointment, and under His control. It is so. Our times of prosperity, of adversity, and the time of our death.

II. THE CHRISTIAN MAN'S RECOGNITION OF THIS TRUTH. It is by faith. The proof of the doctrine is sufficient but not overpowering. Our admission of it depends largely upon our moral condition as, indeed, all faith does. There is no faith in believing the demonstration of a mathematical problem. A man, therefore, may recognize no providence, and to those who do, its difficulties are often very great. Nevertheless, the Christian believes. For he believes in the justice, the wisdom and the goodness, as well as the power of God. And because he is reconciled to God in Christ he believes that providence will bring good to him. He calls upon God as "Our Father, which art in Heaven." Well, then, let us be content, be our lot what it may. Trust for all the future. Let me never dare to doubt.

(Henry Allen.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: My times are in thy hand: deliver me from the hand of mine enemies, and from them that persecute me.

WEB: My times are in your hand. Deliver me from the hand of my enemies, and from those who persecute me.




My Times are in Thy Hand
Top of Page
Top of Page