In the morning, O LORD, You hear my voice; at daybreak I lay my plea before You and wait in expectation. Sermons
I. THE PSALMIST LAYS THE ENTIRE SITUATION BEFORE GOD. (Vers. 8, 9, "mine enemies," equivalent to" those that lie in wait for me.") The whole of the ninth verse shows the treachery and hollowness that mark the hostile bands, and the consequent peril in which the people of God were on that account. (This verse is one of those quoted by the Apostle Paul in proof of human depravity. Nor is there any contrariety to reason in his so doing. For while the psalm speaks of all this wickedness in its relation to society, St. Paul speaks of similar wickedness in its relation to the Law of God and to the God of law. And it is because the psalmist knows how foreign to the nature of God all this iniquity is, that he brings it before God in prayer, and asks him to put it to shame.) Note: Let us learn to pray minutely, and not to lose ourselves in generalities. II. IN DOING THIS HE RECOGNIZES AN ENDEARING RELATION. (Ver. 2.) "My King," "my God." God was not a far-distant Being, only remotely related. The name "Jehovah" brought him near as Israel's redeeming God; and that very name, which removes us infinitely from anthropomorphism, was the one in which the saints of old found their joy and glory. They could call God flair God. Under the New Testament our thoughts of God may be more sweet and endearing still. III. HE OBSERVES A DEVOUT AND WISE METHOD IN HIS PRAYER. "In the morning I will direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up. The meaning is - I will order it accurately, and then look out to see whether it has sped, and when the answer will come. (Many of the old divines are very felicitous in their treatment of these two words.) Sometimes, indeed, the yearning Godward is too deep for outward expression (see ver. 1, "consider my meditation," i.e. understand my murmuring). "Lord, read the desires of my heart by thine all-piercing eye - and interpret my petitions in thine own loving-kindness before they rise to my lips." Happy they who know that they have a God with whom they can thus plead, and who have learned the blessed art of thus pleading with God! IV. HE SETS HIS APPLICATION ON SUBSTANTIAL GROUNDS. (Vers. 4-6.) The psalmist knows the character of God, and the righteousness of his administration; and in these verses he shows us how real was the revelation on these great themes which God had given in his Law (see Psalm 103:6, 7). All these glorious disclosures of the holiness of God are reiterated and confirmed in the teaching and redemption of the Son of God. (For the specific phrases, see the Exposition; also Perowne and Cheyne.) It is because we know what God is, and the principles of his government, that we can under all circumstances commend ourselves, the Church, and the world to him. V. ON SUCH GROUNDS THE PSALMIST OFFERS VARIED PETITIONS. 1. For himself. (Ver. 8.) Beautiful! He wants (1) to go along God's way, not his own; (2) to be shown clearly what that way is; and then (3) to be led along that way. He who thus puts himself into God's hand, wanting only to be led aright, shall never be put to shame. 2. For the people of God. (Ver. 11.) He prays that in the midst of the whirl and tumult which surround them, the righteous may ever ring out a peal of joy because of God's protecting care and love. 3. For evil ones. (Ver. 10.) He prays that they may be (1) held guilty and condemned for their transgressions. Yea (2) rejected by God, even as they had themselves rejected God. We are not bound to imitate the psalmist in such petitions. Jesus Christ tells us that the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than the greatest of Old Testament prophets. They could not rise above the level of their inspiration, nor advance in prayer beyond the point their understanding had reached in those days. For us it would be far more appropriate to pray for the conversion of God's enemies by the power of his love and grace. VI. THERE IS HERE A CONFIDENT ASSURANCE EXPRESSED. (Ver. 12, "Thou, Lord, wilt bless the righteous... as with a shield.") The word means, not a small shield which may be held out to ward off a dart, but a large buckler which can cover one around as with armour. So effective are the Divine protection and care with which he guards his own. May such protection ever be ours! VII. IT IS WORTHY OF NOTE AT WHAT HOUR OF THE DAY THIS PRAYER IS OFFERED. We are twice told in the third verse, "in the morning." The early morn, when the frame is freshest and the spirit freest, is the best time for devotion. The early hours, when sanctified by prayer, will help us to sanctify the whole day for God. Before ever we look upon the face of man, let us catch a morning smile from our Father in heaven; and we shall find how true it is that - "His morning smiles bless all the day." C. 1. My voice shalt Thou hear. Understand as promising himself a gracious acceptance with God. "Thou wilt hear." It is the language of his faith, grounded upon God's promise, that His ear shall be always open to His people's cry. Wherever God finds a praying heart, He will be found a prayer hearing God. Understand as David's promising God a constant attendance on Him, in the way He has appointed. God understands the language of the heart, and that is the language in which we must speak to God. We must see to it that God hears from us daily. He expects and requires it. Thus He will keep up His authority over us: and testify His love and compassion towards us. We have something to say to God every day: as to a friend we love, and have freedom with; as to a master we serve, and have business with. Our happiness is bound up in His favour. We have offended Him, and are daily contracting guilt. We have daily work to do for God and our own souls. We are continually in danger. We are dying daily. We are members of that body whereof Christ is the head, and are concerned to approve ourselves living members. Lay all this together, and consider whether you have not something to say to God every day. If you have all this to say to God, what should hinder you from saying it? Let not distance, or fear, hinder you. Let not His knowing what your business is hinder you. Let not any other business hinder our saying what we have to say to God. II. WE MUST DIRECT OUR PRAYER TO GOD. We must with deliberation and design address ourselves to Him. The term "direct" indicates fixedness of thought, and a close application of mind, to the duty of prayer. It speaks the sincerity of our habitual intention in prayer: the steadiness of our actual regard to God in prayer. III. WE MUST LOOK UP. We must look up in our prayers; and after our prayers, with an eye of satisfaction and pleasure; with an eye of observation, what returns God makes to our prayers. Let us be inward with God in every duty, to make heart work of it, or we make nothing of it. The particular time fixed for this good work is the morning. Then we are fresh and lively. Then we are most free from company and business. Then we have received fresh mercies from God, which we are concerned to acknowledge. In the morning we have fresh matter ministered to us for the adoration of the greatness and glory of God. In the morning we are addressing ourselves to the work of the day, and therefore are concerned by prayer to seek unto God for His presence and blessing. (Matthew Henry.) Homilist. I. THE CHRISTIAN'S RESOLUTION. To pray.1. Prayer is a duty and a privilege. It implies spiritual life — filial relationship — freedom of access to God. The spirit of prayer must be earnestly cultivated. 2. God is the supreme and immediate object of prayer. "I will direct my prayer unto Thee." The mediation of priests and saints or of the Virgin Mary superfluous. "Call upon Me in the day of trouble," etc. 3. Prayer must be definite in its aim. "I will direct, etc. A soul soliloquy is not prayer. Nor is the enumeration of the Divine attributes hid. True prayer is the earnest expression of the deep necessities and longings of the soul in the simplest language possible. The grain of prayer should not be lost in the chaff of vague generalities. II. THE BEST TIME FOR PRIVATE PRAYER. "In the morning," etc. 1. There is a greater freedom from the distracting cares of the family, business, etc. 2. We should seek Divine strength in anticipation of duties, trials, temptations, etc. 3. A day begun with prayer, generally proves a happy day. 4. The most eminent Christians have devoted the early morning to prayer. Mention some. III. THE BECOMING ATTITUDE FOR A PRAYERFUL SOUL. "I will look up." Describe watchtower. 1. We should not be satisfied without the conviction that our prayers have been heard by God. Many prayers never reach the goal of the throne of grace. 2. Our prayers should not be forgotten, but an answer looked for. It will he so if our eye be single and our aim definite. 3. Such an attitude prepares us for the recognition of the Divine hand in answer to our prayers. (Homilist.) 1. Morning is the time for reflection. It seems natural to think, and to be quiet, in the early morning. The very laws of our physical being demand quiet in the morning. 2. Morning is the time for observation. The curtain is drawn aside and we look upon the lace of God's creation. 3. Morning is the time for purpose. We may begin again, every morning, with fresh purposes, that will be achieved if the strength of God is made perfect in our weakness. 4. Morning is the time for prayer. As the morning gives wings to the day, so prayer gives wings to the morning. Wise reflections will become wiser through the power of prayer, and our purposes will only be binding on the conscience, or wrought out in the life, as prayer gives them their character of sincerity or religiousness. Mornings are monitors, text books, and registers. (W. G. Barrett.) Among the elegant forms of insect life, there is a little creature known to naturalists, which can gather round it a sufficiency of atmospheric air — and so clothed upon, it descends into the bottom of the pool, and you may see the little diver moving about dry and at his ease, protected by his crystal vesture, though the water all around and above be stagnant and bitter. Prayer is such a protector — a transparent vesture, the world sees it not — but a real defence, it keeps out the world. By means of it, the believer can gather so much of heaven's atmosphere around him, and with it descend into the putrid depths of this contaminating world, that for a season no evil will touch him; and he knows where to ascend for a new supply.(James Hamilton.) A battle is every morning fought in every Christian's closet. The morning is the key of the position. The season of morning prayer is, so to speak, the citadel, the Hougomont, the critical point in each successive day. If he wins those morning minutes, the devil knows he has won that day.(James Hamilton.) It is said that the monks of Mount Athos are accustomed to hypnotise themselves into trance conditions by gazing at their own bodies — no very ennobling objective if true. In some of the Buddhist monasteries of Eastern Asia devotees are pointed out who have sat facing blank walls for twenty or thirty years and have gazed themselves into mysterious ecstasies. In the modernised Buddhism of London and New York theosophy the same virtue is ascribed to intense and sustained contemplation. What change, think you, ought to effect itself within us if with the same steadfastness we contemplate the personality of Him who is the leader and consummator of our faith?(Thomas G. Selby.) People David, PsalmistPlaces JerusalemTopics Address, Array, Direct, Eagerly, Expectantly, Expectation, Forward, Hearest, Lay, Morning, Myself, O, Order, Prayer, Prepare, Requests, Sacrifice, Voice, Wait, WatchOutline 1. David prays, and professes his study in prayer4. God favors not the wicked 7. David, professing his faith, prays to God to guide him 10. to destroy his enemies 11. and to preserve the godly Dictionary of Bible Themes Psalm 5:3 4954 morning Library A Staircase of Three Steps'All those that put their trust in Thee ... them also that love Thy name ... the righteous.'--PSALM v. 11, 12. I have ventured to isolate these three clauses from their context, because, if taken in their sequence, they are very significant of the true path by which men draw nigh to God and become righteous. They are all three designations of the same people, but regarded under different aspects and at different stages. There is a distinct order in them, and whether the Psalmist was fully conscious … Alexander Maclaren—Expositions of Holy Scripture Morning Hymn. Morning Hymns Moreover what is Written "Thou Wilt Destroy all that Speak Leasing... But if no Authority for Lying Can be Alleged... A Great Deal for Me to Read Hast Thou Sent... On the Other Hand, those who Say that we must Never Lie... What Then, if a Homicide Seek Refuge with a Christian... Since the Case is So, what is Man... Second Sunday after Trinity Exhortation to Brotherly Love. Question of the Division of Life into the Active and the Contemplative Covenanting a Duty. Covenant Duties. 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