The Divine Chain of Mountains of Praise - An Exposition Psalm 103

By Charles Spurgeon

TITLE. A Psalm of David. — Doubtless by David; it is in his own style when at its best, and we should attribute it to his later years when he had a higher sense of the preciousness o ...

Extract

The Divine Chain of Mountains of Praise
An Exposition of Psalm 103
C H Spurgeon

TITLE. A Psalm of David. — Doubtless by David; it is in his own style when at its best, and we should attribute it to his later years when he had a higher sense of the preciousness of pardon, because a keener sense of sin, than in his younger days. His clear sense of the frailty of life indicates his weaker years, as also does the very fainess of his praiseful gratitude. As in the lofty Alps some peaks rise above all others so among even the inspired Psalms there are heights of song which overtop the rest. This one hundred and third Psalm has ever seemed to us to be the Monte Rosa of the divine chain of mountains of praise, glowing with a ruddier light than any of the rest. It is as the apple tree among the trees of the wood, and its golden fruit has a flavour such as no fruit ever bears unless it has been ripened in the full sunshine of mercy. It is man’s reply to the benedictions of his God, his Song on the Mount answering to his Redeemer’s Sermon on the Mount. Nebuchadnezzar adored his idol with flute, harp, sacbut, psaltery, dulcimer and all kinds of music; and David, in far nobler style awakens all the melodies of heaven and earth in honour of the one only living and true God. Our attempt at exposition is commenced under an impressive sense of the utter impossibility of doing justice to so sublime a composition; we call upon our soul and all that is within us to aid in the pleasurable task; but, alas, our soul is finite, and our all of mental faculty far too little for the enterprise. There is too much in the Psalm, for a thousand pens to write, it is one of those all-comprehending Scriptures which is a Bible in itself, and it might alone almost suffice for the hymn book of the church. DIVISION.

First the Psalmist sings of personal mercies which he had himself received Psa. 103:1-5; then he magnifies the attributes of Jehovah as displayed in his dealings with his people, Psa. 103:6-19; and he closes by calling upon all the creatures in the universe to adore the Lord and join with himself in blessing Jehovah, the ever gracious. …

Original Title

The Divine Chain of Mountains of Praise - An Exposition Psalm 103

Total Pages

22

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UK

Language

English

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