Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - The Golden Alphabet: 05 Exposition of Psalm 119:33-40
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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - The Golden Alphabet: 05 Exposition of Psalm 119:33-40
TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - The Golden Alphabet (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 05 Exposition of Psalm 119:33-40
Other Subjects in this Topic:
Exposition of Psa_119:33-40
by Charles Spurgeon
33. Teach me, O LORD, the way of thy statutes; and I shall keep it
unto the end.
34. Give me understanding, and I shall keep thy law; yea, I shall
observe it with my whole heart.
35. Make me to go in the path of thy commandments; for therein
do I delight.
36. Incline my heart unto thy testimonies, and not to covetousness.
37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity; and quicken
thou me in thy way.
38. Stablish thy word unto thy servant, who is devoted to thy fear.
39. Turn away my reproach which I fear: for thy judgments are
good.
40. Behold, I have longed after thy precepts: quicken me in thy
righteousness.
A sense of dependence and a consciousness of extreme need pervade this
section, which is all made up of prayer and plea. The former eight verses
trembled with a sense of sin, quivering with a childlike sense of weakness
and folly, which caused the man of God to cry out for the help by which
alone his soul could be preserved from falling back into sin. That cry for
help is here expressed in requests for teaching, upholding, inclining,
stablishing and quickening.
The section is a honeycomb of prayers. Let us put up similar petitions
while we read, and we may be assured that prayers thus taught us by the
Lord will be answered by him.
33. “Teach me O Lord, the way of thy statutes; and I shall keep it unto the
end.”
“Teach me, O Lord, the way of thy statutes.” Childlike, blessed words,
from the lips of an old, experienced believer, and he a king, and a man
inspired of God. Alas for those who will never be taught! They dote upon
their own wisdom; but their folly is apparent to all who rightly judge. The
Psalmist desires to have the Lord for his teacher; for he feels that his heart
will not learn of any less, effectual instructor. A sense of great slowness to
learn drives us to seek a great teacher. What condescension it is on our
great Jehovah’s part that he deigns to teach those who seek him! The
lesson which is desired is thoroughly practical; the holy man would not
only learn the statutes, but the way of them, the daily use of them, their
tenor, spirit, direction, habit, tendency. He would know that path of
holiness which is hedged in by divine law, along which the commands of
the Lord stand as sign-posts of direction, and mile-stones of information,
guiding and marking our progress. The very desire to learn this way is in
itself an assurance that we shall be taught therein; for he who made us long
to learn will be sure to gratify the desire.
“And I shall keep it unto the end.” Those who are taught of God never
forget their lessons. When divine grace sets a man in the true way, he will
be true to it. Mere human wit and wilt have no such enduring influence:
there is an end to all perfection of the flesh, but there is no end to heavenly
grace except its own end, which is the perfecting of holiness in the fear of
the Lord. Perseverance to the end is most certainly to be predicted of
those whose, beginning is in God, and with God, and by God; but those
who commence without the Lord’s teaching soon forget what they learn,
and start aside from the way upon which they professed to have entered.
No one may boast that he will hold on his way in his own strength, for that
must depend upon the continual teaching of the Lord: we shall fall like
Peter, if we presume on our own firmness, as he did. If God keeps us we
shall keep his way, and it is a great comfort to know that it is the way with
God to keep the feet of his saints. Yet we are to watch as if our keeping of
the war depended wholly on ourselves: for, according to this verse, our
perseverance rests not on any :force or compulsion, but on the teaching of
the Lord, and assuredly teaching, whoever be the teacher, requires learning
on the part of the taught one: no one can teach a man who refuses to learn.
Earnestly, then, let us drink in divine instruction, that so we may hold fast
our integrity, and to life’s latest hour follow on in the path of uprightness I
If we receive the living and incorruptible seed of the word of God we must
live: apart from this we have no life eternal, but only a name to live.
The “end” of which David speaks is the end of life, or the fullness of
obedience. He trusted in grace to make him faithful to the utmost, never
drawing a line and saying to obedience, “Hitherto shalt thou come, but no
further.” The end of our keeping the law will come only when we cease to
breathe; no good man will think of marking a date and saying, “It is
enough, I may now relax my watch, and live after the manner of men.”
As Christ loves us to the end, so must we serve him to the end. The end of
divine teaching is that we may persevere to the end.
The portions of eight show a relationship still. GIMEL begins with prayer
for life, that he may keep the word (17); DALETH cries for more life,
according to that word (25); and now HE opens with a prayer for teaching,
that the man of God may keep the way of God’s statute. If a keen eye is
turned upon these verses a closer affinity will be discerned.
34. “Give me understanding, and I shall keep thy law; yea, I shall observe
it with my whole heart.”
“Give me understanding, and I shall keep thy law.” This is the same
prayer enlarged, or rather it is a supplement which intensifies it. He not
only needs teaching, but the power to learn: he requires not only to
understand, but to obtain an understanding. How low has sin brought us;
for we even lack the faculty to understand spiritual things, and are quite
unable to know them till we are endowed with spiritual discernment! Will
God in very deed give us understanding? This is a miracle of grace. It will,
however, never be wrought upon us till we know our need of it; and we
shall not even discover that need till God gives us a measure of
understanding to perceive it. We are in a state of complicated ruin, from
which nothing but manifold grace can deliver us. Those who feel their folly
are by the example of the Psalmist encouraged to pray for understanding:
let each man by faith cry, ‘“Give me understanding.’” hers have had it, why
may it not come to me? It was a gift to them; will not the Lord also freely
bestow it upon me?
We are not to seek this blessing that we may be famous for wisdom, but
that we may be abundant in our love to the law of God. He who has
understanding will learn; remember, treasure up, and obey the
commandment of the Lord. The gospel gives us grace to keep the law; the
free gift leads us to holy service; there is no way of reaching to holiness but
by accepting the gift of God!. If God gives, we keep; but we never keep
the law in order to obtaining grace. The sure result of regeneration, or the
bestowal of understanding, is a devout reverence for the law and a resolute
keeping of it in the heart. The Spirit of God makes us to know the Lord
and to understand somewhat of his love, wisdom, holiness, and majesty;
and the result is, that we honor the law and yield our hearts to the
obedience of the faith.
Matthew Henry wisely notes that “an enlightened understanding is that
which we are indebted to Christ for; for the Son of God is come, and hath
given us an understanding” (1 John 5:20). Any writer can give us
something to understand, but only the Lord Jesus can give to us
understanding itself.
“Yea, I shall observe it with my whole heart.” The understanding
operates upon the affections; it convinces the heart of the beauty of the
law, so that the soul loves it with all its powers; and then it reveals the
majesty of the lawgiver, and the whole nature bows before his supreme will
An enlightened judgment heals the divisions of the heart, and bends the
united affections to a strict and watchful observance of the one rule of life.
He alone obeys God who can say, “My Lord, I would serve thee, and do it
with all my heart”; and none can truly say this till they have received as a
free grant the inward illumination of the Holy Ghost. To observe God’s