Psalms 143 v 5


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Posted by Psalms on Saturday, 23 January 2016
Psalms 143:5 
I remember the days of old; I meditate on all thy works; I muse on the work of thy hands. 


143:5. I remember the days of old. When we see nothing new which can cheer us, let us think upon old things. We once had merry days, days of deliverance, and joy and thanksgiving; why not again? Jehovah rescued his people in the ages which lie back, centuries ago; why should he not do the like again? We ourselves have a rich past to look back upon; we have many memories, sacred memories, satisfactory memories, and these are as flowers for the bees of faith to visit, from whence they may make honey for present use. 
I meditate on all thy works. When my own works reproach me, thy works refresh me. If at the first view the deeds of the Lord do not encourage us, let us think them over again, ruminating and considering the histories of divine providence. We ought to take a wide and large view of all God’s works, for as a whole they work together for good, and in each part they are worthy of reverent study.  
I muse on the work of thy hands. This he had done even in his most trying hours. Creation had been the book in which he read of the wisdom and goodness of the Lord. He repeats his perusal of the page of nature, and counts it a balm for his wounds, a cordial for his cares, to see what the Lord has made by his skillfull hands. When the work of our own hand grieves us, let us look to the work of God’s hands. Memory, meditation, and musing are here set together as the three graces, ministering grace to a mind depressed and likely to be diseased. As David with his harp played away the evil spirit from Saul, so does he here chase away gloom from his own soul by holy communion with God. 

Excerpt from: 
The Treasury of David by Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892) 
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