Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 119:130
The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.
130. The entrance of thy words ] R.V. the opening of thy words, the setting forth or unfolding of them. Cp. the use of the cognate verb in Psa 49:4. P.B.V. when thy word goeth forth follows Luther’s earlier rendering wenn dein Wort ausgehet.
the simple ] Who need instruction to enable them to discern between right and wrong. Cp. Psa 19:7 note; Psa 116:6; Pro 1:4.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
The entrance of thy words giveth light – The Septuagint translates this, the manifestation (or declaration) – he delosis – of thy words enlightens. So the Vulgate. Luther renders it, When thy word is revealed, so it delivers us, and makes the simple wise. DeWette, The opening (revelation) of thy word, etc. The Hebrew word – pethach – means an opening or entrance – as of a gate, Jos 20:4; Jdg 9:35; and then a door, as of a tent or the temple, Gen 18:1; 1Ki 6:8; or the gate of a city, Isa 3:26; and then it means opening, insight, instruction. The word as used here seems to denote the opening or unfolding of the word of God; the revelation of that word to the mind. A door is open so that we enter into a house; a gate, so that we enter into a city; and thus the meaning of the word of God is opened to us, so that we may, as it were, enter in and see its beauty. The language does not, therefore, denote the entrance of that word into the mind, but, its being made open to us so that we may perceive its beauty, or may ourselves enter into its meaning, its mysteries, and its beauties.
It giveth understanding unto the simple – The word rendered simple literally means those who are open to persuasion, or who are easily enticed or seduced. Then it refers to the credulous, Pro 14:15, and then to the inexperienced. See Psa 19:7, note; Psa 116:6, note.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 119:130
The entrance of Thy words giveth light: it giveth understanding unto the.
The power of the Word
I. The entrance of the word.
1. Generally Thy Word, as used in the text, includes the whole of Divine revelation from its fret announcement in Genesis of a Redeemer to the last vision of the Heavenly Sanctuary by the beloved John on the Isle of Patmos.
2. Specifically, the entrance of Thy Word is the gift of the Son of God (Joh 1:1-14).
II. The effect of the word.
1. The Word gives us light doctrinally.
(1) As to a satisfactory explanation of the world of nature and her laws.
(2) As to the power and dignity of man.
(3) As to the problem of evil.
(4) As to the method of redemption.
2. The Word gives light practically as to the duty of nations and individuals.
(1) By the ethical and judicial law which Gods Word reveals.
(2) By a better civilization which it ushers in under a new national spirit.
3. The entrance of Thy Word gives us light experimentally.
(1) Reveals our moral condition, dead in trespasses and sin.
(2) As to our personal salvation and regeneration. Here we get the full light of Gods promises.
(3) As to Christian duties to God and our fellow-men. (A. A. Johnson, D. D.)
The light of Gods Word
1. The light-giving quality of Gods Word. It is significant to find that the old saints found in the earlier revelation they received in the Old Testament precisely the same peerless power of holy illumination as we can testify to in the perfected message in Jesus Christ. There is nothing that more strikingly reveals the underlying unity and identity of the sacred Scriptures. The volume and momentum of the revelation have varied, but its essential power to quicken and enkindle the human soul has been steadfastly maintained from the first wonderful utterance of the Divine voice in its sacred pages.
11. This quality furnishes a high test of its divinity. The opening of Thy Word giveth light means not only that Gods Word gives light, but that this light divinely grows with the growing revelation or understanding of the Word. As the Word opens before the soul the Divine shines forth from it more clearly, and the glory of the present God becomes more wonderful. And the more we know of the Gospel of Christ, the more irresistibly Divine and beautiful will it prove itself to be.
III. The Word of God imparts this light by the divinest means. The Word translated giveth light is the same Word which is used concerning God in verse 135–Make Thy face to shine upon Thy servant. As His face shines upon us, He makes our hearts shine back upon Him and upon the world. He does not illuminate our path mechanically, but sets His light within us livingly. He does not use us as passive reflectors of His brightness, but as burning and shining lights. (J. Thomas, M. A.)
Revelation and conversion
Trees are known by their fruit, and books by their effect upon the mind. It is not the elegance of its diction but the excellence of its influence by which a book is to be estimated.
I. The work of the Word of God in conversion. Not apart from the Spirit, but as it is used by the Spirit for divers ends, all needful to salvation.
1. To convince men of sin: they see what perfection is, that God demands it, and that they are far from it.
2. To drive men from false methods of seeking salvation, to bring them to self-despair, and to shut them up to Gods method of saving them.
3. To reveal the way of salvation, by grace, through Christ, by faith.
4. To enable the soul to embrace Christ as its all in all. By setting forth promises and invitations, which are opened up to the understanding and sealed to the heart, etc.
5. To bring the heart nearer and nearer to God. Emotions of love, desires for holiness, devotion, self-searching, love to men, humility, etc.
these are all excited, sustained, and perfected in the heart by the Word of God.
6. To restore the soul when it has wandered. Renewing tenderness, hope, love, joy, etc., by its gentle reminders.
7. To perfect the nature. The highest flights of holy enjoyment are not above or beyond the Word. Nothing is purer or more elevated than Holy Scripture. The Word also slays all sin, promotes every virtue, prepares for every duty, etc.
II. The excellence of this work done by the Word. The operations of grace by the Word are altogether good and not evil; and they are timed and balanced with infinite discretion. The Word of the Lord works marvellously, perfectly, and surely.
1. It removes despair without quenching repentance.
2. Gives pardon, but does not create presumption.
3. Gives rest, but excites the soul to progress.
4. Breathes security, but engenders watchfulness.
5. Bestows strength and holiness, but begets no boasting.
6. Gives harmony to duties, emotions, hopes, and enjoyments.
7. Brings the man to live for God, before God, and with God; and yet makes him none the less fitted for the daily duties of life.
III. The consequent excellence of the Word.
1. We need not add to it if we would secure conversion in any special case, or on the largest scale.
2. We need not keep back any doctrine for fear of damping the flame of a true revival.
3. We need not extraordinary gifts with which to preach it: the Word will do its own work.
4. We have but to follow the Word to be converted. It fits a mans needs as a key fits a lock.
5. We have but to keep to it to become truly wise: wise as the aged, wise as necessity requires, wise as the age, wise as eternity demands, wise with the wisdom of Christ.
(1) Cling to the Scripture.
(2) Study the whole revelation of God.
(3) Use it as your chief instrument in all holy service. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The light of truth
I. The words of God are a light. No effect can rise higher than its cause, and nothing can impart what it does not possess; that which gives light on its entrance into the human heart, must be light, or at least have the property of communicating light. The sun in the firmament diffuses its beams, but has no power of giving sight: a man who is born blind, or who has lost the faculty of seeing, is strictly in darkness, notwithstanding the existence of day. In like manner, the holy Scriptures are a light from Heaven; they spread the most essential knowledge, and are adapted to produce the most beneficial effects; but multitudes are not savingly benefited by them: their minds are still dark, and their hearts remain impenitent and unholy.
II. Something hinders the admission of this light into the heart.
1. Principally it is sin; the love of sin: these are opposed to every dictate of heavenly truth, and counteract its salutary effects.
2. The influence of the world.
3. Unbelief.
4. Prejudice.
III. These hindrances may be removed. By whom and in what way is this change produced? God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts. The Spirit applies the truth with almighty energy. By His agency the Word becomes effectual in them that believe, so that every obstacle is removed, every barrier subdued.
IV. When obstacles are removed, and the word of truth enters, the most beneficial effects are produced.
1. The right knowledge of ourselves.
2. The true knowledge of God.
3. The knowledge of Jesus Christ.
4. The way of salvation by the Cross of Christ is learnt.
5. It discovers to us the snares and dangers of the wilderness through which we pass; it informs us of the enemies we have to encounter, and the numerous evils to which we are exposed.
6. Its entrance in the heart helps us to form a just estimate of earthly things: it detects the emptiness and vanity of the present world, and all its concerns, and makes us acquainted with what is infinitely better–heavenly and eternal good. (T. Kidd.)
Value of Gods Word
I. A great blessing.
1. Light is the chief means of knowledge.
2. Another effect of light is cheerfulness (Ecc 11:7).
3. Light is productive of healthy growth.
II. The means of its communication. What is the psalmists idea? Is it the glory of the daybreak–the opening of the earth, and air, and sky by the beams of the rising sun? Or the opening as of the seed-sprout, or the bud that unfolds its mysterious and beauteous pleats to the light of day? The opening of Thy words, i.e. the hearing them and getting at their secret meaning, the blessed messages of love, of pardon, peace. Where are these words of God? All around us in His works and ways! (J. E. Flower, M. A.)
Gods truth clear and simple
The powerlessness of philosophy consists in the fact that it is profound and obscure; the strength of Christianity that it is profound and clear. One of the most illustrious German thinkers said on his death-bed, I carry one regret with me to the grave, that of having been understood by but one man in the world; and he has only half understood me. A system like that was not destined to live, and Hegelianism is already dead. But Jesus Christ made every truth to shine, and herein consisted His greatness.
The Scriptures for the common people
A priest observing to William Tyndale, We are better without Gods law than the Popes, I defy the Pope and all his laws, Tyndale replied; and added, If God spare my life, ere many years I will cause the boy which driveth the plough to know more of Scripture than you do. (Quarterly Review.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 130. The entrance of thy words giveth light] pethach, the opening of it: when I open my Bible to read, light springs up in my mind. Every sermon, every prayer, every act of faith, is an opening by which light is let into the seeking soul.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The entrance of thy words; the very beginnings and rudiments of them; the first discoveries of those sacred mysteries; and much more the depths of them, in which their chief excellency consists. Or, as others both ancient and later interpreters render the place, The opening of thy words; by which may be understood, either,
1. The opening of mens minds by the word of God; but that seems to be the same thing with giving light, which here follows; or,
2. The opening or declaration of Gods mind made in and by his word.
Unto the simple; to the most ignorant and unlearned persons, who are but willing to learn.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
130. The entranceliterally,”opening”; God’s words, as an open door, let in light, orknowledge. Rather, as HENGSTENBERGexplains it, “The opening up,” or, “explanationof thy word.” To the natural man the doors of God’s Word areshut. Luk 24:27; Luk 24:31;Act 17:3; Eph 1:18,confirm this view, “opening (that is, explaining) and alleging,”&c.
unto the simplethoseneeding or desiring it (compare Ps19:7).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
The entrance of thy words giveth light,…. The beginning of them; the first three chapters in Genesis, what light do they give into the origin of all things; the creation of man, his state of innocence; his fall through the temptations of Satan, and his recovery and salvation by Christ, the seed of the woman, the first principles of the oracles of God, the rudiments of religion, the elements of the world, the rites of the ceremonial law, gave great light into Gospel mysteries. As soon as a man enters upon reading the Scriptures, if he has any degree of understanding of the things in them, they immediately throw light into his mind; or, however, as soon as ever the word has an entrance into the heart, and through the Spirit, power, and grace of God, makes its way and has a place there, that being opened by the Lord for that purpose, light arises in darkness. It maybe rendered, “the opening of thy words giveth light” p; and may signify either the interpretation and explanation of the word of God by the ministers of it, which is often of singular use for enlightening and warming the hearts of men, Lu 24:32; and to this sense are the Vulgate Latin and Septuagint versions; the one rendering it “the declaration of thy words”, the other, “the manifestation” of them; and so the Ethiopic and Arabic versions; and to this sense is the Targum;
“the impression of thy words will enlighten those that are dark.”
Or it may intend the word that opens, as well as is opened, since it is the means of opening blind eyes; and so giving light to men to see their lost state by nature, and the suitableness of Christ as a Saviour, his fulness and grace, ability and willingness; to behold the wondrous things of the Gospel, the way they should walk in, and the duties of religion they should perform;
it giveth understanding unto the simple: who want understanding in the knowledge of divine and spiritual things, as all men do; and who are sensible of their want of it, ingenuously confess it, and are meek and humble; and so not above instruction, as proud and conceited persons are. Some render it “babes” q; and it may design such who are but of weak parts, in comparison of others, to whom the things of the Gospel are revealed, when they are hid from the wise and prudent: Christ by his Spirit opens their understandings, that they may understand the Scriptures; and by means of them gives them an understanding of himself, and of those things which make them wise unto salvation, and make for their spiritual peace and comfort, and their eternal welfare; see Ps 19:7.
p “apertio”, Pagninus, Montanus, Musculus, Vatablus, Michaelis; “apertura”, Cocceius, Gejerus; so Ainsworth. q , Sept. “parvulis”, V. L. so Arab. Ethiop. Musculus.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
130 The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.
Here is, 1. The great use for which the word of God was intended, to give light, that is, to give understanding, to give us to understand that which will be of use to us in our travels through this world; and it is the outward and ordinary means by which the Spirit of God enlightens the understanding of all that are sanctified. God’s testimonies are not only wonderful for the greatness of them, but useful, as a light in a dark place. 2. Its efficacy for this purpose. It admirably answers the end; for, (1.) Even the entrance of God’s word gives light. If we begin at the beginning, and take it before us, we shall find that the very first verses of the Bible give us surprising and yet satisfying discoveries of the origin of the universe, about which, without that, the world is utterly in the dark. As soon as the word of God enters into us, and has a place in us, it enlightens us; we find we begin to see when we begin to study the word of God. The very first principles of the oracles of God, the plainest truths, the milk appointed for the babes, bring a great light into the soul, much more will the soul be illuminated by the sublime mysteries that are found there. “The exposition or explication of thy word gives light;” then it is most profitable when ministers do their part in giving the sense, Neh. viii. 8. Some understand it of the New Testament, which is the opening or unfolding of the Old, which would give light concerning life and immortality. (2.) It would give understanding even to the simple, to the weakest capacities; for it shows us a way to heaven so plain that the wayfaring men, though fools, shall not err therein.
Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary
130. The entrance of thy word is light. The amount is, that the light of the truth revealed in God’s word, is so distinct that the very first sight of it illuminates the mind. The word פתח pethach, properly signifies an opening, (10) but metaphorically it is taken for a gate. Accordingly the old translator has rendered it beginning, which is not improper, provided it is understood of the rudiments or first elements of the divine law. It is as if the Prophet had — “Not only do those who have attained an accurate acquaintance with the whole law, and who have made the study of it the business of their lives, discern there a clear light, but also those who have studied it even very imperfectly, and who have only, so to speak, entered the porch.” Now we must reason from the less to the greater. If tyroes and novices begin to be enlightened at their first entrance, what will be the case when a man is admitted to a full and perfect knowledge?
In the second clause the Prophet unfolds his meaning more fully. By little ones he denotes such as neither excel in ingenuity nor are endued with wisdom, but rather are unskilled in letters, and unrefined by education. Of such he affirms that, as soon as they have learned the first principles of the law of God, they will be endued with understanding. It ought to have a most powerful influence in exciting in us an earnest desire to become acquainted with the law of God, when we are told that even those who, in the estimation of the world, are fools, and contemptible simpletons, provided they apply their minds to this subject, acquire from it wisdom sufficient to lead them to eternal salvation. Although it is not given to all men to attain to the highest degree in this wisdom, yet it is common to all the godly to profit so far as to know the certain and unerring rule by which to regulate their life. Thus no man who surrenders himself to the teaching of God, will loose his labor in his school, for from his first entrance he will reap inestimable fruit. Meanwhile we are warned, that all who follow their own understanding, wander in darkness. By affirming that the little ones are enlightened, David intimates, that it is only when men, divested of all self confidence, submit themselves with humble and docile minds to God, that they are in a proper state for becoming proficient scholars in the study of the divine law. Let the Papists mock, as they are accustomed to do, because we would have the Scriptures to be read by all men without exception; yet it is no falsehood which God utters by the mouth of David, when he affirms that the light of his truth is exhibited to fools. God will not, therefore, disappoint the desire of such as acknowledge their own ignorance, and submit themselves humbly to his teaching.
(10) “ פתה pethach, ‘the opening of thy words giveth light:’ when I open my Bible to read, light springs up in my mind.” — Dr. Adam Clarke. The corresponding word in Syriac signifies to enlighten, and in Arabic to explain. Hence, in the opinion of some, פתח, pethach, is the expounding of thy word.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
PE.
(130) Entrance.Literally, opening, which the LXX. and Vulg. better represent by manifestation, declaration. (Comp. opening and alleging, Act. 17:3.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 119:130 The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.
Ver. 130. The entrance of thy words giveth light ] So soon as men are over the threshold of thy house, sese lux quaedam inenarrabilis conspiciendam offert, a marvellous light shineth about them; so little cause is there that any should accuse God’s word of darkness and hardness; or give way to negligence and carelessness of the Scriptures, because they are wonderful. Lex, lux, the law is a light, Pro 6:23 , and the gospel a great light, Mat 4:16 2Pe 1:19 .
It giveth understanding to the simple
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
entrance = doorway; which was always an open way for the light, in the absence of windows.
simple = sincere, as opposed to crafty.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
The Opening of Gods Word
The opening of thy words giveth light;
It giveth understanding unto the simple.Psa 119:130
1. The section of the psalm in which the text occurs is a gem of spiritual beauty. In verse after verse we are led through the deep places of religious faith and love, and the Psalmist guides our feet like one conversant with the holiest secrets of the spiritual pilgrims way. His thoughts are perennial, and his words sound like the utterance of a believing soul here and now in this present generation.
Gods word is wonderful, mysterious. It holds a great mystery which is an offence to the pretentious intellectualism of the wise, but in this very wonderfulness the obedient soul finds rest. Through obedience comes fuller knowledge. Gods word opens. And fuller knowledge creates fuller trust and devotion. For the light grows with the opening of the word, and in it there is no darkness at all. New light produces new longing, a more eager panting of the spirit for the word of God. The longing for Gods word quickly reveals itself as a longing for God Himself, a hungering for His mercy and love. In the vision of Gods face the desire for purity of life is intensified and the soul pleads for deliverance from the dominion of iniquity. Then the man rises into full consciousness of his privilege as one of Gods freemen, whom no power shall enslave and no fetters shall bind. The oppression of man shall not hold him in bondage. And so he stands in the gladness of spiritual strength while Gods face shines upon him like the sun from heaven. Living in Gods light, his heart, like Gods, becomes full of compassion for a sinful world. As the Son of God in later days wept for the sins and woes of Jerusalem, so this ancient Psalmist says: Mine eyes run down with rivers of water, because they observe not thy law.
2. The object of Christian faith may be compared to a jewel enclosed in a casket. The jewel is the Lord Jesus Christ; the casket is the Bible. Now, we believe that a man may possess the jewel who has never seen the casket, or who has got it in his hands in an imperfect and broken form. There is such an efficacy in the Lord Jesus Christ, such a fitness in Him for the sins and sorrows and wants of poor fallen humanity, that the Holy Spirit of God can bring Him home to the soul with saving power by a small portion of knowledge. A single Gospel, a single Epistle, a Psalm such as the Twenty-third, or a verse such as God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life, if explained simply and brought home by Gods Spirit, may become Gods power unto salvation. The Bible came to men in fragments, piece after piece, through many generations, and a fragment of it still does its proper work. It has a principle of life that is complete in its separate parts, and you may see all its truth in one text, as you can see all the suns image in one drop of dew in a flower. This is a wise, Divine arrangement, which may reassure some who fear they are losing Christ, when the question is about the meaning of some parts of the Bible. If a man were so driven about on seas of difficulty that he could have only a board or broken piece of the ship, it would bring him safe to land. Nevertheless, the care and completeness of the casket are of very great moment. Our salvation may be gained by one word about Christ, but our edification, our Christian comfort and well-being, depend on the full word of Christ. Whenever He is set forth, however dimly, there is something for us to learn, something needful to make us thoroughly furnished unto every good work. Here the Bible may be compared, not to a casket enclosing a jewel, but to a piece of tapestry on which a figure is inwoven. If it be mutilated, or the golden threads that meet and intermingle be torn and tarnished, we lose, so far, the complete image of truth that is the inheritance of the Church of Christthe inheritance which the Apostle thus describes: Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.
Bartholdis statue of Liberty Enlightening the World occupies a fine position on Bedloes Island, which commands the approach to New York Harbour. It holds up a torch which is lit at night by an immense electric light. The statue was cast in portions in Paris. The separate pieces were very different, and, taken apart, of uncouth shape. It was only when all was brought together, each in its right place, that the complete design was apparent. Then the omission of any one would have left the work imperfect. In this it is an emblem of Holy Scripture. We do not always see the object of certain portions; nevertheless each has its place, and the whole is a magnificent statue of Christ Jesus, who is the true Liberty Enlightening the World, casting illuminative rays across the dark, rocky ocean of time, and guiding anxious souls to the desired haven.1 [Note: G. Jackson.]
I
The Light Hid
1. The word of God is not a book. There are plenty of Bibles in the world to-day. Indeed there never was a time when so many were distributed. The printing presses of Christendom fairly groan with the innumerable volumes. Nor is the word of God preaching. Churches abound and times of prosperity see them built and rebuilt in ever more magnificent form. The greater the wealth of the community and the more easy and abundant its luxury, the more gorgeous become its churches, the more elegant their ritual, and the more eloquent their preaching. The word of God is the voice of God in a mans soul. As the Saviour put it: Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. That is the voice which, through whatever channel it comes and in whatever words it declares itself, becomes the compelling voice in a mans heart, awakening him to a new consciousness of his relations to his Maker.
2. The word of God is a living word, addressed to men, and it brings the power of God Himself along with it. God did not wait to speak to men until they had advanced so far that they were able to provide themselves with some kind of record of what He said. Far back in the infancy and childhood of the human race, God condescended to men in their weakness and frailty, spoke to them and made Himself intelligible, and lodged the incorruptible seed in their hearts. All the epistles in those days were living epistles, and the living word of God was not written down, but passed like fire, with all its power to quicken and redeem, from heart to heart.
3. No book can adequately express Gods word. What God had to say to men, what God at last actually did say to men, was something too great for human words to record. God, we read in the Bible itself, God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in times past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son. By his Sonrevelation was consummated in Christ. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us full of grace and truth, and Christ, in all the fulness of His grace and truth, is Gods last word to man. Could anybody produce an adequate record of Christ? Could any words that man could use ever tell all the wonderful meaning of that manifestation of God? Evangelists, after they had done their best, declared that half had never been told. You remember how the last of them, John, says at the end of his Gospel, after he had tried to tell everything: The world itself would not contain the books that should be written. No human word, the most wonderful or searching or patient, could ever tell out for men everything that God meant when He sent His Son to save the world.
You do right to call it The Book, but you must not forget that it is a book. It has the limitations of a book, the mistakes of a book, the obscurities of a book, the impotence of a book. And while it is the treasury of the most profound and unquestionable and authoritative in books, it is still only a book. There is something more than the Book. There is a life, a living passion, a moulding faith, a lifting hope; and they are greater than the Book.1 [Note: P. C. Ainsworth, A Thornless World, 15.]
What is a word, a sentence, a book, a library? What are all libraries? A mere peep into the inexpressible. The best writers know this, and are not surprised if they find out their most important things in between the lines, and the best readers soon learn where to look for them. The best speakers know this, and feel when all is done that they have left their most impressive thoughts unspoken because they are unspeakable. However, the best hearers understand perfectly well, perhaps better than if they had been spoken. The poets know best how to use language. They often express their most inexpressible, or evanescent thoughts by means of repugnant, or somewhat paradoxical epithets; as, for example, Coleridge when he says:
The stilly murmur of the distant sea
Tells us of silence.
The belief that it is easy to speak plainly on these great subjects is at the bottom of nearly all the mistakes which divide men in religion, and, it may be added, of nearly all the scepticism which has ever existed.1 [Note: S. Hall.]
4. Multitudes are unconscious of the highest truths, incapable of them. They lack a sense, the sublimest sense of all, the faculty to discern the reality of the Divine and eternal. Clever enough in the arts of this life, they are stone-blind to the higher. Standing beneath the visible world, patent to us all, is an invisible underworld of atoms, ether, colours, and subtle movements, which only the disciplined sense of the scientist can detect and measure; all around us is another world of beauty, music, and poetry, perceived and appreciated only by those possessed of the artistic sense; and again, above us is a supreme world of which God is the everlasting light and glory, a realm evident only to those whose senses are exercised in holy thought, constant purity, and willing obedience.
We say that the eye creates half that it sees: but no eye is nearly so creative as a blind one; and the proud critic, knowing nothing as he ought to know, enlarges copiously and confidently on his speculations. It is the astronomy of the blind. Competent on questions of the lower spheres, these talkers are of no account in regard to the reality and blessedness of personal godliness. Their astronomy is the veriest superstition set forth in the language of philosophy. The least in the Kingdom of God is greater than these. Only men born again see the eternal light clearly and steadily. Only as we experience the truths Divine do we comprehend them. Only as we do the will of God in daily obedience do we know the doctrine. As Carlyle puts it: He who has done nothing has known nothing. Then do we see light in Gods light, and know the secret of the world, of life, of the future when we believe in our heart and obey in our life.
That Thou art nowhere to be found, agree
Wise men, whose eyes are but for surfaces;
Men with eyes opened by the second birth,
To whom the seen, husk of the unseen is,
Descry the soul of everything on earth.
Who knows Thy ends, Thy means and motions see;
Eyes made for glory soon discover Thee.
Not very long ago The Times newspaper contained a correspondence on the desirableness of science lecturers making their great themes more clear to the ordinary audience. In defence the lecturers maintained that it is almost impossible to make lucid the problems of nature to listeners so entirely destitute of knowledge and sympathy as the majority are. More difficult still is it for certain minds to grasp mathematical or metaphysical problems. How completely the ungifted and undisciplined stand away from the mysteries of music! While Glinka was writing his immortal work, his wife complained before everyone that he was wasting ruled paper. The obtuse content themselves with the sarcasm that music is a noise costlier than other noises. And as to the arts, the critics declare that genuine work is unintelligible to the crowd. The beautiful is what your servant instinctively thinks is frightful.1 [Note: W. L. Watkinson, Lifes Unexpected Issues, 27.]
II
The Light Revealed
The opening of thy words giveth light. When the book is opened, the light streams forth. The term translated giveth light is a transitive verb which means to cause to shine. The direct object of the verb may be supplied by using any term which will indicate the lover of Gods word. The opening of Gods Word maketh the attentive heart to shine. That is, the Word of God gives light by enkindling the light of truth within our souls. It is the same word that is used concerning God in the 135th verseMake thy face to shine upon thy servant. As His face shines upon us, He makes our hearts shine back upon Him and upon the world. He does not illuminate our path mechanically, but sets His light within us livingly. He uses us, not as passive reflectors of His brightness, but as burning and shining lights.
1. We must learn to open the book. If God has given us a heavenly Word, a Divinely communicated Word, the first thing we should do is to learn diligently to understand that Word. If God has spoken, then our greatest business is to try to understand what God has said. Suppose a great prince or a great sage spoke words of wisdom, and a thoughtless, foolish person rushed in and began to babble his inanities, instead of trying to understand the wisdom of the counsellor, what would you think? You would probably think more than you would like to say. Are we any better, if, when God has spoken, and in the face of that utterance, instead of setting ourselves in lowliness to understand His great message, we go on babbling our own little passing speculations? We are people of many books to-day, and we speak of our fathers sarcastically as men of one book. There is no objection to many books, but we would do well to get back to the one, and to understand something more of the great mystery of Divine love which God has revealed to us.
Mr. Moody tells us in an amusing way of his own experience: I used at one time to read so many chapters a day, and if I did not I thought I was cold and backsliding, but, mind you, if a man had asked me an hour afterwards what I had read, I could not have told himI had forgotten nearly it all. When I was a boy I used to hoe turnips on a farm, and I used to hoe them so badly to get over so much ground that at night I had to put a stick into the ground so as to know next morning where I had left off. That was somewhat in the same fashion as much Bible reading. A man will say: Wife, did I read that chapter? Well, she says, I dont remember; and neither of them can recollect. Now, there is no sort of merit or profit in that sort of Bible reading; no blessing comes with it. It is of no more use than galloping through so many columns of advertisements or so many pages of the dictionary. If the Scriptures are to profit us, we must ask, as we read, What does this mean? What does it teach? What lesson may I learn from it? Does it suggest prayer? Does it prompt praise? Does it prescribe duty? It would be well if all of us might sometimes be pulled up in our reading by the question, Understandest thou that which thou readest?1 [Note: G. H. James.]
2. The more we study the Word, the more freely the light breaks upon us. The opening of thy words giveth light means not only that Gods Word gives light, but that this light grows with the growing revelation or understanding of the Word. As the Word opens before the soul the Divine shines forth from it more clearly, and the glory of the God it exhibits becomes more wonderful. The more we understand the Word, the more we see of God. The deeper we go into the revelation, the nearer we get to the blaze of the eternal Light.
A friend of mine visited Mr. Prangs chromo establishment in Boston. Mr. Prang showed him a stone on which was laid the colour for making the first impression toward producing the portrait of a distinguished public man, but he could see only the faintest possible line of tinting. The next stone that the paper was submitted to deepened the colour a little, but still no trace of the mans face was visible. Again and again was the sheet passed over successive stones, until at last the outline of a mans face was dimly discerned. Finally, after some twenty impressions from as many different stones, the portrait of the distinguished man stood forth so perfectly that it seemed to lack only the power of speech to make it living. Thus it is with Christ in the Scriptures.2 [Note: G. Jackson.]
A Hindoo gentleman, holding a high office in the Presidency of Bombay, told me a few years ago that during his vacation he was anxious to read with his son for an hour or two daily a book of high moral and spiritual influence. He thought of many, and at last decided to take the Book of Psalms. We treat it, he said, like any other book; we investigate questions of authorship, we try to discover the circumstances in which each psalm was written, we separate the purely Jewish elements from those of more general interest and importance, we try to discriminate between what is human and faulty, and what is lofty and spiritual. By doing this we seem often to hear the voice of God speaking in our hearts, showing us the way of truth and duty, and calling us to higher aspirations and efforts. The man who said this to me was not a Christian. It shows us what hope there is in presenting our Scriptures to non-Christians in the right way, and how true it is that these Scriptures possess a universal adaptation to the human spirit.3 [Note: A. Macarthur.]
III
The Light Utilized
1. It giveth understanding unto the simple. We all know what it means to have the intellect enlightened. Everywhere we are encountering new knowledge. The sciences are all new, the practical affairs of life are conducted on new methods, with new instruments and, we may also say, with new purposes. We live not only on a new continent, but in a veritable new world. Enlightenment of the understanding seems at times the single, all-important necessity. All our great system of schools and colleges and universities is to the one end of providing this enlightened understanding for the growing generation; and we summon the young people to every sacrifice to attain to the enlightenment which is so much needed. We are charmed when we come upon any indication of what it holds in store for them.
When Professor Agassiz came to America and made his first journey westward from the sea-coast, he sat all day in the train looking out of the window, for everywhere he quickly discovered what no one else had seensigns of the action of the great glaciers of the ice period upon the surface of the continent. Every rounded hill, every pond in Massachusetts, every undulation in the levels south of Lake Erie was to him the proof of the theory of the Ice Age as he had held it. And these indisputable signs of a great geological epoch had laid openly before the eyes of generations of men who had been blind to see them. The record of geological history was written on the very face of the continent, and up to that hour no one had read it. With what excitement he turned the leaf of the great story! With what interest he told what he saw! With what open-eyed wonder people responded to the new teaching! We want enlightened intelligence in matters of religion. There are truths as new, as important, and as interesting in regard to revelation, and in regard to the Bible. We may well pray that the Church everywhere, and all believers, may have as a gift of God, enlightenment of their understanding.1 [Note: H. A. Stimson, The New Things of God, 188.]
India has a venerable civilization, such as it is, and sacred books which contain a great deal of wisdom and beauty; but the Light of Asia has never brought enlightenment to the millions who receive it. With all the intellectual glory of ancient Greece, popular education was a thing unknown. Rome trained her people to war and plunder for the aggrandizement of the State. Certain of the slaves were educated to teach their masters sons, but the plebeian multitude were poor, ignorant, and despised. Let the intellectual status of the people of Russia, Italy, Spain, or even France be compared with that of the people in Germany, England, or the United States, and how significant are the facts which appear.1 [Note: S. O. Benton.]
2. But if we need enlightenment of the intellect, we need still more the dew of heaven upon the heart. The heart is the man, and the man must be reached if the work of God is to go forward. Sadly we discover that the enlightenment of the intellect goes but a short way in changing the character. Character rests upon decisions of the will, the abiding purposes of life, and these are determined primarily by the feelings. It is therefore the enlightenment of the heart, the stirring up of the feelings, the opening of the deep wells of the soul, and the appeal to the essential nature of the man himself that alone answers the call of God, and that alone can make men free, in the large sense of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The mere accumulation of knowledge is like the stuffing of the stove with fuelit remains as cold and dead as the iron itself until the fire is kindled, which alone can transform it, and set free its imprisoned energies.
This is the unique triumph of Gods word that it recreates the soul, and changes the unrighteous into the image of Christ. No other power on earth has been able thus to renew the spirit of man. But this word of God renews its power in every generation. Into the dark soul its light enters, and in the lowly spirit the fire of God burns with inextinguishable blaze. In Gods light we see light, and the enkindled soul communes with the glory of God. In Christ Jesus the fallen one rises to be a new creation, and hears a holy voice cry, Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.
This characteristic has been splendidly manifest in the propagation of the gospel in foreign lands. The hindrances to the exercise of this power are enormous among the devotees of false religions. Custom, tradition, sentiment, imagination, and all the vast conservatism of social forces, are arrayed against the incoming of the light of the Gospel. The feeble groundwork of truth upon which the false superstructure is reared has an ancient influence which counts for much. Yet, wherever the Word of God gets an opportunity, its results are similar to those which we have ourselves experienced. In Africa, India, China, and the islands of the sea, men and women rise to the same childlike assurance of pardon and peace in Jesus Christ, and confess in the common language of Christian faith the light-giving and life-giving virtue of the Word of God. The people that sat in darkness have seen a great slight, and that light is the Son of God.1 [Note: J. Thomas, Concerning the King, 57.]
The other day I was reading a story of a Frenchman who was being entertained by a Christian chief in one of the Pacific Islands. The chief had a Bible, which the Frenchman sneered at, saying that in Europe they had got past that. The chief led his guest out of the house, showed him where they used to cook and eat their meals in cannibal days, and clinched everything by saying, My friend, if it had not been for that Book, I should have been dining upon you now.2 [Note: J. R. Walker.]
3. Understanding comes only to the simple-hearted: Unto the simple. A simple person is often supposed to be a person who has no understanding or wisdom. But here simple means sincere, honesta person who has a right aim, a right eye. What says the Saviour of such? If thine eye be singlerendered sometimes simpleif thine eye be simple, thy whole body shall be full of light. There is the entrance of Gods word. But if thine eye be evil,if it be double, if it be hypocritical, if it be deceitful,thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If, therefore, the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is the darkness! And how gracious it is of God, how merciful, that He should put the condition of our receiving the inward light, not upon intellectual and moral capacity. What if He had rested it on intellect, on philosophy, on science, or rank, or natural power of intellect: if He had promised it to the man who could muster different languages, or solve profound and difficult problems! But, so far from this, it is just the reverse; for this is what the Spirit of God tells us of His work, Ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called: but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: that no flesh should glory in his presence; and, it is added, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.
A teacher eminent in scientific research in describing the wondrous beauty and the mysterious structure of a leaf, has said that any tyro can see the facts for himself if he is provided with a leaf and a microscope. But how helpless would the tyro be if he had only the leaf, and not the microscope! The leaf would be perfect in all its parts, it would contain rare beauty of form, colour, and structure, though the tyro was ignorant of it, and had not a microscope to see it. Without the aid of a microscope, a scientific teacher even could not see the mysterious substance, the strange movements, and the beautiful structure of the leaf. The optical instrument is as necessary for the intelligent as for the ignorant, for the scientific as for the uneducated. If a man were to examine the leaf, without the aid of the instrument, and declare his inability to see any inner beauty, form, and structure in the leaf, the simple answer would be that these are things which can only be microscopically discerned. Now this is not merely the teaching of scientists, it is the teaching of the Apostle. Spiritual things can be seen and known only by a spiritual minda mind aided and strengthened by the higher power of vision which the Spirit of God imparts.1 [Note: W. Simpson.]
There was a literary woman who stood high among book critics. One day in reviewing a book she said, Who wrote this book? It is beautifully written, but there is something wrong here and there! She proceeded to criticize with a good deal of severity. Some months afterwards this lady became acquainted with the author of the book, fell in love, and married him. She took the same book again and said, What a beautiful book! There are some mistakes here and there, but they ought to be overlooked. The book was just the same as it had been before, but the critic had changed. When she began to love the author it changed her attitude toward the book. So it is with us and the Bible. People do not love the Bible because they do not love Christ.2 [Note: G. Jackson.]
Literature
Ellis (J.), Sermons in a Nutshell, 96.
Hind (T.), The Treasures of the Snow, 111.
Ker (J.), Sermons, ii. 186.
Stowell (H.), Sermons, 158.
Swing (D.), Truths for To-day, ii. 161.
Thomas (J.), Concerning the King, 50.
Childrens Pulpit: Second Sunday in Advent, i. 136 (G. H. James).
Christian World Pulpit, xiv. 56 (F. W. Aveling); lxviii. 28 (A. Macarthur).
Churchmans Pulpit: Second Sunday in Advent, i. 403 (S. O. Benton).
Homiletic Review, xviii. 191.
Fuente: The Great Texts of the Bible
entrance: Or, “opening;” paithach the Scriptures give satisfactory light to the mind upon every subject of which they treat; and speedily communicate more useful knowledge to the simplest believer, upon the most important topics, than the acutest philosophers have been able to develop through successive ages. Psa 119:105, Pro 6:23, Isa 8:20, Luk 1:77-79, Act 26:18, 2Co 4:4, 2Co 4:6, Eph 5:13, Eph 5:14, 2Pe 1:19
it giveth: Psa 19:7, Pro 1:4, Pro 1:22, Pro 1:23, Pro 9:4-6, Rom 16:18, Rom 16:19, 2Ti 3:15-17
Reciprocal: Lev 24:2 – the lamps Num 8:2 – General Neh 8:12 – because Psa 19:8 – enlightening Psa 73:17 – Until Psa 119:108 – teach Pro 7:7 – the simple Ecc 2:13 – light Son 2:5 – for Isa 35:8 – the wayfaring Mat 7:24 – a wise Joh 6:63 – the words Rom 2:18 – being instructed 2Ti 3:16 – and is Heb 4:12 – is quick
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Psa 119:130. The entrance of thy words Into the heart of man; that is, the receiving of them in faith, and love, and meekness; giveth light To those that were before in darkness, even the light of true and saving knowledge. Hereby we learn our origin and our end, what we are by nature, and what we must be made by grace, in order to our final salvation; what God hath done for us, and the returns he expects from us; the enemies we have to encounter, and how we may be enabled to prevail against them; the mercy and justice, the love and wrath, the goodness and holiness of Jehovah, the joys of heaven, and the pains of hell. But the words , are rendered by many ancient and modern interpreters, the opening of thy words; that is, the unfolding and explaining of them, opening the true sense, and showing thy mind and will therein. Thy words are no sooner opened than there streams a light from them. It giveth understanding to the simple To the most ignorant and unlearned persons, who are but willing to learn.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
119:130 The entrance of thy {b} words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple.
(b) The simple idiots that submit themselves to God have their eyes opened and their minds illuminated, as soon as they begin to read God’s word.