Psalm 147
    
    Exhortations call to praise our God. Let our grateful 
    hearts rejoicingly obey. 
    1. "Praise the Lord; for it is good to sing praises to 
    our God; for it is pleasant; and praise is lovely." 
    It cannot be too earnestly enforced that praise is our 
    duty, our joy, and our becoming exercise. Let happy experience testify this 
    truth. 
    2-3. "The Lord builds up Jerusalem; He gathers 
    together the outcasts of Israel. He heals the broken in heart, and binds up 
    their wounds." 
    
    He brought the captive Jews from Babylon. Thus He showed 
    by expressive type that He will not permit the enemy to hold the Church in 
    enduring bondage. Sorrow and mourning may be long their lot, but at His 
    bidding, joy will bud forth, and every wound be healed. 
    4. "He tells the number of the stars; He calls them 
    all by their names." 
    We are thus taught that nothing can surpass His 
    knowledge. The starry firmament sparkles with innumerable orbs. All are 
    known to Him. So we, our persons, our matters, are all unmistakable to His 
    omniscient eye. 
    5-6. "Great is our Lord, and of great power; His 
    understanding is infinite. The Lord lifts up the meek; He casts the wicked 
    down to the ground." 
    In His wisdom He reads every character. He knows the meek 
    and exalts them. He knows the wicked and debases them. 
    7-9. "Sing to the Lord with thanksgiving; sing praise 
    on the harp to our God; who covers the heaven with clouds, who prepares rain 
    for the earth, who makes grass to grow upon the mountains. He gives to the 
    beast his food, and to the young ravens which cry." 
    We cannot too frequently exhort to praise. The merciful 
    dealings in nature are a fruitful topic. Behold the heavens robed in their 
    clothing of clouds, the rain descending to fertilize the earth, the summits 
    of the hills clad in verdure, and praise the hand which thus dispenses 
    plenteousness. Behold the beasts of the forests and the ravens in their 
    lofty nests. His hand provides their food. Let then His hand be praised. 
    10-11. "He delights not in the strength of the horse; 
    He takes no pleasure in the legs of a man. The Lord takes pleasure in those 
    who fear Him, in those who hope in His mercy." 
    The Lord has no delight in animal or bodily strength of 
    frame. He looks to the inner man, and smiles on faith and fear. May such 
    graces ever appear in us. 
    12-13. "Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem; praise your God, 
    O Zion. For He has strengthened the bars of your gates; He has blessed your 
    children within you." 
    The Church cannot be too fervent in praise. The strength 
    of protecting bulwarks, the happiness of the inhabitants within, all call 
    for grateful adoration. 
    14-20. "He makes peace in your borders, and fills you 
    with the finest of the wheat. He sends forth His commandment upon earth; His 
    word runs very swiftly. He gives snow like wool; He scatters the hoarfrost 
    like ashes. He casts forth His ice like morsels; who can stand before His 
    cold? He sends out His word, and melts them; He causes His wind to blow, and 
    the waters flow. He shows His word to Jacob, His statutes and His judgments 
    to Israel. He has not dealt so with any nation; and as for His judgments, 
    they have not known them. Praise the Lord." 
    All blessings come from the bountiful hand of God and 
    merit praise. His will pervades the length and breadth of the earth, 
    ordering all things and enforcing obedience. But the blessing of blessings 
    is His revealed Word. This is now circulated in almost all the languages of 
    the world. We are abundantly favored with the inestimable boon. Let us 
    gratefully use it, and adore the gracious Giver. Praise the Lord.