Psalm 25
    
    Repentance and contrition find vent in confession and 
    prayer. May these holy exercises be the home of our souls! 
    1. "Unto You, O Lord, do I lift up my soul." 
    Sweet are the hours of communion with God. At every 
    moment we may draw near. The way stands widely open through the rent veil. 
    Christ's body broken and His streaming blood procure immediate access. But 
    true prayer is not formality. It is soul-work. In it the world and all its 
    cares and vanities are left behind. Faith spreads rejoicing wings and soars 
    above the heaven of heavens. The man of prayer lifts up his soul. 
    2, 3. "O my God, I trust in You; let me not be 
    ashamed; let not my enemies triumph over me. Yes, let none that wait on You 
    be ashamed; let those be ashamed who transgress without cause." 
    It is faith's holy privilege to deal unreservedly with 
    God; to open out its real condition; to call Him to witness that all vain 
    confidences are renounced, and that all trust rests on Him. Such may 
    fearlessly supplicate that no disappointments may cause shame; and that no 
    foes may humble them. Those who lift up the soul to God will lift up the 
    head above all the fears of men. 
    Faith, also, is an expansive grace. Its arms embrace all 
    true believers. It strives that others should share its blessedness. But it 
    well knows that shame must be the sinner's doom. There can be no excuse 
    for sin. No cause provokes it. The sinner sins because it is his nature and 
    his will. 
    
    4, 5, 6. "Show me Your ways, O Lord; teach me Your 
    paths. Lead me in Your truth, and teach me; for You are the God of my 
    salvation; on You do I wait all the day. Remember, O Lord, Your tender 
    mercies and Your loving kindnesses; for they have been ever of old." 
    Faith is emboldened to ask great things from knowledge of 
    the character and works of God. It can appeal, 'You are the God who willed 
    and wrought salvation for me; it is Your purpose and decree to save me to 
    the uttermost. Hence You have given Jesus for me, and me to Jesus.' It can 
    look back to a long train of tender mercies from the earliest days. It 
    rejoices to count them out before the Lord. It plies the argument, 'You have 
    been very gracious. You are the same. Oh! be gracious now'; and on these 
    cogent grounds it bases the prayer, "Show me Your ways; lead me, teach me." 
    I am blind, and prone to err. Open my eyes clearly at each moment to discern 
    Your will. Take my outstretched hand and guide me safely in salvation's 
    path. All the day I need Your help, and seek it; all the day be my ready 
    guide. 
    7. "Remember not the sins of my youth, nor my 
    transgressions; according to Your mercy remember me for Your goodness' sake, 
    O Lord." 
    In the case of the ungodly, sins forgotten by him are not 
    sins forgiven. In the case of the believer, sins forgiven by God are not 
    obliterated from his memory. The believer often reviews his course from 
    earliest years; he reads and re-reads the annals of the past. They are dark, 
    and stained with countless sins and countless aggravations. He is humbled to 
    the dust. But he remembers Jesus, and God's boundless love in Him. He flees 
    from the court of justice to the throne of grace. He pleads, nor pleads in 
    vain, that God would deal with him in accordance with the covenant of grace.
    
    8, 9. "The Lord is good and upright; therefore He will 
    teach sinners in the way. He will guide the meek in judgment; and He will 
    teach the meek His way." 
    When prayer pauses, faith gathers strength in meditation. 
    It reflects that God is love, and faithfulness, and truth. It refreshes 
    itself at this deep well of consolation. God's goodness calls; His promises 
    assure. Therefore no sinner, coming in penitence and faith, may fear 
    rejection. A ready welcome will be granted. The teaching Spirit will guide 
    wisely. All who are truly humbled and thus wear the livery of the chosen 
    flock will tread assuredly salvation's road. 
    10. "All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth to 
    such as keep His covenant and His testimonies." 
    May grace be ever ours to adhere closely to the 
    everlasting covenant; to base all our hopes on Christ, its surety, in whom 
    all its terms are fully satisfied, and who, by His Spirit, reveals its 
    message to us. May the like grace enable us to study diligently His holy 
    precepts, and to keep our feet most steadily in their path. Then how blessed 
    will be our earthly course! All God's dealings with us, though sometimes 
    dark to sense , will issue from unfailing love, and prove that His Word is 
    immovable as the everlasting hills. 
    11. "For Your name's sake, O Lord, pardon my iniquity; 
    for it is great." 
    Prayer cannot long be silent. The burden of sin will 
    press again. It will again appear in aggravated colors. Its magnitude 
    deepens the sense of need of pardon. It proves that there is no remedy but 
    in free grace. It clearly sees that God's glory is His forgiveness of all 
    sin through the blood and righteousness of Christ. It therefore descends 
    more lowly in contrition's valley, and importunes more loudly that God would 
    gain glory in the way of pardon. Great, indeed, is our iniquity. May we 
    confess our miserable state, and not remit our cries, that God's glory may 
    be great in blotting all out! 
    12, 13. "Who is he that fears the Lord? Him shall He 
    teach in the way that He shall choose. His soul shall dwell at ease; and His 
    seed shall inherit the earth." 
    
    We do not err when we discern Christ Jesus as the high 
    and full response. In Him each grace was perfect. In His earthly course His 
    holy reverence was supreme. He ever knew by heavenly light His appointed 
    path. His calm serenity was never ruffled. And He looked onward to the 
    blissful time when His seed in countless multitudes should reign undoubted 
    heirs of earth. All His children are conformed to His image. With lowly awe 
    they reverence their God. His fear restrains the movement of their minds. 
    His Spirit guides their steps. Their souls are kept in perfect peace. And in 
    a little while the full delights of the millennial reign shall cause their 
    cup to overflow. 
    14. "The secret of the Lord is with those who fear 
    Him; and He will show them His covenant." 
    There are heights and depths of truth in the everlasting 
    covenant which unaided man can neither reach nor fathom. The Gospel-scheme 
    is a wondrous volume. No eye without God's light can rightly read its pages. 
    But to all who tremble at the Word, the enlightening Spirit comes. He opens 
    out the hidden mysteries. He draws aside the veil and shows the secret 
    transactions in the courts of heaven; and all the wondrous achievements of 
    Christ's life and death. The enraptured soul sees truths which angels ponder 
    with amazement. Who can describe the ecstasies of this knowledge? But all 
    the pupils in this school of light have one mark; they fear the Lord. 
    15, 16. "My eyes are ever toward the Lord; for He 
    shall pluck my feet out of the net. Turn to me, and have mercy upon me; for 
    I am desolate and afflicted." 
    When we can realize possession of the true principles of 
    faith, we may claim all its privileges. Faith's eye is fixed on God. It 
    swerves not from its polar star, therefore it reaps the rich abundance of 
    the promises. Deliverance from every snare is pledged. Therefore with eye 
    never turning from God, the believer walks securely through a path beset 
    with snares. As it moves onward it is constant in petition. It often feels 
    that loneliness and trouble depress, that friends are few, and sorrows many; 
    but it faints not. It has firm trust that God will tenderly regard; that 
    mercy will never fail; that no billows will overwhelm true faith. 
    17, 18. "The troubles of my heart are enlarged; O, 
    bring me out of my distresses. Look upon my affliction and my pain, and 
    forgive all my sins." 
    The believer's day varies, as the surface of the sea. 
    There are periods of lulling calm, then the billows swell and raise gigantic 
    breakers. There is insight that SELF can give no help. There is the 
    immediate cry to GOD, who alone can rescue. But while attention is implored 
    to pains of mind and body, the deepest misery is especially 
    remembered. There is no anguish like the sense of sin. Therefore the 
    constant prayer, 'Forgive all my sin.' We may urge this with all boldness 
    and all hope, for the precious blood cleanses from all sin. 
    19, 20. "Consider my enemies, for they are many; and 
    they hate me with cruel hatred. O keep my soul, and deliver me; for I put my 
    trust in You." 
    The believer might indeed tremble, if he went forth alone 
    to his daily conflict; for many are his foes, and bitter their cruel hate. 
    Nothing can soothe their vengeful hostility. No pity melts within their 
    breasts. But the believer has omnipotent aid beside him. If foes are many, 
    the help is infinite. The humble plea, "I trust in You," will bring all 
    heaven to the rescue. The trusting soul will indeed be kept. "O Lord, 
    increase our faith." 
    21. "Let integrity and uprightness preserve me; for I 
    wait on You." 
    No grace was ever perfect but in the holy, harmless Son 
    of God. Integrity was indeed the belt of His loins, and uprightness the 
    sandals of His feet. But hatred of sin, and honesty of purpose, must be the 
    inhabitants of our hearts. These graces prompt and strengthen prayer; but 
    they are no valid grounds, claiming acceptance. For faith instantly looks 
    from them to God, and adds, "I wait on You, from You only comes my help."
    
    22. "Redeem Israel, O God, out of all his troubles."
    
    We may boldly ply this heaven-taught prayer with our eyes 
    fixed on Jesus. He is made unto us redemption from every trouble and from 
    every sin. He has bought us as His own, with His most precious blood. He 
    will keep us, He will bless us, as His purchased flock. Soon shall we know 
    the full blessedness of this redemption. He will claim the purchased kingdom 
    for His purchased flock, and they shall live and reign forever on redeemed 
    ground, beneath the banners of redemption. Blessed Lord, hasten the time! 
    Fully redeem Your Israel!