Albert Barnes Commentary Psalms 33:22

Albert Barnes Commentary

Psalms 33:22

1798–1870
Presbyterian
Albert Barnes
Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes Commentary

Psalms 33:22

1798–1870
Presbyterian
SCRIPTURE

"Let thy lovingkindness, O Jehovah, be upon us, According as we have hoped in thee." — Psalms 33:22 (ASV)

Let your mercy, O Lord, be upon us – Let us find or obtain your mercy or your favor.

According as we hope in you – It may be remarked in regard to this:

  1. It is only reasonable that we should look for the favor of God only as we trust in him, for we could not properly expect his favor beyond the measure of our confidence in him.
  2. This may be regarded as the most that we are entitled to hope from God. We have no reason to suppose that he will go beyond our wishes and prayers, or that he will confer favors on us which we neither expect nor desire.
  3. One of the reasons why the people of God are not more blessed, or why they receive no more favors from him, may be found in what is here suggested. As they expect little, they obtain little; as they have no intense, burning, lofty desire for the favor of God, either for themselves personally, or for their families, or for the world, so they obtain but slight tokens of that favor.
  4. The true principle, therefore, upon which God is willing to bestow His favors, and which will be the rule that He will observe, is that if people desire much, they will obtain much; that if they have big expectations, they will not be disappointed; and that God is willing to bestow His mercies upon His people and upon the world to the utmost of their desires and hopes. Compare Psalms 81:10, Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it. And Psalms 37:4, delight thyself in the Lord, and he shall give thee the desires of thy heart. How intense and fervent, then, should be the prayers and the petitions of the people of God! How earnest the supplications of sinners that God would have mercy on them!