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النشر الإلكتروني

THE BOOK OF

PSALMS

Edited by

A. F KIRKPATRICK, D.D. Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge; Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity.

CAMBRIDGE:

at the University Press
1906

In the Psalms the soul turns inward on itself, and their great feature is that they are the expression of a large spiritual experience. They come straight from "the heart within the heart," and the secret depths of the spirit. Where, in those rough cruel days, did they come from, those piercing, lightning-like gleams of strange spiritual truth, those magnificent outlooks over the kingdom of God, those raptures at His presence and His glory, those wonderful disclosures of self-knowledge, those pure outpourings of the love of God? Surely here is something more than the mere working of the mind of man. Surely they tell of higher guiding, prepared for all time; surely, as we believe, they hear "the word behind them saying, This is the way, walk ye in it," they repeat the whispers of the Spirit of God, they reflect the very light of the Eternal Wisdom. In that wild time there must have been men sheltered and hidden amid the tumult round them, humble and faithful and true, to whom the Holy Ghost could open by degrees the "wondrous things of His law," whom He taught, and whose mouths He opened, to teach their brethren by their own experience, and to do each their part in the great preparation.

DEAN CHURCH.

First Edition January 1902. Reprinted May 1902, 1903, 1906,

The choice and flower of all things profitable in other books the
Psalms do both more briefly contain, and more movingly also express,
by reason of that poetical form wherewith they are written... What
is there necessary for man to know which the Psalms are not able to
teach? They are to beginners an easy and familiar introduction, a
mighty augmentation of all virtue and knowledge in such as are
entered before, a strong confirmation to the most perfect among others.
Heroical magnanimity, exquisite justice, grave moderation, exact wisdom,
repentance unfeigned, unwearied patience, the mysteries of God, the
sufferings of Christ, the terrors of wrath, the comforts of grace, the works
of Providence over this world, and the promised joys of that world
which is to come, all good necessarily to be either known or done or
had, this one celestial fountain yieldeth. Let there be any grief or
disease incident into the soul of man, any wound or sickness named,
for which there is not in this treasure-house a present comfortable
remedy at all times ready to be found.

R. HOOKER.

LYRIC poetry is the most ancient kind of poetry, and Hebrew

poetry is mainly lyric. Neither epic nor dramatic poetry

flourished in ancient Israel. Some indeed of the historical

Psalms may be said to have an epic colouring, but they belong

to the class of didactic narrative: Job and the Song of Songs

may be called in a sense dramatic, but they do not appear to

have been intended for performance on the stage1. The only

independent branch of poetry in Israel was gnomic or pro-

verbial poetry, which in the hands of the 'Wise Men' attained

to a rich development, and must have exercised an important

influence on the education of the people.

The Old Testament is the religious history of Israel, and the

poetry preserved in the Book of Psalms is, as might be expected,

religious poetry. Secular poetry no doubt existed, but, with

1 See however Driver, Lit. of O. T.6, p. 444, for the view that the Song

may have been "designed to be acted, the different parts being personated

by different characters," or represented by "the varied voice and gesture

of a single reciter."

* Such as the drinking songs referred to in Amos vi. 5 (R.V.);

Is. v. 12: harvest and vintage songs (Is. xvi. 10, 11; Jer. xlviii. 33):

parables (Judg. ix. 8 ff.). Solomon's 'thousand and five songs' were

probably of a secular character (1 Kings iv. 32). Poems like Exod. xv

and Judg. v are essentially religious. The Book of the Wars of Jehovah

(Num. xxi. 14), and the Book of Jashar, i.e. the Upright (Josh. x. 13;

2 Sam. i. 18), appear to have been collections of poems commemorating

remarkable episodes of national history, and the characters and exploits

of national heroes. In these no sharp line could be drawn between what

was secular and what was religious.

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