Psalms 115
ECFPsalms 115:1
Augustine of Hippo: “Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto Your Name give the praise” [Psalms 115:1]. For that grace of the water that gushed from the rock (“now that rock was Christ” [1 Corinthians 10:4]), was not given on the score of works that had gone before, but of His mercy “that justifies the ungodly.” [Romans 4:5] For “Christ died for sinners,” that men might not seek any glory of their own, but in the Lord’s Name. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Augustine of Hippo: When Jesus was entrusting Peter with his sheep, he was entrusting him with us. When he was entrusting Peter with us, he was entrusting the church with his members. So, Lord, entrust your church to your church, let your church entrust itself to you. After all, we say, “Not to us, Lord, not to us, but to your name give the glory.” I mean, what are we without you? Only Peter when he denied you three times. To show up Peter to himself, that is to show up Peter to Peter, the Lord turned his face away from him for a while—and Peter denied him. He turned his face toward him when he looked around—and he wept. Peter washed away his fault with his tears; he poured water from his eyes and baptized his conscience. — SERMON 229P.4
Psalms 115:3
Athanasius of Alexandria: But this all inspired Scripture also teaches more plainly and with more authority, so that we in our turn write boldly to you as we do, and you, if you refer to Scripture, will be able to verify what we say. For an argument when confirmed by higher authority is irresistibly proved. From the first then the divine Word firmly taught the Jewish people about the abolition of idols when it said, “You shall not make for yourself a graven image or the likeness of anything that is in the heaven above or in the earth beneath.” But the cause of their abolition another writer declares, saying, “The idols of the heathen are silver and gold, the works of human hands; they have a mouth and will not speak, they have eyes and will not see, they have ears and will not hear, they have noses and will not smell, they have hands and will not handle, they have feet and will not walk.” Nor has it passed over in silence the doctrine of creation; but, knowing well its beauty, lest any attending solely to this beauty should worship things as if they were gods, instead of God’s works, it teaches people firmly beforehand when it says, “And do not, when you look up with your eyes and see the sun and moon and all the host of heaven, go astray and worship them, which the Lord your God has given to all nations under heaven.” But he gave them, not to be their gods but that by their agency the Gentiles should know, as we have said, God the Maker of them all. — Against the Heathen 45:2-3
Augustine of Hippo: “As for our God, He is in heaven above” [Psalms 115:3]. Not in heaven, where they see the sun and moon, works of God which they adore, but “in heaven above,” which overpasses all heavenly and earthly bodies. Nor is our God in heaven in such a sense, as to dread a fall that should deprive Him of His throne, if heaven were withdrawn from under Him. “In heaven and earth He has made whatsoever pleased Him.” Nor does He stand in need of His own works, as if He had place in them where He might abide; but endures in His own eternity, wherein He abides and has done whatsoever pleased Him, both in heaven and earth; for they did not support Him, as a condition of their being created by Him: since, unless they had been created, they could not have supported Him. Therefore, in whatsoever He Himself dwells, He, so to speak, contains this as in need of Himself, He is not contained by this as if He needed it. Or it may be thus understood: “In heaven and in earth He has done whatsoever pleased Him,” whether among the higher or the lower orders of His people, He has made His grace His free gift, that no man may boast in the merits of his own works…. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Fulgentius of Ruspe: Therefore, there is no falseness in God’s promises because for the all-powerful there is no problem about doing things. And so the effects of the will are never lacking because the will itself is nothing other than power. Whatever God wills, he can do; he can do as much as he wishes.So it is rightly said of him alone, “He does whatever he pleases.” And again, “For you have power to act whenever you choose.” So we have said that there is as much power of will there as there is will itself for the power. Since for the one to whom it is subject, when he shall will, he can, willing being nothing other than power. — LETTER TO MONIMUS 1:12.4-5
Psalms 115:5
Augustine of Hippo: “For they have mouths, and speak not: eyes have they, and see not” [Psalms 115:5]. “They have ears, and hear not: noses have they, and smell not” [Psalms 115:6]. “They have hands, and handle not; feet have they, and walk not; neither cry they through their throat” [Psalms 115:7]. Even their artist therefore surpasses them, since he had the faculty of moulding them by the motion and functions of his limbs: though you would be ashamed to worship that artist. Even you surpass them, though you have not made these things, since you do what they cannot do. Even a beast does excel them; for unto this it is added, “neither cry they through their throat.” For after he had said above, “they have mouths, and speak not;” what need was there, after he had enumerated the limbs from head to feet, to repeat what he had said of their crying through their throat; unless, I suppose, because we perceive that what he mentioned of the other members, was common to men and beasts? For they see, and hear, and smell, and walk, and some, apes for instance, handle with hands. But what he had said of the mouth, is peculiar to men: since beasts do not speak. But that no one might refer what has been said to the works of human members alone, and prefer men only to the gods of the heathen; after all this he added these words, “neither cry they through their throat:” which again is common to men and cattle….How much better then do mice and serpents, and other animals of like sort, judge of the idols of the heathen, so to speak, for they regard not the human figure in them when they see not the human life. For this reason they usually build nests in them, and unless they are deterred by human movements, they seek for themselves no safer habitations. A man then moves himself, that he may frighten away a living beast from his own god; and yet worships that god who cannot move himself, as if he were powerful, from whom he drove away one better than the object of his worship….Even the dead surpasses a deity who neither lives nor has lived…. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Psalms 115:8
Augustine of Hippo: The result that ensues is that described in the next verse: “They that make them are like them, and so are all such as put their trust in them” [Psalms 115:8]. Let them therefore see with open eyes, and worship with shut and dead understandings, idols that neither see nor live. “But the house of Israel has hoped in the Lord” [Psalms 115:9]. “For hope that is seen is not hope; for what a man sees, why does he yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it.” [Romans 8:24-25] But that this patience may endure to the end, “He is their helper and defender.” Do perhaps spiritual persons (by whom carnal minds are built up in “the spirit of meekness,” [Galatians 6:1] because they pray as higher for lower minds) already see, and is that already to them reality which to the lower is hope? It is not so. For even “the house of Aaron has hope in the Lord” [Psalms 115:10]. Therefore, that they also may stretch forward perseveringly towards those things which are before them, and may run perseveringly, until they may apprehend that for which they are apprehended, [Philippians 3:12-14] and may know even as they are known, [1 Corinthians 13:12] “He is their helper and defender.” For both “fear the Lord, and have hoped in the Lord: He is their helper and defender” [Psalms 115:11]. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Psalms 115:12
Augustine of Hippo: For we do not by our deservings prevent the mercy of God; but, “The Lord has been mindful of us, and has blessed us. He has blessed the house of Israel, He has blessed the house of Aaron” [Psalms 115:12]. But in blessing both of these, “He has blessed all that fear the Lord” [Psalms 115:13]. Do you ask, who are meant by both of these? He answers, “both small and great.” That is, the house of Israel with the house of Aaron, those who among that nation believed in Jesus the Saviour….For in the character of those who out of that nation believed, it is said, “Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, we had been as Sodoma, and been made like Gomorrha.” [Romans 9:29] Seed, because when it has been scattered over the earth, it multiplied. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Psalms 115:13
Augustine of Hippo: So then, let us celebrate their feasts, as indeed we are doing, with the utmost devotion, soberly cheerful, gathered in a holy assembly, thinking faithful thoughts, confidently proclaiming their sanctity. It is no small part of imitation to rejoice together in the virtues of those who are better than we are. They are great, we are little; but “the Lord has blessed the little with the great.” They have gone ahead of us, they tower over us like giants. If we are not capable of following them in action, let us follow in affection; if not in glory, then certainly in joy and gladness; if not in merit, then in desire; if not in suffering, then in fellow feeling; if not in excellence, then in our close relationship with them. — SERMON 280:6
Psalms 115:14
Augustine of Hippo: For the great ones, of the house of Aaron, have said, “May the Lord increase you more and more, you and your children” [Psalms 115:14]. And thus it has happened. For children that have been raised even from the stones have flocked unto Abraham: [Matthew 3:9] sheep which were not of this fold, have flocked unto him, that there might be one flock, and one shepherd; the faith of all nations was added, and the number grew, not only of wise priests, but of obedient peoples; the Lord increasing not only their fathers more and more, who in Christ might show the way to the rest who should imitate them, but also their children, who should follow their fathers’ pious footsteps. — Exposition on Psalms 115
Psalms 115:16
Athanasius of Alexandria: The festival of Easter does not consist in pleasant conversation at meals, or splendor of clothing or days of leisure but in the acknowledgment of God and the offering of thanksgiving and of praise to him. Now this belongs to the saints alone, who live in Christ; for it is written, “The dead shall not praise you, O Lord, neither all those who go down into silence; but we who live will bless the Lord, from henceforth even forever.” So it was with Hezekiah, who was delivered from death and therefore praised God, saying, “Those who are in hades cannot praise you; the dead cannot bless you; but the living shall bless you, as I also do.” For to praise and bless God belongs to those only who live in Christ, and by means of this they go up to the feast; for the Passover is not of the Gentiles or of those who are yet Jews in the flesh but of those who acknowledge the truth in Christ, as he declares who was sent to proclaim such a feast: “Our Passover, Christ, is sacrificed.” — FESTAL LETTERS 7:3
Psalms 115:17
Augustine of Hippo: …But nevertheless since they derive the truth and richness of wisdom, not from man nor through man, but through God Himself, they have received little ones who shall be heaven, that they may know that they are heaven of heaven; as yet however earth, unto which they say, “I have planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase.” [1 Corinthians 3:6] For to those very sons of men whom He made heaven, He who knows how to provide for the earth through heaven, has given earth upon which they work. May they therefore abide, heaven and earth, in their God, who made them, and let them live from Him, confessing unto Him, and praising Him; for if they choose to live from themselves, they shall die, as it is written, “From the dead, as though he were not, confession ceases.” [Sirach 17:26] But, “The dead praise not You, O Lord, neither all they that go down into silence” [Psalms 115:17]. For the Scripture in another passage proclaims, “The sinner, when he comes into the abyss of wickednesses, scorns.” “But we, who live, will praise the Lord, from this time forth for evermore” [Psalms 115:18]. — Exposition on Psalms 115
