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Sketch of the Life and Character of David.

to live at the expense of others. The office therefore of a shepherd was neither mean nor unimportant, as a principal part of the property of the Jews consisted in their flocks.

From the ancient history of all civilized nations we learn that the persons thought qualified for it were such as had a liberal education, good natural parts, and were highly trustworthy and courageous. These most evidently were all combined in the character of David. That his education was good, his language and skill in music prove; and that his mind was highly cultivated, the depth, sublimity, and purity of his compositions demonstrate; and that his courage and personal strength must have been great, his slaying the lion and bear that had attacked the flock under his protection, are the clearest proofs.

2. The kinnor. 3. The cythera or azur, an instrument of ten chords. 4. The symphony. 5. The sambuck. 6. The minnim.

II. WIND instruments. 1. The chatsotserah. 2. The shophar, or trumpet. 3. The keren, or horn. 4. The ugab, a species of organ. 5. The mashrokitha, or syrinx. 6. The machalath, a species of pipe or fife. 7. The chalil, or flute.

III. Instruments which required a PLECTRUM. 1. The toph, a drum, tomtom, or tambourine. 2. The tseltselim, or sistrum. 3. The shalishim, or triangle. 4. The metsiltayim a species of bell.

As all these instruments were used in the service

of God, and most of them are mentioned in the psalms, it is very likely that such a consummate musician and poet played on the whole.

3. That David was a skilful military leader, requires little proof. When for the safety of his own life he was obliged to leave the court of Saul, and become an exile in the wilds of a country so much indebted to his courage and valour, he was under the necessity of associating to himself men of desperate fortunes and of no character. These, to the amount of four hundred, he so disciplined and managed, as to soften their lawless disposition, and repress their propensity to plunder and rapine, so that they never went on any expedition that was not under his direction, and made no inroads but what tended to strengthen the hands of his countrymen, and weaken those of their enemies. Neither by day nor night, so complete was his authority over them, were they permitted to take even a lamb or a kid from the flock of any man, though they had frequent opportunities of doing so in countries so thinly inhabited, and where the flocks were numerous. On the contrary they were pro

2. His skill in music was so great as to be proverbial. In this curious art he excelled all his contemporaries, so as alone to acquire the character of the sweet singer of Israel. His success in quieting the turbulent and maniacal spirit of Saul by his performances on the lyre stands strongly marked in his history; and the effects produced were equal to any mentioned in the now fabulous histories of Greece or Rome. The wondrous harp of Orpheus, by which beasts and birds were enraptured, and the very stones and trees moved in harmony together, so as to compose of themselves the celebrated city of Thebes, we may well leave out of the question, as the fable is too gross to be credited, unless we take the exposition of an ancient author, Philodemus, some fragments of whose works have been recovered from the ruins of Herculaneum, from which we learn that the fable of the building of Thebes by the melody of his lyre arose from the fact that he was a musician who attended the builders, played to them during their labour, by whose contributions he earned a comtectors of the different herds which were fed in those petent support, and caused them to go so lightly parts of the wilderness where they were obliged to through their work, that he was hyperbolically said sojourn. To have succeeded in disciplining such a to have built the walls of the city by the power of description of men is highly to the credit of his adhis music. Nothing can be more natural than this dress and skill, especially when we consider that explanation, nor could any thing serve better for the they were composed of such as had run away from foundation of the fable. Indeed it has been conjec- the claims of their creditors; from the authority of tured by one of David's biographers, Dr. Delaney, their masters; who were distressed in their circumthat the history of David was the origin of that of stances, and discontented with the government, or Orpheus. The coincidence of the times, and the their situation in life, 1 Sam. xxii. 2. I question other circumstances alleged by this entertaining much whether any of the heroes of the last or present writer, have not served to persuade me of the truth of century, from Peter and Frederick the Great down to his hypothesis. We can amply support the credit of Napoleon Buonaparte, destitute of all subsidiary authe Hebrew musician without impairing the credi-thority, and without any other officer to assist them bility of the history and identity of the person of the in the command, could have disciplined four ancient Greek lyrist. hundred such men, brought them under perfect obe

restless and marauding spirit with so many temptations before their eyes, while prey was so easy to be acquired, and their general privations rendered such supplies necessary.

It is not likely, however, that David was a per-dience, and prevented them from indulging their former on one kind of instrument only. There were many kinds of musical instruments in his time that were all used in the ordinances of religion, and apparently employed in those parts of it where the compositions of David were used. Calmet and others have properly divided these instruments into three classes. 1. STRINGED instruments. 2. WIND instruments. And 3. Such as were played on by a

4. As a hero, David appears very conspicuous, if we take this word in its general acceptation, a man eminent for bravery. And here his proffering to fight with Goliath, the famous Philistine champion who had defied and terrified all the hosts of Israel, is at I. STRINGED instruments. 1. The nabla, or psaltery. once a proof of his bravery and patriotism. In very

PLECTRUM.

Sketch of the Life and Character of David.

remote times, and down to a late period, military etiquette permitted feuds and civil broils to be settled by single combat. In the presence of the hostile armies, previously to the shock of general battle, a man either stepped out from the ranks, or by a herald bid defiance to any person in the hostile army, and stipulated certain conditions of combat, in order to spare the effusion of blood; to the exact fulfilment of which he pledged himself and his party. This was done very circumstantially in the case before us. When the Israelites and the Philistines had drawn up their forces in battle array at Ephes-dammim, a champion of Gath called Goliath, of gigantic stature and strength, came out of the camp of the Philistines, and stood and cried unto the armies of Israel: "Why are ye come out to set your battle in array? Choose you a man for you, and let him come down to me. If he be able to fight with me, and to kill me, then will we be your servants; but if I prevail against him, and kill him, then shall ye be our servants, and serve us." And concluded with defying the armies of Israel. Saul, though he was a man of great personal courage, and the whole Israelitish army, were greatly dismayed at this challenge; and the more particularly so, because no man dared to take it up, notwithstanding the king had offered "to enrich the accepter with great gifts, give him his daughter in marriage, and make his father's house free in Israel;" 1 Sam. xvii. 1, &c. David had come to the camp with provisions for his brothers who were in Saul's army (for it appears that the Israelitish militia bore their own expenses when their services were requisite for the safety of their country); and hearing the defiance of the Philistine, proposed to take up the challenge; and having obtained Saul's consent, went forth, fought and slew the Philistine in the manner related in the chapter quoted above.

On numerous occasions he signalized himself in the same way; his natural courage, heightened by his constant dependance on God, never forsook him, and was always invincible. He was the life of his kingdom, and the soul of his army; knew well how to distinguish and employ eminent abilities, had the ablest generals, and the address to form a multitude of heroes like himself.

He had a company of champions, or as they are generally termed, worthies or mighty men, to the number of thirty-seven. The account given of these (2 Sam. xxiii.) would almost render credible the legend of king Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table; and it is probable that the first idea of that ancient romance was taken from the genuine history | of David and his thirty-seven champions.

5. How David would have acquitted himself as a lawgiver we cannot tell; for God had taken care to leave nothing of this kind to the wisdom, folly, or caprice of any man. The laws were all made and the constitution framed by Jehovah himself; and no legitimate king of the Jews was permitted to enact any new laws, or abrogate or change the old. The faithful and constitutional king was he who ruled according to the laws already established, as well in

religious as in civil matters; for although the Jewish theocracy was somewhat changed by the election of Saul, yet the monarch was considered only as the vicegerent of the Almighty; and David, taking care to abide by the laws as they then were, and governing his subjects accordingly, was said to be after God's own heart, or a man after God's own heart: and this is the sense in which this phrase is to be understood. And as David took great care that no innovation should be made in the constitution, that the law of God should be the law of the empire, and ruled according to that law, therefore he was most properly said to be a man after God's own heart, to fulfil all his counsels; and by this faithful attachment to the laws he was contradistinguished from Saul, who in several respects changed that law, and made not a few attempts to alter it in some of its most essential principles. On these grounds God rejected him and chose David.

But as a civil magistrate David's conduct was unimpeachable: his court was regulated according to the maxims of the divine law; and the universal prosperity of his kingdom is a decisive proof that judgment and justice were faithfully administered in it. The strong did not oppress the weak, nor the rich the poor: and, although the empire was seldom at rest from war during his reign, yet it was so conducted that his subjects were neither oppressed nor impoverished. Many of his psalms bear testimony to these matters, as they contain appeals to God relative to the sincerity of his heart, the uprightness of his conduct, and his impartiality in administering justice among the people. To David the cry of the distressed was never uttered in vain; and the curse of the widow and fatherless was never pronounced against him for a neglect of justice, or partiality in administering it according to the laws.

6. David, I think, may be fitly ranked among ecclesiastical reformers; for, although the grand body of the Jewish religion was so firmly fixed, that it could not be changed, yet there were several circumstances in the form of divine worship that appear to have been left to the pious discretion of the Jewish prophets, priests, and kings, to improve as time and circumstances might require. That God might be constantly worshipped, that the Jewish ritual might be carefully observed, and all the divinely appointed ecclesiastical persons have their proper share of the public service, David divided the thirty-eight thousand Levites into courses, assigning to each course its particular service, 1 Chron. xxiii. He did the same by the priests, porters, singers, &c.; and appointed twelve captains to serve each a month, and have the rule and inspection of the different courses and orders, to see that the worship of God was properly conducted. The twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twentyfifth, twenty-sixth, and twenty-seventh chapters of the first book of Chronicles, give a very detailed and circumstantial account of the improvements which David made in the form and execution of the different parts of public worship. Almost every pious king of Judah had matters of this kind to regulate and settle: but it appears that David's plan was so

Sketch of the Life and Character of David.

perfect, that it became a standard; and when any decay took place in the form of public worship, the chief aim of the succeeding kings was, to reduce every thing to the form in which David had left it. This is a full proof of the perfection of his plan.

7. That David was favoured with the gift of prophecy is, I think, universally allowed. And although there have been prophets pro tempore, who were not remarkable for piety, yet there never was one on whom the prophetic Spirit rested, that was not truly pious. All such had deep communion with God: their souls were upright, and their bodies became temples of the Holy Ghost. This was most assuredly the case with David: the prophetic Spirit overshadowed and rested upon him; in general he held deep communion with God; and even in his psalms, we can scarcely say when he does not prophesy. Some learned and very pious men consider the whole psalter as a tissue of prophecies concerning Christ and his kingdom; and in this way our Lord and his apostles quote many of them. Could we really ascertain which were David's, perhaps we might find them all of this description; though the subjects to which they apply might not be so clearly distinct: but there were so many written before, at, under, and after, the Babylonish captivity, that are become so mixed with those of David, that it is difficult, and in some cases impossible, to ascertain them. Where he evidently prophesies of Christ and his church, I have particularly remarked it in the notes. I have not gone so far as some learned and pious commentators have gone, in applying the psalms to Christ and his church, because I was not satisfied that they have such reference. Even those which are of David's composition, and have reference to Christ, are so mixed up with his own state, that it is often impossible to say when the Psalmist prophesies of the Root of Jesse, and when he simply refers to his own circumstances: and, on the whole, I am only sure of those which are thus quoted by our Lord and his apostles.

8. That David was a type of Christ is proved by the Scriptures themselves, see Jer. xxx. 9: "They shall serve the Lord their God, and DAVID their king, whom I will raise up unto them;" Ezek. xxxiv. 23: " And I will set up one shepherd over them, and he shall feed them, even my servant DAVID; he shall feed them, and he shall be their shepherd." Ver. 24: "And I the Lord will be their God, and my servant DAVID a prince among them." See also Ezek. xxxvii. 24; and compare this with Jer. xxiii. 4, 5; John x. 11; Heb. xiii. 24; 1 Pet. ii. 25, and v. 4; Hosen, chap. iii. ver. 5, speaks in the same way: "Afterward shall the children of Israel return, and seek the Lord their God, and DAVID their king; and shall fear the Lord and his goodness in the latter days." That none of these Scriptures speak of David, son of Jesse, is evident from this, that Hosea lived three hundred years after David, Jeremiah four hundred and seventythree, and Ezekiel four hundred and ninety-three.

But in what was David a type of Christ? Principally, I think, in the name David, which signifies the beloved one, that one more loved than any other; and this is what is expressed from heaven by God

himself, when he says, This is my Son, 'O Ayaπntos, Ev y evĉoknoα, THE BELOVED ONE, in whom I have delighted. This is the genuine David; the man after my own heart. He was his type also, in being a royal prophet-one in whom the Holy Spirit dwelt, and one who was a truly spiritual king; a character that seldom occurs in the history of the world.

Were we to consult those who have laboured on the types, we might find all the following resem blances stated; and, in their way, wondrously proved! David was a type of Christ, 1. In his originally mean appearance. 2. In his mean education. 3. In his unction. 4. In his eminent qualifications. 5. In his various persecutions. 6. In his enemies. 7. In his distresses. 8. In his deliverance. 9. "In his victories and conquests. And, 10. In his taking to wife the adulterous woman, and thereby bringing guilt upon himself." See Parkhurst. All the first nine particulars might be controverted, as not having any thing in them exclusively typical; and the tenth is horrible, if not blasphemous. No analogies, no metaphorical meanings can support this abominable position. I have already given my opinion: to elucidate the particulars above I shall never attempt.

9. But the highest merit of David, and that which seems to have been almost exclusively his own, was his poetic genius. As a divine poet, even God bimself had created none greater, either before or since. In this science and gift he is therefore the chef-d'œuvre of the Almighty. Moses wrote some fine verses; Solomon two fine poems, an ode and an elegy. The prophets, particularly Isaiah, in several chapters of his prophecy; Jeremiah, in his book of Lamentations; and some of the minor prophets, in a few select verses; have given us specimens of a profound poetical genius: but we have no whole like that of David. The sublimity, the depth, the excursive fancy, the discursive power, the vast compass of thought, the knowledge of heaven and earth, of God and nature, the work of the Spirit, the endlessly varied temptations of Satan, the knowledge of the human heart, the travail of the soul, the full comprehension of the prosopopia or personification of the whole of inanimate nature, of every virtue, and of every vice, the immense grasp of thought embodying and arranging, and afterwards clothing in suitable language, the vast assemblage of ideas furnished by the natural and spiritual world; in a word, the spirit of poetry, the true genie createur, the Tov Tointov oinois, framework of the framer, the poetry of the poet, not the fiction of the inventive genius; but the production of truth, hidden before in the bosom of God and nature, and exhibited in the most pleasing colours, with the most impressive pathos and irresistible harmonie diction: these qualities, these supra-mundane excellencies, are found in no other poet that ever graced the annals of the world; they exist in their perfec tion only in David king of Israel. What is peculiarly remarkable in David is, he has succeeded to the very highest degree in every species of poetic composition that has for its object the glory of God and the welfare of man; and there is not one poet who has succeeded him, that has not failed when he

Sketch of the Life and Character of David.

attempted to sing of God, the punishment and re- | part of his general character; and his repentance on wards of the future world, and the unsearchable the account of that which was his great blot, was the riches of Christ.

The hymns which he produced have been the general song of the universal church; and men of all nations find in these compositions a language at once suitable to their feelings, and expressive of their highest joys and deepest sorrows, as well as of all the endlessly varied wishes and desires of their hearts. Hail, thou sweet singer of Israel! thy voice is still heard in all the assemblies of the saints.

In my notes on different places of the psalter I have taken the opportunity of pointing out some of the beauties of these incomparable productions. But I must here state that the true excellence of this work will never be fully known, till it be translated according to its rythmical order, or hemistich plan, in which the harmony of its versification will be felt, and the whole be much more easily apprehended and practically understood. Had we a second Lowth to take up David, as the first did Isaiah, the church of God would have the utmost reason to rejoice; and Each devout penitent and believer would be enabled to sing more with the spirit and the understanding, than they can possibly do in taking up the best translation of the psalms, whether metrical or prosaic,

now extant.

deepest and most exemplary we have on record. If a man have fallen into sin, and made the speediest return to God by confession and repentance, he proves that that transgression is no part of his character. He does not repeat it; he loathes and abhors it. It requires malice against God's book to say this crime was a part of David's character. Adultery and murder were no part of the character of David: he fell once into the first, and endeavoured to cover it by the death of an innocent man; but who can prove that he ever repeated either? While it is granted that a man of God should never sin against his Maker, it must also be granted that, in a state of probation, a holy man may sin; that such may be renewed unto repentance, and sin against their God no more, are also possible cases. And it is not less possible that a holy man of God may fall into sin, continue in it, repeat it and re-repeat it, and rise no more. Of this dreadful possibility the Scripture gives ample proof. There are but few in the church of God that have kept their garments unspotted from the world, and retained their first love: but it should have been otherwise; and had they watched unto prayer, they would not have fallen. I only contend for the possibility, not for the necessity, of the case. And I contend that, in the case of David, a life so long, so holy, so useful, and, except in these, instances, so truly exemplary, entitles him to the character of a holy man of God; and, allowing but a little for the dispensation under which he lived, one of the holiest, if not THE holiest, that ever wore a crown, or wielded a sceptre. For the supposition that on his death-bed he retracted the promise of life to Shimei, see the notes on 1 Kings ii. 9, where he is amply vindicated.

We have no less than four versions, two in prose and two in verse, given by public authority to the good people of this land. Of the former there is one in the public service of the church, compiled out of various translations; and one by king James's translators, in the authorized version of the Bible: the latter indescribably the better of this class. The two metrical Versions are by Sternhold, Hopkins, and others, and by Brady and Tate. The former is the most just and literal: but none of them worthy of the subject. All these have already passed under On the whole, I can cheerfully sum up all in the review. words of Dr. Delaney, "David was a true believer, a 10. That there should have been any doubt enter-zealous adorer of God, teacher of his law and worship, tained as to the piety of David appears very strange: most certainly, no man ever gave more unequivocal proofs of piety and devotedness to God than he gave. It was utterly impossible that any man could have written such psalms as David has, whose soul was not deeply imbued with the Spirit of holiness; and appears, not only in his writings, but in his general conduct. That in some cases he grievously departed from God, who would attempt to deny? His adultery with Bathsheba, and the consequent murder of the brave Uriah, were crimes of a very deep dye. I can say no more on these, than I have said already in my notes on 2 Sam. xi., and in the observations at the end of that chapter; and to these I beg to refer the reader. His pretended cruelty to the Ammonites has been adduced as a proof of a hard and wicked heart. See the notes on 2 Sam. xii. 31, where this charge is shown to be unfounded. Whatever obliquities have been charged against him, from facts recorded in his history, have already been amply considered where the facts are mentioned. But all these, make the worst of them we can, are but insulated fucts; they never existed in habit, they made no

and inspirer of his praise. A glorious example, a perpetual and inexhaustible fountain of true piety. A consummate and unequalled hero, a skilful and fortunate captain, a steady patriot, a wise ruler, a faithful, generous, and magnanimous friend; and, what is yet rarer, a no less generous a magnanimous enemy. A true penitent, a divine musician, a sublime poet, an inspired prophet. By birth a peasant, by merit a prince. In youth a hero, in manhood a monarch, and in age a saint."

this

The matter of Bathsheba and Uriah are almost his

only blot. There he sinned deeply; and no man ever suffered more in his body, soul, and domestic affairs, than he did in consequence. His penitence was as deep and as extraordinary as his crime; and nothing could surpass both, but that eternal mercy that took away the guilt, assuaged the sorrow, and restored this most humbled transgressor to character, holiness, happiness, and heaven. Reader, let the God of David be exalted for ever!

Corrected for Press, March 15th 1829.-A. C.

INTRODUCTION

TO THE

PROVERBS OF SOLOMON,

THE SON OF DAVID, KING OF ISRAEL.

THEI
HERE has scarcely been any dispute concerning either the author or divine authority
of this book, either in the Jewish or Christian church: all allow that it was written by
Solomon; and the general belief is, that he wrote the book by divine inspiration.

It has, indeed, been supposed that Solomon collected the major part of these proverbs from those who had preceded him, whether Hebrews or heathens; but the latter opinion has been controverted, as derogating from the authority of the book. But this supposition has very little weight; for, whatever of truth is found in or among men, came originally from God; and if he employed an inspired man to collect those rays of light, and embody them for the use of his church, he had a right so to do, and to claim his own wheresoever found, and, by giving it a new authentication, to render it more useful in reference to the end for which it was originally communicated. God is the Father of lights, and from him came all true wisdom, not only in its discursive teachings, but in all its detached maxims for the govern ment and regulation of life. I think it very likely that Solomon did not compose them all; but he collected every thing of this kind within his reach, and what was according to the Spirit of truth, by which he was inspired, he condensed in this book; and as the Divine Spirit gave it, so the providence of God has preserved it, for the use of his church.

That true Light which lightens every man that cometh into the world first taught men to acknowledge himself as the Fountain and Giver of all good; and then by short maxims, conveyed in terse energetic words, taught them to regulate their conduct in life, in respect to the dispensations of his providence, and in reference to each other in domestic, social, and civil life; and this was done by such proverbs as we find collected in this book. The different changes that take place in society; the new relations which in process of time men would bear to each other; the invention of arts and sciences; and the experience of those who had particularly considered the ways of the Lord, and marked the operation of his hands; would give rise to many maxims, differing from the original stock only in their application to those new relations and varying circumstances.

The heathen who had any connexion with the first worshippers of the Almighty would observe the maxims by which they regulated the affairs of life, and would naturally borrow from them; and hence those original teachings became diffused throughout the world; and we find there is not an ancient nation on earth that is without its code of proverbs or proverbial maxims. The ancient SANSCRIT is full of them; and they abound in the Persian and Arabic languages, and in all the dialects formed from these, in all the countries of the East. The HEETOPADESA of Vishnoo Sarma, the Anvari Soheili, the Bahar Danush, Kalila we Dumna, and all the other forms of that original work: the fables of Lockman, Esop, Phædrus, Avienus, &c., are collections of proverbs, illustrated by their application to the most important purposes of domestic, social, and civil life.

Those nations with which we are best acquainted have their collections of proverbs; and perhaps those with which we are unacquainted have theirs also. Messrs. Visdelou and Galand formed a collection of Asiatic proverbs, and published it in their supplement to the Bibliotheque Orientale of D'Herbelot. This is a collection of very great worth, curiosity, and importance. Mr. J. Ray, F. R. S., formed a collection of this kind, particularly such as are or have been in use in Great Britain: this is as curious as it is entertaining and useful.

The term PROVERB, proverbium, compounded of pro, for, and verbum, a word, speech, or saying, leads us to an original meaning of the thing itself. It was an allegorical saying, more was meant than met the eye"-a short saying that stood for a whole discourse,

where 66

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