From the end of the earth will I cry unto thee
Where he now was, as is observed on the title, (See Gill on
Psalms
61:1): though he was distant from his own house, and from
the house of God, he did not restrain prayer before him, but
continued to cry unto him, and determined to do so; and as the
people of God are sometimes forced to flee to distant parts, they
have a God still to go to, who is a God afar off, as well as at
hand. It may be the psalmist may represent the church in Gospel
times, throughout the whole world, even at the further parts of
it, in the isles afar off, where men may and do lift up holy
hands to God without wrath and doubting:
when my heart is overwhelmed;
or "covered" F24; with grief and sorrow for any
trouble, outward or inward, and ready to sink, and fail and die.
Sometimes the saints are overwhelmed with a sense of sin, are
pressed down with the weight and burden of its guilt; their faces
are covered with shame and confusion; and their hearts are
swallowed up and overwhelmed with overmuch sorrow, both at the
number of their sins, and at the aggravated circumstances of
them; and especially when they are without a view of pardoning
grace and mercy, ( Psalms 38:4 Psalms 38:10
) ( 51:12
) ( Lamentations
3:42 Lamentations
3:43 ) ; and sometimes they are overwhelmed with afflictive
providences; the Lord causes all his waves and billows to go over
them, and they are just ready to sink; and did he not stay his
hand, and stop contending with them, the spirit would fail before
him, and the souls that he has made, ( Psalms 42:6 Psalms 42:7 ) (
Isaiah
57:16 ) ; and sometimes with divine desertions, which cause a
"deliquium" of soul, and throw them into fainting fits, (
Song of Solomon 5:6
) ; and sometimes through unbelieving frames; and did not the
Lord appear to them, and strengthen their faith, and remove their
unbelief, they would sink and die away, ( Psalms 77:2 Psalms 77:3 Psalms
77:7-9 ) ( 27:13 ) . And
at all such times it is right to cry unto the Lord, and make the
following request to him:
lead me to the rock [that] is higher than I;
not the land of Israel, as Kimchi thinks, the psalmist being now
in the low lands of the Philistines; nor Jerusalem, and the fort
and hill of Zion; he being now at the extreme and lower parts of
the land: this sense is too low. Some think that some great
difficulty is meant; which seemed insuperable, and like a rock
inaccessible, which he could not get up to, and upon, and get
over; and therefore desires the Lord would lead him up it, and
over it, before whom every rock, mountain, and hill, becomes a
plain, ( Zechariah
4:7 ) ; but rather Christ is meant, the Rock of Israel, the
Rock of our salvation, and our refuge. He is higher than David,
and all the kings of the earth; higher than the angels in heaven,
and than the heavens themselves, ( Hebrews 7:26
) ; and who by his height is able to protect and defend his
people from all their enemies; and by the shade he casts to
refresh and comfort them; and by the sufficiency in him to supply
all their wants; for he is as a rock impregnable, and well
stored, ( Isaiah 33:16
) ( 32:9 )
. And here gracious souls desire to be led by the Spirit of God
always, and especially when in distressing circumstances; and he
does lead them to his blood for pardon and cleansing, and to his
righteousness for justification and acceptance with God, and to
his fulness for fresh supplies.