St Ambrose's commentaries on the psalms
The delightful book of the psalms |
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Although
the whole of Scripture breathes God’s grace upon us, this is especially
true of that delightful book, the book of the psalms. Moses, when he
related the deeds of the patriarchs, did so in a plain and unadorned
style. But when he had miraculously led the people of Israel across the
Red Sea, when he had seen King Pharaoh drowned with all his army, he
transcended his own skills (just as the miracle had transcended his own
powers) and he sang a triumphal song to the Lord. Miriam the prophetess
herself took up a timbrel and led the others in the refrain: Sing to the Lord: he has covered himself in glory, horse and rider he has thrown into the sea.
History instructs us, the law teaches us, prophecy
foretells, correction punishes, morality persuades; but the book of
psalms goes further than all these. It is medicine for our spiritual
health. Whoever reads it will find in it a medicine to cure the wounds
caused by his own particular passions. Whoever studies it deeply will
find it a kind of gymnasium open for all souls to use, where the
different psalms are like different exercises set out before him. In
that gymnasium, in that stadium of virtue, he can choose the exercises
that will train him best to win the victor’s crown.
If someone wants to study the deeds of our ancestors
and imitate the best of them, he can find a single psalm that contains
the whole of their history, a complete treasury of past memories in just
one short reading.
If someone wants to study the law and find out what gives it its force (it is the bond of love, for whoever loves his neighbour has fulfilled the law) let
him read in the psalms how love led one man to undergo great dangers to
wipe out the shame of his entire people; and this triumph of virtue
will lead him to recognise the great things that love can do.
And as for the power of prophecy – what can I say?
Other prophets spoke in riddles. To the psalmist alone, it seems, God
promised openly and clearly that the Lord Jesus would be born of his
seed: I promise that your own son will succeed you on the throne.
Thus in the book of psalms Jesus is not only born for
us: he also accepts his saving passion, he dies, he rises from the dead,
he ascends into heaven, he sits at the Father’s right hand. The
Psalmist announced what no other prophet had dared to say, that which
was later preached by the Lord himself in the Gospel.
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