Exposition on the Psalms of David
"God is not." Above, the Psalmist set forth certain causes of the malice of the wicked, of which one was permissive, because God withdrew far off; the second was inductive, namely the flattering tongue. Here are set forth other motivating causes, namely intrinsic ones, which are two: namely contempt of God and personal presumption. The second, at "he said in his heart." Regarding the first, he does two things. First, he sets forth that the wicked man does not think about God. Second, that he does not fear God's judgments, at "they are removed." Regarding the first, he does two things. Because first he sets forth the turning away from God, or his contempt. Second, the effect of the turning away, at "they are defiled." He says therefore, "God is not in his sight." Jerome has, "in his thoughts," because he thinks nothing about God; and it is connected thus: the sinner will not seek God, because God is not in his sight, that is, in his intention or thought. Job 21: "They said to God: Depart from us; we do not desire the knowledge of your ways." The effect is that "his ways are defiled," that is, they are sordid at all times. The ways of the sinner are his thoughts or his wills: Wis. 1: "Wisdom will not enter a soul that devises evil, nor will it dwell in a body subject to sins." And they are said to be defiled through sin, or in the likeness of the sins of the preceding time. This can be said allegorically of the Antichrist, morally of sinners: because by the very fact that God is not in their intention, they turn themselves to temporal things, by which the soul is defiled insofar as it mingles with things that are lower than the soul. But the soul mingled with God, who is better than the soul, is not defiled but glorified. Lam. 1: "Her filthiness is on her feet, and she did not remember her end." Ps. 34: "Their ways are darkness and slipperiness." Jer. 2: "They have forsaken me, the fountain of living water, and have dug for themselves broken cisterns that cannot hold water." Jerome has, "His ways bring forth," because sinners propose to do various things: Lk. 12: "My soul, you have many goods laid up for many years; eat and make merry." And the Lord said, "Fool, this night," etc. Ps. 7: "He conceived sorrow and brought forth iniquity." He who clings to temporal things is not fixed in one, because it does not suffice; and because of this, he thinks of various things.
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