-
Verse Psalms 2:5. _THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM IN HIS WRATH_] He did
so to the Jews who rejected the Gospel, and vexed and ruined them by
the Roman armies; he did so with the opposing Roman emperors...
-
THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM - That is, this seeming indifference and
unconcern will not last forever. He will not always look calmly on,
nor will he suffer them to accomplish their purposes without...
-
Psalms 2
THE REJECTED KING
_ 1. The rejection and the coming confederacy (Psalms 2:1)_
2. Jehovah's attitude and interference (Psalms 2:4)
3. The coming of the King and his inheritance ...
-
II. MESSIAH'S REIGN. Also without a title. Here we have a distinctly
Messianic Ps., put in this place, possibly, as an introduction to
other Messianic Pss. which follow. Messianic it is in the stricte...
-
The poet-seer draws aside the veil, and bids us look from earth to
heaven. There the supreme Ruler of the world sits enthroned in
majesty. With sovereign contempt He surveys these petty plottings, and...
-
_Then_ There is a limit to the divine patience. He will not always
look on in silence. If they persist in their folly He must speak, and
His word (like that of His representative, Isaiah 11:4) is powe...
-
THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM— This denotes, not God's speaking to
them by an audible voice; but his making them know, to their full
conviction, by the disappointment of their schemes, and the vengean...
-
PSALMS 2
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
The Messiah's Reign in Zion Assured.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 2:1-3, A Conspiracy against Jehovah and His Anointed
Foretold. Stanza II., Psalms 2:4-6, Jehovah's Counter...
-
_THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM IN HIS WRATH, AND VEX THEM IN HIS SORE
DISPLEASURE._
Then - at the moment when their might and profanity are at their
height, and seemingly "nothing will be restrained...
-
The historical situation of this Ps. cannot now be recovered. It may
refer to some threatened rebellion of subject kings in the early days
of Solomon, or to some similar movement under one of the late...
-
THEN] i.e. when the plot ripens into action....
-
Psalms 1:41
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
Words in boxes are from the Bible.
The notes explain some of the words with a *star by them. Tap the *
before a word to show an explanation.
The translated Bible tex...
-
THEN. — An emphatic particle, marking the climax; possibly equal to
“Lo! behold.” The grand roll of the words in the original is like
the roll of the thunder, and is rendered more effective by its
con...
-
אָ֤ז יְדַבֵּ֣ר אֵלֵ֣ימֹו בְ אַפֹּ֑ו
וּֽ בַ
-
Psalms 2:1
VARIOUS unsatisfactory conjectures as to a historical basis for this
magnificent lyric have been made, but none succeeds in specifying
events which fit with the situation painted in it. The...
-
GOD'S SON UPON HIS THRONE
Psalms 2:1
This is one of the sublimest of the Psalms, and can find its
fulfillment only in our Lord. See Acts 4:25; Acts 13:33; H
-
This is the psalm of Jehovah's King. It is impossible to fix the event
for which it was written and to which it first referred. The wider
application is perfectly patent. To whatsoever king the words...
-
(c) Then shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and vex them in his
sore displeasure.
(c) God's plagues will declare that in resisting his Christ, they
fought against him....
-
Rage. These, and similar expressions, when applied to the immutable
Deity, only denote that men have deserved the worst of punishments.
(Haydock) --- God had discomfited the enemies of David (2 Kings...
-
What is here said of the sovereignty of Jehovah, of sitting in the
heavens, of speaking in his wrath, of laughing, and the like, is
intended to convey, by expressions of this nature, is best adapted t...
-
Moreover, he ascribes speech to God, not for the purpose of
instructing his enemies, but only to convict them of their madness;
indeed, by the term _speak, _he means nothing else than a
manifestation...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS PSALMS 1 AND 2.
In Psalms 1, however, we have simply the godly remnant on the earth. I
say remnant, for the subject of the psalm is spoken of as
characterized by indivi...
-
THEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM IN HIS WRATH,.... Or, "and he shall
speak to them"; so Noldius: that is, the Lord that sits in the
heavens, and laughs, and has the Heathen, the people, the kings and
rul...
-
_Then_ In the midst of all their plots and confidence of success;
_shall he speak unto them in his wrath_ That is, severely rebuke them,
not only by his prophets and other messengers in words, but by...
-
Then, on the great day of wrath and Judgment, SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM
IN HIS WRATH, in the white heat of His just anger, AND VEX THEM IN HIS
SORE DISPLEASURE, trouble, terrify, and utterly overthrow...
-
OF THE ETERNAL SONSHIP OF THE MESSIAH.
The Futile Rage Of The Nations.
That the entire psalm is Messianic is clearly shown by the quotation
Acts 4:25, together with the explanation there added: "For...
-
VEX:
Or, trouble...
-
1-6 We are here told who would appear as adversaries to Christ. As
this world is the kingdom of Satan, unconverted men, of every rank,
party, and character, are stirred up by him to oppose the cause...
-
THEN; in the midst of all their plots and confidences of success.
SHALL HE SPEAK TO THEM IN HIS WRATH; he shall severely rebuke them,
not so much verbally as really, by dreadful judgments. For God's
_...
-
Psalms 2:5 speak H1696 (H8762) wrath H639 distress H926 (H8762)
displeasure H2740
Then - P
-
GOD WILL LAUGH AT MAN'S FOLLY AND EXALT HIS ANOINTED.
‘He who sits in the heavens will laugh,
The Lord will have them in derision,
Then will he speak to them in his wrath,
And vex them in his sore...
-
Psalms 2
I. The Psalm opens abruptly; here is no prelude; it is an utterance of
amazement, begotten in the soul and breaking from the lips of one who
looks out upon the nations and generations of man....
-
Psalms 2:1. _Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain
thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take
counsel together, against the LORD, and against his anointed, sayi...
-
Psalms 2:1. _Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain
thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take
counsel together against the LORD, and against his anointed, sayin...
-
Psalms 2:1. _Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain
thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take
counsel together, against the LORD, and against his anointed, sayi...
-
CONTENTS: The psalm of the king; rejected, established and finally
reigning.
CHARACTERS: God, Christ, kings of earth.
CONCLUSION: The kings of earth are ever setting themselves in array
against God...
-
This psalm, by a constant succession of the rabbins, is applied to
Christ. If it have any bearing on David's enemies, for the eyes of
prophets were often directed from objects near, to those which are...
-
_Why do the heathen rage?_
THE PROPHETICAL ELEMENT IN THE PSALM
But though the poem was occasioned by some national event, we must not
confine its application to that event, nor need we even suppose...
-
_He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh. .. and vex them in His
sore displeasure._
FIRST A LAUGH THEN A SMITE
The heathen and the people, the kings and the rulers are answered with
contempt, they...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 2:1. God made David and his descendants
kings in order to fulfill the purpose for which Abraham was called: to
bring blessing to all nations (Genesi
-
INTRODUCTION
“It is quite impossible now to say what the event was which
occasioned this poem. The older interpreters referred it to David, and
the attacks made upon him by the Philistines (2 Samuel 5...
-
EXPOSITION
HERE we have again a psalm without a title, and, so far, we are left
to conjecture its age and author. The Jews, however, have always
regarded it as Davidical; and there is evidence in Scri...
-
The second psalm deals with the Kingdom Age. The glorious Kingdom Age
when Jesus reigns upon the earth. A Messianic psalm.
Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing? For the
kings...
-
Isaiah 11:4; Isaiah 66:6; Luke 19:27; Luke 19:43; Luke 19:44;...
-
CHRIST VERSUS THE ANTICHRIST
Psalms 1:1; Psalms 2:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
1. Satan an adept at counterfeits. As we enter into our study in the
Psalms, we must first get the great message of the Psalms...
-
THE PREFATORY PSALMS
Psalms 1:1, _Psalms 2:1, and Psalms 3:1_
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
The first chapter of the Psalm is its preface. You may call it, if you
wish, the prefatory Psalm. It gives you the ke...