-
Verse Psalms 24:7. _LIFT UP YOUR HEADS, O YE GATES_] The address of
those who preceded the ark, the gates being addressed instead of the
_keepers_ of the gates. Allusion is here made to the triumphal...
-
LIFT UP YOUR HEADS, O YE GATES - Either the gates of the city, or of
the house erected for the worship of God; most probably, as has been
remarked, the former. This may be supposed to have been uttere...
-
Psalms 24
The Chief Shepherd, the King of Glory
_ 1. Who shall dwell with Him when He comes? (Psalms 24:1)_
2. The glorious manifestation of the King (Psalms 24:7)...
-
XXIV. PSALMS 24:1 f. Yahweh the Creator.
PSALMS 24:2. For the water under the earth, _cf._ Exodus 20:4. There
was sea below the earth, another on a level with the earth, and a
third ocean above the f...
-
EVERLASTING DOORS. age-abiding entrances. The tabernacle (or tent) of
David, on Mount Zion, was not ancient. This looks forward to the
fulfilment of prophecy in times yet to come.
KING OF GLORY. Glori...
-
_Lift up your heads_ As though they were too low and mean for the
entrance of "the high and lofty one" who comes, and in token that all
resistance is at an end.
_ye everlasting doors_ Or, _ye ancient...
-
The procession has reached the ancient gates of Zion. They are
summoned to open high and wide to admit their true King....
-
DISCOURSE: 529
THE ASCENSION OF CHRIST TYPIFIED
Psalms 24:7. Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye
everlasting doors; and the King of Glory shall come in. Who is this
King of glory? Th...
-
PSALMS 24
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
The Admission of Worshippers into the Presence of the Previously
Admitted King.
ANALYSIS
Stanza I., Psalms 24:1-2, Jehovah's Ownership of the World the Ground
for Worshi...
-
_LIFT UP YOUR HEADS, O YE GATES; AND BE YE LIFT UP, YE EVERLASTING
DOORS; AND THE KING OF GLORY SHALL COME IN._
As the ark in the procession draws near the gates of Zion, David calls
on them to open...
-
LIFT UP YOUR HEADS] as if to make the entrance more roomy.
EVERLASTING] RM 'ancient,' with an illimitable history behind them....
-
This Ps. is generally, and very appropriately, connected with the
occasion when David brought up the ark from the house of Obededom to
the tent prepared for it on Mt. Zion. It declares the universal
s...
-
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...
-
GATES. — The LXX. and Vulgate miss this fine personification, by
rendering “princes” instead of “heads.”
“Lift up your gates, O princes.”
The sacrifice of the poetry to antiquarianism, by introducin...
-
שְׂא֤וּ שְׁעָרִ֨ים ׀ רָֽאשֵׁיכֶ֗ם
וְֽ֭ הִנָּשְׂאוּ פִּתְחֵ֣י...
-
Psalms 24:1
EWALD'S widely accepted view that this psalm is a composite of two
fragments rests on a somewhat exaggerated estimate of the differences
in tone and structure of the parts. These are obvio...
-
ENTERING JEHOVAH'S HOLY PLACE
Psalms 24:1
Psalms 22:1 tells of the cross; Psalms 23:1 of the crook; Psalms 24:1
of the crown. This grea
-
This is the final psalm of the three, and as in Psa 22:1-31 the words
so far exceed the possibility of exhaustion by any circumstances
originating them as to create an opinion unanimously in favor of...
-
(c) Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting
doors; and the King of glory shall come in.
(c) David desires the building up of the temple, in which the glory of
God should app...
-
_Ignorances. Hebrew, "defects," as youth is more apt to omit duties
than to act very wickedly. Yet it is difficult to decide how grievous
such sins may be. (Berthier) --- Passion and ignorance then co...
-
What a sublimity there is in these blessed words; and what a rich
treasure they contain, in reference to the person and glory of our
almighty Mediator! So important a doctrine was the triumph of Jesus...
-
Psalms 24
_ Proper Psalm for Ascension Day_ (_Evening_).
PSALMS 24-26 = _ Day 5_ (_Morning_)....
-
7._Lift up your heads, O ye gates! _The magnificent and splendid
structure of the temple, in which there was more outward majesty than
in the tabernacle, not being yet erected, David here speaks of th...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS PSALMS 23 AND 24.
Psalms 23, 24 go in a certain sense by themselves, giving the perfect
confidence in the Shepherd, Jehovah, founded on the experience of what
He is in...
-
LIFT UP YOUR HEADS, O YE GATES,.... By which the gates of hell are not
meant; nor are the words to be understood of the descent of Christ
thither, to fetch the souls of Old Testament saints from thenc...
-
Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting
doors; and the King of glory shall come in.
Ver. 7. _Lift up your heads, O ye gates, &c._] Here he calleth unto
hell gates, say the P...
-
_Lift up your heads, O ye gates_ The questions, _Who shall ascend
God's hill_, namely, to worship? and, _Who shall stand in his holy
place_, to minister before and serve him? being answered, the psalm...
-
THE WELCOME OF THE KING...
-
Lift up your heads. O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting
doors; and the King of Glory shall come in. The picture is that of a
mighty host moving forward to take possession of Mount Zion, with...
-
The question was put, Who shall ascend into God's hill and holy place?
PSALMS 24:3; to which answer hath been given, and the persons
described, PSALMS 24:4. But because there still were impediments in...
-
Psalms 24:7 up H5375 (H8798) heads H7218 gates H8179 up H5375 (H8734)
everlasting H5769 doors H6607 King...
-
THE CALL TO LET YHWH ENTER HIS HOLY CITY, BRINGING ABOUT A REVELATION
OF WHO HE IS (PSALMS 24:7).
Psalms 24:7
‘Lift up your heads, O you gates,
And be you lifted up, you ancient (everlasting) doors...
-
Psalms 24:7
I. The primary reference of the words of the text is to the bringing
up of the ark from the house of Obed-edom into the tent prepared for
its reception within the precincts of the city of...
-
Psalms 24:7
I. Notice the historical and original application of these words to
the King who dwelt with Israel. The thought of God in these words is
mainly that of a God of strong and victorious ener...
-
Psalms 24:1. _The earth is the LORD'S, and the fullness thereof,_
And therefore it is also the believer's. The real fullness of the
earth belongs to the Christian. «The meek shall inherit the earth.»...
-
CONTENTS: The one who shall stand before Jehovah.
CHARACTER: God.
CONCLUSION: Those who have been made meet for heaven shall be brought
safely into God's presence. While none may venture to meet God...
-
Psalms 24:1. _The fulness thereof._ Targum, _all its creatures;_ all
that the earth contains and supports.
Psalms 24:4. _Not lifted up his soul to vanity;_ that is, to an idol.
So the LXX, ματαια. Id...
-
_Lift up your heads, O ye gates._
THE ASCENSION OF CHRIST
It is generally admitted by expositors that these words have a
secondary, if not a primary, reference to the return of the Mediator
to heaven...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 24:1. This psalm seems to be intended for
public worship—perhaps a celebration remembering how David brought
the ark of the Lord into Jerusalem (2
-
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 24:7 The people bearing the ark announce
God’s presence in the ark, seeking entry into his sanctuary (v.
Psalms 24:7). The people inside the sanctuary reply,...
-
INTRODUCTION
“This grand choral hymn was in all probability composed and sung on
the occasion of the removal of the ark from the house of Obed-Edom to
the city of David, on Mount Zion (2 Samuel 6). It...
-
EXPOSITION
AT first sight this psalm seems to be composed of two quite separate
fragments (Psalms 24:1 and Psalms 24:7); whence Ewald has laid it down
that, in their origin, the two parts were wholly...
-
The earth is the LORD'S, and the fullness thereof; the world, and they
that dwell therein (Psalms 24:1).
It all belongs to God.
For he hath founded it upon the seas, he established it upon the
flood...
-
1 Corinthians 2:8; 1 Kings 8:11; 1 Kings 8:6; 1 Peter 3:22; 2 Peter 3:
-
Lift up — He speaks here of the gates and doors of the temple, which
by faith and the spirit of prophecy, he beheld as already built, whose
doors he calls Everlasting, not so much because they were ma...