-
Verse Psalms 104:35. _LET THE SINNERS BE CONSUMED OUT OF THE EARTH,
AND LET_ _THE WICKED BE NO MORE._] Or, He shall consume the wicked and
ungodly, till no more of them be found. Then the wicked shal...
-
LET THE SINNERS BE CONSUMED OUT OF THE EARTH - Compare Psalms 37:38.
This might with propriety be rendered, “Consumed are the sinners out
of the earth,” expressing a fact and not a desire; and it may...
-
Psalms 104
Creation's Praise
_ 1. The Creator (Psalms 104:1)_
2. The foundations of the earth (Psalms 104:5)
3. His works manifesting His kindness ...
-
CIV. THE GLORY OF THE CREATOR.
Psalms 104:1. Yahweh's power in the heavens. He is clothed in the
light which God made first (Genesis 1:3) before the heavenly bodies.
He lays the foundation of His dwel...
-
PSALMS 104
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
A Creation Hymn.
ANALYSIS
It is difficult to frame an Analysis of this psalm. The course of
thought and observation followed therein bears Some Resemblance to the
Metho...
-
Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be
no more. Bless thou the LORD, O my soul. Praise ye the LORD.
LET THE SINNERS BE CONSUMED OUT OF THE EARTH, AND LET THE WICKED BE...
-
104:35 be (b-3) Or 'May sinners be. ...' Hallelujah! (c-21) i.e.
'Praise ye Jah.'...
-
This is a Ps. of Nature, celebrating God's glory as seen in His works
both inanimate and animate. It is an expansion of the closing vv. of
Psalms 103, and like that Ps. begins and ends with the phrase...
-
The point of the Psalmist's prayer is that evil may be banished from
the world, though he identifies sin with sinners, and seems to include
their destruction in his wish. PRAISE YE THE LORD] This sent...
-
Psalms 90:106
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
*CREATOR GOD, KEEPING EVERYTHING ALIVE!
PSALMS 104
Jesus said, "Are not two *sparrows sold for a farthing? But not one
of them falls to the ground without your F...
-
SINNERS BE CONSUMED. — This imprecation, which comes in at the close
of this otherwise uniformly glad hymn, has been variously excused. The
truth seems to be that from a religious hymn of Israel, sinc...
-
יִתַּ֤מּוּ חַטָּאִ֨ים ׀ מִן ־הָ
אָ֡רֶץ וּ רְש
-
Psalms 104:1
LIKE the preceding psalm, this one begins and ends with the psalmist's
call to his soul to bless Jehovah. The inference has been drawn that
both psalms have the same author, but that is m...
-
THE ALMIGHTY'S OPEN HAND
Psalms 104:24
The psalmist says nothing of the operation of the great laws of
nature, but passes behind and beyond to the Great Hand which opens to
fill and satisfy all livin...
-
Again we have a great song of praise commencing and closing with the
same note of personal praise. While in the former the dominant note is
that of the mercy of Jehovah, here it is that of His majesty...
-
Let the sinners be (s) consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked
be no more. Bless thou the LORD, O my soul. Praise ye the LORD.
(s) Who infect the world, and so cause it to be that God cannot
re...
-
PSALM CIV. (CONFITEMINI DOMINO.)
A thanksgiving to God, for his benefits to his people Israel....
-
REFLECTIONS
MY sold! read, and pause over again and again, this lovely hymn, until
thine heart, and every devout affection, go forth in praises to
Jehovah, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, for all the ble...
-
These verses possess a peculiar and personal sweetness; and the
Psalmist takes the whole home to himself. As if he had said I know not
what others do, or what others may determine; but as, for me, and...
-
35._Let sinners perish from the earth _This imprecation depends on the
last clause of the 31st verse, _Let Jehovah rejoice in his works _As
the wicked infect the world with their pollutions, the conse...
-
Psalms 104, which celebrates Jehovah as Creator requires very few
remarks. It will be noticed that it is occupied almost entirely with
the earth. He is clothed with the glory of the heavens, which is...
-
LET THE SINNERS BE CONSUMED OUT OF THE EARTH,.... Not in common, for
all men are sinners, even good men are not without sin; but notorious
sinners, whose lives are one continued series and course of s...
-
Let the sinners be consumed out of the earth, and let the wicked be no
more. Bless thou the LORD, O my soul. Praise ye the LORD.
Ver. 35. _Let the sinners be consumed, &c._] Such sinners against
thei...
-
_Let the sinners be consumed_, &c. This speaks terror to the wicked.
As if he had said, As for those ungodly creatures who do not regard
the works of the Lord, nor give him the glory due to his name,...
-
Let the sinners, those who refuse Him faith and service, BE CONSUMED
OUT OF THE EARTH, AND LET THE WICKED BE NO MORE. BLESS THOU THE LORD,
O MY SOUL, the final self-admonition of the psalmist. PRAISE...
-
PRAISE OF GOD FOR HIS WORK IN THE KINGDOM OF NATURE.
The psalmist, probably David, as in the preceding psalm, celebrates
the glory of God in the works of His creation and providence....
-
31-35 Man's glory is fading; God's glory is everlasting: creatures
change, but with the Creator there is no variableness. And if
mediation on the glories of creation be so sweet to the soul, what
gre...
-
But as for those ungodly creatures who do not regard the works of the
Lord, which is noted as a most grievous sin, and punished with a
grievous imprecation, like this, PSALMS 27:4,5, nor give him the...
-
Psalms 104:35 sinners H2400 consumed H8552 (H8735) earth H776 wicked
H7563 Bless H1288 (H8761) LORD H3068 soul...
-
I trust that we have already felt something of holy enjoyment while
our hearts and voices have been praising the Lord our God. Perhaps
this Psalm may help to keep us in a praising state of mind. First...
-
CONTENTS: God's greatness, majesty and sovereign dominion celebrated.
CHARACTERS: God, Psalmist, David.
CONCLUSION: It is the joy of the saints that He who is their God is a
great God who may be see...
-
This psalm has no title in the Hebrew, but it is ascribed to David by
the LXX, and by most of the Versions. It celebrates the works of God
in the creation of the world, and in strains worthy of the ro...
-
_O my soul _
THE SOUL (TO CHILDREN)
I. You have a soul. A stone can be seen and felt, weighed and
measured; but it has no life. A flower is superior to a stone, because
it has a certain kind of life....
-
_O Lord my God, Thou art very great._
A HYMN OF PRAISE TO GOD IN NATURE
I. The universality of God’s workings in Nature.
1. In the domain of dead matter. He is operating in the waters as they
sail...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 104:1. The phrase “Bless the LORD, O my
soul,” which opens and closes the psalm, shows that the psalm is
about reasons for speaking well of God. This hymn of praise celebrat...
-
PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 104:31 The key to the final section is the
repeated “rejoice”: MAY THE LORD REJOICE IN HIS WORKS (what he
does in caring for his creation), and I rejoice in the L
-
INTRODUCTION
“This Psalm,” says Calvin, “differs from the last, in that it
neither treats of God’s special mercies bestowed on His Church, nor
lifts us to the hope of a heavenly life; but painting for...
-
EXPOSITION
"THE psalmist, in a time of severe trouble, arising from the power of
the heathen, seeks consolation in reflecting on the greatness of God
in nature," So Hengstenberg, correctly. The main t...
-
And thus he begins the hundred and fourth psalm,
Bless the LORD, O my soul. O LORD my God, you are very great; you are
clothed with honor and majesty: You have covered yourself with light
as with a g...
-
Judges 5:31; Proverbs 2:22; Psalms 1:4; Psalms 101:8; Psalms 37:38;...
-
Praise ye the Lord — Heb. Hallelujah. This is the first time that
this word occurs. And it comes in here on occasion of the destruction
of the wicked. And the last time it occurs, Revelation 19:1,
Rev...