-
PSALM LXVIII
_The psalmist calls upon God to arise, bless his people, and_
_scatter his enemies_, 1-3;
_exhorts them to praise him for has greatness, tenderness,_
_compassion, and judgments_, 4-6;...
-
LET GOD ARISE - See the notes at Psalms 3:7. There is an obvious
reterence here to the words used by Moses on the removal of the ark in
Numbers 10:35. The same language was also employed by Solomon wh...
-
Psalms 68
The Great Redemption Accomplished
_ 1. The introduction (Psalms 68:1)_
2. The proclamation of His Name and of ‘His acts (Psalms 68:4)
3. A historic review ...
-
LXVIII. A SONG OF TRIUMPH. The most difficult of all the Pss. In some
places the text is so corrupt that it defies any attempt at
emendation, and the VSS give little, if any, help. The historical
allu...
-
God shall arise, his enemies shall be scattered
And they that hate him shall flee from his presence.
Psalms 67 begins with an echo of the priestly blessing of Numbers
6:24 ff, and the opening words...
-
The advent of God brings terror and destruction to His enemies,
blessing and joy to His people....
-
_A prayer at the removing of the ark. An exhortation to praise God for
his mercies, for his care of the church, and for his great works._
To the chief musician, A Psalm _or_ Song of David.
_TITLE._ ש...
-
PSALMS 68
DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
Glimpses of Jehovah's Visible Reign over Israel and the Nations.
ANALYSIS
(See Headlines insetted in text.)
(Lm.) By DavidPsalm Song.
(DIVISION ITHE KING: HIS PROWESS...
-
_LET GOD ARISE, LET HIS ENEMIES BE SCATTERED: LET THEM ALSO THAT HATE
HIM FLEE BEFORE HIM._
Psalms 68:1.-When God arises, His enemies are scattered like smoke,
while the righteous joyfully extol Jah,...
-
68:1 him. (a-27) See Numbers 10:35 ....
-
Taken from the invocation of Moses at the moving of the ark (Numbers
10:35), with the change of Lord (_Jehovah_) into God (_Elohim_).
2, 3. THE WICKED.. THE RIGHTEOUS] the heathen and Israel respecti...
-
This is one of the grandest of the Pss., but its origin and date are
involved in much obscurity. It contains expressions borrowed from the
Blessing of Moses (Deuteronomy 33) and the Song of Deborah (J...
-
PSALMS 42:72
_GORDON CHURCHYARD_
Words in boxes are from the Bible.
Words marked with a *star are described in the word list at the end.
The translated Bible text has yet to go through Advanced Che...
-
LET GOD ARISE. — A reminiscence of the battlecry raised as the ark
was advanced at the head of the tribes (Numbers 10:35). For
interesting historical associations with this verse, see Gibbon (chap.
58...
-
לַ † מְנַצֵּ֥חַ לְ דָוִ֗ד מִזְמֹ֥ור
שִֽׁיר׃ ...
-
Psalms 68:1
THIS superb hymn is unsurpassed, if not unequalled, in grandeur, lyric
fire, and sustained rush of triumphant praise. It celebrates a
victory; but it is the victory of the God who enters a...
-
THE LEADER OF HIS PEOPLE
Psalms 68:1
This is one of the grandest odes in literature. It was probably
composed when the Ark was brought in triumph from the house of
Obed-edom to the newly acquired hil...
-
This psalm sings the praise of the God of deliverances. It opens with
a song of pure praise (verses Psa 68:1-6). This is then justified by a
review of God's past dealings with His people (verses Psa 6...
-
"To the chief Musician, A Psalm [or] Song of David." Let God (a)
arise, let his enemies be scattered: let them also that hate him flee
before him.
(a) The prophet shows that even though God permits t...
-
_Changed. A psalm for Christian converts, to remember the passion of
Christ; (Challoner) whose sentiments this and the 21st psalm express
in the most energetic language. (Berthier) --- It may have bee...
-
CONTENTS
This Psalm is full of gospel from beginning to end, as the authority
of God the Holy Ghost fully shows, Ephesians 4:8. It was composed,
probably, at David's removing the ark from the house o...
-
1._God shall arise: his enemies shall be scattered _In this verse the
Psalmist intimates, as it were by way of preface, the subject which he
proposed to treat in the psalm, and which related to the tr...
-
Psalms 68 follows on these psalms, being the celebration of the
introduction of Israel into the position spoken of in them. Still it
has a complete and individual character of its own. It begins with...
-
LET GOD ARISE,.... Which, as Kimchi observes, is either by way of
prayer, or by way of prophecy; and in either way the sense is the
same: for, if it is considered as a prayer, it is a prayer of faith...
-
Psalms 68:1 «To the chief Musician, A Psalm [or] Song of David. »
Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered: let them also that hate
him flee before him.
_A Psalm or Song of David_] Made at that ti...
-
Psa. 68. The bringing up of the ark of God out of the house of
Obed-edom, the Gittite, into the city of David, on the top of mount
Zion, on which occasion this psalm was penned, was the most remarkabl...
-
_Let God arise_, &c. As God was in a peculiar manner present in the
ark, and as his presence was the great security of the Israelitish
nation from the dangers of the wilderness, and the power of their...
-
Let God arise, let His enemies be scattered, the ancient exclamation
which signaled the departure of the Ark of the Covenant from a camp in
the wilderness, Numbers 10:35, the prayer receiving its real...
-
OF THE MESSIAH'S EXALTATION.
To the chief musician, a psalm or song of David, the event which was
the immediate cause for writing this powerful hymn, according to most
commentators. being the placing...
-
BEFORE HIM:
_ Heb._ from his face...
-
1-6 None ever hardened his heart against God, and prospered. God is
the joy of his people, then let them rejoice when they come before
him. He who derives his being from none, but gives being to all,...
-
PSALM 68 THE ARGUMENT The occasion of this Psalm seems to have been
David's translation of the ark to Zion, which was managed with great
solemnity and devotion, and celebrated with some Psalms, and th...
-
Psalms 68:1 Musician H5329 (H8764) Psalm H4210 David H1732 Song H7892
God H430 arise H6965 (H8799) enemies...
-
LET GOD ARISE
The entire Psalm is pervaded by the joy of Israel in the kingdom, but
a stricter order of events begins with verse 18 (Psalms 68:18). This
is quoted (Ephesians 4:7) of Christ's ascensio...
-
This was a Psalm sung, at the removing of the ark, when it was taken
up to its resting-place on Mount Zion. All the tribes were gathered
together, and, in full pomp, they marched along, bearing the sa...
-
CONTENTS: Prayer against enemies and for God's people. All called upon
to praise God for His greatness and goodness.
CHARACTERS: God, David.
CONCLUSION: The glory of Zion's King is that He is a Savi...
-
This psalm is the _Carmen seculare_ of the Hebrews, and far surpasses
the _Te Deum_ of the christians. It has justly been eulogized in the
whole succession of theological composition,. The song bursts...
-
_Let God arise, let His enemies be scattered: let them alone that hate
Him flee before Him._
A GOOD PRAYER
This was what was always said by Moses, when the ark set forward
afresh in the wilderness. E...
-
PSALM PSALM—NOTE ON PSALMS 68:1. This is a celebration of God’s
continued care and protection. It remembers how God led his people
through the wilderness into their inheritance. The celebration does
n...
-
INTRODUCTION
_Superscription_.—“_To the Chief Musician_.” See Introduction to
Psalms 57. “_A Psalm or Song of David_.” See Introduction to
Psalms 48.
The Superscription does not mention the occasion...
-
EXPOSITION
THIS psalm is one of triumphant praise and jubilation, the crown and
gem of the Second Book. Professor Cheyne calls it "a patriotic and
religious ode of wondrous range and compass, and in t...
-
Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered: let them also that hate
him flee before him. As smoke is driven away, so drive them away: as
wax melts before the fire, so let the wicked perish at the pre...
-
2 Chronicles 6:41; Daniel 2:35; Deuteronomy 7:10; Exodus 20:5;...