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Text -- Psalms 29:2-11 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 29:2 - -- _The honour which he deserves: own him as the Almighty, and the only true God.
_The honour which he deserves: own him as the Almighty, and the only true God.
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Wesley: Psa 29:3 - -- Above in the clouds, which are called waters, Gen 1:7; Psa 18:11. The Divine power displays itself in those high places, which are far above the reach...
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Wesley: Psa 29:3 - -- Upon the clouds, in which there are vast treasures of water, and upon which God is said to sit or ride, Psa 18:10-11, Psa 104:3.
Upon the clouds, in which there are vast treasures of water, and upon which God is said to sit or ride, Psa 18:10-11, Psa 104:3.
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A place famous for strong and lofty cedars.
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Wesley: Psa 29:6 - -- The cedars; which being broken by the thunder, the parts of them are suddenly and violently hurled hither and thither.
The cedars; which being broken by the thunder, the parts of them are suddenly and violently hurled hither and thither.
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Wesley: Psa 29:6 - -- An high mountain beyond Jordan joining to Lebanon. Lebanon and Sirion are said to skip or leap, both here, and Psa 114:4, by a poetical hyperbole.
An high mountain beyond Jordan joining to Lebanon. Lebanon and Sirion are said to skip or leap, both here, and Psa 114:4, by a poetical hyperbole.
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Wesley: Psa 29:8 - -- An eminent wilderness, vast and terrible, and well known to the Israelites, and wherein possibly they had seen, and observed some such effects of thun...
An eminent wilderness, vast and terrible, and well known to the Israelites, and wherein possibly they had seen, and observed some such effects of thunder.
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Wesley: Psa 29:9 - -- Through the terror it causes, which hastens the birth. He names the hinds, because they bring forth their young with difficulty, Job 39:1-2.
Through the terror it causes, which hastens the birth. He names the hinds, because they bring forth their young with difficulty, Job 39:1-2.
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Heb. maketh bare, of its trees, which it breaks or strips of their leaves.
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Wesley: Psa 29:9 - -- Having shewed the terrible effects of God's power in other places, he now shews the blessed privilege of God's people, that are praising God in his te...
Having shewed the terrible effects of God's power in other places, he now shews the blessed privilege of God's people, that are praising God in his temple, when the rest of the world are trembling under the tokens of his displeasure.
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Wesley: Psa 29:10 - -- The most violent waters, which sometimes fall from the clouds upon the earth. These are fitly mentioned, as being many times the companions of great t...
The most violent waters, which sometimes fall from the clouds upon the earth. These are fitly mentioned, as being many times the companions of great thunders. And this may be alleged as another reason, why God's people praised him in his temple, because as he sends terrible tempests and thunders, so he also restrains and over - rules them.
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Wesley: Psa 29:10 - -- He doth sit, and will sit as king for ever, sending such tempests when it pleaseth him.
He doth sit, and will sit as king for ever, sending such tempests when it pleaseth him.
JFB -> Psa 29:2; Psa 29:2; Psa 29:3; Psa 29:3; Psa 29:4; Psa 29:5-6; Psa 29:7; Psa 29:8; Psa 29:9; Psa 29:10-11
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JFB: Psa 29:2 - -- The loveliness of a spiritual worship, of which the perceptible beauty of the sanctuary worship was but a type.
The loveliness of a spiritual worship, of which the perceptible beauty of the sanctuary worship was but a type.
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JFB: Psa 29:3 - -- Audible exhibition of His power in the tempest, of which thunder is a specimen, but not the uniform or sole example.
Audible exhibition of His power in the tempest, of which thunder is a specimen, but not the uniform or sole example.
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JFB: Psa 29:5-6 - -- The tall and large cedars, especially of Lebanon, are shivered, utterly broken. The waving of the mountain forests before the wind is expressed by the...
The tall and large cedars, especially of Lebanon, are shivered, utterly broken. The waving of the mountain forests before the wind is expressed by the figure of skipping or leaping.
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JFB: Psa 29:7 - -- Literally, "hews off." The lightning, like flakes and splinters hewed from stone or wood, flies through the air.
Literally, "hews off." The lightning, like flakes and splinters hewed from stone or wood, flies through the air.
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JFB: Psa 29:8 - -- Especially Kadesh, south of Judea, is selected as another scene of this display of divine power, as a vast and desolate region impresses the mind, lik...
Especially Kadesh, south of Judea, is selected as another scene of this display of divine power, as a vast and desolate region impresses the mind, like mountains, with images of grandeur.
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JFB: Psa 29:9 - -- Terror-stricken animals and denuded forests close the illustration. In view of this scene of awful sublimity, God's worshippers respond to the call of...
Terror-stricken animals and denuded forests close the illustration. In view of this scene of awful sublimity, God's worshippers respond to the call of Psa 29:2, and speak or cry, "Glory!" By "temple," or "palace" (God's residence, Psa 5:7), may here be meant heaven, or the whole frame of nature, as the angels are called on for praise.
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JFB: Psa 29:10-11 - -- Over this terrible raging of the elements God is enthroned, directing and restraining by sovereign power; and hence the comfort of His people. "This a...
Over this terrible raging of the elements God is enthroned, directing and restraining by sovereign power; and hence the comfort of His people. "This awful God is ours, our Father and our Love."
Clarke: Psa 29:2 - -- The glory due unto his name - Rather, the glory of his name. His name is Mercy; his nature is love. Ascribe mercy, love, power, and wisdom to him. A...
The glory due unto his name - Rather, the glory of his name. His name is Mercy; his nature is love. Ascribe mercy, love, power, and wisdom to him. All these are implied in the name Jehovah
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Clarke: Psa 29:2 - -- In the beauty of holiness - בהדרת קדש behadrath kodesh , "the beautiful garments of holiness."Let the priests and Levites put on their best...
In the beauty of holiness -
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Clarke: Psa 29:3 - -- The voice of the Lord - Thunder, so called, Exo 9:23, Exo 9:28, Exo 9:29; Job 37:4; Psa 18:13; Isa 30:30. On this subject see the note on Job 37:4, ...
The voice of the Lord - Thunder, so called, Exo 9:23, Exo 9:28, Exo 9:29; Job 37:4; Psa 18:13; Isa 30:30. On this subject see the note on Job 37:4, where there is a particular description of the nature and generation of thunder; and of the lightning, clap, rain, and other phenomena which accompany it
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Clarke: Psa 29:3 - -- Upon many waters - The clouds, which Moses calls the waters which are above the firmament.
Upon many waters - The clouds, which Moses calls the waters which are above the firmament.
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Clarke: Psa 29:4 - -- Is powerful - There is no agent in universal nature so powerful as the electric fluid. It destroys life, tears castles and towers to pieces, rends t...
Is powerful - There is no agent in universal nature so powerful as the electric fluid. It destroys life, tears castles and towers to pieces, rends the strongest oaks, and cleaves the most solid rocks: universal animate nature is awed and terrified by it. To several of these effects the psalmist here refers; and for the illustration of the whole I must refer to the above notes on Job
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Clarke: Psa 29:4 - -- Full of majesty - No sound in nature is so tremendous and majestic as that of thunder; it is the most fit to represent the voice of God.
Full of majesty - No sound in nature is so tremendous and majestic as that of thunder; it is the most fit to represent the voice of God.
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Clarke: Psa 29:5 - -- Breaketh the cedars - Very tall trees attract the lightning from the clouds, by which they are often torn to pieces. Woods and forests give dreadful...
Breaketh the cedars - Very tall trees attract the lightning from the clouds, by which they are often torn to pieces. Woods and forests give dreadful proof of this after a thunderstorm.
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Clarke: Psa 29:7 - -- Divideth the flames of fire - The forked zigzag lightning is the cause of thunder; and in a thunder-storm these liahtnings are variously dispersed, ...
Divideth the flames of fire - The forked zigzag lightning is the cause of thunder; and in a thunder-storm these liahtnings are variously dispersed, smiting houses, towers, trees, men, and cattle, in different places.
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Clarke: Psa 29:8 - -- The wilderness of Kadesh - This was on the frontiers of Idumea and Paran. There may be a reference to some terrible thunder-storm and earthquake whi...
The wilderness of Kadesh - This was on the frontiers of Idumea and Paran. There may be a reference to some terrible thunder-storm and earthquake which had occurred in that place.
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Clarke: Psa 29:9 - -- Maketh the hinds to calve - Strikes terror through all the tribes of animals; which sometimes occasions those which are pregnant to cast their young...
Maketh the hinds to calve - Strikes terror through all the tribes of animals; which sometimes occasions those which are pregnant to cast their young. This, I believe, to be the whole that is meant by the text. I meddle not with the fables which have been published on this subject both by ancients and moderns
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Clarke: Psa 29:9 - -- Discovereth the forests - Makes them sometimes evident in the darliest night, by the sudden flash; and often by setting them on fire
Discovereth the forests - Makes them sometimes evident in the darliest night, by the sudden flash; and often by setting them on fire
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Clarke: Psa 29:9 - -- And in his temple - Does this refer to the effect which a dreadful thunder-storm often produces? Multitudes run to places of worship as asylums in o...
And in his temple - Does this refer to the effect which a dreadful thunder-storm often produces? Multitudes run to places of worship as asylums in order to find safety, and pray to God. See on Psa 29:2 (note).
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Clarke: Psa 29:10 - -- The Lord sitteth upon the flood - יהוה למבול ישב Jehovah lammabbul yasheb , "Jehovah sat upon the deluge."It was Jehovah that commanded...
The Lord sitteth upon the flood -
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Clarke: Psa 29:10 - -- Sitteth king for ever - He governs universal nature; whatsoever he wills he does, in the heavens above, in the earth beneath, and in all deep places...
Sitteth king for ever - He governs universal nature; whatsoever he wills he does, in the heavens above, in the earth beneath, and in all deep places. Every phenomenon is under his government and control. There is something very like this in Virgil’ s description of Neptune appeasing the storm raised by Juno for the destruction of the fleet of Aeneas. See at the end of this Psalm.
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Clarke: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord will give strength - Prosperity in our secular affairs; success in our enterprises; and his blessing upon our fields and cattle
The Lord will give strength - Prosperity in our secular affairs; success in our enterprises; and his blessing upon our fields and cattle
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Clarke: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord will bless his people with peace - Give them victory over their enemies, and cause the nations to be at peace with them; so that they shall...
The Lord will bless his people with peace - Give them victory over their enemies, and cause the nations to be at peace with them; so that they shall enjoy uninterrupted prosperity. The plentiful rain which God has now sent is a foretaste of his future blessings and abundant mercies
In the note on Psa 29:10 I have referred to the following description taken from Virgil. Did he borrow some of the chief ideas in it from the 29th Psalm? The reader will observe several coincidences
Interea magno misceri murmure pontum
Emissamque hyemem sensit Neptunus, et imi
Stagna refusa vadis: graviter commotus, et alt
Prospiciens, summa placidum caput extulit unda
Disjectam Aeneae toto videt aequore classem
Fluctibus oppressos Troas, coelique ruina
Eurum ad se zephyrumque vocat: dehinc talia fatu
Sic ait: et dicto citius tumida aequora placat
Collectasque fugat nubes, solemque reducit
Cymothoe simul, et Triton adnixus acut
Detrudunt naves scopulo; levat ipse tridenti
Et vastas aperit syrtes, et temperat aequor
Atque rotis summas levibus perlabitur undas
Sic cunctus pelagi cecidit fragor, aequora postqua
Prospiciens genitor, caeloque invectus aperto
Flectit equos, curruque volans dat lora secundo
Aen. lib. i., ver. 124
"Mean time, imperial Neptune heard the soun
Of raging billows breaking on the ground
Displeased, and fearing for his watery reign
He rears his awful head above the main
Serene in majesty; then rolled his eye
Around the space of earth, of seas, and skies
He saw the Trojan fleet dispersed, distressed
By stormy winds and wintry heaven oppressed
He summoned Eurus and the Western Blast
And first an angry glance on both he cast
Then thus rebuked
He spoke; and while he spoke, he soothed the sea
Dispelled the darkness, and restored the day
Cymothoe, Triton, and the sea-green trai
Of beauteous nymphs, and daughters of the main
Clear from the rocks the vessels with their hands
The god himself with ready trident stands
And opes the deep, and spreads the moving sands
Then heaves them off the shoals: where’ er he guide
His finny coursers, and in triumph rides
The waves unruffle, and the sea subsides
So when the father of the flood appears
And o’ er the seas his sovereign trident rears
Their fury fails: he skims the liquid plain
High on his chariot; and with loosened reins
Majestic moves along, and awful peace maintains
Dryden
Our God, Jehovah, sitteth upon the flood: yea, Jehovah sitteth King for ever
The heathen god is drawn by his sea-horse, and assisted in his work by subaltern deities: Jehovah sits on the flood an everlasting Governor, ruling all things by his will, maintaining order, and dispensing strength and peace to his people. The description of the Roman poet is fine; that of the Hebrew poet, majestic and sublime
Calvin: Psa 29:3 - -- 3.The voice of Jehovah is upon the waters David now rehearses the wonders of nature which I have previously referred to; and well indeed does he cele...
3.The voice of Jehovah is upon the waters David now rehearses the wonders of nature which I have previously referred to; and well indeed does he celebrate the power of God as well as his goodness, in his works. As there is nothing in the ordinary course of nature, throughout the whole frame of heaven and earth, which does not invite us to the contemplation of God, he might have brought forward, as in Psa 19:1, the sun and the stars, and the whole host of heaven, and the earth with its riches; but he selects only those works of God which prove not only that the world was at first created by him, and is governed by his power, but which also awaken the torpid, and drag them, as it were, in spite of themselves, humbly to adore him; as even Horace was compelled, though he was not only a heathen poet, but an Epicurean, and a vile contemner of Deity, to say of himself in one of his Odes, — (Lib. I. Ode 34.)
“A fugitive from heaven and prayer,
I mocked at all religious fear,
Deep scienced in the mazy lore
Of mad philosophy; but now
Hoist sail, and back my voyage plough
To that blest harbour which I left before.
“For, lo! that awful heavenly Sire,
Who frequent cleaves the clouds with fire,
Parent of day, immortal Jove;
Late through the floating fields of air,
The face of heaven serene and fair,
His thund’ring steeds, and winged chariot drove,” etc. 609
Experience, too, tells us that those who are most daring in their contempt of God are most afraid of thunderings, storms, and such like violent commotions. With great propriety, therefore, does the prophet invite our attention to these instances which strike the rude and insensible with some sense of the existence of a God, 610 and rouse them to action, however sluggish and regardless they are. He says not that the sun rises from day to day, and sheds abroad his life-giving beams, nor that the rain gently descends to fertilise the earth with its moisture; but he brings forward thunders, violent tempests, and such things as smite the hearts of men with dread by their violence. God, it is true, speaks in all his creatures, but here the prophet mentions those sounds which rouse us from our drowsiness, or rather our lethargy, by the loudness of their noise. We have said, that this language is chiefly directed to those who with stubborn recklessness, cast from them, as far as they can, all thought of God. The very figures which he uses sufficiently declare, that David’s design was to subdue by fear the obstinacy which yields not willingly otherwise. Thrice he repeats that God’s voice is heard in great and violent tempests, and in the subsequent verse he adds, that it is full of power and majesty.
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Calvin: Psa 29:5 - -- 5.The voice of Jehovah breaketh the cedars We see how the prophet, in order to subdue the stubbornness of men, shows, by every word, that God is terr...
5.The voice of Jehovah breaketh the cedars We see how the prophet, in order to subdue the stubbornness of men, shows, by every word, that God is terrible. He also seems to rebuke, in passing, the madness of the proud, and of those who swell with vain presumption, because they hearken not to the voice of God in his thunders, rending the air with his lightnings, shaking the lofty mountains, prostrating and overthrowing the loftiest trees. What a monstrous thing is it, that while all the irrational portion of the creation tremble before God, men alone, who are endued with sense and reason, are not moved! Moreover, though they possess genius and learning, they employ enchantments to shut their ears against God’s voice, however powerful, lest it should reach their hearts. Philosophers think not that they have reasoned skilfully enough about inferior causes, unless they separate God very far from his works. It is a diabolical science, however, which fixes our contemplations on the works of nature, and turns them away from God. If any one who wished to know a man should take no notice of his face, but should fix his eyes only on the points of his nails, his folly might justly be derided. But far greater is the folly of those philosophers, who, out of mediate and proximate causes, weave themselves vails, lest they should be compelled to acknowledge the hand of God, which manifestly displays itself in his works. The Psalmist particularly mentions the cedars of Lebanon, because lofty and beautiful cedars were to be found there. He also refers to Lebanon and Mount Hermon, and to the wilderness of Kadesh, 611 because these places were best known to the Jews. He uses, indeed, a highly poetical figure accompanied with a hyperbole, when he says, that Lebanon skips like a calf at God’s voice, and Sirion (which is also called Mount Hermon 612) like a unicorn, which, we know, is one of the swiftest animals. He also alludes to the terrific noise of thunder, which seems almost to shake the mountains to their foundations. Similar is the figure, when he says, the Lord striketh out flames of fire, which is done when the vapours, being struck, as it were, with his hammer, burst forth into lightnings and thunderbolts. Aristotle, in his book on Meteors, reasons very shrewdly about these things, in so far as relates to proximate causes, only that he omits the chief point. The investigation of these would, indeed, be both a profitable and pleasant exercise, were we led by it, as we ought, to the Author of Nature himself. But nothing is more preposterous than, when we meet with mediate causes, however many, to be stopped and retarded by them, as by so many obstacles, from approaching God; 613 for this is the same as if a man were to remain at the very rudiments of things during his whole life, without going farther. In short, this is to learn in such a manner that you can never know any thing. That shrewdness alone, therefore, is worthy of praise, which elevates us by these means even to heaven, in order that not a confused noise only may strike our ears, but that the voice of the Lord may penetrate our hearts, and teach us to pray and serve God. Some expound the Hebrew word
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Calvin: Psa 29:9 - -- 9.The voice of Jehovah maketh the hinds to bring forth 615 A tacit comparison, as I have said, is here made. It is worse than irrational, it is monst...
9.The voice of Jehovah maketh the hinds to bring forth 615 A tacit comparison, as I have said, is here made. It is worse than irrational, it is monstrous, that men are not moved at God’s voice, when it has such power and influence on wild beasts. It is base ingratitude, indeed, in men not to perceive his providence and government in the whole course of nature; but it is a detestable insensibility that at least his unusual and extraordinary works, which compel even wild beasts to obey him, will not teach them wisdom. Some interpreters think that hinds are mentioned, rather than other beasts, on account of their difficulty in bringing forth their young; which I disapprove not. The voice of the Lord is also said to discover or make bare the forests, either because there is no covering which can prevent it from penetrating into the most secret recesses and caverns; or, because lightnings, rains, and stormy winds, beat off the leaves and make the trees bare. Either sense is appropriate.
In his temple God’s voice fills the whole world, and spreads itself to its farthest limits; but the prophet declares that his glory is celebrated only in his church, because God not only speaks intelligibly and distinctly there, but also there gently allures the faithful to himself. His terrible voice, which thunders in various ways in the air, strikes upon the ears, and causes the hearts of men to beat in such a manner, as to make them shrink from rather than approach him not to mention that a considerable portion turn a deaf ear to its sound in storms, rains, thunder, and lightnings. As men, therefore, profit not so much in this common school as to submit themselves to God, David wisely says especially that the faithful sing the praises of God in his temple, because, being familiarly instructed there by his fatherly voice, they devote and consecrate themselves wholly to his service. No man proclaims the glory of God aright but he who worships him willingly. This may be understood likewise as a complaint, in which David reproves the whole world of being silent in so far as the glory of God is concerned, 616 and laments that although his voice resounds through all regions, yet his praises are no where sung but in his temple alone. He appears, however, after the example of all the godly, to exhort the whole of mankind to praise God’s name, and designedly to erect a temple as a receptacle for his glory, for the purpose of teaching us, that in order truly to know God, and praise him as is his due, we need another voice than that which is heard in thunders, showers, and storms in the air, in the mountains, and in the forests; for if he teach us not in plain words, and also kindly allure us to himself, by giving us a taste of his fatherly love, we will continue dumb. It is the doctrine of salvation alone, therefore, which cheers our hearts and opens our mouths in his praises, by clearly revealing to us his grace, and the whole of his will. It is from thence that we must learn how we ought to praise him. We may also unquestionably see that at that time there was nothing of the light of godliness in the whole world, except in Judea. Even philosophers, who appeared to approach nearest to the knowledge of God, contributed nothing whatever that might truly glorify him. All that they say concerning religion is not only frigid, but for the most part insipid. It is therefore in his word alone that there shines forth the truth which may lead us to true piety, and to fear and serve God aright. 617
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Calvin: Psa 29:10 - -- 10.Jehovah sitteth upon the flood Some think that David here alludes to that memorable instance of God’s vengeance, when he drowned the world at on...
10.Jehovah sitteth upon the flood Some think that David here alludes to that memorable instance of God’s vengeance, when he drowned the world at once by the flood, 618 and thus testified to all ages that he is the judge of mankind. I agree to this in part, but extend his meaning still farther. In my opinion, he prosecutes the former subject, putting us in mind that those floods, which still threaten destruction to the earth, are controlled by the providence of God in such a way, as to make it evident that it is he alone who governs all things at all times. 619 David, therefore, mentions this among other proofs of God’s power, that even when the elements appear to be mingled and confounded together by the utmost fury of the weather, God controls and moderates these commotions from his throne in heaven. He accordingly adds, for the sake of explanation, God sits King for ever.
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Calvin: Psa 29:11 - -- 11.Jehovah will give strength to his people He returns to his former doctrine, namely, that although God exhibits his visible power to the view of th...
11.Jehovah will give strength to his people He returns to his former doctrine, namely, that although God exhibits his visible power to the view of the whole world indiscriminately, yet he exerts it in a peculiar manner in behalf of his elect people. Moreover, he here describes him in a very different manner from what he did formerly; that is to say, not as one who overwhelms with fear and dread those to whom he speaks, but as one who upholds, cherishes, and strengthens them. By the word strength is to be understood the whole condition of man. And thus he intimates that every thing necessary to the preservation of the life of the godly depends entirely upon the grace of God. He amplifies this by the word bless; for God is said to bless with peace those whom he treats liberally and kindly, so that nothing is awanting to the prosperous course of their life, and to their complete happiness. From this we may learn, that we ought to stand in awe of the majesty of God, in such a manner as, notwithstanding, to hope from him all that is necessary to our prosperity; and let us be assuredly persuaded, that since his power is infinite, we are defended by an invincible fortress.
Defender: Psa 29:3 - -- This phrase, "the voice of the Lord," occurs seven times in Psa 29:3-9. It is interesting that there were just seven times when God spoke to Noah (Gen...
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Defender: Psa 29:3 - -- This was the first thunder in earth history as there was no rain on the earth until the Flood (Gen 2:5). It is noteworthy that there also are "seven t...
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Defender: Psa 29:3 - -- "Many waters" is surely an apt description of the onset of the great Flood."
"Many waters" is surely an apt description of the onset of the great Flood."
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Defender: Psa 29:5 - -- David is apparently viewing the actions of a great storm blowing inland from the Mediterranean. He seems to be translated in the Spirit back in time t...
David is apparently viewing the actions of a great storm blowing inland from the Mediterranean. He seems to be translated in the Spirit back in time to that greatest of all storms, the Genesis Flood itself. The luxuriant forests of the antediluvian world are seen being broken and uprooted by the rushing waters. The only way he can describe it is to visualize the mighty cedar forests of Lebanon being torn up and carried down in great floating mats of vegetation (these would eventually become the fossil forests and coal beds in the great depths of sediment also being translated and deposited by the torrential waters)."
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Defender: Psa 29:6 - -- The rains were pouring down from the skies and the fountains of the great deep were being cleaved open (Gen 7:11). This caused tremendous earth moveme...
The rains were pouring down from the skies and the fountains of the great deep were being cleaved open (Gen 7:11). This caused tremendous earth movements which to David appeared as though the greatest mountains he had seen (that is, Lebanon and Sirion - same as Mount Hermon) would be skipping like a young bull."
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Defender: Psa 29:7 - -- Hebrew for "divideth" means "digs out." The mighty earthquakes open great rifts in the denuded lands and flaming magmas emerge from the depths to form...
Hebrew for "divideth" means "digs out." The mighty earthquakes open great rifts in the denuded lands and flaming magmas emerge from the depths to form vast volcanic rock formations all over the earth."
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Defender: Psa 29:8 - -- The word for "shaketh" is the same as "travail." The terrible wilderness, reminding David only of the forbidding wilderness of Kadesh, left around the...
The word for "shaketh" is the same as "travail." The terrible wilderness, reminding David only of the forbidding wilderness of Kadesh, left around the world by the retreating flood waters (the waters themselves rush off into new ocean basins - see notes on Psa 104:6-9), begins to shake as the earth prepares to bring forth new plant life."
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Defender: Psa 29:9 - -- The last "voice of the Lord" speaks to renew the world's animal and plant life after the great destruction. "Calve" and "shaketh" (Psa 29:8) are the s...
The last "voice of the Lord" speaks to renew the world's animal and plant life after the great destruction. "Calve" and "shaketh" (Psa 29:8) are the same word; "discovereth" means "draw out."
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Defender: Psa 29:9 - -- After the purifying judgment of the Flood the heavenly host of angels all cry: "Glory!""
After the purifying judgment of the Flood the heavenly host of angels all cry: "Glory!""
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Defender: Psa 29:10 - -- Seven different Hebrew words are translated "flood," but this is the only place outside the Flood story (Genesis 6-9) where mabbul is used, referring ...
Seven different Hebrew words are translated "flood," but this is the only place outside the Flood story (Genesis 6-9) where
TSK: Psa 29:2 - -- Give : 1Ch 16:28, 1Ch 16:29
glory : etc. Heb. honour of his name, Psa 96:6, Psa 96:8, Psa 97:9, Psa 113:3-6, Psa 145:3-7
worship : Psa 27:4, Psa 96:9;...
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TSK: Psa 29:3 - -- The voice : Psa 18:13-15, Psa 77:16-19; Mat 8:26, Mat 8:27; Rev 17:14, Rev 17:15
God : Psa 24:7-10; Act 7:2
thundereth : Exo 9:28, Exo 9:33, Exo 19:16...
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TSK: Psa 29:4 - -- powerful : Heb. in power, Psa 33:9; Job 26:11-14; Jer 51:15, Jer 51:16; Luk 4:36, Luk 8:25
full of : Heb. in, Job 40:9-12; Isa 66:6; Eze 10:5
powerful : Heb. in power, Psa 33:9; Job 26:11-14; Jer 51:15, Jer 51:16; Luk 4:36, Luk 8:25
full of : Heb. in, Job 40:9-12; Isa 66:6; Eze 10:5
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TSK: Psa 29:6 - -- skip : Psa 114:4-7
Lebanon : Jer 4:23-25; Hab 3:6-11; Rev 20:11
Sirion : Deu 3:9
unicorn : Psa 92:10; Num 23:22
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TSK: Psa 29:7 - -- divideth : Heb. cutteth out
flames : Psa 77:18, Psa 144:5, Psa 144:6; Exo 9:23; Lev 10:2; Num 16:35; 2Ki 1:10-12; Job 37:3; Job 38:35
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TSK: Psa 29:8 - -- shaketh : Psa 18:7, Psa 46:3; Job 9:6; Isa 13:13; Joe 3:16; Hag 2:6, Hag 2:21; Heb 12:26
Kadesh : Num 13:26
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TSK: Psa 29:9 - -- maketh : Or as Bp. Lowth and others, ""maketh the oaks to tremble and maketh bare the forests;""understanding ayyaloth , as denoting here, not hinds...
maketh : Or as Bp. Lowth and others, ""maketh the oaks to tremble and maketh bare the forests;""understanding
calve : or, be in pain
discovereth : Psa 63:2; Isa 9:18, Isa 10:18, Isa 10:19; Eze 20:46-48
in his temple : Psa 46:2-5, Psa 48:9, Psa 134:1, Psa 134:2, Psa 135:1, Psa 135:2
doth : etc. or, every whit of it uttereth
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TSK: Psa 29:10 - -- sitteth : Psa 29:3, Psa 65:7, Psa 104:6-9; Gen 6:17, Gen 8:1, Gen 8:2; Job 38:8-11, Job 38:25; Mar 4:41
King : Psa 2:6-9, Psa 10:16, Psa 93:1, Psa 99:...
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TSK: Psa 29:11 - -- give : Psa 28:8, Psa 28:9, Psa 68:35, Psa 84:7, Psa 85:8, Psa 85:10, Psa 138:3; Isa 40:29, Isa 40:31, Isa 41:10; Zec 10:6, Zec 10:12; Eph 3:16; 2Ti 4:...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 29:2 - -- Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name - Margin: "the honor of his name."The honor of His name is that which is due to it, or which pro...
Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name - Margin: "the honor of his name."The honor of His name is that which is due to it, or which properly belongs to it. The "name"is put here, as it often is, for God Himself; and the meaning is, "Ascribe to God the honor that is properly his due."This is a claim addressed to the angels; it is a claim certainly not less binding on people. It is practically a call upon all creatures in the universe to ascribe due honor to God.
Worship the Lord - This exhortation is made particularly in view of the manifestations of His power in the storm. The idea is, that one who is capable of putting forth such power as is displayed in a tempest, has a claim to adoration and praise.
In the beauty of holiness - Margin, "in his glorious sanctuary."The Hebrew phrase would properly mean "holy beauty."Some have supposed that it means "in holy adorning,"or in such consecrated vestments as were worn by priests in the sacred services of the sanctuary, or when they came into the presence of Yahweh. So DeWette understands it. But the more probable interpretation is that which refers it to the state of the heart - the "internal"ornament - with which we should approach God - to a holy and pure state of mind - that beauty or appropriateness of the soul which consists in holiness or purity. Of this the external clothing of the priesthood was itself but an emblem, and this is that which God desires in those who approach Him in an act of worship. It may be added that there is no "beauty"like this; that there is no external comeliness, no charm of person or complexion, no adorning of costly robes, that can be compared with this. It is this which God seeks, and with this He will be pleased, whether under a less or more attractive external form; whether under rich and costly raiment, or under the plain and decent clothing of poverty.
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Barnes: Psa 29:3 - -- The voice of the Lord - The voice of Yahweh. There can be no doubt that the expression here, which is seven times repeated in the psalm, "the v...
The voice of the Lord - The voice of Yahweh. There can be no doubt that the expression here, which is seven times repeated in the psalm, "the voice of Jehovah,"refers to thunder; and no one can fail to see the appropriateness of the expression. In heavy thunder it seems as if God spake. It comes from above. It fills us with awe. We know, indeed, that thunder as well as the other phenomena in the world, is produced by what are called "natural causes;"that there is no miracle in thunder; and that really God does not "speak"anymore in the thunder than he does in the sighing of the breeze or in the gurgling of the rivulet; but:
(a) He seems more impressively to speak to people in the thunder; and
(b) He may not improperly be regarded as speaking alike in the thunder, in the sighing of the breeze, and in the gurgling stream.
In each and all of these ways God is addressing men; in each and all there are lessons of great value conveyed, as if by His own voice, respecting His own existence and character. Those which are addressed to us particularly in thunder, pertain to His power, His majesty, His greatness; to our own weakness, feebleness, dependence; to the ease with which He could take us away, and to the importance of being prepared to stand before such a God. "Is upon the waters."The word "is"is supplied here by our translators in italics. The whole passage might be read as an exclamation: "The voice of Jehovah upon the waters!"It is the utterance of one who is overpowered by a sudden clap of thunder. The mind is awed. God seems to speak; His voice is heard rolling over the waters. The psalm was most likely composed in view of the sea or a lake - not improbably in view of the Mediterranean, when a storm was passing over it. A thunderstorm is sublime anywhere, in mountain scenery or upon the plains, upon the land or upon the ocean; but there are circumstances which give it special grandeur at sea, when the thunder seems to "roll"along with nothing to check or break it, and when the sublimity is increased by the solitude which reigns everywhere on the ocean.
The God of glory - The glorious God. See the notes at Psa 24:7-10.
The Lord is upon many waters - Yahweh Himself seems to be on the ocean. His voice is heard there, and He Himself appears to be there. The margin here is, "great waters."This would seem to imply that the psalm was composed in view of waters more extended than a lake or a river, and sustains the idea above expressed, that it was in view of the great waters which must have been so familiar to the mind of the sacred writer - the waters of the Mediterranean.
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Barnes: Psa 29:4 - -- The voice of the Lord is powerful - Margin, as in Hebrew: "in power."That is, is mighty; or, has strength. Allusion may be made to what seems t...
The voice of the Lord is powerful - Margin, as in Hebrew: "in power."That is, is mighty; or, has strength. Allusion may be made to what seems to be the effect of thunder in prostrating trees, or tearing off their limbs, or it may be merely to the loud sound of the thunder.
Is full of majesty - Margin, as in Hebrew, "in majesty."That is, it is grand, sublime, overpowering.
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Barnes: Psa 29:5 - -- Breaketh the cedars - The thunder prostrates the lofty trees of the forest. The psalmist speaks as things appeared, attributing, as was natural...
Breaketh the cedars - The thunder prostrates the lofty trees of the forest. The psalmist speaks as things appeared, attributing, as was natural, and as was commonly done, that to the thunder which was really produced by the lightning. It, is now fully known that the effect here referred to is not produced by thunder, but by the rapid passage of the electric fluid as it passes from the cloud to the earth. that power is so great as to rive the oak or the cedar; to twist off their limbs; to prostrate their lofty trunks to the ground. The psalmist speaks of thunder as accomplishing this, in the same way that the sacred writers and all men, even scientific men, commonly speak, as when we say, the sun rises and sets - the stars rise and set, etc. People who would undertake in all cases to speak with scientific accuracy, or in the strict language of science, would be unintelligible to the mass of mankind; perhaps on most subjects they would soon cease to speak at all - since they themselves would be in utter doubt as to what is scientific accuracy. People who require that a revelation from God should always use language of strict scientific precision, really require that a revelation should anticipate by hundreds or thousands of years the discoveries of science, and use language which, when the revelation was given, would be unintelligible to the mass of mankind; nay, which would be always unintelligible to a large portion of the race - since people ordinarily, however much the exact truths of science may be diffused, do not learn to use such exactness of speech. As long as men have occasion to speak on the subject at all they will probably continue to say that the sun rises and sets; that the grass grows; and that water runs.
Breaketh the cedars of Lebanon - " Cedars are mentioned as the loftiest forest trees, and those of Lebanon as the loftiest of their species."- "Prof. Alexander."The cedars of Lebanon are often referred to in the Scriptures as remarkable for their size and grandeur: 1Ki 4:33; 1Ki 5:6; Psa 92:12; Ezr 3:7.
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Barnes: Psa 29:6 - -- He maketh them also to skip like a calf - That is, the cedars of Lebanon. Compare Psa 114:4, "The mountains skipped like rams, and the little h...
He maketh them also to skip like a calf - That is, the cedars of Lebanon. Compare Psa 114:4, "The mountains skipped like rams, and the little hills like lambs."Psa 68:16, "why leap ye, ye high hills?"The meaning is plain. The lightning tore off the large branches, and uprooted the loftiest trees, so that they seemed to play and dance like calves in their gambols. Nothing could be more strikingly descriptive of "power."
Lebanon and Sirion - Sirion was the name by which Mount Hermon was known among the Sidonians: Deu 3:9, "Which Hermon the Sidonians call Sirion."It is a part of the great range of Anti-libanus.
Like a young unicorn - On the meaning of the word used here, see the notes at Psa 22:21. The illustration would be the same if any young wild animal were referred to.
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Barnes: Psa 29:7 - -- Divideth the flames of fire - Margin, "cutteth out."The Hebrew word - חצב châtsab - means properly "to cut, to hew, to hew out;"as,...
Divideth the flames of fire - Margin, "cutteth out."The Hebrew word -
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Barnes: Psa 29:8 - -- Shaketh the wilderness - Causes it to shake or to tremble. The word used here means properly to dance; to be whirled or twisted upon anything; ...
Shaketh the wilderness - Causes it to shake or to tremble. The word used here means properly to dance; to be whirled or twisted upon anything; to twist - as with pain - or, to writhe; and then, to tremble, to quake. The forests are made to tremble or quake in the fierceness of the storm - referring still to what the thunder seems to do.
The wilderness of Kadesh - As in referring Psa 29:5-6 to the effect of the storm on lofty trees, the psalmist had given poetic beauty to the description by "specifying"Lebanon and Sirion, so he here refers, for the same purpose, to a particular forest as illustrating the power of the tempest - to wit, the forest or wilderness of "Kadesh."This wilderness or forest was on the southeastern border of the promised land, toward Edom; and it is memorable as having been the place where the Israelites twice encamped with a view of entering Palestine from that point, but from where they were twice driven back again - the first time in pursuance of the sentence that they should wander forty years in the wilderness - and the second time, from the refusal of the king of Edom to allow them to pass through his territories. It was from Kadesh that the spies entered Palestine. See Num 13:17, Num 13:26; Num 14:40-45; Num 21:1-3; Deu 1:41-46; Jdg 1:7. Kadesh was on the northern border of Edom, and not far from Mount Hor. See Robinson’ s Biblical Researches in Palestine, vol. ii. pp. 582, 610, 662; Kitto, Cyclo-Bib. in the article, "Kadesh;"and the Pictorial Bible on Num 20:1. There seems to have been nothing special in regard to this wilderness which led the author of the psalm to select it for his illustration, except that it was well known and commonly spoken of, and that it would thus suggest an image that would be familiar to the Israelites.
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Barnes: Psa 29:9 - -- The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to calve - The deer. The object of the psalmist here is to show the effects of the storm in producing co...
The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to calve - The deer. The object of the psalmist here is to show the effects of the storm in producing consternation, especially on the weak and timid animals of the forest. The effect here adverted to is that of fear or consternation in bringing on the throes of parturition. Compare Job 39:1, Job 39:3. No one can doubt that the effect here described may occur in the violence of a tempest; and perhaps no image could more vividly describe the terrors of the storm than the consternation thus produced. The margin here is, "to be in pain."The Hebrew means "to bring forth,"referring to the pains of parturition.
And discovereth the forests - The word used here means "to strip off, to uncover;"and, as used here, it means to strip off the leaves of the forest; to make the trees bare - referring to an effect which is often produced by a violent storm.
And in his temple doth every one speak of his glory - Margin, "every whit of it uttereth,"etc. The word here rendered "temple"does not refer in this place to the tabernacle, or to the temple at Jerusalem, but rather "to the world itself,"considered as the residence or dwelling-place of God. Perhaps the true translation would be, "And in his temple everything says, Glory!"That is, in the dwelling-place of God - the world of nature - the sky, the earth, the forests, the waters, everything in the storm, echoes "glory, glory!"All these things declare the glory of God; all these wonders - the voice of God upon the waters; the thunder; the crash of the trees upon the hills; the shaking of the wilderness; the universal consternation; the leaves stripped from the trees and flying in every direction - all proclaim the majesty and glory of Yahweh.
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Barnes: Psa 29:10 - -- The Lord sitteth upon the flood - God is enthroned upon the flood, or presides over it. The obvious meaning is, that God is enthroned upon the ...
The Lord sitteth upon the flood - God is enthroned upon the flood, or presides over it. The obvious meaning is, that God is enthroned upon the storm, or presides over that which produces such consternation. It is not undirected; it is not the result of chance or fate; it is not produced by mere physical laws; it is not without restraint - without a ruler - for Yahweh presides over all, and all this may be regarded as his throne. Compare the notes at Psa 18:7-11. See also Psa 97:2. The word used here is commonly applied to the deluge in the time of Noah, but there would be an obvious unfitness in supposing here that the mind of the psalmist referred to that, or that the course of thought would be directed to that, and it is most natural, therefore, to suppose that the reference is to the floods above - the vast reservoirs of waters in the clouds, pouring down, amidst the fury of the tempest, floods of rain upon the earth.
The Lord sitteth King for ever - This is an appropriate close of the entire description; this is a thought which tends to make the mind calm and confiding when the winds howl and the thunder rolls; this accords with the leading purpose of the psalm - the call upon the sons of the mighty Psa 29:1 to ascribe strength and glory to God. From all the terrors of the storm; from all that is fearful, on the waters, in the forests, on the hills, when it would seem as if everything would be swept away - the mind turns calmly to the thought that God is enthroned upon the clouds; that He presides over all that produces this widespread alarm and commotion, and that He will reign forever and ever.
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Barnes: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord will give strength unto his people - This is a practical application of the sentiments of the psalm, or a conclusion which is fairly t...
The Lord will give strength unto his people - This is a practical application of the sentiments of the psalm, or a conclusion which is fairly to be derived from the main thought in the psalm. The idea is, that the God who presides over the tempest and the storm, the God who has such power, and can produce such effects, is abundantly able to uphold His people, and to defend them. In other words, the application of such amazing power will be to protect His people, and to save them from danger. When we look on the rolling clouds in the tempest, when we hear the roaring of the thunder, and see the flashing of the lightning, when we hear the oak crash on the hills, and see the waves piled mountains high, if we feel that God presides over all, and that He controls all this with infinite ease, assuredly we have no occasion to doubt that He can protect us; no reason to fear that His strength cannot support us.
The Lord will bless his people with peace - They have nothing to fear in the tempest and storm; nothing to fear from anything. He will bless them with peace in the tempest; He will bless them with peace through that power by which He controls the tempest. Let them, therefore, not fear in the storm, however fiercely it may rage; let them not be afraid in any of the troubles and trials of life. in the storm, and in those troubles and trials, he can make the mind calm; beyond those storms and those troubles he can give them eternal peace in a world where no "angry tempest blows."
Poole: Psa 29:2 - -- The glory due unto his name i.e. the honour which he deserves; which is to prefer him before all other gods, and to forsake all others, and to own hi...
The glory due unto his name i.e. the honour which he deserves; which is to prefer him before all other gods, and to forsake all others, and to own him as the Almighty, and the only true God.
In the beauty of holiness or, of the sanctuary , which is commonly called by this name; in his holy and beautiful house, as it is called, Isa 64:11 , the only place where he will receive worship. So he exhorts them to turn proselytes to the Jewish religion; which was their duty and interest.
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Poole: Psa 29:3 - -- The voice of the Lord i.e. thunder, as is manifest from the next clause, and the following effects; which is oft called the Lord’ s voice, as Ex...
The voice of the Lord i.e. thunder, as is manifest from the next clause, and the following effects; which is oft called the Lord’ s voice, as Exo 9:23,28,29 Job 37:4,5 Ps 18:14 46:6 . Upon the waters; either,
1. Upon the seas where its noise spreads far and wide, and is very terrible. But the following verses speak of the effects of it upon the earth only. Or rather,
2. Above in the clouds, which are called waters, Gen 1:7 Psa 18:11 , because they are of a watery substance. And this circumstance is considerable here, to magnify the Divine power, which displayeth itself in those high places, which are far above the reach of all earthly potentates, and from whence he can easily and unavoidably smite all that dwell upon the earth, and will not submit to him. Upon many waters, i.e. upon the clouds, in which there are vast treasures of water, and upon which God is said to sit or ride, Psa 18:10,11 104:3 .
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Is an evident proof of God’ s glorious majesty.
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Poole: Psa 29:5 - -- By thunder-bolts; which have oft thrown down trees and towers.
Lebanon a place famous for strong and lofty cedars. See 2Ch 2:8 Son 3:9 5:15 .
By thunder-bolts; which have oft thrown down trees and towers.
Lebanon a place famous for strong and lofty cedars. See 2Ch 2:8 Son 3:9 5:15 .
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Poole: Psa 29:6 - -- He maketh them the cedars last mentioned; which being broken by the thunder, the parts of them are suddenly and violently hurled about hither and thi...
He maketh them the cedars last mentioned; which being broken by the thunder, the parts of them are suddenly and violently hurled about hither and thither.
Sirion a high mountain beyond Jordan joining to Lebanon; of which see Deu 3:9 4:48 . Lebanon and Sirion are here understood, either,
1. Properly; and so they are said to skip or leap , both here and Psa 114:4 , by a poetical hyperbole, very usual both in Scripture and other authors; which is so known, that it is needless to give any instances of it. Or,
2. Metonymically for the trees or people of them, as the wilderness , Psa 29:8 , may seem to be taken; and as the earth , by the same figure, is frequently put for the people which dwell in it.
Unicorn Heb. reem ; of which see See Poole "Num 23:22 Psa 22:21" .
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Poole: Psa 29:7 - -- Divideth Heb. heweth out , i.e. it breaketh out of the clouds, and thereby makes way for the lightnings, which are suddenly dispersed over the face ...
Divideth Heb. heweth out , i.e. it breaketh out of the clouds, and thereby makes way for the lightnings, which are suddenly dispersed over the face of the earth.
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Poole: Psa 29:8 - -- The wilderness i.e. either the trees, or rather the beasts of the wilderness, by a metonymy, as before, Psa 29:6 . Compare this with the next verse. ...
The wilderness i.e. either the trees, or rather the beasts of the wilderness, by a metonymy, as before, Psa 29:6 . Compare this with the next verse.
Kadesh which he mentions as an eminent wilderness, vast and terrible, and well known to the Israelites, Num 20:1,16 , and wherein possibly they had seen and observed some such effects of thunder as are here mentioned.
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Poole: Psa 29:9 - -- Maketh the hinds to calve through the terror which it causeth, which hastens the birth in these and other places: see 1Sa 4:19 . He nameth the
hinds...
Maketh the hinds to calve through the terror which it causeth, which hastens the birth in these and other places: see 1Sa 4:19 . He nameth the
hinds because they bring forth their young with difficulty, Job 39:1,2 .
Discovereth Heb. maketh bare ; either of its trees, which it either breaks or strips off their leaves; or of the beasts, which it forceth to run into their dens.
And in his temple or, but . Having showed the terrible effects of God’ s power in other places, he now shows the blessed privilege of God’ s people, that are praising and glorifying God, and receiving the comfortable influences of his grace in his temple, when the rest of the world are trembling under the tokens of his displeasure; by which he secretly invites and persuades the Gentiles, for their own safety and comfort, to own the true God and to worship him in his sanctuary, as he did exhort them, Psa 29:2 . Or, therefore , i.e. because of these and such-like discoveries of God’ s excellent majesty and power, his people fear, and praise, and adore him in his temple.
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Poole: Psa 29:10 - -- He moderateth and ruleth (which is oft signified by sitting, this being the posture of a judge, or ruler; of which see Psa 9:7-9 47:8 Joe 3:12 ) the...
He moderateth and ruleth (which is oft signified by sitting, this being the posture of a judge, or ruler; of which see Psa 9:7-9 47:8 Joe 3:12 ) the most abundant and violent inundations of waters, which sometimes fall from the clouds upon the earth; where they would do much mischief if God did not prevent it. And these are here fitly mentioned, as being many times the companions of great thunders. And this may be alleged as another reason why God’ s people did praise and worship him in his temple, because as he sendeth terrible tempests, and thunders, and floods, so he also restrains and overrules them. But most interpreters refer this to Noah’ s flood, to whom the word here used is elsewhere appropriated. And so the words may be rendered, The Lord did sit upon , or at, the flood in Noah’ s time, when it is probable those vehement rains were accompanied with terrible thunders. And so having spoken of the manifestation of God’ s power in storms and tempests in general, he takes an occasion to run back to that ancient and most dreadful example of that kind, in which the Divine power was most eminently seen. And having mentioned that instance, he adds, that as God showed himself to be the King and the Judge of the world at that time, so he doth still sit, and will sit, as
King for ever sending such tempests when it pleaseth him. And therefore his people have great reason to worship and serve him.
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Poole: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord will give strength to support and preserve them in the most dreadful tempests, and consequently in all other dangers, and against all their ...
The Lord will give strength to support and preserve them in the most dreadful tempests, and consequently in all other dangers, and against all their enemies.
The Lord will bless his people with peace though now he sees fit to exercise them with some troubles.
Haydock: Psa 29:2 - -- Extol. Or publish thy great goodness and power, (Haydock) in the same sense as we say Hallowed be thy name. (Berthier) ---
Though God can receiv...
Extol. Or publish thy great goodness and power, (Haydock) in the same sense as we say Hallowed be thy name. (Berthier) ---
Though God can receive no increase of glory, we must shew our gratitude. (Worthington) ---
Me. Thou hast not suffered my people to be wholly destroyed, nor myself to perish in consequence of my vain curiosity. (Calmet) ---
David sings this psalm in thanksgiving for his many deliverances. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 29:3 - -- Healed me. I expected to die every moment, and I had made choice of the scourge of pestilence, that I might not be more screened than my subjects, 2...
Healed me. I expected to die every moment, and I had made choice of the scourge of pestilence, that I might not be more screened than my subjects, 2 Kings xxiv. 13. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 29:4 - -- Hell. Preserving me from great dangers of sinning, (Worthington) or from death. ---
Saved. Hebrew, "granted me life." This may all be explained ...
Hell. Preserving me from great dangers of sinning, (Worthington) or from death. ---
Saved. Hebrew, "granted me life." This may all be explained of Christ's resurrection. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 29:5 - -- Saints. Hebrew, "who have obtained mercy." Priests and faithful people come to return thanks, because God has turned away the scourge. (Calmet) --...
Saints. Hebrew, "who have obtained mercy." Priests and faithful people come to return thanks, because God has turned away the scourge. (Calmet) ---
Memory, or name, Exodus iii. 15. (Calmet) ---
It is from God, and not from ourselves, that holiness comes. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 29:6 - -- Wrath, which is a short fury. (Menochius) (Isaias liv. 7.) ---
Hebrew, "momentary is his indignation;" or rather, "from his indignation comes dest...
Wrath, which is a short fury. (Menochius) (Isaias liv. 7.) ---
Hebrew, "momentary is his indignation;" or rather, "from his indignation comes destruction," roga, as the Septuagint constantly (Haydock) agree, Job xx. 5., and Isaias xxviii. 12., &c. (Calmet) ---
"The miseries which are inflicted, are in consequence of his indignation." (Prin. dis. Berthier)--- We are not miserable unless we have deserved it. (St. Augustine) ---
Even in chastising, God considers our welfare. (Worthington) ---
He takes no pleasure in our torments, but delights to crown us with life and happiness. (Haydock) ---
Eternal joys are the fruits of the short sorrows of this world, (Berthier) which is represented as one night or evening. (Haydock) ---
A few moments ago Jerusalem expected nothing but destruction. Thus the apostles grieved till Christ rose again; (Calmet) and the life of the just is a constant vicissitude of sorrow and of comfort. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 29:7 - -- Moved. David thought himself invincible; and, out of vanity, ordered his subjects to be numbered. God shewed his displeasure only for three days, a...
Moved. David thought himself invincible; and, out of vanity, ordered his subjects to be numbered. God shewed his displeasure only for three days, and all was in confusion, ver. 8. (Calmet) ---
Though we may imagine that we are firmly established, we must acknowledge that all our strength is derived from God, who sometimes leaves us to experience our own weakness. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 29:8 - -- Beauty. So Septuagint and Syriac have read ledre, (Calmet) instead of leharri, "my mountain," Sion, which David had taken from the Jebusites. T...
Beauty. So Septuagint and Syriac have read ledre, (Calmet) instead of leharri, "my mountain," Sion, which David had taken from the Jebusites. The sense is much the same, though the reading of the Septuagint seem more natural. Symmachus has followed another copy. (Berthier) ---
"Thou hast given strength to my first father." (Calmet) ---
The present Hebrew is rejected by Houbigant, (Berthier) though it be conformable to Aquila, St. Jerome, &c. How necessary is it for us to be convinced, that all we have is the gift of God! (Haydock) ---
In prosperity man is too apt to give way to presumption. (Berthier) ---
David had yielded to this temptation, not being sufficiently aware how jealous God is of his rights. (Calmet) ---
He confesses this mistake. Hebrew, "I was terrifies." (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 29:9 - -- Will I. We must not cease to pray, (Worthington) as we are always beset with enemies. (Haydock) ---
This text may be explained, "I prayed," that ...
Will I. We must not cease to pray, (Worthington) as we are always beset with enemies. (Haydock) ---
This text may be explained, "I prayed," that I might suffer instead of my people, 4 Kings xxiv. 17. (Calmet) ---
But here the prophet seems rather to beg that he may not die, in order that he may publish God's praises. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord. Hebrew points determine, "Lord, hear," &c. But the Greek interpreters agree with the Vulgate, which seems better. (Berthier) ---
St. Je...
The Lord. Hebrew points determine, "Lord, hear," &c. But the Greek interpreters agree with the Vulgate, which seems better. (Berthier) ---
St. Jerome, however, make this a prayer. "Hear," &c. (Haydock)
Gill: Psa 29:2 - -- Give unto the Lord the glory due to his name,.... Or "the glory of his name" x: which is suitable to his nature, agreeable to his perfections, and whi...
Give unto the Lord the glory due to his name,.... Or "the glory of his name" x: which is suitable to his nature, agreeable to his perfections, and which belongs unto him on account of his works;
worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness; the Lord is only to be worshipped, and not any creature, angels or men; not Jehovah the Father only, who is to be worshipped in spirit and in truth; but the Son of God, and the Holy Ghost also, being of the same nature, and possessed of the same perfections; and that with both internal and external worship; and in true holiness, in which there is a real beauty: holiness is the beauty of God himself, he is glorious in it; it is the beauty of angels, it makes them so glorious as they are; and it is the beauty of saints, it is what makes them like unto Christ, and by which they are partakers of the divine nature; and in the exercise of holy graces, and in the discharge of holy duties, should they worship the Lord; unless this is to be understood of the place of worship, the sanctuary, or holy place in the tabernacle; or rather the church of God, which holiness becomes; but the former sense seems best.
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Gill: Psa 29:3 - -- The voice of the Lord is upon the waters,.... What follows concerning thunder, the voice of the Lord, gives so many reasons why he should have glory ...
The voice of the Lord is upon the waters,.... What follows concerning thunder, the voice of the Lord, gives so many reasons why he should have glory given him and be worshipped; the Heathens y paid their devotion to thunder and lightning: but this should be done to the author of them; which may be literally understood of thunder, and is the voice of the Lord; see Psa 18:13; and which is commonly attended with large showers of rain, Jer 10:13; and is very terrible upon the waters, and has its effect there, Psa 104:7; and this is the rather mentioned, because that there is a God above, who is higher than the mighty, who are called upon to give glory to him, and because that thunder has been terrible to kings and great men of the earth; or this may be figuratively interpreted of the voice of Christ in the Gospel, which reaches to many nations and people, compared to waters, Rev 17:15. The disciples had a commission to preach it to all nations, and the sound of their words went into all the world, Rom 10:18;
the God of glory thundereth; this shows that thunder may be meant by the voice of the Lord, who is glorious in himself, and in all his works; and may be applied to the Gospel of Christ, who is the Lord of glory, and whose ministers, at least some of them, are sons of thunder; see 1Co 2:8;
the Lord is upon many waters; that is, his voice is, as before, which is thunder; and that this belongs to God, the Heathens were so sensible of, that they called their chief deity Jupiter Tonans z.
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Gill: Psa 29:4 - -- The voice of the Lord is powerful,.... Or "with power" a; as thunder, in the effect of it, shows; and so is the Gospel, when it comes, not in word on...
The voice of the Lord is powerful,.... Or "with power" a; as thunder, in the effect of it, shows; and so is the Gospel, when it comes, not in word only, but is attended with the power of God to the conversion and salvation of souls; it is then quick and powerful, Heb 4:12; and the word of Christ personal, when here on earth, was with power, Luk 4:32;
the voice of the Lord is full of majesty; Christ, in his state of humiliation, spake and taught as one having authority; and now, in the ministration of his Gospel by his servants, he goes forth with glory and majesty, Psa 45:3.
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Gill: Psa 29:5 - -- The voice of the Lord breaketh the cedars,.... Such an effect thunder has upon the tallest, strongest, and largest trees, as to break them into shiver...
The voice of the Lord breaketh the cedars,.... Such an effect thunder has upon the tallest, strongest, and largest trees, as to break them into shivers;
yea, the Lord breaketh the cedars of Lebanon; a mountain in the north part of the land of Judea, so called from its whiteness, both by reason of the snow with which some part of it is covered in summer, as Tacitus observes b; and partly from the colour of the earth that has no snow on it, which looks as white as if it was covered with white tiles, as Maundrell c says; and where the goodliest cedars grow; and to which may be compared proud, haughty, lofty, and stouthearted sinners, who are broken, brought down, and laid low, by the voice of Christ in his Gospel, his power attending it. The Targum renders it, "the Word of the Lord".
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Gill: Psa 29:6 - -- He maketh them also to skip like a calf,.... That is, the cedars, the branches being broken off, or they torn up by the roots, and tossed about by the...
He maketh them also to skip like a calf,.... That is, the cedars, the branches being broken off, or they torn up by the roots, and tossed about by the wind; which motion is compared to that of a calf that leaps and skips about;
Lebanon and Sirion, like a young unicorn; that is, these mountains move and skip about through the force of thunder, and the violence of an earthquake attending it; so historians report that mountains have moved from place to place, and they have met and dashed against one another d. Sirion was a mountain in Judea near to Lebanon, and is the same with Hermon; which was called by the Sidonians Sirion, and by the Amorites Shenir, Deu 3:9. This may regard the inward motions of the mind, produced by the Gospel of Christ under a divine influence; see Isa 35:6.
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Gill: Psa 29:7 - -- The voice of the Lord divideth the flames of fire. Or "cutteth with flames of fire" e; that is, the thunder breaks through the clouds with flames of f...
The voice of the Lord divideth the flames of fire. Or "cutteth with flames of fire" e; that is, the thunder breaks through the clouds with flames of fire, or lightning, as that is sometimes called, Psa 105:32; and with which it cleaves asunder trees and masts of ships, cuts and hews them down, and divides them into a thousand shivers. Some refer this, in the figurative and mystical sense, to the giving of the law on Mount Sinai f, on which the Lord descended in fire, and from his right hand went a fiery law; but rather this may be applied to the cloven or divided tongues of fire which sat upon the disciples on the day of Pentecost, as an emblem of the extraordinary gifts of the Spirit bestowed on them; though it seems best of all, as before, to understand this of the voice of Christ in the Gospel, which cuts and hews down all the goodliness of men, and lays them to the ground, Hos 6:5; and is of a dividing nature, and lays open all the secrets of the heart, Heb 4:12; and, through the corruption or human nature, is the occasion of dividing one friend from another, Luk 12:51; and like flames of fire it has both light and heat in it; it is the means of enlightening men's eyes to see their sad estate, and their need of Christ, and salvation by him; and of warming their souls with its refreshing truths and promises, and of inflaming their love to God and Christ, and of setting their affections on things above, and of causing their hearts to burn within them.
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Gill: Psa 29:8 - -- The voice of the Lord shaketh the wilderness,.... The ground of it, the trees in it, and the beasts that harbour there; and causes them to be in pain,...
The voice of the Lord shaketh the wilderness,.... The ground of it, the trees in it, and the beasts that harbour there; and causes them to be in pain, and to bring forth their young, as the g word signifies, and as it is rendered in Psa 29:9; all which effects thunder produces, and may mystically signify the preaching of the Gospel among the Gentiles, and the consequence of it. The Gentile world may be compared to a wilderness, and is called the wilderness of the people, Eze 20:35; the inhabitants of it being ignorant, barren, and unfruitful; and the conversion of them is expressed by turning a wilderness into a fruitful land, Isa 35:1; and the Gospel being sent thither has been the means of shaking the minds of many with strong and saving convictions; which made them tremble and cry out, what shall we do to be saved?
the Lord shaketh the wilderness of Kadesh; which was the terrible wilderness that the children of Israel passed through to Canaan's land; the same with the wilderness of Zin, Num 33:36; and was called Kadesh from the city of that name, on the borders of Edom, Num 20:1; the Targum paraphrases it,
"The word of the Lord shaketh the wilderness of Rekam;''
in the Targum in the King's Bible it is,
"makes the serpents in the wilderness of Rekam to tremble;''
but that thunder frightens them, I have not met with in any writer.
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Gill: Psa 29:9 - -- The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to calve,.... Which being timorous creatures, the bringing forth of their young, which is naturally very painfu...
The voice of the Lord maketh the hinds to calve,.... Which being timorous creatures, the bringing forth of their young, which is naturally very painful and difficult, is lessened and facilitated by thunder; they being either so frightened with it that they feel not their pains; or their pains, being hastened by it, become more easy; and naturalists observe, that the time of bringing forth their young is at that season of the year when thunder is most frequent; see Job 39:1. Thunder has a like effect on sheep, and makes them abortive g: this may be applied to the Gospel, which is the means of bringing forth souls to Christ by his churches and ministers; who may very fitly be compared to hinds for their love and loveliness, their swiftness and readiness to do the will of Christ, and their eager desires after communion with him, Pro 5:19;
and discovereth the forests; or "maketh bare" h: by beating off the leaves and branches of trees, and them to the ground; or by causing the wild beasts that frequent them to retire to their holes and dens; which effects are produced by thunder; and this aptly agrees with the Gospel, which is a revelation of secrets, of the thickets and deep things of God; of his council, covenant, mind, and will; and of the mysteries of his grace to the sons of men, and generally to babes, or men of their capacities; and of its stripping them of all their own righteousness, and dependence on it;
and in his temple doth everyone speak of his glory; either in heaven, where angels and glorified saints are continually employed in speaking of his glorious name, nature, and works; or in the temple, or tabernacle at Jerusalem, where the Levites stood to praise the Lord morning and evening, and where the tribes went up to worship, and to give thanks unto the Lord, 1Ch 23:30; or the church of God, which is the temple of the living God, whither saints resort, and where they dwell, and speak of the glory of God, of his divine perfections, and of his works of creation and providence; and of the glory of the person of Christ, and salvation by him; and of the glorious work of grace begun in their souls by the blessed Spirit; for hither such as have heard the voice of Christ, and have felt the power of it, and have found it to be a soul-shaking, an heart-breaking, and an illuminating voice, come, and declare it to the glory of the grace of God.
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Gill: Psa 29:10 - -- The Lord sitteth upon the flood,.... Noah's flood; which is always designed by the word here used, the Lord sat and judged the old world for its wicke...
The Lord sitteth upon the flood,.... Noah's flood; which is always designed by the word here used, the Lord sat and judged the old world for its wickedness, and brought a flood upon them, and destroyed them; and then he abated it, sent a wind to assuage the waters, stopped up the windows of heaven, and the fountains of the great deep, and restrained rain from heaven; and he now sits upon the confidence of waters in the heavens, at the time of a thunder storm, which threatens with an overflowing flood; and he remembers his covenant, and restrains them from destroying the earth any more: and he sits upon the floods of ungodly men, and stops their rage and fury, and suffers them not to proceed to overwhelm his people and interest; and so the floods of afflictions of every kind, and the floods of Satan's temptations, and of errors and heresies, are at his control, and he permits them to go so far, and no farther;
yea, the Lord sitteth King for ever: he is King of the whole world, over angels and men, and even the kings of the earth; and he is also King of saints, in whose hearts he reigns by his Spirit and grace; and the Gospel dispensation is more eminently his kingdom, in which his spiritual government is most visible; and this will more appear in the latter day glory, when the Lord shall be King over all the earth; and after which the Lord Christ will reign with his saints here a thousand years, and then with them to all eternity, and of his kingdom there shall be no end.
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Gill: Psa 29:11 - -- The Lord will give strength unto his people,.... His special people, his covenant people, whom he has chosen for himself; these are encompassed with i...
The Lord will give strength unto his people,.... His special people, his covenant people, whom he has chosen for himself; these are encompassed with infirmities, and are weak in themselves; but there is strength for them in Christ: the Lord promises it unto them, and bestows it on them, and which is a pure gift of his grace unto them; this may more especially regard that strength, power, and dominion, which will be given to the people of the most High in the latter day; since it follows, upon the account of the everlasting kingdom of Christ;
the Lord will bless his people with peace: with internal peace, which is peculiar to them, and to which wicked men are strangers; and which arises from a comfortable apprehension of justification by the righteousness of Christ, of pardon by his blood, and atonement by his sacrifice; and is enjoyed in a way of believing; and with external peace in the latter day, when there shall be no more war with them, nor persecution of them; but there shall be abundance of peace, and that without end; and at last with eternal peace, which is the end of the perfect and upright man; and the whole is a great blessing.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 29:3 Traditionally “many waters.” The geographical references in the psalm (Lebanon, Sirion, Kadesh) suggest this is a reference to the Mediter...
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NET Notes: Psa 29:5 The cedars of the Lebanon forest were well-known in ancient Israel for their immense size. Here they may symbolize the arrogant enemies of God (see Is...
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NET Notes: Psa 29:6 Lebanon and Sirion are compared to frisky young animals (a calf…a young ox) who skip and jump. The thunderous shout of the Lord is so powerful, ...
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NET Notes: Psa 29:7 The Lord’s shout strikes with flaming fire. The short line has invited textual emendation, but its distinct, brief form may highlight the statem...
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NET Notes: Psa 29:8 Kadesh. The references to Lebanon and Sirion in v. 6 suggest this is a reference to the northern Kadesh, located north of Damascus, not the southern K...
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NET Notes: Psa 29:10 The prefixed verbal form with vav (ו) consecutive here carries the descriptive function of the preceding perfect.
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NET Notes: Psa 29:11 Heb “blesses his people with peace.” The Hebrew term שָׁלוֹם (shalom, “peace”) proba...
Geneva Bible: Psa 29:3 The ( b ) voice of the LORD [is] upon the waters: the God of glory thundereth: the LORD [is] upon many waters.
( b ) The thunder claps that are heard...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:5 The ( c ) voice of the LORD breaketh the cedars; yea, the LORD breaketh the cedars of Lebanon.
( c ) That is, the thunderbolt breaks the most strong ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:6 He maketh them also to skip like a calf; Lebanon and ( d ) Sirion like a young unicorn.
( d ) Called also Hermon.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:7 The voice of the LORD divideth the ( e ) flames of fire.
( e ) It causes the lightnings to shoot and glide.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:8 The voice of the LORD shaketh the wilderness; the LORD shaketh the wilderness of ( f ) Kadesh.
( f ) In places most desolate, where it seems there is...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:9 The voice of the LORD maketh the hinds to ( g ) calve, and ( h ) discovereth the forests: and in his ( i ) temple doth every one speak of [his] glory....
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Geneva Bible: Psa 29:10 The LORD sitteth upon the ( k ) flood; yea, the LORD sitteth King for ever.
( k ) To moderate the rage of the tempests and waters that they not destr...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 29:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 29:1-11 - --1 David exhorts princes to give glory to God;3 by reason of his power;11 and protection of his people.
MHCC -> Psa 29:1-11
MHCC: Psa 29:1-11 - --The mighty and honourable of the earth are especially bound to honour and worship him; but, alas, few attempt to worship him in the beauty of holiness...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 29:1-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 29:1-11 - -- In this psalm we have, I. A demand of the homage of the great men of the earth to be paid to the great God. Every clap of thunder David interpreted ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 29:1-2 - --
The opening strophe calls upon the celestial spirits to praise Jahve; for a revelation of divine glory is in preparation, which, in its first moveme...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 29:3-9 - --
Now follows the description of the revelation of God's power, which is the ground of the summons, and is to be the subject-matter of their praise. T...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 29:10-11 - --
Luther renders it: "The Lord sitteth to prepare a Flood,"thus putting meaning into the unintelligible rendering of the Vulgate and lxx; and in fact ...
Constable: Psa 29:1-11 - --Psalm 29
David praised God for His awesome power as a consequence of observing a severe thunderstorm eit...
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Constable: Psa 29:1-2 - --1. A call to praise Yahweh 29:1-2
The phrase "sons of the mighty" (NASB) or "mighty ones" (NIV) ...
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Constable: Psa 29:3-9 - --2. Reasons to praise Yahweh 29:3-9
This section pictures a thunderstorm.
29:3-4 Evidently David saw the storm first over a large body of water, probab...
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Constable: Psa 29:10-11 - --3. The sovereignty of Yahweh 29:10-11
29:10 The present storm reminded David of the inundation of the whole world in Noah's day. The Hebrew word for f...
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