
Text -- Psalms 47:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 47:5
Wesley: Psa 47:5 - -- This is meant literally of the ark: but mystically of Christ's ascension into heaven, as may be gathered by comparing this with Eph 4:8, where the lik...
JFB -> Psa 47:5-7; Psa 47:5-7
JFB: Psa 47:5-7 - -- God, victorious over His enemies, reascends to heaven, amid the triumphant praises of His people, who celebrate His sovereign dominion. This sovereign...
God, victorious over His enemies, reascends to heaven, amid the triumphant praises of His people, who celebrate His sovereign dominion. This sovereignty is what the Psalm teaches; hence he adds,

JFB: Psa 47:5-7 - -- Literally, "sing and play an instructive (Psalm)." The whole typifies Christ's ascension (compare Psa 68:18).
Literally, "sing and play an instructive (Psalm)." The whole typifies Christ's ascension (compare Psa 68:18).
Clarke -> Psa 47:5
Clarke: Psa 47:5 - -- God is gone up with a shout - Primarily, this may refer to the rejoicing and sounding of trumpets, when the ark was lifted up to be carried on the s...
God is gone up with a shout - Primarily, this may refer to the rejoicing and sounding of trumpets, when the ark was lifted up to be carried on the shoulders of the Levites. But it is generally understood as a prophetic declaration of the ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ; and the shout may refer to the exultation of the evangelists and apostles in preaching Christ crucified, buried, risen from the dead, and ascended to heaven, ever to appear in the presence of God for us. This was the triumph of the apostles; and the conversion of multitudes of souls by this preaching was the triumph of the cross of Christ.
Calvin -> Psa 47:5
Calvin: Psa 47:5 - -- 5.God is gone up with triumph There is here an allusion to the ancient ceremony which was observed under the Law. As the sound of trumpets was wont t...
5.God is gone up with triumph There is here an allusion to the ancient ceremony which was observed under the Law. As the sound of trumpets was wont to be used in solemnising the holy assemblies, the prophet says that God goes up, when the trumpets encourage and stir up the people to magnify and extol his power. When this ceremony was performed in old time, it was just as if a king, making his entrance among his subjects, presented himself to them in magnificent attire and great splendor, by which he gained their admiration and reverence. At the same time, the sacred writer, under that shadowy ceremony, doubtless intended to lead us to consider another kind of going up more triumphant — that of Christ when he “ascended up far above all heavens,” (Eph 4:10) and obtained the empire of the whole world, and armed with his celestial power, subdued all pride and loftiness. You must remember what I have adverted to before, that the name Jehovah is here applied to the ark; for although the essence or majesty of God was not shut up in it, nor his power and operation fixed to it, yet it was not a vain and idle symbol of his presence. God had promised that he would dwell in the midst of the people so long as the Jews worshipped him according to the rule which he had prescribed in the Law; and he actually showed that he was truly present with them, and that it was not in vain that he was called upon among them. What is here stated, however, applies more properly to the manifestation of the glory which at length shone forth in the person of Christ. In short, the import of the Psalmist’s language is, When the trumpets sounded among the Jews, according to the appointment of the Law, that was not a mere empty sound which vanished away in the air; for God, who intended the ark of the covenant to be a pledge and token of his presence, truly presided in that assembly. From this the prophet draws an argument for enforcing on the faithful the duty of singing praises to God He argues, that by engaging in this exercise they will not be acting blindly or at random, as the superstitious, who, having no certainty in their false systems of religion, lament and howl in vain before their idols. He shows that the faithful have just ground for celebrating with their mouths and with a cheerful heart the praises of God; 186 since they certainly know that he is as present with them, as if he had visibly established his royal throne among them.
TSK -> Psa 47:5
TSK: Psa 47:5 - -- God : Psa 24:7-10, Psa 68:17-19, Psa 68:24, Psa 68:25, Psa 68:33; Luk 24:51-53; Act 1:5-11; Eph 4:8-10; 1Ti 3:16
with a shout : Psa 78:65; Num 23:21; ...
God : Psa 24:7-10, Psa 68:17-19, Psa 68:24, Psa 68:25, Psa 68:33; Luk 24:51-53; Act 1:5-11; Eph 4:8-10; 1Ti 3:16
with a shout : Psa 78:65; Num 23:21; 2Sa 6:15; 1Ch 15:28
sound : Psa 81:3, Psa 150:3; Num 10:1-10; Jos 6:5; 1Ch 15:24, 1Ch 16:42; 1Co 15:52; 1Th 4:16; Rev 8:6-13, Rev 11:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 47:5
Barnes: Psa 47:5 - -- God is gone up with a shout - That is, he has ascended to heaven, his home and throne, after having secured the victory. He is represented as h...
God is gone up with a shout - That is, he has ascended to heaven, his home and throne, after having secured the victory. He is represented as having come down to aid his people in the war by the overthrow of their enemies, and (having accomplished this) as returning to heaven, accompanied by his hosts, and amidst the shouts of triumph. All this is, of course, poetical, and is not to be regarded as literal in any sense. Compare the notes at Psa 7:7.
The Lord with the sound of a trumpet - Yahweh, accompanied with the notes of victory. All this is designed to denote triumph, and to show that the victory was to be traced solely to God.
Poole -> Psa 47:5
Poole: Psa 47:5 - -- God is gone up: this is meant literally of the ark, wherein God was present, which went or was carried up to the hill of Zion, where the tabernacle w...
God is gone up: this is meant literally of the ark, wherein God was present, which went or was carried up to the hill of Zion, where the tabernacle was erected for it, and afterwards to the hill of Moriah into the temple; which solemnity was accompanied with the shouts and acclamations of the people, and with the sound of trumpets: but mystically it respects Christ’ s ascension into heaven, as may be gathered by comparing this with Eph 4:8 , where the like words uttered concerning the ark upon the same occasion, Psa 68:18 , are directly applied to Christ’ s ascension.
Haydock -> Psa 47:5
Haydock: Psa 47:5 - -- Earth is superfluous. (St. Jerome, ad Sun.) (Calmet) ---
Yet it is found in the Vatican Septuagint, &c. (Haydock) ---
The kings of the earth as...
Earth is superfluous. (St. Jerome, ad Sun.) (Calmet) ---
Yet it is found in the Vatican Septuagint, &c. (Haydock) ---
The kings of the earth assembled against the Church, (Psalm ii. 2.) as many came to oppose Jerusalem, under Cambyses, Ezechiel xxviii. 2, 13. (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 47:5
Gill: Psa 47:5 - -- God is gone up with a shout,.... That is, the Son of God, who is truly and properly God, equal to the Father, having the same perfections; God manifes...
God is gone up with a shout,.... That is, the Son of God, who is truly and properly God, equal to the Father, having the same perfections; God manifest in the flesh, the Word that was made flesh, and dwelt among men on earth; who in the next clause is called "Lord" or "Jehovah", being the everlasting "I AM", which is, and was, and is to come; he having done his work on earth he came about, went up from earth to heaven in human nature, really, locally, and visibly, in the sight of his apostles, attended by angels, and with their shouts and acclamations, which are here meant;
the Lord with the sound of the trumpet; which circumstance, though not related in the account of Christ's ascension in the New Testament, yet inasmuch as the angels say he shall descend in like manner as he ascended, and that it is certain he will descend with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and the trump of God; so that if his ascent was as his descent will be, it must be then with a shout, and the sound of a trumpet, Act 1:10. This text is applied to the Messiah by the ancient Jewish writers d.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 47:5 Heb “the Lord amid the sound of the ram horn.” The verb “ascended” is understood by ellipsis; see the preceding line.
Geneva Bible -> Psa 47:5
Geneva Bible: Psa 47:5 God is gone up with a shout, the LORD with the ( d ) sound of a trumpet.
( d ) He alludes to the trumpets that were blown at solemn feasts: but he fu...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 47:1-9
TSK Synopsis: Psa 47:1-9 - --1 The nations are exhorted cheerfully to entertain the kingdom of Christ.
MHCC -> Psa 47:5-9
MHCC: Psa 47:5-9 - --Praise is a duty in which we ought to be frequent and abundant. But here is a needful rule; Sing ye praises with understanding. As those that understa...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 47:5-9
Matthew Henry: Psa 47:5-9 - -- We are here most earnestly pressed to praise God, and to sing his praises; so backward are we to this duty that we have need to be urged to it by pr...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 47:4-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 47:4-8 - --
(Heb.: 47:5-9) The ascent of God presupposes a previous descent, whether it be a manifestation of Himself in order to utter some promise (Gen 17:22...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...

Constable: Psa 47:1-9 - --Psalm 47
The psalmist called on all nations to honor Israel's God who will one day rule over them. This ...
