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Text -- Psalms 84:1-7 (NET)

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Context
Psalm 84
84:1 For the music director; according to the gittith style; written by the Korahites, a psalm. How lovely is the place where you live, O Lord who rules over all! 84:2 I desperately want to be in the courts of the Lord’s temple. My heart and my entire being shout for joy to the living God. 84:3 Even the birds find a home there, and the swallow builds a nest, where she can protect her young near your altars, O Lord who rules over all, my king and my God. 84:4 How blessed are those who live in your temple and praise you continually! (Selah) 84:5 How blessed are those who find their strength in you, and long to travel the roads that lead to your temple! 84:6 As they pass through the Baca Valley, he provides a spring for them. The rain even covers it with pools of water. 84:7 They are sustained as they travel along; each one appears before God in Zion.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Baca a valley; probably figurative: weeping
 · Gittith a tune name
 · Korah a man who led a rebellion against Moses and Aaron.,son of Esau and Oholibamah,son of Eliphaz son of Esau,son of Izhar son of Kohath son of Levi,son of Hebron of Judah,son of Izhar (Amminadab) son of Kohath son of Levi
 · Selah a musical notation for crescendo or emphasis by action (IBD)
 · Zion one of the hills on which Jerusalem was built; the temple area; the city of Jerusalem; God's people,a town and citidel; an ancient part of Jerusalem


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Music | Psalms | Church | Readings, Select | PSALMS, BOOK OF | Music, Instrumental | Gittith | SACRIFICE, IN THE OLD TESTAMENT, 3 | Worship | Swallow | Sparrow | Baca | Affections | Blessing | WELL | VALE, VALLEY | MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF THE HEBREWS | Mulberry Tree | Righteous | Seekers | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 84:1 Traditionally, “Lord of hosts.” The title draws attention to God’s sovereign position (see Ps 69:6).

NET Notes: Psa 84:2 Heb “my flesh,” which stands for his whole person and being.

NET Notes: Psa 84:3 The psalmist here romanticizes the temple as a place of refuge and safety. As he thinks of the birds nesting near its roof, he envisions them finding ...

NET Notes: Psa 84:4 The Hebrew noun is an abstract plural. The word often refers metonymically to the happiness that God-given security and prosperity produce (see v. 12 ...

NET Notes: Psa 84:5 Heb “roads [are] in their heart[s].” The roads are here those that lead to Zion (see v. 7).

NET Notes: Psa 84:6 Pools of water. Because water is so necessary for life, it makes an apt symbol for divine favor and blessing. As the pilgrims traveled to Jerusalem, G...

NET Notes: Psa 84:7 The psalmist returns to the singular (see v. 5a), which he uses in either a representative or distributive (“each one” ) sense.

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