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Text -- Psalms 95:1-7 (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 95:3 - -- Above all that are called God's angels, earthly potentates, and especially the false gods of the Heathen.
Above all that are called God's angels, earthly potentates, and especially the false gods of the Heathen.
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Wesley: Psa 95:7 - -- Whom he feeds and keeps in his own pasture, or in the land which he hath appropriated to himself.
Whom he feeds and keeps in his own pasture, or in the land which he hath appropriated to himself.
JFB: Psa 95:1 - -- David (Heb 4:7) exhorts men to praise God for His greatness, and warns them, in God's words, against neglecting His service. (Psa 95:1-11)
The terms ...
David (Heb 4:7) exhorts men to praise God for His greatness, and warns them, in God's words, against neglecting His service. (Psa 95:1-11)
The terms used to express the highest kind of joy.
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The terms used describe the world in its whole extent, subject to God.
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Or, "enter," with solemn forms, as well as hearts.
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JFB: Psa 95:7 - -- This relation illustrates our entire dependence (compare Psa 23:3; Psa 74:1). The last clause is united by Paul (Heb 3:7) to the following (compare Ps...
Clarke: Psa 95:1 - -- O come, let us sing - Let us praise God, not only with the most joyful accents which can be uttered by the voice; but let us also praise him with he...
O come, let us sing - Let us praise God, not only with the most joyful accents which can be uttered by the voice; but let us also praise him with hearts tuned to gratitude, from a full sense of the manifold benefits we have already received
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Clarke: Psa 95:1 - -- The rock of our salvation - The strong Fortress in which we have always found safety, and the Source whence we have always derived help for our soul...
The rock of our salvation - The strong Fortress in which we have always found safety, and the Source whence we have always derived help for our souls. In both these senses the word rock, as applied to God, is used in the Scriptures.
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Clarke: Psa 95:2 - -- Let us come before his presence - פניו panaiv , his faces, with thanksgiving, בתודה bethodah , with confession, or with the confession-of...
Let us come before his presence -
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Clarke: Psa 95:3 - -- For the Lord is a great God - Or, "A great God is Jehovah, and a great King above all gods;"or, "God is a great King over all."The Supreme Being has...
For the Lord is a great God - Or, "A great God is Jehovah, and a great King above all gods;"or, "God is a great King over all."The Supreme Being has three names here:
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Clarke: Psa 95:4 - -- In his hand are the deep places of the earth - The greatest deeps are fathomed by him
In his hand are the deep places of the earth - The greatest deeps are fathomed by him
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Clarke: Psa 95:4 - -- The strength of the hills is his also - And to him the greatest heights are accessible,
The strength of the hills is his also - And to him the greatest heights are accessible,
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Clarke: Psa 95:5 - -- The sea is his - The sea and the dry land are equally his, for he has formed them both, and they are his property. He governs and disposes of them a...
The sea is his - The sea and the dry land are equally his, for he has formed them both, and they are his property. He governs and disposes of them as he sees good. He is the absolute Master of universal nature. Therefore there is no other object of worship nor of confidence.
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Clarke: Psa 95:6 - -- O come, let us worship - Three distinct words are used here to express three different acts of adoration
1. Let us worship, נש...
O come, let us worship - Three distinct words are used here to express three different acts of adoration
1. Let us worship,
2. Let us bow down,
3. Let us kneel,
And let us consider that all this should be done in the presence of Him who is Jehovah our Creator.
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Clarke: Psa 95:7 - -- For he is our God - Here is the reason for this service. He has condescended to enter into a covenant with us, and he has taken us for his own; ther...
For he is our God - Here is the reason for this service. He has condescended to enter into a covenant with us, and he has taken us for his own; therefore: -
We are the people of his pasture - Or, rather, as the Chaldee, Syriac, Vulgate, and Ethiopic read, "We are his people, and the sheep of the pasture of his hand."We are his own; he feeds and governs us, and his powerful hand protects us
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Clarke: Psa 95:7 - -- To-day if ye will hear his voice - To-day-you have no time to lose; to-morrow may be too late. God calls to-day; to-morrow he may be silent. This sh...
To-day if ye will hear his voice - To-day-you have no time to lose; to-morrow may be too late. God calls to-day; to-morrow he may be silent. This should commence the eighth verse, as it begins what is supposed to be the part of the priest or prophet who now exhorts the people; as if he had said: Seeing you are in so good a spirit, do not forget your own resolutions, and harden not your hearts, "as your fathers did in Meribah and Massah, in the wilderness;"the same fact and the same names as are mentioned Exo 17:7; when the people murmured at Rephidim, because they had no water; hence it was called Meribah, contention or provocation, and Massah, temptation.
Calvin: Psa 95:1 - -- 1.Come, let us rejoice before Jehovah. This psalm is suited for the Sabbath, when we know that the religious assemblies were more particularly conven...
1.Come, let us rejoice before Jehovah. This psalm is suited for the Sabbath, when we know that the religious assemblies were more particularly convened for the worship of God. It is not individuals among the godly whom he exhorts to celebrate the divine praises in private; he enjoins these to be offered up in the public meeting. By this he showed that the outward worship of God principally consisted in the sacrifice of praise, and not in dead ceremonies. He enjoins haste upon them; by which they might testify their alacrity in this service. For the Hebrew word
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Calvin: Psa 95:3 - -- 3.For Jehovah is a great God. By these words the Psalmist reminds us what abundant grounds we have for praising God, and how far we are from needing ...
3.For Jehovah is a great God. By these words the Psalmist reminds us what abundant grounds we have for praising God, and how far we are from needing to employ the lying panegyric with which rhetoricians flatter earthly princes. First, he extols the greatness of God, drawing a tacit contrast between him and such false gods as men have invented for themselves. We know that there has always been a host of gods in the world, as Paul says,
“There are many on the earth who are called gods,”
(1Co 8:5.)
We are to notice the opposition stated between the God of Israel and all others which man has formed in the exercise of an unlicensed imagination. Should any object, that “an idol is nothing in the world,” (1Co 8:4,) it is enough to reply, that the Psalmist aims at denouncing the vain delusions of men who have framed gods after their own foolish device. I admit, however, that under this term he may have comprehended the angels, asserting God to be possessed of such excellence as exalted him far above all heavenly glory, and whatever might be considered Divine, as well as above the feigned deities of earth. 45 Angels are not indeed gods, but the name admits of an improper application to them on account of their being next to God, and still more, on account of their being accounted no less than gods by men who inordinately and superstitiously extol them. If the heavenly angels themselves must yield before the majesty of the one God, it were the height of indignity to compare him with gods who are the mere fictions of the brain. In proof of his greatness, he bids us look to his formation of the world, which he declares to be the work of God’s hands, and subject to his power. This is one general ground why God is to be praised, that he has clearly shown forth his glory in the creation of the world, and will have us daily recognize him in the government of it. When it is said, that the depths of the earth are in his hand, the meaning is, that it is ruled by his providence, and subject to his power. Some read, the bounds of the earth, but the word means abysses or depths, as opposed to the heights of the mountains. The Hebrew word properly signifies searching.
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Calvin: Psa 95:6 - -- 6.Come ye, let us worship Now that the Psalmist exhorts God’s chosen people to gratitude, for that pre-eminency among the nations which he had conf...
6.Come ye, let us worship Now that the Psalmist exhorts God’s chosen people to gratitude, for that pre-eminency among the nations which he had conferred upon them in the exercise of his free favor, his language grows more vehement. God supplies us with ample grounds of praise when he invests us with spiritual distinction, and advances us to a pre-eminency above the rest of mankind which rests upon no merits of our own. In three successive terms he expresses the one duty incumbent upon the children of Abraham, that of an entire devotement of themselves to God. The worship of God, which the Psalmist here speaks of, is assuredly a matter of such importance as to demand our whole strength; but we are to notice, that he particularly condescends upon one point, the paternal favor of God, evidenced in his exclusive adoption of the posterity of Abraham unto the hope of eternal life. We are also to observe, that mention is made not only of inward gratitude, but the necessity of an outward profession of godliness. The three words which are used imply that, to discharge their duty properly, the Lord’s people must present themselves a sacrifice to him publicly, with kneeling, and other marks of devotion. The face of the Lord is an expression to be understood in the sense I referred to above, — that the people should prostrate themselves before the Ark of the Covenant, for the reference is to the mode of worship under the Law. This remark, however, must be taken with one reservation, that the worshippers were to lift their eyes to heaven, and serve God in a spiritual manner. 47
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Calvin: Psa 95:7 - -- 7.Because he is our God While it is true that all men were created to praise God, there are reasons why the Church is specially said to have been for...
7.Because he is our God While it is true that all men were created to praise God, there are reasons why the Church is specially said to have been formed for that end, (Isa 61:3.) The Psalmist was entitled to require this service more particularly from the hands of his chosen people. This is the reason why he impresses upon the children of Abraham the invaluable privilege which God had conferred upon them in taking them under his protection. God may indeed be said in a sense to have done so much for all mankind. But when asserted to be the Shepherd of the Church, more is meant than that he favors her with the common nourishment, support, and government which he extends promiscuously to the whole human family; he is so called because he separates her from the rest of the world, and cherishes her with a peculiar and fatherly regard. His people are here spoken of accordingly as the people of his pastures, whom he watches over with peculiar care, and loads with blessings of every kind. The passage might have run more clearly had the Psalmist called them the flock of his pastures, and the people of his hand; 48 or, had he added merely — and his flock 49 — the figure might have been brought out more consistently and plainly. But his object was less elegancy of expression than pressing upon the people a sense of the inestimable favor conferred upon them in their adoption, by virtue of which they were called to live under the faithful guardianship of God, and to the enjoyment of every species of blessings. They are called the flock of his hand, not so much because formed by his hand as because governed by it, or, to use a French expression, le Troupeau de sa conduite. 50 The point which some have given to the expression, as if it intimated how intent God was upon feeding his people, doing it himself, and not employing hired shepherds, may scarcely perhaps be borne out by the words in their genuine meaning; but it cannot be doubted that the Psalmist would express the very gracious and familiar kind of guidance which was enjoyed by this one nation at that time. Not that God dispensed with human agency, intrusting the care of the people as he did to priests, prophets, and judges, and latterly to kings. No more is meant than that in discharging the office of shepherd to this people, he exercised a superintendence over them different from that common providence which extends to the rest of the world.
To-day, if you will hear his voice 51 According to the Hebrew expositors, this is a conditional clause standing connected with the preceding sentence; by which interpretation the Psalmist must be considered as warning the people that they would only retain possession of their privilege and distinction so long as they continued to obey God. 52 The Greek version joins it with the verse that follows — to-day, if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts, and it reads well in this connection. Should we adopt the distribution of the Hebrew expositors, the Psalmist seems to say that the posterity of Abraham were the flock of God’s hand, inasmuch as he had placed his Law in the midst of them, which was, as it were, his crook, and had thus showed himself to be their shepherd. The Hebrew particle
Defender -> Psa 95:7
Defender: Psa 95:7 - -- Psa 95:7-11 is quoted in Heb 3:7-11 then analyzed in Heb 3:12-19 and applied as a parable warning against those who profess faith in God, but do not h...
Psa 95:7-11 is quoted in Heb 3:7-11 then analyzed in Heb 3:12-19 and applied as a parable warning against those who profess faith in God, but do not have true faith (compare Psa 100:3)."
TSK: Psa 95:1 - -- Come : Psa 34:3, Psa 66:8, Psa 107:8, Psa 107:15, Psa 107:21, Psa 117:1, Psa 118:1, Psa 136:1-3, Psa 148:11-13, Psa 150:6
sing : Psa 47:6, Psa 47:7, P...
Come : Psa 34:3, Psa 66:8, Psa 107:8, Psa 107:15, Psa 107:21, Psa 117:1, Psa 118:1, Psa 136:1-3, Psa 148:11-13, Psa 150:6
sing : Psa 47:6, Psa 47:7, Psa 66:1, Psa 66:2, Psa 81:1, Psa 96:1, Psa 96:2, Psa 101:1; Exo 15:1, Exo 15:21; 1Ch 16:9; Eph 5:19; Col 3:16; Rev 5:9, Rev 14:3, Rev 15:3
let us make : Psa 66:1, Psa 98:4-8, Psa 100:1; Ezr 3:11-13; Isa 12:4-6; Jer 33:11; Mat 21:9; Rev 19:6
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TSK: Psa 95:2 - -- Let us : Psa 7:7, Psa 100:2, Psa 100:4; Jer 31:12, Jer 31:13
come before his presence : Heb. prevent his face, Psa 17:13 *marg.
psalms : Psa 105:2; Ja...
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TSK: Psa 95:3 - -- For : Psa 86:8-10, Psa 96:4, Psa 97:9, Psa 145:3; Jer 10:6, Jer 10:7
a great : Psa 47:2, Psa 48:2; Jer 10:10, Jer 46:18, Jer 48:15; Dan 4:37; Mal 1:11...
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TSK: Psa 95:4 - -- In : Psa 21:2; Job 11:10
his : Heb. whose
deep : Psa 135:6
the strength of the hills is his also : or, heights of the hills are his, Psa 65:6, Psa 97:...
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TSK: Psa 95:5 - -- The sea is his : Heb. Whose the sea is, Psa 33:7; Gen 1:9, Gen 1:10; Job 38:10, Job 38:11; Pro 8:29; Jer 5:22
hands : Pro 8:26
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TSK: Psa 95:6 - -- O come : Psa 95:1; Hos 6:1; Mat 4:2; Rev 22:17
worship : Psa 72:9; Exo 20:5; Mat 4:9; Mar 14:35; Act 10:25, Act 10:26; Rev 22:8
kneel : 1Ki 8:54; 2Ch ...
O come : Psa 95:1; Hos 6:1; Mat 4:2; Rev 22:17
worship : Psa 72:9; Exo 20:5; Mat 4:9; Mar 14:35; Act 10:25, Act 10:26; Rev 22:8
kneel : 1Ki 8:54; 2Ch 6:13; Ezr 9:5; Dan 6:10; Luk 22:41; Act 7:60, Act 20:36, Act 21:5; Eph 3:14; Phi 2:10; 1Co 6:20
our : Psa 100:3; Job 35:10; Ecc 12:1; Isa 54:5; Joh 1:3; 1Pe 4:19
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TSK: Psa 95:7 - -- For he : Psa 48:14, Psa 67:6, Psa 115:3; Exo 15:2, Exo 20:2; Jer 31:33; Heb 11:16
people : Psa 23:1, Psa 79:13, Psa 80:1, Psa 100:3; Isa 40:10, Isa 40...
For he : Psa 48:14, Psa 67:6, Psa 115:3; Exo 15:2, Exo 20:2; Jer 31:33; Heb 11:16
people : Psa 23:1, Psa 79:13, Psa 80:1, Psa 100:3; Isa 40:10, Isa 40:11; Eze 34:30, Eze 34:31; Joh 10:3, Joh 10:4; Joh 10:14-16; Act 20:28; 1Pe 2:25
To day : Heb 3:7, Heb 3:13, Heb 3:15, Heb 4:7
if ye : Pro 8:6; Isa 55:3; Mat 3:2, Mat 3:3, Mat 17:5; Rev 3:20
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 95:1 - -- O come, let us sing unto the Lord - The word here rendered come, means properly "go;"but it is used here, as it often is, as a formula of invit...
O come, let us sing unto the Lord - The word here rendered come, means properly "go;"but it is used here, as it often is, as a formula of invitation, in calling on others to share in what is done by the speaker. It is here to be understood as used by one portion of an assembly convened for worship addressing the other portion, and calling on them to unite in the praise of God.
Let us make a joyful noise - The word used here means commonly to make a loud noise, to shout, Job 30:5. It is especially used
(a) of warlike shouts, Jos 6:16; 1Sa 17:20;
(b) of the shout of triumph, Jdg 15:14;
© of the sound or clangor of a trumpet, Num 10:9; Joe 2:1.
It may thus be used to denote any shout of joy or praise. In public worship it would denote praise of the most animated kind.
To the Rock of our salvation - The strong ground of our confidence; the basis of our hope; our security. See the notes at Psa 18:2.
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Barnes: Psa 95:2 - -- Let us come before his presence - Margin, as in Hebrew, "prevent his face."The word in Hebrew means literally to come before; to anticipate. It...
Let us come before his presence - Margin, as in Hebrew, "prevent his face."The word in Hebrew means literally to come before; to anticipate. It is the word which is commonly rendered "prevent."See Job 3:12, note; Psa 17:13, note; Psa 59:10, note; 1Th 4:15, note. Here it means to come before, in the sense of "in front of."Let us stand before his face; that is, in his very presence.
With thanksgiving - Expressing our thanks.
And make a joyful noise unto him - The same word which occurs in Psa 95:1.
With psalms - Songs of praise.
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Barnes: Psa 95:3 - -- For the Lord is a great God - For Yahweh is a great God. The object is to exalt Jehovah, the true God, as distinguished from all who were worsh...
For the Lord is a great God - For Yahweh is a great God. The object is to exalt Jehovah, the true God, as distinguished from all who were worshipped as gods. The first idea is that he is "great;"that he is exalted over all the universe; that he rules over all, and that he is to be worshipped as such.
And a great King above all gods - This does not mean that he is a great ruler of all other gods, as if they had a real existence, but that he is king or ruler far above all that were worshipped as gods, or to whom homage was paid. Whoever, or whatever was worshipped as God, Yahweh was supreme over all things. He occupied the throne; and all others must be beneath him, and under his dominion. If the sun, the moon, or the stars were worshipped - if the mountains or the rivers - if angels good or bad - yet Yahweh was above all these. If imaginary beings were worshipped, yet Yahweh in his perfections was exalted far above all that was ascribed to them, for He was the true God, and the Ruler of the universe, while they were beings of the imagination only.
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Barnes: Psa 95:4 - -- In his hand - In his power, or under his control as his own. That is, he so possesses all things that they can be claimed by no other. His righ...
In his hand - In his power, or under his control as his own. That is, he so possesses all things that they can be claimed by no other. His right over them is absolute and entire.
Are the deep places of the earth - The word used here -
The strength of the hills is his also - Margin, "The heights of the hills are his."The word rendered "strength"-
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Barnes: Psa 95:5 - -- The sea is his - Margin, as in Hebrew, "Whose the sea is."That is, The sea belongs to him, with all which it contains. And he made it - I...
The sea is his - Margin, as in Hebrew, "Whose the sea is."That is, The sea belongs to him, with all which it contains.
And he made it - It is his, "because"he made it. The creation of anything gives the highest possible right over it.
And his hands formed the dry land - He has a claim, therefore, that it should be recognized as his, and that all who dwell upon it, and derive their support from it, should acknowledge him as its great Owner and Lord.
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Barnes: Psa 95:6 - -- O come, let us worship and bow down - Let us worship him by bowing down; by prostrating ourselves before him. The word here rendered "come"is n...
O come, let us worship and bow down - Let us worship him by bowing down; by prostrating ourselves before him. The word here rendered "come"is not the same which is used in Psa 95:1. Its literal meaning is "come,"and it is an earnest exhortation to come and worship. It is not a particle merely calling attention to a subject, but it is an exhortation to approach - to enter - to engage in a thing. The word rendered "worship,"means properly to bow down; to incline oneself; and then, to bow or prostrate oneself before anyone in order to do him homage, or reverence. Then it means to bow down before God in the attitude of worship. It would most naturally refer to an entire "prostration"on the ground, which was a common mode of worship; but it would also express adoration in any form. The word rendered "bow down,"means properly to bend, to bow, spoken usually of the knees. Isa 45:23 : "every knee shall bow."Compare Jdg 7:5-6; 1Ki 8:54; 2Ki 1:13. The word might be applied, like the former word, to those who bow down with the whole person, or prostrate themselves on the ground. 2Ch 7:3.
Let us kneel before the Lord our Maker - The usual attitude of prayer in the Scriptures. See the notes at Dan 6:10; compare 2Ch 6:13; Luk 22:41; Act 7:60; Act 9:40; Act 20:36; Act 21:5. All the expressions here employed denote a posture of profound reverence in worship, and the passage is a standing rebuke of all irreverent postures in prayer; of such habits as often prevail in public worship where no change of posture is made in prayer, and where a congregation irreverently sit in the act of professedly worshipping God. People show to their fellowmen the respect indicated by rising up before them: much more should they show respect to God - respect in a posture which will indicate profound reverence, and a deep sense of his presence and majesty. Reverently kneeling or standing "will"indicate this; sitting does not indicate it.
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Barnes: Psa 95:7 - -- For he is our God - Not only the God whom we worship as the true God, but One who has revealed himself to us as our God. We worship him as God ...
For he is our God - Not only the God whom we worship as the true God, but One who has revealed himself to us as our God. We worship him as God - as entitled to praise and adoration because he is the true God; we worship him also as sustaining the relation of God to us, or because we recognize him as our God, and because he has manifested himself as ours.
And we are the people of his pasture - whom he has recognized as his flock; to whom he sustains the relation of shepherd; who feeds and protects us as the shepherd does his flock. See the notes at Psa 79:13; compare Psa 23:1-3.
And the sheep of his hand - The flock that is guided and fed by his hand.
To day if ye will hear his voice - His voice calling you; commanding you; inviting you; encouraging you. See this passage explained in the notes at Heb 3:7-11. The word "today"here means "the present time;"now. The idea is, that the purpose to obey should not be deferred until tomorrow; should not be put off to the future. The commands of God should be obeyed at once; the purpose should be executed immediately. All God’ s commands relate to the present. He gives us none for the future; and a true purpose to obey God exists only where there is a willingness to obey "now,""today;"and can exist only then. A purpose to repent at some future time, to give up the world at some future time, to embrace the Gospel at some future time, is "no obedience,"for there is no such command addressed to us. A resolution to put off repentance and faith, to defer attention to religion until some future time, is real disobedience - and often the worst form of disobedience - for it is directly in the face of the command of God. "If ye will hear."That is, If there is a disposition or willingness to obey his voice at all; or, to listen to his commands. See the notes at Heb 3:7.
Poole: Psa 95:2 - -- His presence which he will then afford us in a singular manner, in his Son the Messiah, in and by whom he will be visibly present with the sons of me...
His presence which he will then afford us in a singular manner, in his Son the Messiah, in and by whom he will be visibly present with the sons of men.
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Poole: Psa 95:3 - -- Above all that are accounted and called
gods angels, and earthly potentates, and especially the false gods of the heathens, which upon Christ̵...
Above all that are accounted and called
gods angels, and earthly potentates, and especially the false gods of the heathens, which upon Christ’ s coming into the world were struck dumb, and could no more deliver their oracles, as Plutarch and other heathens observed, with admiration, nor deceive the world, but were forced to give place to the true God, and to the knowledge and worship of him alone, which was propagated among all nations by the gospel.
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Poole: Psa 95:4 - -- In his hand under his government.
The deep places those parts which are far out of men’ s sight and reach, and much more those that are at men...
In his hand under his government.
The deep places those parts which are far out of men’ s sight and reach, and much more those that are at men’ s disposal.
The strength of the hills the strongest or highest mountains are under his feet, and at his disposal. The sense of the verse is, All the parts of the earth, whether high or low, are subject to his power and providence, and therefore it is not strange if all the nations of the earth be brought to the acknowledgment of him, and if the Gentiles receive his gospel.
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Poole: Psa 95:6 - -- By which expressions he teacheth that even in gospel times God is to be glorified and worshipped, as well with the members of our bodies, as with th...
By which expressions he teacheth that even in gospel times God is to be glorified and worshipped, as well with the members of our bodies, as with the faculties of our souls.
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Poole: Psa 95:7 - -- Our God in a peculiar manner; and therefore it will be most unreasonable and abominable for us to forsake him, when the Gentiles submit to his law. ...
Our God in a peculiar manner; and therefore it will be most unreasonable and abominable for us to forsake him, when the Gentiles submit to his law. The people of his pasture ; whom he feedeth and keepeth in his own proper pasture, or in the land which he hath appropriated to himself.
The sheep of his hand which are under his special care and conduct, or government; which is oft expressed by the hand, as Num 4:28 31:49 Jud 9:29 .
Today i.e. forthwith or presently, as this word is used, Deu 4:4,8 27:9 Jos 22:16,18 , &c. Or, this day ; in this solemn day of grace, or of the gospel, which the psalmist speaks of as present, according to the manner of the prophets. And this word, though belonging to the following clause, as appears from Heb 3:7 , may seem to be thus placed, to show that it had some respect to the foregoing words also. For the sense of the place may be this, We (Jews) are or shall be the people of his pasture, and the sheep of his hand ; God will still own us for his people this day , i.e. in the days of the Messiah, if this day or in that time we shall hear his voice. Otherwise God will reject us, and receive the Gentiles in our stead.
If ye will hear his voice if you will hearken to his call, and obey his further commands; which may be added as a necessary caution and admonition to the Israelites, that they might understand and consider that God’ s presence and favour was not absolutely, necessarily, and everlastingly fixed to them, as they were very apt to believe, but was suspended upon the condition of their continued obedience, which if they violated they should be rejected, and the Gentiles performing it should be received to his mercy. And this clause may be connected either,
1. With the former words, as the condition of their interest in God as their God, as was now said. Or,
2. With the following verse; If you are willing to hearken to God’ s call delivered by his Son, take the following counsel.
PBC -> Psa 95:7
Haydock: Psa 95:1 - -- An exhortation to praise God for the coming of Christ and his kingdom.
Fulness. Its raging billows, (Calmet) fishes, (Menochius) those who live upo...
An exhortation to praise God for the coming of Christ and his kingdom.
Fulness. Its raging billows, (Calmet) fishes, (Menochius) those who live upon the water. (Haydock) ---
Let al testify their joy. Every thing is animated by the psalmist. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Psa 95:1 - -- When the house was built, &c. Alluding to that time, and then ordered to be sung; but principally relating to the building of the Church of Christ, ...
When the house was built, &c. Alluding to that time, and then ordered to be sung; but principally relating to the building of the Church of Christ, after our redemption from the captivity of satan. (Challoner) ---
Captivity. The greater canticle of David, (1 Paralipomenon xvi.) was probably divided, on that occasion, (Calmet) into three. This forms the second part, from ver. 23; as the psalm civ., to ver. 16., does the first. The three last verses of David's canticle, (ver. 34.) occur [in] Psalm cv. 1, 47. But in reality, there are so many variations, that it seems most probable, (Haydock) that he revised that work, and left us the three psalms in their present form. This perhaps relates to the establishment of the Church, though it might be also sung at the return from Babylon. (Berthier) ---
Modern Jews understand it of their future re-union under the Messias. (Kimchi) (Calmet) ---
The rebuilding of the temple is foretold, as a figure of man's redemption. (Worthington) ---
New canticle . As the blessed do, (Apocalypse v. 9., and xv. 4.) and those who receive the Messias, Isaias xlii. 10. (Berthier) ---
Love sings the new canticle. (St. Augustine) ---
Earth. And not Judea alone, ver. 7. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 95:2 - -- Lord....his name. As ver. 7., and 8. The plural and singular denote the Trinity. (Worthington) ---
Shew forth. Septuagint, "evangelize," bene ...
Lord....his name. As ver. 7., and 8. The plural and singular denote the Trinity. (Worthington) ---
Shew forth. Septuagint, "evangelize," bene nuntiate. (St. Augustine) ---
"Tell the glad tidings" of salvation incessantly. This preaching shall continue for ever. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 95:5 - -- Devils. Hebrew elilim, "diminutive gods, (Haydock) nothings, (Calmet) vain things." (Montanus) (1 Paralipomenon) ---
We have idols, as Protes...
Devils. Hebrew elilim, "diminutive gods, (Haydock) nothings, (Calmet) vain things." (Montanus) (1 Paralipomenon) ---
We have idols, as Protestants read here. These were in fact, either devils, or vain imaginations of men. St. Paul says, we know that an idol is nothing in the world, 1 Corinthians viii. 4. They cannot claim self-existence, and if the true God were not to support those creatures, the sun, &c., which have been the objects of adoration, they would presently cease to be. (Haydock) ---
This most plausible species of idolatry is therefore refuted, since the Lord made the heavens. (Calmet) ---
The Creator alone can be considered as God; the devils prompt the people to adore other things. (Worthington) ---
It would appear but a small praise for the Lord to be feared above all gods, (Haydock) if they were "nothing." Hence the Septuagint have used the word devils, to signify, that these potent, but maleficent beings, which the pagans adored, were infinitely beneath God, and worse than nothing. (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 95:6 - -- Before him. At his disposal; whereas the idols can bestow nothing. (Calmet) ---
Sanctuary, or "sanctification." (Worthington) 1 Paralipomenon, ...
Before him. At his disposal; whereas the idols can bestow nothing. (Calmet) ---
Sanctuary, or "sanctification." (Worthington) 1 Paralipomenon, in his place. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 95:7 - -- Kindreds; patriæ, or families, as it is expressed, 1 Paralipomenon xvi. (Haydock)
Kindreds; patriæ, or families, as it is expressed, 1 Paralipomenon xvi. (Haydock)
Gill: Psa 95:1 - -- O come, let us sing unto the Lord,.... To Jehovah the Messiah, the Lord our righteousness; setting forth, in songs of praise, the glory of his person,...
O come, let us sing unto the Lord,.... To Jehovah the Messiah, the Lord our righteousness; setting forth, in songs of praise, the glory of his person, the riches of his grace, and our thankfulness to him for spiritual mercies by him: Christ is to be the subject of our spiritual songs, and is the person to whose honour and glory they should be directed: in the New Testament we are instructed to sing unto the Lord, the Lord Christ, Eph 5:19, and this is what Pliny a tells Trajan, the Roman emperor, the Christians in his time did; they sung a hymn to Christ, as to a God:
let us make a joyful noise to the Rock of our salvation; to Christ, the Rock, 1Co 10:4, a Rock, for height, being higher than the saints, than the kings of the earth, than the angels in heaven, than the heavens themselves; for strength, being the mighty God, and mighty Saviour; for shelter, being the saints security from avenging justice and wrath to come: a Rock, on which the church and all believers are built, and which endures for ever; "the Rock of salvation", being the author of spiritual and eternal salvation, and the strength and security of it; not only is he strong to do it, but, being done by him, it is safe in him; wherefore shouts of joy and songs of praise are due unto him. This shows that vocal singing is meant, singing with an harmonious and musical voice; and that social singing, or singing in concert together, is intended. The Septuagint renders it, "to God our Saviour", Luk 1:47.
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Gill: Psa 95:2 - -- Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving,.... Come with the sacrifice of praise, there being no other in the days of the Messiah, all ceremon...
Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving,.... Come with the sacrifice of praise, there being no other in the days of the Messiah, all ceremonial sacrifices being put an end to when his sacrifice was offered up; so Arama observes, that the offering of thanksgiving shall remain, or be left in the days of the Messiah; come with this to Christ as a priest, to offer it by him to God his Father, to whom it is acceptable through him, and with this to himself for the great salvation he has wrought out: "to come before his presence", or "face" b, supposes his being come in the flesh, his being God manifest in it, and also as clear and free from the veil of types and shadows; these all being gone now he is come, and to be beheld with open face; and likewise his having done his work as a Saviour, and now upon his throne as a King; into whose presence chamber saints are admitted to make their acknowledgments to him, and profess their allegiance and subjection to him, and their gratitude for favours received. It signifies an attendance on him in his house and ordinances, where he shows his face, and grants his presence; and intends not merely bodily exercise, or a presentation of our bodies only to him, but a drawing nigh to him with true hearts, and serving him in a spiritual manner:
and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms; with a melodious voice, and grace in the heart, with psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs; this belonging to Gospel times shows that singing of psalms vocally in a musical way is an ordinance of Christ, to be performed to him under the Gospel dispensation, Eph 5:19.
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Gill: Psa 95:3 - -- For the Lord is a great God,.... Christ is truly and properly God, wherefore divine service is to be performed unto him; particularly singing psalms, ...
For the Lord is a great God,.... Christ is truly and properly God, wherefore divine service is to be performed unto him; particularly singing psalms, setting forth therein his greatness and glory: and he is a great one; great in power, wisdom, justice, truth, mercy, and grace; greatness is to be ascribed unto him, and worship given him, because of his greatness, Tit 2:13.
and a great King over all gods; he is King of the whole world; his kingdom ruleth over all; he is King of kings, and Lord of lords; he is King of saints, the government of the whole church is upon his shoulders, which he exercises in the most wise, powerful, and righteous manner imaginable; he is above all that are called gods, all the nominal and fictitious deities of the Heathens; above all civil magistrates, who are gods by office; and above the angels, who have this name, 1Pe 3:22. Aben Ezra interprets it of angels.
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Gill: Psa 95:4 - -- In his hand are the deep places of the earth,.... The "penetrals" c of it; not only what are penetrated by men, the minerals that are in it; but what ...
In his hand are the deep places of the earth,.... The "penetrals" c of it; not only what are penetrated by men, the minerals that are in it; but what are of such deep recess as to be penetrated only by the Lord himself; these are in the hands and power of Christ, which he can search into, discover, and dispose of; these are the foundations of the earth, which cannot be searched out beneath by men, Jer 31:37,
the strength of the hills is his also; or, "the wearinesses" d of them, the tops e of them, which make a man weary to go up unto, they are so high; the Targum is,
"the strengths of the height of the hills;''
which takes in both ideas, both the height and strength of them. The hills, that are both high and strong, are set fast by his power, and are at his command; and bow and tremble before him, whom men ought to worship.
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Gill: Psa 95:5 - -- The sea is his, and he made it,.... He made it, and therefore it is, and all creatures in it; he sets bounds to it, and its waves, and restrains the r...
The sea is his, and he made it,.... He made it, and therefore it is, and all creatures in it; he sets bounds to it, and its waves, and restrains the raging of it at his pleasure, Mat 8:26,
and his hands formed the dry land; the whole world, all besides the sea, the vast continent; he is the Maker of it, and all creatures in it; without him was nothing made that is made; and, being the Creator of all things, is the proper object of worship, Joh 1:2, as follows.
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Gill: Psa 95:6 - -- O come, let us worship and bow down,.... Before him who is the Rock of our salvation, the great God and great King, the Creator of the ends of the ear...
O come, let us worship and bow down,.... Before him who is the Rock of our salvation, the great God and great King, the Creator of the ends of the earth, the proper object of all religious worship and adoration: Christ is to be worshipped with every part of external worship under the New Testament dispensation; psalms and songs of praise are to be sung unto him; prayer is to be made unto him; the Gospel is to be preached, and ordinances to be administered, in his name; and likewise with all internal worship, in the exercise of every grace on him, as faith, hope, and love: see Psa 45:11,
let us kneel before the Lord our Maker; both in a natural and spiritual sense: Christ is the Maker of us as creatures, of our souls and bodies; we have our natural being from him, and are supported in it by him; and he is the Maker of us as new creatures; we are his workmanship, created in him, and by him; and therefore he should be worshipped by us, Eph 2:10. Kimchi distinguishes these several gestures, expressed by the different words here used; the first, we render worship, signifies, according to him, the prostration of the whole body on the ground, with the hands and legs stretched out; the second, a bowing of the head, with part of the body; and the third, a bending of the knees on the ground; but though each of these postures and gestures have been, and may be, used in religious worship, yet they seem not so much to design them themselves, and the particular use of them, as worship itself, which is in general intended by them.
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Gill: Psa 95:7 - -- For he is our God,.... God over all, blessed for ever, truly and properly God, and therefore to be worshipped: "our God"; in whom we have interest, wh...
For he is our God,.... God over all, blessed for ever, truly and properly God, and therefore to be worshipped: "our God"; in whom we have interest, who became our head and surety in covenant; took upon him our nature, is our "Immanuel", God with as, which increases the obligation to worship him; these are the words of New Testament saints:
and we are the people of his pasture; for whom he has provided a good pasture; whom he leads into it, and feeds in it, even by the ministry of the word and ordinances:
and the sheep of his hand; made and fashioned by his hand, both in a natural and spiritual sense; led and guided by his hand, as a flock by the hand of the shepherd; are in his hand, being put there for safety by his Father; and upheld by it, and preserved in it, and from whence none can pluck them; see Deu 33:3 receiving such favours from him, he ought to be worshipped by them. The Heathens had a deity they called Pan, whom they make to be a keeper of sheep e; and some Christian writers have thought that Christ the chief Shepherd is meant; since, when the Heathen oracles ceased, after the coming and death of Christ, a voice is f said to be heard at a certain place, "the great Pan is dead: today, if ye will hear his voice"; the voice of the Shepherd, the voice of God, says Aben Ezra, his Word, as the Targum; the voice of the Messiah, both his perceptive voice, his commands and ordinances, which ought to be hearkened to and obeyed; and the voice of his Gospel, and the doctrines of it; which is to be heard not only externally, but internally: when it is heard as to be understood, to be approved of and believed, and to be distinguished; so as to have a spiritual and experimental knowledge of it; to feel the power and efficacy of it, and practically attend to it; it is an evidence of being the sheep of Christ; see Joh 10:4, where the sheep are said to know the voice of the shepherd, and not that of a stranger; of which Polybius g gives a remarkable instance in the goats of the island of Cyrnon, who will flee from strangers, but, as soon as the keeper sounds his trumpet, they will run to him: though the words may be connected with what follows, as they are in Heb 3:7, where they are said to be the words of the Holy Ghost, and are applied to times, and are interpreted of the voice of the Son of God in his house; for though it may refer to some certain day in David's time, as the seventh day sabbath, in which the voice of God might be heard, the word of God read and explained; and in Gospel times, as the Lord's day, in which Christ speaks by his ministers; and to the whole time of a man's life, which is called "while it is today", Heb 3:13, yet it chiefly respects the whole day of the Gospel, the whole Gospel dispensation, 2Co 6:2.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 95:7 Heb “if only you would listen to his voice.” The Hebrew particle אִם (’im, “if”) and following prefixe...
Geneva Bible: Psa 95:1 O come, let us sing unto the LORD: let us make a ( a ) joyful noise to the rock of our salvation.
( a ) He shows that God's service stands not in dea...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 95:3 For the LORD [is] a great God, and a great King above all ( b ) gods.
( b ) Even the angels (who in respect to men are thought as gods) are nothing i...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 95:4 In his hand [are] the deep places of the earth: the ( c ) strength of the hills [is] his also.
( c ) All things are governed by his providence.
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Geneva Bible: Psa 95:6 O come, let us ( d ) worship and bow down: let us kneel before the LORD our maker.
( d ) By these three words he signifies one thing: meaning that th...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 95:7 For he [is] our God; and we [are] the people of his pasture, and the sheep of his ( e ) hand. To day if ye will hear his voice,
( e ) That is, the fl...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 95:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 95:1-11 - --1 An exhortation to praise God,3 for his greatness;6 and for his goodness;8 and not to tempt him.
MHCC -> Psa 95:1-7; Psa 95:7-11
MHCC: Psa 95:1-7 - --Whenever we come into God's presence, we must come with thanksgiving. The Lord is to be praised; we do not want matter, it were well if we did not wan...
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MHCC: Psa 95:7-11 - --Christ calls upon his people to hear his voice. You call him Master, or Lord; then be his willing, obedient people. Hear the voice of his doctrine, of...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 95:1-7; Psa 95:7-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 95:1-7 - -- The psalmist here, as often elsewhere, stirs up himself and others to praise God; for it is a duty which ought to be performed with the most lively ...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 95:7-11 - -- The latter part of this psalm, which begins in the middle of a verse, is an exhortation to those who sing gospel psalms to live gospel lives, and to...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 95:1-2 - --
Jahve is called the Rock of our salvation (as in Psa 89:27, cf. Psa 94:22) as being its firm and sure ground. Visiting the house of God, one comes b...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 95:3-7 - --
The adorableness of God receives a threefold confirmation: He is exalted above all gods as King, above all things as Creator, and above His people a...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 95:7-11 - --
The second decastich begins in the midst of the Masoretic Psa 95:7. Up to this point the church stirs itself up to a worshipping appearing before it...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...
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Constable: Psa 95:1-11 - --Psalm 95
The anonymous psalmist extolled Yahweh as the great King above all gods and urged the Israelite...
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Constable: Psa 95:1-7 - --1. Exhortation to praise the sovereign Lord 95:1-7a
95:1-2 These introductory verses call on the congregation to glorify the Lord in song for His salv...
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Constable: Psa 95:7-11 - --2. Exhortation to believe the sovereign Lord 95:7b-11
Israel, however, had been a wayward flock ...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence -> Psa 95:4-5; Psa 95:6
Evidence: Psa 95:4-5 Scientific facts in the Bible . Only in recent years has man discovered that there are mountains on the ocean floor. This was revealed in the Bible th...
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