
Text -- Psalms 96:10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
God hath now set up his kingdom in the world.

Wesley: Psa 96:10 - -- The nations of the world shall by the means of it enjoy an established and lasting peace.
The nations of the world shall by the means of it enjoy an established and lasting peace.
JFB -> Psa 96:10
JFB: Psa 96:10 - -- Let all know that the government of the world is ordered in justice, and they shall enjoy firm and lasting peace (compare Psa 72:3, Psa 72:7; Isa 9:6-...
Clarke: Psa 96:10 - -- Say among the heathen that the Lord reigneth - Justin Martyr, in his dialogue with Trypho the Jew, quotes this passage thus: Ειπατε εν το...
Say among the heathen that the Lord reigneth - Justin Martyr, in his dialogue with Trypho the Jew, quotes this passage thus:

Clarke: Psa 96:10 - -- The world also shall be established - The word תבל tebel signifies the habitable globe, and may be a metonymy here, the container put for the ...
The world also shall be established - The word
Calvin -> Psa 96:10
Calvin: Psa 96:10 - -- 10.Say among the heathen, Jehovah reigneth His language again implies that it is only where God rules and presides that he can be worshipped. The Gen...
10.Say among the heathen, Jehovah reigneth His language again implies that it is only where God rules and presides that he can be worshipped. The Gentiles could not possibly profess the worship of God, so long as his throne was only in the small corner of Judea, and they were not acknowledging his government. Accordingly, the Psalmist speaks of his extending his kingdom to all parts of the world, with the view of gathering unto himself in one, those who had formerly been divided and scattered. The expression, Say among the heathen, signifies that God would enlarge the boundaries of his kingdom by his word and doctrine. What is said of the world being established, is particularly worthy of our observation. So far as the order of nature is concerned, we know that it has been Divinely established, and fixed from the beginning; that the same sun, moon, and stars, continue to shine in heaven; that the wicked and the unbelieving are sustained with food, and breathe the vital air, just as do the righteous. Still we are to remember that so long as un-godliness has possession of the minds of men, the world, plunged as it is in darkness, must be considered as thrown into a state of confusion, and of horrible disorder and misrule; for there can be no stability apart from God. The world is very properly here said therefore to be established, that it should not shake, when men are brought back into a state of subjection to God. We learn this truth from the passage, That though all the creatures should be discharging their various offices, no order can be said to prevail in the world, until God erect his throne and reign amongst men. What more monstrous disorder can be conceived of, than exists where the Creator himself is not acknowledged? Wicked and unbelieving men may be satisfied with their own condition, but it is necessarily most insecure, most unstable; and destitute as they are of any foundation in God, their life may be said to hang by a thread. 92 We are to recollect what we have seen taught, (Psa 46:5) “God is in the midst of the holy city, she shall not be moved.” Very possibly there may be an indirect allusion to the imperfect and uncompleted state of things under the Law, and a contrast may have been intended between the perfect condition of things which should obtain under Christ, and the prelude to it under the former period. Next he predicts that the kingdom to be introduced should be distinguished by righteousness, according to what we have seen, (Psa 45:6) “A scepter of righteousness is the scepter of thy kingdom.” The term judging, in the Hebrew, includes government of any kind. If God’s method of governing men be to form and regulate their lives to righteousness, we may infer, that however easily men may be satisfied with themselves, all is necessarily wrong with them, till they have been made subject to Christ. And this righteousness of which the Psalmist speaks has not reference merely to the outward actions. It comprehends a new heart, commencing as it does in the regeneration of the Spirit, by which we are formed again into the likeness of God.
TSK -> Psa 96:10
TSK: Psa 96:10 - -- Say : Psa 18:49, Psa 46:6, Psa 46:10, Psa 126:2; Mal 1:11, Mal 1:14; Gal 1:16
the Lord : Psa 2:8-12, Psa 59:13, Psa 93:1, Psa 97:1, Psa 99:1; Dan 2:44...
Say : Psa 18:49, Psa 46:6, Psa 46:10, Psa 126:2; Mal 1:11, Mal 1:14; Gal 1:16
the Lord : Psa 2:8-12, Psa 59:13, Psa 93:1, Psa 97:1, Psa 99:1; Dan 2:44; Mat 3:2; Rev 11:15, Rev 19:6
the world : Isa 49:8; Col 2:7; Heb 1:3
judge : Psa 96:13, Psa 9:8, Psa 67:4, Psa 98:9; Isa 11:3-5; Act 17:31; Rom 2:5, Rom 2:6, Rom 3:5, Rom 3:6; Rev 19:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 96:10
Barnes: Psa 96:10 - -- Say among the heathen - Among the nations; all nations. Make this proclamation everywhere. This is changed from the parallel passage in 1 Chr. ...
Say among the heathen - Among the nations; all nations. Make this proclamation everywhere. This is changed from the parallel passage in 1 Chr. 16. The language there is, "Fear before him, all the earth; the world also shall be stable, that it be not moved: let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice: and let people say among the nations, The Lord reigneth."The sense is, however, essentially the same. The idea here is, "Make universal proclamation that Yahweh is King."
That the Lord reigneth - See the notes at Psa 93:1.
The world also shall be established ... - Under the reign of God. The meaning is, that the world is fixed or immovable. It has its place, and it cannot be moved out of it. The government of God is fixed and stable. It is not temporary, changing, vacillating, like the dynasties of the earth, but is stedfast and abiding, and is well represented by the earth - so fixed and firm that nothing can move it from its place.
He shall judge the people righteously - The people of all lands; the nations of the earth. See the notes at Psa 67:4.
Poole -> Psa 96:10
Poole: Psa 96:10 - -- Say among the heathen: you converted Gentiles, declare this to those who yet remain in the darkness of heathenism.
That the Lord reigneth that God ...
Say among the heathen: you converted Gentiles, declare this to those who yet remain in the darkness of heathenism.
That the Lord reigneth that God hath now set up his throne and kingdom in the world. And as that kingdom shall never be destroyed, but shall stand for ever, as is said, Dan 2:44 ; so the nations of the world shall by the means of it enjoy an established and lasting peace; which is every where mentioned as one of the blessings which the Messiah shall give to the world, as Psa 72:3,7 Isa 9:6,7 66:12 Mic 5:5 Zec 9:10 .
He shall judge the people righteously he shall not abuse his invincible power and established dominion to the oppression of his people, as other princes frequently do, but shall govern them by the rules of justice and equity, which is the only foundation of a true and solid peace. See Isa 32:17 .
Gill -> Psa 96:10
Gill: Psa 96:10 - -- Say among the Heathen,.... This is a direction to such as were converted to Christ among the Jews, or were first called out from among the Gentiles; o...
Say among the Heathen,.... This is a direction to such as were converted to Christ among the Jews, or were first called out from among the Gentiles; or to the ministers of the word, the apostles and first preachers of the Gospel more especially, who were sent into all the world to preach the Gospel to every creature, that a people from among them might he taken for the Lord:
that the Lord reigneth; whose Gospel should be received and obeyed, and his ordinances submitted to; who now reigns in heaven, at his Father's right hand, and must reign till all enemies are put under his feet; he reigns in the hearts of his people by his Spirit and grace; will reign more gloriously in his churches in the latter day, and with his saints for a thousand years in the New Jerusalem church state; and, after that, to all eternity in heaven: this is one part of the Gospel, or good tidings to be published among the Gentiles, Isa 52:7,
the world also shall be established, that it shall not be moved; not the natural material world; for that shall flee, and pass away, and be no more; it shall be burnt up, and all things in it; though that, and mankind on it, will be continued till all the elect of God are gathered in; Christ will uphold it, it being by his power that it shall not be moved till the work is effected: moreover, the church, in however fluctuating and unsettled a condition it may be now, sometimes in one place, and sometimes in another, yet ere long will be established on the top of the mountains, so that it shall not be moved; and the Gospel dispensation is what will remain unto the end of time, and the Gospel is an everlasting one; the ordinances of it will continue to the second coming of Christ; and he will be with his churches to the end of the world; he is reigning King of Zion; has set up a government, of which, and the peace of it, there shall be no end: during the spiritual reign of Christ, the world will be in such stable tranquillity as to have no commotions in it, nor to be moved with wars, and rumours of wars; and when the Millennium shall take place, the new heavens and new earth shall never pass away:
he shall judge the people righteously: he reigns over his people in a righteous manner, with a sceptre of righteousness, according to the rules of righteousness, by righteous laws and ordinances; he justifies his people with his own righteousness; he forms the new man in them, which is created in righteousness, and sets up a kingdom within them, which consists of righteousness; and he protects and defends them, and keeps them in safety from all their enemies.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 96:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Psa 96:1-13 - --1 An exhortation to praise God,4 for his greatness;8 for his kingdom;11 for his general judgment.
MHCC -> Psa 96:10-13
MHCC: Psa 96:10-13 - --We are to hope and pray for that time, when Christ shall reign in righteousness over all nations. He shall rule in the hearts of men, by the power of ...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 96:10-13
Matthew Henry: Psa 96:10-13 - -- We have here instructions given to those who were to preach the gospel to the nations what to preach, or to those who had themselves received the go...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 96:10-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 96:10-11 - --
That which is to be said among the peoples is the joyous evangel of the kingdom of heaven which is now come and realized. The watchword is "Jahve is...
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...

Constable: Psa 96:1-13 - --Psalm 96
Here is another psalm that focuses on the reign of God. In it the psalmist called on all the ea...
