C24 EXPLANATORY NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS<
Whole Psalm. It will be seen that this Psalm was written to be chanted in
responsive parts, with two choruses. To comprehend it fully, it should be
understood that Jerusalem, as the city of God, was by the Jews regarded as a
type of heaven. It so occurs in the Apocalypse, whence we have adopted it
in our poetical and devotional aspirations. The court of the tabernacle was
the scene of the Lord's more immediate residencethe tabernacle his
palace, and the ark his throne. With this leading idea in his mind, the
most cursory readerif there be cursory readers of the Biblecannot
fail to be struck with the beauty and sublimity of this composition, and its
exquisite suitableness to the occasion. The chief musician, who was
probably in this case the king himself, appears to have begun the sacred lay
with a solemn and sonorous recital of these sentences:
"The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof;
The world, and they that dwell therein.
For he hath founded it upon the seas,
And established it upon the floods."
The chorus of vocal music appears to have then taken up the song, and
sung the same words in a more tuneful and elaborate harmony; and the
instruments and the whole chorus of the people fell in with them, raising
the mighty declaration to heaven. There is much reason to think that the
people, or a large body of them, were qualified or instructed to take their
part in this great ceremonial. The historical text says, "David, and all
the house of Israel played before the Lord, upon all manner of
instruments," etc. We may presume that the chorus then divided, each
singing in their turns, and both joining at the close
"For he hath founded it upon the seas,
And established it upon the floods."
This part of the music may be supposed to have lasted until the procession
reached the foot of Zion, or came in view of it, which from the nature of
the enclosed site, cannot be till one comes quite near to it. Then the king
must be supposed to have stepped forth, and begun again, in a solemn and
earnest tone
"Who shall ascend into the holy hill of the Lord?
Or who shall stand in his holy place?"
To which the first chorus responds
"He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart;
Who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully."
And then the second chorus
"He shall receive the blessing from the Lord,
And righteousness from the God of his salvation."
This part of the sacred song may, in like manner, be supposed to have lasted till they reached the gate of the city, when the king began again in this grand and exalted strain:
"Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
And be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors,
And the King of glory shall come in."
repeated then, in the same way as before, by the general chorus.
The persons having charge of the gates on this high occasion ask
"Who is the King of glory?"
To which the first chorus answers
"It is Jehovah, strong and mighty
Jehovah mighty in battle."
which the second chorus then repeats in like manner as before, closing it
with the grand universal chorus,
"He is the King of glory! He is the King of glory!"
We must now suppose the instruments to take up the same notes, and continue them to the entrance to the court of the tabernacle. There the
king again begins
"Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
And be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors;
And the King of glory shall come in."
This is followed and answered as beforeall closing, the instruments
sounding, the chorus singing, the people shouting
"He is the King of glory."
John Kitto's "Daily Bible Illustrations."
Whole Psalm. The coming of the Lord of glory, the high demands upon his
people proceeding from this, the absolute necessity to prepare worthily for
his arrival, form the subject-matter of this Psalm.
E. W. Hengstenberg.
Whole Psalm. We learn from the rabbins, that this was one of certain
Psalms which were sung in the performance of Jewish worship on each day in
the week:
The 24th Psalm on the 1st, the Lord's-day, our Sunday.
48th " 2nd "
82nd " 3rd "
94th " 4th "
81st " 5th "
93rd " 6th "
92nd " 7th, the Jewish Sabbath.
This Psalm, then, appropriated to the Lord's-day, our Sunday, was
intended to celebrate the resurrection of Messiah, and his ascension into
heaven, there to sit as priest upon God's throne, and from thence to come
down bringing blessings and mercies to his people.
R. H. Ryland.
Whole Psalm. Anthem of praise, performed when the heads of the gates of
Jerusalem were lifted up to receive the ark; and those of the Israelites who
were ceremoniously clean, were alone permitted to accompany it into the
court of the tabernacle. A Psalm of David. Verses 1, 2, chorus. 3. First
voice. 4, 5. Second voice. 6. Chorus. 7. Semi-chorus accompanying the
ark. 8. Voice from within the gates. 8. Chorus of priests accompanying the
ark. 9. Chorus of priests and people with the ark. 10. Voice within the
gates. 10. Grand chorus.
From "The Psalms, with Prefatory Titles, etc., from the Port Royal
Authors," by Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck, 1825.
Whole Psalm. How others may think upon this point, I cannot say, nor
pretend to describe, but for my own part, I have no notion of hearing, or of
any man's ever having seen or heard, anything so great, so solemn, so
celestial, on this side the gates of heaven.
Patrick Delany, D.D., 1686-1768.
Verse 1. "The earth is the Lord's," that is, Christ's, who is the "Lord
of lords" (Revelation 19:16); for the whole world and all the things therein
are his by a twofold title. First, by donation of God his Father, having
"all power given unto him in heaven and in earth" (Matthew 28:18), even
whatsoever things the Father hath are his (John 16:15); and so consequently
"made heir of all things." Hebrews 1:2. Secondly, the earth is Christ's
and all that therein is, by right of creation, for "he founded it," saith
our prophet, and that after a wonderful manner, "upon the seas and
floods." . . . All things then are Christ's, in respect of
creation , by whom all things were made" (John 1:3); in respect of
sustentation, as upholding all things by his mighty word (Hebrews 1:3); in
respect of administration, as reaching from one end to another, and
ordering all things sweetly (Wisdom 8:1): in one word"Of him, and
through him, and to him, are all things." Romans 11:36. From hence we may
learn (1), That Christ is "the King of glory," "Lord of Hosts," even
Almighty God. For he that made all, is "Lord over all;" he that is the
Creator of heaven and earth is Almighty (saith our Creed); able to do
whatsoever he will, and more than he will toomore by his absolute
power, than he will by his actual"able to raise up children unto
Abraham" out of the very stones of the street, though he doth not actually
produce such a generation. His almightiness evidently proves him to be God,
and his founding of the world his almightiness; for "The gods that have
not made the heaven and earth shall perish from the earth, and from under
these heavens." Jeremiah 10:11. (2.) Seeing the compass of the world and
all they that dwell therein are the Lord's, it is plain that the church is
not confined within the limits of one region, or glued, as it were, to one
seat only. The Donatists in old time, would tie the church only to
Cartenna in Africa, the Papists in our time to Rome in Italy; but the
Scriptures plainly affirm that the golden candlesticks are removed from one
place to another, and that the kingdom of God is taken away from one nation
and given unto another country that brings forth the fruit thereof; in every
region he that feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted of him.
Acts 10:35.
John Boys.
Verse 1. "The earth is Jehovah's." The object of the beginning of the
Psalm is to show that the Jews had nothing of themselves which could entitle
them to approach nearer or more familiarly to God than the Gentiles. As God
by his providence preserves the world, the power of his government is alike
extended to all, so that he ought to be worshipped by all, even as he also
shows to all men, without exception, the fatherly care he has about them.
J. Calvin.
Verse 1. "The earth is the Lord's." It is Christ's, by creation (verse
2; John 1:1, 2), and it is his by resurrection (Matthew 28:18), and by his
glorious ascension into heaven, where he is enthroned King of the world in
his human nature. This Psalm takes up the language of the first Ascension
Psalm (Psalm 8.)
Christopher Wordsworth, D.D., in loc.
Verse 1. St. Chrysostom, suffering under the Empress Eudoxia, tells his
friend Cyriacus how he armed himself before hand: ei me ' bouletai n
basilissa e xorisai me, etc. "I thought, will she banish me? 'The earth
is the Lord's and the fulness thereof.' Take away my goods? 'Naked came
I into the world, and naked must I return.' Will she stone me? I
remembered Stephen. Behead me? John Baptist came into my mind," etc. Thus
it should be with every one that intends to live and die comfortably: they
must, as we say, lay up something for a rainy day; they must stock
themselves with graces, store up promises, and furnish themselves with
experiences of God's lovingkindness to others and themselves too, that so
when the evil day comes, they may have much good coming thereby.
John Spencer.
Verse 1. "The earth is the Lord's." As David, in his youthful days,
was tending his flocks on Bethlehem's fertile plains, the spirit of the Lord
descended upon him, and his senses were opened, and his understanding
enlightened, so that he could understand the songs of the night. The
heavens proclaimed the glory of God, and glittering stars formed the general
chorus, their harmonious melody resounded upon earth, and the sweet fulness
of their voices vibrated to it utmost bounds.
Light is the countenance of the Eternal," sung the setting sun: "I am
the hem of his garment," responded the soft and rosy twilight. The clouds
gathered themselves together and said, "We are his nocturnal tent." And the
waters in the clouds, and the hollow voices of the thunders, joined in the
lofty chorus, "The voice of the Eternal is upon the waters, the God of glory
thundereth in the heavens, the Lord is upon many waters."
"He flieth upon my wings," whispered the winds, and the gentle air
added, "I am the breath of God, the aspirations of his benign presence."
"We hear the songs of praise," said the parched earth; "all around is
praise; I alone am sad and silent." Then the falling dew replied, "I will
nourish thee, so that thou shalt be refreshed and rejoice, and thy infants
shall bloom like the young rose." "Joyfully we bloom," sang the refreshed
meads; the full ears of corn waved as they sang, "We are the blessing of
God, the hosts of God against famine."
"We bless thee from above," said the gentle moon; "We, too, bless thee,"
responded the stars; and the lightsome grasshopper chirped, "Me, too, he
blesses in the pearly dew-drop." "He quenched my thirst," said the roe;
"And refreshed me," continued the stag; "And grants us our food," said the
beasts of the forest; "And clothes my lambs," gratefully added the sheep.
"He heard me," croaked the raven, "when I was forsaken and alone;" "He
heard me," said the wild goat of the rocks, "when my time came, and I
brought forth." And the turtle-dove cooed, and the swallow and other birds
joined the song, "We have found our nests, our houses, we dwell upon the
altar of the Lord, and sleep under the shadow of his wing in tranquillity
and peace." "And peace," replied the night, and echo prolonged the sound,
when chanticleer awoke the dawn, and crowed with joy, "Open the portals, set
wide the gates of the world! The King of glory approaches. Awake! Arise,
ye sons of men, give praises and thanks unto the Lord, for the King of glory
approaches."
The sun arose, and David awoke from his melodious rapture. But as long
as he lived the strains of creation's harmony remained in his soul, and
daily he recalled them from the strings of his harp.
From the "Legend of the Songs of the Night," in the Talmud, quoted in
"Biblical Antiquities." By F. A. Cox, D.D., LL.D., 1852.
Verse 1. The pious mind views all things in God,, and God in all things.
Ingram Cobbin, 1839.
Verse 2. "He hath founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the
floods." This founding the land upon the seas, and preparing it upon
the floods, is so wonderfully wonderful, that Almighty God asked his
servant Job, "Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened?" Job 38:6.
Xerxes commanded his soldiers to fetter the waters of Hellispontus; and so
God bindeth, as it were, the floods in fetters, at St. Basil plainly,
Ligatum est mare præcepto Creatoris quasi compedibus; he saith unto the
sea, "Hitherto shalt thou come, but no further, there shall it stay thy
proud waves." "He gathereth the waters of the sea together as an heap; he
layeth up the depth in storehouses" (Job 38:11; Psalm 33:7); so that without
his leave not so much as one drop can overflow the land.
John Boys.
Verse 2. (New translation.) "For he hath founded it upon the seas, and
upon streams doth he make it fast." The reference is no doubt to the
account of the Creation, in Genesis, the dry land having emerged from the
water, and seeming to rest upon it. (Comp. 136:6; Proverbs 8:29.) It
would, however, be quite out of place to suppose that in such language we
have the expression of any theory, whether popular or scientific, as to the
structure of the earth's surface: Job says (26:7), "He hangeth the earth
upon nothing." Such expressions are manifestly poetical. See Job 38:6.
J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verse 2. "Upon the seas:" that is, upon the great abyss of water which
is under the earth, enclosed in great hollow places, whence the heads of
rivers do spring, and other waters bubble out upon the earth.
John Diodati.
Verse 2. "Above the floods he hath established it." Both the words
(Heb.) (Al) in the two clauses of this verse mean either "above" as we have
rendered it, and refer to Genesis 1:9, 10, denoting that Jehovah hath called
forth dry land from the midst of the seas, and established it above the
floods, and hath set a boundary to the latter never to turn and overflow it
(see Job 38:8; Psalm 104. chronologically Psalm 7:9); or "by, or at," as
they often denote, and refer to the same subject of the omnipotence of God
in relation to the same quoted passages, i.e., that though our globe is
situated at or by the floodsis surrounded with mighty waters whose
single wave could bury it for ever, still the Lord has so established it
that this never can happen. This is a mighty reason why the earth and all
its fulness and inhabitants belong to Jehovah.
Benjamin Weiss.
Verse 2. Hereby is mystically meant, that he hath set his church above
the waters of adversities, so that how high soever they arise, it is kept
still above them in safety, and so shall be for evermore; or it may agree
thushe will take in all nations to be in his grace, because all be his
creatures; he made them so admirable an habitation at the first, and upholds
it still, showing hereby how much he regards them; therefore he will now
extend his favour further towards them, by taking them in to be his people.
Augustine, quoted by Mayer.
Verse 3. "Who shall ascend?" Indeed, if none must ascend but he that
is clean and pure, and without vanity and deceit, the question is quickly
answered, None shall, for there is none so: dust is our matter, so not
clean; defiled is our nature, so not pure; lighter, the heaviest of us, than
vanity, and deceitful upon the balance the best of us; so no ascending so
high for any of us. Yet there is One we hear of, or might have heard of
to-day, that rose and ascended up on high, was thus qualified as the
psalmist speaks of, all clean and pure, no chaff at all, no guile found in
his mouth. 1 Peter 2:22. Yes, but it was but One that was so; what's that
to all the rest? Yes, somewhat 'tis. He was our Head, and if the Head
be once risen and ascended, the members will all follow after in their time.
Mark Frank.
Verse 3. "The hill of the Lord," can be no other than a hill of glory.
His holy place is no less than the very place and seat of glory. And being
such, you cannot imagine it but hard to come by, the very petty glories of
the world are so. This is a hill of glory, hard to climb, difficult to
ascend, craggy to pass up, steep to clamber, no plain campagnia to it, the
broad easy way leads some whither else (Matthew 7:13); the way to this is
narrow (verse 14); 'tis rough and troublesome. To be of the number of
Christ's true faithful servants is no slight work; 'tis a fight, 'tis a
race, 'tis a continual warfare; fastings and watchings, and cold and
nakedness, and hunger and thirst, bonds, imprisonments, dangers and
distresses, ignominy and reproach, afflictions and persecutions, the world's
hatred and our friend's neglect, all that we call hard or difficult is to be
found in the way we are to go. A man cannot leave a lust, shake off bad
company, quit a course of sin, enter upon a way of virtue, profess his
religion, or stand to it, cannot ascend the spiritual hill, but he will
meet some or other of these to contest and strive with. But not only to
ascend, but to stand there, as the word signifies; to continue at so high
a pitch, to be constant in truth and piety, that will be hard indeed, and
bring more difficulties to contest with.
Mark Frank.
Verses 3, 4. The Psalm begins with a solicitous enquiry, subjoins a
satisfactory answer, and closes with a most pertinent but rapturous
apostrophe. This is the enquiry, "Who shall ascend into the hill of the
Lord? or who shall stand in his holy place?" This is the answer, "He that
hath clean hands, and a pure heart;" "he shall receive the blessing" of
plenary remission "from the Lord, and righteousness also from the God of
his salvation:" even that perfect righteousness which is not acquired by
man, but bestowed by Jehovah; which is not performed by the saint, but
received by the sinner; which is the only solid basis to support our hopes
of happiness, the only valid plea for an admission into the mansions of joy.
Then follows the apostrophe: the prophet foresees the ascension of Christ
and his saints into the kingdom of heaven. He sees his Lord marching at the
head of the redeemed world, and conducting them into regions of honour and
joy. Suitably to such a view, and in a most beautiful strain of poetry, he
addresses himself to the heavenly portals. "Lift up your heads, O ye
gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory,"
with all the heirs of his grace and righteousness, shall make their
triumphant entry; "shall enter in," and go out no more.
James Hervey.
Verses 3, 4. It is not he who sings so well or so many Psalms, nor he who
fasts or watches so many days, nor he who divides his own among the poor,
nor he who preaches to others, nor he who lives quietly, kindly, and
friendly; nor, in fine, is it he who knows all sciences and languages, nor
he who works all virtuous and all good works that ever any man spoke or read
of, but it is he alone, who is pure within and without.
Martin Luther.
Verse 4. "He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart." Shall I tell
you, then, who is a moral man in the sight of God? It is he that bows to
the divine law as the supreme rule of right; he that is influenced by a
governing regard to God in all his actions; he that obeys other commands
spontaneously, because he has obeyed the first and great command, "Give me
thy heart." His conduct is not conformed to custom or expediency, but to
one consistent, immutable standard of duty. Take this man into a court of
justice, and call on him to testify, and he will not bear false witness.
Give him the charge of untold treasures, he will not steal. Trust him with
the dearest interests of yourself or family, you are safe, because he has a
living principle of truth and integrity in his bosom. He is as worthy of
confidence in the dark as at noonday; for he is a moral man, not because
reputation or interest demands it, not because the eye of public observation
is fixed upon him, but because the love and fear of God have predominant
ascendency in his heart.
Ebenezer Porter, D.D., 1834.
Verse 4. Conditions that suit none but Christ. (Bellarmine.) "He that
hath clean hands;" "the clean of hands," Margin:those hands from which
went forth virtue and healing; hands ever lifted up in prayer to God, or in
blessing to man; hands stretched forth on the cross for the cleansing of the
whole world.
Isaac Williams, in loc.
Verse 4. "Who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity," is read by
Arius Montanus, "He that hath not received his soul in vain." Oh! how many
receive their souls in vain, making no more use of them than the swine, of
whom the philosopher observes, cujus anima pro sale, their souls are only
for salt to keep their bodies from stinking. Who would not grieve to think
that so choice a piece should be employed about so vain a use!
George Swinnock.
Verse 4. "Nor sworn deceitfully;" or inured his tongue to any other
kind of language of hell's rotten communication, to the dishonouring of God,
or deceiving of others. Perjury is here instanced for the rest, as one of
the most heinous. But Peraldus reckoneth up four-and-twenty several sins of
the tongue, all which every burgess of the New Jerusalem is careful to
avoid, as the devil's drivel, no way becoming his pure lip.
John Trapp.
Verse 4. Now we come to the four conditions requisite to render such an
ascent possible. 1. Abstinence from evil doing: "He that hath clean
hands." 2. Abstinence from evil thought: "and a pure heart." 3. Who
does that duty which he is sent into the world to do: "That hath not lifted
up his mind unto vanity;" or, as it is in the Vulgate, "Who hath no
received his soul in vain." And, 4. Remembers the vows by which he is
bound to God: "nor sworn to deceive." And in the fullest sense, there was
but One in whom all these things were fulfilled; so that in reply to the
question, "Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord?" He might well
answer, "No man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from
heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven." John 3:13. "Therefore it
is well-written," says St. Bernard, "that such an High Priest became us,
because he knows the difficulty of that ascent to the celestial mountain, he
knows the weakness of us that have to ascend."
Lorinus and Bernard, quoted by J. M. Neale.
Verse 4. Heaven is not won with good words and a fair profession. The
doing Christian is the man that shall stand, when the empty boaster of his
faith shall fall. The great talkers of religion are often the least doers.
His religion is in vain whose profession brings not letters testimonial from
a holy life.
William Gurnall.
Verse 5. "He shall receive the blessing;" as before, "Thou shalt set
him to be a blessing." Psalm 21:6. His name is never without blessing. In
him shall all the nations of the earth be blessed. On the mount of his
beatitudes, on the heavenly Mount Sion, crowned as "the Son of the Blessed."
"From the Lord;" even "the God and father of our Lord Jesus Christ."
Ephesians 1:3.
Isaac Williams.
Verse 5. "He shall receive . . . righteousness." As for our own
righteousness which we have without him, Esay telleth us, "it is a defiled
cloth;" and St. Paul, that it is but "dung." Two very homely comparisons,
but they be the Holy Ghost's own; yet nothing so homely as in the original,
where they be so odious, as what manner of defiled cloth, or what kind of
dung, we have not dared to translate. Our own then being no better, we are
driven to seek for it elsewhere. "He shall receive his righteousness,"
saith the prophet; and "the gift of righteousness," saith the apostle.
Philippians 3:8, 9; Romans 5:17. It is then another, to be given us, and
to be received by us, which we must seek for. And whither shall we go for
it? Job alone dispatcheth this point (chapter 15:15; 4:18; 25:5.) Not to
the heavens or stars, they are unclean in his sight. Not to the
saints , for in them he found folly. Not to the angels, for neither in
them found he steadfastness. Now, if none of these will serve, we see a
necessary reason why Jehovah must be a part of this name, "the LORD our
righteousness." Jeremiah 23:6.
Lancelot Andrewes.
Verse 6. "This is the generation of them that seek him, that seek thy
face." Christians must be seekers. This is the generation of seekers.
All mankind, if ever they will come to heaven, they must be a generation of
seekers. Heaven is a generation of finders, of possessors, of enjoyers,
seekers of God. But here we are a generation of seekers. We want somewhat
that we must seek. When we are at best, we want the accomplishment of our
happiness. It is a state of seeking here, because it is a state of want; we
want something alway. But to come more particularly to this seeking the
face of God , or the presence of God. . . . The presence of God meant here
is, that presence that he shows in the time of need, and in his
ordinances. He shows a presence in need and necessity, that is, a gracious
presence to his children, a gracious face. As in want of direction, he
shows his presence of light to direct them; in weakness he shows his
strength; in trouble and perplexity he will show his gracious and
comfortable presence to comfort them. In perplexity he shows his presence
to set the heart at large, answerable to the necessity. So in need God is
present with his children, to direct them, to comfort them, to strengthen
them, if they need that.
Richard Sibbes.
Verse 6. "This is the generation." By the demonstrative pronoun
"this," the psalmist erases from the catalogue of the servants of God all
counterfeit Israelites, who, trusting only to their circumcision and the
sacrifice of beasts, have no concern about offering themselves to God; and
yet, at the same time, they rashly thrust themselves into the church.
John Calvin.
Verse 6. "That seek thy face, O Jacob." In Proverbs 7:15, and 29:26,
we have "seeking the face of" in the sense of seeking the favour of, or
showing delight in. Their delight is not in Esau, who got "the fatness of
earth" (Genesis 27:39) as his portion. And those writers may be right, who
consider Jacob as a name for Messiah, to whom belong the true birthright and
blessing.
Andrew A. Bonar.
Verse 6. "That seek thy face, O Jacob." He is "the seed of Jacob;" he
is "the Holy One of Israel;" "the face of thine Anointed" is the face of him
who is both God and man; for "we shall see him as he is."
Isaac Williams.
Verse 6. "O Jacob," or O God of Jacob. As the church is called
Christ (1 Corinthians 12:12), so God is here called "Jacob;" such a near
union there is betwixt him and his people. Or, this is Jacob. So the
true seekers are fitly called, first because Israelites indeed (John 1:47;
Romans 9:6); secondly, because they see God face to face, as Jacob did at
Peniel (Genesis 32:24-30); thirdly, because they also, as he, do bear away
a blessing (Hosea 12:4), even "righteousness from the God of their
salvation," as in the verse aforegoing.
John Trapp.
Verse 7. "Lift up your heads, O ye gates." The gates of the temple
were indeed as described, very lofty and magnificent, in proportion to the
gigantic dimensions of that extraordinary edifice. But the phrase, "Lift
up your heads," refers not so much to their loftiness, as to the upper part
being formed so as to be lifted up; while the under portion opened in
folding doors.
Robert Jamieson, in "Paxton's Illustrations of Scriptures."
Verse 7. "Lift up your heads, O ye gates." At the castle of Banias, in
Syria, are the remains of an ancient gate which was drawn up, like a blind,
the gate fitting in grooves. This will fully explain the term.
John Gadsby.
Verse 7. "Lift up." A phrase or term taken from triumphal arches, or
great porticoes, set up, or beautified and adorned for the coming in of
great, victorious, and triumphant captains.
John Diodati.
Verse 7. "Be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory
shall come in." Some interpret this of the doors of our heart, according
to that (Revelation 3:20), "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any
man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him," etc. In the
gospel history, we find that Christ had a fourfold entertainment among men.
Some received him into house, not into heart, as Simon the Pharisee (Luke
7:44), who gave him no kiss nor water to his feet; some into heart, but not
into house, as the faithful centurion (Matthew 8:8), esteeming himself
unworthy that Christ should come under his roof; some neither into house nor
heart, as the graceless Gergesites (Matthew 8:34); some both into house and
heart, as Lazarus, Mary, Martha. John 3:15; Luke 10:38. Now that Christ
may dwell in our hearts by faith, and that our bodies may be temples of his
Holy Spirit, we must as our prophet exhorts here, lift up our souls, that
is, in the words of St. Paul (Colossians 3:2), our affections must be set on
things which are above, and not on things which are on earth: if we desire
to lift up our hearts unto Christ's verity, we may not lift them up unto the
world's vanity; that is, we must not fasten our love too much upon the
things of this life, but on those pleasures at God's right hand which are
evermore; that as we have borne the image of the first Adam, who was
earthly, so we should bear the image of the second Adam, which is heavenly.
1 Corinthians 15:49. The prophane worldling sings a Nunc dimittis unto
Christ, and saith as the devils, "Ah! what have we to do with thee, thou
Jesus of Nazareth?" (Mark 1:24); and as Job reports his words, "Depart from
us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways." Job 21:14. On the
contrary, the religious soul, enjoying the possession of the Saviour,
chanteth a merry Magnificat, and a pleasant Te Deum: she saith unto
Christ, as Ruth unto Naomi (Ruth 1:16), "Intreat me not to leave thee, or to
return from following after thee." Nay, death itself shall not part us, for
when I am loosed out of my body's prison, I hope to be with Christ; as Ittai
then unto David, I say unto Jesus, "As the Lord liveth, and as my lord the
king liveth, surely in what place my lord the king shall be, whether in
death, or life, even there also will thy servant be." 2 Samuel 15:21. O
Lord, which art the God of my salvation, I lift my heart to thee, desirous
to seek thee, both in the right ubi where thou mayest be found, and in
the right quando while thou mayest be found. Psalm 18:47; 25:1. Open
my dull ears and hard heart, that thy Son my Saviour may come in and dwell
with me. Grant me grace that I may still hear while he calleth, open while
he knocketh, and hold him also when I have him; that I may both ascend
thine hill, and stand in thy holy place; that I may not only sojourn in
thy tabernacle, but also rest and dwell upon the mountain of thine holiness.
John Boys.
Verse 7. "Everlasting doors." Heaven's gates are called
"everlasting," because they shall endure for ever, or because they be the
doors unto the life which is everlasting.
John Boys.
Verse 7. Whatever we may think of these things, David thought it high
time for him to bid such a messenger welcome, and to open his heart for the
receiving of his God. Hear what he saith to his own heart and others:
"Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors;
and the King of glory shall come in." And because the door of men's hearts
is locked, and barred, and bolted, and men are in a deep sleep, and will not
hear the knocking that is at the gate, though it be loud, though it be a
king; therefore David knocks again, "Lift up, ye everlasting doors." Why,
what haste, saith the sinner? What haste? Why, here's the King at your
gates; and that not an ordinary king neither; he is a glorious King, that
will honour you so far, if you open quickly, as to lodge within, to take up
his abode in your house, to dwell with you. But the soul for all this doth
not yet open, but stands still questioning, as if it were an enemy rather
than a friend that stood there, and asks, "Who is this King of glory?"
Who? He answers again, "It is the Lord of Hosts;" he, that if you will
not open quickly and thankfully too, can easily pull your house down about
your ears; he is the Lord of hosts, that King who hath a mighty army always
at his command, who stand ready to their commission, and then you should
know who it is you might have had for your friend; "Lift up, therefore, your
heads, O ye gates." Open quickly, ye that had rather have God for your
friend, than for your enemy. Oh, why should not the soul of every sinner
cry out, Lord, the door is locked, and thou hast the key; I have been trying
what I can do, but the wards are so rusty that I cannot possibly turn the
key? But, Lord, throw the door off the hinges, anything in the world, so
thou wilt but come in and dwell here. Come, O mighty God, break through
doors of iron, and bars of brass, and make way for thyself by thy love and
power. Come, Lord, and make thyself welcome; all that I have is at thy
service; O fit my soul to entertain thee!
James Janeway.
Verse 7. He hath left with us the earnest if the Spirit, and taken from
us the earnest of our flesh, which he hath carried into heaven as a pledge
that the whole shall follow after.
Tertullian.
Verse 7. Christ is gone to heaven as a victor; leading sin, Satan, death,
hell, and all his enemies, in triumph at his chariot wheels. He has not
only overcome his enemies for himself, but for all his people, whom he will
make conquerors, yea, "more than conquerors." As he has overcome, so shall
they also overcome; and as he has gone to heaven a victor, they shall follow
in triumph. He is in heaven as a Saviour. When he came from heaven it was
in the character of a Saviour; when on earth he obtained eternal salvation;
in heaven he lives as a Saviour; when he comes again from heaven he will
come as a Saviour; and when he will return, he will return as a Saviour. He
is also gone to heaven as the rightful heir. He is not gone to heaven as a
sojourner, but as "the heir of all things." He is the heir of heavenly
glory and happiness, and believers are "heirs of God, and joint heirs with
Christ."
Henry Pendlebury, 1626-1695.
Verse 7. O clap your hands together, all ye people; sing unto God with
the voice of melody. God is gone up with a merry noise, and the Lord with
the sound of the trump." Psalm 47: 1, 5. This Ark, which has saved the
world from destruction, after floating on a deluge of blood, rests at length
on the mountain. This innocent Joseph, whose virtue has been oppressed by
the synagogue, is brought out of the dungeon to receive a crown. This
invincible Samson has carried away the gates of hell, and goes in triumph to
the everlasting hills. This victorious Joshua has passed over Jordan with
the ark of the covenant, and taken possession of the land of the living.
This Sun of righteousness, which had gone down ten degrees, returns
backward to the place which it had left. He who was "a worm" at his birth,
a Lamb in his passion, and a Lion in his resurrection, now ascends as an
Eagle to heaven, and encourages us to follow him thither. This day heaven
learns to endure man's presence, and men to walk above the stars; the
heavenly Jerusalem receives its rightful King, the church its High Priest,
the house of God its Heritor, the whole world its Ruler. "O sing praises,
sing praises unto our God: O sing praises, sing praises unto our King."
Psalm 47:6-8. "God reigneth over the heathen, God sitteth upon his holy
seat." "The princes of the people are joined unto" him; "he is very highly
exalted" above them.
From "The Life of Jesus Christ in Glory," translated from the French of
James Nouet.
Verses 7, 8. Christ being now arrived at heaven's doors, those heavenly
spirits that accompanied him began to say, "Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come
in!" to whom some of the angels that were within, not ignorant of his
person, but admiring his majesty and glory, said again, "Who is the King of
glory?" and then they answered "The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord
mighty in battle," and thereupon those twelve gates of the holy city, of
New Jerusalem, opened of their own accord, and Jesus Christ with all his
ministering spirits entered in. O my soul, how should this heighten thy joy
and enlarge thy comforts, in that Christ is now received up into glory?
Every sight of Christ is glorious, and in every sight thou shouldst wait on
the Lord Jesus Christ for some glorious manifestations of himself. Come,
live up to the rate of this great mystery; view Christ as entering into
glory, and thou wilt find the same sparkle of glory on thy heart. O! this
sight is a transforming sight: "We all, with open face beholding as in a
glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to
glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord." 2 Corinthians 3:18.
Isaac Ambrose.
Verses 7, 8. Ye that are thus the living temples of the Lord, and have
already entertained his sanctifying Spirit into you, do you lift up your
hearts in the use of holy ordinances through faith, in joyful desires and
assured expectation of him; yea, be you abundantly lift up by faith in the
use of holy means who are the everlasting habitation of an everlasting God,
with a joyful and assured welcome of him; for so shall you invite and
undoubtedly entertain the high and mighty Potentate the Lord Christ into
your souls, with the glorious manifestation and ravishing operation of his
love, benefits, and graces. And know, O all ye faithful and obedient ones,
for your courage and comfort, who, and of what quality this glorious King,
the Lord Jesus is, whom the world despises but you honour. Why, he is the
Almighty God, of power all-sufficient to preserve and defend his people and
church, that in trust of him do love and serve him, against all the strength
and power of men and devils that do or shall malign or oppose themselves
against them, and to put them to the foil, as we his Israel in the letter
have found by experience for your instruction and corroboration that are his
people in spirit.
George Abbot, in "Brief notes upon the whole Book of Psalms," 1651.
Verses 7-10. Oh, what tongue of the highest archangel of heaven can
express the welcome of thee, the King of glory, into these blessed regions
of immortality? Surely the empyreal heaven never resounded with so much
joy: God ascended with jubilation and the Lord with the sound of the
trumpet. It is not for us, weak and finite creatures, to wish to conceive
those incomprehensible, spiritual, divine gratulations, that the glorious
Trinity gave to the victorious and now glorified human nature. Certainly
if, when he brought his only-begotten Son into the world, he said, "Let all
the angels worship him;" much more now that he, "ascendeth on high, and hath
led captivity captive, hath he given him a name above all names, that at the
name of Jesus all knees should bow." And if the holy angels did so carol at
his birth, in the very entrance into that state of humiliation and
infirmity, with what triumph did they receive him now returning from the
perfect achievement of man's redemption? and if, when his type had
vanquished Goliath, and carried his head into Jerusalem, the damsels came
forth to meet him with dances and timbrels, how shall we think those angelic
spirits triumphed, in meeting of the great Conqueror of hell and death? How
did they sing, "Lift up your heads, ye gates! and be lifted up, ye
everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in." Surely, as he
shall come, so he went; and, "Behold, he shall come with thousands of his
holy ones; thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand
thousands stood before him;" from all whom, methinks I hear that blessed
applause, "Worthy is the Lamb that was killed, to receive power, and riches,
and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and praise: praise and
honour, and glory, and power, be to him that sitteth upon the throne, and to
the Lamb for evermore." And why dost not thou, O my soul, help to bear thy
part with that happy choir of heaven? Why art not thou rapt out of my
bosom, with an ecstasy of joy, to see this human nature of ours exalted
above all the powers of heaven, adored of angels, archangels, cherubim,
seraphim, and all those mighty and glorious spirits, and sitting there
crowned with infinite glory and majesty?
Joseph Hall.
Verses 7-10. In the twenty-fourth Psalm, we have an account of the
actual entrance of Christ into heaven. When the King of England wishes to
enter the city of London through Temple Bar, the gate being closed against
him, the herald demands entrance. "Open the gate." From within a voice is
heard, "Who is there?" The herald answers, "The King of England!" The gate
is at once opened, and the king passes, amidst the joyful acclamations of
his people. This is an ancient custom, and the allusion is to it in this
Psalm. "The Lord ascended with a shout;" he approached the heavenly portal
the herald in his escort demanded an entrance, "Lift up your heads, O
ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory
shall come in." The celestial watchers within ask, "Who is the King of
glory?" The heralds answer, "The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty
in battle." The question and answer being repeated once more, the gates
lift up their heads, and the everlasting doors are lifted up. The Prince
enters his Father's palace, greeted with the acclamations of heaven, all
whose inhabitants unite in one shout of joy ineffable: "The Lord of Hosts,
he is the King of glory!"
Christmas Evans.
Verses 7-10. If we follow our Redeemer in his ascension and session at
the right hand of God, where he is constituted Lord of all, angels,
principalities, and powers being made subject to him, and where he sits till
his enemies are made his footstool, we shall observe the tide of celestial
blessedness rise higher and higher still. The return of a great and beloved
prince, who should by only hazarding his life, have saved his country, would
fill a nation with ecstasy. Their conversation in every company would turn
upon him, and all their thoughts and joys concentrate in him. See then the
King of kings, after having by death abolished death, and brought life and
immortality to light; after spoiling the powers of darkness, and ruining all
their schemes; see him return in triumph! There was something like triumph
when he entered into Jerusalem. All the city was moved, saying, "Who is
this?" And the multitude answered, It is Jesus, the prophet of Nazareth;
and the very children sung, Hosannah to the Son of David: blessed be he that
cometh in the name of the Lord; hosannah in the highest! How much greater
then must be the triumph of his entry into the heavenly Jerusalem! Would
not all the city be "moved" in this case, saying, "Who is this?" See
thousands of angels attending him, and ten thousand times ten thousand come
forth to meet him! The entrance of the ark into the city of David was but a
shadow of this, and the responsive strains which were sung on that occasion
would on this be much more applicable.
Andrew Fuller.
Verses 7-10. Why is the song repeated? Why are the everlasting gates
invited to lift up their heads a second time? We may not pretend here, or
in any place, to know all the meaning of the divine Psalms. But what if the
repetition of the verse was meant to put us in mind that our Saviour's
ascension will be repeated also? He will not indeed die any more; death can
no more have any dominion over him; "there remaineth no more sacrifice for
sin." Neither of course can he rise again any more. But as he will come
again at the end of the world, to judge the quick and the dead, so after
that descent he will have to ascend again. And I say, this second ascension
may be signified by the psalmist, calling on the everlasting doors to lift
up their heads a second time, and make way for the King of glory. Now
observe the answer made this second time, "Who is the King of glory? The
Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle. Lift up your heads, O ye
gates; even lift them up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall
come in. Who is this King of glory? The Lord of hosts, he is the King of
glory." Before it was, "the Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in
battle;" now it is "The Lord of hosts." Christ ascending the first time,
to intercede for us at his Father's right hand, is called "The Lord mighty
in battle." But Christ, ascending the second time, after the world hath
been judged, and the good and bad separated for ever, is called "the Lord
of hosts." Why this difference in his divine titles? We may reverently
take it, that it signifies to us the difference between his first and second
coming down to earth, his first and second ascension into heaven. As in
other respects his first coming was with great humility, so in this, that he
came, in all appearance, alone. The angels were indeed waiting round him,
but not visibly, not in glory. "He trode the winepress alone, and of the
people there was none with him." He wrestled with death, hell, and Satan,
alone. Alone he rose from the dead: alone, as far as man could see, he went
up to heaven. Thus he showed himself "the Lord mighty in battle," mighty in
that single combat which he, as our champion, our David, victoriously
maintained against our great enemy. But when he shall come down and go up
the second time, he will show himself "the Lord of hosts." Instead of coming
down alone in mysterious silence, as in his wonderful incarnation, he will
be followed by all the armies of heaven. "The Lord my God will come, and
all his saints with him." "The Lord cometh with ten thousand of his
saints." "The Son of Man will come in the glory of his Father, and all the
holy angels with him." "Thousand thousands will stand around him, and ten
thousand times ten thousand will minister unto him." Instead of the silence
of that quiet chamber at Nazareth, and of the holy Virgin's womb, there will
be the voice of the archangel, and the trump of God accompanying him. Thus
he will come down as the Lord of hosts, and as the Lord of hosts, he will
ascend again to his Father. After the judgment, he will pass again through
the everlasting doors, with a greater company than before; for he will lead
along with him, into the heavenly habitation, all those who shall have been
raised from their graves and found worthy. Hear how the awful sight is
described by one who will doubtless have a high place in that day near the
Judge. The great apostle and prophet St. Paul, says, "The Lord himself
shall descend from heaven with a shout; and the dead in Christ shall rise
first: then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with
them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air, and so shall we ever be
with the Lord."
John Keble, M.A.
Verses 7-10.
In this blessed life
I see the path, and in his death the price,
And in his great ascent the proof supreme
Of immortality. And did he rise?
Hear, O ye nations! hear it, O ye dead!
He rose! He rose! He burst the bars of death.
Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates!
And give the King of glory to come in.
Who is the King of glory? He who left
His throne of glory for the pangs of death.
Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates!
And give the King of glory to come in.
Who is the King of glory? He who slew
The ravenous foe that gorged all human race.
The King of glory, he whose glory filled
Heaven with amazement at his love to man,
And with divine complacency beheld
Powers most illumined 'wildered in the theme.
Edward Young.
Verses 7-10.
Lift up your heads, ye gates, and, O prepare,
Ye living orbs, your everlasting doors,
The King of glory comes!
What King of glory? He whose puissant might
Subdued Abaddon, and the infernal powers
Of darkness bound in adamantine chains:
Who, wrapp'd in glory, with the Father reigns,
Omnipotent, immortal, infinite!
James Scott.
Verse 8. "Who is the King of glory?" Christ in two respects is "the
King of glory." 1. For that all honour and glory belongs properly to him
his is "the kingdom, the power, and the glory" (Matthew 6:13), called in
this regard, "The Lord of glory." 1 Corinthians 2:8. 2. For that Christ
maketh us partakers of his glory, termed in this respect our glorious Lord
Jesus. James 2:1. If the Lord of hosts, strong and mighty in battle, be
the King of glory, then Christ (having conquered all his enemies, and made
them his footstool, triumphing over death, and the devil which is the
founder of death, and sin which is the sting of death, and the grave which
is the prison of death, and hell itself which is the proper dominion of the
devil and death) is doubtless in himself, "the King of glory." And for as
much as he died for our sins, and is risen again for our justification, and
is ascended on high to give gifts unto menin this life grace, in the
next glorywhat is he less than a "King of glory" towards us, of whom
and through whom alone we find that fight his battles are delivered from the
hands of all that hate us, and so made victors (1 Corinthians 15:57), yea,
"more than conquerors." Romans 8:37.
John Boys.
Verse 8. "The Lord strong and mighty." "Strong and mighty" in
subduing all adversaries; and overcoming death and the devil who had the
power of death.
Ludolphus, quoted by Isaac Williams.
Verse 10. "Jehovah of hosts," or, as the Hebrew is, Jehovah Tsebaoth,
for so the word is used by the apostles, untranslated in the Greek,
Sabaoth. Romans 9:29. It signifieth hosts or armies standing ready
in martial order, and in battle array, and comprehendeth all creatures in
heaven and in earth, which are pressed to do the will of God.
Henry Ainsworth.
HINTS TO THE VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse 1. The great Proprietor, his estates and his servants, his rights
and wrongs.
Verse 1. "The earth is the Lord's."
I. Mention other claimantsidols: pope, man, devil, etc.,
II. Try the suit.
III. Carry out the verdict. Use our substance, preach everywhere, claim all things for God.
IV. See how glorious the earth looks when she bears her Master's name.
Verse 1 (last clause ). All men belong to God. His sons or his
subjects, his servants or his serfs, his sheep or his goats, etc.
Verse 2. Divine purposes accomplished by singular means.
Verse 2. Founded on the seas. Instability of terrestrial things.
Verse 3. The all-important question.
Verse 4 (first clause ). Connection between outward morality and inward purity.
Verse 4 (second clause ). Men judged by their delights.
Verse 4. "Clean hands."
I. How to get them clean.
II. How to keep them clean.
III. How to defile them
IV. How to get them clean again.
Verses 4, 5. Character manifested and favour received.
Verse 5 (second clause ). The good man receiving righteousness and
needing salvation, or the evangelical meaning of apparently legal passages.
Verse 6. Those who truly seek fellowship with God.
Verse 7. Accommodate the text to the entrance of Jesus Christ into our
hearts.
I. There are obstacles, "gates," "doors."
II. We must will to remove them: "lift up."
III. Grace must enable us: "be ye lift up."
IV. Our Lord will enter.
V. He enters as "King," and "King of glory."
Verse 7. The ascension and its teachings.
Verses 7-10.
I. His titlethe Lord of hosts.
II. His victories, implied in the expression. The Lord strong and mighty in battle.
III. His mediatorial title, The King of glory.
IV. His authoritative entrance into the holy place.
John Newton's "Messiah."
Verse 8. The mighty Hero. His pedigree, his power, his battles, his
victories.
Verse 10. The sovereignty and glory of God in Christ.
WORK UPON THE TWENTY-FOURTH PSALM
In the "Works" of John Boys, 1626, folio, pp. 908-913, there is an
Exposition of this Psalm.
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