Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 87:5
And of Zion it shall be said, This and that man was born in her: and the highest himself shall establish her.
5. The Psalmist speaks, echoing the divine decree from Zion’s point of view, dwelling upon the honour which will accrue to Zion by this accession of citizens.
Yea, of Zion it shall be said,
Each and every one was born in her;
And the Most High himself shall establish her.
Not merely certain specified nations but all the nations shall call Zion their mother-city. One after another comes to be reckoned among her children [49] . Grammatically it is possible to understand each and every one of individuals, but the context is decisive in favour of taking this verse to refer to nations, as Psa 87:4 ; Psa 87:6 do. Each nation, reckoned as a whole, receives the right of citizenship. Individuals receive it as members of their nation.
[49] The reading of the LXX, though due apparently simply to a textual error in the Greek ( for , Vulg. numquid), catches the spirit of the Psalm too strikingly to be passed over: O Mother Sion, shall a man say.
The LXX and some other Ancient Versions render hath founded her; but shall establish her, as Psa 48:8, is certainly right. Under the protection and blessing of the Sovereign Ruler of the world she grows ever stronger and nobler as each fresh nation joins the universal kingdom of God.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And of Zion it shall be said – In respect to Zion; or, in honor of Zion. People shall regard it as a privilege to have been born in Zion. They shall speak of such a birth as a marked and honored distinction. This and that man, etc. Designating them, or pointing them out, as having been born there. Those in a crowd, those passing along, those brought in any way to notice, will be spoken of in reference to their birth in Zion, and will be treated with a degree of favor and esteem, arising from their birth there corresponding to what those receive who are born in Egypt, Babylon, or Tyre. They will not be shunned and avoided on account of their birth as if it were ignoble, but they will be honored for it.
And the Highest himself shall establish her – Will establish Zion, or will give it prosperity and perpetuity. This, too, is what would be said respecting Zion by such as should speak of those born there; and it indicates
(a) their conviction that it would be permanent; and
(b) their desire that it might be: that a place so honored and distinguished might be perpetuated.
The practical truths suggested by this verse, as applied to the church, are
(1) that it is a privilege to have been born in connection with the Christian church; to have had a Christian parentage, and to have been early dedicated to God;
(2) that the time will come when this will be a ground of commendation, or when it will be spoken of as an honor, or when it will be regarded as presumptive evidence of a claim to esteem in the eyes of the world, that one was born in the church, was early devoted to God, and was trained up under the influences of religion;
(3) that the character of those who are thus born, and who are thus trained up, will constitute, in the view of the world, evidence of the stability of the church, and proof that God regards it with favor. It has not always been deemed an honor, or a passport to favor, to have been born in the church, but the time will come when this will be universally so; and, even now, no child can fully appreciate the honor and the real advantage of having been born in a family where God is served, and of having been early consecrated to God by parental purpose, by prayer, and by Christian baptism.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 87:5
And of Zion it shall be said, This and that man was born in her.
The Church of to-day
I. The chief work and truest dignity of the Church lies in her regeneration and saving energy. In imitation of the example of her Lord, she has reached, and is reaching now, those whom philosophers and poets, statesmen and even philanthropists, had designated the lapsed and incorrigible classes. Where schools of philosophy and codes of law have utterly and ignominiously failed to kill the virus of some moral epidemic, the religion of Christ has succeeded, the Gospel of Christ has proved an unfailing remedy.
II. The conversion of men should be the first aim of the Christian ministry.
III. This should be the great aim of all religious effort. We need more of the spirit of the sainted Alleine, who said he was insatiably greedy for the salvation of souls; or of Matthew Henry, who said he would deem it a greater happiness to gain one soul to Christ than thousands of gold and silver.
IV. The dignity and work of the Church lies with its individual members–this and that man. The Church of every age can boast of names whose loss would be a loss to mankind. Time would fail to tell of Paul, the eloquent apostle of the Gentiles; Polycarp, the faithful disciple of John; Justin Martyr, the great defender of the faith; Augustine, Luther, Wycliffe, Knox, Wesley and Whitefield, and a host of others, of whom we say with pride, this and that man, etc.
V. The true inspiration in the Church is spiritual and supernatural, I have seen an unfilled balloon lying limp and useless on the ground. I have seen the same material expanded and floating gracefully far away above the toil and sin of earth. So have I seen the Church lying limp and lifeless, an object of loathing to some and pity to others. I have seen the same Church filled by the breath of God warm and full, no longer pitied, but admired as the centre of life and hope for a weary world. (Z. T. Dowen, D. D.)
Zion a type of the Church
Contemplate Zion in regard to–
I. Her converts. They are born, as it were, into a new world. The subjects of this change have new attachments and aversions; new joys and sorrows; new fears and hopes. They are actuated by new motives; and having experienced such a change in the inward man, they will manifest it in the whole of their deportment.
II. Her perpetuity.
III. Her final triumph. We may infer this from–
1. The faithfulness of God to His promises.
2. The firm basis on which religious liberty rests in our day, and the growing intelligence of the age respecting the spiritual nature and the Scriptural means of supporting the Church of Christ.
3. The more abundant outpouring of the Holy Spirit with which we believe God will bless His Church.
4. The prayers offered and the efforts made for the religious interests of the neighbourhood. (Essex Remembrancer.)
The Churchs fruitfulness
1. In regard of the eminency of her births, she is not wholly barren; she bath her births of men, and worthy men. The carnal world hath not exceeded the Church in men of raised intellectuals; Zion hath not been a city of fools.
2. In regard to the multitude of them; this and that man, of all sorts and conditions, and multitudes of them, so that more are the children of the desolate than of the married wife. The tents were prophesied to be enlarged, the curtains of the habitations of Zion to be stretched out, and her cords to be lengthened, to receive and entertain that multitude of children that should be brought forth by her after the sacrifice of the Son of God (Isa 54:1-2); for that exhortation follows upon the description of the death and exaltation of Christ (Isa 53:1-12.). (S. Charnock.)
Fragrant memories of spiritual birth-places
There is nothing strange in the halo of dearness which, to every Christian, hangs around the scenes with which the beginning of his new life is associated. The place where two friends first met is sacred to them all through their friendship, all the more sacred as their friendship deepens and grows old. Only the last day shall tell how much of earth is hallowed ground. This is what makes the old churches holy with an accumulated sacredness which surpasses their first consecration. Who can tell how many this church of ours will find among the blessed to honour and treasure her for ever, that she may not be forgotten when the birthplaces of souls are remembered? (Bishop Phillips Brooks.)
And the Highest Himself shall establish her.
The Churchs stability
I. The explication.
1. This stability must not be meant of any particular Church in the world. Particular Churches have their beginnings, progresses, and periods. Particular Churches have been corrupted by superstition and idolatry, rent by heresies, and scattered by persecutions, Zion hath stood, though some synagogues of it have been pulled down; it hath, like the sun, kept its station in the firmament, though not without eclipses and clouds to muffle it. The Church is but one, though it be in divers countries, and named according to the places where it resides, as the Church of Ephesus, the Church of Sardis, etc. If you obstruct the light of one beam, or lop off one branch, or dam up the stream, yet the sun, root, fountain remains the same.
2. Though God unstakes the Church in one place, yet He will not only have a Church, but a professing Church in another. It is a standing law of Christianity that a belief in the heart should be attended by confession with the mouth (Rom 10:9). And the Church is a congregation of people sounding the voice of Christ, as He was preached and confessed by the apostles. While there are believers, there will be professors in society together; some ordinances settled in being during the continuance of the world, as the supper (1Co 11:6).
3. This Church or Zion shall have a numerous progeny. The spiritual Israel shall be as the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured or numbered (Hos 1:10), which was the promise made to Abraham (Gen 22:17), and renewed in the same terms to Jacob (Gen 32:12). The Church is a little flock in comparison of the carnal world, yet it is numerous in itself, though not in every place.
II. God has hitherto established Zion.
1. This is testified by its present standing, when other empires have sunk by age or violence. She bath borne up her head in the midst of earthly revolutions, and met with her preservation or resurrection where carnal interests have found their funeral.
2. No society but the Church ever subsisted in the midst of a multitude of enemies.
3. The violences against her, which have been fatal to other societies, have been useful to her. This bush hath burned without consuming, and preserved its verdure in the midst of fire; not from the nature of the bush, but the presence of Him that dwelt in it.
4. When she has seemed to be forlorn and dead, God has restored her. When Israel was at the lowest, a decree issued out in Egypt to destroy her males and root out her seed, deliverance began to dawn; and when a knife was at her throat at the Red Sea, and scarce a valiant believer found among a multitude of despairers, God turned the back of the knife to His Israel, and the edge to the throat of the enemies.
5. God never wanted instruments for His Church in the due season. If Nebuchadnezzar be the axe to hew down Jerusalem, Cyrus shall be the instrument to build her up; when His time is come, He will not want an Ezra and Nehemiah to rear her walls, nor be wanting to them to inspire them with courage and assist their labour, in spite of the adversaries that would give checkmate to the work. If Stephen be stoned by the Sews, He will call out Paul, an abettor of that murder, to be a preacher of the Gospel, and he that was all fire against it shall become as great a flame for the propagation of it: one phoenix shall arise out of the ashes of another.
III. Why it must needs be so.
1. It is necessary for the honour of God. Those societies may moulder away, and those religions grow feeble, which have drawn their birth from the wisdom of man and been settled from the force of man, but a Divine work must needs have a Divine establishment.. It is so–
(1) If you regard it as His main design in the creation of the world.
(2) As He hath been the author and builder of Zion.
(3) As He hath been the preserver and enlarger of her to this day.
(4) In regard of the cost and pains He hath been at about Zion.
(5) In regard of faithfulness, His veracity is engaged.
(6) In regard it is the seat of His glory.
(7) In regard that it is the object of His peculiar affection.
(8) In regard of the natural weakness of the Church.
2. It is for the exercise of the offices of Christ that Zion should be established. He is prophet, priest, and king, which are all titles of relation. Prophet implies some to be instructed, a priest some to offer for, and a king some to be ruled; put one relation, and you must necessarily put the other. If there were no Church preserved in the world, He would be a nominal prophet without any disciples, a king without subjects, and a priest without suppliants to be atoned by Him upon earth.
3. The foundation of Zion is sure. It is founded upon Christ, the corner stone.
IV. The use,
1. Information.
(1) If the Church hath a duration and stability, then ordinances and ministry are perpetual. Ministers may be thrust into corners, clapped up in prison, hurried to their graves, but the sepulchres of ministers are not the graves of the ministry.
(2) The doctrine of the establishment of every member of Zion is clearly established. The same blood that is the cement of Zion, the same hand that built her, the same head that influenceth her, secures every one of her true-born children. They are all in the same posture and upon the same foundation with Zion herself.
(3) How great is the folly of Zions enemies! They judge of her by the weakness of her worldly interest, and not by the almightiness of her guardian.
(4) What a ground is here for prayer! No petition can more comfortably, no petition can more confidently, be put up, than for Zions establishment. Prayers for particular persons, or for ourselves, may want success; but supplications for Zion never miscarry.
(5) What a strong ground is here for trust! Look not so much upon the condition of Zions walls as upon her foundation; not upon her present posture, as upon her promise-charte; not upon her as a weak vine, but under the hand of the Highest as the vine-dresser. Look not upon the feebleness of the flock, but upon the care of the shepherd; nor upon the fierceness of the lions, but upon the strength and affection of her guardian.
2. Comfort.
(1) In the confusions and troubles of the world.
(2) In persecutions.
(3) In the deepest designs of her enemies. If He be the Highest, and employs Himself as the Highest, there is none so high as to overtop Him, none so high as to outwit Him. Though their union be never so close, and their projects never so deep, yet Gods being with the Church is curb enough for them and comforting enough for Zion (Isa 8:9).
3. Exhortation.
(1) Take heed of apostatizing from Zion.
(2) Let us love Zion.
(3) Let us desire the establishment of Zion more than our own private establishment.
(4) Let us endeavour the establishment of Zion. (S. Charnock.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 5. This and that man was born in her] It will be an honour to any person to have been born in Zion. But how great is the honour to be born from above, and be a citizen of the Jerusalem that is from above! To be children of God, by faith in Christ Jesus! The Targum has, “David the king, and Solomon his son, were brought up here.”
The Highest himself shall establish her.] The Christian Church is built on the foundation of the prophets and apostles; Jesus Christ himself being the Cornerstone.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Of Zion, i.e. of Jerusalem, or the church of God. It shall be said; it shall be mentioned by God, as was said, Psa 87:4, and it shall be observed and acknowledged by men, as a great and wonderful work of God.
This and that man, i.e. men of this and that nation, i.e. of every nation, indifferently, Jews or Gentiles, according to that prediction, that Egypt, and Assyria, and Israel should be all joined together, and blessed and owned by God for his people, Isa 19:24,25. Heb. Man and man, i.e. every man, or all sorts of men, without difference of nations; as this very phrase man and man, Lev 17:10,13, is rendered every or whatsoever man; and as by day and day is meant every day, or from day to day, Est 1:1,4; Psa 61:8. And the Highest himself shall establish her: and this shall not be a sudden and transient, but a lasting work; Zion shall continue in its strength and fertility because the Almighty God is her Founder and Protector, and will finish the work which he hath begun.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
5. The writer resumes
This and that manliterally,”man and man,” or many (Gen 14:10;Exo 8:10; Exo 8:14),or all (Isa 44:5; Gal 3:28).
the highest . . . herGodis her protector.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And of Zion it shall be said,…. The same with the city of God, the church before commended:
this and that man was born in her; this and that great man, in opposition to a mean person, in the preceding verse: “or a man and man” d; men of all sorts, and of different nations, Jews and Gentiles, and great numbers of them:
and the Highest himself shall establish her; the church of God, though founded by him, and laid on a sure foundation, on the Rock of ages, against which the gates of hell cannot prevail, yet is sometimes fluctuating and unsettled;
it is tossed with tempests, the persecutions of men, the errors and heresies of false teachers, and the contentions and divisions of its own members; and is not always in one place, but is removed from one place to another, and is obliged to flee into the wilderness; but in the latter day it will be established and settled; it will be a tabernacle that shall not be taken down nor removed; but shall be established for ever, Ps 89:37, and this is the work of God, the most high God, the possessor of heaven and earth, whatever instruments he may make use of, as ministers of the word, and kings of the earth; as it is his work, and his only, to establish particular believers, 2Co 1:21, so it is his to establish the church in general: or it may be rendered, “he shall establish her on high” e, which will be the case when she is established upon the top of the mountains, and exalted above the hills, Isa 2:2.
d “vir et vir”, Pagninus, Montanus, Tigurine version, Vatablus, Gejerus, Michaelis. e So the Targum, and Ainsworth.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Inasmuch now as the nations come thus into the church (or congregation) of the children of God and of the children of Abraham, Zion becomes by degrees a church immeasurably great. To Zion, however, or of Zion ( of reference to), shall it be said . Zion, the one city, stands in contrast to all the countries, the one city of God in contrast to the kingdoms of the world, and in contrast to . This contrast, upon the correct apprehension of which depends the understanding of the whole Psalm, is missed when it is said, “whilst in relation to other countries it is always only the whole nation that comes under consideration, Zion is not reckoned up as a nation, but by persons” (Hofmann). With this rendering the retires into the background; in that case this giving of prominence to the value of the individual exceeds the ancient range of conception, and it is also an inadmissible appraisement that in Zion each individual is as important as a nation as a whole. Elsewhere , Lev 17:10, Lev 17:13, or , Est 1:8, signifies each and every one; accordingly here (individual and, or after, individual) affirms a progressus in infinitum , where one is ever added to another. Of an immeasurable multitude, and of each individual in this multitude in particular, it is said that he was born in Zion. Now, too, has a significant connection with what precedes. Whilst from among foreign peoples more and more are continually acquiring the right of natives in Zion, and thus are entering into a new national alliance, so that a breach of their original national friendships is taking place, He Himself (cf. 1Sa 20:9), the Most High, will uphold Zion (Psa 48:9), so that under His protection and blessing it shall become ever greater and more glorious. Psa 87:6 tells us what will be the result of such a progressive incorporation in the church of Zion of those who have hitherto been far removed, viz., Jahve will reckon when He writeth down ( as in Jos 18:8) the nations; or better – since this would more readily be expressed by , and the book of the living (Isa 4:3) is one already existing from time immemorial – He will reckon in the list ( after the form , , = , Eze 13:9) of the nations, i.e., when He goes over the nations that are written down there and chosen for the coming salvation, “this one was born there;” He will therefore acknowledge them one after another as those born in Zion. The end of all history is that Zion shall become the metropolis of all nations. When the fulness of the Gentiles is thus come in, then shall all and each one as well singing as dancing say (supply ): All my fountains are in thee. Among the old translators the rendering of Aquila is the best: , which Jerome follows, et cantores quasi in choris: omnes fontes mei in te . One would rather render cholaliym, “flute-players” (lxx ); but to pipe or play the flute is (a denominative from ), 1Ki 1:40, whereas to dance is ( Pilel of ); it is therefore = , like , Hos 7:5. But it must not moreover be rendered, “And singers as well as dancers (will say);” for “singers” is , not , which signifies cantantes , not cantores . Singing as dancing, i.e., making known their festive joy as well by the one as by the other, shall the men of all nations incorporated in Zion say: All my fountains, i.e., fountains of salvation (after Isa 12:3), are in thee (O city of God). It has also been interpreted: my looks (i.e., the object on which my eye is fixed, or the delight of my eyes), or: my thoughts (after the modern Hebrew of spiritual meditation); but both are incongruous. The conjecture, too, of Bttcher, and even before him of Schnurrer ( Dissertationes, p. 150), , all who take up their abode (instead of which Hupfeld conjectures , all my near-dwellers, i.e., those who dwell with me under the same roof)
(Note: Hupfeld cites Rashi as having thus explained it; but his gloss is to be rendered: my whole inmost part (after the Aramaic = ) is with thee, i.e., they salvation.)),
is not Hebrew, and deprives us of the thought which corresponds to the aim of the whole, that Jerusalem shall be universally regarded as the place where the water of life springs for the whole of mankind, and shall be universally praised as this place of fountains.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
5 And it shall be said of Zion, Man and man is born in her. It is asserted, in the 4 verse, That new citizens shall be gathered into the Church of God from different parts of the world; and here the same subject is prosecuted. Another figure is however employed, which is, that strangers by birth shall be accounted among the holy people, just as if they were descended from Abraham. It had been stated in the preceding verse, that the Chaldeans and Egyptians would be added to the household of the Church; and that the Ethiopians, Philistines, and Tyrians, would be enrolled among her children. Now, it is added, by way of confirmation, that the number of the new progeny shall be exceeding great, so that the city which had been for a time uninhabited, and afterwards only half filled with a few people, shall be crowded with a vast population. The prophet Isaiah describes more at length what is here promised, in a few words,
“
Sing, O barren, thou that didst not bear; break forth into singing, and cry aloud, thou that didst not travail with child: for more are the children of the desolate than the children of the married wife, saith the Lord. Enlarge the place of thy tent, and let them stretch forth the curtains of thine habitations: spare not, lengthen thy cords, and strengthen thy stakes: for thou shalt break forth on the right hand and on the left; and thy seed shall inherit the Gentiles, and make the desolate cities to be inhabited.” (Isa 54:1)
Also,
“
Lift up thine eyes round about, and see; all they gather themselves together, they come to thee: thy sons shall come from far, and thy daughters shall be nursed at thy side.” (Isa 60:4)
And, in the 44 chapter, at the 5 verse, we meet with almost the same language as in the passage before us, or at least what comes very near to it: “One shall say, I am the Lord’s; and another shall call himself by the name of Jacob; and another shall subscribe with his hand unto the Lord, and surname himself by the name of Israel.” Nor is the word born inappropriately employed to express the fact, that the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and such like, shall be of the flock of God’s people. Although Zion was not the place of their natural birth, but they were to be grafted into the body of the holy people by adoption; yet as the way by which we enter into the Church is a second birth, this form of expression is used with great propriety. The condition upon which Christ espouses the faithful to himself is, that they should forget their own people and their father’s house, (Psa 45:11,) and that, being formed into new creatures, and born again of incorruptible seed, they should begin to be the children of God as well as of the Church, (Gal 4:19.) And the ministry of the Church, and it alone, is undoubtedly the means by which we are born again to a heavenly life. By the way, we should remember the difference which the Apostle sets forth as subsisting between the earthly Jerusalem, — which, being herself a bondwoman, brings forth children also in bondage, — and the heavenly Jerusalem, which brings forth free children by the instrumentality of the Gospel.
In the second part of the verse, there is expressed the stability and enduring character of Zion. It often happens, that in proportion to the rapidity with which cities rise to distinguished eminence, is the shortness of the continuance of their prosperity. That it may not be thought that the prosperity of the Church is of such a perishable and transitory nature, it is declared, that the Most High himself will establish her It is not surprising, as if it had been said, to find other cities shaken, and subject from time to time to a variety of vicissitudes; for they are carried round with the world in its revolutions, and do not enjoy everlasting defenders. But it is the very reverse with respect to the new Jerusalem, which, being founded upon the power of God, will continue even when heaven and earth shall fall into ruins.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(5) And of Zion . . .This verse must be taken as antithetical to the preceding. The poet claims a prouder boast for natives of Jerusalem, because it was established by the Most High. Render, But of Zion it is said, This man and that (literally, man and man) was born in her, and her the Most High established.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 87:5. The Highest himself shall establish her That is what David promised himself; that as he had built the city under the direction of God, and had fixed for the ark a proper habitation in it; so God would now establish it, by guarding it from its enemies, and providing for its future prosperity: and I think it appears from hence, that this and the foregoing verse are the Psalmist’s own words, and not the words of God concerning Jerusalem, as Grotius, Le Clerc, and others, make them. Chandler.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
If, as Mr. Romaine justly concludes, we may, without violence to the original, read this verse – “And of Zion it shall be said, A Person, and a Person shall be born in her; ” this plainly intimates the identical person, God and Man, Christ Jesus: and this decidedly refers the whole of the glorious things spoken before to be of Him. Then the Highest, He himself, will perfectly establish her; for in Him Zion must be firm. Reader, what blessed views open to our souls in these precious things of our Jesus!
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 87:5 And of Zion it shall be said, This and that man was born in her: and the highest himself shall establish her.
Ver. 5. And of Zion it shall be said, This and that man was born in her ] i.e. Converted; and so a daily accession made to the Church of Christ, as it was by Peter’s sermon, &c., and now so many nations: Behold, the world is gone after him, said these envious Pharisees, Joh 12:19 ; and the Papists grudge as much at the late glorious Reformation, begun by Luther, wherein so many rejoice, and shall do to all eternity. Bucholcerus blesseth God that he was born in the days and was bred under the discipline of holy Malancthon, Luther’s colleague:
Divisae his operae, sed mens fuit unica; pavit
Ore Lutherus oves, flore Melancthon apes.
Beatus Ludovicus would be called Ludovicus de Pissiaco rather than take greater titles, because there he became a Christian. He thought no birth equal to a new birth in Christ; no parentage to that of God to his Father, the Church to his mother, Christ to his elder brother, &c. Some apply this text to the places of holy men’s birth, and tell us, that he loves the very ground his servants tread on, the very air they first breathe in, their walls are continually before him, Isa 49:16
And the highest himself shall establish her of = to.
man. Hebrew. ‘ish.
the HIGHEST = the MOST HIGH. Hebrew. ‘Elyon. App-4.
of Zion: Isa 44:4, Isa 44:5, Isa 60:1-9, Joh 1:12-14, Joh 3:3-5, Gal 3:26-28, Heb 11:32-40, Heb 12:1, Heb 12:2, Heb 12:22-24, 1Pe 1:23, 1Pe 1:24
highest: Eze 48:35, Mat 16:18, Rom 8:31
Reciprocal: Deu 28:9 – establish 1Ki 15:4 – and to establish 1Ch 11:5 – the castle Psa 48:8 – God Isa 14:32 – the Lord Jer 33:2 – the maker Luk 1:76 – Highest 2Co 1:21 – stablisheth
Psa 87:5. Of Zion Concerning the church of God, whether composed of Jews or Gentiles, it shall be said It shall be mentioned by God, and acknowledged by men, as a great and wonderful work of Jehovah, that this and that man was born in her That is, persons of this and that nation: not only a few of one nation, as formerly, but now multitudes of all sorts and conditions, without difference of nations, shall become members of the church, Gal 4:28; Col 3:11. Hebrew, , ish veish, man and man, that is, every man, or, all sorts of men, without respect of persons; any man whosover that shall turn to God; so this very phrase, man and man, is rendered Lev 17:10; Lev 17:13; as, by day and day, is meant every day, or, from day to day, Est 3:4; Psa 61:8. And the Highest himself shall establish her Uphold her to perpetuity, Mat 16:18. This shall not be a sudden and transient, but a lasting work: and the accession of proselytes, out of divers nations, shall be so far from occasioning discord and division, that it shall contribute greatly to Zions strength; for God himself having founded her upon a rock, whatever convulsions and revolutions there may be of states and kingdoms, and however heaven and earth may be shaken, she shall be found among the things which cannot be shaken, but must remain, Hag 2:6-7; Heb 12:27. Zion shall continue in its strength and fertility, because the almighty God is its founder and protector, and will finish the work which he hath begun; the Highest himself who can do it effectually, shall undertake to establish her.
87:5 And of Zion it shall be said, {e} This and that man was born in her: and the highest himself shall establish her.
(e) Out of all quarters they will come to the Church, and be counted as citizens.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes