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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 95:3

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 95:3

For the LORD [is] a great God, and a great King above all gods.

3. The thoughts of the greatness of Jehovah, of His sovereignty, and of His supremacy over the gods of the heathen, are characteristic of this group of Psalms. They are not new thoughts (Exo 15:11; Exo 15:18), but fresh reality had been given to them by His revelation of Himself in the humiliation of Babylon and its gods, and the deliverance of Israel.

That the Psalmist attributes any real existence to the gods of the heathen is not to be supposed. They are mere idols, things of nought (Psa 96:5), gods in name but not in reality. He cannot have gone back from the teaching of Jer 10:3 ff., in which the living God, the Eternal King, the Creator, is contrasted with helpless perishable idols; or have forgotten the scathing sarcasms of Isa 40:18 ff; Isa 44:9 ff.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

3 5. The reason for this service: His greatness as the supreme King, the Lord of the world.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

For the Lord is a great God – For Yahweh is a great God. The object is to exalt Jehovah, the true God, as distinguished from all who were worshipped as gods. The first idea is that he is great; that he is exalted over all the universe; that he rules over all, and that he is to be worshipped as such.

And a great King above all gods – This does not mean that he is a great ruler of all other gods, as if they had a real existence, but that he is king or ruler far above all that were worshipped as gods, or to whom homage was paid. Whoever, or whatever was worshipped as God, Yahweh was supreme over all things. He occupied the throne; and all others must be beneath him, and under his dominion. If the sun, the moon, or the stars were worshipped – if the mountains or the rivers – if angels good or bad – yet Yahweh was above all these. If imaginary beings were worshipped, yet Yahweh in his perfections was exalted far above all that was ascribed to them, for He was the true God, and the Ruler of the universe, while they were beings of the imagination only.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 95:3

For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above all gods.

On the existence, greatness, and government of God


I.
The transcendent greatness of the psalmists God.

1. He is great in the eternity of His existence. God only hath immortality. Finite beings are always going forward to further immortality; but God possesses it in the most absolute sense. Other beings depend for their immortality on the will of their Maker, and flow of their duration; but He is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever. And as He is infinite in essence, He must necessarily be indestructible in the nature of His existence; for the power that destroys must always be greater than what is destroyed.

2. He is great in the immateriality, unity, and immensity of His existence. These are all necessarily implied in His eternity.

3. He is great in Omnipotence. Creation, in all its works of greatness and grandeur, falls infinitely short of a full exhibition of omnipotent power. For no finite substances, however multiplied and extended, could ever fill boundless space, or circumscribe the efforts of God Omnipotent. Here we might contemplatively roam after the ways and works of the Almighty Architect, until we were bewildered and lost in the magnitudes, mazes, and mysteries of creation. His power is also manifested in upholding all things created. He commands all the suns, systems, and planetary orbs, and they move in obedience to His sovereign pleasure.

4. He is boundless in love. Our first parents proved His goodness in the Garden of Eden, where His benevolence lavished around them every charm. There the Tree of Life, in grand and conspicuous pre-eminence, unfolded its verdant glories, and invited the human pair to partake of its immortality. The redemption of this fallen world is another proof of Divine love–into which angels desire to look, and in which we are everlastingly interested.

5. He is gloriously great in holiness. All the works of His creation, holiness of His laws, dispensations of His providence, influences of His Spirit, and condemnation and overthrow of wicked men and devils, proclaim that He is holy. And Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, will be the sublimest song that immortal millions can endlessly sing in the heaven of heavens.

6. He is incomprehensibly great in omniscience.


II.
He is a great King above all Gods.

1. His right to the empire.

(1) Right of eternal priority. As there can be but one absolute and endless monarchy, so there is but one supreme and independent King.

(2) Right of eternal sufficiency. His throne is for ever and ever. It is founded in infinite wisdom, and upheld by everlasting strength. Amidst the revolutions of ages it stands the same.

(3) Right of universal inheritance. In His administration no law can be defective, no faithful subject go unprotected, and no enemy be triumphant. The thunders of the throne shall prevent all invasion, and His omnipotence defy all usurpation, until His right to reign shall be indisputably acknowledged, and the God of everlasting sovereignty be gloriously magnified.

2. His extensive empire.

(1) He reigns in the Kingdom of Nature. He reigns over inanimate nature by those fixed laws which regulate and revolve all matter; and carries forward as undeviatingly His superintendence over an atom as over a magnificent world. He reigns over animate irrational nature by instinct. He reigns over man by reason, conscience, and revelation.

(2) He reigns in the kingdom of providence.

(3) He reigns in the kingdom of darkness and damnation.

(4) He reigns in the kingdom of grace, for the protection and complete triumph of His Church.

(5) He reigns in the kingdom of glory–the heaven of heavens, the home of all the saint. (W. Barns.)

God of gods


I.
The Divine sovereignty in the physical realm. Nature is full of the manifestations of a great intelligence, full of remarkable adjustments and adaptations, full of ordered sequences and wise contrivances. In other words, Nature, through all her domain, from those gleaming stars which shoot their rays through vast and interminable spaces down to those invisible and primordial atoms of which all substances are composed, and which maintain their ceaseless movements to and fro, is subject to a high and beneficent power. Everywhere there is manifest the sovereignty of law, and the sovereignty of law is the sovereignty of God. In most great cities they have a mansion house, or some similar building, which is a symbol and centre of that civic authority which rules over the whole of the area comprised in the civic boundary; and so this physical universe is the mansion house of creations God–not a house empty and tenantless, so far as the Creators presence is concerned, but occupied and inhabited throughout with that same creative spirit which in the beginning created all things, and which ever since has sustained and controlled all things.


II.
The Divine sovereignty in the moral and spiritual realm. The kingdom of grace is the extension of the kingdom of nature, and the laws and principles which operate in the one operate in the other.

1. There is the prominence given to beauty. One might almost say that the object of the Creator was the creation of beauty, and that the great Designer had set His heart upon producing a picture of surpassing loveliness. And the object of God in redemption is clearly the creation or the re-creation of beauty, not outward beauty merely, but inward–beauty of character, beauty of soul.

2. There is the insistence of the Divine constancy and faithfulness. Banks fail, governments are overturned, empires break up and pass away, but the sun never refuses to shine, and the earth never declines to bring forth the vintage of her fruits and the harvest of her flowers. And this characteristic of faithfulness belongs as truly to the sphere of grace as of nature. The promises of God are all yea and amen.

3. There is the recognition of the value of the individual. Nature cares for the whole, and she cares not less for the individual parts of which the whole is composed. There is not a cowslip in the meadow, nor yet a blade of grass which catches its little drop of crystal and holds it suspended in the early sunlight but witnesses to the care and providence of God, and to the individualizing character of that providence. And the same is true of the grace which bringeth salvation. The disciples were all chosen and called separately and individually. There is not one of us, down to the least and the youngest, whose name is not written in Creations book, and for whom there is not a place reserved in Redemptions record! (T. Sanderson.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 3. For the Lord is a great God] Or, “A great God is Jehovah, and a great King above all gods;” or, “God is a great King over all.” The Supreme Being has three names here: EL, JEHOVAH, ELOHIM, and we should apply none of them to false gods. The first implies his strength; the second his being and essence; the third, his covenant relation to mankind. In public worship these are the views we should entertain of the Divine Being.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Above all that are accounted and called

gods, angels, and earthly potentates, and especially the false gods of the heathens, which upon Christs coming into the world were struck dumb, and could no more deliver their oracles, as Plutarch and other heathens observed, with admiration, nor deceive the world, but were forced to give place to the true God, and to the knowledge and worship of him alone, which was propagated among all nations by the gospel.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

3. above . . . godsesteemedsuch by men, though really nothing (Jer 5:7;Jer 10:10-15).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

For the Lord is a great God,…. Christ is truly and properly God, wherefore divine service is to be performed unto him; particularly singing psalms, setting forth therein his greatness and glory: and he is a great one; great in power, wisdom, justice, truth, mercy, and grace; greatness is to be ascribed unto him, and worship given him, because of his greatness, Tit 2:13

and a great King over all gods; he is King of the whole world; his kingdom ruleth over all; he is King of kings, and Lord of lords; he is King of saints, the government of the whole church is upon his shoulders, which he exercises in the most wise, powerful, and righteous manner imaginable; he is above all that are called gods, all the nominal and fictitious deities of the Heathens; above all civil magistrates, who are gods by office; and above the angels, who have this name, 1Pe 3:22. Aben Ezra interprets it of angels.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The adorableness of God receives a threefold confirmation: He is exalted above all gods as King, above all things as Creator, and above His people as Shepherd and Leader. (gods) here, as in Psa 96:4., Psa 97:7, Psa 97:9, and frequently, are the powers of the natural world and of the world of men, which the Gentiles deify and call kings (as Moloch Molech, the deified fire), which, however, all stand under the lordship of Jahve, who is infinitely exalted above everything that is otherwise called god (Psa 96:4; Psa 97:9). The supposition that denotes the pit-works ( ) of the mountains (Bttcher), is at once improbable, because to all appearance it is intended to be the antithesis to , the shafts of the earth. The derivation from ( ), , , also does not suit in Num 23:22; Num 24:8, for “fatigues” and “indefatigableness” are notions that lie very wide apart. The of Job 22:25 might more readily be explained according to this “silver of fatigues,” i.e., silver that the fatiguing labour of mining brings to light, and in the passage before us, with Gussetius, Geier, and Hengstenberg: cacumina montium quia defatigantur qui eo ascendunt , prop. ascendings = summits of the mountains, after which , Job 22:25, might also signify “silver of the mountain-heights.” But the lxx, which renders in the passages in Numbers and in the passage before us, leads one to a more correct track. The verb ( ), transposed from ( ), goes back to the root , , to stand forth, tower above, to be high, according to which = signifies eminentiae , i.e., towerings = summits, or prominences = high (the highest) perfection (vid., on Job 22:25). In the passage before us it is a synonym of the Arabic mfan , mfatun , pars terrae eminens (from Arab. wfa = , prop. instrumentally: a means of rising above, viz., by climbing), and of the names of eminences derived from Arab. yf’ (after which Hitzig renders: the teeth of the mountains). By reason of the fact that Jahve is the Owner (cf. 1Sa 2:8), because the Creator of all things, the call to worship, which concerns no one so nearly as it does Israel, the people, which before other peoples is Jahve’s creation, viz., the creation of His miraculously mighty grace, is repeated. In the call or invitation, signifies to stretch one’s self out full length upon the ground, the proper attitude of adoration; , to curtsey, to totter; and , Arabic baraka , starting from the radical signification flectere, to kneel down, in genua ( , pronum = procnum) procumbere, 2Ch 6:13 (cf. Hlemann, Bibelstudien, i. 135f.). Beside , people of His pasture, is not the flock formed by His creating hand (Augustine: ipse gratia sua nos oves fecit ), but, after Gen 30:35, the flock under His protection, the flock led and defended by His skilful, powerful hand. Bttcher renders: flock of His charge; but in this sense (Jer 6:3) signifies only a place, and “flock of His place” would be poetry and prose in one figure.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

3. For Jehovah is a great God. By these words the Psalmist reminds us what abundant grounds we have for praising God, and how far we are from needing to employ the lying panegyric with which rhetoricians flatter earthly princes. First, he extols the greatness of God, drawing a tacit contrast between him and such false gods as men have invented for themselves. We know that there has always been a host of gods in the world, as Paul says,

There are many on the earth who are called gods,” (1Co 8:5.)

We are to notice the opposition stated between the God of Israel and all others which man has formed in the exercise of an unlicensed imagination. Should any object, that “an idol is nothing in the world,” (1Co 8:4,) it is enough to reply, that the Psalmist aims at denouncing the vain delusions of men who have framed gods after their own foolish device. I admit, however, that under this term he may have comprehended the angels, asserting God to be possessed of such excellence as exalted him far above all heavenly glory, and whatever might be considered Divine, as well as above the feigned deities of earth. (45) Angels are not indeed gods, but the name admits of an improper application to them on account of their being next to God, and still more, on account of their being accounted no less than gods by men who inordinately and superstitiously extol them. If the heavenly angels themselves must yield before the majesty of the one God, it were the height of indignity to compare him with gods who are the mere fictions of the brain. In proof of his greatness, he bids us look to his formation of the world, which he declares to be the work of God’s hands, and subject to his power. This is one general ground why God is to be praised, that he has clearly shown forth his glory in the creation of the world, and will have us daily recognize him in the government of it. When it is said, that the depths of the earth are in his hand, the meaning is, that it is ruled by his providence, and subject to his power. Some read, the bounds of the earth, but the word means abysses or depths, as opposed to the heights of the mountains. The Hebrew word properly signifies searching.

(45) “ Deum ita excellere, ut longe emineat supra omnem coelestem gloriam et quicquid divinum est, non minus quam supra omne terrenum figmentum.” — Lat.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(3) Above all gods.Not here angelic beings, but the gods of surrounding tribes, as accurately explained in Psa. 96:4-5. (Comp. Exo. 15:11; Exo. 18:11.) Commentators vex themselves with the difficulty of the ascription of a real existence to these tribal deities in the expression, King above all gods. But how else was Israel constantly falling into the sin of worshipping them? It was in the inspired rejection of them as possessing any sovereign power, and in the recognition of Jehovahs supremacy shown by the psalmists and prophets, that the preservation of Israels religion consisted.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

3. For the Lord is a great God This is the theme of Psa 95:3-5, and the reason for this call for abundant and loud praise.

Above all gods Above all the “gods” of the nations. But the title “gods” is also sometimes given to princes, judges, and rulers, (Psa 8:6; Psa 82:6; Psa 96:4-5,) to whom it better applies here.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Here the Psalmist, taught by the Holy Ghost, brings forward some of the blessed causes for which Jesus claims the love, and praise, and unceasing adoration of his people. He is our Maker, and a great King, in whose hands are all the things of the earth. He is the upholder, and preserver, and sustainer of all things; for by him all things consist; and as all things were made by him, so were they for him. All things, as the gospel speaks, were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made. Joh 1:3 ; Col 1:16-18 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Psa 95:3 For the LORD [is] a great God, and a great King above all gods.

Ver. 3. For the Lord is a great God ] Understand it of Christ, as the apostle also does, Heb 3:4 1Co 10:4

Above all gods ] Whether reputed so, or deputed, as kings.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

GOD. Hebrew EL App-4.

gods = rulers, or judges. Hebrew. elohim. App-4. See note on Exo 22:9.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

For: Psa 86:8-10, Psa 96:4, Psa 97:9, Psa 145:3, Jer 10:6, Jer 10:7

a great: Psa 47:2, Psa 48:2, Jer 10:10, Jer 46:18, Jer 48:15, Dan 4:37, Mal 1:11, Mal 1:14, Mat 5:35

above: Psa 135:5, Exo 18:11, Isa 44:8, Jer 10:10-16

Reciprocal: Gen 18:14 – Is Jos 22:22 – Lord God Psa 100:3 – Know Psa 145:1 – my God Ecc 5:8 – higher than they Eph 4:6 – who Rev 10:5 – lifted

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

95:3 For the LORD [is] a great God, and a great King above all {b} gods.

(b) Even the angels

(who in respect to men are thought as gods) are nothing in his sight, much less the idols, which man’s brain invents.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

The greatness of Yahweh comes through in His superiority over all the so-called gods the heathen worshipped. They venerated gods that supposedly ruled the caves of the earth and others that they thought lived in the mountains. Still others received credit for controlling the seas and others the land. However, Yahweh is the King of them all. That is, He is the real ruler.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)