Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 100:4
Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, [and] into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, [and] bless his name.
4. thanksgiving ] The parallelism of praise in the next line is decidedly in favour of this rendering: still the parallel in Psa 96:8 justifies the alternative rendering of R.V. marg., a thank offering.
be thankful ] Give thanks. Cp. Psa 97:12; and for bless his name, cp. Psa 96:2.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Enter into his gates … – The gates which lead to his temple, or to the place of public worship.
Into his courts … – The courts were literally the open spaces which surrounded the tabernacle or temple. It was in these that worship was celebrated, and not in the tabernacle or temple. See Psa 65:4, note; Psa 84:2, note; Psa 92:13, note.
Be thankful unto him – That is, Offer thanksgiving and praise. Come before him with a grateful heart. See the notes at Psa 50:14.
Bless his name – Bless him; praise him; ascribe honor to him; acknowledge him as God.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 100:4
Enter into His gates with thanksgiving.
Thankfulness
Thankfulness denotes a composite emotion, whose elements are joy for a gift, and love for the giver. It differs from gratitude, not essentially, but only in form; the one being necessarily a feeling only, the other that feeling both existent and expressed.
I. The hindrances which practically interfere with this great moral and Christian duty.
1. The habit of looking too much at other people, and too little at ourselves. If the poor man would go into his own heart, and fling overboard all but his own peculiar cares and troubles, and sit down to feast on the rich viands God has gathered as his sea-stores, then his lightened and relieved bark would float buoyantly on the waters, and answer readily her helm, and with glad songs and bright skies, go on her way rejoicing.
2. Letting the mind dwell too much on the dark side of our experience. The ten thousand daily blessings wherewith God has been surrounding our lives are lost sight of in the occasional clouds of difficulty that may have chequered our pathway. We think more of the one thousand dollars lost, than of the twenty thousand left us. More of the one month of sickness, than the eleven months of health. More of the one beloved friend dead, than of the many beloved yet living.
3. Regarding the first gift of a good thing as alone demanding gratitude, and its subsequent preservation as a natural sequence.
II. The helps to thankfulness.
1. We must entertain just and philosophic views of lifes nature and mission. A man, crossing an ocean on shipboard, is not discontented because he cannot carry with him his sumptuous furniture and equipage; and grumbles not that his state-room hath not the breadth and brilliancy of his palatial pavilions. His very gladness is, that he is in a structure so modelled that it can have speed upon the waters. And just so it is with a man in progress to immortality. What we want is rather a tent that can be pitched and struck at pleasure; and provisions of a kind that can be carried in journeys; than a splendid palace, and ponderous luxuries, incapable of transportation. And so a true appreciation of the real uses of things will go far to render us thankful for the peculiar size and shape of the blessings God gives us.
2. We must dwell much in thought upon these Divine mercies, present and actual. We are too much given to day-dreams amid things possible and future. We lift the glass of imagination to the far hills, that, mellowed by distance and haloed with the purple and gold of the setting sun, look like fairy lands, and grow dissatisfied with the present and possessed. And yet, there is no one in whose present experience there is not enough at least for thankfulness–of comfort and blessing.
3. We must make the best of our misfortunes. What the Germans tell us as a parable, we have all of us–who have gone afield with nature in observant moods–witnessed not unfrequently. Standing by some autumnal and over-matured flower, we have seen the laborious bee come hurrying and humming, and plunging into the flowers cup, where there was not a particle of honey. But what does the bee do? Why, after sucking, and finding no nectar, does it come up from the flowers heart with a disappointed air, as if departing to some other field of labour? Ah no! If there be no sweets at the flowers red core, yet its stamens are full of golden farina, and out of the farina the bee builds its cells; and so it rolls its little legs against these stamens, till they look large and loaded as golden hose, and, thanking the flower as sweetly as if it had been full of honey, gladly humming, it flies home with its wax. Yes, and herein lies Gods moral–If our flowers have no honey, let us be glad of the wax!
4. We must, meanwhile, learn to look upon these very evils as Gods disguised blessings. To every true Christian, they are so, positively, and beyond controversy. As part of the special providence of a wise and loving Father, they cannot be otherwise. It is God that determines the bounds of our habitation; the stations we are to fill; the comforts we are to enjoy; and the trials we are to suffer. And if we have not much of the present world, it is not because our heavenly Father is not able to give us more. It is all to be resolved into the wisdom and kindness of the Divine administration–Gods wisdom discerning how much is best for us–and His love determining to allow us no more.
5. To become truly thankful, we must become Christians–and Christians growing in grace and advancing in knowledge.
(1) Religion makes a man humble; and humility, as a grace, lies at the foundation of contentment.
(2) Religion gives him just views of present things, and of the true relation he sustains to them, in this earthly economy. They never seem to him ends, but only means unto ends. He understands how his present life is a sojourn–an exodus. And, as a true-hearted traveller, he expects not home comforts on a journey, but is content with rude fare and humble hostelries, and can thank God even for rough roads and foul weather, if they hinder not his progress.
(3) Religion, as it is essentially a principle of self-denial, moderates a mans wishes, and so creates happiness. Diogenes was happier in his tub, than Alexander on the throne of his empire. And for a good reason–because the tub held the wishes of the philosopher; but the world was too small for those of the conqueror.
(4) Religion produces trustfulness, and so brings contentment.
III. The reasons of thankfulness.
1. Our circumstances demand it. Just contrast your own condition this day, with that of the exulting pilgrims, when they kept their first thanksgiving festival. See them, amid the solitudes of that great wilderness–the cry of the wild beast, and the roar of the strong wind rising around them–the loved homes of their childhood, and the precious temples of their fathers, far away over the waters–a barren soil beneath their feet; and above, the cold and cheerless azure of a stranger-heaven! And yet singing triumphantly unto God their thanksgiving anthem!
2. For the sake of your own souls, you ought to be thankful. The habit of mournful sadness blinds the eye, and dwarfs the pinions of the soul; renders the heart a nervous and neuralgic thing; eats out a mans piety; weakens every Christian grace; and makes the creature a torture to himself, and a curse to his neighbourhood.
3. As Christians, we ought, for the sake of others, to manifest this abiding spirit of icy and thanksgiving.
4. For your heavenly Fathers sake, you ought to cherish and display this spirit of thanksgiving. A monarch, whose subjects are always complaining of their lot, is set down by the world as a hard and selfish tyrant. A father, whose children walk abroad ever in sadness and tears, is anathematized by all people as a heartless and cruel parent. Shame on us, if, surrounded by such blessings, and hastening onward to such revelations of glory, we go ever with the bowed head, and the mournful footsteps, saying to the world by our pitiful complainings–See how the eternal God is maltreating His loyal subjects! . . . See how our heavenly Father is torturing His children! (C. Wadesworth.)
And into His courts with praise.
Praise
Gods praises must be sung–
I. With the attention of the mind. The words must be considered, as well as heard or read. A person can never be rationally or piously affected with what he sings, except he understands it. Without this, there is no more devotion in him, than there is in an organ or other musical instrument which utters the like sounds. Or if there be anything like devotion excited by mere sounds, it is probably enthusiasm, or something purely animal; a sort of pleasing mechanical sensation, which perhaps some brutes may as strongly feel by sounds suited to the state of their frame.
II. With the melody of the voice. Poetry enlivens praise; and music heightens the powers of poetry, and gives it more force to engage and affect the mind. It puts spirit into every word, and their united influences elevate, compose, and melt the soul. From hence it will follow that the better the poetry is, provided it be intelligible, and the greater harmony there is in uttering it, the greater effect it will have upon the mind, and make the impression of what we sing more deep and lasting. As God hath formed us with voices capable of uttering harmonious sounds, He expects that they be employed in His service.
III. With the devotion of the heart. It is not sufficient to understand what is sung, to attend to it, and join our voices with those of our fellow-worshippers; but our intentions should be upright and good. And they should be these; to glorify God, and to edify ourselves and others.
1. Our intention should be to glorify God; that is, not to make Him more glorious, for neither the praises of men nor angels can do that; but to do Him apparent and public honour; to acknowledge His glory; to proclaim our high veneration and affection for Him, and celebrate and recommend Him as an object worthy the esteem and praises of the whole world (Psa 62:2; Psa 1:23; Psa 69:30).
2. It should be our desire also to edify ourselves and one another (Eph 5:19; Col 3:16). (Job Orton, D.D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 4. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving] Publicly worship God; and when ye come to the house of prayer, be thankful that you have such a privilege; and when you enter his courts, praise him for the permission.
The word bethodah, which we render with thanksgiving, is properly with the confession-offering or sacrifice. See on the title. See Clarke on Ps 100:1.
Bless his name.] Bless Jehovah, that he is your Elohim; see Ps 100:3. In our liturgic service we say, “Speak good of his name;” we cannot do otherwise; we have nothing but good to speak of our God.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Enter into his gates; the gates of his courts; for the people might enter no further, and the courts had walls and gates as well as the house.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
4. Join joyfully in His publicworship. The terms are, of course, figurative (compare Psa 84:2;Psa 92:13; Isa 66:23).
Enteror, “Comewith solemnity” (Ps 95:6).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Enter into his gates with thanksgiving,…. The same with the gates of Zion, loved by the Lord more than all the dwellings of Jacob; the gates of Jerusalem, within which the feet of the saints stand with pleasure; the gates of Wisdom, or Christ, where his followers watch and wait; the gates into his house, the church, and the public ordinances of it, to be entered into with thankfulness for all mercies, temporal and spiritual; for the Gospel, and Gospel opportunities and ordinances:
and into his courts with praise; with the sacrifice of praise, as in
Ps 96:8, of these courts, see Ps 65:4,
be thankful unto him; for all blessings of grace in him and by him; for all things, and at all times:
and bless his name; by ascribing honour, blessing, and glory to him, saying, “blessed be his glorious name for ever”, Ps 72:19.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Therefore shall the men of all nations enter with thanksgiving into the gates of His Temple and into the courts of His Temple with praise ( Psa 96:8), in order to join themselves in worship to His church, which – a creation of Jahve for the good of the whole earth – is congregated about this Temple and has it as the place of its worship. The pilgrimage of all peoples to the holy mountain is an Old Testament dress of the hope for the conversion of all peoples to the God of revelation, and the close union of all with the people of this God. His Temple is open to them all. They may enter, and when they enter they have to look for great things. For the God of revelation (52:11; 54:8) is “good” (Psa 25:8; Psa 34:9), and His loving-kindness and faithfulness endure for ever – the thought that recurs frequently in the later Hallelujah and Hodu Psalms and is become a liturgical formula (Jer 33:11). The mercy of loving-kindness of God is the generosity, and His faithfulness the constancy, of His love.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
4 Enter his gates The conclusion of the psalm is almost the same as the beginning of it, excepting that he adopts a mode of speech which relates to the worship of God which obtained under the law; (126) in which, however, he merely reminds us that believers, in rendering thanks to God, do not discharge their duty aright, unless they also continue in the practice of a steady profession of piety. Meanwhile, under the name of the temple, he signifies that God cannot be otherwise worshipped than in strict accordance with the manner prescribed in his law. And, besides, he adds, that God’s mercy endureth for ever, and that his truth also is everlasting, to point out to us that we can never be at a loss for constant cause of praising him. If, then, God never ceases to deal with us in this manner, it would argue the basest ingratitude on our part, if we wearied in rendering to Him the tribute of praise to which he is entitled. We have elsewhere taken notice of the reason why truth is connected with mercy. For so foolish are we, that we scarcely feel the mercy of God while he openly manifests it, not even in the most palpable displays of it, until he open his holy lips to declare his paternal regard for us.
(126) “ Sinon qu’il mesle des maniers de parler, qui se rapportent au service de Dieu qui estoit sous la Loy.” — Fr.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
4. Thanksgiving The word should here also be understood of the zebahh-hatodah, the praise offering under the law. See note on the title of this psalm. But this ground idea anticipates the spiritual and prophetic sense the ceaseless praise offering of the lips by the universal Church, fully brought out in Heb 13:15; Hos 14:2.
Be thankful unto him Give thanks to him. As the priest led the victim to the altar, and the people entered the sacred enclosure and drew near to perform their part in worship, and in the religious feast before the Lord, they were to feel and express the gratitude and praise which their peace offering denoted.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Here the invitation, or rather the command, is reiterated: surely such a God, such a Creator; such a Redeemer, may well demand our warmest praise. And therefore let us enter into his courts: let us approach his footstool: let praise, thanksgiving, and sacred joy fill every heart, swell every song, burst from every tongue: bless, bless his name! Reader; in the Jewish church, the courts of God’s house became the nearest place the Gentiles were permitted to approach, in their sacred worship: and even Israel was not allowed to enter into the Holy Place. But you and I, poor Gentiles by nature, and sinners by practice, are permitted to enter into the holiest, by the blood of Jesus; nay, commanded to come, and find grace to help in all time of need. Think, my brother, of the vast privilege; and let us improve it to his glory, in whose name and righteousness we can alone come, and by whose rich redemption such blessings are alone made ours.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 100:4 Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, [and] into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, [and] bless his name.
Ver. 4. Enter into his gates, &c. ] As sheep into his sheepfolds, frequent his public ordinances, wait at the posts of the gates of wisdom; there, as at a heavenly exchange, the smuts present duty, and God confers mercy.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Psa 100:4-5
4Enter His gates with thanksgiving
And His courts with praise.
Give thanks to Him, bless His name.
5For the Lord is good;
His lovingkindness is everlasting
And His faithfulness to all generations.
Psa 100:5 Notice how YHWH is characterized (see SPECIAL TOPIC: CHARACTERISTICS OF ISRAEL’S GOD ).
1. good, cf. Psa 106:1; Psa 117:1; Psa 118:1; Psa 118:29; Jer 33:1,
2. merciful, see SPECIAL TOPIC: LOVINGKINDNESS (HESED)
3. everlasting, see Special Topic: Forever (olam)
4. faithful, see Special Topic: Believe, Trust, Faith and Faithfulness in the OT
5. to all through time
a. either Israel or
b. all humans who trust Him
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
This is a study guide commentary which means that you are responsible for your own interpretation of the Bible. Each of us must walk in the light we have. You, the Bible, and the Holy Spirit are priority in interpretation. You must not relinquish this to a commentator.
These discussion questions are provided to help you think through the major issues of this section of the book. They are meant to be thought provoking, not definitive.
1. To whom is this Psalm addressed?
2. To what creative act is Psa 100:3 b referring?
3. List and define the main theological words in Psa 100:5.
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
His name. See note on Psa 20:1.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Psa 100:4
Psa 100:4
“Enter into his gates with thanksgiving,
And into his courts with praise:
Give thanks unto him and bless his name.”
The mention of “gates” and “courts” here was a reference, no doubt, to those features of the Jewish Temple; but they are equally applicable to the kingdom of God. The Church of Our Lord is the current Temple of God; and the Savior himself admonished us all to “enter in” by the straight gate. He also called himself the “door of the sheep.”
Yates has pointed out that a number of the factors of true worship are mentioned in this tiny psalm. “After entering the gates, the further essentials of true worship are: thanksgiving, praise, prayer, and a recognition of God’s character in such attributes as His goodness, love, and faithfulness. He further added that, “Such essentials must be observed by worshippers in any period of time.
E.M. Zerr:
Psa 100:4. A gate is an entrance to a city and a court is an enclosure for the vicinity of a king or other dignified person. If a human being is permitted to enter into a city of the King of Heaven, and to go even as far as into the final enclosure of hts palace. then thanksgiving and praise should be forthcoming.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Enter: Psa 65:1, Psa 66:13, Psa 116:17-19, Isa 35:10
be thankful: Psa 96:2, Psa 103:1, Psa 103:2, Psa 103:20-22, Psa 145:1, Psa 145:2, 1Ch 29:13, 1Ch 29:20, Col 3:16, Col 3:17, Heb 13:15
Reciprocal: Exo 27:9 – the court Exo 38:9 – the court 1Ch 16:29 – come Psa 26:7 – That Psa 92:13 – in the Psa 95:2 – Let us Psa 96:8 – come Psa 106:1 – O give Psa 116:19 – General Psa 117:2 – General Psa 118:19 – I will go Psa 122:2 – General Psa 138:2 – and praise Eze 40:14 – the court Joh 10:9 – and shall Col 3:15 – and be Rev 7:12 – thanksgiving
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
100:4 {c} Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, [and] into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, [and] bless his name.
(c) He shows that God will not be worshipped, but by those means which he has appointed.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
2. Grateful worship 100:4-5
The psalmist called on the Israelites to enter the gates of Jerusalem with thanksgiving in their hearts. They should enter the temple courtyard with praise on their lips. They should express their gratitude to Him for His many blessings and should bless Him. The reason for this behavior is that God is good to His people. His loyal love lasts forever, and He will continue to remain faithful to all generations of people.
Every generation that benefits from Yahweh’s goodness, loyal love, and faithfulness should carry out this psalm’s exhortation to serve God happily and worship Him gratefully.