“ I will go into thy house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows, ”
I will go into thy house with burnt-offeriings - To thy temple - the place of worship. This is language designed to represent the feelings and the purpose of the people. If the psalm was composed...
I will go into thy (h) house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows, (h) The duty of the faithful is here described, who are never mindful to render God praise for his benefits.
LXVI. A and LXVI. B. Here again we have two Pss., rather unskilfully joined together, for the former ends, the latter begins abruptly. In Psalms 66 A ( Psalms 66:1-12 ) the speaker always uses the...
13 I will come into thy house with burnt offerings Hitherto the Psalmist has spoken in the name of the people at large. Now he emphatically gives expression to his own private feelings, and...
I will go into thy house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows, I will go into thy house with burnt-offerings - Now that thou hast restored us to our own land, and established us in it, we wi...
I will go into thy house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows I will go into thy house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows, I will pay thee my vows. He speaks as personi...
This Ps. triumphantly celebrates a great national deliverance. The whole earth is summoned to join in the chorus of praise ( Psalms 66:1-4 ). The memories of the exodus are recalled ( Psalms 66:5-7 )...
Psalms 66:1-20 THE most striking feature of this psalm is the transition from the plural "we" and "our," in Psalms 66:1-12 , to the singular "I" and "my," in Psalms 66:13-20 . Ewald supposes tha...
“Come and See the Works of God” Psalms 66:1-15 Some of the old expositors speak of this psalm as “the Lord's Prayer in the Old Testament.” A summons to praise, Psalms 66:1-4 The devout so...
This is one of the most beautiful of the songs of worship. It is divided into two parts by a change from the use of the plural pronoun (verses Psa 66:1-12) to the use of the singular (verses Psa 66:1...
It is sweet and profitable to go up to God's house, under the leadings of God's Spirit, at all times, and upon all occasions; and it is doubly sweet when, after sickness or detention from God's ordin...
I will go into thy house with burnt offerings ,.... The psalmist here represents the saints and faithful in those times, who being delivered out of all their troubles, and brought into a large, free...
I will go into thy house with burnt offerings: I will pay thee my vows, Ver. 13. I will go into thine house, &c. ] I will begin to others in that public solemn thanksgiving, and not grudge at...
I will go, &c. The psalmist, having before endeavoured to excite all people in general, and all God's people in particular, to praise the Lord, here declares it to be his own resolution to wors...
David Resolves to Praise God; David Declaring What God Has Done for His Soul. 13 I will go into thy house with burnt...
No text from Poole on this verse.
PART 2). ISRAEL'S GRATEFUL RESPONSE TO GOD'S DELIVERANCE REVEALED IN OFFERINGS AND THE FULFILMENT OF VOWS, AND A CALL FOR CONSIDERATION OF GOD'S FAITHFULNESS IN ANSWERING PRAYER ( Psalms 66:13-20 )....
INTRODUCTION Superscription .—“ To the chief Musician .” See Introduction to Psalms 57 . “ A Psalm or Song . See Introduction to Psalms 48 . Both the author and the occasion of the psalm are unk...
Psalms 66:1 . Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands: Let not Israel alone do it. Take up the strain, ye nations. He is the God of all the nations of the earth. «Make a joyful noise unto God,...
This in the Greek is called a psalm of the resurrection, no doubt because God had in David's time revived the nation. The application to the captivity is unsupported by the language of joy. David her...
Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands. Providence The real theme of this psalm is in the last section: it is a psalm of thanksgiving for a special mercy experienced by an individual. But t...
EXPOSITION THIS is another song of thanksgiving, and is connected with a special deliverance ( Psalms 66:10-19 ). The composer is about to offer a sacrifice to God in his holy place, in perfor...
Thanksgiving for the Miracles of God's Deliverance. To the chief musician, for use in liturgical worship, a song or psalm, the name of the inspired poet not being mentioned.
Deuteronomy 12:11 ; Deuteronomy 12:12 ; Ecclesiastes 5:4 ; Hebrews 13:15 ; Jonah 2:9 ; Nahum 1:15 ; Psalms 100:4 ; Psalms 116:14 ; Psalms 116:17-19 ; Psalms 118:19 ; Psalms 118:27 ; Psalm...