“ Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. ”
Let the people praise thee ... - See Psalms 67:5 . The repetition shows that this was the principal thought in the mind of the author of the psalm. It expresses an earnest - an intense - desire,...
LXVII. An Expansion of the High Priest's Blessing ( Numbers 6:24-26 ). The Jews have had an abundant harvest, and the Psalmist hopes that Yahweh's favour to Israel may lead other nations to a knowl...
DISCOURSE: 608 CALLING OF THE GENTILES PRAYED FOR Psalms 67:1-7 . God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us: that thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving hea...
Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. Let the people praise thee - Seeing the abundance of the blessings which the Gentiles were to receive, he calls again and again upon...
Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. -When all the peoples praise God, then the earth itself shall be delivered from the curse. Verse 6. Then shall the earth y...
This short and joyful Ps. is in the first place a harvest thanksgiving ( Psalms 67:6 ), perhaps at the Feast of Tabernacles. God's goodness to Israel reveals Him also to the nations ( Psalms 67:2 ),...
Psalms 67:1-7 THIS little psalm condenses the dominant thought of the two preceding into a series of aspirations after Israel's blessing, and the consequent diffusion of the knowledge of God's way...
“Let All the Peoples Praise Thee” Psalms 66:16-20 ; Psalms 67:1-7 Come and hear, Psalms 66:16-20 The psalm began with Come and see, Psalms 66:5 . Compare Mark 5:19-20 ; John 4:29 . It...
In this psalm there is a fine merging of prayer and praise. Prayer is its dominant note. Moreover, it is prayer on the highest level. It asks for personal blessing, but its deepest passion is that al...
The call on the people is again repeated, to rejoice, like the repeated hallelujahs of Heaven. He that hath once sung to the praise of Christ's redeeming love, will everlastingly sing to it, and make...
Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. Psalms 67:3 . This is repeated from that preceding verse to show the earnest desire of the church that it might be so; or that th...
Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee. Ver. 5. Versus amoibaeus. See Psalms 67:3 .
Let all the people praise thee O hasten that time when the Gentiles shall forsake their dumb idols, and serve and praise thee, the living God, as they have abundant cause to do. O let the nations...
Prayer for the Prosperity and Extension of the Church; Conversion of the Gentiles. To the chief musician on Neginoth. A ps...
No text from Poole on this verse.
INTRODUCTION Superscription . “ To the chief Musician: ” see Introduction to Psalms 57 . “ On Neginoth: ” see Introduction to Psalms 54 . “ A Song or Psalm :” see Introduction to Psalms 48 . Ne...
Title. In the LXX this is called a hymn, and is inscribed to David. Psalms 67:6 . God, the Elohim, even our own God, the Messiah, shall bless us; so the ancients interpret these words. REF...
God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause His face to shine upon us. Illumining the life Let us mark the two extremes of the psalm. It begins with “God be merciful unto us,” and it ends...
EXPOSITION ACCORDING to some, this psalm, like Psalms 65:1-19 , is a harvest thanksgiving (Hengstenberg, Cheyne). But the single expression (in Psalms 65:6 ) on which this view is grounded s...
A Psalm of Praise for the Conversion of the Gentiles. To the chief musician on Neginoth, to be rendered in public services with the accompaniment of stringed instruments, a psalm or song, the insp...
Matthew 6:10 ; Matthew 6:9 ; Psalms 67:3