Bible Commentary

Psalms 93:1

The Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The completeness of Divine Creation.

"The world also is established, that it cannot be moved." It is a remarkable illustration of the mistakes made in explaining the poetical figures of God's Word, that Calvin appealed to this passage as proving that the earth is motionless, which it is not. What the psalmist rejoices in is the completeness of the Divine creation. It needed no one to put to it a finishing touch. Man's handiwork always needs finishing off. We may illustrate by the complicated machine which man may make. However complete it may be, no one thinks of its going alone, without any supervision and attention; and no one thinks of doubting its completeness because it receives such attention. Yet men so often persist that if God's creation is perfect, it must be independent; it must need no attention and no repair, even if self-willed men do interfere with it.

I. COMPLETENESS MEANS THAT THE THINGS MADE ARE PERFECT AND SUFFICIENT. We may not think that God made all he could make. What he made was relative to the particular moral beings he designed. They were to be beings with five senses, and creation was to be fitted to those five senses. Of everything God made it was declared that it was good, not necessarily the best possible to God's thought, but the best possible for God's purpose. Show that man, in all the ages, has never of himself been able to improve a single thing God has made. He has only improved things by bringing out the latent possibilities God put in the things. As with developed flowers, roses, etc.

II. COMPLETENESS MEANS THAT THE LAWS RULING THE RELATIONS OF THINGS ARE ONCE FOR ALL FIXED AND DEFINED. Much is made of the fixity and certainty of the "laws of nature." Too much cannot be made of it. "The law of the Lord," in creation, "is perfect." But in every set of laws it will be found that law qualifies, and limits, and even crosses, law in actual working. It is so with the laws of nature. And the best perfection is seen in the fact that the laws will work with each other harmoniously. Illustrate how the laws of life and of death work into each other throughout creation.

III. COMPLETENESS MEANS THAT A LIVING WILL PRESIDES OVER ALL THINGS AND THE WORKING OF ALL LAWS. Nothing can be moved, in the sense of being changed; but everything is within the Divine adjustment, and the confidence of the psalmist arises from the conviction of the actual present Divine rule.—R.T.

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Psalms 93:1-5The Lord might have displayed only his justice, holiness, and awful power, in his dealings with fallen men; but he has been pleased to display the riches of his mercy, and the power of his renewing grace. In this great…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1-5EXPOSITION Line the preceding, a psalm of praise. Jehovah is set forth as manifesting himself in the character of King. He robes himself in majesty, and reigns openly. The world, unstable as it may seem, is in reality f…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1The Lord reigneth; rather, is become King ( ἐβασίλευσεν, LXX.); comp. Psalms 10:16; Psalms 47:6; Psalms 96:10; Psalms 97:1, etc. God is regarded as having for a time laid aside, or hidden, his sovereignty, but as now…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1-5The psalm celbrates the majesty of Jehovah as Creator and Ruler of the universe. Three principal thoughts— I. GOD IS ABLE TO OVERCOME THE FIERCEST OPPOSITION OF HIS FOES. The "floods" and "many waters" and "mighty waves…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1-5The Lord reigneth. Note— I. THE PROPOSITION TO BE PROVED—that "the Lord reigneth." The psalmist describes: 1. The royal robes. "He hath clothed himself with majesty." The sacred writers seem to have drawn their ideas of…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1Is God dead? Mrs. Beecher Stowe relates an incident which once gave to a speech which Frederick Douglas was delivering a startling and almost overwhelming power. Douglas was descanting, in his usual impassioned manner,…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1The God of vengeance. To many it seems a strange prayer that God should show himself in this character. Therefore consider— I. WHAT VENGEANCE IS. 1. It is not the same as revenge, a human, an evil, and often unjust thin…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:1The King figure for God. Prayer book Version, "The Lord is King." The sentence would be more precisely rendered "has become King," for some particular manifestation of Jehovah's kingly rule was then occupying the psalmi…Joseph S. Exell and contributors