Bible Commentary

Psalms 93:2

The Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:2

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

The distinction between God and God's handiwork.

"Thou art from everlasting." Thou wast before the world was. He was. He made the earth, and all that therein is. "In the beginning God." His name is the "I am." "The first and foundation stone of the great temple of revealed truth is a declaration which grasps all space, all being, all time, and bids us see before them, above them, and altogether independent of them—One lonely, infinite Being, having life in himself. When there was no heaven and no earth, in the silent dark eternities, in the beginning, there was God." The first chapter of Genesis is evidently "designed to impress on us that the world was not created by chance, by self-generation, by impersonal powers of nature, or by many agents acting either in harmony or in antagonism. God is distinct from all that he has made." Bishop Wordsworth says, on , "The declaration of this verse opposes the Pantheist, who says, 'The world is God;' the Peripatetics, who say, 'The world exists from eternity;' the Stoics, who say, 'The world was made by Fate and Necessity;' the Epicureans, who say, 'It arose from a fortuitous concourse of atoms;' the Persians and Manichaeans, who say, 'It arose from the antagonism of two rival powers;' the Gnostics, who say, 'It was made by angels, or emanations of aeons;' Hermogenes, who says, 'It was made out of matter coeternal with God;' and the modern notion, that it arose out of the spontaneous agency and evolution of self developing powers." The distinction between a man and the machine he makes is clear enough; but the complication of thought, in relation to God, arises from the fact that he makes the material of which he makes the machine of creation. Illustrate the distinction along the following lines.

I. CREATION HAD A BEGINNING; THE CREATOR HAD NONE.

II. CREATION IS A MATERIAL THING; THE CREATOR IS A SPIRITUAL BEING.

III. CREATION, AS WE KNOW IT, MAY BE ONE OF MANY CREATIONS; THE CREATOR; AS WE KNOW HIM, IS THE ORIGINATOR OF THEM ALL.

IV. CREATION IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE; THE CREATOR IS UNCHANGEABLE.

V. CREATION HAS BUT A TEMPORARY EXISTENCE; THE CREATOR IS ETERNAL. "From everlasting to everlasting thou art God;" "Of thy years there is no ending" ().—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 93:1-5The 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 93:2Thy throne is established of old. Though God from time to time comes forward, as it were, and asserts his sovereignty, yet it is no new rule that he sets up. He has always been the King both of heaven and earth. Thou ar…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Psalms 93:2The eternity of God. "Thou art from everlasting." There are truths self-evident, yet incomprehensible. We can neither doubt nor grasp them. Light, which reveals all things else, dazzles, even blinds, if we gaze on it. S…Joseph S. Exell and contributors