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Salmi 2:6 Commento

10 voci storiche

Come la Chiesa ha letto Psalms 2:6 attraverso due millenni — Matthew Henry, John Calvin, Agostino d'Ippona, Giovanni Crisostomo e altri, raccolti versetto per versetto dal pubblico dominio.

KJV (1611) · en
Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion.
BLIVRE (2018) · pt-br
E eu ungi a meu Rei sobre Sião, o monte de minha santidade.
ARC (1995) · pt-br
Eu tenho estabelecido o meu Rei sobre Sião, meu santo monte.

Voci attraverso i secoli

Puritani 3

Matthew Henry · 1662 Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible
Introduction
As the foregoing psalm was moral, and showed us our duty, so this is evangelical, and shows us our Saviour. Under the type of David's kingdom (which was of divine appointment, met with much opposition, but prevailed at last) the kingdom of the Messiah, the Son of David, is prophesied of, which is the primary intention and scope of the psalm; and I think there is less in it of the type, and more of the anti-type, than in any of the gospel psalms, for there is nothing in it but what is applicable to Christ, but some things that are not at all applicable to David (Psa 2:6, Psa 2:7): "Thou art my Son" (Psa 2:8), "I will give thee the uttermost parts of the earth," and (Psa 2:12), "Kiss the Son." It is interpreted of Christ Act 4:24; Act 13:33; Heb 1:5. The Holy Ghost here foretels, I. The opposition that should be given to the kingdom of the Messiah (Psa 2:1-3). II. The baffling and chastising of that opposition (Psa 2:4, Psa 2:5). III. The setting up of the kingdom of Christ, notwithstanding that opposition (Psa 2:6). IV. The confirmation and establishment of it (Psa 2:7). V. A promise of the enlargement and success of it (Psa 2:8, Psa 2:9). VI. A call and exhortation to kings and princes to yield themselves the willing subjects of this kingdom, (Psa 2:10-12). Or thus: We have here, I. Threatenings denounced against the adversaries of Christ's kingdom (Psa 2:1-6). II. Promises made to Christ himself, the head of this kingdom (Psa 2:7-9). III. Counsel given to all to espouse the interests of this kingdom (Psa 2:10-12). This psalm, as the former, is very fitly prefixed to this book of devotions, because, as it is necessary to our acceptance with God that we should be subject to the precepts of his law, so it is likewise that we should be subject to the grace of his gospel, and come to him in the name of a Mediator.
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John Gill · 1697 Exposition of the Entire Bible
Introduction
INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 2 This psalm is the second in order, and so it is called in Act 13:33; which shows that the book of Psalms was in the same form in the apostles' days as now, and as it ever had been; and though it is without a title, yet certain it is that it is a psalm of David, since the twelve apostles of Christ with one voice ascribe it to him, in which no doubt they the generally received sense of the Jewish Act 4:24; and the Messiah is the subject of and that it is a prophecy concerning him, his person, office, and kingdom, appears from the express mention of the Lord's Anointed, or Messiah, in his being set as King over Zion, notwithstanding the opposition made against him; from the person spoken of being called the Son of God, and that in such sense as angels and men are not, and therefore cannot belong to any creature; and from his having so large an inheritance, and such power over the Heathen; and from the reverence, service, and obedience due to him from the kings and judges of the earth; and from the trust and confidence which is to be put in him, which ought not to be placed but in a divine Person; and more especially this appears from several passages cited out of it in the New Testament, and applied to the Messiah, Act 4:25, to which may be added, that the ancient Jewish doctors interpreted this psalm of the Messiah (s); and some of the modern ones own that it may be understood either of David or of the Messiah, and that some things are clearer of the Messiah than of David (t); and some particular passages in it are applied to him both by ancient and later writers among the Jews, as Psa 2:1, "Why do the Heathen rage", &c. (u); Psa 2:6, "I have set", &c. (w); Psa 2:7, "I will declare the decree", &c. (x), and Psa 2:8, "Ask of me", &c. (y); and we may very safely interpret the whole of him. (s) Jarchi in loc. (t) Kimchi in v. 12. & Aben Ezra in v. 6. 12. (u) T. Bab. Avodah Zarah, fol. 3. 2. Pirke Eliezer, c. 19. (w) R. Saadiah Gaon in Dan. vii. 13. (x) Yalkut Simeoni, par. 2. fol. 90. 2. Zohar in Numb. fol. 82. 2. Maimon in Misn Sanhedrin, c. 11. 1. & Abarbinel Mashmiah Jeshuah, fol. 37. 4. &. 38. 1. (y) T. Bab. Succah, fol. 52. 1. & Bereshit Rabba, s. 44. fol. 38. 4.
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John Gill · 1697 Exposition of the Entire Bible
Yet have I set my King upon my holy hill of Zion. Or, "behold, I have set", &c. so Noldius by Zion is meant the church of God, especially under the Gospel dispensation; see Heb 12:22; so called, because, as Zion was, it is the object of God's love and choice, the place of his habitation and residence; where divine worship is observed, and the word and ordinances of God administered; and where the Lord distributes his blessings of grace; and which is the perfection of beauty, through Christ's comeliness put upon her; and will be the joy of the whole earth: it is strongly fortified by the power and grace of God, and is immovable and impregnable, being built on Christ, the Rock of ages; and, like Zion, it is an high hill, eminent and visible; and more especially will be so when the mountain of the Lord's house is established upon the tops of the mountains: and it is an Holy One, through the presence and worship of God in it, and the sanctification of his Spirit. And over this hill, the church, Christ is King; he is King of saints, and is acknowledged by them; and it is for their great safety and security, their joy, comfort, and happiness, that he is set over them: he is called by his Father "my King", because he who is King of Zion is his Anointed, as in Psa 2:2; and his Son, his begotten Son, as in Psa 2:7; his firstborn, his fellow and equal; and because he is his as King; not that he is King over him, for his Father is greater than he, as man and Mediator, or with respect to his office capacity, in which he is to be considered as King; and therefore he is rather King under him: but he is a King of his setting up, and therefore called his; he has appointed him his kingdom, given him the throne of his father David; put a crown of pure gold on his head, and crowned him with glory and honour, and the sceptre of righteousness in his hand, and has given him a name above every name. He did not make himself a King, nor was he made so by men; but he was set up, or "anointed" by God the Father, as the word (g) here used signifies; and may refer either to the inauguration of Christ into his kingly office, and his investiture with it from all eternity, as in Pro 8:23, where the same word is used as here; and anointing with oil being a ceremony performed at the instalment of kings into their office, the phrase is used for the thing itself: or rather, since Christ was anointed with the Holy Ghost in the human nature, at his incarnation and baptism, and especially at the time of his ascension, when he was made or declared to be LORD and CHRIST; this may refer to the time when he, as the ascended Lord and King, gave gifts to men, to his apostles, and qualified them in an extraordinary manner to carry his Gospel into the Gentile world, and spread it there, as they did with success; whereby his kingdom became more visible and glorious, to the great vexation of the Jews; for, in spite of all their opposition, Christ being set by his Father King over his church and people, continued so, and his kingdom was every day more and more enlarged, to their great mortification. (g) Symmachus; "unxi", Musculus, Vatablus, Ainsworth, Piscator, Muis, Cocceius; "ego inungens", Junius & Tremellius; "inunxi", Michaelis.
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Padri della Chiesa 4

Jerome · 347 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON PSALM 2
The first four verses are spoken by a prophet or an angel wondering why human rashness had risen up against the Son of God. From the fifth verse, though, the Lord himself responds, exhorting the Gentiles and all the people from the Jews who are going to believe in him, so that they may loosen the binding chains and cast off the heavy burden of the law that their own ancestors were unable to carry, so they may follow him whose yoke is easy, and burden light.
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Augustine of Hippo · 354 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
Exposition on Psalm 2
"Yet am I set by Him as King upon Sion, His holy hill, preaching His decree" [Psalm 2:6]. This is clearly spoken in the Person of the very Lord our Saviour Christ. But if Sion signify, as some interpret, beholding, we must not understand it of anything rather than of the Church, where daily is the desire raised of beholding the bright glory of God, according to that of the Apostle, "but we with open face beholding the glory of the Lord." [2 Corinthians 3:18] Therefore the meaning of this is, Yet I am set by Him as King over His holy Church; which for its eminence and stability He calls a mountain. "Yet I am set by Him as King." I, that is, whose "bands" they were meditating "to break asunder," and whose "yoke" to "cast away." "Preaching His decree." Who does not see the meaning of this, seeing it is daily practised?
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Theodoret of Cyrus · 393 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
COMMENTARY ON THE PSALMS 2:7
[This] verse … is expressed in human fashion: as God he possesses his kingship by nature, as human he receives it by election.
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Theodore of Mopsuestia · 428 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
COMMENTARY ON PSALMS 2:6
Truly, God did not establish the Word as King at that time, whose power did not just begin at a point but who was and always is powerful, who as in his nature had power to create whatever he wished; so also in his nature he had power rightly so to rule over all things that were made by him.
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Medievale 1

Thomas Aquinas · 1225 Excerpts (Historical Christian Faith …
Exposition on the Psalms of David
There follows next the showing of how they are suppressed by his Christ, when he says, "But I." Now the people, the nations, and the princes rose up against the Christ of David. First, therefore, he shows how Christ relates to the people. Second, how to the nations, at "The Lord said to me." Third, how to the kings, at "And now, O kings, understand," etc. He says, therefore: "But I have been appointed king by him over Zion, his holy mountain," etc. It should be known, moreover, that he was appointed king by God in Jerusalem, and by his preaching he brought the people back. As if to say: they act thus, but they cannot achieve their aim, because I have been appointed, that is, established as king over Zion, that is, over the Jewish people, who were in Jerusalem, whose citadel is Zion -- by him, namely by God: Ps. 117: "The Lord is my helper; I will not fear what man may do to me." Job 17: "Place me, O Lord, beside you, and let any man's hand fight against me." I have been appointed king, moreover, over Zion, his holy mountain, not for my own sake, but to govern the people according to the law of God; and therefore he says, "proclaiming his precept." Mystically, however, he was appointed king, according to Jer. 23: "A king shall reign and be wise," etc. Zion, that is, the Church of the Jews, which is called the holy mountain, because it first received the rays of the sun: Mt. 15: "I was not sent except to the sheep," etc. 2 Sam. 19: "Do I not know that today I am made king over Israel?" "Proclaiming the precept," that is, the Gospel. Or that special precept of which it is said in Jn. 13: "A new commandment I give you, that you love one another"; and Jn. 15: "This is my commandment," etc. This precept he personally preached to the Jews, that is, in his own person: Mt. 4: "Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the kingdom." Rom. 15: "I say that Christ Jesus was a minister of the circumcision for the truth of God," etc.
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Moderno 2

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown · 1802 Critical and Explanatory Commentary o…
Introduction
The number and authorship of this Psalm are stated (Act 4:25; Act 13:33). Though the warlike events of David's reign may have suggested its imagery, the scenes depicted and the subjects presented can only find a fulfilment in the history and character of Jesus Christ, to which, as above cited and in Heb 1:5; Heb 5:5, the New Testament writers most distinctly testify. In a most animated and highly poetical style, the writer, in "four stanzas of three verses each," sets forth the inveterate and furious, though futile, hostility of men to God and His anointed, God's determination to carry out His purpose, that purpose as stated more fully by His Son, the establishment of the Mediatorial kingdom, and the imminent danger of all who resist, as well as the blessing of all who welcome this mighty and triumphant king. (Psa 2:1-12) Why do the heathen, &c.--Beholding, in prophetic vision, the peoples and nations, as if in a tumultuous assembly, raging with a fury like the raging of the sea, designing to resist God's government, the writer breaks forth into an exclamation in which are mingled surprise at their folly, and indignation at their rebellion. heathen--nations generally, not as opposed to Jews. the people--or, literally, "peoples," or races of men.
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Jamieson, Fausset & Brown · 1802 Critical and Explanatory Commentary o…
The purpose here declared, in its execution, involves their overthrow. Yet--literally, "and," in an adversative sense. I have set--anointed, or firmly placed, with allusion in the Hebrew to "casting an image in a mould." The sense is not materially varied in either case. my king--appointed by Me and for Me (Num 27:18). upon my holy hill of Zion--Zion, selected by David as the abode of the ark and the seat of God's visible residence (Kg1 8:1); as also David, the head of the Church and nation, and type of Christ, was called holy, and the Church itself came to be thus named (Psa 9:11; Psa 51:18; Psa 99:2; Isa 8:18; Isa 18:7, &c.).
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