Cogitent ergo principes quantum infra Deum … THE PSALM OF THE SEVEN THUNDERS. Read Psalm 29:4 commentary using The Treasury of David. Study the bible online using commentary on Psalm 29:4 and more! The voice of the Lord is full of majesty — Is a very awful and evident proof of God’s glorious majesty. With Bible Gateway Plus, you gain instant access to a digital Bible study library, including complete notes from the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible and the New Bible Commentary. Upgrade to the best Bible Gateway experience!
4. We have enlisted hundreds of friends -- biblical scholars, theologians, homileticians and pastors dedicated to the craft of biblical preaching -- to provide you timely, compelling and trustworthy content. The cedars of Lebanon — A place famous for strong and lofty cedars.
PSALM 29.
Psalms 29:4 The voice of the LORD [is] powerful; the voice of the LORD [is] full of majesty.. Ver.
Psalm 28 Psalm 30 ... You'll get this book and many others when you join Bible Gateway Plus. Psalm 29:4-9.
The Working Preacher team believes that God uses good biblical preaching to change lives. Now the psalm is spent in showing what great things God can do, and that with no more trouble to himself than a word speaking, "The voice of the Lord is full of majesty" Ps 29:4, "It breaks the cedars, it divides the flames, it shakes the wilderness, it makes the hinds to calve." The voice of the Lord is powerful] So that it shaketh heaven and earth, Hebrews 12:26.
What Psalm 29 means This is one of the most beautiful psalms in the Bible, called a "Psalm of sublime grandeur," by Dummelow, "Awe-inspiring poetry," by Yates and, "A magnificent description of a thunder-storm rolling over the land," by Maclaren. Psalm 29:3. Psalm 29:10-11:David says that the people of the LORD will be safe even in a great storm. Psalm 29:4-6. ... An integrated digital Bible study library - including complete notes from the Believer's Bible Commentary and the Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible (NIV and NRSV) - is … Breaketh the cedars — By lightning, vulgarly called thunderbolts; which have torn asunder and destroyed trees and towers.
Working Preacher is a ministry brought to you by Luther Seminary. Try it free for 30 days! John Trapp Complete Commentary. Verse 1. The voice of the Lord — That is, thunder, frequently so called; is upon the waters — Upon the seas, where its noise spreads far and wide, and is very terrible; or rather above the clouds, which are sometimes called waters, as Genesis 1:7; Psalm 18:11, because they are of a watery substance, and frequently much water is contained in them.