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  1. Jun 15, 2023 · Answer. The phrase lift up your heads in Psalm 24:7 is describing the praise of Israel at a specific time in its history: “Lift up your heads, you gates; be lifted up, you ancient doors, that the King of glory may come in.”. It is likely that David wrote Psalm 24 after the ark of the covenant returned to Jerusalem.

  2. Mar 29, 2020 · Psalm 24 is an antiphonal psalm requiring two choirs which were conspicuously absent at Jesus’ entry to Jerusalem. The actual fulfilment of the Ps 24 prophecy is possibly found in places like Rev 11:15-18, 19:16 where Jesus is given the title King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Lord of hosts, etc, and the kingdoms of this world are formally handed over the Jesus.

  3. Psalm 24:7 These last verses reveal to us the great representative man, who answered to the full character laid down, and therefore by his own right ascended the holy hill of Zion. Our Lord Jesus Christ could ascend into the hill of the Lord because his hands were clean and his heart was pure, and if we by faith in him are conformed to his image we shall enter too.

  4. Psalms 24:7. Lift up your heads, O ye gates By which the gates of hell are not meant; nor are the words to be understood of the descent of Christ thither, to fetch the souls of Old Testament saints from thence; who the Papists dream were detained in an apartment there, as in a prison, called by them "limbus patrum"; seeing these, immediately upon their separation from the body, were in a state ...

  5. ^A Matt. XXIV. 1-28; ^B Mark XIII. 1-23; ^C Luke XXI. 5-24. ^a 1 And Jesus went out from the temple [leaving it to return no more], and was going on his way; and his disciples came to him ^b as he went forth ^a to show him the buildings of the temple. ^b one of his disciples saith unto him, Teacher, behold, what manner of stones and what manner of buildings! ^c 5 And as some spake of the ...

  6. Nov 1, 2009 · Similarly, the poem describes the contrasting natures of the God who enters into human space and the nature of those humans who are able to meet the advent of this God. Psalm 24 is about the advent of human beings into the presence of God, and the mutual advent of the King of glory into the presence of “those who seek the face of God.”.

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  8. Jul 17, 2024 · The expression “lift up your heads” in Psalm 24:7 describes Israel’s praise at a specific historical moment: “Lift up your heads, you gates; be lifted up, you ancient doors, that the King of glory may come in.”. It is probable that David composed Psalm 24 after the ark of the covenant was brought back to Jerusalem.

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