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  1. What does Psalm 28:2 mean? David was mindful of right worship as he prayed. The tabernacle in Jerusalem was the site where God met His people and displayed His glory. This is the "holy sanctuary" to which David refers. Daniel, living many centuries after David, was also mindful of right worship.

  2. Jun 25, 2017 · Read our Psalm 28 1 commentary for an explanation of Psalm 28:1. Then continue on to verse 2… Now, in Psalm 28:2 David continues his petitioning the Lord that he started in verse 1. 2 Hear the voice of my supplications, when I cry unto thee, when I lift up my hands toward thy holy oracle. So, David here again in verse two is asking the Lord ...

  3. iii. “This need not mean that the psalm is later than David; only that the word had become the standard term for the ark’s abode by Solomon’s time, which suggests that it was in use well before this.” (Kidner) 2. (Psalm 28:3-5) Asking to be spared the fate of the wicked. Do not take me away with the wicked And with the workers of iniquity,

  4. This psalm is again simply titled “A Psalm of David.” It shows David the son of Jesse once again crying out to God, and praising Him for the hearing and answering of his prayer. In this psalm we see the heart in a few different aspects: the evil heart (Psalm 28:3), the trusting heart (Psalm 28:7), and the rejoicing heart (Psalm 28:7). A.

  5. In Psalm 28:3, Psalm 28:4 the prayer is expanded. משׁך (instead of which we find אסף in Psalm 26:9), to draw any one down forcibly to destruction, or to drag him to the place of judgment, Ezekiel 32:20, cf. Psalm 10:8; Job 24:22. The delineation of the ungodly David borrows from his actual foes, Should he succumb to them, then his fate ...

  6. Psalm 28 The former part of this psalm is the prayer of a saint militan and now in distress ( ver 1-3 ), to which is added the doom of God's implacable enemies, ver 4, 5 . The latter part of the psalm is the thanksgiving of a saint triumphant, and delivered out of his distresses ( ver 6-8 ), to which is added a prophetical prayer for all God's faithful loyal subjects, ver 9 .

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  8. Jul 14, 2024 · God’s Anointed – In the context of Psalm 28, God’s anointed one refers to David. The prophet Samuel was instructed by God to anoint David with oil, signifying that he would be the next king of Israel. OUTLINE: THE LORD IS THE STRENGTH OF HIS PEOPLE (28:1-9): David begins the 28th psalm in a familiar way, asking God to hear his prayers for ...