Psalms 2:6-12
2:6 a my chosen king: The Lord establishes his anointed ruler.Summary for Ps 2:7-9: 2:7-9 b The Lord adopted the king of David’s dynasty to conquer rebellious nations by force (see 89:26-27 c). 2:7 d Today I have become your Father: People in the ancient Near East commonly accepted a father-son relationship between gods and kings. In Israel, the Lord adopted kings as his sons. God set David apart as his most excellent and exalted son (89:27 e). All descendants of David were the Lord’s representatives or agents. As an eternal member of the Godhead (John 1:1 f) and a descendant of David (Acts 13:33 g; Heb 1:5 h; 5:5 i), Jesus is the true Son of God.
2:8 j In an example of the suzerain-vassal relationship between the Lord and Israel’s king (see Deuteronomy Book Introduction, “Literary Form”), the Lord invites the king to ask for favors (see Ps 21:2 k, 4 l).
• All nations will be subject to David’s descendant, the Messiah.
2:9 m The Lord gives his anointed ruler the power to conquer the nations as his inheritance (Isa 11:4 n; Rev 2:27 o; 12:5 p; 19:15 q), breaking their rebellion, resistance, and independence.
2:10 r It pleases the Lord when his people submit to him and seek his protection. The wise accept the Lord’s rebuke and desire to repent.
Summary for Ps 2:11-12: 2:11-12 s rejoice: Rulers must welcome the Son as their true and only King.
• Submit to God’s royal son (or Submit to God’s royal Son, or kiss the son): Kissing was an expression of submission (Hos 13:2 t).
• The Lord gives joy to all who fear him (Ps 1:1-2 u) and trust him (18:30 v; 34:22 w; 119:1-3 x).
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