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Verse 7

FELLOWSHIP IN GOD'S FAMILY OPEN TO ALL

"Ascribe unto Jehovah, ye kindreds of the peoples,

Ascribe unto Jehovah glory and strength.

Ascribe unto Jehovah the glory due unto his name:

Bring an offering, and come into his courts.

Oh worship Jehovah in holy array:

Tremble before him, all the earth."

Whereas, in the first three verses, Israel might have been able to interpret the message there as meaning that the Israelites alone would be the ones to proclaim the glory of God among all nations; but here, there is no room for such a misunderstanding. It is clear enough that the Gentiles will be accepted into the fellowship of God upon the basis of their honoring the True God and bringing a sacrifice into his courts.

Just as the opening lines of this psalm featured the triple call to "sing," we have another triple call here.

"Ascribe ... ascribe ... ascribe" (Psalms 96:7-8). In the KJV, these words are translated "give."

"Ye kindreds of the peoples" (Psalms 96:7). These can be none other than the Gentiles of all the earth. The prophet Malachi prophesied the acceptance of the Gentile world into fellowship with God, as follows.

"From the rising of the sun even to the going down of the same my name shall be great among the Gentiles; and in every place incense shall be offered unto my name, and a pure offering: for my name shall be great among the Gentiles" (Malachi 1:11).

"Bring an offering and come into his courts" (Psalms 96:8). It is well to remember that the tabernacle of David's day had "courts," no less than the more elaborate installations of the temple after Solomon's building of it.

"An offering." "This word is the one commonly used to denote a `bloodless' offering such as a thank-offering."[8] This surely indicates that "the offerings" which the Gentiles are here invited to bring are not the same as the bloody sacrifices of the Old Covenant. In the New Covenant, God's family of worshippers are called by the apostle Peter, "A spiritual house ... to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus Christ" (1 Peter 2:5). "Through him (Christ) let us offer up a sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips which make confession to his name" (Hebrews 13:15). Also, in the quotation from Malachi 1:11, it is a "pure" offering that is to be required, which is not a reference to the bloody sacrifices of the Old Testament.

"Oh worship Jehovah in holy array" (Psalms 96:9). "The New English Bible renders the last phrase here, `in the splendour of holiness'."[9] Here it becomes clear that the Gentiles are to be accepted into God's fellowship, not upon the basis of some merely formal sacrifice, but, at least partially, upon the basis of "holiness" (Hebrews 12:14). Delitzsch also referred students to Jesus' parable of "The Marriage of the King's Son"[10] (Matthew 22:1-14), in which the man who dared to attend without wearing a wedding garment was ejected in disgrace from the feast (Matthew 22:11f).

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