The processional march still continues. Presently Mount Zion comes in sight, and the neighboring hills are depicted as eying it enviously for its selection in preference to themselves. In Psalms 68:17-18 the glad throng begins to climb the sacred slopes of Zion, amid still more triumphant strains; and in Psalms 68:19, etc., the gates of the sanctuary stand wide open to welcome the festal crowds.
How great the contrast between the blackened appearance of a smoky caldron, and the lustrous sheen of a bird's pinions as they flash in the sunlight! Psalms 68:13. Yet that is the contrast between what we were, and what we now are. Zalmon, Psalms 68:14 -perhaps a reference to the wooded hill near Shechem, mentioned in Judges 9:48. The hostile kings were scattered as snowflakes are driven before the wind and melt in the sun. The hill Bashan, Psalms 68:15, is a snow-clad summit, but Zion is greater, since God is there. In the triumphant words of Psalms 68:18, the singer quotes Judges 5:12, and they are applied in Ephesians 4:8 to our Lord's ascension. Note the r.v. rendering of Psalms 68:19 -that the Lord daily beareth our burdens. Singers, minstrels, and girls with timbrels, Psalms 68:25 -all have a share in the Church's joy. [source]
Chapter Summary: Psalms 68
1A prayer at the removing of the ark 4An exhortation to praise God for his mercies 7for his care of the church 19for his great works
What do the individual words in Psalms 68:15 mean?
A mountainof God[is] the mountainof Bashana mountain [of][many] peaksof Bashan
Parse: Proper Noun, feminine singular
Root: בָּשָׁן
Sense: a district east of the Jordan known for its fertility which was given to the half-tribe of Manasseh.
Parse: Proper Noun, feminine singular
Root: בָּשָׁן
Sense: a district east of the Jordan known for its fertility which was given to the half-tribe of Manasseh.
What are the major concepts related to Psalms 68:15?