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Passage Research

Psalm 75 — Sermon Preparation

Below is a research summary for Psalm 75, drawn from openly licensed scholarly databases — original-language morphology, classic sermons from the church fathers through the Puritans, and ancient geography data.

11
verses
87 / 60
Hebrew words / lemmas
5
classic sermon excerpts
3
preachers & commentators

Psalm 75 in the Hebrew

Distinctive vocabulary of this chapter, based on original-language morphology.

Hebrew Transliteration Strong's Count Glosses
רוּם rûwm H7311 5 be high, rise
קֶרֶן qeren H7161 4 horn, flask
רָשָׁע râshâʻ H7563 3 wrong, bad
יָדָה yâdâh H3034 2 throw, revere
הָלַל hâlal H1984 2 be clear, shine
שָׁפַט shâphaṭ H8199 2 judge, sentence
מֶסֶךְ meçek H4538 1 mixture

How preachers through history handled this text

5 public-domain excerpts on Psalm 75, from the church fathers to the Puritans.

Matthew Henry 3 Alexander MacLaren 1 John Wesley 1

“Though this psalm is attributed to Asaph in the title, yet it does so exactly agree with David's circumstances, at his coming to the crown after the death of Saul, that most interpreters apply it to that juncture, and suppose that either Asaph penned it, in the person of David, as his poet-laureate (probably the substance of the psalm was some speech which David made to a convention of the states, at his accession to the government, and Asaph turned it into verse, and published it in a poem, for the better spreading of it among the people), or …”

— Matthew Henry, Commentary on the Whole Bible, Vol. 3 (Job to Song of Solomon), on Psalm 75:1–30 (Public Domain)

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