9. iniquity--"unnrighteousness." Some oldest manuscripts read,
"lawlessness."
therefore--because God loves righteousness and hates iniquity.
God . . . thy God--JEROME,
AUGUSTINE, and others translate
Ps 45:7,
"O God, Thy God, hath anointed thee," whereby Christ is addressed as
God. This is probably the true translation of the Hebrew there,
and also of the Greek of Hebrews here; for it is likely the Son
is addressed, "O God," as in
Heb 1:8.
The anointing here meant is not that at His baptism, when He
solemnly entered on His ministry for us; but that with the "oil of
gladness," or "exulting joy" (which denotes a triumph, and
follows as the consequence of His manifested love of
righteousness and hatred of iniquity), wherewith, after His
triumphant completion of His work, He has been anointed by the Father
above His fellows (not only above us, His fellow men, the adopted
members of God's family, whom "He is not ashamed to call His brethren,"
but above the angels, fellow partakers in part with Him, though
infinitely His inferiors, in the glories, holiness, and joys of heaven;
"sons of God," and angel "messengers," though subordinate to the divine
Angel--"Messenger of the covenant"). Thus He is antitype to Solomon,
"chosen of all David's many sons to sit upon the throne of the kingdom
of the Lord over Israel," even as His father David was chosen before
all the house of his father's sons. The image is drawn from the custom
of anointing guests at feasts
(Ps 23:5);
or rather of anointing kings: not until His ascension did He assume the
kingdom as Son of man. A fuller accomplishment is yet to be,
when He shall be VISIBLY the anointed King over
the whole earth (set by the Father) on His holy hill of Zion,
Ps 2:6, 8.
So David, His type, was first anointed at Bethlehem
(1Sa 16:13;
Ps 89:20);
and yet again at Hebron, first over Judah
(2Sa 2:4),
then over all Israel
(2Sa 5:3);
not till the death of Saul did he enter on his actual kingdom; as it
was not till after Christ's death that the Father set Him at His right
hand far above all principalities
(Eph 1:20, 21).
The
forty-fifth Psalm
in its first meaning was addressed to Solomon; but the Holy Spirit
inspired the writer to use language which in its fulness can only apply
to the antitypical Solomon, the true Royal Head of the theocracy.
JFB.
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