What is the meaning of Psalm 24:2? For • The word “for” ties verse 2 back to verse 1, giving the reason God rightfully owns “the earth and all its fullness.” • Scripture consistently links ownership to creative authority—Psalm 100:3: “Know that the LORD is God. It is He who made us, and we are His.” • Revelation 4:11 echoes the same logic: creation grounds worship. He has founded it • “Founded” pictures God as a master builder setting the earth in place, not a random process. • Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” • Hebrews 11:3 stresses that the visible world was “formed by God’s command.” • Like a house firmly laid on bedrock, the planet rests on the intentional act of its Designer. Upon the seas • Genesis 1:9–10 records God gathering the waters so dry land could appear; land literally rises “upon” or out of the seas. • Psalm 136:6: “He spread out the earth upon the waters.” • Job 38:8–11 portrays God setting boundaries the seas cannot cross. • These passages affirm a real, physical act in which God controls chaotic waters, shaping an inhabitable world. And established it • Founding is the initial act; establishing speaks of ongoing stability. • Psalm 93:1: “The world is established; it cannot be moved.” • Colossians 1:17 shows Christ “holds all things together,” highlighting continuous preservation. • The verse moves from creation to providence: God didn’t merely start the world; He keeps it secure. Upon the waters • Repetition reinforces the miracle: solid earth stands where fluid once reigned. • 2 Peter 3:5 recalls that “long ago by God’s word the heavens existed and the earth was formed out of water and by water.” • Psalm 104:5–9 celebrates the same feat, underscoring God’s sovereign control over the primal deep. • The language invites awe: the most unstable element becomes, by divine power, the platform of stability. summary Psalm 24:2 proclaims that the earth is God’s possession because He personally crafted it, lifted it out of watery chaos, and continues to uphold it. Creation and providence together validate His absolute right to rule and our joyful duty to acknowledge Him as Lord of all. |