What is the meaning of Psalm 2:5? Then He rebukes them • The verse opens with swift divine response: “Then He rebukes them” (Psalm 2:5). God does not overlook rebellion; He calls it out with authority. • Throughout Scripture we see the Lord’s rebuke shatter pride—Psalm 9:5 says, “You have rebuked the nations; You have destroyed the wicked…”; Job 26:11 pictures even “the pillars of heaven” trembling at His reprimand. • The timing—“then”—follows the nations’ plotting (Psalm 2:1-3). Human defiance invites a direct, unmistakable correction from the Throne. in His anger • God’s anger is righteous, never impulsive. Psalm 7:11 reminds us He “displays His wrath each day” against evil. • Romans 1:18 adds that “the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness,” confirming that divine anger targets sin, not innocents. • This holy anger showcases purity: He cannot be indifferent toward wickedness. Nahum 1:2-3 echoes, “The LORD is avenging and wrathful… the LORD will by no means leave the guilty unpunished.” and terrifies them • The rebuke isn’t merely verbal; it shakes rebels to the core. Exodus 15:16 records how “Terror and dread fall upon them” when God acts. • Psalm 76:7-8 paints the scene: “You alone are to be feared… when You rose up to judge.” Divine presence produces awe that strips away bravado. • Revelation 6:15-17 shows future fulfillment, kings hiding in caves, begging mountains to fall because they cannot stand before “the wrath of the Lamb.” in His fury • Fury intensifies anger—an unstoppable, consuming force against persistent rebellion. Isaiah 66:15 declares, “The LORD will come with fire… to render His anger with fury.” • Ezekiel 38:19 depicts the same blazing emotion: “In My zeal and fiery wrath I proclaim…” leading to global trembling. • Hebrews 10:31 sums it up: “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” The psalmist wants us to feel that weight so we run to grace rather than oppose it. summary Psalm 2:5 shows God moving from laughter at human arrogance (v.4) to decisive judgment. He rebukes—correcting; He does so in anger—holy displeasure; He terrifies—producing dread; He acts in fury—final, consuming wrath. The verse underscores that rejecting God’s Anointed is perilous. Yet the larger psalm soon invites every ruler—and every heart—to “kiss the Son” (v.12), finding refuge instead of wrath. |