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Psalm 24

The King of Glory Enters His Holy Place

Because the Lord owns all creation and enters as the King of glory, His people must seek His face with clean hands, pure hearts, truthful worship, and reverent welcome of His reign.

Chapter Summary

Because the Lord owns all creation and enters as the King of glory, His people must seek His face with clean hands, pure hearts, truthful worship, and reverent welcome of His reign.

Overview

Psalm 24 argues that the Lord's universal kingship and holiness govern all true worship. Because He created and owns the whole earth, no creature stands outside His rule. Because His dwelling is holy, those who approach Him must be clean in conduct, pure in heart, loyal in worship, and truthful in speech. Because He is the God of salvation, He gives blessing and righteousness to those who seek His face.

Because He is the King of glory, worship climaxes not in human ascent but in the Lord's victorious royal entrance.

Context
Author

The superscription associates the psalm with David.

Audience

Israel's worshiping community, especially those approaching the Lord in holy worship and confessing His universal kingship.

Setting

The psalm does not name a precise historical event. Its language fits a liturgical setting involving ascent to the Lord's holy place and a processional or antiphonal celebration of the Lord as King of glory.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

Psalm 24 moves from creation-wide ownership, to holy access, to covenant blessing, to the triumphant entrance of the King of glory.

Covenant Significance

Psalm 24 shows covenant worship under the rule of the Creator-King. The covenant Lord owns all things, establishes His holy place, requires clean and truthful worship, gives blessing and righteousness as the God of salvation, and comes to His people as the King of glory. The psalm joins covenant access with covenant holiness and covenant hope.

Gospel Clarity

Psalm 24 clarifies the gospel by exposing both the glory of God and the problem of access. The Lord owns the earth, is holy, and must not be approached through false worship, deceit, or divided hearts. Sinners cannot finally ascend and stand by their own purity. The gospel announces that Jesus Christ, the truly righteous and pure Son, entered God's presence through His obedient life, atoning death, resurrection, and exaltation, and now grants cleansed sinners access to God.

In Him, God's people become a seeking generation who receive blessing and righteousness from the God of salvation and await the full appearing of the King of glory.

Focus Points

  • The Lord's universal ownership of creation
  • The holiness of divine presence
  • True worship requiring clean conduct and pure-hearted allegiance
  • Blessing and righteousness from the God of salvation
  • Seeking the face of God
  • Divine kingship and glory
  • The Lord as victorious warrior King
  • The movement from human ascent to divine entrance
  • Creation and ownership
  • Holiness and access
  • Integrity of worship
  • Salvation and righteousness received
  • Divine kingship
  • Seeking God's face
  • Doctrine of creation
  • Divine sovereignty
  • Holiness of God
  • True worship
  • Salvation and righteousness
  • Kingship of God
  • Christological fulfillment

Biblical Theology

Ministry Themes

Passages

Chapter opening: Psalms 24:1-6

Book Arc