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Let them praise his name in the dance! Let them sing praises to him with tambourine and harp!
Verse Takeaways
1
A 'Dance' or a 'Pipe'?
Scholars note a significant debate over the Hebrew word often translated as 'dance.' Several commentators, including Ellicott and Gill, argue it more likely refers to a musical instrument, like a 'pipe.' Others, like Barnes and Spurgeon, accept 'dance' as a form of sacred, joyful movement. The core command, however, remains clear: to praise God with expressive celebration.
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Psalms
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7
18th Century
Presbyterian
Let them praise his name in the dance — Margin, with the pipe. The Hebrew word here — מחול mâchôl — is rendered "…
19th Century
Anglican
In the dance. —Rather, as noted in the margin, with the pipe. The use of the word machôl in what was evidently a…
Baptist
Let them praise his name in the dance: let them sing praises unto him with the timbrel and harp.
That is, let them repeat the joy o…
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
Let them praise his name in the dance In a chorus of saints, joining together in their expressions of joy, by words …
New mercies continually demand new songs of praise, on earth and in heaven. And the children of Zion have not only to bless the God who made them, …