Before proceeding to describe the 'morning sacrifice,' it
is necessary to advert to a point of considerable interest and importance. There can be no
doubt that, at the time of Christ, public prayer occupied a very prominent place in the
ordinary daily services of the Temple. Yet the original institution in the law of Moses
contains no mention of it; and such later instances as the prayer of Hannah, or that of
Solomon at the dedication of the Temple, afford neither indication nor precedent as
regards the ordinary public services. The confession of the high-priest over the
scape-goat (Lev 16:21) cannot be regarded as public prayer. Perhaps the nearest approach
to it was on occasion of offering the firstfruits, especially in that concluding entreaty
(Deut 26:15): 'Look down from Thy holy habitation, from heaven, and bless Thy people
Israel, and the land which Thou hast given us, as Thou swarest unto our fathers, a land
that floweth with milk and honey.' But, after all, this was again private, not public
prayer, and offered on a private occasion, far different form the morning and evening
sacrifices. The wording of King Solomon's prayer (1 Kings 8) implies indeed an act of
united and congregational worship, but strictly speaking, it conveys no more than that
public supplication was wont to be offered in times of public necessity (1 Kings 8:30-52).
Nor can anything definite be inferred from the allusions of Isaiah to the hypocrisy of his
contemporaries (Isa 1:15) in spreading forth their hands and making many prayers. *
Regulations of the Rabbis
It was otherwise after the return from Babylon. With the
institution and spread of synagogues for the twofold purpose, that in every
place Moses should be read every Sabbath day, and to provide a place 'where prayer was
wont to be made' practice of public worship soon became general. In Nehemiah 11:17 we
find already a special appointment 'to begin the thanksgiving in prayer.' Afterwards
progress in this direction was rapid. The Apocrypha afford painful evidence how soon all
degenerated into a mere form, and how prayer became a work of self-righteousness, by which
merit might be obtained. This brings us to the Pharisees of the New Testament, with their
ostentatious displays of devotion, and the hypocrisy of their endless prayers, full of
needless repetitions and odious self-assertion. At the outset we here meet, as usual, at
least seeming contradictions. On the one hand, the Rabbis define every attitude and
gesture in prayer, fix the most rigid formulas, trace each of them up to one of the
patriarchs, * and would have us believe that the pious have their nine hours of devotion,
laying down this curious principle, suited to both worlds'Prolix prayer protracts life.'
* The Rabbis ascribe the origin of the
morning prayers to Abraham, that of the afternoon prayers to Isaac, and of the evening
prayers to Jacob. In each case supposed Scriptural evidence for it is dragged in by some
artificial mode of interpretation.
On the other hand, they also tell us that prayer may be
contracted within the narrowest limits, and that a mere summary of the prescribed formulas
is sufficient; while some of their number go the length of strenuously contending for free
prayer. In fact, free prayer, liturgical formulas, and special prayers taught by
celebrated Rabbis, were alike in use. Free prayer would find its place in such private
devotions as are described in the parable of the Publican and the Pharisee. It also
mingled with the prescribed liturgical formulas. It may be questioned whether, even in
reference to the latter, the words were always rigidly adhered to, perhaps even accurately
remembered. Hence the Talmud lays it down (in the treatise Berachoth), that in such
cases it sufficed to say the substance of the prescribed prayers.
The Lord's Prayer
The prayer spoken by the Lord far transcended any that
Jewish Rabbis ever conceived, even where its wording most nearly approaches theirs. *
* It must always be kept in mind that such
expressions as 'Our Father,' 'Thy kingdom come,' and others like them, meant in the mouth
of the Rabbis a predominance of the narrowest Judaism; in fact, the subjection of all the
world to Rabbinical ordinances, and the carnal glory of Israel.
It is characteristic that two of its petitions find no
real counterpart in the prayers of the Rabbis. These are: 'Forgive us our trespasses,' and
'Lead us not into temptation.' In the Temple the people never responded to the prayers by
an Amen, but always with this benediction, 'Blessed be the name of the glory of His
kingdom for ever!' *
* Thus the words in our Authorised Version,
Matthew 6:13, 'For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen,'
which are wanting in all the most ancient MSS, are only the common Temple-formula of
response, and as such may have found their way into the text. The word 'Amen' was in
reality a solemn asseveration or a mode of oath.
This formula was traced up to the patriarch Jacob, on his
death-bed. In regard to 'the kingdom,' whatever the Rabbis understood by it, the feeling
was so strong, that it was said: 'Any prayer which makes not mention of the kingdom, is
not a prayer at all.'
The Two Elements in Prayer
In general the Rabbis distinguish two elements in prayer,
on the ground of the two terms used by Solomon (1 Kings 8:28), and petition.
To these correspond the two kinds of early Jewish prayer: the Eulogies and the Tephillah.
And thus far correctly, as the two Hebrew words for prayer indicate, the one adoration,
the other supplication, or, rather, intercession. Both kinds of prayer found expression in
the Temple services. But only after the manifestation of Him, who in His person united the
Divine with the human nature, could adoration and supplication be fully called out. Nay,
the idea of supplication would only be properly realised after the outpouring of the
Spirit of adoption, whereby the people of God also became the children of God. Hence it is
not correct to designate sacrifices as 'prayers without words.' The sacrifices were in no
sense prayers, but rather the preparation for prayer. The Tabernacle was, as its Hebrew
designation shows, the place 'of meeting' between God and Israel; the sacrificial service,
that which made such meeting possible; and the priest (as the root of the word implies),
he who brought Israel near to God. Hence prayer could only follow after the sacrifice; and
its appropriate symbol and time was the burning of incense. This view is expressed in the
words: 'Let my prayer be set forth before Thee as incense' (Psa 141:2), and
authoritatively confirmed in Revelation 5:8, where we read of the 'golden vials full of
incense, which are the prayers of saints.'
Burning the Incense
It is this burning of incense which in the Gospel is
alluded to in connection with the birth of John the Baptist (Luke 1:9). Zacharias had come
up from the hill country of Judea, from the neighbourhood of priestly Hebron, to minister
in the Temple. His course of Abia on duty for the week, and the 'house of his
fathers' for that special day. More than that, the lot had fallen on Zacharias for the
most honourable service in the daily ministry of burning the incense on the golden
altar within the Holy Place. For the first time in his life, and for the last, would this
service devolve on him. As the pious old priest ministered within the Holy Place, he saw
with such distinctness that he could afterwards describe the very spot, Gabriel standing,
as if he had just come out from the Most Holy Place, between the altar and the table of
shewbread, 'on the right side of the altar.' So far as we know, this was the first and
only angelic appearance in the Temple. For we cannot attach serious importance to the
tradition that, during the forty years of his pontificate, an angel always accompanied
Simeon the Just, when on the Day of Atonement he entered and left the Most Holy Place,
except the last year, when the angel left him in the Sanctuary, to show that this was to
be the end of his ministry. What passed between Gabriel and Zacharias is beside our
present purpose. Suffice it to notice several details incidentally mentioned in this
narrative, such as that a special lot was cast for this ministry; that the priest was
alone in the Holy Place while burning the incense; and that 'the whole multitude of the
people were praying without at the time of incense.'
Filling the Laver
The lot for burning the incense was, as we have seen, the
third by which the order of the ministry for the day was determined. The first lot,
which in reality had been cast before the actual break of day, was that to designate the
various priests who were to cleanse the altar and to prepare its fires. The first
of the priests on whom this lot had fallen immediately went out. His brethren reminded him
where the silver chafing-dish was deposited, and not to touch any sacred vessel till he
had washed his hands and feet. He took no light with him; the fire of the altar was
sufficient for his office. Hands and feet were washed by laying the right hand on the
right foot, and the left hand on the left. *
* Perhaps this might therefore be
appropriately described as washing 'the feet only,' (John 13:10).
The sound of the machinery, as it filled the laver with
water, admonished the others to be in readiness. This machinery had been made by Ben
Catin, who also altered the laver so that twelve priests could at the same time
perform their ablutions. Otherwise the laver resembled that in the Temple of Solomon. It
was of brass. All the vessels in the Sanctuary were of metal, the only exception being the
altar of burnt-offering, which was solid, and wholly of stones taken from virgin soil,
that had not been defiled by any tool of iron. The stones were fastened together by
mortar, pitch, and molten lead. The measurement of the altar is differently given by
Josephus and the Rabbis. It seems to have consisted of three sections, each narrower than
the former: the base being thirty-two cubits wide, the middle twenty-eight, and the top,
where the fire was laid (of course, not including the horns of the altar nor the space
where the priests moved), only twenty-four cubits. With the exception of some parts of the
altar, in which the cubit was calculated at five hand-breadths, the sacred cubit of the
Temple was always reckoned at six hand-breadths. Lastly, as readers of the New Testament
know, whatever touched the altar, or, indeed, any sacred vessel, was regarded as
'sanctified' (Matt 23:19), but no vessel could be dedicated to the use of the Temple which
had not been originally destined for it.
The Second Lot
These preliminaries finished, the priests gathered once
more for the second lot. The priest on whom it fell was designated, along with the
twelve who stood nearest to him, for offering the sacrifice and cleansing the candlestick
and the altar of incense. Immediately after casting this second lot, the president
directed one to ascend some 'pinnacle,' and see whether it was time to kill the daily
sacrifice. If the priest reported, 'The morning shineth already,' he was again asked, 'Is
the sky lit up as far as Hebron?' If so, the president ordered the lamb to be brought from
the chamber by the Beth-Moked, where it had been kept in readiness for four days. Others
fetched the gold and silver vessels of service, of which the Rabbis enumerate
ninety-three. The sacrificial lamb was now watered out of a golden bowl, and anew examined
by torch-light, though its Levitical fitness had been already ascertained the evening
before. Then the sacrificing priest, surrounded by his assistants, fastened the lamb to
the second of the rings on the north side of the altar the morning in the western, in
the evening in the eastern corner. *
* The sacrifice was always offered against
the sun.
The sacrifice was held together by its feet, the fore and
hind feet of each side being tied together; its head was laid towards the south and
fastened through a ring, and its face turned to the west, while the sacrificing priest
stood on the east side. The elders who carried the keys now gave the order for opening the
Temple gates. As the last great gate slowly moved on its hinges, the priests, on a signal
given, blew three blasts on their silver trumpets, summoning the Levites and the
'representatives' of the people (the so-called 'stationary men') to their duties, and
announcing to the city that the morning sacrifice was about to be offered. Immediately
upon this the great gates which led into the Holy Place itself were opened to admit the
priests who were to cleanse the candlestick and the altar of incense.
The Altar of Incense and the Candlestick
We proceed to describe the service of those whose duty it
was to cleanse the altar of incense and to dress the golden candlestick in the Holy Place.
A few particulars as to each of these will not be out of place. The triumphal Arch of
Titus in Rome bears a representation of the golden mortars in which the incense was
bruised, and of the golden candlestick, but not the altar of incense. Still, we can form a
sufficiently accurate idea of its appearance. It was square, one cubit long and broad, and
two cubits high, that is, half a cubit higher than the table of shewbread, but one cubit
lower than the candlestick, and it had 'horns' at each of its four corners. It was
probably hollow, and its top covered with a golden plate, and like an Eastern roof,
surrounded by what resembled a balustrade, to prevent the coals and incense from falling
off. Below this balustrade was a massive crown of gold. The incense burned upon this altar
was prepared of the four ingredients mentioned in Exodus 30:34, with which, according to
the Rabbis, seven others were mixed, besides a small quantity of 'Ambra,' and of a herb
which gave out a dense smoke. To these thirteen substances (Jos. Wars, v. 5. s.)
salt was of course added. The mode of preparing the incense had been preserved in the
family of Abtinas. The greatest care was taken to have the incense thoroughly
bruised and mixed. Altogether 368 pounds were made for the year's consumption, about half
a pound being used every morning and evening in the service. The censer for the Day of
Atonement was different in size and appearance from that for ordinary days. The golden
candlestick was like that delineated in Exodus 25:31, etc., and is sufficiently known from
its representation on the Arch of Titus.
Now, while one set of priests were busy in the Court of
the Priests offering the sacrifice, the two on whom it devolved to trim the lamps of the
candlestick and to prepare the altar of incense had gone into the Holy Place. As nearly as
possible while the lamb was being slain without, the first of these priests took with his
hands the burnt coals and ashes from the golden altar, and put them into a golden
vessel 'teni' withdrew, leaving it in the sanctuary. Similarly, as the blood
of the lamb was being sprinkled on the altar of burnt-offering, the second priest ascended
the three steps, hewn in stone, which led up to the candlestick. He trimmed and refilled
the lamps that were still burning, removed the wick and old oil from those which had
become extinguished, supplied fresh, and re-lit them from one of the other lamps. But the
large central lamp, towards which all the others bent, and which was called the western,
because it inclined westward towards the Most Holy Place, might only be re-lit by fire
from the altar itself. Only five, however, of the lamps were then trimmed; the other two
were reserved to a later period of the service.
Prayer Before the Third Lot
And now the most solemn part of the service was about to
begin. For the third time the priests assembled in the 'Hall of Polished Stones,' to draw
the third and the fourth lots. But before doing so the president called on them to join in
the prescribed prayers. Tradition has preserved these to us. Subjecting them to the
severest criticism, so as to eliminate all later details, the words used by the priests
before the third and fourth lots were as follows:
'With great love hast Thou loved us, O Lord our God, and
with much overflowing pity hast Thou pitied us. Our Father and our King, for the sake of
our fathers who trusted in Thee, and Thou taughtest them the statutes of life, have mercy
upon us, and enlighten our eyes * [in Thy law; cause our hearts to cleave to Thy
commandments; unite our hearts to love and to fear Thy name, and we shall not be put to
shame, world without end. For Thou art a God who preparest salvation, and us hast Thou
chosen from among all nations and tongues, and hast, in truth, brought us near to Thy
great name, Selah, in order] that we in love may praise Thee and Thy Unity. Blessed be the
Lord, who in love chose His people Israel.'
* The words here and afterwards within
square brackets are regarded by Jost (Gesch. d. Jud.) as a later addition.
After this prayer the ten commandments were (at one time)
wont to be repeated, a practice discontinued, however, lest the Sadducees should declare
them to be the only essential part of the law. Then all assembled said the so-called
'Shema' * which may be designated as a sort of 'credo' or 'belief.' It consisted of these
three passages 6:4-9; 11:13-21; and Numbers 15:37-41.
* So named from the first word, Shema,
'Hear,' viz. 'O Israel,' etc. By one of the strangest mistakes, Lightfoot confounds the
contents of the 'Shema' with those of the phylacteries.
Offering the Incense
The incensing priest and his assistance now approached
first the altar of burnt-offering. One filled with incense a golden censer held in a
silver vessel, while another placed in a golden bowl burning coals from the altar. As they
passed from the court into the Holy Place, they struck a large instrument (called the
'Magrephah'), at sound of which the priests hastened from all parts to worship, and the
Levites to occupy their places in the service of song; while the chief of the 'stationary
men' ranged at the Gate of Nicanor such of the people as were to be purified that day.
Slowly the incensing priest and his assistants ascended the steps to the Holy Place,
preceded by the two priests who had formerly dressed the altar and the candlestick, and
who now removed the vessels they had left behind, and, worshipping, withdrew. Next, one of
the assistants reverently spread the coals on the golden altar; the other arranged the
incense; and then the chief officiating priest was left alone within the Holy Place, to
await the signal of the president before burning the incense. It was probably while thus
expectant that the angel Gabriel appeared to Zacharias. As the president gave the word of
command, which marked that 'the time of incense had come,' 'the whole multitude of the
people without' withdrew from the inner court, and fell down before the Lord, spreading
their hands * in silent prayer.
* The practice of folding the hands
together in prayer dates from the fifth century of our era, and is of purely Saxon origin.
See Holemann, Bibel St. i. p. 150, quoted by Delitzsch, u.s.
Imagery in the Apocalypse
It is this most solemn period, when throughout the vast
Temple buildings deep silence rested on the worshipping multitude, while within the
sanctuary itself the priest laid the incense on the golden altar, and the cloud of
'odours' (Rev 5:8) rose up before the Lord, which serves as the image of heavenly things
in this description (Rev 8:1,3,4): * 'and when He had opened the seventh seal, there was
silence in heaven about the space of half an hour...And another angel came and stood at
the altar, having a golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that he
should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was before the
throne. And the smoke of the incense, which came with the prayers of the saints, ascended
up before God out of the angel's hand.'
* According to Tamid, vi. 3, the
incensing priest 'bowed down,' or prayed, on withdrawing backwards from the Holy Place.
Prayers with the Incense
The prayers offered by priests and people at this part of
the service are recorded by tradition as follows: * 'True it is that Thou art Jehovah our
God, and the God of our fathers; our King and the King of our fathers; our Saviour and the
Saviour of our fathers; our Maker and the Rock of our salvation; our Help and our
Deliverer. Thy name is from everlasting, and there is no God beside Thee. A new song did
they that were delivered sing to Thy name by the sea-shore; together did all praise and
own Thee as King, and say, Jehovah shall reign who saveth Israel. **
* A few details for those who wish fuller
information. Tradition has preserved two kinds of fragments from the ancient Jewish
liturgy in the times of the Temple. The one is called the 'Tephillah,' or Prayer, the
other the 'Eulogies,' or Benedictions. Of the latter there are eighteen, of which the
three first and the three last are the oldest, though four, five, six, eight, and nine are
also of considerable antiquity. Of the ancient Tephilloth four have been preserved
used before and two (in the morning, one) after the Shema. The first morning and the last
evening Tephillah are strictly morning and evening prayers. They were not used in the
Temple service. The second Tephillah before the Shema was said by the priests in the 'Hall
of Polished Stones,' and the first Tephillah after the Shema by priests and people during
the burning of incense. This was followed by the three last of the eighteen Eulogies. Is
it not a fair inference, then, that while the priests said their prayers in 'the hall,'
the people repeated the three first Eulogies, which are of equal antiquity with the three
last, which we know to have been repeated during the burning of incense?
** Now follow in the text the three
last 'Eulogies.'
'Be graciously pleased, Jehovah our God, with Thy people
Israel, and with their prayer. Restore the service to the oracle of Thy house; and the
burnt-offerings of Israel and their prayer accept graciously and in love; and let the
service of Thy people Israel be ever well-pleasing unto Thee.
'We praise Thee, who art Jehovah our God, and the God of
our fathers, the God of all flesh, our Creator, and the Creator from the beginning!
Blessing and praise be to Thy great and holy name, that Thou hast preserved us in life and
kept us. So preserve us and keep us, and gather the scattered ones into Thy holy courts,
to keep Thy statutes, and to do Thy good pleasure, and to serve Thee with our whole heart,
as this day we confess unto Thee. Blessed be the Lord, unto whom belongeth praise.
'Appoint peace, goodness, and blessing; grace, mercy, and
compassion for us, and for all Israel Thy people. Bless us, O our Father, all of us as
one, with the light of Thy countenance. For in the light of Thy countenance hast Thou,
Jehovah, our God, given us the law of life, and loving mercy, and righteousness, and
blessing, and compassion, and life, and peace. And may it please Thee to bless Thy people
Israel at all times, and at every hour with Thy peace. [May we and all Thy people Israel
be remembered and written before Thee in the book of life, with blessing and peace and
support.] Blessed be Thou, Jehovah, who blessest Thy people Israel with peace.'
These prayers ended, he who had formerly trimmed the
candlestick once more entered the Holy Place, to kindle the two lamps that had been left
unlit; and then, in company with the incensing priest, took his stand on the top of the
steps which led down to the Court of the Priests. *
* According to Maimonides, it was at this
part of the service, and not before, that the sound of the Magrephah summoned the priests
to worship, the Levites to their song, and the 'stationary men' to their duties.
The other three who had also ministered within the Holy
Place gathered beside him, still carrying the vessels of their ministry; while the rest of
the priests grouped themselves on the steps beneath. Meanwhile he on whom the fourth lot
had fallen had ascended to the altar. They whose duty it was handed to him, one by one,
the pieces of the sacrifice. Upon each he pressed his hands, and next flung them
confusedly upon the fire, that so the flesh of the sacrifice might be scattered as well as
its blood sprinkled. After that he ranged them in order, to imitate as nearly as possible
the natural shape of the animal. This part of the service was not unfrequently performed
by the high-priest himself.
The Blessing
The priests, who were ranged on the steps to the Holy
Place, now lifted their hands above their heads, spreading and joining their fingers in a
peculiar mystical manner. *
* The high-priest lifted his hands no
higher than the golden plate on his mitre. It is well know that, in pronouncing the
priestly blessing in the synagogue, the priests join their two outspread hands, by making
the tip of the first fingers touch each other. At the same time, the first and second, and
the third and fourth fingers in each hand are knit together, while a division is made
between those fingers by spreading them apart. A rude representation of this may be seen
in Jewish cemeteries on the gravestones of priests.
One of their number, probably the incensing priest,
repeated in audible voice, followed by the others, the blessing in Numbers 6:24-26:
'Jehovah bless thee, and keep thee: Jehovah make His face shine upon thee, and be gracious
unto thee: Jehovah lift up His countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.' To this the
people responded, 'Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel, from everlasting to
everlasting.' In the modern synagogues the priestly blessing is divided into three parts;
it is pronounced with a disguised voice and veiled faces, while the word 'Lord' is
substituted for the name of 'Jehovah.' *
* Dr. Geiger has an interesting argument to
show that in olden times the pronunciation of the so-called ineffable name 'Jehovah,'
which now is never spoken, was allowed even in ordinary life. See Urschrift u. Uebers
d. Bibel, p. 259, etc.
Of course all this was not the case in the Temple. But if
it had been the duty of Zacharias, as incensing priest for the day, to lead in the
priestly blessing, we can all the better understand the wonder of the people as 'he
beckoned unto them, and remained speechless' (Luke 1:22) while they waited for his
benediction.
After the priestly blessing the meat-offering was brought,
and, as prescribed in the law, oil added to it. Having been salted, it was laid on the
fire. Next the high-priest's daily meat-offering was presented, consisting of twelve cakes
broken in halves half-cakes being presented in the morning, and the other twelve
in the evening. Finally, the appropriate drink-offering was poured out upon the foundation
of the altar (perhaps there may be an allusion to this in Revelation 6:9, 10).
The Temple Music
Upon this the Temple music began. It was the duty of the
priests, who stood on the right and the left of the marble table on which the fat of the
sacrifices was laid, at the proper time to blow the blasts on their silver trumpets. There
might not be less than two nor more than 120 in this service; the former in accordance
with the original institution (Num 10:2), the latter not to exceed the number at the
dedication of the first Temple (2 Chron 5:12). The priests faced the people, looking
eastwards, while the Levites, who crowded the fifteen steps which led from the Court of
Israel to that of the Priests, turned westwards to the sanctuary. On a signal given by the
president, the priests moved forward to each side of him who struck the cymbals.
Immediately the choir of the Levites, accompanied by instrumental music, began the Psalm
of the day. It was sustained by not less than twelve voices, with which mingled the
delicious treble from selected voices of young sons of the Levites, who, standing by their
fathers, might take part in this service alone. The number of instrumental performers was
not limited, nor yet confined to the Levites, some of the distinguished families which had
intermarried with the priests being admitted to this service. *
* It is a curious coincidence that of the
two families named in the Talmud as admitted to this service, one of
Tsippariah have been 'from Emmaus' (Luke 24:13).
The Psalm of the day was always sung in three sections. At
the close of each the priests drew three blasts from their silver trumpets, and the people
bowed down and worshipped. This closed the morning service. It was immediately followed by
the sacrifices and offerings which private Israelites might have to bring, and which would
occasionally continue till near the time for the evening service. The latter resembled in
all respects that of the morning, except that the lot was only cast for the incense; that
the incense was burned, not, as in the morning, before, but after the
pieces of the sacrifice had been laid on the fire of the altar, and that the priestly
blessing was generally admitted.
The Order of Psalms
The following was the order of the Psalms in the daily
service of the Temple (Tamid, sect. vii, and Maimonides in Tamid). On the
first day of the week they sang Psalm 24, 'The earth is the Lord's,' etc., in
commemoration of the first day of creation, when 'God possessed the world, and ruled in
it.' On the second day they sang Psalm 48, 'Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised,'
etc., because on the second day of creation 'the Lord divided His works, and reigned over
them.' On the third day they sang Psalm 82, 'God standeth in the congregation of the
mighty,' etc., 'because on that day the earth appeared, on which are the Judge and the
judged.' On the fourth day Psalm 94 was sung, 'O Lord God, to whom vengeance belongeth,'
etc., 'because on the fourth day God made the sun, moon, and stars, and will be avenged on
those that worship them.' On the fifth day they sang Psalm 81, 'Sing aloud unto God our
strength,' etc., 'because of the variety of creatures made that day to praise His name.'
On the sixth day Psalm 93 was sung, 'The Lord reigneth,' etc., 'because on that day God
finished His works and made man, and the Lord ruled over all His works.' Lastly, on the
Sabbath day they sang Psalm 92, 'It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord,' etc.,
'because the Sabbath was symbolical of the millennial kingdom at the end of the six
thousand years' dispensation, when the Lord would reign over all, and His glory and
service fill the earth with thanksgiving.'