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|  |  | explain the Psalm as referring to 'King Messiah', although his own opinion 
was different. The Lord Jesus Christ claims to possess the world-wide authority
1 promised in this Psalm. The words 'Kiss the Son' mean 'do Him 
homage as king'. The word rendered 'Son' in this last verse is not the same as 
that which is used at the beginning of the extract, it is the Aramaic 
בַּד instead 
of the Hebrew 
בַּר. Others render it 'the Pure One', for in Hebrew the word 
בֵּנ 
means 'pure', and this would also be very suitable in reference to the Lord 
Jesus, 'the Sinless Prophet' 
(النبي 
المعصوم). It is probably from a misunderstanding of this 
passage that the Druzes and others use 
بار as the appellation of what they style 
'the first emanation of the Divine'. But there are no emanations from God; and 
this passage in the Psalms shows that the promised Messiah, the Word of God, is 
also the Son of God, in exact accordance with. the teaching of the New 
Testament. In the forty-fifth Psalm the promised Messiah is addressed in the following 
words: 
  Thy 2 throne, O God, is for ever and ever:A sceptre of equity is the sceptre of thy kingdom.
 Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated wickedness:
 Therefore God, thy God, 3 hath anointed 4 thee
 With the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
 
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| PROOF OF THE DEITY OF CHRIST | 121 |  |  | The Epistle to the Hebrews 1 declares that these verses are spoken 
in reference to the Lord Jesus Christ, and takes them as a clear testimony to 
His Deity. All attempts to explain them in any other way fail to account for the 
title of God given to the king who is here described. The rest of the Psalm 
describes the spiritual union between the Lord Jesus Christ and His Church as a 
wedding, just as is done in the Book of Revelation. 2 In the hundred and tenth Psalm the following passage occurs: 
  The 3 LORD saith unto my Lord, Sit thou at my 
  right handUntil I make thine enemies thy footstool.
 The New Testament in passage 4 after passage refers these words to 
the ascensions of the Lord Jesus Christ, and says that they were written about 
Him. The Lord Jesus himself mentions them as an inspired utterance of David and 
as referring to Himself; as it is written in the Gospel: 'While 6 the 
Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them a question, saying, What 
think ye of the Christ? whose son is he? They say unto him, The son of David. He 
saith unto them, How 
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