Verse explainer
Not a gentle invitation to relax and meditate — it's God telling the raging nations to STOP, drop their weapons, and recognize who actually rules.
Be still, and know that I am God: I will be exalted among the heathen, I will be exalted in the earth.
BSB“Be still and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted over the earth.”
The plain meaning
Psalm 46 is a war psalm: nations rage, kingdoms totter, God breaks the bow and burns the chariot (vv. 6, 9). Into that, v. 10 is addressed — most naturally — to the warring nations, not to a tired believer: "Stop! Cease your striving! Know that I am God." The Hebrew is closer to "let go, desist" than "sit quietly." It's a command to lay down arms before the God who will be exalted over the whole earth. The comfort for the believer is real, but it comes from God's sovereign command of the chaos, not from a mood of calm.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Spurgeon hears it as a divine rebuke to the warring world: hold off your hands, you furious nations, and own that there is a God who will be exalted — comfort for the church precisely because the command silences her enemies.
Calvin takes it as God restraining the tumult of the nations, bidding the proud and the agitated be quiet and acknowledge His supremacy, so that the faithful may rest in His protection rather than be shaken by upheaval.
Barnes notes the address is to the agitated peoples: cease your vain efforts and turmoil, recognize the true God, for it is He, not your armies, who will be exalted in the earth.
The word behind it
"Be still" translates a verb meaning to slacken, let drop, cease, desist. It's the gesture of letting your hands fall — withdrawing from striving — not the posture of quiet meditation. To the raging nations it means "stand down"; to the believer, "stop your frantic efforts and let God be God."
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