Psalms 48:2
See note in NIV Study Bible;
sides of the north -- on the sides of the north] Thus rendered, the words appear to be a topographical description of the situation of Mount Zion to the north of the city; or, if we render, on the sides of the north is the citadel of the great King, a description of the position of the Temple. But ‘Mount Zion’ in this Psalm is not a part of the city but the whole city (vv. 11, 12); a merely topographical description would be frigid in the extreme; the rendering involves a doubtful construction; and it gives a very inadequate meaning to the phrase the sides of the north. This phrase occurs elsewhere in Isaiah 14:13; Ezekiel 38:6, Ezekiel 18:15; Ezekiel 39:2; and in all these passages it means the recesses or remotest quarters of the north. In Isaiah 14:13 “the uttermost parts of the north” (R.V.) are mentioned as the locality of the sacred mountain, which according to Asiatic mythology was the abode of the gods. This mountain, corresponding to the Olympus of the Greeks, was the Meru of the Indians, the Alborg of the Persians, the Arālu of the Assyrians and Babylonians. It would seem that the Psalmist boldly calls Mount Zion the uttermost parts of the north with reference to this mythological idea.
Kirkpatrick, A. F. (1906) (pp. 263–264). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
The sacred mountain of our God is not in the remote recesses of the north, but in the very midst of the city of His choice. Zion is in reality all that the Assyrians claim for their fabled mount of the gods. Their king too may style himself ‘great,’ but Zion is the citadel of One Who is in truth the great King, for He is the King of all the earth (Psalms 47:2; Psalms 47:7). “The great king” was a title claimed by the king of Assyria (Is. 36:4); and the word for ‘great’ is not that used in v. 1 (gādōl) but rab, which corresponds to the Assyrian title sarru rabbu (Schrader, Cuneif. Inser. p. 320). ‘City’ (citadel) is not the same word as in v. 1 (‘īr), but ḳiryāh, a word which does not occur again in the Psalter, but is found several times in Isaiah (Psalms 22:2; Psalms 29:1; Psalms 33:20). To many commentators it seems inconceivable that the Psalmist should allude to Assyrian mythology. But a writer of Isaiah’s time might easily have become acquainted with the religious ideas of the Assyrians, and the author of the Book of Job does not hesitate to introduce popular mythological ideas. See Prof. Davidson’s note on Job 26:12: and cp. Isaiah 27:1
Kirkpatrick, A. F. (1906) The Book of Psalms; (p. 264). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
north -- “Zaphon.” In Canaanite mythology Zaphon was an ancient Near Eastern equivalent to Mt. Olympus, the dwelling place of pagan gods. If this was the psalmist’s intention in Psalms 48:2, the reference becomes a polemical description of the Lord; He is not only King of Kings but also is God of all so-called gods. The city of the great King. Cf. Psalms 47:2 and Matthew 5:34-35. God Himself has always been the King of Kings.
MacArthur, J., Jr. (Ed.). (1997). MASB