The interpretation timeline

Ps 94:4

How this passage has been read — the sources, oldest to newest.

From the early Church Fathers to now.

1 Patristic · 1 Jewish · 1 Catholic

Ps 94:4 · Douay-Rheims
“For in his hand are all the ends of the earth: and the heights of the mountains are his.”
Patristic before A.D. 750
430
A.D.
Augustine of Hippo Patristic
A.D. 354–430
“What does the Psalm add? "In His hand are all the corners of the earth" [Psalm 95:4]: we recognise the corner stone: the corner stone is Christ. There cannot be a corner, unless it has united in itself two walls: they come from different sides to one corner, but they are not opposed to each other in the corner. The circumcision comes from one side: the uncircumcision from the other; in Christ both peoples have met together: because He has become the stone, of which it is written, "The stone which the builders rejected, has become the head of the corner.". ..”
Source
675 years pass — nothing from this stretch is hosted yet
Scholastic c. 1100 – 1500
1105
A.D.
Rashi Jewish
1040–1105
“and the heights An expression of height, like a bird that flies [up high].”
744 years pass — nothing from this stretch is hosted yet
Post-Reformation c. 1650 – 1900
1849
A.D.
1774–1849
“Ends. Hebrew, “depths.” — Are his. This is grandeur, that “he beholds,” as in the Roman psalter. (Berthier) (Isaias xl. 15., and xlv. 18.) — Virgil (Geor. 4.) says: Deum, namque ire per omnes Terrasque et tractusque maris, cœlumque profundum.”
Modern · 1953 →

The in-app commentary runs from the Fathers to the early-modern record, then stops — that's where the public-domain sources end, not where the reading does. For the modern reading, follow the sources directly.