Text -- Psalms 90:7 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 90:7
Thou dost not suffer us to live so long as we might by the course of nature.
JFB -> Psa 90:7-8; Psa 90:7-8
A reason, this is the infliction of God's wrath.
JFB: Psa 90:7-8 - -- Literally, "confounded by terror" (Psa 2:5). Death is by sin (Rom 5:12). Though "secret," the light of God's countenance, as a candle, will bring sin ...
Clarke: Psa 90:7 - -- We are consumed by thine anger - Death had not entered into the world, if men had not fallen from God
We are consumed by thine anger - Death had not entered into the world, if men had not fallen from God
Clarke: Psa 90:7 - -- By thy wrath are we troubled - Pain, disease, and sickness are so many proofs of our defection from original rectitude. The anger and wrath of God a...
By thy wrath are we troubled - Pain, disease, and sickness are so many proofs of our defection from original rectitude. The anger and wrath of God are moved against all sinners. Even in protracted life we consume away, and only seem to live in order to die
"Our wasting lives grow shorter still,
As days and months increase
And every beating pulse we tell
Leaves but the number less."
Calvin -> Psa 90:7
Calvin: Psa 90:7 - -- 7.For we fail by thy anger Moses makes mention of the anger of God advisedly; for it is necessary that men be touched with the feeling of this, in or...
7.For we fail by thy anger Moses makes mention of the anger of God advisedly; for it is necessary that men be touched with the feeling of this, in order to their considering in good earnest, what experience constrains them to acknowledge, how soon they finish their course and pass away. He had, however, still another reason for joining together the brevity of human life and the anger of God. Whilst men are by nature so transitory, and, as it were, shadowy, the Israelites were afflicted by the hostile hand of God; and his anger is less supportable by our frail natures, which speedily vanish away, than it would be were we furnished with some tolerable degree of strength.
TSK -> Psa 90:7
TSK: Psa 90:7 - -- For we : Psa 90:9, Psa 90:11, Psa 39:11, Psa 59:13; Num 17:12, Num 17:13; Deu 2:14-16; Heb 3:10, Heb 3:11, Heb 3:17-19; Heb 4:1, Heb 4:2
are we : Exo ...
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 90:7
Barnes: Psa 90:7 - -- For we are consumed by thine anger - That is, Death - the cutting off of the race of man - may be regarded as an expression of thy displeasure ...
For we are consumed by thine anger - That is, Death - the cutting off of the race of man - may be regarded as an expression of thy displeasure against mankind as a race of sinners. The death of man would not have occurred but for sin Gen 3:3, Gen 3:19; Rom 5:12; and all the circumstances connected with it - the fact of death, the dread of death, the pain that precedes death, the paleness and coldness and rigidity of the dead, and the slow and offensive returning to dust in the grave - all are adapted to be, and seem designed to be, illustrations of the anger of God against sin. We cannot, indeed, always say that death in a specific case is proof of the direct and special anger of God "in that case;"but we can say that death always, and death in its general features, may and should be regarded as an evidence of the divine displeasure against the sins of people.
And by thy wrath - As expressed in death.
Are we troubled - Are our plans confounded and broken up; our minds made sad and sorrowful; our habitations made abodes of grief.
Poole -> Psa 90:7
Poole: Psa 90:7 - -- We either,
1. We men; or rather,
2. We Israelites in this wilderness.
Consumed either naturally, by the frame of our bodies; or violently, by ext...
We either,
1. We men; or rather,
2. We Israelites in this wilderness.
Consumed either naturally, by the frame of our bodies; or violently, by extraordinary judgments. Thou dost not suffer us to live so long as we might by the course of nature.
Thine anger caused by our sinful state and lives.
Haydock -> Psa 90:7
Haydock: Psa 90:7 - -- Fall. Or "attack,....but shall not come nigh to thee." (Eusebius) (Calmet) ---
How great soever may be the number of thy adversaries, they shall ...
Fall. Or "attack,....but shall not come nigh to thee." (Eusebius) (Calmet) ---
How great soever may be the number of thy adversaries, they shall not be able to do thee any harm. They shall at thy feet, and their dart shall not reach thee. (Haydock) ---
More forsake God in prosperity, than under adversity. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 90:7
Gill: Psa 90:7 - -- For we are consumed by thine anger,.... Kimchi applies this to the Jews in captivity; but it is to be understood of the Israelites in the wilderness, ...
For we are consumed by thine anger,.... Kimchi applies this to the Jews in captivity; but it is to be understood of the Israelites in the wilderness, who are here introduced by Moses as owning and acknowledging that they were wasting and consuming there, as it was threatened they should; and that as an effect of the divine anger and displeasure occasioned by their sins; see Num 14:33. Death is a consumption of the body; in the grave worms destroy the flesh and skin, and the reins of a man are consumed within him; hell is a consumption or destruction of the soul and body, though both always continue: saints, though consumed in body by death, yet not in anger; for
when flesh and heart fail, or "is consumed", "God is the strength of their hearts, and their portion for ever", Psa 73:26, their souls are saved in the day of the Lord Jesus, and their bodies will rise glorious and incorruptible; but the wicked are consumed at death, and in hell, in anger and hot displeasure:
and by thy wrath are we troubled; the wrath of God produces trouble of mind, whenever it is apprehended, and especially in the views of death and eternity; and it is this which makes death the king of terrors, and men subject to bondage in life through fear of it, even the wrath to come, which follows upon it; nothing indeed, either in life or at death, or death itself, comes in wrath to the saints; nor is there any after it to them, though they have sometimes fearful apprehensions of it, and are troubled at it.