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Text -- Psalms 102:21-28 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:28
That they might publish the name and praises of God in his church.
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Wesley: Psa 102:22 - -- When the Gentiles shall gather themselves to the Jews, and join with them in the worship of the true God.
When the Gentiles shall gather themselves to the Jews, and join with them in the worship of the true God.
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Wesley: Psa 102:23 - -- In the midst of the course of our lives. Some think the psalmist here speaks of the whole commonwealth as of one man, and of its continuance, as of th...
In the midst of the course of our lives. Some think the psalmist here speaks of the whole commonwealth as of one man, and of its continuance, as of the life of one man.
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Do not wholly destroy thy people Israel.
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Wesley: Psa 102:24 - -- Before they come to a full possession of thy promises and especially of that fundamental promise of the Messiah.
Before they come to a full possession of thy promises and especially of that fundamental promise of the Messiah.
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Though we die, yet thou art the everlasting God.
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Wesley: Psa 102:28 - -- Though the heavens and earth perish, yet we rest assured that our children, and their children after them, shall enjoy an happy restitution to, and se...
Though the heavens and earth perish, yet we rest assured that our children, and their children after them, shall enjoy an happy restitution to, and settlement in their own land.
JFB: Psa 102:19-22 - -- Or, "That," as introducing the statement of God's condescension. A summary of what shall be written.
Or, "That," as introducing the statement of God's condescension. A summary of what shall be written.
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JFB: Psa 102:21 - -- Or, that God's name may be celebrated in the assemblies of His Church, gathered from all nations (Zec 8:20-23), and devoted to His service.
Or, that God's name may be celebrated in the assemblies of His Church, gathered from all nations (Zec 8:20-23), and devoted to His service.
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JFB: Psa 102:23-28 - -- The writer, speaking for the Church, finds encouragement in the midst of all his distresses. God's eternal existence is a pledge of faithfulness to Hi...
The writer, speaking for the Church, finds encouragement in the midst of all his distresses. God's eternal existence is a pledge of faithfulness to His promises.
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JFB: Psa 102:23-28 - -- Literally, "afflicted," and made fearful of a premature end, a figure of the apprehensions of the Church, lest God might not perform His promise, draw...
Literally, "afflicted," and made fearful of a premature end, a figure of the apprehensions of the Church, lest God might not perform His promise, drawn from those of a person in view of the dangers of early death (compare Psa 89:47). Paul (Heb 1:10) quotes Psa 102:26-28 as addressed to Christ in His divine nature. The scope of the Psalm, as already seen, so far from opposing, favors this view, especially by the sentiments of Psa 102:12-15 (compare Isa 60:1). The association of the Messiah with a day of future glory to the Church was very intimate in the minds of Old Testament writers; and with correct views of His nature it is very consistent that He should be addressed as the Lord and Head of His Church, who would bring about that glorious future on which they ever dwelt with fond delightful anticipations.
Clarke -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:25; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:27; Psa 102:27; Psa 102:28
Clarke: Psa 102:21 - -- To declare the name of the Lord - To publish that Messenger of the Covenant in whom the name of the Lord is, that Messiah in whom the fullness of th...
To declare the name of the Lord - To publish that Messenger of the Covenant in whom the name of the Lord is, that Messiah in whom the fullness of the Godhead dwelt; and to commence at Jerusalem, that the first offers of mercy might be made to the Jews, from whom the word of reconciliation was to go out to all the ends of the earth.
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Clarke: Psa 102:22 - -- When the people are gathered together - When all the Gentiles are enlightened, and the kings of the earth brought to pay homage to the King of kings...
When the people are gathered together - When all the Gentiles are enlightened, and the kings of the earth brought to pay homage to the King of kings.
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Clarke: Psa 102:23 - -- He weakened my strength in the way - We are brought so low in our captivity by oppression, by every species of hard usage, and by death, that there ...
He weakened my strength in the way - We are brought so low in our captivity by oppression, by every species of hard usage, and by death, that there is now no hope of our restoration by any efforts of our own.
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Clarke: Psa 102:24 - -- I said, O my God - This and the following verses seem to be the form of prayer which the captives used previously to their deliverance
I said, O my God - This and the following verses seem to be the form of prayer which the captives used previously to their deliverance
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Clarke: Psa 102:24 - -- Thy years are throughout all generations - This was a frequent argument used to induce God to hear prayer. We are frail and perishing; thou art ever...
Thy years are throughout all generations - This was a frequent argument used to induce God to hear prayer. We are frail and perishing; thou art everlasting: deliver us, and we will glorify thee.
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Clarke: Psa 102:25 - -- Of old hast thou laid the foundation - None taught of God ever imagined the world to have been eternal. Of old, לפנים lephanim , before there ...
Of old hast thou laid the foundation - None taught of God ever imagined the world to have been eternal. Of old,
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Clarke: Psa 102:26 - -- They shall perish - Nothing can be eternal a parte ante, or a parte post, but thyself. Even that which thou hast created, because not necessarily et...
They shall perish - Nothing can be eternal a parte ante, or a parte post, but thyself. Even that which thou hast created, because not necessarily eternal, must be perishable; necessary duration belongs to God only; and it is by his will and energy alone that universal nature is preserved in existence, and preserved from running into speedy disorder, decay, and ruin
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Clarke: Psa 102:26 - -- Yea, all of them shall wax old - Every thing must deteriorate, unless preserved by thy renewing and invigorating energy. Even the heavens and the ea...
Yea, all of them shall wax old - Every thing must deteriorate, unless preserved by thy renewing and invigorating energy. Even the heavens and the earth are subject to this law; for that which is not, from the infinite perfection of its own nature, Eternal, must be perishable; therefore the heavens and the earth must necessarily come to an end. They contain the seeds of their own dissolution. It is true that in sublunary things, the vicissitudes of seasons is a sort of check to the principle of dissolution; but it only partially corrects this tendency. Even the productions of the earth wear out or deteriorate. Plant the same seed or grain for several years consecutively, and it degenerates so as at last not to be worth the labor of tillage, however expensively the soil may be manured in which it is planted. I may instance in wheat and in the potatoe, the two grand supporters of life in European countries. All other seeds and plants, as far as they have fallen under my observation, are subject to the same law.
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Clarke: Psa 102:27 - -- But thou art the same - ואתה הוא veattah Hu , but thou art He, that is, The Eternal; and, consequently, he who only has immortality
But thou art the same -
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Clarke: Psa 102:27 - -- Thy years shall have no end - לא יתמו lo yittammu , "they shall not be completed."Every thing has its revolution - its conception, growth, pe...
Thy years shall have no end -
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Clarke: Psa 102:28 - -- The children of thy servants shall continue - Thy Church shall be permanent, because founded on thee, it shall live throughout all the revolutions o...
The children of thy servants shall continue - Thy Church shall be permanent, because founded on thee, it shall live throughout all the revolutions of time. And as thy followers are made partakers of the Divine nature they shall live in union with God in the other world, deriving eternal duration from the inexhaustible Fountain of being. Nothing can be permanent but by God’ s supporting and renewing influence
Calvin: Psa 102:21 - -- 21.That the name of Jehovah may be declared in Zion Here is celebrated a still more ample and richer fruit of this deliverance than has been previous...
21.That the name of Jehovah may be declared in Zion Here is celebrated a still more ample and richer fruit of this deliverance than has been previously mentioned, which is, that the Jews would not only be united into one body to give thanks to God, but that, when brought back to their own country, they would also gather kings and nations into the same unity of faith, and into the same divine worship with themselves. At that time it was a thing altogether incredible, not only that the praises of God should within a short period resound, as in the days of old, in that temple which was burnt and completely overthrown, 154 but also that the nations should resort thither from all quarters, and be associated together in the service of God with the Jews, who were then like a putrefied carcase. The prophet, to inspire the people with the hope of returning to their own land, argues that it was impossible that the place which God had chosen for himself should be left in perpetual desolation; and declares, that so far from this being the case there would be new matter for praising God, inasmuch as His name would be worshipped by all nations, and the Church would consist not of one nation only, but of the whole world. This we know has been fulfilled under the administration of Christ, as was announced in prophecy by the holy patriarch,
“The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the Gentiles be, ” (Gen 49:10.)
But as the prophets are wont, in celebrating the deliverance from the Babylonish captivity, to extend it to the coming of Christ, the inspired bard in this place does not lay hold on merely a part of the subject, but carries forward the grace of God, even to its consummation. And although it was not necessary that all who were converted to Christ should go up to Jerusalem, yet following the manner of expression usual with the prophets, he has laid down the observance of the divine worship which was appointed under the law, as a mark of true godliness. Farther, we may learn from this passage, that the name of God is never better celebrated than when true religion is extensively propagated, and when the Church increases, which on that account is called,
“The planting of the Lord, that he might be glorified,” (Isa 61:3.)
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Calvin: Psa 102:23 - -- 23.He hath afflicted my strength in the way Some improperly restrict this complaint to the time when the Jews were subjected to much annoyance after ...
23.He hath afflicted my strength in the way Some improperly restrict this complaint to the time when the Jews were subjected to much annoyance after the liberty granted them to return to their own land. We are rather to understand the word journey or way in a metaphorical sense. As the manifestation of Christ was the goal of the race which God’s ancient people were running, they justly complain that they are afflicted and weakened in the midst of their course. 158 Thus they set before God his promise, telling him, that although they had not run at random, but had confided in his protection, they were nevertheless broken and crushed by his hand in the midst of their journey. They do not indeed find fault with him, as if he had disappointed their hope; but fully persuaded, that he does not deal deceitfully with those who serve him, by this complaint they strengthen themselves in the hope of a favorable issue. In the same sense they add, that their days were shortened, because they directed their view to the fullness of time, which did not arrive till Christ was revealed. 159 It accordingly follows, — (verse 24,) Cut me not off in the midst of my days. They compare the intervening period until Christ should appear to the middle of life; for, as has been already observed, the Church only attained to her perfect age at his coming. This calamity, no doubt, had been foretold, but the nature of the covenant which God had entered into with his ancient people required that he should take them under his protection, and defend them. The captivity, therefore, was as it were a violent rupture, on which account the godly prayed with the greater confidence, that they might not be prematurely taken away in the midst of their journey. By speaking in this manner, they did not fix for themselves a certain term of life; but as God, in freely adopting them, had given them the commencement of life, with the assurance that he would maintain them even to the advent of Christ, they might warrantably bring forward and plead this promise. Lord, as if they had said, thou hast promised us life, not for a few days, or for a month or for a few years, but until thou shouldst renew the whole world, and gather together all nations under the dominion of thine Anointed One.
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Calvin: Psa 102:24 - -- What then does the prophet mean when he prays, Let us not perish in the midst of our course? 160 The reason stated in the clause immediately follow...
What then does the prophet mean when he prays, Let us not perish in the midst of our course? 160 The reason stated in the clause immediately following, Thy years are from generation to generation, seems to be quite inapplicable in the present case. Because God is everlasting, does it therefore follow that men will be everlasting too? But on Psa 90:2, we have shown how we may with propriety bring forward his eternity, as a ground of confidence in reference to our salvation; for he desires to be known as eternal, not only in his mysterious and incomprehensible essence, but also in his word, according to the declaration of the Prophet Isaiah,
“All flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field; but the word of our God shall stand for ever.”
Isa 40:6
Now since God links us to himself by means of his word, however great the distance of our frail condition from his heavenly glory, our faith should nevertheless penetrate to that blessed state from which he looks down upon our miseries. Although the comparison between his eternal existence and the brief duration of human life is introduced also for another purpose, yet when he sees that men pass away as it were in a moment, and speedily evanish, it moves him to compassion, as shall presently be declared at greater length.
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Calvin: Psa 102:25 - -- 25.Thou hast aforetime founded the earth Here the sacred writer amplifies what he had previously stated, declaring, that compared with God the whole ...
25.Thou hast aforetime founded the earth Here the sacred writer amplifies what he had previously stated, declaring, that compared with God the whole world is a form which quickly vanishes away; and yet a little after he represents the Church as exempted from this the common lot of all sublunary things, because she has for her foundation the word of God, while her safety is secured by the same word. Two subjects are therefore here brought under our consideration. The first is, that since the heavens themselves are in the sight of God almost as evanescent as smoke, the frailty of the whole human race is such as may well excite his compassion; and the second is, that although there is no stability in the heavens and the earth, yet the Church shall continue steadfast for ever, because she is upheld by the eternal truth of God. By the first of these positions, true believers are taught to consider with all humility, when they come into the divine presence, how frail and transitory their condition is, that they may bring nothing with them but their own emptiness. Such self-abasement is the first step to our obtaining favor in the sight of God, even as He also affirms that he is moved by the sight of our miseries to be merciful to us. The comparison taken from the heavens is a very happy illustration; for how long have they continued to exist, when contrasted with the brief span of human life, which passes or rather flies away so swiftly? How many generations of men have passed away since the creation, while the heavens still continue as they were amidst this continual fluctuation? Again, so beautiful is their arrangement, and so excellent their frame-work, that the whole fabric proclaims itself to be the product of God’s hands 161 And yet neither the long period during which the heavens have existed, nor their fair embellishment, will exempt them from perishing. What then shall become of us poor mortals, who die when we are as yet scarcely born? for there is no part of our life which does not rapidly hasten to death.
Interpreters, however, do not all explain these words, The heavens shall perish, in the same way. Some understand them as expressing simply the change they shall undergo, which will be a species of destruction; for although they are not to be reduced to nothing, yet this change of their nature, as it may be termed, will destroy what is mortal and corruptible in them, so that they shall become, in a manner, different and new heavens. Others explain the words conditionally, and make the supplement, “If it so please God,” regarding it as a thing absurd to say that the heavens are subject to corruption. But first, there is no necessity for introducing these supplementary words, which obscure the sense instead of making it plainer. In the next place, these expositors improperly attribute an immortal state to the heavens, of which Paul declares that they “groan and travail in pain,” like the earth and the other creatures, until the day of redemption, (Rom 8:22) because they are subject to corruption; not indeed willingly, or in their own nature, but because man, by precipitating himself headlong into destruction, has drawn the whole world into a participation of the same ruin. Two things are to be here attended to; first, that the heavens are actually subject to corruption in consequence of the fall of man; and, secondly, that they shall be so renewed as to warrant the prophet to say that they shall perish; for this renovation will be so complete that they shall not be the same but other heavens. The amount is, that to whatever quarter we turn our eyes, we will see everywhere nothing but ground for despair till we come to God. What is there in us but rottenness and corruption? and what else are we but a mirror of death? Again, what are the changes which the whole world undergoes but a kind of presage, yea a prelude of destruction? If the whole frame-work of the world is hastening to its end, what will become of the human race? If all nations are doomed to perish, what stability will there be in men individually considered? We ought therefore to seek stability no where else but in God.
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Calvin: Psa 102:28 - -- 28.The children of thy servants shall dwell. By these words the prophet intimates that he does not ask the preservation of the Church, because it is ...
28.The children of thy servants shall dwell. By these words the prophet intimates that he does not ask the preservation of the Church, because it is a part of the human race, but because God has raised it above the revolutions of the world. And undoubtedly, when He adopted us as his children, his design was to cherish us as it were in his own bosom. The inference of the inspired bard is not, therefore, far-fetched, when, amidst innumerable storms, each of which might carry us away, he hopes that the Church will have a permanent existence. It is true, that when through our own fault we become estranged from God, we are also as it were cut off from the fountain of life; but no sooner are we reconciled to Him than he begins again to pour down his blessings upon us. Whence it follows that true believers, as they are regenerated by the incorruptible seed, shall continue to live after death, because God continues unchangeably the same. By the word dwell, is to be understood an abiding and everlasting inheritance.
When it is said that the seed of God’s servants shall be established before his face, the meaning is, that it is not after the manner of the world, or according to the way in which the heavens and the earth are established, that the salvation of true believers is made steadfast, but because of the holy union which exists between them and God. By the seed and children of the godly, is to be understood not all their descendants without exception — for many who spring from them according to the flesh become degenerate — but those who do not turn aside from the faith of their parents. Successive generations are expressly pointed out, because the covenant extends even to future ages, as we shall again find in the subsequent psalm. If we firmly keep the treasure of life intrusted to us, let us not hesitate, although we may be environed with innumerable deaths, to cast the anchor of our faith in heaven, that the stability of our welfare may rest in God.
Defender: Psa 102:25 - -- Psa 102:25-27 are quoted in Heb 1:10-12 and addressed to the Lord Jesus Christ as Creator of heaven and earth. This confirms that the earlier verses o...
Psa 102:25-27 are quoted in Heb 1:10-12 and addressed to the Lord Jesus Christ as Creator of heaven and earth. This confirms that the earlier verses of the psalm are especially applicable to the humiliation and suffering of Christ (Psa 102:1-11)."
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Defender: Psa 102:26 - -- The aging of the earth and heaven is a relatively recent discovery of science which is the universal principle of increasing entropy or decay. This re...
The aging of the earth and heaven is a relatively recent discovery of science which is the universal principle of increasing entropy or decay. This remarkable fact, that every system of any sort or size tends to disintegrate with time, is now recognized as the Second Law of Thermodynamics and has no known exception. It reflects God's primeval Curse on the creation because of sin (Gen 3:15-17; Rom 8:20-22)."
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Defender: Psa 102:27 - -- There is one exception to this law of decay. The God who imposed the law on His creation is not subject to the law Himself. Neither is His Word for Je...
There is one exception to this law of decay. The God who imposed the law on His creation is not subject to the law Himself. Neither is His Word for Jesus said: "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away" (Mat 24:35)."
TSK -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:25; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:27; Psa 102:28
TSK: Psa 102:21 - -- Psa 9:13, Psa 9:14, Psa 22:22, Psa 51:14, Psa 51:15, Psa 79:13; Isa 51:11; Eph 2:4-7, Eph 3:21; 1Pe 2:9
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TSK: Psa 102:22 - -- Psa 72:8-11; Gen 49:10; Isa 49:22, Isa 49:23, 60:3-22; Hos 1:9-11; Zec 8:20-23; Mat 24:14; Rom 15:19
Psa 72:8-11; Gen 49:10; Isa 49:22, Isa 49:23, 60:3-22; Hos 1:9-11; Zec 8:20-23; Mat 24:14; Rom 15:19
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TSK: Psa 102:23 - -- He weakened : Heb. He afflicted, Psa 89:38-47; 2Th 2:3-12; 1Ti 4:1-3; 2Tim. 3:1-17; Rev. 11:2-19, Rev 12:13-17
shortened : Job 21:21
He weakened : Heb. He afflicted, Psa 89:38-47; 2Th 2:3-12; 1Ti 4:1-3; 2Tim. 3:1-17; Rev. 11:2-19, Rev 12:13-17
shortened : Job 21:21
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TSK: Psa 102:24 - -- I said : Psa 39:13; Isa 38:10-22
thy years : Psa 102:12, Psa 9:7, Psa 90:1, Psa 90:2; Hab 1:12; Rev 1:4, Rev 1:8
I said : Psa 39:13; Isa 38:10-22
thy years : Psa 102:12, Psa 9:7, Psa 90:1, Psa 90:2; Hab 1:12; Rev 1:4, Rev 1:8
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TSK: Psa 102:25 - -- Gen 1:1, Gen 2:1; Exo 20:11; Job 38:4-7; Pro 8:23-36; Jer 32:17; Heb 1:10-12, Heb 3:3, Heb 3:4
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TSK: Psa 102:26 - -- They shall : Isa 34:4, Isa 51:6, Isa 65:17, Isa 66:22; Luk 21:33; Rom 8:20; 2Pe 3:7-12; Rev 20:11, Rev 21:1
endure : Heb. stand, Psa 102:12; Exo 3:14
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TSK: Psa 102:27 - -- thou art : Mal 3:6; Joh 8:58; Heb 13:8; Jam 1:17; Rev 1:8, Rev 1:17, Rev 1:18
years : Psa 90:4; Job 36:26
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TSK: Psa 102:28 - -- The children : Psa 22:30, Psa 22:31, Psa 45:16, Psa 45:17, Psa 69:35, Psa 69:36; Isa 53:10, Isa 59:20, Isa 59:21, Isa 65:22, Isa 66:22
their seed : Ps...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 102:21 - -- To declare the name of the Lord in Zion ... - That his name might be declared in Zion, or that his praise might be set up in Jerusalem again. T...
To declare the name of the Lord in Zion ... - That his name might be declared in Zion, or that his praise might be set up in Jerusalem again. That is, that his people might be returned there, and his praise be celebrated again in the holy city.
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Barnes: Psa 102:22 - -- When the people are gathered together - When they shall be brought from their dispersion in distant lands; when they shall assemble again in th...
When the people are gathered together - When they shall be brought from their dispersion in distant lands; when they shall assemble again in the city of their fathers, and when public worship shall be celebrated there as in former ages.
And the kingdoms, to serve the Lord - The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render this, "kings."The reference must be to the time when those of other lands - kings and their people - would be converted to the true religion; when the Gentiles as well as the Jews, then one undistinguished people, would be brought to the knowledge of the true God, and would unite in his worship. See the notes at Isa. 60. All of all lands, will yet praise the Lord "as if"they were one great congregation, assembled in one place. Thus, though separate, they will with united feeling recount the mercy and goodness of God to his people in past times.
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Barnes: Psa 102:23 - -- He weakened my strength in the way - Margin, as in Hebrew, "afflicted."The idea is, that God had taken his strength away; he had weakened him -...
He weakened my strength in the way - Margin, as in Hebrew, "afflicted."The idea is, that God had taken his strength away; he had weakened him - humbled him - brought him low by sorrow. The word "way"refers to the course which he was pursuing. In his journey of life God had thus afflicted - humbled - prostrated him. The psalmist here turns from the exulting view which he had of the future Psa 102:21-22, and resumes his complaint - the remembrance of his troubles and sorrows Psa 102:3-11. He speaks, doubtless, in the name of his people, and describes troubles which were common to them all. Perhaps the allusion to his troubles here may be designed, as such a recollection should do, to heighten his sense of the goodness and mercy of God in the anticipated blessings of the future.
He shortened my days - Compare Job 21:21; Psa 89:45. That is, He seemed to be about to cut me off from life, and to bring me to the grave. The psalmist felt so confident that he would die - that he could not endure these troubles, but must sink under them, that he spoke as if it were already done. Compare Psa 6:4-5.
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Barnes: Psa 102:24 - -- I said, O my God, take me not away in the midst of my days - This was the burden of my prayer, for this I earnestly pleaded. See Psa 30:9; Isa ...
I said, O my God, take me not away in the midst of my days - This was the burden of my prayer, for this I earnestly pleaded. See Psa 30:9; Isa 38:1-3, Isa 38:9-18. The word used here means "to cause to ascend or go up"and the expression might have been translated, "Cause me not to ascend."The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render it, "Call me not away."Dr. Horsley,"Carry me not off."In the word there may be an allusion - an obscure one, it is to be admitted - to the idea that the soul ascends to God when the body dies. The common idea in the Old Testament is that it would descend to the regions of the departed spirits - to Sheol. It is plain, however, that there was another idea - that the soul would ascend at once to God when death occurred. Compare Ecc 3:21; Ecc 12:7. The word rendered "in the midst"means properly in the half; as if life were divided into two portions. Compare Psa 55:23.
Thy years are throughout all generations - Thou dost not die; thou art ever the same, though the generations of people are cut off. This seems to have been said here for two reasons:
(1) As a ground of consolation, that God was ever the same; that whatever might happen to people, to the psalmist himself, or to any other man, God was unchanged, and that his great plans would be carried forward and accomplished;
(2) As a reason for the prayer. God was eternal. He had an immortal existence. He could not die. He knew, in its perfection, the blessedness of "life"- life as such; life continued; life unending. The psalmist appeals to what God himself enjoyed - as a reason why life - so great a blessing - should be granted to him a little longer. By all that there was of blessedness in the life of God, the psalmist prays that that which was in itself - even in the case of God - so valuable, might yet a little longer be continued to "him."
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Barnes: Psa 102:25-27 - -- Of old - See this passage fully explained in the notes at Heb 1:10-12. In the beginning; at the first. The phrase used here means literally "to...
Of old - See this passage fully explained in the notes at Heb 1:10-12. In the beginning; at the first. The phrase used here means literally "to the face;"then, "before"in the order of time. It means here, long ago; of olden time; at the beginning. The meaning is, that the years of God had stretched through all the generations of people, and all the changes which had occurred upon the earth; that at the very beginning he existed, and that he would continue to exist to the very close, unchangeably the same.
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Barnes: Psa 102:28 - -- The children of thy servants shall continue - The descendants of those that serve and obey thee. This represents the confident expectation of t...
The children of thy servants shall continue - The descendants of those that serve and obey thee. This represents the confident expectation of the psalmist that, as God was unchangeable, all his promises toward his people would be fulfilled, even though the heavens and the earth should pass away. God was the same. His word would not fail. His promises were sure. Compare Mat 5:18; Mat 24:35. The word rendered "continue,"means to dwell, as in a habitation; then, to abide. It stands opposed to a wandering, nomadic life, and indicates permanency.
And their seed shall be established before thee - The word used here means properly to stand erect; then to set up, to erect, to place, to found, to make firm, as a city, Psa 107:36; the earth, Psa 24:2; the heavens, Pro 3:19. It means here that they would be firmly and permanently established: that is, the church of God would be permanent in the earth. It would not be like the generations of people that pass away. It would not be like the nomadic tribes of the desert that have no fixed habitation, and that wander from place to place. It would not be even like the heavens that might put on new forms, or wholly pass away: it would be as enduring and changeless as God himself; it would, in its proper form, endure forever. As God is eternal and unchangeable, so would the safety and welfare of his people be.
Poole: Psa 102:21 - -- That they being delivered might publish and celebrate the name and praises of God in his church.
That they being delivered might publish and celebrate the name and praises of God in his church.
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Poole: Psa 102:22 - -- When the Gentiles shall gather themselves to the Jews, and join with them in the praise and worship of the true God, and of the Messias. This verse ...
When the Gentiles shall gather themselves to the Jews, and join with them in the praise and worship of the true God, and of the Messias. This verse seems to be added to intimate, that although the psalmist in this Psalm respects the deliverance of the Jews out of Babylon, yet he had a further design and a principal respect unto that greater and more general deliverance of his church and people by the Messias.
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Poole: Psa 102:23 - -- He to wit, God, to whom he ascribes these calamities, Psa 102:10 ; to whom therefore he addresseth himself for relief.
In the way either,
1. In th...
He to wit, God, to whom he ascribes these calamities, Psa 102:10 ; to whom therefore he addresseth himself for relief.
In the way either,
1. In the midst of our expectations. Whilst we are expecting the accomplishment of thy promise, either of bringing us out of Babylon, or of sending the Messias, we faint, and one of us perish after another, and our hope is like the giving up of the ghost. Or rather,
2. In the midst of the course of our lives; which sense is confirmed,
1. From the following clause; which, after the manner, explains the former,
he shortened my days as also from the next verse, where he begs relief from God against this misery in these words, take me not away in the midst of my days .
2. From the use of this word way, which is used for the course of a man’ s life, Psa 2:12 , and (which comes to the same thing) for the course of a journey, as it is opposed to the end of the journey, Gen 24:27 Exo 23:20 , and elsewhere; the life of man being oft compared to a journeying or travelling, and death to his journey’ s end. And the psalmist here speaks (as other sacred writers do elsewhere, and as all sorts of writers frequently do) of the whole commonwealth as of one man, and of its continuance as of the life of one man. And so this seems to be the matter of his complaint and humble expostulation with God: O Lord, thou didst choose us out of all the world to be thy peculiar people, and didst plant us in Canaan, and cause a glorious temple to be built to thy name, to be the only place of thy public and solemn worship in the world, and didst make great and glorious promises, that thine eyes and heart should be upon it perpetually, 1Ki 9:3 , and that thy people should be planted in thy land, so as not to be moved any more or afflicted, as they had been in the days of the judges, 2Sa 7:10,11 ; from whence we promised to ourselves a long and settled prosperity. But, alas, how soon were our hopes blasted! not long after the beginning of our settlement, in Rehoboam’ s time, and so successively in the course of our affairs under the following kings, till at last thou didst give us up to ruin and desolation, as at this day. And this he doth not allege to accuse God, or excuse himself or his people, but only that he might move the Divine Majesty to show them some pity, considering the shortness of their days, and his own eternity, as he pursues the argument in the following verses. My days ; the days of my life, or of my prosperous state, as above, Psa 102:1 ; for adversity is a kind of death, and is frequently so called.
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Poole: Psa 102:24 - -- Take me not away do not wholly cut off and destroy thy people of Israel. In the midst of my days; before they come to a full age and stature, and to ...
Take me not away do not wholly cut off and destroy thy people of Israel. In the midst of my days; before they come to a full age and stature, and to the plenary possession of thy promises, and especially of that great and fundamental promise of the Messias, in and by whom alone their happiness is to be completed, and until whose coming thy church is in its nonage; of which see Gal 4:1-4 . Possibly the psalmist (whom some learned interpreters suppose to be Daniel) may have respect to that prophecy, Dan 9:24,25 , which probably was published before this time; for this time was almost precisely the midst of the days between the building of the material temple by Solomon, and the building of the spiritual temple, or the church, by the Messias; there being about a thousand years distance between those two periods, whereof seventy prophetical weeks, or four hundred and ninety years, were yet to come. And so he prays that God would not root them out in this Babylonish captivity, but would graciously restore them to their own land, and preserve them as a church and nation there until the coming of the Messias.
Thy years are throughout all generations: though we successively die and perish, yet thou art the everlasting and unchangeable God, and therefore art and wilt ever be able to deliver thy people, and faithful in performing all thy promises; and therefore we beseech thee to pity our frail and languishing state, and give us a more settled and lasting felicity than yet we have enjoyed; and therefore we trust that thy people shall continue and be established before thee , as he saith, Psa 102:28 , because as thou art the everlasting God, so thou hast made an everlasting covenant with them, Psa 105:10 Isa 55:3 Jer 32:40 , to be their God for ever, and therefore thou wilt not now forsake or reject us.
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Poole: Psa 102:25 - -- The eternity of God looks both backward and forward, it is both without beginning and without end. The former is affirmed and illustrated Psa 102:24...
The eternity of God looks both backward and forward, it is both without beginning and without end. The former is affirmed and illustrated Psa 102:24,26,27 , the latter is clearly implied in this verse. Thou hadst a being before the creation of the world, when there was nothing but eternity, but the earth and heavens had a beginning given them by thy almighty power.
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Poole: Psa 102:26 - -- They shall perish either,
1. As to the substance of them, which shall be annihilated. Or,
2. As to their present nature and use: see Isa 65:17 66:2...
They shall perish either,
1. As to the substance of them, which shall be annihilated. Or,
2. As to their present nature and use: see Isa 65:17 66:22 2Pe 3:7,10,11 . The heavens and the earth, although they be the most permanent of all visible beings, and their continuance is oft mentioned to signify the stability and immutability of things, yet if compared with thee are as nothing; they had a beginning, and shall have an end.
Wax old i.e. decay and perish.
Like a garment which is worn out and laid aside, and exchanged for another. And so shall this present frame of heaven and earth be.
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Poole: Psa 102:28 - -- Though the heavens and the earth perish, and though we thy servants pine away in our iniquities , according to thy righteous sentence and threateni...
Though the heavens and the earth perish, and though we thy servants pine away in our iniquities , according to thy righteous sentence and threatening, Lev 26:39 , and die in captivity; yet by virtue of thy eternal and unchangeable nature and covenant, we rest assured that our children, and their children after them, shall enjoy the promised mercies, a happy restitution to and settlement in their own land, and the presence of our and their Messias, whom, being not to come till after four hundred and ninety years, we shall not live to see. The expression here used is general, not without design, partly to show that this promised blessing belongs to the Jews not upon the account of any carnal relation to Abraham, but as they are and continue to be God’ s servants, from whom, if they revolt, they lose this and all their other privileges; and partly to imply that it belongs to all God’ s faithful servants, and to their children, whether they be Jews or Gentiles, of whose conversion he spoke, Psa 102:22 .
Before thee in the place of thy gracious presence; either here in thy church, or hereafter in heaven, from which we are now banished. And this phrase further intimates that their happiness did not consist in the enjoyment of the outward blessings of the land of Canaan, but in the presence and fruition of God there, which he mentions as the top and upshot of all his desires and their felicities.
Haydock -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22
Hosts. Sun, &c., which never deviate from their regular course.
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Haydock: Psa 102:22 - -- Soul. In vain should we behold all nature praising God, if we neglected that duty. (Berthier) ---
All the works of the Most High praise him, being...
Soul. In vain should we behold all nature praising God, if we neglected that duty. (Berthier) ---
All the works of the Most High praise him, being under his dominion. (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:25; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:27; Psa 102:28
Gill: Psa 102:21 - -- To declare the name of the Lord in Zion,.... That is, that the prisoners and persons appointed to death, being loosed, might declare, in the church, w...
To declare the name of the Lord in Zion,.... That is, that the prisoners and persons appointed to death, being loosed, might declare, in the church, what great things the Lord has done for them; and so speak well of his wisdom, power, grace, and goodness, in their deliverance; profess his name, and confess him before men, and express a value for his name, and show forth the honour of it, and seek his glory:
and his praise in Jerusalem; the Gospel church state, the same with Zion; when it shall be the praise of the whole earth; then and there will those, that are delivered from the antichristian yoke, praise the Lord, sing the song of Moses and the Lamb, and glorify God for all that he has done for them.
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Gill: Psa 102:22 - -- When the people are gathered together,.... When the people of the Jews shall be gathered together, and seek the Lord their God, and David their King, ...
When the people are gathered together,.... When the people of the Jews shall be gathered together, and seek the Lord their God, and David their King, the Messiah, and appoint them one head, even Christ; and when the Gentiles shall gather together, in great numbers, to the church of God, Hos 1:11,
and the kingdoms to serve the Lord; even the kingdoms of this world, which will become his, and will serve him in righteousness and holiness, freely and cheerfully, with one shoulder and one content; their kings will fall down before the Lord, and all nations shall serve him, Psa 72:11, and then will be the time when the prisoners shall be loosed, and the Lord shall be praised in Zion.
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Gill: Psa 102:23 - -- He weakened my strength in the way,.... The psalmist here returns to his complaint of his afflictions, weakness, and frailty, which ended Psa 102:11, ...
He weakened my strength in the way,.... The psalmist here returns to his complaint of his afflictions, weakness, and frailty, which ended Psa 102:11, after which some hints are given of the latter day glory, which though he despaired of seeing, by reason of his frailty and mortality, yet comforts himself with the eternity and immutability of Christ, and that there would be a succession of the church, a seed of true believers, who would see and enjoy it: as for himself, he says that God (for he is that "He", and not the enemy, as some) had "weakened" his "strength in the way", by afflictions, as the word e signifies; which weakens the strength and vigour of the mind, and discourages and dispirits it, and enfeebles the body: many are the afflictions which the people of God meet with in the course of their life, in their way to heaven, which have such an effect upon them; through many tribulations they pass to enter the kingdom, as the Israelites in their way to Canaan, and Christ to glory: some think the psalmist represents the Jews in their return from the Babylonish captivity, meeting with difficulties and discouragements in the way; rather the church of God, in the expectation of the Messiah, who, because his coming was delayed, grew feeble in their faith and hope, had weak hands and feeble knees, which needed strengthening by fresh promises: though it may be, best of all, the people of God, waiting for latter day glory, enfeebled by the persecutions of antichrist, or grown weak in the exercises of their grace, faith, hope, and love; which will be their case before these glorious times, and now is, see Rev 3:2,
he shortened my days; which he thought he should live, and expected he would; and which, according to the course of nature, and the common term of man's life, he might, in all human appearance, have lived; otherwise, with respect to the decree of God, which has fixed the bounds of man's days, they cannot be shorter or longer than they are, Job 14:5.
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Gill: Psa 102:24 - -- I said, O my God, take me not away in the midst of my days;.... Which was always reckoned as a judgment, as a token of God's sore displeasure, and as ...
I said, O my God, take me not away in the midst of my days;.... Which was always reckoned as a judgment, as a token of God's sore displeasure, and as what only befell wicked men, Psa 55:23, in the Hebrew it is, "cause me not to ascend" f; either as smoke, which ascends, and vanishes away; or rather it designs the separation of the soul from the body at death, when it ascends upwards to God that gave it; so Aben Ezra compares it with Ecc 12:7, the Targum is,
"do not take me out of the world in the midst of my days, bring me to the world to come:''
some, who think that Daniel was the penman of this psalm, or some other, about the time of the Babylonish captivity, curiously observe, that that period was much about the middle between the building of Solomon's temple and the coming of Christ, the antitype of it; which was about a thousand years, of which four hundred and ninety were to come, according to Daniel's weeks; so, representing the church, prays they might not be destroyed, as such; but be continued till the Messiah came:
thy years are throughout all generations; which are not as men's years, of the same measure or number; but are boundless and infinite: the phrase is expressive of the eternity of God, or Christ; which the psalmist opposes to his own frailty, and which he illustrates in the following verses, by setting it in contrast with the discontinuance and changeableness of the heavens and the earth; see Job 10:5.
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Gill: Psa 102:25 - -- Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth,.... The lower part of the creation, the Lord's footstool, called the earth beneath: this has its fo...
Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth,.... The lower part of the creation, the Lord's footstool, called the earth beneath: this has its foundation; though what it is cannot be well said, it cannot be searched out; it is sometimes said to be founded upon the waters, and yet so as not to be removed for ever, Jer 31:37, this shows the wisdom of God, as a wise master builder, and the stability of the earth; and is a proof of the deity of Christ, to whom these words belong: this is said to be done "of old", or "at" or "in the beginning", as Jarchi and the Targum; and so in Heb 1:10, where they are applied to the Messiah, the Son of God; and this, as it proves the eternity of Christ, who must be in the beginning, and before all things, so it confutes the notion of the eternity of the earth, received by some philosophers: besides, the words may be rendered, "before" g "thou foundest the earth"; and so refers to the preceding, "thy years", &c. were before the earth was; that is, from eternity, and so fully express the eternal existence of Christ:
and the heavens are the work of thy hands; these are the airy and starry heavens, and the heaven of heavens; which are creatures, and not to be worshipped, made by Christ himself, and are expressive of his power, wisdom, and glory.
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Gill: Psa 102:26 - -- They shall perish,.... Both the heavens and the earth, though so well founded, and so firmly made; they shall be dissolved, melt, and pass away; not a...
They shall perish,.... Both the heavens and the earth, though so well founded, and so firmly made; they shall be dissolved, melt, and pass away; not as to the substance, but as to the quality of them: or, as R. Judah Ben David says, whom Aben Ezra on the place cites, and calls the first grammarian in the west, not as to generals, but as to particulars:
but thou shalt endure; as the eternal God, from everlasting to everlasting; and, even as man, he will die no more; and, as Mediator, will ever remain; he will be King for ever; his throne is for ever and ever; his kingdom is an everlasting one; he is a priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedek; his sacrifice is of an eternal efficacy, and he ever lives to make intercession for his people; he will always continue, as the Prophet, in his church, to teach by his Spirit, word, and ordinances, in the present state; and hereafter will be the light of the New Jerusalem, and of his saints, for ever:
yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment: not only the heavens, which are as a curtain and garment about the earth, but the earth itself, Isa 51:6, will lose their beauty and glory, and become useless, as to the present form of them:
as a vesture shall thou change them, and they shall be changed; as to their form, as a garment that is turned or folded up, and laid aside, as to present use: this seems to favour the above sense given, that the earth and heavens will not perish, as to the substance of them; but as to their form, figure, fashion, and scheme; and as to the qualities of them, all noxious ones being purged away by fire, the curse removed, and new heavens and new earth arise out of them.
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Gill: Psa 102:27 - -- But thou art the same,.... That hast created them, as the Targum adds; or "thou art he" h, the everlasting I AM, the unchangeable Jehovah; immutable i...
But thou art the same,.... That hast created them, as the Targum adds; or "thou art he" h, the everlasting I AM, the unchangeable Jehovah; immutable in his nature and perfections; in his love and affections to his people; in his power to protect and keep them; in his wisdom to guide and direct them; in his righteousness to clothe them, and render them acceptable to God; in his blood to cleanse them, and speak peace and pardon to them; in his fulness to supply them, and in his intercession for them,
and thy years shall have no end; See Gill on Psa 102:24, now he, that made the heavens and the earth, and will be when they will not be, especially in the present form they are, must be able to rebuild his Zion, and bring on the glory he has promised; and from his eternity and immutability may be concluded the continuance of his church and interest in the world, until all the glorious things spoken of it shall be fulfilled, as follows.
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Gill: Psa 102:28 - -- The children of thy servants shall continue,.... The "servants" of the Lord are the apostles of Christ, and ministers of the word, in all successive g...
The children of thy servants shall continue,.... The "servants" of the Lord are the apostles of Christ, and ministers of the word, in all successive generations, with whom Christ will be to the end of the world: their "children" are such whom they have begotten again, through the Gospel, to whom they are spiritual fathers; regenerated souls are meant; of these there will be a succession in all ages, until latter day glory takes place; these are the church's seed, and her seed's seed, from whom the word of the Lord, the Gospel, will never depart, Isa 59:21, or these "shall inhabit" i, as the word may be rendered, the earth, as the Targum adds; that is, the new heavens, and the new earth, when the old ones are passed away; here they shall dwell with the Lord, who is the same today, yesterday, and for ever:
and their seed shall be established before thee; the same with the children, the spiritual seed of the church and of faithful minister; these, with the church, in which they are born and brought up, shall be established in Christ; the church will be no more in an unstable and fluctuating state, but will he as a tabernacle, that shall not be taken down; yea, shall be established upon the top of the mountains, and exalted above the hills; see Isa 2:2.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Psa 102:21; Psa 102:21; Psa 102:22; Psa 102:23; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:24; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:26; Psa 102:27; Psa 102:28; Psa 102:28
NET Notes: Psa 102:21 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.
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NET Notes: Psa 102:23 Heb “he has afflicted my strength in the way.” The term “way” refers here to the course of the psalmist’s life, which ap...
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NET Notes: Psa 102:26 The Hebrew verb חָלַף (khalaf) occurs twice in this line, once in the Hiphil (“you will remove them”) and on...
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NET Notes: Psa 102:27 Heb “you [are] he,” or “you [are] the one.” The statement may echo the Lord’s affirmation “I am he” in Isa 4...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 102:22 When the people are gathered ( p ) together, and the kingdoms, to serve the LORD.
( p ) He shows that Gad's name is never more praised, than when rel...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 102:23 He ( q ) weakened my strength in the way; he shortened my days.
( q ) The church lament that they see not the time of Christ, which was promised, but...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 102:26 ( r ) They shall perish, but thou shalt endure: yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment; as a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 102:28 The children of thy servants shall continue, and their seed shall ( s ) be established before thee.
( s ) Seeing you have chosen your Church out of t...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 102:1-28
TSK Synopsis: Psa 102:1-28 - --1 The prophet in his prayer makes a grievous complaint.12 He takes comfort in the eternity, and mercy of God.18 The mercies of God are to be recorded....
MHCC -> Psa 102:12-22; Psa 102:23-28
MHCC: Psa 102:12-22 - --We are dying creatures, but God is an everlasting God, the protector of his church; we may be confident that it will not be neglected. When we conside...
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MHCC: Psa 102:23-28 - --Bodily distempers soon weaken our strength, then what can we expect but that our months should be cut off in the midst; and what should we do but prov...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 102:12-22; Psa 102:23-28
Matthew Henry: Psa 102:12-22 - -- Many exceedingly great and precious comforts are here thought of, and mustered up, to balance the foregoing complaints; for unto the upright there ...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 102:23-28 - -- We may here observe, I. The imminent danger that the Jewish church was in of being quite extirpated and cut off by the captivity in Babylon (Psa 102...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 102:18-22; Psa 102:23-28
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 102:18-22 - --
The poet goes on advancing motives to Jahve for the fulfilment of his desire, by holding up to Him what will take place when He shall have restored ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 102:23-28 - --
On the way ( ב as in Psa 110:7) - not "by means of the way"( ב as in Psa 105:18), in connection with which one would expect of find some attributi...
Constable: Psa 90:1--106:48 - --IV. Book 4: chs. 90--106
Moses composed one of the psalms in this section of the Psalter (Ps. 90). David wrote t...
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Constable: Psa 102:1-28 - --Psalm 102
Another anonymous writer poured out his personal lament to Yahweh (cf. Pss. 22, 69, 79). He fe...
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Constable: Psa 102:11-21 - --3. Confidence in Yahweh's restoration 102:12-22
102:12-13 In contrast to his own brief life the suffering psalmist voiced his belief that God would co...
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Constable: Psa 102:22-27 - --4. Hope in God's ceaseless existence 102:23-28
It seemed as though God was killing the psalmist ...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence -> Psa 102:25-26; Psa 102:27
Evidence: Psa 102:25-26 Scientific facts in the Bible . Three different places in the Bible ( Isa 51:6 ; Psa 102:25-26 ; Heb 1:11 ) indicate that the earth is wearing out. ...
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