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Text -- Psalms 102:24 (NET)

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Context
102:24 I say, “O my God, please do not take me away in the middle of my life! You endure through all generations.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Jesus, The Christ | Immortality | God | Afflictions and Adversities | ACCOMMODATION | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 102:24 - -- Do not wholly destroy thy people Israel.

Do not wholly destroy thy people Israel.

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.

Wesley: Psa 102:24 - -- Though we die, yet thou art the everlasting God.

Though we die, yet thou art the everlasting God.

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.

JFB: Psa 102:23-28 - -- Of providence.

Of providence.

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 102:24 - -- 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

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.

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.

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

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."

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.

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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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 102:24 Heb “in a generation of generations [are] your years.”

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 102:23-28 - --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 102:23-28 - -- 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 102:23-28 - -- 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...

Constable: Psa 102:1-28 - --Psalm 102 Another anonymous writer poured out his personal lament to Yahweh (cf. Pss. 22, 69, 79). He fe...

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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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 102 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 102:1, The prophet in his prayer makes a grievous complaint; Psa 102:12, He takes comfort in the eternity, and mercy of God; Psa 102:...

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 102 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 102:1-11) A sorrowful complaint of great afflictions. (Psa 102:12-22) Encouragement by expecting the performances of God's promises to his churc...

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 102 (Chapter Introduction) Some think that David penned this psalm at the time of Absalom's rebellion; others that Daniel, Nehemiah, or some other prophet, penned it for the ...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 102 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 102 A prayer of the afflicted, when he is overwhelmed, and poureth out his complaint before the Lord; Whether this psalm was ...

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