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Text -- Psalms 90:1-11 (NET)
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Book 4
(Psalms 90-106)
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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 90:1 - -- Although we and our fathers, for some generations, have had no fixed habitation, yet thou hast been instead of a dwelling - place to us, by thy watchf...
Although we and our fathers, for some generations, have had no fixed habitation, yet thou hast been instead of a dwelling - place to us, by thy watchful and gracious providence. And this intimates that all the following miseries were not to be imputed to God but themselves.
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Thou hadst thy power, and all thy perfections, from all eternity.
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Wesley: Psa 90:3 - -- But as for man, his case is far otherwise, though he was made by thee happy. and immortal, yet for his sin thou didst make him mortal and miserable.
But as for man, his case is far otherwise, though he was made by thee happy. and immortal, yet for his sin thou didst make him mortal and miserable.
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Wesley: Psa 90:3 - -- Didst pronounce that sad sentence, return, O men, to the dust out of which ye were taken, Gen 3:19.
Didst pronounce that sad sentence, return, O men, to the dust out of which ye were taken, Gen 3:19.
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Wesley: Psa 90:4 - -- Indeed time seems long when it is to come, but when it is past, very short and contemptible.
Indeed time seems long when it is to come, but when it is past, very short and contemptible.
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Universally, without exception or distinction.
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Short and vain, as sleep is, and not minded 'till it be past.
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Thou dost not suffer us to live so long as we might by the course of nature.
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Wesley: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou dost observe them, as a righteous judge, and art calling us to an account for them.
Thou dost observe them, as a righteous judge, and art calling us to an account for them.
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Wesley: Psa 90:8 - -- Which though hid from the eyes of men, thou hast brought to light by thy judgments.
Which though hid from the eyes of men, thou hast brought to light by thy judgments.
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Wesley: Psa 90:10 - -- Of the generality of mankind, in that and all following ages, some few persons excepted.
Of the generality of mankind, in that and all following ages, some few persons excepted.
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Wesley: Psa 90:10 - -- We do not now go to death, as we do from our very birth, but flee swiftly away like a bird, as this word signifies.
We do not now go to death, as we do from our very birth, but flee swiftly away like a bird, as this word signifies.
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Wesley: Psa 90:11 - -- According to the fear of thee; according to that fear which sinful men have of a just God.
According to the fear of thee; according to that fear which sinful men have of a just God.
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It bears full proportion to it, nay indeed doth far exceed it.
JFB -> Psa 90:1; Psa 90:1; Psa 90:2; Psa 90:3; Psa 90:4; Psa 90:4; Psa 90:5-6; Psa 90:7-8; Psa 90:7-8; Psa 90:9; Psa 90:9; Psa 90:9; Psa 90:10; Psa 90:10; Psa 90:11
JFB: Psa 90:1 - -- Contrasting man's frailty with God's eternity, the writer mourns over it as the punishment of sin, and prays for a return of the divine favor. A Praye...
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Both express the idea of production by birth.
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JFB: Psa 90:4 - -- Even were our days now a thousand years, as Adam's, our life would be but a moment in God's sight (2Pe 3:8).
Even were our days now a thousand years, as Adam's, our life would be but a moment in God's sight (2Pe 3:8).
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JFB: Psa 90:5-6 - -- Life is like grass, which, though changing under the influence of the night's dew, and flourishing in the morning, is soon cut down and withereth (Psa...
Life is like grass, which, though changing under the influence of the night's dew, and flourishing in the morning, is soon cut down and withereth (Psa 103:15; 1Pe 1:24).
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A reason, this is the infliction of God's wrath.
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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 ...
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JFB: Psa 90:10 - -- Or, "driven," as is said of the quails in using the same word (Num 11:31). In view of this certain and speedy end, life is full of sorrow.
Or, "driven," as is said of the quails in using the same word (Num 11:31). In view of this certain and speedy end, life is full of sorrow.
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JFB: Psa 90:11 - -- The whole verse may be read as a question implying the negative, "No one knows what Thy anger can do, and what Thy wrath is, estimated by a true piety...
The whole verse may be read as a question implying the negative, "No one knows what Thy anger can do, and what Thy wrath is, estimated by a true piety."
Clarke: Psa 90:1 - -- Lord, thou hast been our dwellingplace - מעון maon ; but instead of this several MSS. have מעוז maoz , "place of defense,"or "refuge,"whi...
Lord, thou hast been our dwellingplace -
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Clarke: Psa 90:2 - -- Before the mountains were brought forth - The mountains and hills appear to have been everlasting; but as they were brought forth out of the womb of...
Before the mountains were brought forth - The mountains and hills appear to have been everlasting; but as they were brought forth out of the womb of eternity, there was a time when they were not: but Thou hast been ab aeternitate a parte ante, ad aeternitatem a parte post; fram the eternity that is past, before time began; to the eternity that is after, when time shall have an end. This is the highest description of the eternity of God to which human language can reach.
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Clarke: Psa 90:3 - -- Thou turnest man to destruction - Literally, Thou shalt turn dying man, אנוש enosh , to the small dust, דכא dacca but thou wilt say, Retu...
Thou turnest man to destruction - Literally, Thou shalt turn dying man,
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Clarke: Psa 90:4 - -- For a thousand years in thy sight - As if he had said, Though the resurrection of the body may be a thousand (or any indefinite number of) years dis...
For a thousand years in thy sight - As if he had said, Though the resurrection of the body may be a thousand (or any indefinite number of) years distant; yet, when these are past, they are but as yesterday, or a single thatch of the night. They pass through the mind in a moment, and appear no longer in their duration than the time required by the mind to reflect them by thought. But, short as they appear to the eye of the mind, they are nothing when compared with the eternity of God! The author probably has in view also that economy of Divine justice and providence by which the life of man has been shortened from one thousand years to threescore years and ten, or fourscore.
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Clarke: Psa 90:5 - -- Thou carriest them away as with a flood - Life is compared to a stream, ever gliding away; but sometimes it is as a mighty torrent, when by reason o...
Thou carriest them away as with a flood - Life is compared to a stream, ever gliding away; but sometimes it is as a mighty torrent, when by reason of plague, famine, or war, thousands are swept away daily. In particular cases it is a rapid stream, when the young are suddenly carried off by consumptions, fevers, etc.; this is the flower that flourisheth in the morning, and in the evening is cut down and withered. The whole of life is like a sleep or as a dream. The eternal world is real; all here is either shadowy or representative. On the whole, life is represented as a stream; youth, as morning; decline of life, or old age, as evening, death, as sleep; and the resurrection as the return of the flowers in spring. All these images appear in these curious and striking verses, Psa 90:3-6.
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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
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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."
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Clarke: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou hast set our iniquities before thee - Every one of our transgressions is set before thee; noted and minuted down in thy awful register
Thou hast set our iniquities before thee - Every one of our transgressions is set before thee; noted and minuted down in thy awful register
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Clarke: Psa 90:8 - -- Our secret sins - Those committed in darkness and privacy are easily discovered by thee, being shown by the splendours of thy face shining upon them...
Our secret sins - Those committed in darkness and privacy are easily discovered by thee, being shown by the splendours of thy face shining upon them. Thus we light a candle, and bring it into a dark place to discover its contents. O, what can be hidden from the allseeing eye of God? Darkness is no darkness to him; wherever he comes there is a profusion of light - for God is light!
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Clarke: Psa 90:9 - -- We spend our years as a tale - The Vulgate has: Anni nostri sicut aranea meditabuntur; "Our years pass away like those of the spider."Our plans and ...
We spend our years as a tale - The Vulgate has: Anni nostri sicut aranea meditabuntur; "Our years pass away like those of the spider."Our plans and operations are like the spider’ s web; life is as frail, and the thread of it as brittle, as one of those that constitute the well-wrought and curious, but fragile, habitation of that insect. All the Versions have the word spider; but it neither appears in the Hebrew, nor in any of its MSS. which have been collated
My old Psalter has a curious paraphrase here: "Als the iran (spider) makes vayne webs for to take flese (flies) with gile, swa our yeres ere ockupide in ydel and swikel castes about erthly thynges; and passes with outen frute of gude werks, and waste in ydel thynkyns."This is too true a picture of most lives
But the Hebrew is different from all the Versions. "We consume our years (
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Clarke: Psa 90:10 - -- Threescore years and ten - See the note on the title of this Psalm 90 (note). This Psalm could not have been written by Moses, because the term of h...
Threescore years and ten - See the note on the title of this Psalm 90 (note). This Psalm could not have been written by Moses, because the term of human life was much more extended when he flourished than eighty years at the most. Even in David’ s time many lived one hundred years, and the author of Ecclesiasticus, who lived after the captivity, fixed this term at one hundred years at the most (Sirach 18:9); but this was merely a general average, for even in our country we have many who exceed a hundred years
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Clarke: Psa 90:10 - -- Yet is their strength labor and sorrow - This refers to the infirmities of old age, which, to those well advanced in life, produce labor and sorrow
Yet is their strength labor and sorrow - This refers to the infirmities of old age, which, to those well advanced in life, produce labor and sorrow
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It is soon cut of - It - the body, is soon cut off
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And we fly away - The immortal spirit wings its way into the eternal world.
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Clarke: Psa 90:11 - -- Who knoweth the power of thine angers - The afflictions of this life are not to be compared to the miseries which await them who live and die withou...
Who knoweth the power of thine angers - The afflictions of this life are not to be compared to the miseries which await them who live and die without being reconciled to God, and saved from their sins.
Calvin: Psa 90:1 - -- 1.O Lord! thou hast been our dwelling-place In separating the seed of Abraham by special privilege from the rest of the human family, the Psalmist ma...
1.O Lord! thou hast been our dwelling-place In separating the seed of Abraham by special privilege from the rest of the human family, the Psalmist magnifies the grace of adoption, by which God had embraced them as his children. The object which he has in view in this exordium is, that God would now renew the grace which he had displayed in old time towards the holy patriarchs, and continue it towards their offspring. Some commentators think that he alludes to the tabernacle, because in it the majesty of God was not less conspicuous than if he had dwelt in the midst of the people; but this seems to me to be altogether out of place. He rather comprehends the whole time in which the Fathers sojourned in the land of Canaan. As the tabernacle had not yet continued for the space of forty years, the long duration here mentioned — our dwelling-place from generation to generation — would not at all be applicable to it. It is not then intended to recount what God showed himself to be towards the Israelites from the time that he delivered them from Egypt; but what their fathers had experienced him to be in all ages, even from the beginning. 565 Now it is declared that as they had always been pilgrims and wanderers, so God was to them instead of a dwelling-place. No doubt, the condition of all men is unstable upon earth; but we know that Abraham and his posterity were, above all others, sojourners, and as it were exiles. Since, then, they wandered in the land of Canaan till they were brought into Egypt, where they lived only by sufferance from day to day, it was necessary for them to seek for themselves a dwelling-place under the shadow of God, without which they could hardly be accounted inhabitants of the world, since they continued everywhere strangers, and were afterwards led about through many windings and turnings. The grace which the Lord displayed in sustaining them in their wanderings, and shielding them with his hand when they sojourned among savage and cruel nations, and were exposed to injurious treatment at their hands — this grace is extolled by Moses in very striking terms, when he represents God as an abode or dwelling-place to these poor fugitives who were continually wandering from one place to another in quest of lodgings. This grace he magnifies from the length of time during which it had been exercised; for God ceased not to preserve and defend them for the space of more than four hundred years, during which time they dwelt under the wings of his protection.
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Calvin: Psa 90:2 - -- 2.Before the mountains were brought forth Moses designs to set forth some high and hidden mystery, and yet he seems to speak feebly, and, as it were,...
2.Before the mountains were brought forth Moses designs to set forth some high and hidden mystery, and yet he seems to speak feebly, and, as it were, in a puerile manner. For who does not know that God existed before the world? This we grant is a truth which all men admit; but we will scarcely find one in a hundred who is thoroughly persuaded that God remains unchangeably the same. God is here contrasted with created beings, who, as all know, are subject to continual changes, so that there is nothing stable under heaven. As, in a particular manner, nothing is fuller of vicissitude than human life, that men may not judge of the nature of God by their own fluctuating condition, he is here placed in a state of settled and undisturbed tranquillity. Thus the everlastingness of which Moses speaks is to be referred not only to the essence of God, but also to his providence, by which he governs the world. Although he subjects the world to many alterations, he remains unmoved; and that not only in regard to himself, but also in regard to the faithful, who find from experience, that instead of being wavering, he is steadfast in his power, truth, righteousness, and goodness, even as he has been from the beginning. This eternal and unchangeable steadfastness of God could not be perceived prior to the creation of the world, since there were as yet no eyes to be witnesses of it. But it may be gathered a posteriori; for while all things are subject to revolution and incessant vicissitude, his nature continues always the same. There may be also here a contrast between him and all the false gods of the heathen, who have, by little and little, crept into the world in such vast numbers, through the error and folly of men. But I have already shown the object which Moses has in view, which is, that we mistake if we measure God by our own understanding; and that we must mount above the earth, yea, even above heaven itself, whenever we think upon him.
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Calvin: Psa 90:3 - -- 3.Thou shalt turn man to destruction Moses, in the first place, mentions how frail and transitory is the life of man, and bewails its miseries. This ...
3.Thou shalt turn man to destruction Moses, in the first place, mentions how frail and transitory is the life of man, and bewails its miseries. This he does, not for the purpose of quarrelling with God, but as an argument to induce him the more readily to exercise his mercy, even as he is elsewhere said to pardon mortal men, when he considers of what they are made, and remembers that they are but dust and grass, (Psa 103:14.) he compares the course of our life to a ring or circle, because God, placing us upon the earth, turns us about within a narrow circuit, and when we have reached the last point, draws us back to himself in a moment. Others give a different interpretation, namely, that God leads men forth to death, and afterwards restores them at the resurrection. But this subtilty is far-fetched, and does not harmonise with the context. We have here laid down a simple definition of our life, that it is, as it were, a short revolution in which we quickly complete our circle, the last point of which is the termination of our earthly course. This account of human life sets in a clearer light the gracious manner in which God deals with his servants, in adopting them to be his peculiar people, that he may at length gather them together into his everlasting inheritance. Nor is it in vain that it is added, by way of contrast, (verse 4,) that a thousand years in God’s sight are as yesterday Although we are convinced from experience that men, when they have completed their circle, are forthwith taken out of the world, yet the knowledge of this frailty fails in making a deep impression upon our hearts, because we do not lift our eyes above the world. Whence proceeds the great stupidity of men, who, bound fast to the present state of existence, proceed in the affairs of life as if they were to live two thousand years, but because they do not elevate their conceptions above visible objects? Each man, when he compares himself with others, flatters himself that he will live to a great age. In short, men are so dull as to think that thirty years, or even a smaller number, are, as it were, an eternity; nor are they impressed with the brevity of their life so long as this world keeps possession of their thoughts. This is the reason why Moses awakens us by elevating our minds to the eternity of God, without the consideration of which we perceive not how speedily our life vanishes away. The imagination that we shall have a long life, resembles a profound sleep in which we are all benumbed, until meditation upon the heavenly life swallow up this foolish fancy respecting the length of our continuance upon earth.
As men are thus blinded, Moses sets before their view God as their judge. O Lord! as if he had said, if men would duly reflect upon that eternity from which thou beholdest these inconstant circlings of the world, they would not make so great account of the present life. But as, instead of seriously considering what is true duration, they rather wilfully turn away their eyes from heaven, this explains why they are so stupid, and look upon one day as if it were a hundred years. Moses’ apostrophe to God is emphatic, implying that his patience being exhausted at seeing us so thoughtless, he addresses himself to God; and that it was labor to no purpose for him to speak to the deaf, who would not be taught that they were mortal, no, not even by the proofs of this, which experience was constantly presenting before them. This text is quoted by the Apostle Peter in a sense somewhat different, (2Pe 3:8,) while at the same time he does not pervert it, for he aptly and judiciously applies the testimony of Moses in illustration of the subject of which he is there treating. The design of Moses is to elevate the minds of men to heaven by withdrawing them from their own gross conceptions. And what is the object of Peter? As many, because Christ does not hasten his coming according to their desire, cast off the hope of the resurrection through the weariness of long delay, he corrects this preposterous impatience by a very suitable remedy. He perceives men’s faith in the Divine promises fainting and failing, from their thinking that Christ delays his coming too long. Whence does this proceed, but because they grovel upon the earth? Peter therefore appropriately applies these words of Moses to cure this vice. As the indulgence in pleasures to which unbelievers yield themselves is to be traced to this, that having their hearts too much set upon the world, they do not taste the pleasures of a celestial eternity; so impatience proceeds from the same source. Hence we learn the true use of this doctrine. To what is it owing that we have so great anxiety about our life, that nothing suffices us, and that we are continually molesting ourselves, but because we foolishly imagine that we shall nestle in this world for ever? Again, to what are we to ascribe that extreme fretfulness and impatience, which make our hearts fail in waiting for the coming of Christ, but to their grovelling upon the earth? Let us learn then not to judge according to the understanding of the flesh, but to depend upon the judgment of God; and let us elevate our minds by faith, even to his heavenly throne, from which he declares that this earthly life is nothing. Nor does Moses simply contrast a thousand years with one day, but he contrasts them with yesterday, which is already gone; for whatever is still before our eyes has a hold upon our minds, but we are less affected with the recollection of what is past. In regard to the word watch, the ancients, as is well known, were accustomed to divide the night into four watches, consisting of three hours each. 566 To express still more forcibly how inconsiderable that which appears to us a long period is in God’s eyes, this similitude is added, That a thousand years in his sight differ nothing from three hours of the night, in which men scarcely know whether they are awake or asleep.
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Calvin: Psa 90:5 - -- 5.Thou carriest them away as with a flood Moses confirms what he had previously said, That men, so long as they are sojourners in this world, perform...
5.Thou carriest them away as with a flood Moses confirms what he had previously said, That men, so long as they are sojourners in this world, perform, as it were, a revolution which lasts only for a moment. I do not limit the expression to carry away as with a flood to calamities of a more grievous kind, but consider that death is simply compared in general to a flood; for when we have staid a little while in the world, we forthwith fall into the grave and are covered with earth. Thus death, which is common to all, is with propriety called an inundation. While we are breathing the breath of life, the Lord overflows us by death, just as those who perish in a shipwreck are engulfed in the ocean; so that death may be fitly called an invisible deluge. And Moses affirms, that it is then evidently seen that men who flatter themselves that they are possessed of wonderful vigor in their earthly course, are only as a sleep. The comparison of grass which is added, amounts to this, That men come forth in the morning as grass springs up, that they become green, or pass away within a short time, when being cut down, they wither and decay. The verbs in the 6th verse being in the singular number, it is better to connect them with the word grass. But they may also be appropriately referred to each man; and as it makes little difference as to the sense of the text, whether we make grass or each man the nominative to the verbs, I am not disposed to expend much labor upon the matter. This doctrine requires to be continually meditated upon; for although we all confess that nothing is more transitory than our life, yet each of us is soon carried away, as it were, by a frantic impulse to picture to his own imagination an earthly immortality. Whoever bears in mind that he is mortal, restrains himself, that instead of having his attention and affections engrossed beyond measure with earthly objects, he may advance with haste to his mark. When we set no limit to our cares, we require to be urged forward by continual goadings, that we may not dream of a thousand lives instead of one, which is but as a shadow that quickly vanishes away.
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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.
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Calvin: Psa 90:8 - -- 8.Thou hast set our iniquities before thee To show that by this complaint he is far from intending to murmur against God, he asserts that the Divine ...
8.Thou hast set our iniquities before thee To show that by this complaint he is far from intending to murmur against God, he asserts that the Divine anger, however terrible it had been, was just, inasmuch as the people had provoked it by their iniquities; for those who, when stricken by the Divine hand, are not brought to genuine humiliation, harden themselves more and more. The true way to profit, and also to subdue our pride, is to feel that He is a righteous judge. Accordingly Moses, after having briefly taught that men by nature vanish away like smoke, gathers from thence that it is not to be wondered at if God exanimates and consumes those whom he pursues with his wrath. The manner of the expression by which God is described as showing the tokens of his anger is to be observed — he sets the iniquities of men before his eyes Hence it follows, that whatever intermission of punishment we experience ought in justice to be ascribed to the forbearance of. God, who buries our sins that he may spare us. The word
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Calvin: Psa 90:9 - -- 9.For all our days are passed away in thy indignation This might be viewed as a general confirmation of the preceding sentence, That the whole course...
9.For all our days are passed away in thy indignation This might be viewed as a general confirmation of the preceding sentence, That the whole course of man’s life is suddenly brought to an end, as soon as God shows himself displeased. But in my opinion Moses rather amplifies what he has said above concerning the rigour of God’s wrath, and his strict examination of every case in which he punishes sin. He asserts that this terror which God brought upon his people was not only for a short time, but that it was extended without intermission even to death. He complains that the Jews had almost wasted away by continual miseries; because God neither remitted nor mitigated his anger. It is therefore not surprising to find him declaring that their years passed away like a tale, when God’s anger rested upon them so unremittingly.
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Calvin: Psa 90:10 - -- 10.In the days of our years there are threescore years and ten He again returns to the general doctrine respecting the precariousness of the conditio...
10.In the days of our years there are threescore years and ten He again returns to the general doctrine respecting the precariousness of the condition of men, although God may not openly display his wrath to terrify them. “What,” says he, “is the duration of life? Truly, if we reckon all our years, we will at length come to threescore and ten, or, if there be some who are stronger and more vigorous, they will bring us even to fourscore.” Moses uses the expression, the days of our years, for the sake of emphasis; for when the time is divided into small portions, the very number itself deceives us, so that we flatter ourselves that life is long. With the view of overthrowing these vain delusions, he permits men to sum up the many thousand days 570 which are in a few years; while he at the same time affirms that this great heap is soon brought to nothing. Let men then extend the space of their life as much as they please, by calculating that each year contains three hundred and sixty-five days; yet assuredly they will find that the term of seventy years is short. When they have made a lengthened calculation of the days, this is the sum in which the process ultimately results. He who has reached the age of fourscore years hastens to the grave. Moses himself lived longer, (Deu 34:7,) 571 and so perhaps did others in his time; but he speaks here of the ordinary term. And even then, those were accounted old men, and in a manner decrepit, who attained to the age of fourscore years; so that he justly declares that it is the robust only who arrive at that age. He puts pride for the strength or excellence of which men boast so highly. The sense is, that before men decline and come to old age, even in the very bloom of youth they are involved in many troubles, and that they cannot escape from the cares, weariness, sorrows, fears, griefs, inconveniences, and anxieties, to which this mortal life is subject. Moreover, this is to be referred to the whole course of our existence in the present state. And assuredly, he who considers what is the condition of our life from our infancy until we descend into the grave, will find troubles and turmoil in every part of it. The two Hebrew words
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Calvin: Psa 90:11 - -- 11.Who knoweth, the power of thy anger? Moses again returns to speak of the peculiar afflictions of the Israelites; for he had also on this occasion ...
11.Who knoweth, the power of thy anger? Moses again returns to speak of the peculiar afflictions of the Israelites; for he had also on this occasion complained before of the common frailty and miseries of mankind. He justly exclaims that the power of God’s wrath is immeasurably great. So long as God withholds his hand, men wantonly leap about like runaway slaves, who are no longer afraid at the sight of their master; nor can their rebellious nature be reduced to obedience in any other way than by his striking them with the fear of his judgment. The meaning then is, that whilst God hides himself, and, so to speak, dissembles his displeasure, men are inflated with pride, and rush upon sin with reckless impetuosity; but when they are compelled to feel how dreadful his wrath is, they forget their loftiness, and are reduced to nothing. What follows, According to thy fear, so is thy wrath, is commonly explained as denoting that the more a man is inspired with reverence towards God, the more severely and sternly is he commonly dealt with; for “judgment begins at the house of God,” (1Pe 4:17.) Whilst he pampers the reprobate with the good things of this life, he wastes his chosen ones with continual troubles; and in short, “whom he loveth he chasteneth,” (Heb 12:6.) It is then a true and profitable doctrine that he deals more roughly with those who serve him than with the reprobate. But Moses, I think, has here a different meaning, which is, that it is a holy awe of God, and that alone, which makes us truly and deeply feel his anger. We see that the reprobate, although they are severely punished, only chafe upon the bit, or kick against God, or become exasperated, or are stupified, as if they were hardened against all calamities; so far are they from being subdued. And though they are full of trouble, and cry aloud, yet the Divine anger does not so penetrate their hearts as to abate their pride and fierceness. The minds of the godly alone are wounded with the wrath of God; nor do they wait for his thunderbolts, to which the reprobate hold out their hard and iron necks, but they tremble the very moment when God moves only his little finger. This I consider to be the true meaning of the prophet. He had said that the human mind could not sufficiently comprehend the dreadfulness of the Divine wrath. And we see how, although God shakes heaven and earth, many notwithstanding, like the giants of old, treat this with derision, and are actuated by such brutish arrogance, that they despise him when he brandishes his bolts. But as the Psalmist is treating of a doctrine which properly belongs to true believers, he affirms that they have a strongly sensitive feeling of the wrath of God which makes them quietly submit themselves to his authority. Although to the wicked their own conscience is a tormentor which does not suffer them to enjoy repose, yet so far is this secret dread from teaching them to humble themselves, that it excites them to clamor against God with increasing frowardness. In short, the faithful alone are sensible of God’s wrath; and being subdued by it, they acknowledge that they are nothing, and with true humility devote themselves wholly to Him. This is wisdom to which the reprobate cannot attain, because they cannot lay aside the pride with which they are inflated. They are not touched with the feeling of God’s wrath, because they do not stand in awe of him.
Defender: Psa 90:1 - -- This psalm has always been identified as "a prayer of Moses the man of God" (superscript). The tone and context of the prayer indicate that it was com...
This psalm has always been identified as "a prayer of Moses the man of God" (superscript). The tone and context of the prayer indicate that it was composed shortly before Moses died. He had edited the records of the ancient patriarchs, from Adam down to Jacob and his sons as preserved now in the book of Genesis, and was thinking in terms of "all generations" and God's preservation of His people in all these ages."
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Defender: Psa 90:2 - -- To the skeptical question as to who made God, the only answer that satisfies all the facts of both science and human reason is that God is "from everl...
To the skeptical question as to who made God, the only answer that satisfies all the facts of both science and human reason is that God is "from everlasting." He is the Creator of time as well as space and all things that exist in time and space. This is beyond our mental comprehension, but there is no other rational explanation for our existence, and it is surely compatible with the intuitions of our spiritual comprehension. God satisfies the heart regardless of difficulties conjured in the mind."
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Defender: Psa 90:3 - -- "Destruction" is literally "crumbling" or "dust." "Children of men" is actually "children of Adam" and the reference is to God's judgment on men becau...
"Destruction" is literally "crumbling" or "dust." "Children of men" is actually "children of Adam" and the reference is to God's judgment on men because of sin (Gen 3:19)."
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Defender: Psa 90:4 - -- This verse (like 2Pe 3:8) has often been misinterpreted to justify taking the days of creation as equivalent to geological ages. However, in this cont...
This verse (like 2Pe 3:8) has often been misinterpreted to justify taking the days of creation as equivalent to geological ages. However, in this context, Moses is referring to the ancient descendants of Adam. Even though they lived almost 1000 years, by the time of Moses they were all but forgotten."
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Defender: Psa 90:5 - -- These children of Adam, who lived a thousand years, were finally destroyed in the Flood and soon forgotten like actors in a dream."
These children of Adam, who lived a thousand years, were finally destroyed in the Flood and soon forgotten like actors in a dream."
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Defender: Psa 90:10 - -- Moses contrasts the 70 years of a normal life span in his day (even though he himself providentially lived 120 years) with the 1000 year life-span of ...
Moses contrasts the 70 years of a normal life span in his day (even though he himself providentially lived 120 years) with the 1000 year life-span of men before the Flood (Psa 90:4). It is remarkable that for over 3000 more years of human history after Moses, including the great medical advances of recent centuries, 70-80 years is still the normal life-span."
TSK: Psa 90:1 - -- the man : Exo 33:14-19; Deu 33:1; 1Ki 13:1; 1Ti 6:11
Lord : Psa 71:3, Psa 91:1, Psa 91:9; Deu 33:27; Isa 8:14; Eze 11:16; Joh 6:56; 1Jo 4:16
all gener...
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TSK: Psa 90:2 - -- Before : Job 38:4-6, Job 38:28, Job 38:29; Pro 8:25, Pro 8:26
or ever : Psa 33:9, Psa 146:6; Gen 1:1
even from : Psa 93:2, Psa 102:24-27, Psa 103:17; ...
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TSK: Psa 90:3 - -- Thou : Psa 104:29, Psa 146:4; Gen 3:19, Gen 6:6, Gen 6:7; Num 14:35; Job 12:10, Job 34:14, Job 34:15; Ecc 12:7
Return ye children of men : Rather, ""R...
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TSK: Psa 90:4 - -- For : 2Pe 3:8
is past : or, when he hath passed them
and as : Mat 14:25, Mat 24:43; Luk 12:38
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TSK: Psa 90:5 - -- Thou : Job 9:26, Job 22:16, Job 27:20, Job 27:21; Isa 8:7, Isa 8:8; Jer 46:7, Jer 46:8
as a sleep : Psa 73:20; Isa 29:7, Isa 29:8
morning : Psa 103:15...
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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 ...
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TSK: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou : Psa 10:11, Psa 50:21, Psa 139:1-4; Job 34:21; Jer 9:13-16, Jer 16:17, Jer 23:24; Eze 8:12; Rev 20:12
our : Psa 19:12; Pro 5:21; Ecc 12:14; Luk ...
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TSK: Psa 90:9 - -- For : Psa 78:33
passed : Heb. turned
we spend : The Vulgate has, Anni nostri sicut aranea mediatabuntur , ""Our years pass away like those of the sp...
For : Psa 78:33
passed : Heb. turned
we spend : The Vulgate has, Anni nostri sicut aranea mediatabuntur , ""Our years pass away like those of the spider.""Our plans and operations are like the spider’ s web. Life is as frail, and the thread of it as brittle, as one of those which constitute the well-wrought and curious, but fragile habitation of that insect. All the versions have the word spider, but it is not found in any Hebrew manuscripts, or edition yet collated. The Hebrew might be rendered, ""We consume our lives with a groan,""
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TSK: Psa 90:10 - -- The days : etc. Heb. As for the days of our years, in them are seventy years, Gen 47:9; Deu 34:7
yet : 2Sa 19:35; 1Ki 1:1; Ecc 12:2-7
for : Psa 78:39;...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 90:1 - -- Lord - Not יהוה Yahweh here, but אדני 'Adonāy . The word is properly rendered "Lord,"but it is a term which is often app...
Lord - Not
Thou hast been our dwelling-place - The Septuagint renders this, "refuge"-
In all generations - Margin, "generation and generation."That is, A succeeding generation has found him to be the same as the previous generation had. He was unchanged, though the successive generations of men passed away.
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Barnes: Psa 90:2 - -- Before the mountains were brought forth - Before the earth brought forth or produced the mountains. In the description of the creation it would...
Before the mountains were brought forth - Before the earth brought forth or produced the mountains. In the description of the creation it would be natural to represent the mountains as the first objects that appeared, as emerging from the waters; and, therefore, as the "first"or "most ancient"of created objects. The phrase, therefore, is equivalent to saying, Before the earth was created. The literal meaning of the expression, "were brought forth,"is, in the Hebrew, "were born."The mountains are mentioned as the most ancient things in creation, in Deu 33:15. Compare Gen 49:26; Hab 3:6.
Or ever thou hadst formed - literally, "hadst brought forth."Compare Job 39:1.
The earth and the world - The word "earth"here is used to denote the world as distinguished either from heaven Gen 1:1, or from the sea Gen 1:10. The term "world"in the original is commonly employed to denote the earth considered as "inhabited,"or as capable of being inhabited - a dwelling place for living beings.
Even from everlasting to everlasting - From duration stretching backward without limit to duration stretching forward without limit; that is, from eternal ages to eternal ages; or, forever.
Thou art God - Or, "Thou, O God."The idea is, that he was always, and ever will be, God: the God; the true God; the only God; the unchangeable God. At any period in the past, during the existence of the earth, or the heavens, or before either was formed, he existed, with all the attributes essential to Deity; at any period in the future - during the existence of the earth and the heavens, or beyond - far as the mind can reach into the future, and even beyond that - he will still exist unchanged, with all the attributes of Deity. The creation of the universe made no change in him; its destruction would not vary the mode of his existence, or make him in any respect a different being. There could not be a more absolute and unambiguous declaration, as there could not be one more sublime, of the eternity of God. The mind cannot take in a grander thought than that there is one eternal and immutable Being.
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Barnes: Psa 90:3 - -- Thou turnest man to destruction - In contradistinction from his own unchangeableness and eternity. Man passes away; God continues ever the same...
Thou turnest man to destruction - In contradistinction from his own unchangeableness and eternity. Man passes away; God continues ever the same. The word rendered "destruction"-
And sayest, Return, ye children of men - Return to your dust; go back to the earth from which you came. Return, all of you without exception; - kings, princes, nobles, warriors, conquerors; mighty people, captains, and counselors; ye learned and great, ye honored and flattered, ye beautiful and happy, ye youthful and vigorous, and ye aged and venerable; whatever is your rank, whatever are your possessions, whatever are your honors, whatever you have to make you lovely, to charm, to please, to be admired; or whatever there is to make you loathsome and detestable; ye vicious, ye profane, low, grovelling, sensual, debased; go all of you alike to "dust!’ Oh, how affecting the thought that this is the lot of man; how much should it do to abase the pride of the race; how much should it do to make any man sober and humble, that he himself is soon to turn back to dust - unhonored, undistinguished, and undistinguishable dust!
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Barnes: Psa 90:4 - -- For a thousand years in thy sight - Hebrew, "In thy eyes;"that is, It so appears to thee - or, a thousand years so seem to thee, however long t...
For a thousand years in thy sight - Hebrew, "In thy eyes;"that is, It so appears to thee - or, a thousand years so seem to thee, however long they may appear to man. The utmost length to which the life of man has reached - in the case of Methuselah - was nearly a thousand years Gen 5:27; and the idea here is, that the longest human life, even if it should be lengthened out to a thousand years, would be in the sight of God, or in comparison with his years, but as a single day.
Are but as yesterday when it is past - Margin, "he hath passed them."The translation in the text, however, best expresses the sense. The reference is to a single day, when we call it to remembrance. However long it may have appeared to us when it was passing, yet when it is gone, and we look back to it, it seems short. So the longest period of human existence appears to God.
And as a watch in the night - This refers to a portion of the night - the original idea having been derived from the practice of dividing the night into portions, during which a watch was placed in a camp. These watches were, of course, relieved at intervals, and the night came to be divided, in accordance with this arrangement, into parts corresponding with these changes. Among the ancient Hebrews there were only three night-watches; the first, mentioned in Lam 2:19; the middle, mentioned in Jdg 7:19; and the third, mentioned in Exo 14:24; 1Sa 11:11. In later times - the times referred to in the New Testament - there were four such watches, after the manner of the Romans, Mar 13:35. The idea here is not that such a watch in the night would seem to pass quickly, or that it would seem short when it was gone, but that a thousand years seemed to God not only short as a day when it was past, but even as the parts of a day, or the divisions of a night when it was gone.
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Barnes: Psa 90:5 - -- Thou carriest them away as with a flood - The original here is a single verb with the suffix - זרמתם ze rame tâm . The verb - ז...
Thou carriest them away as with a flood - The original here is a single verb with the suffix -
They are as a sleep - The original here is, "a sleep they are."The whole sentence is exceedingly graphic and abrupt: "Thou sweepest them away; a sleep they are - in the morning - like grass - it passes away."The idea is that human life resembles a sleep, because it seems to pass so swiftly; to accomplish so little; to be so filled with dreams and visions, none of which remain or become permanent.
In the morning they are like grass which groweth up - A better translation of this would be to attach the words "in the morning to the previous member of the sentence, "They are like sleep in the morning;"that is, They are as sleep appears to us in the morning, when we wake from it - rapid, unreal, full of empty dreams. The other part of the sentence then would be, "Like grass, it passeth away."The word rendered "groweth up,"is in the margin translated "is changed."The Hebrew word -
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Barnes: Psa 90:6 - -- In the morning it flourisheth - This does not mean that it grows with any special vigor or rapidity in the morning, as if that were illustrativ...
In the morning it flourisheth - This does not mean that it grows with any special vigor or rapidity in the morning, as if that were illustrative of the rapid growth of the young; but merely that, in fact, in the morning it is green and vigorous, and is cut down in the short course of a day, or before evening. The reference here is to grass as an emblem of man.
And groweth up - The same word in the Hebrew which is used in the close of the previous verse.
In the evening it is cut down, and withereth - In the short period of a day. What was so green and flourishing in the morning, is, at the close of the day, dried up. Life has been arrested, and death, with its consequences, has ensued. So with man. How often is this literally true, that those who are strong, healthy, vigorous, hopeful, in the morning, are at night pale, cold, and speechless in death! How striking is this as an emblem of man in general: so soon cut down; so soon numbered with the dead. Compare the notes at Isa 40:6-8; notes at 1Pe 1:24-25.
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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.
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Barnes: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou hast set our iniquities before thee - Thou hast arrayed them, or brought them forth to view, as a "reason"in thy mind for cutting us down....
Thou hast set our iniquities before thee - Thou hast arrayed them, or brought them forth to view, as a "reason"in thy mind for cutting us down. Death may be regarded as proof that God has brought before his mind the evidence of man’ s guilt, and has passed sentence accordingly. The fact of death at all; the fact that anyone of the race dies; the fact that human life has been made so brief, is to be explained on the supposition that God has arrayed before his own mind the reality of human depravity, and has adopted this as an illustration of his sense of the evil of guilt.
Our secret sins - literally, "our secret;"or, that which was concealed or unknown. This may refer to the secret or hidden things of our lives, or to what has been concealed in our own bosoms; and the meaning may be, that God has judged in the case not by external appearances, or by what is seen by the world, but by what "he"has seen in the heart, and that he deals with us according to our real character. The reference is, indeed, to sin, but sin as concealed, hidden, forgotten; the sin of the heart; the sin which we have endeavored to hide from the world; the sin which has passed away from our own recollection.
In the light of thy countenance - Directly before thee; in full view; so that thou canst see them all. In accordance with these, thou judgest man, and hence, his death.
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Barnes: Psa 90:9 - -- For all our days are passed away in thy wrath - Margin, "turned."The Hebrew word - פנה pânâh - means to "turn;"then, to turn to o...
For all our days are passed away in thy wrath - Margin, "turned."The Hebrew word -
We spend our years as a tale that is told - Margin, "meditation."The Hebrew word -
(a) a muttering, or growling, as of thunder;
(b) a sighing or moaning;
© a meditation, thought.
It means here, evidently, thought; that is, life passes away as rapidly as thought. It has no permanency. It makes no impression. Thought is no sooner come than it is gone. So rapid, so fleeting, so unsubstantial is life. The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate in some unaccountable way render this "as a spider."The translation in our common version, "as a tale that is told,"is equally unauthorized, as there is nothing corresponding to this in the Hebrew. The image in the original is very striking and beautiful. Life passes with the rapidity of thought!
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Barnes: Psa 90:10 - -- The days of our years - Margin, "As for the days of our years, in them are seventy years."Perhaps the language would better be translated: "The...
The days of our years - Margin, "As for the days of our years, in them are seventy years."Perhaps the language would better be translated: "The days of our years! In them are seventy years;"or, they amount to seventy years. Thus the psalmist is represented as reflecting on human life - on the days that make up the years of life; - as fixing his thought on those days and years, and taking the sum of them. The days of our years - what are they?
Are threescore years and ten - Not as life originally was, but as it has been narrowed down to about that period; or, this is the ordinary limit of life. This passage proves that the psalm was written when the life of man had been shortened, and had been reduced to about what it is at present; for this description will apply to man now. It is probable that human life was gradually diminished until it became fixed at the limit which now bounds it, and which is to remain as the great law in regard to its duration upon the earth. All animals, as the horse, the mule, the elephant, the eagle, the raven, the bee, the butterfly, have each a fixed limit of life, wisely adapted undoubtedly to the design for which they were made, and to the highest happiness of the whole. So of man. There can be no doubt that there are good reasons - some of which could be easily suggested - why his term of life is no longer. But, at any rate, it is no longer; and in that brief period he must accomplish all that he is to do in reference to this world, and all that is to be done to prepare him for the world to come. It is obvious to remark that man has enough to do to fill up the time of his life; that life to man is too precious to be wasted.
And if by reason of strength ... - If there be unusual strength or vigor of natural constitution; or if the constitution has not been impaired or broken by toil, affliction, or vicious indulgence; or if the great laws of health have been understood and observed. Any of these causes may contribute to lengthen out life - or they may all be combined; and under these, separately or combined, life is sometimes extended beyond its ordinary limits. Yet the period of seventy is the ordinary limit beyond which few can go; the great mass fall long before they reach that.
Yet is their strength - Hebrew, "Their pride."That of which a man who has reached that period might be disposed to boast - as if it were owing to himself. There is, at that time of life, as well as at other times, great danger lest that which we have received from God, and which is in no manner to be traced to ourselves, may be an occasion of pride, as if it were our own, or as if it were secured by our own prudence, wisdom, or merit. May it not, also, be implied here that a man who has reached that period of life - who has survived so many others - who has seen so many fall by imprudence, or vice, or intemperance - will be in special danger of being proud, as if it were by some special virtue of his own that his life had been thus lengthened out? Perhaps in no circumstances will the danger of pride be more imminent than when one has thus passed safely through dangers where others have fallen, and practiced temperance while others have yielded to habits of intemperance, and taken care of his own health while others have neglected theirs. The tendency to pride in man does not die out because a man grows old.
Labour and sorrow - The word rendered "labour"-
The ordinary hopes and plans of life ended; the companions of other years departed; the offices and honors of the world in other hands; a new generation on the stage that cares little for the old one now departing; a family scattered or in the grave; the infirmities of advanced years on him; his faculties decayed; the buoyancy of life gone; and now in his second childhood dependent on others as he was in his first; how little of happiness is there in such a condition! How appropriate is it to speak of it as a time of "sorrow!"How little desirable is it for a man to reach extreme old age! And how kind and merciful the arrangement by which man is ordinarily removed from the world before the time of "trouble and sorrow"thus comes! There are commonly just enough people of extreme old age upon the earth to show us impressively that it is not "desirable"to live to be very old; just enough to keep this lesson with salutary force before the minds of those in earlier life; just enough, if we saw it aright, to make us willing to die before that period comes!
For it is soon cut off ... - Prof. Alexander renders this, "For he drives us fast;"that is, God drives us - or, one seems to drive, or to urge us on. The word used here -
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Barnes: Psa 90:11 - -- Who knoweth the power of thine anger? - Who can measure it, or take a correct estimate of it, as it is manifest in cutting down the race of peo...
Who knoweth the power of thine anger? - Who can measure it, or take a correct estimate of it, as it is manifest in cutting down the race of people? If the removal of people by death is to be traced to thine anger - or is, in any proper sense, an expression of thy wrath - who can measure it, or understand it? The cutting down of whole generations of people - of nations - of hundreds of million of human beings - of the great, the powerful, the mighty, as well as the weak and the feeble, is an amazing exhibition of the "power"- of the might - of God; and who is there that can fully understand this? Who can estimate fully the wrath of God, if this is to be regarded as an expression of it? Who can comprehend what this is? Who can tell, after such an exhibition, what may be in reserve, or what further and more fearful displays of wrath there may yet be?
Even according to thy fear, so is thy wrath - literally, "And according to thy fear, thy wrath."The word rendered "fear"would here seem to refer to the "reverence"due to God, or to what there is in his character to inspire awe: to wit, his power, his majesty, his greatness; and the sense seems to be that his wrath or anger as manifested in cutting down the race seems to be commensurate with all in God that is vast, wonderful, incomprehensible. As no one can understand or take in the one, so no one can understand or take in the other. God is great in all things; great in himself; great in his power in cutting down the race; great in the expressions of his displeasure.
Poole: Psa 90:1 - -- Who, considering that terrible but righteous sentence of God concerning the cutting off all that sinful generation in the wilderness, of which see Nu...
Who, considering that terrible but righteous sentence of God concerning the cutting off all that sinful generation in the wilderness, of which see Nu 14 , takes that occasion to publish these meditations concerning mans mortality and misery in this life, which might be useful both to that and to all succeeding generations.
Moses, setting forth the eternity and providence of God, Psa 90:1:2 , describeth the misery and shortness of man’ s life, Psa 90:3-11 ; prayeth for wisdom to number his days, Psa 90:12 ; and for the knowledge and sensible experience of God’ s good providence, Psa 90:13-17 .
Although we and our fathers, for some generations, have had no certain and fixed habitation, but have been strangers in a land that was not ours , and afflicted for four hundred years , according to thy prediction, Gen 15:13 ; and although we now are, and have been for some time, and still are like to continue, in, a vast howling wilderness, having no houses but dwelling in tents, and wandering from place to place, we know not whither; yet thou, O Lord, hast fully supplied this want, and hast been instead of and better than a dwelling-place to us, by thy watchful and gracious providence over us in all places and exigencies. And this is a very proper preface to this Psalm, to intimate that all the following miseries were not to be imputed to God, but unto themselves, who by their own sins had brought these mischiefs upon themselves.
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Poole: Psa 90:2 - -- The mountains ; which he mentions as the most fixed and stable part of the earth. Or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world , i.e. from et...
The mountains ; which he mentions as the most fixed and stable part of the earth. Or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world , i.e. from eternity; which is frequently described in this manner, as Pro 8:25,26 Joh 17:24 Eph 1:4 , because there was nothing before the creation of the world but eternity. And thus the words here following do explain it. And this eternity of God is here mentioned, partly that men by the contemplation thereof might be wrought to a deeper sense of their own frailty and nothingness, which is the foundation of humility and of all true piety, and to a greater reverence and admiration of the Divine Majesty; and partly for the comfort of God’ s people, who notwithstanding all their present miseries have a sure and everlasting refuge and portion. Thou art God ; or, thou art the strong God . Thou hast thy power and all thy perfections, not by degrees, as men have theirs, but from all eternity. Or, thou art or wast, O God .
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Poole: Psa 90:3 - -- But as for man, his case is far otherwise, his time is short; and though he was made by thee a happy creature, and should have been immortal, yet up...
But as for man, his case is far otherwise, his time is short; and though he was made by thee a happy creature, and should have been immortal, yet upon and for his sin thou didst make him mortal and miserable.
Sayest or, didst say , i.e. pronounce that sad sentence here following,
Return O men, to the dust, out of which you were taken, Gen 3:19 Psa 146:4 Ecc 12:7 .
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Poole: Psa 90:4 - -- A thousand years if we should now live so long, as some of our progenitors well nigh did. As he compared man’ s duration with God’ s in res...
A thousand years if we should now live so long, as some of our progenitors well nigh did. As he compared man’ s duration with God’ s in respect of its beginning, Psa 90:2 , so here he compareth them in respect of the end or continuance.
In thy sight in thy account, and therefore in truth; which is opposed to the partial and false judgment of men, who think time long because they do not understand eternity; or in comparison of thy endless duration.
When it is past which is emphatically added; because time seems long when it is to come, but when it is past, and men look backward upon it, it seems very short and contemptible, and men value one hour to come more than a thousand years which are past.
A watch which lasted but for three or four hours; for the night was anciently divided into three or four watches. See Jud 7:19 Mar 6:48 13:35 Luk 12:38 .
In the night which also hath its weight; for the silence and slumbers of the night make time seem shorter than it doth in the day.
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Poole: Psa 90:5 - -- Them i.e. mankind, of whom he spake, Psa 90:8 .
As with a flood unexpectedly, violently and irresistibly, universally, without exception or distinc...
Them i.e. mankind, of whom he spake, Psa 90:8 .
As with a flood unexpectedly, violently and irresistibly, universally, without exception or distinction.
As a sleep short and vain, as sleep is, and not minded till it be past. Or like a dream, when a man sleepeth, wherein there may be some real pleasure, but never any satisfaction; or some real trouble, but very inconsiderable, and seldom or never pernicious. Even such an idle and insignificant thing is human life considered in itself, without respect to a future state, in which there is but a mere shadow or dream of felicity, only the calamities attending upon it are more real and weighty.
Which groweth up Heb. which is changed , either, first, for the worse, which passeth away , as some render the word; which having generally affirmed here, he may seem more particularly to explain in the next verse: or rather, secondly, for the better, as this word is sometimes used, as Job 14:7 Isa 40:31 , which sprouteth out of the earth, and groweth more apparent, and green, and flourishing. And this interpretation is confirmed from the next verse, where this same word is used in this sense; where also
the morning is again mentioned, and that as the time, not of its decay, but of its flourishing.
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Poole: Psa 90:6 - -- The whole space of man’ s life is compared to one day, and his prosperity is confined to a part of that day, and ended in the close of it.
The whole space of man’ s life is compared to one day, and his prosperity is confined to a part of that day, and ended in the close of it.
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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.
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Poole: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou dost not now cover, or blot out, or pass by our sins, as thou hast usually done to thy people; but thou dost diligently search them out, and ac...
Thou dost not now cover, or blot out, or pass by our sins, as thou hast usually done to thy people; but thou dost diligently search them out, and accurately observe them, as a severe but righteous Judge, and art now calling us to an account for them.
Our secret sins thou dost not only punish us for our notorious and scandalous sins, which thine honour may seem to oblige thee to do, but even for our secret lusts, the murmuring, and unbelief, and apostacy, and idolatry of our hearts; which though hid from the eyes of men, thou hast set before thine eyes, and brought them to light by thy judgments.
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Poole: Psa 90:9 - -- Are passed away or, turn away themselves or their face from us. They do not continue with us, but quickly turn their backs upon us, and leave us....
Are passed away or, turn away themselves or their face from us. They do not continue with us, but quickly turn their backs upon us, and leave us.
As a tale that is told which may a little affect us for the present, but is quickly ended and gone out of mind, Or, as a word , as Job 37:2 , which in an instant is gone, and that irrevocably. Or, as a thought , or a sigh , or a breath ; all which come to one sense.
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Poole: Psa 90:10 - -- The days of our years either,
1. Of the Israelites in the desert, who being twenty years old, and some, thirty, some forty, some fifty years old, wh...
The days of our years either,
1. Of the Israelites in the desert, who being twenty years old, and some, thirty, some forty, some fifty years old, when they came out of Egypt, and dying in the wilderness, as all of that age did, Num 14:29 , a great number of them doubtless died in their seventieth or eightieth year, as is here implied. Or rather,
2. Of the generality of mankind, and the Israelites no less than others, in that and all following ages, some few persons excepted, amongst whom were Moses, and Caleb, and Joshua, who lived a hundred and twenty years; which is therefore noted of them as a thing singular and extraordinary. This sense suits best with the following words, and with the scope of Moses; which was to represent the vain and transitory condition of men in this life, and how much mankind was now sunk below their ancestors, who commonly lived many hundreds of years; and that the Israelites, though God’ s peculiar people, and endowed with many privileges, yet in this were no better than other men; all which may be considered, either as an argument to move God to pity and spare them, or as a motive to awaken and quicken the Israelites to serious preparations for death, by comparing this with Psa 90:12 .
Threescore years and ten Which time the ancient heathen writers also fixed as the usual space of men’ s lives.
By reason of strength i.e. by the strength of their natural constitution; which is the true and common cause of longer life.
Their strength their strongest and most vigorous old age. Or, their excellency , or pride ; that old age which is their glory, and in which men do commonly glory.
Labour and sorrow filled with troubles and griefs from the infirmities of age, the approach of death, and the contingencies of human life.
It either our age or our strength,
is soon cut off it doth not now decline by many degrees and slow steps, as it doth in our young and flourishing age, but decayeth apace, and suddenly flieth away.
We fly away we do not now go to death, as we do from our very birth, nor run, but fly swiftly away like a bird, as this word signifies.
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Poole: Psa 90:11 - -- Who knoweth? few or none sufficiently apprehend it, or stedfastly believe it, or duly consider it, or are rightly affected with it. For all these thi...
Who knoweth? few or none sufficiently apprehend it, or stedfastly believe it, or duly consider it, or are rightly affected with it. For all these things are comprehended under this word knoweth .
The power of thine anger the greatness, and force, and dreadful effects of thine anger conceived against the sons of men, and in particular against thine own people, for their miscarriages.
According to thy fear i.e. according to the fear of thee; as my fear is put for the fear of me , Mal 1:6 , and his knowledge for the knowledge of him , Isa 53:11 . According to that fear or dread which sinful men have of a just and holy God. These fears of the Deity are not vain bugbears, and the effects of ignorance and folly or superstition, as heathens and atheists have sometimes said, but are just, and built upon solid grounds, and justified by the terrible effects of thy wrath upon mankind.
So is thy wrath it bears full proportion to it, nay, indeed, doth far exceed it. It cannot be said of God’ s wrath, which is said of death, that the fear of it is worse than the thing itself. But this verse is by many, both ancient and later interpreters, rendered otherwise, and that very agreeably to the Hebrew text, Who knoweth the power of thine anger, and thy wrath according to thy fear ? i.e. either,
1. According to the fear of thee, or so as thou art to be feared, or answerably to thy terrible displeasure against sin and sinners. Or,
The just is secure under the protection of God.
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Haydock: Psa 90:1 - -- David. Septuagint add, "it has no title in Hebrew," and hence the Jews refer it to the preceding author, with St. Jerome, &c. But this rule is very...
David. Septuagint add, "it has no title in Hebrew," and hence the Jews refer it to the preceding author, with St. Jerome, &c. But this rule is very uncertain. (Calmet) (Berthier) ---
Some suppose that Moses composed it when he led the Israelites out of Egypt, or in the wilderness; while others think that it is the work of David under some imminent danger. The Fathers apply it to Jesus Christ. Yet it may be considered simply as a moral instruction, (Calmet) superior in elegance to any Greek or Latin poem. (Muis) ---
Aid. Hebrew, "secret place." Of heaven. Is not in Hebrew shaddai, which means, (Haydock) "the almighty self-sufficient, or destroying God." (Calmet) ---
We must keep close to God by mental prayer, if we would enjoy the divine protection. (St. Gregory, Mor. vii. 7.) (Berthier)
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Haydock: Psa 90:3 - -- Delivered me. Hebrew and Septuagint, "shall deliver thee." Yet the Alexandrian copy has me. (Haydock) ---
The psalmist addresses his own soul. ...
Delivered me. Hebrew and Septuagint, "shall deliver thee." Yet the Alexandrian copy has me. (Haydock) ---
The psalmist addresses his own soul. (Berthier) ---
Word, verbo: we sometimes find "sword," printed by mistake. Hebrew dabar, signifies "word, thing, pestilence, &c." (Haydock) ---
The devil employs human respect to draw many into his nets. (St. Augustine) (Berthier) ---
Neither subtle craft, nor the cruelty of tyrants will disturb those who trust in Providence. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 90:4 - -- With. Septuagint, "upon." St. Augustine, "between," as the Lord carried Israel, Deuteronomy xxxii. 11. (Calmet) ---
Hebrew, "he will cover thee w...
With. Septuagint, "upon." St. Augustine, "between," as the Lord carried Israel, Deuteronomy xxxii. 11. (Calmet) ---
Hebrew, "he will cover thee with his feathers," (Haydock) like an eagle. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 90:5 - -- Shield. God's fidelity, or word, affords the best protection, Proverbs xxx. 5. (Calmet) ---
Having the spirit of faith, a man is secure. But he w...
Shield. God's fidelity, or word, affords the best protection, Proverbs xxx. 5. (Calmet) ---
Having the spirit of faith, a man is secure. But he whose heart is hardened, (Berthier) is covered with the buckler of God's affliction, (Lamentations iii. 64.; Haydock) abuses every thing, and seems bewitched with self-love, Galatians i. (Berthier) ---
Night. Devils, spectres, &c., (Canticle of Canticles iii. 7.; Calmet) and treacherous insinuations, that people are not bound to confess the truth, in time of danger. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 90:6 - -- Day. Neither open attacks, nor unforeseen accidents prevail. (Calmet) ---
Business. Hebrew dabar, "thing," ver. 3., "the pestilence." (St. Je...
Day. Neither open attacks, nor unforeseen accidents prevail. (Calmet) ---
Business. Hebrew dabar, "thing," ver. 3., "the pestilence." (St. Jerome) (Haydock) ---
The Hebrews suppose, that one angel presides over death in the daytime, and another during the night; or that various demons send maladies at these different times. ---
Invasion. Septuagint and old Italic, have, "ruin." ---
St. Jerome, after Aquila, "from the bite of him who rageth, Greek: damonizontos, at noon. Keteb, (Haydock) according to the ancient tradition of the Jews, denotes one of the bolder devils, who attacks in open day, and seeks no aid from nocturnal craft. (Genebrard) The psalmist may allude to those popular notions, (Theodoret; St. Jerome) which were prevalent among the pagans. (Theocrit. Idyl. i.; Lucan iii.) (Calmet) ---
Thou shalt fear no danger of the day or night, (Bellarmine) nor any which disturbs the life of man. (Scaligers, ep. i. p. 95.) ---
This author mistakes, when he supposes that Keteb is rendered devil. (Amama) ---
He might also ask how the Chaldean, Aquila, and Symmachus came to discover, that the devil is here mentioned, as well as the Septuagint? (Berthier) ---
These seem to have read ussod, "and the devil," instead of issud, "from destruction which ravages," (Amama) vastabit. (Montanus) (Haydock) ---
But allowing that the Septuagint, &c., are accurate what is meant by this devil? St. Peter seems to explain the idea, when he exhorts us to sobriety, 1 Peter v. 8. (Berthier) ---
Violent temptations of sloth, (St. Athanasius) or impurity, (Theodoret) or the persecutions against the faithful, may be meant. Four different sorts of attacks seem to be designated. 1. Such as assult the ignorant with the fears of the night, tempting them to secure their temporal estates, while they think not of eternal woe impending. 2. Others are attacked with the arrows in the day, and threatened with death, which they know they ought rather to endure, than abandon their faith. 3. The business, &c., imitates some grievous but latent temptation, as when the faithful are persuaded to take some unlawful oath. 4. But the greatest and most manifest attack, is styled, invasion, &c., when persecutors assail those who adhere to the true faith with a succession of torments, and subtle arguments, which have been the occasion of the fall of many, who had resisted the former attacks. Yet none of these yield, but by their own fault, trusting in themselves, and not in God. (St. Augustine) (Worthington) ---
Noon day. Grotius explains this of the heat of the sun, which is very dangerous to travellers in Palestine. (Calmet)
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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)
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Haydock: Psa 90:9 - -- Because. Saying, Thou, &c. (Worthington; ver. 1.) (Calmet) ---
High. Hebrew helyon is a title of God, (Calmet) not the adjective to refuge,...
Because. Saying, Thou, &c. (Worthington; ver. 1.) (Calmet) ---
High. Hebrew helyon is a title of God, (Calmet) not the adjective to refuge, (Berthier) as Chaldean, Aquila, &c., have taken it. "Thou hast placed thy dwelling most high." So that there, &c., ver. 10. It is evident that the following promises relate not to the Lord, (Calmet) but to the just man. Protestants, "because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the most high thy habitation." This transposition is not authorized by the text. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 90:10 - -- Scourge. Aquila has Greek: Aphe, "the leprosy," (Calmet) or any stroke of distress. (Haydock) ---
What the saints have suffered were not real e...
Scourge. Aquila has Greek: Aphe, "the leprosy," (Calmet) or any stroke of distress. (Haydock) ---
What the saints have suffered were not real evils, and they will be amply rewarded in heaven. They never complain, having God with them, (Calmet; ver. 15.; Haydock) and his holy angels. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Psa 90:11 - -- Angels. Many seem to be assigned to the just, to whom St. Hilary, &c., would restrain this privilege. But it is more generally believed, that each ...
Angels. Many seem to be assigned to the just, to whom St. Hilary, &c., would restrain this privilege. But it is more generally believed, that each person has an angel guardian. This was the opinion even of the pagans. (Porphyrius, Ap. ii.; Clement of Alexandria, Strom. v.) (Calmet) ---
To keep. Instead of this, the tempter substituted and, (Matthew iv. 6.) finding it would not answer his purpose, (Haydock) and shed that the question was about walking, and not about precipitating oneself. (St. Bernard, ser. xv. p. 90.) ---
To attempt such unusual courses, is the way of Lucifer, (Worthington) and tempting God, as our Saviour replied. (Berthier) ---
From the father of lies, heretics have learnt how to curtail and misapply the holy Scriptures. (Haydock) ---
God has highly favoured man, by intrusting him to the care of these sublime ministers of his court, (St. Bernard) and surely it is lawful for us to implore their assistance, as we may apply to our fellow-creatures for redress in our temporal necessities. To refuse to do so, on the plea that we expect all immediately from God, would be going contrary to his appointment. Else why has God given them for our guardians, since He could have done all without them? In vain is it objected, that this invocation is a religious worship. It may be so styled, because they are blessed, and help us to obtain salvation. But we only honour in the the gifts of God. (Berthier) ---
They protect us by his ordinance, (Worthington) and the very form of praying, shews in what light we regard them. Who durst say to God, pray for us? (Menochius)
Gill: Psa 90:1 - -- Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations,.... Even when they had no certain dwelling place in the world; so their ancestors, Abraham...
Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations,.... Even when they had no certain dwelling place in the world; so their ancestors, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, dwelt in tabernacles in the land of promise, as in a strange land; and their posterity for many years served under great affliction and oppression in a land that was not theirs; and now they were dwelling in tents in the wilderness, and removing from place to place; but as the Lord had been in every age, so he now was the dwelling place of those that trusted in him; being that to them as an habitation is to man, in whom they had provision, protection, rest, and safety; see Psa 31:2 so all that believe in Christ dwell in him, and he in them, Joh 6:56, they dwelt secretly in him before they believed; so they dwelt in his heart's love, in his arms, in him as their head in election, and as their representative in the covenant of grace from eternity; and, when they fell in Adam, they were preserved in Christ, dwelling in him; and so they were in him when on the cross, in the grave, and now in heaven; for they are said to be crucified, buried, and risen with him, and set down in heavenly places in him, Gal 2:20, and, being converted, they have an open dwelling in him by faith, to whom they have fled for refuge, and in whom they dwell safely, quietly, comfortably, pleasantly, and shall never be turned out: here they have room, plenty of provisions, rest, and peace, and security from all evils; he is an hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the storm. Some render the word "refuge"; a such is Christ to his people, being the antitype of the cities of refuge; and others "helper", as the Targum; which also well agrees with him, on whom their help is laid, and is found.
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Gill: Psa 90:2 - -- Before the mountains were brought forth,.... Or "were born" b, and came forth out of the womb and bowels of the earth, and were made to rise and stand...
Before the mountains were brought forth,.... Or "were born" b, and came forth out of the womb and bowels of the earth, and were made to rise and stand up at the command of God, as they did when he first created the earth; and are mentioned not only because of their firmness and stability, but their antiquity: hence we read of the ancient mountains and everlasting hills, Gen 49:26, for they were before the flood, and as soon as the earth was; or otherwise the eternity of God would not be so fully expressed by this phrase as it is here, and elsewhere the eternity of Christ, Pro 8:25, or "ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world"; the whole terraqueous globe, and all the inhabitants of it; so the Targum; or "before the earth brought forth; or thou causedst it to bring forth" c its herbs, plants, and trees, as on the third day:
even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God; and so are his love, grace, and mercy towards his people, and his covenant with them; and this is as true of Jehovah the Son as of the Father, whose eternity is described in the same manner as his; see Pro 8:22, and may be concluded from his name, the everlasting Father; from his having the same nature and perfections with his Father; from his concern in eternal election, in the everlasting covenant of grace, and in the creation of all things; and his being the eternal and unchangeable I AM, yesterday, today, and for ever, is matter of comfort to his people.
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Gill: Psa 90:3 - -- Thou turnest man to destruction,.... Or to death, as the Targum, which is the destruction of man; not an annihilation of body or soul, but a dissoluti...
Thou turnest man to destruction,.... Or to death, as the Targum, which is the destruction of man; not an annihilation of body or soul, but a dissolution of the union between them; the words may be rendered, "thou turnest man until he is broken" b; and crumbled into dust; thou turnest him about in the world, and through a course of afflictions and diseases, and at last by old age, and however by death, returns him to his original, from whence he came, the dust of the earth, which he becomes again, Gen 3:19 the grave may be meant by destruction:
and sayest, return, ye children of men, or "Adam"; from whom they all sprung, and in whom they all sinned, and so became subject to death; to these he says, when by diseases he threatens them with a dissolution, return by repentance, and live; and sometimes, when they are brought to the brink of the grave, he returns them from sickness to health, delivers them from the pit, and enlightens them with the light of the living, as he did Hezekiah: or this may refer to the resurrection of the dead, which will be by Christ, and by his voice calling the dead to return to life, to rise and come to judgment; though some understand this as descriptive of death, when by the divine order and command man returns to his original dust; thus the frailty of man is opposed to the eternity of God. Gussetius understands all this of God's bringing men to repentance, contrition, and conversion; and takes the sense to be,
"thou turnest till he becomes contrite, and sayest, be ye converted, ye sons of Adam;''
which he thinks c best agrees with the mind of the Apostle Peter, who quotes the following passage, 2Pe 3:8. Some, as Arama observes, connect this with the following verse; though men live 1000 years, yet they are but as yesterday in the sight of God.
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Gill: Psa 90:4 - -- For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday,.... Which may be said to obviate the difficulty in man's return, or resurrection, from the dea...
For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday,.... Which may be said to obviate the difficulty in man's return, or resurrection, from the dead, taken from the length of time in which some have continued in the grave; which vanishes, when it is observed, that in thy sight, esteem, and account of God, a thousand years are but as one day; and therefore, should a man lie in the grave six or seven thousand years, it would be but as so many days with God; wherefore, if the resurrection is not incredible, as it is not, length of time can be no objection to it. Just in the same manner is this phrase used by the Apostle Peter, and who is thought to refer to this passage, to remove an objection against the second coming of Christ, taken from the continuance of things as they had been from the beginning, and from the time of the promise of it: see 2Pe 3:4, though the words aptly express the disproportion there is between the eternal God and mortal man; for, was he to live a thousand years, which no man ever did, yet this would be as yesterday with God, with whom eternity itself is but a day, Isa 43:13, man is but of yesterday, that has lived the longest; and were he to live a thousand years, and that twice told, it would be but "as yesterday when it is past"; though it may seem a long time to come, yet when it is gone it is as nothing, and can never be fetched back again:
and as a watch in the night; which was divided sometimes into three, and sometimes into four parts, and so consisted but of three or four hours; and which, being in the night, is spent in sleep; so that, when a man wakes, it is but as a moment with him; so short is human life, even the longest, in the account of God; See Gill on Mat 14:25.
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Gill: Psa 90:5 - -- Thou carriest them away as with a flood,.... As the whole world of the ungodly were with the deluge, to which perhaps the allusion is; the phrase is e...
Thou carriest them away as with a flood,.... As the whole world of the ungodly were with the deluge, to which perhaps the allusion is; the phrase is expressive of death; so the Targum,
"if they are not converted, thou wilt bring death upon them;''
the swiftness of time is aptly signified by the flowing gliding stream of a flood, by the rolling billows and waves of it; so one hour, one day, one month, one year, roll on after another: moreover, the suddenness of death may be here intended, which comes in an hour unlooked for, and unaware of, as a flood comes suddenly, occasioned by hasty showers of rain; as also the irresistible force and power of it, which none can withstand; of which the rapidity of a flood is a lively emblem, and which carries all before it, and sweeps away everything that stands in its course; as death, by an epidemic and infectious disease, or in a battle, carries off thousands and ten thousands in a very little time; nor does it spare any, as a flood does not, of any age or sex, of any rank or condition of life; and, like a flood, makes sad destruction and devastation where it comes, and especially where it takes off great numbers; it not only turns beauty to ashes, and strength into weakness and corruption, but depopulates towns, and cities, and kingdoms; and as the flowing flood and gliding stream can never be fetched back again, so neither can life when past, not one moment of time when gone; see 2Sa 14:14, besides this phrase may denote the turbulent and tempestuous manner in which, sometimes, wicked men go out of the world, a storm being within and without, as in Job 27:20, "they are as a sleep"; or dream, which soon passeth away; in a sound sleep, time is insensibly gone; and a dream, before it can be well known what it is, is over and lost in oblivion; and so short is human life, Job 20:8 there may be, sometimes, a seeming pleasure enjoyed, as in dreams, but no satisfaction; as a man in sleep may dream that he is eating and drinking, and please himself with it; but, when he awakes, he is hungry and empty, and unsatisfied; and so is man with everything in this life, Isa 29:8, and all things in life are a mere dream, as the honours, riches, and pleasures of it; a man rather dreams of honour, substance, and pleasure, than really enjoys them. Wicked men, while they live, are "as those that sleep"; as the Targum renders it; they have no spiritual senses, cannot see, hear, smell, taste, nor feel; they are without strength to everything that is spiritually good; inactive, and do none; are subject to illusions and mistakes; are in imminent danger, and unconcerned about it; and do not care to be jogged or awaked, and sleep on till they sleep the sleep of death, unless awaked by powerful and efficacious grace; and men when dead are asleep, not in their souls, but in their bodies; death is often in Scripture signified by a sleep, under which men continue until the resurrection, which is an awaking out of it:
in the morning they are like grass, which groweth up or "passeth away", or "changeth" d; or is changed; some understand this of the morning of the resurrection, when there will be a change for the better, a renovation, as Kimchi interprets the word; and which, from the use of it in the Arabic language, as Schultens observes e, signifies to be green and flourishing, as grass in the morning is; and so intends a recovery of rigour and strength, as a man after sleep, and as the saints will have when raised from the dead. The Targum refers it to the world to come,
"and in the world to come, as grass is cut down, they shall be changed or renewed;''
but it is rather to be understood of the flourishing of men in the morning of youth, as the next verse shows, where it is repeated, and where the change of grass is beautifully illustrated and explained.
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Gill: Psa 90:6 - -- In the morning it flourisheth and groweth up,.... That is, the grass, through the dew that lay all night on it, and by the clear shining of the sun af...
In the morning it flourisheth and groweth up,.... That is, the grass, through the dew that lay all night on it, and by the clear shining of the sun after rain, when it appears in great beauty and verdure; so man in the morning of his youth looks gay and beautiful, grows in the stature and strength of his body, and in the endowments of his mind; and it may be also in riches and wealth; it is well if he grows in grace, and in the knowledge of Christ:
in the evening it is cut down, and withereth; the Targum adds, "through heat"; but it cannot be by the heat of the sun, when it is cut down at evening; but it withers in course, being cut down. This respects the latter part of life, the evening of old age; and the whole expresses the shortness of life, which is compared to grass, that now is in all its beauty and glory, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, Mat 6:30. This metaphor of grass, to set forth the frailty of man, and his short continuance, is frequently used; see Psa 37:2, 1Pe 1:24. It may be observed, that man's life is represented but as one day, consisting of a morning and an evening, which signifies the bloom and decline of life.
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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.
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Gill: Psa 90:8 - -- Thou hast set our sins before thee,.... The cause of all trouble, consumption, and death; these are before the Lord, as the evidence, according to whi...
Thou hast set our sins before thee,.... The cause of all trouble, consumption, and death; these are before the Lord, as the evidence, according to which he as a righteous Judge proceeds; this is opposed to the pardon of sin, which is expressed by a casting it behind his back, Isa 38:17,
our secret sins in the light of thy countenance; the Targum and Jarchi interpret it of the sins of youth; the word is in the singular number, and may be rendered, "our secret sin" f; which has led some to think of original sin, which is hidden from, and not taken notice of by, the greatest part of the world, though it is the source and spring of all sin. It is not unusual for the singular to be put for the plural, and may intend all such sins as are secretly committed, and not known by other men, and such as are unobserved by men themselves; as the evil thoughts of their hearts, the foolish words of their mouths, and many infirmities of life, that are not taken notice of as sins: these are all known to God, and will be brought to light and into judgment by him, and will be set in "the light of his countenance"; which denotes not a gracious forgiveness of them, but his clear and distinct knowledge of them, and what a full evidence they give against men, to their condemnation and death; and intends not only a future, but the present view the Lord has of them, and his dealings with men in life, and at death, according to them.
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Gill: Psa 90:9 - -- For all our days are passed away in thy wrath,.... The life of man is rather measured by days than by months or years; and these are but few, which pa...
For all our days are passed away in thy wrath,.... The life of man is rather measured by days than by months or years; and these are but few, which pass away or "decline" g as the day does towards the evening; see Jer 6:4 or "turn away their face", as the word h may be rendered: they turn their backs upon us, and not the face to us; so that it is a hard thing to get time by the forelock; and these, which is worst of all, pass away in the "wrath" of God. This has a particular reference to the people of Israel in the wilderness, when God had swore in his wrath they should not enter into the land of Canaan, but wander about all their days in the wilderness, and be consumed there; so that their days manifestly passed away under visible marks of the divine displeasure; and this is true of all wicked men, who are by nature children of wrath, and go through the world, and out of it, as such: and even it may be said of man in general; the ailments, diseases, and calamities, that attend the state of infancy and youth; the losses, crosses, and disappointments, vexations and afflictions, which wait upon man in riper years; and the evils and infirmities of old age, do abundantly confirm this truth: none but God's people can, in any sense, be excepted from it, on whom no wrath comes, being loved with an everlasting love; and yet these, in their own apprehensions, have frequently the wrath of God upon them, and pass many days under a dreadful sense of it:
we spend our years as a tale that is told; or as a "meditation" y a thought of the heart, which quickly passes away; or as a "word" z, as others, which is soon pronounced and gone; or as an assemblage of words, a tale or story told, a short and pleasant one; for long tales are not listened to; and the pleasanter they are, the shorter the time seems to be in which they are told: the design of the metaphor is to set forth the brevity, and also the vanity, of human life; for in tales there are often many trifling and vain things, as well as untruths told; men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree a lie, in every state; and, in their best state, they are altogether vanity: a tale is a mere amusement; affects for a while, if attended to, and then is lost in oblivion; and such is human life: in a tale there is oftentimes a mixture, something pleasant, and something tragic; such changes are there in life, which is filled up with different scenes of prosperity and adversity: and perhaps this phrase may point at the idle and unprofitable way and manner in which the years of life are spent, like that of consuming time by telling idle stories; some of them spent in youthful lusts and pleasures; others in an immoderate pursuit of the world, and the things of it; very few in a religious way, and these with great imperfection, and to very little purpose and profit; and particularly point to the children of Israel in the wilderness, who how they spent their time for thirty eight years there, we have no tale nor story of it. The Targum is,
"we have consumed the days of our life as the breath or vapour of the mouth in winter,''
which is very visible, and soon passes away; see Jam 4:14.
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Gill: Psa 90:10 - -- The days of our years are threescore years and ten,.... In the Hebrew text it is, "the days of our years in them are", &c. a; which refers either to t...
The days of our years are threescore years and ten,.... In the Hebrew text it is, "the days of our years in them are", &c. a; which refers either to the days in which we live, or to the persons of the Israelites in the wilderness, who were instances of this term of life, in whom perhaps it first took place in a general way: before the flood, men lived to a great age; some nine hundred years and upwards; after the flood, men lived not so long; the term fixed then, as some think, was an hundred and twenty years, grounding it on the passage in Gen 6:3, but now, in the time of Moses, it was brought to threescore years and ten, or eighty at most: of those that were numbered in the wilderness of Sinai, from twenty years and upwards, there were none left, save Joshua and Caleb, when the account was taken in the plains of Moab; see Num 14:29, so that some must die before they were sixty; others before seventy; and perhaps all, or however the generality of them, before eighty: and, from that time, this was the common age of men, some few excepted; to the age of seventy David lived, 2Sa 5:4, and so it has been ever since; many never come up to it, and few go beyond it: this is not only pointed at in revelation, but is what the Heathens have observed. Solon used to say, the term of human life was seventy years b; so others; and a people called Berbiccae, as Aelianus relates c, used to kill those of them that lived above seventy years of age, having exceeded the term of life. The Syriac version is, "in our days our years are seventy years"; with which the Targum agrees,
"the days of our years in this world are seventy years of the stronger;''
for it is in them that such a number of years is arrived unto; or "in them", that is, in some of them; in some of mankind, their years amount hereunto, but not in all: "and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years"; through a good temperament of body, a healthful and strong constitution, under a divine blessing, some may arrive to the age of eighty; there have been some instances of a strong constitution at this age and upwards, but not very common; see Jos 14:11, for, generally speaking, such who through strength of body live to such an age,
yet is their strength labour and sorrow; they labour under great infirmities, feel much pain, and little pleasure, as Barzillai at this age intimates, 2Sa 19:35, these are the evil days d, in which is no pleasure, Ecc 12:1, or "their largeness or breadth is labour and sin" e; the whole extent of their days, from first to last, is spent in toil and labour to live in the world; and is attended with much sin, and so with much sorrow:
for it is soon cut off; either the strength of man, or his age, by one disease or incident or another, like grass that is cut down with the scythe, or a flower that is cropped by the hand; see Job 14:2,
and we fly away; as a shadow does, or as a bird with wings; out of time into eternity; from the place of our habitation to the grave; from a land of light to the regions of darkness: it is well if we fly away to heaven and happiness.
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Gill: Psa 90:11 - -- Who knoweth the power of thine anger?.... Expressed in his judgments on men: as the drowning of the old world, the burning of Sodom and Gomorrah, the ...
Who knoweth the power of thine anger?.... Expressed in his judgments on men: as the drowning of the old world, the burning of Sodom and Gomorrah, the consumption of the Israelites in the wilderness; or in shortening the days of men, and bringing them to the dust of death; or by inflicting punishment on men after death; they are few that take notice of this, and consider it well, or look into the causes of it, the sins of men: such as are in hell experimentally know it; but men on earth, very few closely attend to it, or rarely think of it:
even according to thy fear, so is thy wrath; or who knows thy wrath, so as to fear thee? who considers it so, as that it has such an influence upon him to fear the Lord, and stand in awe of him, and fear to offend him, and seek to please him? or rather the wrath of God is answerable to men's fear of him; and that, in some things and cases, men's fears exceed the things feared; as afflictions viewed beforehand, and death itself: the fears of them are oftentimes greater, and more distressing, than they themselves, when they come; but so it is not with the wrath of God; the greatest fears, and the most dreadful apprehensions of it, do not come up to it; it is full as great as they fear it is, and more so.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Psa 90:2 Heb “and from everlasting to everlasting you [are] God.” Instead of אֵל (’el, “God”) the LXX reads ...
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NET Notes: Psa 90:3 The Hebrew term דַּכָּא (daka’) carries the basic sense of “crushed.” Elsewhere it refers ...
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NET Notes: Psa 90:4 The divisions of the nighttime. The ancient Israelites divided the night into distinct periods, or “watches.”
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NET Notes: Psa 90:5 Heb “you bring them to an end [with] sleep.” The Hebrew verb זָרַם (zaram) has traditionally been taken to m...
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NET Notes: Psa 90:6 The Polel form of this verb occurs only here. Perhaps the form should be emended to a Qal (which necessitates eliminating the final lamed [ל] as...
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NET Notes: Psa 90:8 Heb “what we have hidden to the light of your face.” God’s face is compared to a light or lamp that exposes the darkness around it.
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NET Notes: Psa 90:9 Heb “we finish our years like a sigh.” In Ezek 2:10 the word הֶגֶה (hegeh) elsewhere refers to a grumbling o...
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NET Notes: Psa 90:10 We fly away. The psalmist compares life to a bird that quickly flies off (see Job 20:8).
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NET Notes: Psa 90:11 Heb “and like your fear [is] your raging fury.” Perhaps one should emend וּכְיִרְא...
Geneva Bible: Psa 90:1 "A Prayer of Moses ( a ) the man of God." Lord, thou hast been our ( b ) dwelling place in all generations.
( a ) Thus the Scripture refers to the pr...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:2 Before the ( c ) mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou [art] God...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:3 Thou ( d ) turnest man to destruction; and sayest, Return, ye children of men.
( d ) Moses by lamenting the frailty and shortness of man's life moves...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:4 ( e ) For a thousand years in thy sight [are but] as yesterday when it is past, and [as] a watch in the night.
( e ) Though man thinks his life is lo...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:5 Thou ( f ) carriest them away as with a flood; they are [as] a sleep: in the morning [they are] like grass [which] groweth up.
( f ) You take them aw...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:7 For we are ( g ) consumed by thine anger, and by thy wrath are we troubled.
( g ) You called us by the rods to consider the storms of our life and fo...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:9 For all our days are passed away in thy wrath: we ( h ) spend our years as a tale [that is told].
( h ) Our days are not only short but miserable as ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:10 The days of our years [are] threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength [they be] ( i ) fourscore years, yet [is] their strength labour and...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 90:11 ( k ) Who knoweth the power of thine anger? even according to thy fear, [so is] thy wrath.
( k ) If man's life for the shortness of it is miserable, ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 90:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Psa 90:1-17 - --1 Moses, setting forth God's providence.3 complains of human fragility,7 divine chastisements,10 and brevity of life.12 He prays for the knowledge and...
MHCC -> Psa 90:1-6; Psa 90:7-11
MHCC: Psa 90:1-6 - --It is supposed that this psalm refers to the sentence passed on Israel in the wilderness, Numbers 14. The favour and protection of God are the only su...
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MHCC: Psa 90:7-11 - --The afflictions of the saints often come from God's love; but the rebukes of sinners, and of believers for their sins, must be seen coming from the di...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 90:1-6; Psa 90:7-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 90:1-6 - -- This psalm is entitled a prayer of Moses. Where, and in what volume, it was preserved from Moses's time till the collection of psalms was begun to...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 90:7-11 - -- Moses had, in the foregoing verses, lamented the frailty of human life in general; the children of men are as a sleep and as the grass. But here h...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 90:1-4 - --
The poet begins with the confession that the Lord has proved Himself to His own, in all periods of human history, as that which He was before the wo...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 90:5-8 - --
Psa 90:5-6 tell us how great is the distance between men and this eternal selfsameness of God. The suffix of זרמתּם , referred to the thousand...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 90:9-12 - --
After the transitoriness of men has now been confirmed in Psa 90:6. out of the special experience of Israel, the fact that this particular experienc...
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 90:1-17 - --Psalm 90
The psalmist asked God to bless His people in view of life's brevity.
T...
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Constable: Psa 90:1-12 - --1. The transitory nature of human life 90:1-12
90:1-6 Moses began by attributing eternality to Yahweh. All generations of believers have found Him to ...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence: Psa 90:1 Four Simple Laws 1 God is holy and just : " For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it...
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Evidence: Psa 90:2 QUESTIONS & OBJECTIONS " Who made God?" To one who examines the evidence, there can be no doubt that God exists. Every building has a builder. Ev...
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Evidence: Psa 90:4 Time is God’s creation . He Himself is not subject to the dimension of time. See 2Pe 3:8 footnote.
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Evidence: Psa 90:7-8 The ungodly must be made to understand that every secret sin as well as sins of the heartare seen by God. He will bring every work to judgment, includ...
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