Psalm 102
This psalm is classified
as one of the seven penitential psalms (Psalms 6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143). It
emphasizes the suffering and discipline often associated with sin.
The psalm exemplifies the
literary genre of an individual lament. This lament arises out of an exilic
situation, when the godly together with the wicked had been exiled from the
land. For other exilic psalms, see 42, 43, 74, 79, 137;
On what occasion, or by
whom, this psalm was composed, it is not possible now to ascertain. It seems possible,
however, from Psa_102:13-21, that it was in the time of the captivity, and was
in view of the troubles of that long and weary exile, and that the psalmist
speaks not of individual and personal troubles, but speaks as one of the people
- as one in exile with others who had been long held in captivity, and who
sighed for deliverance, and for a restoration to their native land. In the
midst of these troubles, which are so tenderly described in the first eleven
verses, he saw encouraging evidences that the Lord was about to manifest His
mercy, and to restore the people to their native land; and he pleads most
earnestly with God, on the ground that He was faithful and unchanging, that He
would thus interpose and accomplish the earnest desire of His afflicted people.
The “language,” indeed, in the psalm, is that of an individual, and the author
of the psalm speaks of his own personal sorrows, but it may be as one among
many who were equally crushed and overwhelmed, so that the language used to
represent his sorrow may describe the sorrows experienced by others in the same
circumstances. Beyond all question, the language used in the psalm would
express the feelings of many a pious Hebrew in the time of the exile, the
sorrow - the sadness - the cherished hopes - the prayers - of many a one in
that prolonged and painful captivity.
If it is the prayer of the
captives in Babylon, it is towards the end of the captivity, when they were
almost worn out with oppression, cruelty, and distress. The author of the
Epistle to the Hebrews has applied the twenty-fifth, twenty sixth, and twenty
seventh verses to our Lord, and the perpetuity of his kingdom.
Psalm 102:25-27
Of old You have laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the
work of Your hands. They shall perish, but You shall endure; yea, all of them
shall become old like a garment; like a robe You shall change them, and they
shall be changed; but You are He, and Your years shall have no end.
Hebrews 1: 10-12
And, "You, Lord, have laid the foundation of the earth in the
beginning, and the heavens are the works of Your hands. They shall perish, but
You will remain. And they shall all become old as a garment, and as a covering
You shall fold them up, and they shall be changed. But You are the same, and
Your years shall not fail."
The psalm may be divided into three parts:
I. A description of the
sorrows of the author of the psalm, as representative of the condition and
feelings of the exiles, Psa_102:1-11. In this, the language of lamentation and
complaint predominates.
II. The grounds of hope -
the indications of deliverance - the evidences that God was about to show favor
to his people, and to restore them to their own country - that the time, the
set time, to favor Zion was about to come, Psa_102:12-22.
III. The confidence of the
psalmist in God, on the ground of his unchangeableness: on the fact that God is
always the same; that his promises must be sure; that his purposes must be
accomplished; that the very heavens and the earth would change - that the skies
would grow old like a garment and pass away - but that God did not, would not
change. All that he had spoken must be true; all that he had purposed must be accomplished;
all that he had promised must come to pass, Psa_102:23-28.
Psa 102:1 A Prayer of the
afflicted, when he is overwhelmed, and poureth out his complaint before the
LORD. Hear my prayer, O LORD, and let my cry come unto thee.
And let my cry come unto thee - My prayer, accompanied with an outward expression of
my earnestness. It was not a silent, or a mental prayer; it was a loud and
earnest cry.
Hear my prayer - The chief parts of the Psalm answer well to the title: it is the
language of the deepest distress, and well directed to Him from whom alone help
can come. He calls his prayer cry, because it was uttered in distress, and with
great vehemency and importunity; and he prays that it might come unto God, even
into His ears, and be regarded by Him, and not shut out. God hears the prayers
of the righteous. Proverbs 15:29 The LORD is far
from the wicked, but He hears the prayer of the righteous.
Hear my prayer - The prayer of a poor, destitute, and afflicted one; his own, and not
another's; not what was composed for him, but composed by him; which came out
of his own heart, and out of unfeigned lips, and expressed under a feeling
sense of his own wants and troubles; and though dictated and inwrought in his
heart by the Spirit of God, yet, being put up by him in faith and fervency, it
is called his own, and which he desires might be heard:
Hear my prayer - Even good men may be almost overwhelmed with afflictions. It is our
duty and interest to pray; and it is comfort to an afflicted spirit to unburden
itself, by a humble representation of its griefs. Hebrews
4:16 Therefore let us come boldly to the
throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of
need. Philippians 4:6-7 Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by
prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to
God. And the peace of God which passes all understanding shall keep your hearts
and minds through Christ Jesus.
Psa 102:2 Hide not thy face from me
in the day when I am in trouble; incline thine ear unto me: in the day when I
call answer me speedily.
Hide not thy face from me - The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render this, “Do
not turn away thy face from me.” The sense is essentially the same. The prayer
is, that God would not refuse to look graciously upon him; that He would turn
his attention to him; that He would regard his supplications.
Hide not thy face from me - The Shechinah: when God hides His face at any time
from His people, it is a trouble to them, and very grievous; but especially
when they are in any other trouble.
In the day when I call, answer me speedily - Grant at once my requests; give me immediate evidence
that my prayer is heard. The psalmist believed in an immediate answer to
prayer. He often had evidence that his prayer was answered at once; his mind
became calm; he had comfort and peace; he obtained the blessing which he
earnestly sought. No one can doubt that prayer may be answered at once; no one
who prays can fail to find such answers in his own case, in his peace, his
calmness, his joy. In multitudes of cases blessings are granted in such a way that
there can be no doubt that they have come in answer to prayer.
Psa 102:3 For my days are consumed
like smoke, and my bones are burned as an hearth.
For my days are consumed like smoke - They vanish as smoke; they pass away and become
nothing; they are spent in affliction, and seem to accomplish nothing. The idea
is, that in his affliction he seemed to accomplish none of the ends of life.
His life seemed to be wasted. This is often the feeling in trial: and yet in
trial a man may be more useful, he may do more to accomplish the real ends of
life, he may do more to illustrate the power and excellence of religion, than
he ever did in the days of prosperity.
My days are consumed like smoke - He represents himself under the notion of a pile of
combustible matter, placed upon a fire, which soon consumes it; part flying
away in smoke, and the residue lying on the hearth in the form of charred coal
and ashes. The Chaldeans were the fire, and the captive Jews the fuel, thus
converted into smoke and ashes.
And my bones are burned as an hearth - Or rather, as kindling or fuel. Literally, “They are
burned as a burning.” The idea is, that in his troubles, his very bones, the
most solid and substantial part of himself, seemed to be consumed and to waste
away.
For my days are consumed like smoke - Which suddenly rises up, is easily dissipated, and
quickly disappears; so sudden, short, and transient, are the days of man's
life; see Jam_4:14 or "in smoke"; his days were spent in great
obscurity, in the darkness of affliction, temptation, and desertion; and in so
much vexation, trouble, and uneasiness, as if he had lived in smoke all his
time:
Psa 102:4 My heart is smitten, and
withered like grass; so that I forget to eat my bread.
My heart is smitten, and withered like grass - The metaphor here is taken from grass cut down in the
meadow. It is first smitten with the scythe, and then withered by the sun. Thus
the Jews were smitten with the judgments of God; and they are now withered
under the fire of the Chaldeans.
My heart is smitten - Broken; crushed with grief. We now speak of “a broken
heart.”
My heart is smitten, and withered like grass - his heart was smitten with a sense of sin, and of
God's wrath and displeasure at him, and with the heat of affliction and
trouble, that it failed him, and he could not look up with joy and comfort:
And withered like grass - It is dried up as grass is by drought, or as when it
is cut down. It loses its support; and having no strength of its own, it dies.
So that I forget to eat my bread - I am so absorbed in my trials; they so entirely
engross my attention, that I think of nothing else, not even of those things
which are necessary to the support of life. Grief has the effect of taking away
the appetite, but this does not seem to be the idea here. It is that of such a
complete absorption in trouble that everything else is forgotten. There was
such a loss of appetite, through sorrow, that he forgot his stated meals, having
no manner of inclination to food.
Psa 102:5 By reason of the voice of
my groaning my bones cleave to my skin.
By reason of the voice of my groaning - Under the burden of sin, and pressure of afflictions:
By suffering and trouble, so great as to produce groaning, my flesh is wasted
away.
My bones cleave to my skin - The effect described is that of a wasting away or an
emaciation of flesh from deep distress, so that the bones became prominent, and
had nothing to hide them from view; so that they seemed to adhere fast to the
flesh itself.
My bones cleave to my skin - was quite emaciated, reduced to a skeleton, became
nothing but skin and bone; which sometimes is occasioned, as by outward
afflictions, so by soul troubles:
Psa 102:6 I am like a pelican of
the wilderness: I am like an owl of the desert.
I am like a pelican of the wilderness - A bird in the midst of desolation becomes a striking
image of loneliness and distress. The word rendered “pelican” is supposed to have been a name given to the
pelican from the idea of vomiting, as it “vomits
the shells and other substances which it has too voraciously swallowed.” The
word occurs in the following places, where it is rendered as here “pelican:”
Lev_11:18; Deu_14:17; and in Isa_34:11; Zep_2:14, where it is rendered
“cormorant.”
I am like an owl of the desert - The owl is a well-known bird which dwells in
solitudes and old ruins, and which becomes, alike by its seeking such places of
abode, by its appearance, and by its doleful cry, the very emblem of
desolation.
Psa 102:7 I watch, and am as a
sparrow alone upon the house top.
I watch, and am as a sparrow alone upon the housetop - That is, I am “sleepless;” trouble drives sleep from
my eyes, and I am kept awake at night - a common effect of grief and distress.
As a sparrow alone – The
Hebrew word seems to be often used for
any small bird, such as the swallow, sparrow, or the like.
Psa 102:8 Mine enemies reproach me
all the day; and they that are mad against me are sworn against me.
Mine enemies reproach me all the day - Continually. For his principles and practices, being
different from theirs; for his religion; for his faith and profession of it.
Good men have their enemies, and always had; but then they are such who are
also enemies to God and Christ, and true religion; and these, not content to
reproach now and then, continually throw out their scoffs and jeers. John 15:18-9 If the world hates you, you know that
it hated Me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love
its own. But because you are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the
world, therefore the world hates you. Matthew
10:22 And you will be hated of all men for My name's sake, but the one who
endures to the end shall be kept safe.
and they that are mad against me - as the those Pharisees etc who were against Christ,
because of His miracles, doctrine, and success, and therefore sought to take
away His life; and as the Apostle Paul before conversion was, even exceeding
mad against the saints, and persecuted them to strange cities, Luk_6:11, so
were the psalmist's enemies quite outrageous and implacable, being his sworn
enemies.
Are sworn against me - literally, “swear by me,” or against me. The meaning
is, that they have conspired together under the solemnity of an oath to do me
harm. It is not the wrath of an individual that I am to meet, but the combined
wrath of those who act under the solemnities of an oath.
Psa 102:9 For I have eaten ashes
like bread, and mingled my drink with weeping,
For I have eaten ashes like bread - I have seated myself in ashes in my grief Job_2:8 And he took for himself a potsherd with which to
scrape himself while he sat in the midst of the ashes. Jon_3:6 Then word came
to the king of Nineveh; and he arose from his throne and laid aside his robe, covered
himself with sackcloth and sat in ashes. and ashes have become, as
it were, my food. The ashes in which he sat had been mingled with his food.
For I have eaten ashes like bread - He sitting in ashes, as Job did, and rolling himself
in them in the manner of mourners; and, having no other table than the ground
to eat his food upon, he might eat ashes along with it; and the sense may be,
that he ate bread like ashes, no more savored and relished it, or was nourished
by it, than if he had eaten ashes. He was fed with the bread of adversity, and
water of affliction:
And mingled my drink with weeping - Tears have fallen into the cup from which I drank,
and have become a part of my drink. The idea is, that he had shed copious
tears; and that even when he took his food, there was no respite to his grief.
and mingled my drink with weeping - that is, with tears; as he drank, the tears ran down
his cheeks, and mixed with the liquor in his cup; he was fed with the bread of
tears, and had them to drink in great measure; these were his meat and his
drink, day and night, while enemies reproached him, swore at him, against him,
and by him;
Psa 102:10 Because of thine
indignation and thy wrath: for thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down.
Because of thine indignation and thy wrath - he regarded all his sufferings as proof of the
indignation and wrath of God against him.
For thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down - We were exalted in thy favor beyond any people, and
now thou hast made us the lowest and most abject of the children of men.
For thou hast lifted me up and cast me down – or Thou hast lifted me up, and cast me away. That is,
Thou hast lifted me from the ground as a storm or tempest takes up a light
thing, and hast whirled me away. This idea occurs in Isa_22:18
Whirling, He will whirl you like a
ball into a large country; there you shall die, and there are the chariots of
your glory, the shame of your lord's house.
for thou hast lifted me up, and cast me down - so that he may be thrown with the greater force upon
the ground; in like manner the psalmist thought the Lord was dealing with him:
or this may express his changeable state and condition, sometimes lifted up,
and sometimes cast down.
Psa 102:11 My days are like a
shadow that declineth; and I am withered like grass.
My days are like a shadow that declineth - The idea is that the shadow made by the descending
sun was about to disappear altogether. It had become less distinct and clear,
and it would soon vanish.
I am withered like grass - which in the morning is flourishing, is cut down and
withered at evening: this is the case of all flesh, however beautiful and
goodly it may look; it is weak, frail, and mortal; cannot stand before the
force of afflictions, which quickly consume strength and beauty, and much less
before the scythe of death; Psa_90:5-6 You carry them
away like a flood; They are like a sleep. In the morning they are like grass
which grows up: In the morning it flourishes and grows up; In the evening it is
cut down and withers.
Psa 102:12 But thou, O LORD, shalt
endure for ever; and thy remembrance unto all generations.
But thou, O Lord, shalt endure for ever - Though my condition has been changed, though I have
been cast down from an exalted position, though kingdoms rise and fall, yet
thou art unchanged. Thy purposes will abide. Thy promises will be fulfilled.
Thy character is the same. The psalmist here brings to his own mind, as an
encouragement in trouble, as we may at all times, the fact that God is an
unchanging God; that He always lives; that He is ever the same. We could have
no ground of hope if God changed; if He formed purposes only to abandon them; if
He made promises only to disregard them; if today He were a Being of mercy and
goodness, and tomorrow would be merely a Being of justice and wrath. This
argument is enlarged upon in Psa_102:25-28.
But thou, O Lord, shalt endure for ever - This address is made to Christ, as is clear from Psa_102:25 Of old You have laid the foundation
of the earth; and the heavens are the work of Your hands. and Heb_1:10 And, "You, Lord, have laid the
foundation of the earth in the beginning, and the heavens are the works of Your
hands. Christ who is a divine Person, endures forever, is from
everlasting to everlasting, unchangeably the same in His love, power, wisdom,
faithfulness, &c. and though He died as man, He will die no more; He is
alive, and lives for evermore; and because He lives, His people shall live
also; and He will come again to take them to Himself: and, as Mediator, He is
King forever; always continues, as such, to rule over, protect, and defend His
people; and is a Priest forever, and ever lives to make intercession for them;
and His blood, righteousness, and sacrifice, have a constant virtue in them, to
take away sin, and secure from it: the consideration of the perpetuity of
Christ, in His person and offices, was a comfort to the psalmist under his
troubles, and in a view of his own declining state.
And thy remembrance unto all generations - Thy memory; or, the remembrance of thee. My days are
like a shadow. I shall pass away, and be forgotten. No one will recollect me;
no one will feel any interest in remembering that I have ever lived. But while
one knows that this must be so in regard to himself and to all other people -
that he and they are alike to be forgotten - he may also feel that there is One
who will never be forgotten. God will never pass away. He will be always the
same. All the hopes of the church - of the world - are based on this. It is not
on man - on any one individual - on any number of people - for they will all
alike pass away and be forgotten; but one generation of people after another,
to the end of time, may call on God, and find him an ever-living, an unchanged
and unchangeable protector and friend.
thy remembrance to all generations - the remembrance of His name Jehovah, or Jesus, or
Immanuel, or any other, is sweet and precious to His saints in all ages; and so
the remembrance of His works, of what He has done and suffered, especially the
great work of redemption; for the remembrance of which the ordinance of the
Lord's supper is appointed to be continued till His second coming; and His
Gospel is an everlasting one, which will transmit the memory of Him to men in
every age, to the end of the world; and though all flesh is as grass, and every
man dies, even the ministers of the word, yet that itself lives forever.
Remembrance -
The name, Jehovah, which is called by this very word, God's remembrance, or
memorial, and that unto all generations, Exo_3:15 And God said to
Moses again, You shall say this to the sons of Israel, Jehovah the God of your
fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent
me to you. This is My name forever, and this is My title from generation to
generation.
Psa 102:13 Thou shalt arise, and
have mercy upon Zion: for the time to favour her, yea, the set time, is come.
For the time to favor her - Implying that there was an appointed time to favor
her, or to bring her troubles to an end.
Yea, the set time is come - The word used here means properly an appointed season
- a designated moment. It refers to some purpose or appointment in regard to
anything that is to be done, or to a fixed period, as when certain things are
to be done, certain festivals to be held regularly at a certain season of the
year. Here it means that there was some period fixed in the Lord’s mind when
this was to occur, or a definite time when it had been predicted or promised
that it would occur. The language is such as would be applicable to the
captivity in Babylon, concerning which there was a promise that it should
continue but seventy years. If the psalm refers to that, then the meaning is
that there were indications in the course of events that that period was about
to arrive.
The set time -
the seventy years predicted by Jeremiah, was ended; and God gave him to see
that He was ever mindful of His promises. Some see this as referring
prophetically to the future of the seventy weeks of Daniel fixed for the
Messiah's coming. It may designate the end of the forty two months, or the 1260
days fixed for the treading underfoot the holy city, for the witnesses
prophesying in sackcloth, and for the reign of antichrist; which when come will
usher in glorious times Rev_11:2 But leave out
the court which is outside the temple, and do not measure it, for it was given
to the nations. And they will trample the holy city forty-two months.
Psa 102:14 For thy servants take
pleasure in her stones, and favour the dust thereof.
For thy servants take pleasure in her stones - Those who profess to be thy servants; thy friends.
This was the “evidence” to the mind of the psalmist that God was about to visit
his people, and to rebuild Jerusalem. It was an “awakened interest” among the
professed people of God, leading them to manifest their love for Zion, and for
all that pertained to her - a love for the very stones that lay in
undistinguished heaps where the city once stood - the piles of rubbish where
the walls and dwellings had once been. The people of God in their captivity
began to look with strong interest on these very ruins, and with an earnest
wish that from these ruins the city may again arise, and the walls be rebuilt.
Thy servants take pleasure in her stones - Though Jerusalem was at this time in a heap of ruins,
yet even her rubbish was sacred in the eyes of the pious; for this had been the
city of the great King.
For thy servants take pleasure in her stones - Meaning not Cyrus and Darius, who gave leave and
orders for the rebuilding of the city and temple of Jerusalem, as some; nor
Nehemiah, and Ezra, and others, who took more pleasure in the stones and
rubbish of the temple, as it lay in ruins, than in all the stately palaces in
Babylon; and who were very desirous of, and took delight in gathering these
stones, and putting them together again, as others; but, the ministers of the
Gospel, and other Christians, in the latter day, who will take pleasure in the great
number of converts that there will then be, who, as lively stones, will be
built up a spiritual house; and especially when those stones shall be laid with
fair colors, and the headstone shall be brought in with acclamations, crying,
Grace, grace unto it; 1Pe_2:5 you also as
living stones are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up
spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.
And favor the dust thereof - literally, pity - or, show compassion for. They no
longer look with indifference on these ruins of Zion. They look with a tender
heart on the very dust of those ruins. They feel that a wrong has been done to
Zion; they ardently desire its restoration to its former splendor and glory.
They long for a return to it as to their home. They are weary with their
captivity, and they are anxiously waiting for the time when they may revisit
their native land. A surrounding world would look with unconcern on the ruins
of Jerusalem; a friend of God, in whose heart religion was revived, would look
with the most tender concern even on that rubbish, and those ruins.
and favour the dust thereof - which sometimes designs multitudes, Num_23:10 Who can count the dust of Jacob, and
the number of the fourth of Israel? Let me die the death of the righteous, and
let my last end be like his! Perhaps here it may denote a time when there
shall be a delight in the stones and dust of Zion, and a spirit of grace and
supplication poured forth upon the servants of the Lord.
Psa 102:15 So the heathen shall
fear the name of the LORD, and all the kings of the earth thy glory.
So the heathen - The nations. that is, the surrounding people.
Shall fear the name of the Lord - Shall reverence and honor Him. Whose name is
reverend, and to be feared; especially the glorious and fearful name
"Jehovah", expressive of the divine existence, of his eternity and
immutability; and particularly the Messiah, the Son of God, in whom the name of
the Lord is; the King of saints, whom all men will fear in the latter day, when
the set time to favour Zion is come; will stand in awe of him and will serve
and worship him;
And all the kings of the earth thy glory - The sovereigns of the earth will be especially
affected and impressed with His majesty. If this refers to the return from the
captivity at Babylon, then it means that that event would be particularly
suited to impress the minds of the rulers of the world, as showing that God had
all nations under His control; that He could deliver a captive people from the
grasp of the mighty; that He was the friend of those who worshipped Him.
So the heathen shall fear the name of the Lord - It is granted that after the edict of Cyrus to
restore and rebuild Jerusalem which was about four hundred and ninety years
before Christ, the name of the true God was more generally known among the
heathen; and the translating the Sacred Writings into Greek, by the command of
Ptolemy Philadelphus, king of Egypt, about two hundred and eighty-five years
before the Christian era, spread a measure of the light of God in the Gentile
world which they had not before seen. Add to this the dispersion of the Jews
into different parts of the Roman empire, after Judea became a Roman province,
which took place about sixty years before the advent of our Lord; and we may
consider these as so many preparatory steps to the conversion of the heathen by
the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. And to this last general illumination of
the Gentile world the psalmist must allude here, when he speaks of “the heathen
fearing God’s name, and all the kings of the earth his glory.”
and all the kings of the earth thy glory – which may be supplied thus, either "all the
kings of the earth shall see thy glory", or shall fear thee because of
"thy glory"; the glory of Christ's person, as the Son of God; the
glory of his offices, as Prophet, Priest, and King; especially the glory of his
kingly office, to which that of the kings of the earth is not to be compared;
the glory of his works of creation, providence, and redemption; and as it will
be held forth in the Gospel. The earth will be fulled with the glory of the
Lord, Psa 72:19 And blessed be his glorious name for ever: and let
the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen. and will
be so remarkable and conspicuous as to be taken notice of by the kings of the
earth when the glory of the Lord shall be risen in Zion, will come to the
brightness of it, and look upon it, and admire it, and fear because of it, Isa 60:1 Arise, shine; for thy light is come,
and the glory of the LORD is risen upon thee. Rom 14:11 For it is
written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every
tongue shall confess to God. Php 2:10-11 That at the name of Jesus every knee should
bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; And
that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God
the Father.
Psa 102:16 When the LORD shall
build up Zion, he shall appear in his glory.
When the Lord shall build up Zion – The psalmist may throw himself into the future, and -
standing there - he may describe things as they will appear then - as already
done. In the purity of Gospel truths, ordinances, and worship; in the number of
converts; in the gifts and graces of the Spirit of God upon them; in their
peace, prosperity, unity, and spirituality; and in the presence of Christ with
them, who will be seen in all the glory and majesty of his kingly office; he
will now reign before his ancients gloriously.
He shall appear in his glory – The idea is that the building up of Zion would be an
occasion in which God would manifest his glory. In reference to the restoration
of his people from bondage; in rebuilding Zion, then in ruins; in restoring the
splendor of the place where he had been so long worshipped, he would display
his true character as a God of glory, truth, power, and goodness. As applied to
the church in general, this would mean that when God comes to revive religion,
to visit his people, to recover them from their backslidings, to convert and
save sinners, he appears in his appropriate character as the God of his people
- as a glorious God. Then the perfections of his nature are most illustriously
displayed; then he appears in his true character, as a God of mercy, grace, and
salvation. There is no scene on earth where the character of God is more
gloriously exhibited than in a revival of true religion.
When the Lord shall build up Zion – It is such a difficult thing, so wholly improbable,
so far out of the reach of human power, that when God does it, he must manifest
his power and glory in a most extraordinary manner.
Psa 102:17 He will regard the
prayer of the destitute, and not despise their prayer.
He will regard the prayer – literally, “He looks upon,” or “he ‘turns himself’ to
their prayer.” He does not any longer seem to turn away from them and disregard
them. He shows by thus building up Zion that he does regard prayer; that he
hears the supplications of his people.
Of the destitute – literally, “of the poor.” The word, according to its etymology, means “naked;” then, poor, stripped
of everything, impoverished, wholly destitute. It would thus be eminently
applicable to the poor exiles in Babylon; it is as applicable to sinners
pleading with God, and to the people of God themselves, destitute of everything
like self-righteousness, and feeling that they have nothing in themselves, but
that they are wholly dependent on the mercy of God.
And not despise their prayer – Not treat it with contempt; not pass it by unheard.
This is stated as one of the reasons why the nations would be struck with awe -
that God, the infinite God, would hear the prayers of those who were so poor,
so powerless, so friendless. There is, in fact, nothing more suited to excite
wonder than that God does hear the prayer of poor, lost, sinful man.
and not despise their prayer - not reject it with contempt and abhorrence; more is
intended than is expressed: the meaning is, that he will receive it with pleasure,
and return an answer to it; the prayer of these poor destitute ones is
delightful to him, Pro
15:8 The sacrifice of the wicked is an
abomination to the LORD: but the prayer of the upright is his delight.
Psa 102:18 This shall be written
for the generation to come: and the people which shall be created shall praise
the LORD.
This shall be written for the generation to come - It shall be recorded for the instruction and
encouragement of future ages. The fact that God has heard the prayer of his
people in a time of trial shall be so recorded and remembered that it may be
referred to in similar circumstances in all time to come, for he is an
unchanging God. What he has done now, he will always be willing to do
hereafter.
The people which shall be created – This can be
considered the way Christians are new creations in Christ. “The Gentiles, who
shall be brought to the knowledge of salvation by Christ”: how often the
conversion of the soul to God is represented as a new creation. 2Co 5:17 Therefore if any man be in Christ, he
is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become
new.
And the people which shall be created – Future generations. Each successive generation is in
fact a new “creation;” each individual is also; for the essential idea in
creation is that of bringing something into existence where there was nothing
before. There is a “beginning” of existence in every human being. Man is not in
any proper sense a “development” from former being, nor is his life merely a
“continuance” of something which existed before.
Shall praise the Lord –Shall praise the Lord for what he has now done; shall learn,
from the great principles now illustrated in regard to his administration, to
praise him.
Psa 102:19 For he hath looked down
from the height of his sanctuary; from heaven did the LORD behold the earth;
For he hath looked down from the height of his sanctuary – From
his high and holy dwelling-place, in heaven. The word here rendered “looked
down,” means to lay upon or over; then to lie out over anything, to project;
and then, to bend forward. It then means to bend or incline forward with an
intention to look at anything, as from a window.
For he hath looked down – This, with the three following verses, seems to contain
a glorious prophecy of the incarnation of Christ, and the gathering in of the
Jews and the Gentiles to him. The Lord looks down from heaven, and sees the
whole earth groaning and travailing in pain; his eye affects his heart, and he
purposes their salvation.
Psa 102:20 To hear the groaning of
the prisoner; to loose those that are appointed to death;
To hear the groaning of the prisoner – Meaning here, probably, the captives in Babylon; those
who were held as prisoners there, and who were subjected to such hardships in
their long captivity.
To hear the groaning –By sin, all the inhabitants of the earth are
miserable. They have broken the Divine laws, are under the arrest of judgment,
and all cast into prison, They have been tried, found guilty, and appointed to
die; they groan under their chains, are alarmed at the prospect of death, and
implore mercy.
To loose those that are appointed to death – in Hebrew, “the children of death.” This may mean either those who were sentenced
to death; those who were sick and ready to die; or those who, in their
captivity, were in such a state of privation and suffering that death appeared
inevitable. The word rendered “loose” means, properly, to “open,” applied to
the mouth, for eating, Eze_3:2; or in song, Psa_78:2; or for speaking, Job_3:1;
- or the ear, Isa_50:5; or the hand, Deu_15:8; or the gates of a city, a door,
etc., Deu_20:11. Then it means to set free, as by opening the doors of a
prison, Isa_14:17; Job_12:14. Here it means to “set free,” to deliver.
to loose those that are appointed to death - delivered to death; delivered over to the secular
power, in order to be put to death; these the Lord will loose, and save them from
the death they are appointed to by men; In addition, they are the same as
"children of wrath", Eph 2:3 Among whom also we all had our conversation in times
past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the
mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others. that
is, deserving of death, and under the sentence of it; as all men are in Adam,
even the Lord's own people; and who are, in their own apprehension, as dead
men, when awakened and convinced of their state by the Spirit of God; these
Christ looses from the shackles and fetters of sin, from the bondage of the
law, from the tyranny of Satan, and from fears of death, and puts them into the
glorious liberty of the children of God.
To loose – To
release his poor captives out of Babylon, and from the chains of sin and
eternal destruction.
Psa 102:21 To declare the name of
the LORD in Zion, and his praise in Jerusalem;
To declare the name of the Lord in Zion - That his name might be declared in Zion, or that his
praise might be set up in Jerusalem again. That is, that his people might be
returned there, and his praise be celebrated again in the holy city. The Holy
Spirit descended on the apostles at Pentecost in Jerusalem.
Psa 102:22 When the people are
gathered together, and the kingdoms, to serve the LORD.
When the people are gathered together – When they shall be brought from their dispersion in
distant lands; when they shall assemble again in the city of their fathers, and
when public worship shall be celebrated there as in former ages.
When the people are gathered together – When all the Gentiles are enlightened, and the kings
of the earth brought to pay homage to the King of kings.
When the people are gathered together – When the people of the Jews shall be gathered
together, and seek the Lord their God, and David their King, the Messiah, and
appoint them one head, even Christ; and when the Gentiles shall gather
together, in great numbers, to the church of God.
And the kingdoms, to serve the Lord – The Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate render this,
“kings.” All of all lands, will yet praise the Lord “as if” they were one great
congregation, assembled in one place. Thus, though separate, they will with
united feeling recount the mercy and goodness of God to his people in past
times.
Psa 102:23 He weakened my strength
in the way; he shortened my days.
He weakened my strength in the way – Hebrew, “afflicted.” The idea is, that God had taken
his strength away; he had weakened him - humbled him - brought him low by
sorrow. The word “way” refers to the course which he was pursuing. In his
journey of life God had thus afflicted - humbled - prostrated him. The psalmist
here turns from the exulting view which he had of the future Psa_102:21-22, and
resumes his complaint - the remembrance of his troubles and sorrows
Psa_102:3-11.
He weakened my strength in the way – The psalmist here returns to his complaint of his
afflictions, weakness, and frailty, which ended Psa_102:11, after which some
hints are given of the latter day glory, which though he despaired of seeing,
by reason of his frailty and mortality, yet comforts himself with the eternity
and immutability of Christ. Many are the afflictions which the people of God
meet with in the course of their life, in their way to heaven, which have such
an effect upon them; through many tribulations they pass to enter the kingdom.
He shortened my days – That is, He seemed to be about to cut me off from
life, and to bring me to the grave. The psalmist felt so confident that he
would die - that he could not endure these troubles, but must sink under them,
that he spoke as if it were already done.
Psa 102:24 I said, O my God, take
me not away in the midst of my days: thy years are throughout all generations.
take me not away in the midst of my days – This was the burden of my prayer, for this I earnestly
pleaded. The word used here means “to cause to ascend or go up” and the
expression might have been translated, “Cause me not to ascend.” The Septuagint
and the Latin Vulgate render it, “Call me not away.” The word rendered “in the
midst” means properly in the half; as if life were divided into two portions.
take me not away in the midst of my days - Which was always reckoned as a judgment, as a token
of God's sore displeasure, and as what only befell wicked men: in the Hebrew it
is, "cause me not to ascend"; either as smoke, which ascends, and
vanishes away; or rather it designs the separation of the soul from the body at
death, when it ascends upwards to God.
thy years are throughout all generations – which are not as men's years, of the same measure or
number; but are boundless and infinite: the phrase is expressive of the
eternity of God, or Christ; which the psalmist opposes to his own frailty, and
which he illustrates in the following verses, by setting it in contrast with
the discontinuance and changeableness of the heavens and the earth.
Thy years are throughout all generations – Thou dost not die; thou art ever the same, though the
generations of people are cut off. This seems to have been said here for two
reasons:
(1) As a ground of
consolation, that God was ever the same; that whatever might happen to people,
to the psalmist himself, or to any other man, God was unchanged, and that his
great plans would be carried forward and accomplished;
(2) As a reason for the
prayer. God was eternal. He had an immortal existence. He could not die. He
knew, in its perfection, the blessedness of “life” - life as such; life
continued; life unending. The psalmist appeals to what God himself enjoyed - as
a reason why life - so great a blessing - should be granted to him a little
longer.
Thy years are throughout all generations – This was a frequent argument used to induce God to
hear prayer. We are frail and perishing; thou art everlasting: deliver us, and
we will glorify thee.
I said, O my God – This and the following verses seem to be the form of prayer which the
captives used previously to their deliverance.
Psa 102:25 Of old hast thou laid
the foundation of the earth: and the heavens are the work of thy hands.
Of old hast thou laid the foundation – In the beginning; at the first. The phrase used here
means literally “to the face;” then, “before” in the order of time. It means
here, long ago; of olden time; at the beginning. The meaning is, that the years
of God had stretched through all the generations of people, and all the changes
which had occurred upon the earth; that at the very beginning he existed, and
that he would continue to exist to the very close, unchangeably the same.
Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth - The lower part of the creation, the Lord's footstool,
called the earth beneath.
the heavens are the work of thy hands – This is creation and not to be worshipped, made by
Christ himself, and are expressive of his power, wisdom, and glory.
Psa 102:26 They shall perish, but
thou shalt endure: yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment; as a vesture
shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed:
They shall perish – Nothing can be eternal except the Lord. Even that
which He has created is perishable; duration belongs to God only; and it is by
His will and energy alone that universal nature is preserved in existence, and
preserved from running into speedy disorder, decay, and ruin.
They shall perish – Both the heavens and the earth, though so well founded, and so firmly
made; they shall be dissolved, melt, and pass away;
Yea, all of them shall wax old – Everything must deteriorate, unless preserved by His
renewing. Even the heavens and the earth are subject to this law; for that
which is not, from the infinite perfection of its own nature, Eternal, must be
perishable; therefore the heavens and the earth must necessarily come to an
end.
yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment –not only the heavens, which are as a curtain and
garment about the earth, but the earth itself, Isa_51:6, will lose their beauty
and glory, and become useless, as to the present form of them:
but thou shalt endure – as the eternal God, from everlasting to everlasting; He
will be King forever; his throne is for ever and ever; his kingdom is an
everlasting one; he is a priest forever, after the order of Melchizedek; his
sacrifice is of an eternal efficacy, and he ever lives to make intercession for
his people; he will always continue, as the Prophet, in his church, to teach by
his Spirit, word, and ordinances, in the present state; and hereafter will be
the light of the New Jerusalem, and of his saints, forever:
In Heb_1:10-12
And,
Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the
heavens are the works of thine hands: They shall perish; but thou remainest;
and they all shall wax old as doth a garment; And as a vesture shalt thou fold
them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall
not fail. Paul quotes Psa_102:26-28 They shall
perish, but thou shalt endure: yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment;
as a vesture shalt thou change them, and they shall be changed: But thou art
the same, and thy years shall have no end. The children of thy servants shall
continue, and their seed shall be established before thee. as
addressed to Christ in His divine nature. The scope of the Psalm, as already
seen, so far from opposing, favors this view, especially by the sentiments of Psa_102:12-15 But thou, O LORD, shalt endure for
ever; and thy remembrance unto all generations. Thou shalt arise, and have
mercy upon Zion: for the time to favour her, yea, the set time, is come. For
thy servants take pleasure in her stones, and favour the dust thereof. So the
heathen shall fear the name of the LORD, and all the kings of the earth thy
glory. The association of the Messiah with a day of future glory to
the Church was very intimate in the minds of Old Testament writers; and with
correct views of His nature it is very consistent that He should be addressed
as the Lord and Head of His Church, who would bring about that glorious future
on which they ever dwelt with fond delightful anticipations.
Psa 102:27 But thou art the same,
and thy years shall have no end.
Thy years shall have no end – “they shall not be completed.” Everything has its
revolution - its conception, growth, perfection, decay, dissolution, and death,
or corruption. It may be said that regeneration restores all these substances;
and so it does in a measure, but not without deterioration. God has no
completion, no beginning and no end. What is eternal is unchangeable and
imperishable. God alone is eternal.
But thou art the same – the everlasting I AM, the unchangeable Jehovah;
immutable in his nature and perfections; in his love and affections to his
people; in his power to protect and keep them; in his wisdom to guide and
direct them; in his righteousness to clothe them, and render them acceptable to
God; in his blood to cleanse them, and speak peace and pardon to them; in his
fullness to supply them, and in his intercession for them,
Psa 102:28 The children of thy
servants shall continue, and their seed shall be established before thee.
The children of thy servants shall continue – The descendants of those that serve and obey thee.
This represents the confident expectation of the psalmist that, as God was
unchangeable, all his promises toward his people would be fulfilled, even
though the heavens and the earth should pass away. God was the same. His word
would not fail. His promises were sure. Mat 5:18 For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth
pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be
fulfilled. Mat 24:35 Heaven and earth
shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away. The word rendered
“continue,” means to dwell, as in a habitation; then, to abide. It stands
opposed to a wandering, nomadic life, and indicates permanency.
The children of thy servants shall continue – Thy Church shall be permanent, because founded on
thee, it shall live throughout all the revolutions of time. And as thy
followers are made partakers of the Divine nature they shall live in union with
God, deriving eternal duration from the inexhaustible Fountain of being.
Nothing can be permanent but by God’s supporting and renewing influence.
The children of thy servants shall continue – The "servants" of the Lord are the apostles
of Christ, and ministers of the word, in all successive generations, with whom
Christ will be to the end of the world: their "children" are such
whom they have begotten again, through the Gospel; regenerated souls are meant;
of these there will be a succession in all ages, until latter day glory takes
place; these are the church's seed, and her seed's seed, from whom the word of
the Lord, the Gospel, will never depart, Isa 59:21 As for me, this is my covenant with them, saith the
LORD; My spirit that is upon thee, and my words which I have put in thy mouth,
shall not depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of
the mouth of thy seed's seed, saith the LORD, from henceforth and for ever.
And their seed shall be established before thee - The word used here means properly to stand erect;
then to set up, to erect, to place, to found, to make firm, as a city,
Psa_107:36; the earth, Psa_24:2; the heavens, Pro_3:19. It means here that they
would be firmly and permanently established: that is, the church of God would
be permanent in the earth. It would not be like the generations of people that
pass away. It would not be like the nomadic tribes of the desert that have no
fixed habitation, and that wander from place to place. It would not be even
like the heavens that might put on new forms, or wholly pass away: it would be
as enduring and changeless as God himself; it would, in its proper form, endure
forever. As God is eternal and unchangeable, so would the safety and welfare of
his people be.