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												Verses 1-3Title. A prayer of the 
												afflicted, &c. — It was composed 
												by one who was himself 
												afflicted, afflicted with the 
												church of God, and for it; and 
												it is calculated for an 
												afflicted state, and intended 
												for the use of others that maybe 
												in similar distress. It is the 
												fifth of those Psalms styled 
												Penitential.
 
 Psalms 102:3. My days are 
												consumed like smoke — Which 
												passeth away in obscurity, and 
												swiftly, and irrecoverably. 
												Hebrew, בעשׁן, into, or, in 
												smoke. As wood, or any 
												combustible matter put into the 
												fire, wasteth away in smoke and 
												ashes, so are my days wasted 
												away. Or, as some interpret the 
												words, “My afflictions have had 
												the same effect on me as smoke 
												has on things which are hung up 
												in it, that is, have dried me 
												up, and deformed me.” And my 
												bones — The most strong and 
												solid parts of my body, which 
												seemed least likely to suffer 
												any injury by my trouble; are 
												burned as a hearth — Either as a 
												hearth is heated, or burned up 
												by the coals which are laid upon 
												it; or, as the hearth, being so 
												heated, burns up that Which is 
												put upon it. But כמוקד, here 
												translated, as a hearth, may be 
												rendered, (as it is by many,) as 
												a fire-brand, or, as dry wood, 
												which seems most applicable to 
												the subject here spoken of. For, 
												as Dr. Horne observes, “The 
												effects of extreme grief on the 
												human frame are here compared to 
												those which fire produces upon 
												fuel. It exhausts the radical 
												moisture, and by so doing 
												consumes the substance. A man’s 
												time and his strength evaporate 
												in melancholy, and his bones, 
												those pillars and supports of 
												his body, become like wood, on 
												which the fire hath done its 
												work, and left it without sap, 
												and without cohesion.”
 
 Verses 4-7
 Psalms 102:4-7. My heart is 
												withered like grass — Which is 
												smitten and withered by the heat 
												of the sun, either while it 
												stands, or after it is cut down. 
												So that I forget to eat my bread 
												— Because my mind is wholly 
												swallowed up with the 
												contemplation of my own 
												miseries. My bones cleave to my 
												skin — My flesh being quite 
												consumed with excessive sorrow. 
												I am like a pelican in the 
												wilderness — “There are two 
												species of pelicans, one of 
												which lives in the water on 
												fish, the other in the 
												wilderness, upon serpents and 
												reptiles.” The word קאת, kaath, 
												here used, is rendered 
												cormorant, (which is a 
												corruption of corvorant,) Isaiah 
												34:11; Zephaniah 2:14. “By the 
												owl of the desert many 
												understand the bittern, and by 
												the bird that sits solitary on 
												the house-top, the owl.” Dr. 
												Waterland and Houbigant, instead 
												of sparrow alone, read the 
												solitary bird; and the latter, 
												for pelican, reads onocrotalus.
 
 Verse 8
 Psalms 102:8. Mine enemies 
												reproach me all the day — This 
												my misery hath exposed me to the 
												scorn of mine enemies, who do 
												nothing but upbraid me with my 
												calamities. And they that are 
												mad against me — Or, my 
												slanderers, as Dr. Waterland 
												renders, מהוללי, moholalai, are 
												sworn against me, — Or, they 
												swear by me. They make use of my 
												name and misery, in their forms 
												of swearing and imprecation; for 
												when they would express their 
												malicious and mischievous 
												intentions against any one, they 
												swear they will make him as 
												miserable as a Jew. Or, their 
												form of swearing is this, “If we 
												break our oaths, may the gods 
												pour down their vengeance upon 
												us, and make us as miserable as 
												this captive Jew.”
 
 Verse 9-10
 Psalms 102:9-10. I have eaten 
												ashes like bread — That is, 
												instead of eating my bread, I 
												have laid down in dust and 
												ashes. Or, dust and ashes are as 
												constant and familiar to me as 
												the eating of my bread; I cover 
												my head with them; I sit, yea, 
												lie down among them, as mourners 
												often did, by which means the 
												ashes might easily be mingled 
												with their meat as tears were 
												with their drink, as mentioned 
												in the next clause. And mingled 
												my drink, &c. — He alludes to 
												the custom of mingling their 
												wine with water. Because of thy 
												indignation, &c. — Because I not 
												only conflict with men, but with 
												the Almighty God, and with his 
												anger. For thou hast lifted me 
												up, and cast me down — As a man 
												lifts up a person or thing as 
												high as he can, that he may cast 
												it down to the ground with 
												greater force. Or, he aggravates 
												his present reproach and misery 
												by the consideration of that 
												great honour and happiness to 
												which God had formerly advanced 
												him, as Job did, chap. 29., 30., 
												and the church, Lamentations 
												1:7.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Psalms 102:11-12. My days are 
												like a shadow — Which “never 
												continueth in one stay, but is 
												still gliding imperceptibly on, 
												lengthening as it goes, and at 
												last vanisheth into darkness. 
												The period of its existence is 
												limited to a day at farthest. 
												The rising sun gives it birth, 
												and in the moment when the sun 
												sets it is no more.” — Horne. 
												And just so, the psalmist 
												intimates, the hopes which they 
												had sometimes entertained of a 
												restitution were quickly cut off 
												and disappointed. But thou shalt 
												endure for ever — But this is my 
												comfort, although we die, and 
												our hopes vanish, yet our God is 
												unchangeable and everlasting, 
												and therefore not to be 
												conquered by his and our 
												enemies, however numerous and 
												powerful, but is constant in his 
												counsels and purposes of mercy 
												to his church, steadfast and 
												faithful in the performance of 
												all his promises; and therefore 
												he both can and will deliver his 
												people. And thy remembrance unto 
												all generations — To the end of 
												time, nay, to eternity: thou 
												shalt be known and honoured; and 
												“the remembrance of thy former 
												works and mercies comforts our 
												hearts, and encourages us to 
												hope, nay, even to rejoice, in 
												the midst of our sorrow and 
												tribulation.”
 
 Verse 13-14
 Psalms 102:13-14. Thou shalt 
												have mercy upon Zion — Upon 
												Jerusalem, or thy church and 
												people; for the set time is come 
												— The end of those seventy years 
												which was the time fixed for the 
												continuing of the Babylonish 
												captivity: see Jeremiah 25:12; 
												Jeremiah 29:10; Daniel 9:2. For 
												thy servants take pleasure in 
												her stones, &c. — Thy people 
												value the dust and rubbish of 
												the holy city more than all the 
												palaces of the earth, and 
												passionately desire that it may 
												be rebuilt. “From this passage, 
												and what follows.” says Dr. 
												Horne, “it appears that the 
												suppliant, in this Psalm, 
												bewails not only his own 
												miseries, but those of the 
												church. Israel was in captivity, 
												and Zion a desolation. A time, 
												notwithstanding, a set time 
												there was at hand, when God had 
												promised to arise, and to have 
												mercy upon her. The bowels of 
												her children yearned over her 
												ruins; they longed to see her 
												rebuilt, and were ready, 
												whenever the word of command 
												should be given, to set heart 
												and hand to the blessed work.”
 
 
 Verse 15
 Psalms 102:15. So the heathen 
												shall fear the Lord, &c. — Shall 
												have high thoughts of him and 
												his people, and even the kings 
												of the earth shall be affected 
												with his glory. They shall think 
												better of the church of God than 
												they have done, when God, by his 
												providence, thus puts honour 
												upon it; and they shall be 
												afraid of doing any thing 
												against it, when they see God 
												taking its part. Thus it is 
												said, Esther 8:17, that many of 
												the people of the land became 
												Jews, for the fear of the Jews 
												fell upon them. This promise was 
												in some sort fulfilled, when the 
												rebuilding of the temple and 
												city of God was carried on and 
												completed, to the admiration, 
												envy, and terror of their 
												enemies, notwithstanding the 
												many and great difficulties and 
												oppositions which the Jews had 
												to encounter, Nehemiah 6:16; 
												Psalms 126:2; but it was much 
												more truly and fully 
												accomplished in the building of 
												the spiritual Jerusalem by 
												Christ, unto whom the Gentiles 
												were gathered, and to whom the 
												princes of the world paid their 
												acknowledgments.
 
 Verses 16-18
 Psalms 102:16-18. When the Lord 
												shall build up Zion — They take 
												it for granted it would be done, 
												for God himself had undertaken 
												it; he shall appear in his glory 
												— His glorious power, wisdom, 
												and goodness shall be manifested 
												to all the world. He will regard 
												the prayer of the destitute — 
												That is, of his poor, forsaken, 
												despised people in Babylon. And 
												not despise their prayer — That 
												is, he will accept and answer 
												it. This shall be written for 
												the generation to come — This 
												wonderful deliverance shall not 
												be lost nor forgotten, but 
												carefully recorded for the 
												instruction and encouragement of 
												all succeeding generations. And 
												the people which shall be 
												created — Who shall hereafter be 
												born; or, who shall be created 
												anew in Christ Jesus; shall 
												praise the Lord — For his 
												answers to their prayers, when 
												they were most destitute. This 
												may be understood, either, 1st, 
												Of the Jews, who should be 
												restored to, their own land, for 
												they had been, in a manner, dead 
												and buried in the grave and mere 
												dry bones, as they are 
												represented Isaiah 26:19, and 
												Ezekiel 37 : or, 2d, Of the 
												Gentiles who should be 
												converted, whose conversion is 
												frequently, and might very 
												justly be called, a second 
												creation.
 
 Verses 19-22
 Psalms 102:19-22. For he hath 
												looked down — Namely, upon us, 
												and not as an idle spectator, 
												but with an eye of pity and 
												relief; from the height of his 
												sanctuary — From his higher or 
												upper sanctuary, namely, heaven, 
												as the next clause explains it, 
												which is called, God’s high and 
												holy place, Isaiah 57:15. To 
												loose those that are appointed 
												to death — To release his poor 
												captives out of Babylon, and, 
												which is more, to deliver 
												mankind from the chains and 
												fetters of sin and Satan, and 
												from eternal destruction. To 
												declare the name of the Lord, 
												&c. — That they, being 
												delivered, might publish and 
												celebrate the name and praises 
												of God in his church. When the 
												people are gathered together, 
												&c. — When the Gentiles shall 
												gather themselves to the Jews, 
												and join with them in the praise 
												and worship of the true God, and 
												of the Messiah. This verse seems 
												to be added to intimate, that 
												although the psalmist, in this 
												Psalm, referred to the 
												deliverance of the Jews out of 
												Babylon, yet he had a further 
												design, and a principal respect 
												unto that great and more general 
												deliverance of his church and 
												people by Christ.
 
 Verse 23
 Psalms 102:23. He — Namely, God, 
												whom he considered as bringing 
												these calamities upon them for 
												their sins, and to whom 
												therefore he applies for relief; 
												weakened my strength in the way 
												— That is, soon impaired the 
												prosperity and flourishing 
												condition of our church and 
												commonwealth, in the course of 
												our affairs. “They were for many 
												ages,” says Henry, “in the way 
												to the performance of the great 
												promise made to their fathers, 
												concerning the Messiah, longing 
												as much for it as ever a 
												traveller did to be at his 
												journey’s end; the legal 
												institutions led them in the 
												way; but when the ten tribes 
												were lost in Assyria, and the 
												two almost lost in Babylon, the 
												strength of that nation was 
												weakened, and, in all 
												appearances, its days shortened, 
												for they said, Our hope is lost, 
												we are cut off for our parts, 
												Ezekiel 37:11.” “The prophet,” 
												says Dr. Horne, “in the person 
												of captive Zion, having, from 
												Psalms 102:13-22, expressed his 
												faith and hope in the promised 
												redemption, now returns to his 
												mournful complaints as at Psalms 
												102:11. Israel doubts not of 
												God’s veracity, but fears lest 
												his heavy hand should crush the 
												generation then in being, before 
												they should behold the 
												expiration of their troubles. 
												They were in the way, but their 
												strength was so weakened, and 
												their days shortened, that they 
												almost despaired of holding out 
												to their journey’s end.” Bishop 
												Patrick, however, supposes that 
												the psalmist spake of himself 
												personally, and interprets the 
												passage thus: “I had hopes to 
												have lived to see this blessed 
												time, (namely, of the redemption 
												from Babylon, and the accession 
												of the Gentile nations to the 
												church of God, spoken of in the 
												preceding verses,) “and thought 
												I had been in the way to it, 
												Ezra 3:8. But he hath stopped 
												our vigorous beginnings, Ezra 
												4:4, and thereby so sorely 
												afflicted me, that I feel I am 
												like to fall short of my 
												expectations.” Dr. Dodd 
												understands the words nearly in 
												the same sense, observing, “The 
												connection is this: 
												‘Notwithstanding these glorious 
												hopes of being speedily restored 
												to my native country, I find 
												that through continual 
												affliction God hath weakened my 
												strength, even while I thought I 
												was in the way to that 
												happiness; and that, on account 
												of the short remainder of my 
												life, I shall not be able to 
												attain it.’” This interpretation 
												of the words connects well with 
												the following verse.
 
 Verse 24
 Psalms 102:24. But, I said, O my 
												God, take me not away, &c. — I 
												prayed most earnestly to him, 
												and said, O my God, who hast so 
												graciously begun our 
												deliverance, take me not away 
												before it be completely 
												finished, but let me see thy 
												promise fulfilled, which thou, 
												who diest not, as we do, I am 
												sure, wilt not fail to make 
												good. Yes: “though I should not 
												live to have any share in the 
												public joy for that restoration, 
												yet thou, who art an everlasting 
												and immutable God, whose years 
												are throughout all generations, 
												wilt not fail to make those who 
												survive me happy therein.” Those 
												who consider the psalmist, as 
												personating the captive Jews, 
												interpret the verse as follows: 
												O my God, take we not away in 
												the midst of my days — Do not 
												wholly cut off and destroy my 
												people Israel before they come 
												to a full age and stature in the 
												plenary possession of thy 
												promises, and especially of that 
												great and fundamental promise of 
												the Messiah, in and by whom 
												alone their happiness is to be 
												completed, and until whose 
												coming thy church is in its 
												nonage, Galatians 4:1-4. Thy 
												years are throughout all 
												generations — Though we 
												successively die and perish, yet 
												thou art the everlasting and 
												unchangeable God, who art, and 
												wilt ever be, able to deliver 
												thy people, and faithful in 
												performing all thy promises; and 
												therefore we beseech thee to 
												pity our frail and languishing 
												state, and give us a more 
												settled and lasting felicity 
												than we have yet enjoyed.
 
 Verse 25
 Psalms 102:25. Of old hast thou 
												laid the foundation of the earth 
												— The eternity of God looks both 
												backward and forward: it is both 
												without beginning and without 
												end. The latter is affirmed and 
												illustrated Psalms 102:24; 
												Psalms 102:26-27, the former is 
												implied in this verse. Thou 
												hadst a being before the 
												creation of the world, when 
												there was nothing but eternity, 
												but the earth and heaven had a 
												beginning given them by thy 
												almighty power.
 
 Verse 26
 Psalms 102:26. They shall perish 
												— Either as to the substance of 
												them, which shall be 
												annihilated, or as to their 
												present form, fashion, and use, 
												which shall be entirely changed: 
												see the margin. The heavens and 
												the earth, although they be the 
												most permanent of all visible 
												beings, and their continuance is 
												often mentioned to signify the 
												stability of things; yet, if 
												compared with thee, they are as 
												nothing, for they had a 
												beginning, and shall have an 
												end. All of them shall wax old — 
												That is, shall decay and perish, 
												like a garment — Which is worn 
												out, and laid aside, and 
												exchanged for another. And so 
												shall this present frame of 
												heaven and earth be. As a 
												vesture shalt thou change them — 
												Isaiah tells us, Isaiah 51:6, 
												that the heaven and earth shall 
												wax old like a garment; but the 
												psalmist here goes one step 
												further than the prophet; and 
												not only acquaints us that the 
												heavens and earth shall wax old, 
												but, like a worn-out garment, 
												shall be changed for new. And 
												what can he intend but the new 
												heavens and new earth, mentioned 
												by St. Peter in the New 
												Testament, and said to be the 
												expectation of believers, 
												according to God’s promise? 2 
												Peter 3:13.
 
 Verse 27
 Psalms 102:27. But thou art the 
												same. &c. — “Amidst the changes 
												and chances of this mortal 
												life,” says Dr. Horne, “one 
												topic of consolation will ever 
												remain, namely, the eternity and 
												immutability of God our Saviour, 
												of him who was, and is, and is 
												to come. Kingdoms and empires 
												may rise and fall; nay, the 
												heavens and the earth, as they 
												were originally produced and 
												formed by the WORD of God, the 
												Son, or second person in the 
												Trinity, to whom the psalmist 
												here addresses himself; (see 
												Hebrews 1:10;) so will they, at 
												the day appointed, be folded up, 
												and laid aside, as an old and 
												worn-out garment; but Jehovah is 
												ever the same; his years have no 
												end, nor can his promise fail, 
												any more than himself. Heaven 
												and earth, saith he, shall pass 
												away, but my words shall not 
												pass away, Matthew 24:35.”
 
 Verse 28
 Psalms 102:28. The children of 
												thy servants shall continue — 
												Though the heavens and the earth 
												perish, and though we, thy 
												servants, pine away in our 
												iniquities, according to thy 
												righteous sentence and 
												threatening, Leviticus 26:39, 
												and die in captivity; yet, by 
												virtue of thy eternal and 
												unchangeable nature, and thy 
												promises made to Abraham and his 
												seed, we rest assured that our 
												children, and their children 
												after them, shall enjoy the 
												promised mercies, even a happy 
												restoration to and settlement in 
												their own land, and the presence 
												of our and their Messiah. And 
												their seed shall be established 
												before thee — In the place of 
												thy gracious presence, either 
												here in thy church, or hereafter 
												in heaven. Perhaps this 
												expression, before thee, might 
												be intended further to intimate, 
												that their happiness did not 
												consist in the enjoyment of the 
												outward blessings of the land of 
												Canaan, but in the presence and 
												fruition of God there, which he 
												mentions as the consummation of 
												their desires and felicities.
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