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102. Psalm 102

1 Hear my prayer, LORD;
   let my cry for help come to you.

2 Do not hide your face from me
   when I am in distress.
Turn your ear to me;
   when I call, answer me quickly.

    3 For my days vanish like smoke;
   my bones burn like glowing embers.

4 My heart is blighted and withered like grass;
   I forget to eat my food.

5 In my distress I groan aloud
   and am reduced to skin and bones.

6 I am like a desert owl,
   like an owl among the ruins.

7 I lie awake; I have become
   like a bird alone on a roof.

8 All day long my enemies taunt me;
   those who rail against me use my name as a curse.

9 For I eat ashes as my food
   and mingle my drink with tears

10 because of your great wrath,
   for you have taken me up and thrown me aside.

11 My days are like the evening shadow;
   I wither away like grass.

    12 But you, LORD, sit enthroned forever;
   your renown endures through all generations.

13 You will arise and have compassion on Zion,
   for it is time to show favor to her;
   the appointed time has come.

14 For her stones are dear to your servants;
   her very dust moves them to pity.

15 The nations will fear the name of the LORD,
   all the kings of the earth will revere your glory.

16 For the LORD will rebuild Zion
   and appear in his glory.

17 He will respond to the prayer of the destitute;
   he will not despise their plea.

    18 Let this be written for a future generation,
   that a people not yet created may praise the LORD:

19 “The LORD looked down from his sanctuary on high,
   from heaven he viewed the earth,

20 to hear the groans of the prisoners
   and release those condemned to death.”

21 So the name of the LORD will be declared in Zion
   and his praise in Jerusalem

22 when the peoples and the kingdoms
   assemble to worship the LORD.

    23 In the course of my life Or By his power he broke my strength;
   he cut short my days.

24 So I said:
“Do not take me away, my God, in the midst of my days;
   your years go on through all generations.

25 In the beginning you laid the foundations of the earth,
   and the heavens are the work of your hands.

26 They will perish, but you remain;
   they will all wear out like a garment.
Like clothing you will change them
   and they will be discarded.

27 But you remain the same,
   and your years will never end.

28 The children of your servants will live in your presence;
   their descendants will be established before you.”


11. My days are like the shadow which declineth 146146     It is literally, “My days are like a shadow, stretched out.” As the sun descends in the firmament, the shadow of any terrestrial object gradually lengthens, and grows fainter as it becomes longer, until shooting out to an unmeasurable length, it disappears. The Psalmist complains that his days were like a shadow nearly stretched to its utmost length, and at the point of being lost in total darkness. He felt that he had far passed his meridian, that the sun of life was about to set, and the dark night of death to fall down upon him” — See Psalm 109:23. When the sun is directly over our heads, that is to say, at mid-day, we do not observe such sudden changes of the shadows which his light produces; but when he begins to decline towards the west the shadows vary almost every moment, This is the reason why the sacred writer expressly makes mention of the shadow which declineth What he attributes to the afflicted Church seems indeed to be equally applicable to all men; but he had a special reason for employing this comparison to illustrate the condition of the Church when subjected to the calamity of exile. It is true, that as soon as we advance towards old age, we speedily fall into decay. But the complaint here is, that this befell the people of God in the very flower of their age. By the term days is to be understood the whole course of their life; and the meaning is, that the captivity was to the godly as the setting of the sun, because they quickly failed. In the end of the verse the similitude of withered grass, used a little before, is repeated, to intimate that their life during the captivity was involved in many sorrows which dried up in them the very sap of life. Nor is this wonderful, since to live in that condition would have been worse than a hundred deaths had they not been sustained by the hope of future deliverance. But although they were not altogether overwhelmed by temptation, they must have been in great distress, because they saw themselves abandoned by God.


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