Psalms 90:1
This is, beyond fair doubt, the oldest Psalm in the whole Psalter. It
is the work, not of David, but, as the inscription tells us in the
Bible version, of Moses. Especially like Moses is the union of
melancholy and fervour which meets us here the fervour of the intrepid
servant of God d... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:1
Scripture certainly emphasises in many places the frail and fleeting
aspect of life; the thought of man's mortality runs as a wail through
many a psalm, and touches with pathos the heart of the prophet in his
brightest visions. But then there is always in Scripture another side
of the p... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90
This Psalm sets out with the definite statement of a theologic
doctrine: the doctrine of the eternity of God.
I. This splendid thought of the Divine eternity is made to touch the
shifting and inconstant character of our earthly state by the single
word "dwelling-place." Here God's eterni... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:3
Two of the greatest lessons which Christ came to teach us were the
Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. Look at man in himself,
look at man as he makes himself by yielding to and aiding in the fraud
and malice of the devil, and hardly any language can be too bitter to
describe h... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:7
I. In this passage we find: (1) an exercise of penitential faith or
believing repentance; (2) an exercise of believing appropriation and
assurance.
II. The three petitions in Psalms 90:16 and Psalms 90:17 point to work
or entering into work as being the peaceable fruit of righteousness.... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:9
No part of the ancient Scriptures is less obsolete than this Psalm. It
is a picture still true to nature. Human life, viewed generally, has
not since brightened up into a scene of joy and triumph. The text
seems to express both a necessary fact and a censure. The rapid
consumption of ou... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:10
It is a paradox, and yet, like many other paradoxes, a truism also, to
say that death generally alters, sometimes reverses, the whole
estimate of a life. It will scarcely be doubted that in such cases the
second judgment, if not absolutely just, is the more just in
comparison. The true... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:11
I. When I consider the difficulties which lie in the way of our
measuring the anger of God, I conclude that it is chiefly His steady
and orderly goodness which has thrust His displeasure out of sight. So
far as one can see from the present arrangements of the world, it is
God's way to w... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:12
The great mistake, perhaps, that people make when they reflect on the
probable time they shall live in the body, is to think of their life
on earth as the only life they have. We should not number our days in
any such fashion as this. Time is to be regarded and prized not for
the harve... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:16
This Psalm has a threefold interest: of subject, of authorship, and of
association. It touches the most solemn, most momentous, most
affecting point in the life of man. Its author is "Moses the man of
God." It has been heard by us when standing in the presence of death.
I. The words o... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:16
I. The prayer of the Psalmist is not the prayer of the wearied,
disappointed prophet, "It is enough; now, O Lord, take away my life,"
but the prayer of one who looks forward, of one who would fain build
what will be continued by them that come after. "Show Thy servants Thy
work, and th... [ Continue Reading ]
Psalms 90:17
I. What is the beauty of God? The excellence of His character. The
meaning of all beauty is to image the holiness and excellence of God.
The perception of beauty has been given us not, as some suppose, for
enjoyment merely, but to bind us to the infinite, to make it more
difficult for m... [ Continue Reading ]