to hear the groans of the prisoners, to set free those who were doomed to die,
This prayer belongs to the faithful in Babylon's captivity, when deliverance drew near. They lament their afflictions, plead for the temple's restoration, and recall God's promises to steady their hope. The prophet shaped it as a form of prayer when the seventy years were nearly finished and comfort was about to break forth.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 102:1-28
God leans from heaven's battlements not to watch the great and mighty, but to hear the groaning of prisoners and loose those appointed to death. His mercy is astounding: He bends to relieve the distress of the condemned, breaking their chains by providential rescue and, spiritually, by pardoning grace that lifts us from the deadly despair sin creates. We who were once children of death yet are now free must praise Him without measure.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 102:19
My days vanish like a shadow, but You sit enthroned forever, Your remembrance burning through all generations. A man who loves God better than himself takes comfort here: though I die and my name sink into dust, Your church's interests are safe in hands that never fail, and deliverance for Zion must come.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 102:12-22