his soul will go to the generation of his fathers, who will never again see light.
The wicked enjoy prosperity while God's people suffer affliction, which tempts the faithful to despair. But the Psalmist means to check their envy and moderate the pride of the ungodly by showing that worldly happiness, however grand it appears, is vain and evanescent, whereas the godly, tried though they be, remain the objects of divine regard and shall be delivered from their enemies.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 49:1-20
He shall go to the generation of his fathers. Where the former generations lie, the present shall also slumber. The sires beckon to their sons to come to the same land of forgetfulness. Mortal fathers beget not immortal children. As our ancestors have departed, so also must we. They shall never see light.
The believer's great comfort in death is this: God will redeem the soul from the grave's power and receive it into glory. Rich and poor meet in the grave alike, yet their spiritual states divide them forever at death. When death breaks the lantern, the candle inside does not go out; the soul lives on, freed from its prison, conversing more freely than ever, until body and soul reunite in resurrection.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 49:15-20