The children of thy servants shall continue, and their seed shall be established before thee.
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
The children of thy servants shall continue. The Psalmist had early in the psalm looked forward to a future generation, and here he speaks with confidence that such a race would arise and be preserved and blessed of God. Some read it as a prayer, "let the sons of thy servants abide." Any way, it is full of good cheer to us; we may plead...
When the ten tribes were lost in Assyria and Judah nearly lost in Babylon, the promise seemed to fail utterly; the strength of that nation was broken in the way, and the day of the Messiah appeared cut short. Yet the psalmist cries out as we all must when sickness or early death threatens: God's hand holds our strength and time, and we must trust His love even when both are taken from us.
AI summary
Commenting on Psalm 102:23-28