Psalm 90:1 A Prayer of Moses the man of God. Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Who, considering that terrible but righteous sentence of God concerning the cutting off all that sinful generation in the wilderness, of which see
Numbers 14, takes that occasion to publish these meditations concerning mans mortality and misery in this life, which might be useful both to that and to all succeeding generations.
Moses, setting forth the eternity and providence of God,
Psalm 90:1 :2, describeth the misery and shortness of man’s life,
Psalm 90:3-11; prayeth for wisdom to number his days,
Psalm 90:12; and for the knowledge and sensible experience of God’s good providence,
Psalm 90:13-17.
Although we and our fathers, for some generations, have had no certain and fixed habitation, but have been
strangers in a land that was not ours, and
afflicted
for
four hundred years, according to thy prediction,
Genesis 15:13; and although we now are, and have been for some time, and still are like to continue, in, a vast howling wilderness, having no houses but dwelling in tents, and wandering from place to place, we know not whither; yet thou, O Lord, hast fully supplied this want, and hast been instead of and better than a dwelling-place to us, by thy watchful and gracious providence over us in all places and exigencies. And this is a very proper preface to this Psalm, to intimate that all the following miseries were not to be imputed to God, but unto themselves, who by their own sins had brought these mischiefs upon themselves.