Psalms Chapter 90

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October 13, 2025

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🏠 God Has Always Been Our Home

Lord, You have been like a safe, cozy home for Your people for as long as anyone can remember—even before our great-great-great-grandparents were born! Before the mountains were even made, before the earth existed, You were already God. You have always been here, and You will always be here forever and ever.ᵃ

⏰ God Sees Time Differently Than We Do

When God looks at time, it’s totally different than how we see it. To Him, a thousand years is like just one day—or even like staying up for just a few hours at night! That’s because God lives outside of time. He made time, so He’s not stuck in it like we are.

🌱 Our Lives Are Short, But God Is Forever

God made us from the dust of the earth, and one day our bodies return to dust. He says, “Return to dust, you people I created.” Our lives here on earth are pretty short—kind of like grass that sprouts up fresh and green in the morning but gets dry and brown by evening. Sometimes God gets angry when we do wrong things. He sees everything we do—even the secret stuff we think nobody knows about. He sees it all because He is holy and perfectᵇ and wants us to be good too.

📅 Learning to Use Our Time Wisely

Most people live to be around 70 or 80 years old if they’re healthy. But even those years go by really fast! And let’s be honest—life can be hard sometimes with troubles and sadness. Before we know it, our time on earth is over. That’s why the psalm writer prays: Teach us to remember that our days are limited, so we can learn to be wise with the time we have. This means making good choices and not wasting the precious life God gave us!

🙏 A Prayer for God’s Help

The writer then asks God: “Please change Your mind about being angry! How long will You stay upset? Please be kind to the people who serve You!” He prays: Fill us up each morning with Your amazing love, so we can be happy and sing with joy every single day! Make us just as happy as we were sad before. Let the hard times turn into good times!

✨ Asking God to Bless Our Work

The psalm ends with a beautiful prayer: Let us see the wonderful things You do, God! Let our children see how awesome You are! Please be kind to us and make everything we do turn out well. Yes, please bless the work we do with our hands! This means the writer is asking God to help everything we try to do—whether it’s schoolwork, helping our families, being kind to friends, or anything else—be successful and make God happy.

👣 Footnotes:

  • Everlasting to Everlasting: This means God has no beginning and no end. He wasn’t born like we were, and He will never die. He’s always been alive and always will be!
  • Holy and Perfect: God never does anything wrong. He is completely good, pure, and perfect in every way. That’s why sin (the wrong things we do) makes Him sad and angry—because He is so perfectly good.
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Footnotes:

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    A Prayer of Moses the man of God. Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.
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    Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou [art] God.
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    Thou turnest man to destruction; and sayest, Return, ye children of men.
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    For a thousand years in thy sight [are but] as yesterday when it is past, and [as] a watch in the night.
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    Thou carriest them away as with a flood; they are [as] a sleep: in the morning [they are] like grass [which] groweth up.
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    In the morning it flourisheth, and groweth up; in the evening it is cut down, and withereth.
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    For we are consumed by thine anger, and by thy wrath are we troubled.
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    Thou hast set our iniquities before thee, our secret [sins] in the light of thy countenance.
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    For all our days are passed away in thy wrath: we spend our years as a tale [that is told].
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    The days of our years [are] threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength [they be] fourscore years, yet [is] their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.
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    Who knoweth the power of thine anger? even according to thy fear, [so is] thy wrath.
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    So teach [us] to number our days, that we may apply [our] hearts unto wisdom.
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    Return, O LORD, how long? and let it repent thee concerning thy servants.
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    O satisfy us early with thy mercy; that we may rejoice and be glad all our days.
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    Make us glad according to the days [wherein] thou hast afflicted us, [and] the years [wherein] we have seen evil.
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    Let thy work appear unto thy servants, and thy glory unto their children.
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    And let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us: and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work of our hands establish thou it.
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    A prayer of Moses the man of God. Lord, You have been our dwelling place through all generations.
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    Before the mountains were born or You brought forth the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting You are God.
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    You return man to dust, saying, “Return, O sons of mortals.”
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    For in Your sight a thousand years are but a day that passes, or a watch of the night.
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    You whisk them away in their sleep; they are like the new grass of the morning—
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    in the morning it springs up new, but by evening it fades and withers.
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    For we are consumed by Your anger and terrified by Your wrath.
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    You have set our iniquities before You, our secret sins in the light of Your presence.
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    For all our days decline in Your fury; we finish our years with a sigh.
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    The length of our days is seventy years—or eighty if we are strong—yet their pride is but labor and sorrow, for they quickly pass, and we fly away.
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    Who knows the power of Your anger? Your wrath matches the fear You are due.
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    So teach us to number our days, that we may present a heart of wisdom.
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    Return, O LORD! How long will it be? Have compassion on Your servants.
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    Satisfy us in the morning with Your loving devotion, that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days.
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    Make us glad for as many days as You have afflicted us, for as many years as we have seen evil.
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    May Your work be shown to Your servants, and Your splendor to their children.
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    May the favor of the Lord our God rest upon us; establish for us the work of our hands—yes, establish the work of our hands!

Psalms Chapter 90 Commentary

When Eternity Meets Mortality

What’s Psalm 90 about?

This is Moses’ only psalm in the entire collection – a prayer where the great liberator of Israel wrestles with the crushing weight of human mortality against the backdrop of God’s eternal nature. It’s both a sobering meditation on death and a surprising blueprint for finding meaning in our brief existence.

The Full Context

Picture Moses in his final years, somewhere in the wilderness, looking back on decades of leading a grumbling, rebellious people through the desert. He’s watched an entire generation die off – including his own brother Aaron – and he knows his own death is approaching. This isn’t just any leader reflecting on mortality; this is the man who spoke with God face to face, who saw the glory of the Lord, now grappling with the stark reality that even he, the great Moses, will not escape death’s grip.

What makes Psalm 90 so remarkable is its literary structure within the broader Psalter. It stands as the only psalm attributed to Moses, creating a bridge between the Torah and the worship songs of Israel. The psalm serves as both a theological treatise on the nature of God’s eternity versus human frailty and a practical prayer for wisdom in the face of life’s brevity. Ancient Near Eastern literature often dealt with mortality, but rarely with such theological depth combined with pastoral heart. Moses isn’t just philosophizing – he’s pastoring a people who needed to understand why their lives seemed so fragile and brief compared to God’s eternal promises.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The opening line hits you like a theological thunderbolt: “Adonai, you have been our dwelling place in all generations” (Psalm 90:1). That word ma’on for “dwelling place” is fascinating – it’s not just any shelter, but specifically a habitation or refuge. Moses is saying that while everything else shifts and changes, God himself has been Israel’s permanent address across the centuries.

But then comes the contrast that makes your head spin. Psalm 90:3 uses the word shuwb – “You turn man back to dust” – the same word used when God told Adam he would return to dust in Genesis 3:19. Moses isn’t just making a poetic observation; he’s connecting this psalm directly back to the fall narrative.

Grammar Geeks

The Hebrew phrase in verse 4 literally reads “a thousand years are like yesterday when it passes by.” The verb ’abar (passes by) is the same one used for the Passover – when death “passed over” the houses with blood on the doorposts. There’s a subtle but powerful connection here between God’s eternal perspective and his power over death itself.

The most striking linguistic choice comes in Psalm 90:10 where Moses talks about our years being “seventy, or by strength eighty.” The Hebrew word for “strength” here is g’vurah – the same word used for God’s mighty acts of deliverance. Moses is saying that even our longest lives, achieved by God’s own strength, are still remarkably brief.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Put yourself in the sandals of an Israelite in the wilderness. You’ve been wandering for decades. Your parents’ generation? Dead. Your grandparents? Dead. The promised land still feels like a distant dream, and now even Moses – the man who split the Red Sea – is talking about the brevity of life.

But here’s what would have struck them: Moses isn’t complaining about God’s character. He’s not questioning God’s goodness or faithfulness. Instead, he’s reframing their entire understanding of what it means to be human in relationship to an eternal God.

Ancient Near Eastern cultures were obsessed with achieving some form of immortality – through great buildings, through children, through heroic deeds. But Moses is telling Israel something radically different: your meaning doesn’t come from extending your life, but from understanding your place in God’s eternal story.

Did You Know?

Archaeological evidence suggests that the average lifespan in Moses’ time was actually much shorter than the 70-80 years he mentions. Most people lived to be 30-40 years old. Moses might be describing not just the potential human lifespan, but specifically the lifespan of leaders and those blessed by God – making his point about brevity even more poignant.

The original audience would have heard Psalm 90:12 – “teach us to number our days” – not as morbid advice, but as revolutionary wisdom. In cultures that tried to ignore death or defeat it, Moses is saying: embrace the reality of your mortality so you can live wisely within it.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where things get really interesting. Psalm 90:7-11 seems to suggest that our brief lives are somehow connected to God’s wrath: “For we are consumed by your anger and terrified by your wrath.” Wait – is Moses saying we die because God is angry with us?

This isn’t about God being vindictive. Moses is making a deeper theological point about the nature of fallen creation. Death entered the world through human rebellion (Romans 5:12), and God’s holy nature cannot coexist with sin indefinitely. But – and this is crucial – Moses doesn’t end there.

The psalm’s turning point comes in verse 13: “Return, O LORD! How long? Have compassion on your servants!” The word shuwb appears again – the same word used for our return to dust. Moses is essentially saying: “God, if you can turn us back to dust, you can also turn back to us in mercy.”

Wait, That’s Strange…

Why does Moses ask “How long?” in verse 13 when he’s just spent the entire psalm talking about how brief human life is? It’s almost like he’s caught between two timeframes – the eternal perspective where a thousand years is like a day, and the human perspective where even 70 years feels desperately short. Moses seems to be wrestling with the tension between God’s eternal plans and human impatience for relief.

How This Changes Everything

The genius of Psalm 90 isn’t just its honest treatment of mortality – it’s the profound shift it makes in verses 13-17. After dwelling on human frailty for twelve verses, Moses doesn’t ask God to make humans live longer. He asks for something far more revolutionary: satisfaction, joy, and meaningful work.

Look at what Moses actually prays for:

This is stunning. Moses has just painted the most sobering picture of human mortality in all of Scripture, and his solution isn’t to escape mortality but to find meaning within it. He’s essentially saying: “God, we can’t extend our days, but you can fill our days.”

“The answer to life’s brevity isn’t more time – it’s more meaning in the time we have.”

The final verse (Psalm 90:17) contains a Hebrew word that appears twice: kuwn – “establish.” Moses is asking God to make their brief work permanent, to give their temporary lives eternal significance. It’s the most hopeful ending to the most sobering psalm.

Key Takeaway

Moses teaches us that the secret to meaningful living isn’t denying our mortality but embracing it wisely – finding our security not in the length of our days but in the eternal God who fills our brief years with purpose, satisfaction, and work that outlasts us.

Further Reading

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