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Psalm 90:1-17

1981 Psalm 90

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In '1981 Psalm 90,' Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds Psalm 90, a prayer of Moses, to guide profitable New Year's meditation. He first establishes Moses' fundamental confession of God as the eternal, unchangeable dwelling place of His people. Then, he presents Moses' accurate assessment of man's transitory nature and existence under God's wrath due to sin. Finally, Martin outlines Moses' appropriate petitions, urging believers to number their days for wisdom and to seek God's favor, presence, and blessing on their labors, while calling unbelievers to repentance and refuge in Christ.

Primary Texts

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Psalm 90:1-17 The entire sermon is a structured overview and application of Psalm 90, presented as a guide for New Year's meditation.

Outline 8 sections · 51 min

  1. Introduction: Purpose and Author of Psalm 90 0:04
  2. Moses' Fundamental Confession of Faith: God as Eternal Dwelling Place 8:22
  3. Moses' Accurate Assessment of Man's Experience: Transitory and Under Wrath 15:54
  4. Moses' Petition for Wisdom: Numbering Our Days 26:03
  5. Moses' Specific Petitions: God's Favor, Presence, and Blessing on Labor 32:27
  6. Application for Unbelievers: Flee to Christ 38:11
  7. Application for Believers: Live with Purpose and Prayer 43:16
  8. Concluding Prayer and Exhortation 46:57

Key Quotes

“My pastoral concern is simply this. In the first psalm, the blessed man or woman is described as the one who meditates in the law of God day and night.”
“And you see, if there was any change whatsoever in God, what had been from eternity would not be the same as what now is or what shall be. And in this very simple but eloquent way we have testimony to what the theologians call the immutability, the changelessness of God.”
“But you must begin where Moses began. Begin not with God in abstraction, but God in the wonder and in the glory of His covenant commitments to His people. He is the dwelling place of His people.”
“It's a question of course that is not answered in the passage but surely the answer is implied in the very way he asked the question that one of the tragedies of our sin is that our sin has blinded us to the very realities that our sin has brought upon us.”
“No one can dispute that. And yet most men live as though they were going to live forever.”
“And what is a heart of wisdom in the context? It is a heart that dictates a pattern of life. Commensurate with the brevity of life.”
“what kind of life do you want in the extension of that life is it that you might have more days upon which to squander God's gifts more days upon which to squander God's gifts more days in which to carry out a life of rebellion and indifference to the claims of God in his law and in the gospel not so with Moses”
“that physical death which will overtake you is just a frightening preview of that death of deaths which is separation of the soul and body from the presence of God in that place that the Bible calls Gehenna hell the lake of fire outer darkness”

Applications

Believers

  • As a congregation, pray for God to establish the work of your hands in the coming year as you move into a new situation and desire to do what He has commanded.

All listeners

  • Focus your meditation as a starting point not on man's changelessness or your failures, but on God in the wonder and glory of His covenant commitments to His people.
  • Take a long, hard, sober, realistic view of man's experience, coming to grips with the fact that God is turning man back to destruction and that man is living under the wrath of God.
  • If you are looking at things as they really are, you will cry out with Moses, 'Who knows the power of thine anger and thy wrath according to the fear that is due unto thee?'
  • Pray for a heart of wisdom to number your days, realistically coming to grips with man's transitory nature and living a pattern of life commensurate with its brevity.
  • Be not unwise, but understand what the will of the Lord is, redeeming the time, buying up the opportunity, for the days are evil.
  • Examine what kind of life you want in the extension of your days; do you desire more days to squander God's gifts or to live in rebellion, or do you desire a life filled with God's presence, favor, and usefulness?
  • If God is not your dwelling place, flee for refuge to the Lord Jesus Christ, for all that is said about man's destruction and God's wrath is true of you.
  • Do not despise the goodness of God, which is intended to lead you to repentance; pray with Moses, 'Oh God, teach me to number my days.'
  • If you are out of Christ, God offers Himself to be the dwelling place of every poor, helpless sinner if you will come through the door He has appointed, which is His Son.
  • As parents, take Psalm 90 and make it your prayer, asking the Lord to establish the work of your hands in the care of your little ones, making every service an offering to Him.
  • Pray that God's glory would be manifested in His works not only to you and your spouse but also upon your children.
  • Take the prayer of Moses, the man of God, and make it yours: begin with his confession of faith, view life realistically, earnestly pray to number your days for wisdom, and make his specific petitions your own, fleshing them out with your particulars.
  • Amidst legitimate time spent feasting and watching football, make time to sneak away and sit down with Moses' prayer to meditate upon it for the profit of your own soul.
  • Pray for forgiveness for wasted hours and days, for squandering the precious commodity of time, and ask God to help you number your days and live wisely under His favor.
  • Pray for those who are strangers to God's grace, that they may seek Him while He may be found and call upon Him while He is near.
  • Grant that our lives may adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in all things.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 87 paragraphs, roughly 51 minutes.

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