Psalm 102: The Smoke and the Everlasting
Here is a prayer so raw it barely holds together. The psalmist is not composing poetry — he is disintegrating. His days are consumed like smoke, his bones burn like a hearth, his heart is smitten and withered like grass in a drought. He has become, he says, like a pelican in the wilderness, an owl in the desert, a sparrow alone on a housetop — each image more desolate than the last, as though loneliness itself were a landscape he is mapping. And yet, right at the center of this unraveling, comes the turn that changes everything: "But thou, O Lord, shall endure for ever." It is not a pivot from despair to joy — the psalmist is still suffering — but it is a pivot from self to God. And from that shift flows the most extraordinary claim in the psalm: that the heavens themselves, those seemingly eternal fixtures, will wax old like a garment and be changed like a worn coat, but God will remain the same, his years without end. The afflicted man, who began by begging God merely to hear him, ends by declaring that the children of God's servants shall continue and their seed be established. Not because his own pain has lessened, but because he has looked past it to the one thing that does not perish.
00:00 A Cry from the Ashes
01:00 The Sparrow Alone
02:00 God Looks Down from Heaven
03:00 The Heavens Shall Perish, But Thou Endurest