x

Biblia Todo Logo
idiomas
BibliaTodo Commentaries





«

Lamentations 5 - Treasury of Scripture Knowledge vs Calvin John vs Coke Thomas

×

Lamentations 5

Lamentations 5:1

Remember, O LORD, what is come upon us: consider, and behold our reproach.

remember

Lamentations 1:20 Behold, O LORD; for I am in distress: my bowels are troubled; my …

Lamentations 2:20 Behold, O LORD, and consider to whom you have done this. Shall the …

Lamentations 3:19 Remembering my affliction and my misery, the wormwood and the gall.

Nehemiah 1:8 Remember, I beseech you, the word that you commanded your servant …

Job 7:7 O remember that my life is wind: my eye shall no more see good.

Job 10:9 Remember, I beseech you, that you have made me as the clay; and will …

Jeremiah 15:15 O LORD, you know: remember me, and visit me, and revenge me of my …

Habakkuk 3:2 O LORD, I have heard your speech, and was afraid: O LORD, revive …

Luke 23:42 And he said to Jesus, Lord, remember me when you come into your kingdom.

behold

Lamentations 2:15 All that pass by clap their hands at you; they hiss and wag their …

Lamentations 3:61 You have heard their reproach, O LORD, and all their imaginations against me;

Nehemiah 1:3 And they said to me, The remnant that are left of the captivity there …

Nehemiah 4:4 Hear, O our God; for we are despised: and turn their reproach on …

Psalm 44:13-16 You make us a reproach to our neighbors, a scorn and a derision to …

Psalm 74:10,11 O God, how long shall the adversary reproach? shall the enemy blaspheme …

Psalm 79:4,12 We are become a reproach to our neighbors, a scorn and derision to …

Psalm 89:50,51 Remember, Lord, the reproach of your servants; how I do bear in my …

Psalm 123:3,4 Have mercy on us, O LORD, have mercy on us: for we are exceedingly …

Lamentations 5:2

Our inheritance is turned to strangers, our houses to aliens.

Deuteronomy 28:30 You shall betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her: you …

Psalm 79:1,2 O God, the heathen are come into your inheritance; your holy temple …

Isaiah 1:7 Your country is desolate, your cities are burned with fire: your …

Isaiah 5:17 Then shall the lambs feed after their manner, and the waste places …

Isaiah 63:18 The people of your holiness have possessed it but a little while: …

Jeremiah 6:12 And their houses shall be turned to others, with their fields and …

Ezekiel 7:21,24 And I will give it into the hands of the strangers for a prey, and …

Zephaniah 1:13 Therefore their goods shall become a booty, and their houses a desolation: …

Lamentations 5:3

We are orphans and fatherless, our mothers are as widows.

Exodus 22:24 And my wrath shall wax hot, and I will kill you with the sword; and …

Jeremiah 18:21 Therefore deliver up their children to the famine, and pour out their …

Hosea 14:3 Asshur shall not save us; we will not ride on horses: neither will …

Lamentations 5:4

We have drunken our water for money; our wood is sold unto us.

have

Deuteronomy 28:48 Therefore shall you serve your enemies which the LORD shall send …

Isaiah 3:1 For, behold, the Lord, the LORD of hosts, does take away from Jerusalem …

Ezekiel 4:9-17 Take you also to you wheat, and barley, and beans, and lentils, and …

is sold. Heb. cometh for price

Lamentations 5:5

Our necks are under persecution: we labour, and have no rest.

our necks are under persecution. Heb. on our necks are we persecuted

Lamentations 1:14 The yoke of my transgressions is bound by his hand: they are wreathed, …

Lamentations 4:19 Our persecutors are swifter than the eagles of the heaven: they pursued …

Deuteronomy 28:48,65,66 Therefore shall you serve your enemies which the LORD shall send …

Jeremiah 27:2,8,11,12 Thus said the LORD to me; Make you bonds and yokes, and put them on your neck…

Jeremiah 28:14 For thus said the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel; I have put a …

Matthew 11:29 Take my yoke on you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in …

Acts 15:10 Now therefore why tempt you God, to put a yoke on the neck of the …

labour

Nehemiah 9:36,37 Behold, we are servants this day, and for the land that you gave …

Lamentations 5:6

We have given the hand to the Egyptians, and to the Assyrians, to be satisfied with bread.

given

Genesis 24:2 And Abraham said to his oldest servant of his house, that ruled over …

2 Kings 10:15 And when he was departed there, he lighted on Jehonadab the son of …

Jeremiah 50:15 Shout against her round about: she has given her hand: her foundations …

Ezekiel 17:18 Seeing he despised the oath by breaking the covenant, when, see, …

to the Egyptians

Isaiah 30:1-6 Woe to the rebellious children, said the LORD, that take counsel, …

Isaiah 31:1-3 Woe to them that go down to Egypt for help; and stay on horses, and …

Isaiah 57:9 And you went to the king with ointment, and did increase your perfumes, …

Jeremiah 2:18,36 And now what have you to do in the way of Egypt, to drink the waters …

Jeremiah 44:12-14 And I will take the remnant of Judah, that have set their faces to …

Hosea 5:13 When Ephraim saw his sickness, and Judah saw his wound, then went …

Hosea 7:11 Ephraim also is like a silly dove without heart: they call to Egypt, …

Hosea 9:3 They shall not dwell in the LORD's land; but Ephraim shall return …

Hosea 12:1 Ephraim feeds on wind, and follows after the east wind: he daily …

Lamentations 5:7

Our fathers have sinned, and are not; and we have borne their iniquities.

fathers

Exodus 20:5 You shall not bow down yourself to them, nor serve them: for I the …

Jeremiah 16:12 And you have done worse than your fathers; for, behold, you walk …

Jeremiah 31:29 In those days they shall say no more, The fathers have eaten a sour …

Ezekiel 18:2 What mean you, that you use this proverb concerning the land of Israel, …

Matthew 23:32-36 Fill you up then the measure of your fathers…

and are

Genesis 42:13,36 And they said, Your servants are twelve brothers, the sons of one …

Job 7:8,21 The eye of him that has seen me shall see me no more: your eyes are …

Jeremiah 31:15 Thus said the LORD; A voice was heard in Ramah, lamentation, and …

Zechariah 1:5 Your fathers, where are they? and the prophets, do they live for ever?

Lamentations 5:8

Servants have ruled over us: there is none that doth deliver us out of their hand.

servants

Genesis 9:25 And he said, Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants shall he be …

Deuteronomy 28:43 The stranger that is within you shall get up above you very high; …

Nehemiah 2:19 But when Sanballat the Horonite, and Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, …

Nehemiah 5:15 But the former governors that had been before me were chargeable …

Proverbs 30:22 For a servant when he reigns; and a fool when he is filled with meat;

there

Job 5:4 His children are far from safety, and they are crushed in the gate, …

Job 10:7 You know that I am not wicked; and there is none that can deliver …

Psalm 7:2 Lest he tear my soul like a lion, rending it in pieces, while there …

Psalm 50:22 Now consider this, you that forget God, lest I tear you in pieces, …

Isaiah 43:13 Yes, before the day was I am he; and there is none that can deliver …

Hosea 2:10 And now will I discover her lewdness in the sight of her lovers, …

Zechariah 11:6 For I will no more pity the inhabitants of the land, said the LORD: …

Lamentations 5:9

We gat our bread with the peril of our lives because of the sword of the wilderness.

Judges 6:11 And there came an angel of the LORD, and sat under an oak which was …

2 Samuel 23:17 And he said, Be it far from me, O LORD, that I should do this: is …

Jeremiah 40:9-12 And Gedaliah the son of Ahikam the son of Shaphan swore to them and …

Jeremiah 41:1-10,18 Now it came to pass in the seventh month, that Ishmael the son of …

Ezekiel 4:16,17 Moreover he said to me, Son of man, behold, I will break the staff …

Ezekiel 12:18,19 Son of man, eat your bread with quaking, and drink your water with …

Lamentations 5:10

Our skin was black like an oven because of the terrible famine.

skin

Lamentations 3:4 My flesh and my skin has he made old; he has broken my bones.

Lamentations 4:8 Their visage is blacker than a coal; they are not known in the streets: …

Job 30:30 My skin is black on me, and my bones are burned with heat.

Psalm 119:83 For I am become like a bottle in the smoke; yet do I not forget your statutes.

terrible famine, or terrors, or storms of famine

Lamentations 5:11

They ravished the women in Zion, and the maids in the cities of Judah.

Deuteronomy 28:30 You shall betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her: you …

Isaiah 13:16 Their children also shall be dashed to pieces before their eyes; …

Zechariah 14:2 For I will gather all nations against Jerusalem to battle; and the …

Lamentations 5:12

Princes are hanged up by their hand: the faces of elders were not honoured.

Lamentations 2:10,20 The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground, and keep silence: …

Lamentations 4:16 The anger of the LORD has divided them; he will no more regard them: …

Isaiah 47:6 I was wroth with my people, I have polluted my inheritance, and given …

Jeremiah 39:6,7 Then the king of Babylon slew the sons of Zedekiah in Riblah before …

Jeremiah 52:10,11,25-27 And the king of Babylon slew the sons of Zedekiah before his eyes: …

Lamentations 5:13

They took the young men to grind, and the children fell under the wood.

the young

Exodus 11:5 And all the firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from the first …

Judges 16:21 But the Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him …

Job 31:10 Then let my wife grind to another, and let others bow down on her.

Isaiah 47:2 Take the millstones, and grind meal: uncover your locks, make bore …

fell

Exodus 1:11 Therefore they did set over them taskmasters to afflict them with …

Exodus 2:11 And it came to pass in those days, when Moses was grown, that he …

Exodus 23:5 If you see the donkey of him that hates you lying under his burden, …

Nehemiah 5:1-5 And there was a great cry of the people and of their wives against …

Isaiah 58:6 Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, …

Matthew 23:4 For they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them …

Lamentations 5:14

The elders have ceased from the gate, the young men from their musick.

elders

Lamentations 1:4,19 The ways of Zion do mourn, because none come to the solemn feasts: …

Lamentations 2:10 The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground, and keep silence: …

Deuteronomy 16:18 Judges and officers shall you make you in all your gates, which the …

Job 29:7-17 When I went out to the gate through the city, when I prepared my …

Job 30:1 But now they that are younger than I have me in derision, whose fathers …

Isaiah 3:2,3 The mighty man, and the man of war, the judge, and the prophet, and …

the young

Job 30:31 My harp also is turned to mourning, and my organ into the voice of …

Isaiah 24:7-11 The new wine mourns, the vine languishes, all the merry hearted do sigh…

Jeremiah 7:34 Then will I cause to cease from the cities of Judah, and from the …

Jeremiah 16:9 For thus said the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel; Behold, I will …

Jeremiah 25:10 Moreover I will take from them the voice of mirth, and the voice …

Ezekiel 26:13 And I will cause the noise of your songs to cease; and the sound …

Revelation 18:22 And the voice of harpers, and musicians, and of pipers, and trumpeters, …

Lamentations 5:15

The joy of our heart is ceased; our dance is turned into mourning.

our dance

Psalm 30:11 You have turned for me my mourning into dancing: you have put off …

Amos 6:4-7 That lie on beds of ivory, and stretch themselves on their couches, …

Amos 8:10 And I will turn your feasts into mourning, and all your songs into …

James 4:9,10 Be afflicted, and mourn, and weep: let your laughter be turned to …

Lamentations 5:16

The crown is fallen from our head: woe unto us, that we have sinned!

the crown

Lamentations 1:1 How does the city sit solitary, that was full of people! how is she …

Job 19:9 He has stripped me of my glory, and taken the crown from my head.

Psalm 89:39 You have made void the covenant of your servant: you have profaned …

Jeremiah 13:18 Say to the king and to the queen, Humble yourselves, sit down: for …

Ezekiel 21:26 Thus said the Lord GOD; Remove the diadem, and take off the crown: …

Revelation 2:10 Fear none of those things which you shall suffer: behold, the devil …

Revelation 3:11 Behold, I come quickly: hold that fast which you have, that no man …

is fallen from our head. Heb. of our head is fallen. woe

Lamentations 1:8,18 Jerusalem has grievously sinned; therefore she is removed: all that …

Lamentations 2:1 How has the LORD covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his …

Lamentations 4:13 For the sins of her prophets, and the iniquities of her priests, …

Proverbs 14:34 Righteousness exalts a nation: but sin is a reproach to any people.

Isaiah 3:9-11 The show of their countenance does witness against them; and they …

Jeremiah 2:17,19 Have you not procured this to yourself, in that you have forsaken …

Jeremiah 4:18 Your way and your doings have procured these things to you; this …

Ezekiel 7:17-22 All hands shall be feeble, and all knees shall be weak as water…

Ezekiel 22:12-16 In you have they taken gifts to shed blood; you have taken usury and increase…

2 Peter 2:4-6 For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down …

Lamentations 5:17

For this our heart is faint; for these things our eyes are dim.

our heart

Lamentations 1:13,22 From above has he sent fire into my bones, and it prevails against …

Leviticus 26:36 And on them that are left alive of you I will send a faintness into …

Isaiah 1:5 Why should you be stricken any more? you will revolt more and more: …

Jeremiah 8:18 When I would comfort myself against sorrow, my heart is faint in me.

Jeremiah 46:5 Why have I seen them dismayed and turned away back? and their mighty …

Ezekiel 21:7,15 And it shall be, when they say to you, Why sigh you? that you shall …

Micah 6:13 Therefore also will I make you sick in smiting you, in making you …

our eyes

Lamentations 2:11 My eyes do fail with tears, my bowels are troubled, my liver is poured …

Deuteronomy 28:65 And among these nations shall you find no ease, neither shall the …

Job 17:7 My eye also is dim by reason of sorrow, and all my members are as a shadow.

Psalm 6:7 My eye is consumed because of grief; it waxes old because of all my enemies.

Psalm 31:9 Have mercy on me, O LORD, for I am in trouble: my eye is consumed …

Psalm 69:3 I am weary of my crying: my throat is dried: my eyes fail while I …

Isaiah 38:14 Like a crane or a swallow, so did I chatter: I did mourn as a dove: …

Lamentations 5:18

Because of the mountain of Zion, which is desolate, the foxes walk upon it.

of the

Lamentations 2:8,9 The LORD has purposed to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion: …

1 Kings 9:7,8 Then will I cut off Israel out of the land which I have given them; …

Psalm 74:2,3 Remember your congregation, which you have purchased of old; the …

Jeremiah 17:3 O my mountain in the field, I will give your substance and all your …

Jeremiah 26:9 Why have you prophesied in the name of the LORD, saying, This house …

Jeremiah 52:13 And burned the house of the LORD, and the king's house; and all the …

Micah 3:12 Therefore shall Zion for your sake be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem …

the foxes

Isaiah 32:13,14 On the land of my people shall come up thorns and briers; yes, on …

Jeremiah 9:11 And I will make Jerusalem heaps, and a den of dragons; and I will …

Lamentations 5:19

Thou, O LORD, remainest for ever; thy throne from generation to generation.

remainest

Deuteronomy 33:27 The eternal God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting …

Psalm 9:7 But the LORD shall endure for ever: he has prepared his throne for judgment.

Psalm 10:16 The LORD is King for ever and ever: the heathen are perished out of his land.

Psalm 29:10 The LORD sits on the flood; yes, the LORD sits King for ever.

Psalm 90:2 Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the …

Psalm 102:12,25-27 But you, O LORD, shall endure for ever; and your remembrance to all …

Habakkuk 1:12 Are you not from everlasting, O LORD my God, my Holy One? we shall …

1 Timothy 1:17 Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, …

1 Timothy 6:15,16 Which in his times he shall show, who is the blessed and only Potentate, …

Hebrews 1:10-12 And, You, Lord, in the beginning have laid the foundation of the …

Hebrews 13:8 Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.

Revelation 1:4,8,17,18 John to the seven churches which are in Asia: Grace be to you, and …

thy throne

Psalm 45:6 Your throne, O God, is for ever and ever: the scepter of your kingdom …

Psalm 145:13 Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and your dominion endures …

Psalm 146:10 The LORD shall reign for ever, even your God, O Zion, to all generations. …

Daniel 2:44 And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, …

Daniel 7:14,27 And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that …

Hebrews 1:8,9 But to the Son he said, Your throne, O God, is for ever and ever: …

Lamentations 5:20

Wherefore dost thou forget us for ever, and forsake us so long time?

dost

Psalm 13:1 How long will you forget me, O LORD? for ever? how long will you …

Psalm 44:24 Why hide you your face, and forget our affliction and our oppression?

Psalm 74:1 O God, why have you cast us off for ever? why does your anger smoke …

Psalm 77:7-10 Will the Lord cast off for ever? and will he be favorable no more…

Psalm 79:5 How long, LORD? will you be angry for ever? shall your jealousy burn like fire?

Psalm 85:5 Will you be angry with us for ever? will you draw out your anger …

Psalm 89:46 How long, LORD? will you hide yourself for ever? shall your wrath …

Psalm 94:3,4 LORD, how long shall the wicked, how long shall the wicked triumph…

Isaiah 64:9-12 Be not wroth very sore, O LORD, neither remember iniquity for ever: …

Jeremiah 14:19-21 Have you utterly rejected Judah? has your soul loathed Zion? why …

so long time. Heb. for length of days

Lamentations 5:21

Turn thou us unto thee, O LORD, and we shall be turned; renew our days as of old.

turn

1 Kings 18:37 Hear me, O LORD, hear me, that this people may know that you are …

Psalm 80:3,7,19 Turn us again, O God, and cause your face to shine; and we shall be saved…

Psalm 85:4 Turn us, O God of our salvation, and cause your anger toward us to cease.

Jeremiah 31:18 I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus; You have chastised …

Jeremiah 32:39,40 And I will give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear me …

Exodus 36:25-27,37 And for the other side of the tabernacle, which is toward the north …

Habakkuk 3:2 O LORD, I have heard your speech, and was afraid: O LORD, revive …

renew

Jeremiah 31:4,23-25 Again I will build you, and you shall be built, O virgin of Israel: …

Jeremiah 33:10,13 Thus said the LORD; Again there shall be heard in this place, which …

Zechariah 8:3-6 Thus said the LORD; I am returned to Zion, and will dwell in the …

Malachi 3:4 Then shall the offering of Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant to the …

Lamentations 5:22

But thou hast utterly rejected us; thou art very wroth against us.

but thou hast utterly rejected us. or, for wilt thou utterly reject us?

Psalm 44:9 But you have cast off, and put us to shame; and go not forth with our armies.

Psalm 60:1,2 O God, you have cast us off, you have scattered us, you have been …

Jeremiah 15:1-5 Then said the LORD to me, Though Moses and Samuel stood before me, …

Ezekiel 37:11 Then he said to me, Son of man, these bones are the whole house of …

Hosea 1:6 And she conceived again, and bore a daughter. And God said to him, …


×

Lamentations 5

This prayer ought to be read as unconnected with the Lamentations, for the initial letters of the verses are not written according to the order of the Alphabet; yet it is a complaint rather than a prayer; for Jeremiah mentions those things which had happened to the people in their extreme calamity in order to turn God to compassion and mercy.

He says first, Remember what has happened to us; and then in the second part he explains himself, Look and see our reproach Now the words, though brief and concise, yet contain a useful doctrine — that God is pleased to bring help to the miserable when their evils come to an account before him, especially when they are unjustly oppressed. It is, indeed, certain that nothing is unknown to God, but this mode of speaking is according to the perceptions of men; for we think that God disregards our miseries, or we imagine that his back is turned to us when he does not immediately succor us. But as I have said, he is simply to be asked to look on our evils, for we know what he testifies of himself; so that as he claims to himself the office of helping the miserable and the unjustly oppressed, we ought to acquiesce in this consolation, that as soon as he is pleased to look on the evils we suffer, aid is at the same time prepared for us.

There is mention especially made of reproach, that the indignity might move God the more: for it was for this end that he took the people under his protection, that they might be for his glory and honor, as Moses says. As, then, it was God’s will that the riches of his glory should appear in that people, nothing could have been more inconsistent that that instead of glory they should have nothing but disgrace and reproach. This, then, is the reason why the Prophet makes a special mention of the reproach of the people. It follows, —



A catalogue of many calamities is now given by the Prophet, and as I have reminded you, for this end, that he may obtain God’s favor for himself and for the whole people. It was by no means a reasonable thing, that the inheritance of the elect people should be given to aliens; for we know that the land had been promised to Abraham four hundred years before his children possessed it; we know that this promise had been often repeated, “This land shall be to you for an inheritance.” For though God sustained all nations, yet he was pleased to take a peculiar care of his people. In short, no land has ever been given to men in so singular a way as the land of Canaan to the posterity of Abraham. As, then, this inheritance had been for so many ages possessed by the chosen people, Jeremiah does not without reason complain that it was turned over to aliens.

In the second clause he repeats the same thing; but he shews that the Jews had not only been robbed of their fields, but had been cast out of their houses, a more grievous and disgraceful thing. For it sometimes happens, that when one loses his farm, his fields, and vineyards, his house remains to him untouched; but the Prophet here amplifies the misery of his own nation, that they were not only deprived of their fields and possessions, but that they were also ejected from their own houses, and others had possession of them. For it is a sight deemed affecting even among heathens, when one unworthy of any honor succeeds in the place of another eminent in wealth and dignity. Well known are these words, —

O house of Aucus! How ruled by an unequal master! (223)

As Tarquinius had succeeded and taken possession of the kingdom, the heathen poet upbraidingly said that the house of Ancus had passed over to those who were at first exiles and fugitives, but afterwards became proud and cruel tyrants. So also in this place Jeremiah says that aliens dwelt in the houses of the people. It follows, —

(223) O domus Anci! Quam dispari domino dominaris!



Here the Prophet not only speaks in the person of the whole people, but utters also the groans and complaints of each; for this could not have been suitable to the whole Church, as he speaks of fathers and mothers. We hence see that this verse does not apply to the whole body, but to individual members, though every one of the people might have said that widows and orphans were everywhere seen.

Now, this usually happens when a nation is consumed either by pestilence or by war; for in one battle all do not so fall that a whole country becomes full of orphans. But the Prophet sets forth here the orphanage and widowhood occasioned through the continued vengeance of God, for he had not ceased to afflict the people until by degrees they were exhausted. It was, indeed, a sad spectacle to see among the chosen people so many widows, and also so many children deprived of their fathers. It follows, —



The Prophet here relates, that the people were denuded, that they labored under the want of water and of wood. He does not say that they were only deprived of corn and wine, he does not complain that any of their luxuries were lessened; but he mentions water and wood, the common things of life; for the use of water, as it is said, is common to all; no one is so poor, if he dwells not in a land wholly dry, but that he has water enough to drink. For if there be no fountains, there are at least rivers, there are wells; nor do men perish through thirst, except in deserts and in places uninhabitable. As, then, water might be had everywhere, the Prophet here sets forth the extreme misery of the people, for water was even sold to them. In stony and high places water is sold; but this is a very rare thing. The Prophet here means that the people were not only deprived of their wealth, but reduced to such a state of want that they had no water without buying it.

At the same time he seems to express something worse when he says, Our water we drink for money, and our wood is brought to us for a price. It is not strange that wood should be bought; but the Prophet means that water was sold to the Jews which had been their own, and that they were also compelled to buy wood which had been their own. Thus the possessive pronouns are to be considered as emphatical. Then he says, “Our own waters we drink,” etc. (224) He calls them the waters of the people, which by right they might have claimed as their own; and he also calls the wood The same; it was that to which the people had a legitimate right. He then says that all things had been so taken away by their enemies, that they were forced to buy, not only the wine which had been taken from their cellars, and the corn which had been taken from their granaries, but also the water and the wood.

But were any one disposed to take the words more simply, the complaint would not be unsuitable, — that the people, who before had abundance of wine and all other things, were constrained to buy everything, even water and wood. For it is a grievous change when any one, who could once cut wood of his own, and gather his own wine and corn, is not able to get even a drop of water without buying it. This is a sad change. So this passage may be understood. It follows, —

(224) To express this meaning, which is probably the true one, the words ought to be thus rendered, —

 

4.Our own water, for money have we drunk it;

Our own wood, for a price it comes to us.

Grotius says that in the land of Canaan the forests were free to all to get wood from. When in exile the Jews had to buy wood. — Ed.



Here he says that the people were oppressed with a grievous bondage. It is, indeed, a metaphorical expression when he says, that people suffered persecution on their necks. Enemies may sometimes be troublesome to us, either before our face, or behind our backs, or by our sides; but when they so domineer as to ride on our necks, in this kind of insult there is extreme degradation. Hence the Prophet here complains of the servile and even disgraceful oppression of the people when he says, that the Jews suffered persecution on their necks.

The meaning is, that the enemies so domineered at the, it pleasure, that the Jews dared not to raise up their heads. They were, indeed, worthy of this reward — for we know that they had an iron neck; for when God would have them to bear his yoke, they were wholly unbending; nay, they were like untameable wild beasts. As, then, their hardness had been so great, God rendered to them a just reward for their pride and obstinacy, when their enemies laid such a burden on their necks. (225)

But the Prophet sets forth here this indignity, that he might turn God to mercy; that is, that the Chaldeans thus oppressed as they pleased the chosen people.

He adds, that they labored and had no rest. He intimates by these words that there were no limits nor end to their miseries and troubles; for the phrase in Hebrew is, We have labored and there was no rest. It often happens that when one is pressed down with evils for a short time, a relaxation comes. But the Prophet. says that there was no end to the miseries of the people. Then to labor without rest is the same as to be pressed down with incessant afflictions, from which there is no outlet. Their obstinacy was worthy also of this reward, for they had fought against God, not for a few months or years only, but for many years. We know how long the Prophet called them without any success. Here, however, he seeks favor with God, by saying that the people were miserable without limits or end.

(225) Not one of the versions or the Targ., though they all differ, gives a satisfactory rendering of this clause. Some take, “on our neck we have been pursued,” as meaning, We have been closely pursued. So Gataker. Others, as Lowth and Henderson, regarding על a noun, signifying a yoke, give a construction of this kind, “With the yoke on our neck we have been pursued” or persecuted, according to the words of Moses in Deu 28:48. The former seems the best, —

On our neck (closely) have we been pursued,

We labored and had no rest.

Then comes in what they did when thus pursued by their enemies, —

To Egypt gave we the hand,

To Assyria, to be satisfied with bread.

To give the hand, in this case, was to put it forth as suppliants to ask help. This seems to refer to a, time previous to their exile. — Ed.



He speaks here of the mendicity of the people, that they sought bread from every quarter. To give the hand, is explained in three ways: some say that it means humbly to ask; others, to make an agreement; and others, to extend it in token of misery, as he who cannot ask for help, intimates his wants by extending his hand. But the Prophet seems simply to mean that the people were so distressed by want, that they begged bread. I then take the expression, to give the hand, as meaning that they asked bread, as beggars usually do.

He now says that they gave or extended the hand both to the Egyptians and to the Assyrians, which was a most unworthy and disgraceful thing; for the Egyptians had been their most troublesome enemies, and the Assyrians afterwards followed their example. At that time, indeed, the Egyptians pretended to be the friends of the chosen people, and made a treaty with them; but the Jews were held in contempt by them as they deserved, for they had prostituted as it were themselves like harlots. As, then, they had been despised by the Egyptians, it was a disgrace and reproach the most bitter, when they were compelled to beg bread in Egypt, and then in Assyria; for this might have been turned to the bitterest taunts.

We now, then, perceive the meaning of the Prophet; even this reward also God justly rendered to them. He had promised them a fruitful land, in which he was ready to support them to the full. How often is mention made by Moses of corn, wine, and oil; and why? in order that God might shew that that land exceeded every other in fertility. It was, then, an evidence of an extreme curse when the people were compelled to beg bread here and there, while yet the abundance of all things ought to have been sufficient to supply even aliens,

“Thou shalt lend to others, but thou shalt not borrow.” (Deu 15:6.)

They then who ought to have fed others by their plenty, were so reduced that their want forced them to undergo this disgrace, to beg bread of the Egyptians and Assyrians. It follows, —



The Prophet seems here to contend with God, and to utter that blasphemy mentioned by Ezekiel. For when God severely chastised the people, that proverb was commonly used by them,

“Our fathers did eat a sour grape, and our teeth are blunted.” (Eze 18:2.)

Thus they intimated that they were unjustly and cruelly treated, because they suffered the punishment of others, when they themselves were innocent. So the Prophet seems to quarrel with God when he says that the fathers who sinned were no more; but as we shall presently see, the Prophet confesses also the sins of those who were yet alive. As, then, an ingenuous confession is made by the Prophet, he no doubt abstained here from that blasphemy which is so severely reproved by Ezekiel. Jeremiah had nothing farther from his purpose than to free the people from all blame, as though God had dealt cruelly with them, according to what is said by a heathen poet, —

“For the sins of the fathers thou undeservedly sufferest, O Roman!” (226)

Another says, —

“Enough already by our blood

Have we suffered for the perjuries of Laomedonian Troy.” (227)

They mean that the people of their age were wholly innocent, and seek in Asia and beyond the sea the cause of evils, as though they never had a sin at Rome. But the meaning of Jeremiah was not this, but he simply intended to say that the people who had been long rebellious against God were already dead, and that it was therefore a suitable time for God to regard the miseries of their posterity. The faithful, then, do not allege here their own innocency before God, as though they were blameless; but only mention that their fathers underwent a just punishment, for that whole generation had perished. Daniel speaks more fully when he says,

“We have sinned, and our fathers, and our kings.”

(Dan 9:8.)

He involved in the same condemnation both the fathers and their children.

But our Prophet’s object was different, even to turn God to mercy, as it has been stated; and to attain this object he says, “O Lord, thou indeed hast hitherto executed just punishment, because our fathers had very long abused thy goodness and forbearance; but now the time is come for thee to try and prove whether we are like our fathers: as, then, they have perished as they deserved, receive us now into favor.” We hence see that thus no quarrel or contention is carried on with God, but only that the miserable exiles ask God to look on them, since their fathers who had provoked God and had experienced his dreadful vengeance, were already dead. (228)

And when he says that the sons bore the iniquity of the fathers, though it be a strong expression, yet its meaning is not as though God had without reason punished their children and not their fathers; for unalterable is that declaration,

“The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, nor the father the iniquity of the son; but the soul that sinneth it shall die.”

(Eze 18:20.)

It may yet be said that children are loaded with the sins of their fathers, because God, as he declares by Moses, extends his vengeance to the third and fourth generation. (Exo 20:5.) And he says also in another place,

“I will return into the bosom of children the iniquity of their fathers.”

(Jer 32:18.)

God then continued his vengeance to their posterity. But yet there is no doubt but that the children who had been so severely punished, bore also the punishment of their own iniquity, for they deserved a hundred deaths. But these two things well agree together, that God returns the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of their children, and yet that the children are chastised for their own sins.

(226) Horace, Od. 6:1, —

“Delicta majorum immeritus lues, Romane.”

(227) Virgil, Georg., lib. 1, —

“Satis jampridem sanguine nostro

Laomedonteae luimus perjuria Troiae.”

(228) The words may be thus rendered, —

Our fathers, they sinned and are not;

We, their iniquities have we borne.

To bear iniquities, is here evidently to bear their penalty. So when Christ is said to bear our sins, the same thing is meant. — Ed.



Another circumstance aggravated the calamity of the people, that they came under the power of servants, which is more degrading than when the rich and the eminent in wealth and power make us their servants. For it is no shame to serve a king, or at, least a man who possesses some eminence; for that servitude which is not apparently degrading is deemed tolerable. But when we become the servants of servants, it is a most afflicting degradation, and most grievously wounds our minds.

It is, then, for this indignity that Jeremiah now expostulates, and says that servants ruled over them. There is, indeed, no doubt but that they were driven into exile by some of the lowest; for the Chaldeans thought it right to exercise towards them every kind of cruelty. But it was yet a very mournful thing for God’s children to be the slaves of servants; for they were before a sacerdotal kingdom, and God had so taken them under his protection, that their condition was better and more desirable than that of any other kingdom. As, then, they had been robbed of their liberty, and not only so, but also made subject to servants, the change was sad in the extreme. (229) Therefore the Prophet sought another occasion to plead for mercy, when he said that they were ruled by servants. It now follows, —

(229) See Neh 5:15. — Ed.



The word חרב, chereb, means drought as well as sword. As the Prophet is speaking of famine and the desert,, I have no doubt but that dryness or drought is sword the word means here; and I wonder that the word sword had occurred to any; they could not have regarded the context.

He then says that the people sought bread with the soul, that is, at the hazard of their own life. If danger be preferred, I do not object. But as he simply says, with the soul, he seems to express this, that for food they hazarded their own life. Food, indeed, is the support of life, for why is bread sought but for sustaining life? But the hungry so rush headlong to procure food, that they expose themselves to thousand dangers, and they also weary themselves with many labors; and this is to seek bread with their soul, that is, when men not only anxiously labor to procure food, but pour forth as it were their own blood, as when one undertakes a long journey to get some support, lie is almost lifeless when he reaches the distant hospital. As, then, the Jews nowhere found food, the Prophet says that they sought bread with their life, that is, at the hazard of life. This is the view I prefer.

He then adds, For the dryness of the wilderness. What has the sword to do with wilderness? We see that this is wholly unsuitable; there was then no reason why interpreters should pervert this word. But what he calls the dryness of the wilderness was the want by which the people were distressed, as though they were in the wilderness. This is said by way of comparison, — that on account of the dryness of the desert, that is, on account of sterility, they were under the necessity of exposing their life to death, only that they might anywhere find bread. (230)

It may also be, that the Prophet meant, that they were fugitives, and thus went in hunger through woods and forest, when they dared not to go forth into the open country lest the enemy should meet them. But what I have said is most suitable, that is, that they were so famished as though they were in a vast desert, and far away from every hospital, so that bread could nowhere be found. We now, then, perceive the meaning of the Prophet. He adds, —

(230) The versions and the Targ. render the word, “sword;” and so do Gataker, Blayney, and Henderson. And by “the sword of the desert” are to be understood freebooters who carried swords and made incursions from desert places.

At the risk of our life we got our bread,

On account of the sword of the desert

— Ed.



Some read, “for tremors;” literally, “from the face of tremors.” Jerome renders it, “tempests,” but the word “burnings” is the most suitable; for he says that their skins were darkened, and he compares them to an oven. This metaphor often occurs in Scripture,

“Though ye have been as among pots in the smoke, and deformed by blackness, yet your wings shall shine.” (Psa 68:14.)

God says that his people had contracted blackness, as though they had touched smoky pots, because they had been burnt as it were by many afflictions; for when we pine away in our evils, filthiness itself deforms us. But here he compares to an oven (which is the same thing) their skins or skin. He then says that the skin of every one was so wrinkled and darkened by blackness, that it was like an oven which is black through constant fire and smoke. The Prophet or whoever was the author of the 119th Psalm, uses another comparison, that he was like a bottle or a bladder, contracted by the smoke, and had wrinkles together with blackness. (231)

The meaning is, that there was a degrading deformity in the people, for they were so famished that no moisture remained in them; and when moisture fails, then paleness and decay follow; and then from paleness a greater deformity and blackness, of which the Prophet now speaks. Hence I have said, that the word “burnings” is the most proper. For, if we say tempests or storms, a tempest does not certainly darken the skin; and if we render it tremors or tremblings, this would be far remote; but if we adopt the word burnings, the whole passage will appear consistent; and we know, that as food as it were irrigates the life of man, so famine burns it up, as Scripture speaks also elsewhere. It follows, —

(231) The word זלעפות, occurs in Psa 11:6, and in the singular number in Psa 119:53. The versions and the Targ. render it differently in the three places, for it is not found anywhere else. In Psa 119:53, it is rendered “horror” in our version, and this meaning suits the passage in Psa 11:6, and also this passage, —

Our skins, like an oven they became black,

Because of the horrors of famine (or, horrible famine.)

The word for “skins” is in the plural number according to several copies, and the verb requires it to be so. — Ed.



He mentions here another kind of reproach, that women had been ravished in Jerusalem, and in other cities. (232) God had commanded chastity to be observed among his people. When, therefore, virgins and women were thus defiled, it was a thing extremely disgraceful. But the Prophet mentioned this also, in order that God might at length show himself propitious to his people after having been entreated. (Deu 22:21.)

And he mentioned Sion rather than Jerusalem, — it was indeed to state a part for the whole; but that place, we know, had been chosen by God that his name might be there worshipped. Sion, then, was a holy place above any other; it was, in a word, the earthly dwelling of God. As, then, God had there his palace, that he might dwell in the midst of his people, it was a disgraceful sight in the extreme to see women ravished there, for the temple of God was thus violated. It was not only a thing disgraceful to the people, that women were thus ravished, but it was a filthy profanation of God’s worship, and therefore sacrilegious. We now see the design of the Prophet. He mentions also the cities of Judah, but with reference to the same thing. It follows —

(232) There is here a delicate word for a disgraceful act. The words literally are, —

Women in Sion they humbled (or, were humbled,)

And virgins in the cities of Judah.

It is humbled by the Sept. and Vulg. “And” before “virgins” is supplied by the Vulg. and Syr. — Ed.



The beginning of the verse may be explained in two ways. All render thus, “The princes have been slain by their hand,” that is, of their enemies. But I wonder how it never occurred to them, that it was far more grievous, that they were slain by their own hand. I certainly do not doubt but that the Prophet says here, that some of the princes had laid violent hands on themselves. For it would be a frigid expression, that the princes were hung by the hand of enemies; but if we read, that the princes were hung by their own hand, this would be far more atrocious, as we have before seen that even women, excelling in humanity, devoured their own offspring. So he says now that princes were hung, not by enemies, for it was a common thing for the conquered to be slain by their enemies, and be also hung by way of reproach; but the Prophet, as it appears to me, meant to express something more atrocious, even that the miserable princes were constrained to lay violent hands on themselves. (233)

He adds, that the faces of the aged were not honored; which is also a thing not natural; for we know that some honor is always rendered to old age, and that time of life is commonly regarded with reverence. When, therefore, no respect is shown to the aged, the greatest barbarity must necessarily prevail. It is the same, then, as though the Prophet had said that the people had been so disgracefully treated, that their enemies had not even spared the aged. We also now understand why he adds this, for it would have otherwise appeared incredible, that the princes hung themselves by their own hand. But he here intimates that there was no escape for them, except they in despair sought death for themselves, because all humanity had disappeared. It follows, —

(233) The most obvious meaning of the words is, that princes were hung or suspended by the hand, and not by the neck. Such a punishment is not recorded as having been then practiced; but it may have been a barbarity resorted to by the Chaldeans. This seems to be the meaning conveyed by the versions and the Targ., —

 

Princes were by their hand hung up,

The persons of the aged were not honored.

— Ed.



I cannot proceed farther now.



Here the Prophet briefly shews that the city was reduced to ruins, so that nothing but desolation could be seen there. For when cities are inhabited, judges sit at the gate and young men exercise themselves in lawful pursuits; but he says that there were no judgments; for at that time, as it is well known, they were wont to administer justice and to hold assemblies at the gates of cities. It was then the same as though all civil order had been abolished.

Then he adds, the young men had ceased from their own beating or musical songs. The meaning is, that there was so great a desolation in the city, that, it was no more a city. For men cannot dwell together without laws and without courts of justice. Where courts of justice are closed up, where laws are mute, where no equity is administered, there barbarity prevails, which is worse than solitude; and where there are no assemblies for legitimate amusements, life becomes brutal, for we know that man is a sociable being. By these words, then, the Prophet shews that a dreadful desolation appeared in the city after the people had gone into exile. And among the Chaldeans, and in Assyria, they had not their own judges nor any form of government, for they were dispersed and scattered, and that designedly, that they might not unite together any more; for it was the purpose of the Chaldeans to obliterate by degrees the very name of the people; and hence they were not there formed into a community. So justly does the Prophet deplore their desolation even in exile. It follows, —



He pursues the same subject, but he seems more clearly to explain what he had briefly stated in the preceding verse, when he says that all joy of the heart had ceased, and that all the dances were turned into mourning (234) We know that life is more bitter than death when men are in constant mourning; and truly where there is no hilarity, that state of life is worse than death. And this is what the Prophet now means by saying that all joy had ceased, and that all dances were converted into mourning.

(234) The words ought rather to be thus rendered, —

Turned into mourning was our piping.

The word does not mean dancing, but playing on some fistular instrument. — Ed.



By the crown of the head he no doubt understands all those ornaments by which that people had been adorned. They had a kingdom and a priesthood, which were like two luminaries or two precious jewels; they had also other things by which the Lord had adorned them. As, then, they were endued with such excellent things, they are said to have borne a crown on their head But a crown was not only taken for a diadem, — it was also a symbol of joy and of honor; for not only kings then wore crowns, but men were crowned at weddings and feasts, at games also, and theatres. The Prophet, in a word, complains, that though many ornaments did belong to the people, yet now they were denuded of them all: The crown, he says, has fallen from our head (235)

He then exclaims, Woe to us now, for we have sinned! Here he sets forth an extreme misery, and at the same time shews that all hope of restoration was taken away. He, however, mentions the cause, because they had done wickedly By saying this he did not intend to exasperate their sorrow, so that they who were thus afflicted might murmur against God; but, on the contrary, his object was to humble the afflicted, so that they might perceive that they were justly punished. It is the same as though he had summoned them as guilty before the tribunal of God, and pronounced in one word that they justly suffered or sustained so grievous a punishment; for a just God is an avenger of wickedness.

We hence conclude, that when he said yesterday that the fathers who had sinned were dead, and their iniquity was borne by their children, he did not so speak as to exempt the living from all blame; for here he condemns them and includes himself in the number. But I explained yesterday the meaning of that verse; and here the Prophet ingenuously confesses that the people were justly punished, because they had by their sins provoked the wrath of God. And this doctrine ought to be carefully observed; because when we are pressed down by adversities, Satan will excite us to sorrow, and at the same time hurry us on to rage, except this doctrine comes to our minds, that we have to do with God, who is a righteous Judge. For the knowledge of our sins will tame our pride and also check all those clamorous complaints, which the unbelieving are wont to utter when they rise up against God. Our evils, then, ought to lead us to consider God’s judgment and to confess our sins; and this was the end which our Prophet had in view. It follows, —

(235) The words are, —

Fallen has the crown of our head.

Then the “woe” in the next line is only declarative, —

Woe is now to us, because we have sinned.

The particle “now” is omitted in our version. — Ed.



He connects sorrow here with the acknowledgment of sin, that the people under the pressure and agony of sorrow might apply their minds so as to consider their own sins. At the same time the Prophet, no doubt, includes here all that we have already observed, as though he had said that the people were not without reason wearied with sorrow, for they had ample and manifold reasons for their grief.

For this reason, he says, that is, we do not exceed a due measure in our sorrow, for our afflictions are not ordinary, so that our grief cannot be moderate; but as we are come to an extremity, it cannot then be but our minds should be overwhelmed with sorrow. As, then, the curse of God appeared everywhere, he says that this was the cause of the fainting heart; and he says also, Therefore were our eyes darkened. This is a common metaphor, that the eyes become dim through sorrow; for the senses through sorrow are blunted. Hence it is that the sight of the eyes is injured; and David especially makes use of this mode of speaking. Our Prophet then says that the eyes were darkened, because their grief was, as it were, deadly. It follows —



Though he had in general included all kinds of evils, he yet mentions now the principal cause of sorrow, that mount Sion had lost its beauty and its excellency. For that place had been chosen by God, as though he had descended there from heaven, that he might dwell there; and we know also that its beauty is spoken of in high terms. For there the face of God shone forth, as Moses and the Prophets often speak. It was then an extremely sad change, that as God had dwelt in mount Sion, foxes should lodge there as in a deserted cave. For on mount Sion was the tabernacle or the sanctuary; and God says that it was the tabernacle of meeting, מועד, moud, because there he wished to hold intercourse with his people. As, then, that place included God and his Church, it was, as I have said, a dreadful and monstrous thing, that it had become so desolate, that foxes succeeded in the place of God and the faithful. It was not, then, without reason that Jeremiah, after having spoken of so many and so bitter calamities, mentioned this as the chief, that mount Sion was reduced to desolation, so that foxes ran there hither and thither (236)

For as it is the principal thing, and as it were the chief of all blessings, to be counted God’s people, and to have a familiar access to him, so in adversities nothing is so sad as to be deprived of God’s presence. When David testified his gratitude to God, because he had been enriched by every kind of blessing, he added this,

“I shall dwell in the house of God.” (Psa 23:6.)

For though he had spoken of wealth and riches and of the abundance of all things, yet he saw that his chief happiness was to call on God together with the faithful, and to be deemed one of his people. So, also, on the other hand, the Prophet here shews that nothing can be sadder to the godly than when God leaves his dwelling and makes it desolate, in order to terrify all who may see it.

This had been predicted to them by Jeremiah himself, as we have seen in the seventh chapter of his prophecies, “Go ye to Shiloh,” he said, where the ark of the covenant had long been; though that place had been a long time the habitation of God, yet it was afterwards rejected with great disdain. Jeremiah then declared to the Jews, while they were yet in safety, that such would be the condition of Jerusalem; but his prophecy was not believed. He now, then, confirms, by the event, what he had predicted by God’s command, when he says that mount Sion was become the den of foxes. It follows, —

(236) Some connect this verse with the foregoing, as a special reason why their eyes were darkened, —

 

17.For this become faint did our heart;

For these things darkened were our eyes,

18.Yea, for mount Sion, which is desolate;

Foxes have walked through it.

“This” was the “woe” which sin had brought; and “these things” were the various things which he had previously stated, but the desolation of mount Sion was the chief cause of sorrow.

Others take this verse by itself, as it is done by the Sept., where על is rendered “on,” and ש for אשר, is translated “because,” —

On mount Sion, because it has become desolate,

Foxes have walked in (or through) it.

If על be rendered concerning, or, as to, or, with regard to, the best construction would be the following, —

As to mount Sion, which has become desolate,

Foxes have walked in it (or, traversed it.)

— Ed



The Prophet here raises up his eyes to God, and, by his example, he encourages all the godly, that they might not cease, notwithstanding their extreme calamities, to look to God, as we find in the hundred and second Psalm, where the Psalmist speaks of the destruction of the city of Jerusalem. Indeed the subject of that psalm is similar to that of this chapter; nor is there a doubt but that it was composed when the people, as it clearly appears, were in exile in Babylon. There the Psalmist, after having spoken of the ruin of the city, and calamities of the people, says, that the heavens were growing old and wasting as it were with rottenness, together with the whole world; but he afterwards adds,

“But thou, O Lord, remainest perpetually.”

(Psa 102:26.)

At the same time he speaks more clearly than Jeremiah, for he applies his doctrine to the consolation of the Church, “Children’s children,” he says, “shall inhabit it.” Hence, from the perpetuity and immutability of God, he infers the perpetuity of the Church. This is not done by Jeremiah, though it is implied; and for this reason, no doubt, he exclaims, that God dwells for ever, and that his throne remains fixed in all ages, or through all ages.

For when we fix our eyes on present things, we must necessarily vacillate, as there is nothing permanent hi the world; and when adversities bring a cloud over our eyes, then faith in a manner vanishes, at least we are troubled and stand amazed. Now the remedy is, to raise up our eyes to God, for however confounded things may be in the world, yet he remains always the same. His truth may indeed be hidden from us, yet it remains in him. In short, were the world to change and perish a hundred times, nothing could ever affect the immutability of God. There is, then, no doubt but that the Prophet wished to take courage and to raise himself up to a firm hope, when he exclaimed, “Thou, O God, remainest for ever.” By the word sitting or remaining, he doubtless meant that the world is governed by God. We know that God has no body, but the word sitting is to be taken metaphorically, for He is no God except he be the judge of the world.

This, also, he expresses more clearly, when he says, that God’s throne remains through all ages. The throne of God designates the government of the world. But if God be the judge of the world, then he doeth nothing,, or suffereth nothing to be done, but according to his supreme wisdom and justice. (237) We hence see, that inasmuch as the state of present things, as thick darkness, took away all distinction, the Prophet raises up his eyes to God and acknowledges him as remaining the same perpetually, though things in the world continually change. Then the throne of God is set in opposition to chance or uncertain changes which ungodly men dream of; for when they see things in great confusion in the world, they say that it is the wheel of fortune, they say that all things happen through blind fate. Then the Prophet, that he might not be cast down with the unbelieving, refers to the throne of God, and strengthens himself in this doctrine of true religion, — that God nevertheless sits on this throne, though things are thus confounded, though all things fluctuate; yea, even though storms and tempests mingle as it were heaven and earth together, yet God sits on his throne amidst all such disturbances. However turbulent, then, all the elements may be, this derogates nothing from the righteous and perpetual judgment of God. This is the meaning of the words; and hence fruit and benefit may be easily gathered. It. follows, —

(237) The words literally are, —

Thou Jehovah for ever sittest,

Thy throne is from generation to generation.

Sitting is the posture of a judge, and the reference here is to Jehovah, not as to his essence or existence, but as to his judicial office. — Ed.



He seems, indeed, here to expostulate with God; but the faithful, even when they patiently bear their evils, and submit to God’s scourges, do yet familiarly deposit their complaints in his bosom, and thus unburden themselves. We see that David prayed, and no doubt by the real impulse of the Spirit, and at the same time expostulated,

“Why dost thou forget me perpetually?” (Psa 13:1.)

Nor is there a doubt but that the Prophet took this complaint from David. Let us, then, know, that though the faithful sometimes take this liberty of expostulating with God, they yet do not put off reverence, modesty, submission, or humility. For when the Prophet thus inquired why God should for ever forget his people and forsake them, he no doubt relied on his own prophecies, which he knew had proceeded from God, and thus he deferred his hope until the end of the seventy years, for that time had been prefixed by God. But it was according to human judgment that he complained in his own person, and in that of the faithful, that the affliction was long; nor is there a doubt but that he dictated this form of prayer to the faithful, that k might be retained after his death. He, then, formed this prayer, not only according to his own feeling, and for the direction to those of his own age; but his purpose was to supply the faithful with a prayer after his own death, so that they might flee to the mercy of God.

We now, then, perceive how complaints of this kind ought to be understood, when the prophets asked, “How long?” as though they stimulated God to hasten the time; for it cannot be, when we are pressed down by many evils, but that we wish help to be accelerated; for faith does not wholly strip us of all cares and anxieties. But when we thus pray, let us remember that our times are at the will and in the hand of God, and that we ought not to hasten too much. It is, then, lawful for us on the one hand to ask God to hasten; but, on the other hand, we ought to check our impatience and wait until the suitable time comes. Both these things the Prophet no doubt joined together when he said, Why shouldest thou, perpetually forget us and forsake us? (238)

We yet see that he judged according to the evils then endured; and doubtless he believed that God had not forsaken his own people nor forgotten them, as no oblivion can happen to him. But, as I have already said, the Prophet mentioned these complaints through human infirmity, not that men might indulge themselves in their own thoughts, but that they might ascend by degrees to God and overcome all these temptations. It follows, —

(238)  

Why shouldest thou to the end forget us —

Forsake us for the length of our days?

“To the end,” or perpetually, and “the length of our days,” are the same. The length of days, as it appears from Psa 23:6, means the extent of the present life; the phrase is there used as synonymous with all the days of one’s life. Might not the Prophet here refer to the life of those then living? As to restoration after seventy years, he could have had no doubt. He seems to have pleaded for the restoration of the generation then living. — Ed.



The Prophet shews, in this verse, that the remedy is in God’s hand whenever he is pleased to succor his people. He, then, exalts here the power of God, as though he had said, that God is not without power, but that he can, whenever he pleases, help his people. This is not, indeed, a sufficient ground for confidence, yet it is the beginning of hope; for whence is it that despair weakens us, so that we cannot call on God? because we think that it is all over with us; and whence is this? because we impiously confine the power of God; nay, we in a manner, through our unbelief, repel his power, which would otherwise be exerted in our behalf. As, then, we thus close the door against God, when we extenuate his power, and think that our evils will prevail; it is, therefore, as I have said, the beginning of hope to believe that all the issues of death are in God’s hand, and that were we a hundred times swallowed up, yet he, by stretching forth his hand to us, can become the author of salvation to us at any moment.

This is now the argument which the Prophet handles, when he says, Turn us, O Jehovah, and we shall be turned; that is, “If thou, O Jehovah, be pleased to gather us, salvation is already certain to us.” And he does not speak here of repentance. There is, indeed, a twofold turning or conversion of men to God, and a twofold turning of God to men. There is all inward turning when God regenerates us by his own Spirit; and turning with respect to us is said to be the feeling of true religion, when, after having been alienated from him, we return to the right way and to a fight mind. There is also all exterior turning as to God, that is, when he so receives men into favor, that his paternal favor becomes apparent; but the interior turning of men to God takes place when they recover life and joy.

Of this second turning, then, does the Prophet now speak, Turn us, O Jehovah, and we shall be turned; that is, If thou, Jehovah, lookest on us, our condition will immediately become prosperous, for in thy hand there is a sure salvation for us.” As, then, the Jews were at that time like the dead, the Prophet says, that if it pleased God to gather them, they could in a moment, as they say, have been restored, as it is said also in the Psalms,

“Thou takest away life, and all things change; send forth thy Spirit, and renew the face of the earth.” (Psa 104:29.)

As, then, God renews the face of the earth and restores it by only looking at it, hence now the Prophet says, that the Jews, though they had been destroyed, could yet be immediately restored, if it were the will of God to receive them into favor. (239)

He adds, Renew our days as of old. This is an explanation of the former clause — the renewing of days was restoration to their former state. God had been for many ages the deliverer of his people; under David had been their greatest happiness; under Solomon also they had greatly flourished; but from the time when God had redeemed his people, he had given, as we know, many and constant proofs of his favor and mercy. As, then, God’s goodness had, by so many evidences been made conspicuous, the Prophet now says, Renew our days as formerly, that is, “Restore us to that happiness, which was formerly a testimony of thy paternal favor towards thy people.” We now then perceive the meaning of the Prophet.

But it ought to be noticed, that he grounds his hope on the ancient benefits of God; for as God had formerly redeemed his people, had often helped the miserable, had poured forth on them, posterity fullness of blessings, hence the Prophet encourages himself to entertain good hope, and suggests also to others the same ground of confidence. We see that this was done often by David; for whenever he mentions ancient testimonies of God’s favor towards his people, he hence gathered, that God would extend the same goodness and kindness to posterity. It follows, —

(239) The meaning of this sentence is,” says Grotius, “Restore us to thy favor, that we may be restored to our ancient state.” This being evidently the meaning, the rendering ought to be this, —

Restore us, O Jehovah, to thyself, that we may be restored.

And as Calvin, as well as Grotius, says, the following line is a confirmation, —

Renew our days as of old.

— Ed.



The two words כי אם, ki am, are differently explained: some render them, “but if,” or “certainly if,” and thus separate the verse into two parts, “Surely if thou hast rejected us, thou art very angry;” but this is a forced meaning, not intended, as I think, by the Prophet. And these seem to have been compelled by necessity to pervert the Prophet’s words; because it appears hard simply to declare that the people had been wholly rejected by God. As, then, this harshness offended them, they contrived this comment, “If thou hast rejected us, thou art very angry.” But as I have said, this exposition I do not approve of, because it is a very forced one; and the greater part of interpreters follow what I stated in the first place, for they take כי אם, ki am, adversatively. The two particles are often connected together, and rendered, “though” or although, — “Though thou hast rejected us:” and hence the last verse has been repeated.

For the Jews labor under this superstition, that when a book ends with a hard and severe sentence, or one containing a dreadful threatening, grating to the ears, in order to avoid the sad omen, they repeat the last verse but one. So they do at the end of Isaiah, and at the end of Malachi. As Isaiah says, “It shall be a horror (or abomination) to all flesh;” they therefore repeat the previous verse. So in Malachi; as he says, “Lest I come and smite the earth with a curse — חרם, cherem, ” they think that as he pronounces there an anathema, it is a sort of charm that may absorb this curse, to have the previous verse repeated after it. There is, then, no doubt but that they took this passage in the same sense, “Though thou hast rejected us,” etc.

If this explanation be approved, we must hold that the Prophet here exceeded due limits, as also the faithful, in their prayers, do not always so restrain themselves, but that some heat bubbles up; for we see how David, in the Psalms, too often shewed this kind of feeling; and it is hence evident, that his mind was not always sufficiently calm. We must then say, that the Prophet was impelled by a turbulent feeling when he uttered these words.

But כי אם, ki am, may also be rendered, “Unless,” or except’ and it is singular that no one has perceived this, though it be not an unsuitable meaning, “Except it may be thou rejecting hast rejected us, and hast become very angry with us,” or above measure angry; for עד מאד, od mad in Hebrew, means the same as above measure (supra modum) in Latin. Though the Prophet seems to speak doubtingly, by laying down t, his condition, there is vet no doubt but that he struggled against all unbelief, when he said, Except it may be; for he reasons from what is impossible, “Turn thou us to thee and we shall be turned, renew our days as formerly; except it may be thou hast rejected us:” but this was impossible. Then, as I have said, the Prophet here strengthens himself by setting up a shield against all the assaults of temptations when he says, Except it may be thou hast rejected us (240)

But it cannot be that God will reject his people, and be so angry with them, as never to be reconciled. We hence see that the Prophet does not simply set down the condition, as though he said, “O God, if thou art to be perpetually angry with us, and wilt never be reconciled, it is there all over with our salvation; but if thou wilt be reconciled to us, we shall then entertain good hope.” No, the Prophet did not thus keep his own mind and the minds of others in suspense, but had a sure confidence as to God’s favor; for it cannot be that God will ever forsake those whom he has chosen, as Paul also shews in the eleventh chapter of the Epistle to the Romans.

As it has so seemed good to the brethren, I will begin tomorrow the explanation of Ezekiel.

(240) The particles, כי אם, seem to have the meaning of “except,” as in Gen 32:26, “except thou bless me.” But the exposition is too refined. The usual meaning of the particles is, but in truth, for surely, when indeed. See 1Sa 21:5; Pro 23:18; Exo 22:23. They are rendered here, “for,” by the Sept., Syr., and Arab; “but,” by the Vulg. , and “although,” by the Targ. The version of Blayney and Henderson is, “For surely.” The Prophet assigns a reason for his petition in the preceding verse; as though he had said, “I ask for restoration to thy favor and to our land, because thou hast clearly manifested thy rejection of us, and thy displeasure towards us.”

For surely rejecting thou hast rejected us,

Thou hast been wroth with us exceedingly,

or, more literally,

Thou hast foamed against us exceedingly.

The first line here corresponds with the latter part of the previous verse, “Restore us to our land, and renew the ancient days,” — “Thou hast wholly rejected us.” He speaks of things as they were then. Then the last line in this verse bears a relation to the first part of the preceding verse, “Restore us to thy favor,” — “Thou hast been exceedingly displeased with us.” Thus, for displeasure he asked favor, and for repudiation, a restoration. — Ed.

 




×

Lamentations 5

Lam 5:1. Remember, O Lord- In the Vulgate, Arabic, and Syriac, this chapter is intitled, "The prayer of Jeremiah." It is rather to be understood as the earnest supplication of the whole body of the Jews in their captivity. See the introductory note to this book.

Lam 5:4. Our wood is sold unto us- Our wood came at a price upon our necks; Lam 5:5. We are under persecution, &c. Houbigant. That numbers of the Israelites had no wood growing on their own lands for their burning, must be imagined from the openness of their country. See Jdg 5:6. It is certain, the eastern villagers have now sometimes little or none on their premises. Dr. Russel says, that inconsiderable as the stream which runs by Aleppo and the gardens about it may appear, they however contain almost the only trees which are to be met with for twenty or thirty miles round; for that the villages are all destitute of trees, and most of them only supplied with what rain water the inhabitants can save in cisterns. D'Arvieux gives us to understand, that several of the present villages of the holy land are in the same situation; for, after observing that the Arabs burn cow-dung in their encampments, he adds, that all the villagers who live in places where there is a scarcity of wood, take great care to provide themselves with sufficient quantities of this kind of fuel. See 1Sa 2:8. The holy land, from the accounts we have of it, appears to have been as little wooded anciently as at present; nevertheless the Israelites seem to have burned wood very commonly, and without buying it too, from what the prophet says in the present verse. Had they been wont to buy their fuel, they would not have then complained of it as such a hardship. The true account of it seems to be this. The woods of the land of Israel being from very ancient times common, the people of the villages, which, like those about Aleppo, had no trees growing in them, supplied themselves with fuel out of these wooded places, of which there were many anciently, and several that still remain. This liberty of taking wood in common, the Jews suppose to have been one of the constitutions of Joshua, of which they give us ten; the first giving liberty to an Israelite to feed his flock in the woods of any tribe; the second, that he should be free to take wood in the fields any where. But though this was the ancient custom in Judaea, it was not so in the country into which they were carried captives; or if this text of Jeremiah respects those who continued in their own country for a while under Gedaliah, as the ninth verse insinuates, it signifies that their conquerors possessed themselves of these woods, and would allow no fuel to be cut down without leave, and that leave was not to be obtained without money. It is certain that presently after the return from the captivity timber was not to be cut without leave: Neh 2:8. See Observations, p. 218.

Lam 5:6. We have given the hand- We have submitted.

Lam 5:7. Our fathers have sinned- That is, "Though our fathers have been guilty of great sins, they have died without signal punishment and calamities; which are come upon us their children, who thus bear the punishment of theirs, as well as of our own iniquities." See Dan 8:11; Dan 8:27. This seems to be the plain meaning of the present verse; and if so, it certainly gives no countenance to the interpretation in the note on chap. Lam 3:27. See Eze 2:3.

Lam 5:9. With the peril of our lives, &c.- I can no otherwise understand this, than that on account of their weak and defenceless state the people were continually exposed, while they followed their necessary business, to the incursions of the Arabian freebooters, who might not be improperly styled, "the sword of the wilderness." See Harmer's Observ. ch. 2: Obs. 5 and 6.

Lam 5:12. By their hand- That is to say, by the hands of the Chaldeans.

Lam 5:16. The crown is fallen from our head- At their fears, at their marriages, and other seasons of festivity, they used to crown themselves with flowers. The prophet probably alludes to this custom, as we may gather from the preceding verses. The general meaning is, "All our glory is at an end, together with the advantages of being thy people, and enjoying thy presence, by which we were eminently distinguished from the rest of the world."

Lam 5:18. Because of the mountain of Zion- Houbigant connects this with the preceding verse; For these things our eyes are dim; for mount Zion, because it is desolate, and the foxes walk upon it. See Jdg 15:4.

Lam 5:21-22. Renew our days, &c.- Renew our days as of old; Lam 5:22. After thou hast rejected us and hast been very wroth against us. Houbigant.

REFLECTIONS.-1st, The prophet, in the name of his afflicted people, presents their miserable case before the God of all mercy, intreating him to regard, consider, and remove the reproach under which they groan. And no tear, no sigh of the truly sincere passes unnoticed.

1. He lays their present wretched state before God in a variety of particulars, wherein their grievous reproach appeared. Deprived of the inheritance of their fathers, strangers have seized their estates, and dwell in the houses which they had built. In a natural, political, and spiritual sense, they were become orphans and widows; the men slain with the sword, their king removed, and God himself had forsaken them. In their captivity they were not only destitute of the comforts of life, but the very necessaries were hardly to be procured by them; even their water and their wood were to be purchased at an exorbitant rate. Groaning under heavy loads, scarcely would their heathen masters allow them sleep, and probably forbade them the observance of their sabbaths, wearing them out with incessant toil. For a morsel of bread, to relieve their hunger, they yielded their necks to bondage in Egypt and Assyria; and the meanest among the nations whither they were dispersed, tyrannized over them. To a state of such ignominy and wretched servitude were they reduced; and not a friend to interpose to mitigate their burdens, or deliver them from their bondage: or their heathen masters suffered their very servants to insult them without check or rebuke. During the siege, when, driven by hunger, any ventured to go without the walls in quest of provision, the sword of the wilderness, or of the plain, the Chaldeans, who guarded every avenue, exposed them to confront peril of their lives: scorched up with famine, their shrivelled skins looked black, as if burnt with fire. Sacrificed to brutal lust, their wives and virgins fell a prey to lawless ravishers. Their princes were hanged by their cruel conquerors, and perhaps, when dead, their bodies hanged up by their hand and exposed. The elders in age or office were insulted, and no respect paid to dignity or hoary locks. The young men are set to grind or carry the grist, as if they were beasts of burden; and the very children sink under their loads of wood, unable to sustain them. The courts of justice are no more; the judges slain, or captives: the voice of music silenced; their joy is fled, and all their gaiety exchanged for mourning. The crown is fallen, their king a prisoner, their kingdom enslaved. Note; This world is a scene of awful changes: we must look to a better for never-fading crowns and uninterrupted joy.

2. Their sins have provoked these judgments: they own and lament it. Our fathers have sinned, and are not, and we have borne their iniquities, having added their own provocations to the past, till they had filled up the measure of their sins; woe unto us, our case is deplorable and pitiable, that we have sinned; and, having nothing to plead in indication of themselves, they cast their souls upon the free grace and mercy of God, acknowledging the justice of all that they suffered; for this our heart is faint, both for their miseries and their sins; for these things our eyes are dim with weeping, because of the mountain of Zion, which is desolate, the city and temple in ruins; the foxes walk upon it, without interruption as in the desert. Note;

(1.) Among the bitterest griefs that affect the hearts of the pious, are the desolations of Zion, the afflictions of God's church and people. (2.) Sin is the root of all our sorrows, and more to be lamented than all the sufferings which it occasions.

2nd, The people of God, for whom the prophet speaks,

1. Express their dependance upon God. Thou, O Lord, remainest for ever, the same unchangeable Jehovah, faithful to all his promises; and therefore his believing people may comfort themselves in him, to whatever troubles they are exposed: thy throne from generation to generation; his dominion is eternal; and he who rules over all will over-rule every event for the good of them that love him. While Zion's God reigns, his saints need never despair.

2. They expostulate with God on their unhappy case. Wherefore dost thou forget us for ever, and forsake us so long time? It had been long, and they were ready to fear that it would be for ever; yea, every moment of his displeasure seemed an age to them; and their unbelief was ready often to suggest, but thou hast utterly rejected us, and there is no more hope; thou art very wroth against us, to consume us. Or the words may be read, For hast thou utterly rejected us? wilt thou be very wroth against us? Humble expostulations are allowable: we may reason with God concerning his judgments, though we may not quarrel with him on account of them.

3. They pray. Turn thou us unto thee, O Lord, and we shall be turned. Conscious of their sad departures from him, and their utter inability to help themselves, they look to him who alone can work the mighty change. Renew our days as of old: bring us to our former state of happiness, and enable us to imitate the examples of our pious ancestors. This verse is repeated at last, after the following one, by the Jewish rabbins, who would not have the book conclude with the last melancholy words. Note; However dark the scene may close upon God's suffering saints on earth, let them patiently and perseveringly commend their souls to him, and then they shall quickly wake up in glory, honour, and immortality.


»

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge by R. A. Torrey [ca. 1880]
Expanded version courtesy INT Bible ©2013, Used by permission
Follow us:



Advertisements