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IS FAINT ... - Or, has become “faint” - have become “dim.”
“For this,” i. e. for the loss of our crown etc....
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CHAPTER 5 THE PRAYER OF HOPE
The lamentations end with a prayer: “Remember, O LORD, what is come
upon us; consider and behold our reproach.” It is the prayer of
confession and of hope, which reaches t...
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LAMENTATIONS 5. A PRAYER. This chapter differs much from the previous
four. It is not a Lament, but one long pleading; and it is not the
chant of an individual, but of a company, a plural, we. It may...
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THIS: ie.
this sin.
THESE THINGS: i.e. loss of king, country, possessions, and liberties....
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CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
A PENITENT NATION
Lamentations 5:1-22
The form of the fifth poem differs in at least two respects from the
four which precede it. First, this poem is not in the acrostic form.
But...
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For this our heart is faint; for these things our eyes are dim. FOR
THIS OUR HEART IS FAINT - (; )....
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ZION'S EARNEST PETITION FOR DELIVERANCE
This final poem is not so much an elegy as a prayer or meditation. The
tone is more calm and spiritual than the others, with no trace of
vindictiveness. The poe...
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FOR THIS.. FOR THESE _things_] loss of nationality and present
distress respectively.
19-22. A final appeal to Jehovah to remove Zion's reproach.
The book closes with a majestic apostrophe to Jehova...
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JEREMIAH WEEPS IN THE DARKNESS
LAMENTATIONS
_ROY ROHU_
CHAPTER 5
JEREMIAH IS PRAYING.
V1 Remember, *Lord, the suffering that has come upon us. Look down and
see our shame....
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FOR THIS... FOR THESE THINGS. — The first clause refers to the loss
of national honour indicated in Lamentations 5:16; the latter, to all
the horrors named in Lamentations 5:8....
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עַל ־זֶ֗ה הָיָ֤ה דָוֶה֙ לִבֵּ֔נוּ עַל
־אֵ֖לֶּ
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SIN AND SHAME
Lamentations 5:11
THE keynote of the fifth elegy is struck in its opening verse when the
poet calls upon God to remember the reproach that has been cast upon
His people. The preceding p...
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The final poem is an appeal out of sorrow to Jehovah. Speaking on
behalf of the whole nation, the prophet called on Jehovah to remember.
He described the actual desolation, telling of the affliction o...
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For this our heart is faint; for these [things] our (i) eyes are dim.
(i) With weeping....
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_Dim, the natural consequence of extreme want, 1 Kings xiv. 27._...
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We have given the hand to the Egyptians, and to the Assyrians, to be
satisfied with bread. Our fathers have sinned, and are not; and we
have borne their iniquities. Servants have ruled over us: there...
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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, n...
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The prophet can now present the whole affliction of the people to God,
as an object of compassion and mercy. This is an onward step in the
path of these deep exercises of heart. He is at peace with Go...
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FOR THIS OUR HEART IS FAINT,.... Our spirits sink; we are ready to
swoon and die away; either for this, that we have sinned; because of
our sins, they are so many, so great, and so aggravated; or for...
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For this our heart is faint; for these [things] our eyes are dim.
Ver. 17. _For this our heart is faint._] _Ponit symbolum vere
contritionis,_ we are sin sick even at heart; our sins are as so many
d...
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_For this our heart is faint_ And sinks under the load of its own
heaviness. _Our eyes are dim_ See on Lamentations 2:11. Our spirits
fail us, and we are almost blind with weeping. _Because of the
mou...
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Plea for the Renewal of Jehovah's Love...
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For this, on account of the great afflictions, well deserved as they
were, OUR HEART IS FAINT, with the bitterness of the soul's pain; FOR
THESE THINGS ARE OUR EYES DIM, the sorrow of the heart findin...
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17-22 The people of God express deep concern for the ruins of the
temple, more than for any other of their calamities. But whatever
changes there are on earth, God is still the same, and remains for...
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Either for our sins these miseries are befallen us; or for these
miseries our spirits fail us, and we are almost blinded with weeping....
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Lamentations 5:17 heart H3820 faint H1739 eyes H5869 dim H2821 (H8804)
our heart - Lamentations 1:13,...
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CONTENTS: Lamentation of the state of Judah in captivity.
Supplications for the return of mercy.
CHARACTERS: God, Jeremiah.
CONCLUSION: All our woes are owing to our own sin and folly, and God
is th...
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REFLECTIONS. Jeremiah in this last elegy continues the subject in more
minute details; and having no hope for the present, he consoles
himself with hope in the latter day. Psalms 85; Hosea 3. The insu...
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_For this our heart is faint, for these things our eyes are dim._
ZION’S SUFFERINGS
1. The best are exposed to sorrow. That the best are not out of the
reach of misery, or that there is no outward ca...
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_The elders have ceased from the gate._
THE SEAT OF JUSTICE OVERTHROWN
1. It is a grievous plague unto a people when the seat of justice is
overthrown from among them.
(1) Reasons.
(A) It bringeth...
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LAMENTATIONS—NOTE ON LAMENTATIONS 5:1 Restore Us to Yourself, O
Lord. This concluding chapter is the community’s plea for
restoration. It includes an opening petition (v....
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EXEGETICAL NOTES.—
Lamentations 5:17. How depressing is the conviction of personal sin.
FOR THIS OUR HEART HAS BECOME FAINT. Many sorrows had surged over them
and exhausted the faculty of external an...
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EXPOSITION
LAMENTATIONS 5:1
INSULT UPON INSULT HAS BEEN HEAPED UPON JERUSALEM.
LAMENTATIONS 5:2...
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Fifth lamentation:
Remember, O LORD, what is come upon us: consider, and behold our
reproach. Our inheritance is turned to strangers, our houses to
aliens. We are orphans, fatherless, our mothers are...
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Deuteronomy 28:65; Ezekiel 21:15; Ezekiel 21:7; Isaiah 1:5; Isaiah