LAMENTATIONS CHAPTER 3 The faithful bewail their misery and contempt,
LAMENTATIONS 3:1. They nourish their hope by consideration of the
justice, providence, and mercies of God, LAMENTATIONS 3:22. They stir
up themselves to repentance, patience, prayers, and confidence of
deliverance for themselves,... [ Continue Reading ]
DARKNESS in Scripture (metaphorically taken) signifies _ignorance,
sin, and misery_; and _light_ signifies _knowledge_, a state of grace,
or a state of mirth and jollity; they are both here taken in the
latter sense, as light is taken, ESTHER 8:16 MICAH 7:8 JOB 18:5 PSALMS
97:11; and also darkness i... [ Continue Reading ]
The course of God's providence toward me is quite altered, his hand,
that is, his power, which was wont to be with me, and for me, against
my enemies, is now turned against me; nor is it for a moment, or for
one stroke or two, but his hand is continually against me.... [ Continue Reading ]
I was a virgin, young and fair, but I am quite altered, and am now as
an old woman whose flesh is decayed, and my skin wrinkled; all my
beauty is gone, and all my strength is gone; my bones, those in whom
my strength consisted, are slain and broken.... [ Continue Reading ]
He hath not builded with me, increasing my prosperity, and protecting
my houses, but he hath builded forts, and batteries, and castles,
(military buildings,) to batter down my walls and houses, ISAIAH
29:2,3. And compassed me with gall and travel; or with poison, venom,
and misery, as some translate... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet compareth their state in Babylon to the state of bodies in
the graves, or in some charnel-house, which are places of darkness,
full of rottenness and dead men's bones. Such was the state of the
Jews in Jerusalem during the time of the siege before the city was
taken, when Jerusalem was a... [ Continue Reading ]
The use of a hedge about an enclosed field is twofold:
1. To keep out other beasts which belong not to the owner of the
ground; in this sense God set a hedge sometimes about Canaan, ISAIAH
5:5.
2. To keep in those beasts that are within; thus God had now hedged
them in, into a barren place where t... [ Continue Reading ]
In the condition I am in, I cannot help myself, no creatures can help
me, I have no hope but in God. I take the ordinary course in that
case, which is prayer, I pray fervently and aloud, as those that are
serious and importunate for what they desire (for shouting here
signifies no more than making a... [ Continue Reading ]
WAYS in Scripture ordinarily signifies men's courses, and methods of
counsels, and actions; if the term be taken in that sense here, it
signifieth God's defeating all their methods and counsels taken for
their own security, in the pursuit of which they met not with
ordinary, but with insuperable dif... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, he hath taken all advantages against me to destroy me.... [ Continue Reading ]
The same thing is repeated in other phrases which was before said,
viz. that God had pleased by his providence to frustrate all the
designs and counsels of the Jews, and miserably to destroy them, as a
lion or a bear (the wild beasts mentioned before) tear in pieces the
beasts they prey upon.... [ Continue Reading ]
He hath prepared himself for acts of vindicative justice, and he hath
made me the object of it.... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, he hath made his judgments to pierce the most inward parts of
the nation; or, he hath mortally wounded me. In the Hebrew it is, _the
daughters of his quiver, _ a way of speaking very usual in Hebrew, to
express any thing that comes from another as the effect either of a
natural or moral cau... [ Continue Reading ]
OLBHeb;
Though some think the prophet speaks this of himself, yet, considering
he hath all along spoken in the name of the people, it is not
probable, which makes a difficulty, how the people could be a derision
to themselves? It seemeth therefore ill translated, and that it should
have been, I WAS... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, he hath filled me with severe and bitter dispensations.
WORMWOOD is a bitter herb, but it is also a wholesome herb, and
therefore some think that the Hebrew word should rather be translated
_henbane_, and that it signifies some herb whose juice is intoxicating
and poisonous.... [ Continue Reading ]
These are but more metaphorical expressions, signifying the unpleasant
difficult condition into which God had brought this people. They were
like men that lived upon gritty bread, more fit to break their teeth
than to nourish them; they were in the state of mourners, and no
ordinary mourners, who we... [ Continue Reading ]
PEACE here signifieth _prosperity_, rather than a _freedom from war_.
Though during the siege they were far from peace in a strict sense,
yet in their captivity they had that peace; but both their minds were
far off from quiet, and their persons from prosperity: the prophet
owneth God as the cause o... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
If, according to our translation, we read REMEMBERING, or _While I
remember_, these two verses contain but one sentence; in tire former
part the prophet in the name of this people expresseth their
despairing condition; in the latter he gives the reason of it, viz.
the people's poring upon their grea... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, I cannot forget them, and the thoughts of them sink my
spirits.... [ Continue Reading ]
This, not what was already said, that made them despair, and their
souls to bow down; but this, that which followeth, concerning the
nature of God, and other good providences. I see nothing in the
circumstances of my condition to comfort me, but I see something in
God's nature, and in some other dis... [ Continue Reading ]
Mercy is nothing else but love flowing freely from any to persons in
misery, and differs from compassion only in the freeness of the
emanation. It is not because God had not power enough utterly to have
consumed us, nor because we had not guilt enough to have provoked his
justice to have put an end... [ Continue Reading ]
These compassions of God are renewed day by day, to declare the great
faithfulness of God in fulfilling his many promises made for mercy to
his people.... [ Continue Reading ]
God is the portion of his people, and they have chosen him as their
portion; he hath declared himself to them as such, and they have
accepted him as such. This gives them ground both for patience under
his providences, and also of expectation of good from him in their
lowest and meanest state.... [ Continue Reading ]
GOOD is a term of a very comprehensive notion. The nature of it lieth
in a suitableness to the thing or person to whom it relateth; so it
signifieth _profit_ and _pleasantness_. There is in God an essential
goodness, which is his absolute perfection; but this text speaketh of
a communicative goodnes... [ Continue Reading ]
GOOD here either signifies _honestum_, what becomes men, and is their
duty; or utile, what is profitable, and will turn to good account to
them. _Hoping_ and _waiting_ differ but as the mother and daughter,
hope being the mother of patience and waiting; or as the _habit_ and
_act_, hoping and waitin... [ Continue Reading ]
GOOD here must be expounded in the same sense as in the foregoing
verse. It is not pleasant, but it is profitable, it is honourable,
what becomes us, and is our duty, quietly and patiently to bear what
afflictions God will please to lay upon us, to restrain our wild and
wanton spirits when they are... [ Continue Reading ]
Our English Annotations supplying _that_, makes the connexion clear,
It is good for a man that he _sit alone_, JEREMIAH 15:17; not doing
what he doth to be seen of men, but sitting alone, and when he is
alone suppressing the mutinies of his spirit, and keeping his soul in
subjection to God; because... [ Continue Reading ]
OLBHeb;
If _that_ may be supplied, or _when_, (as Pagnine translateth yb
LAMENTATIONS 3:28, the connexion of these words with the former is
very fair and easy, for then those words, LAMENTATIONS 3:27, It is
good that must be repeated in the beginning of LAMENTATIONS 3:28 and
LAMENTATIONS 3:29; howev... [ Continue Reading ]
According to our Saviour's precept, MATTHEW 5:39, he doth not take any
private revenge; he is reproached and reviled, but when he is so he
_revileth not again_, 1 PETER 2:23; he is filled with reproach from
others, but his mouth is not filled with the reproachings of others.... [ Continue Reading ]
This is that which beareth up his spirits, that though the Lord may
for a time estrange himself from his people, yet he will not always
forsake them.... [ Continue Reading ]
But though, as a prudent parent, he may see reason to cause grief in
and to afflict his own people, yet as a tender good father, that
pitieth his children in misery, he will have compassion upon them,
having not only mercies, but a multitude or abundance of mercies.... [ Continue Reading ]
In the Hebrew it is, he doth not afflict from his heart, that is, with
pleasure and delight; or (which seemeth the best sense to me) not from
his own mere motion without a cause given him from the persons
afflicted. Hence judgment is called God's _strange work_. Showing
mercy is his proper natural w... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
Here are three things mentioned, of all which it is said that God
APPROVETH them NOT neither all, nor any of them. The first is, _to
crush the prisoners of the earth_: he hath power to crush all men in
the world, they are his prisoners, and cannot flee from him, but he
delighteth not in it. Some thi... [ Continue Reading ]
The sense of these words is doubted by none, that nothing cometh to
pass in the world but by the disposal of Divine Providence, either
effecting it by an immediate influence, or permitting it; but to what
end these words are brought in in this place is not so generally
agreed. Some think they are br... [ Continue Reading ]
In the Hebrew the form of these words is interrogatory, as much as if
he should say, Doth not evil come out of God's mouth from his
direction and command, and from his providence, as well as good? He
speaks of evils of punishment, judicial afflictive dispensations; so
it agreeth with JOB 2:10 AMOS 3... [ Continue Reading ]
This verse admits of various senses, caused from the various
interpretation of the Hebrew word, which we translate _complain_,
which also signifies to mourn or grieve; so some render it, Why doth a
living man grieve or vex himself? But the word is noted most generally
to signify complaining or murmu... [ Continue Reading ]
Seeing God doth not grieve us willingly, nor delight to crush us,
though we be his prisoners, and seeing the hand of God is in these
things upon us, and that justly, to recompense our iniquities into our
bosoms, instead of mourning and fretting against God, which is not
reasonable, nor will be of an... [ Continue Reading ]
Let us apply ourselves unto God by prayer, often expressed under this
notion in Scripture from that gesture ordinarily used in prayer; and
let us not do it in hypocrisy, but joining our hearts with our hands,
praying seriously and fervently.... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet doth not dictate words, but sense to them, teaching them
the matter of their prayer; first, by way of confession. Sin is called
a _transgression_, because it is going aside from the way of God's
precepts; it is called _rebellion_, because it is an act contrary to
that allegiance and duty... [ Continue Reading ]
THOU HAST COVERED WITH ANGER; either thou hast covered thyself with
anger, or covered thy own face with anger, so as not to look upon us
to move thy pity; or (which is more probably the sense) thou hast
covered, that is, _overwhelmed_, us with thy wrath. Thou hast slain,
thou hast not pitied; thou h... [ Continue Reading ]
God had covered them with wrath, overwhelming them with afflictions.
so as they had no way to escape; and whereas in this distress they had
nothing else to do but only to apply themselves to God, he had hid his
face from them, so as they could get no comfortable sight of him; he
was as one covered w... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, thou hast made us to all nations extremely contemptible, so
as they value us no more than the sweepings of their houses, or the
most vile, refuse, and contemptible things imaginable.... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, to mock, scoff, and reproach us.... [ Continue Reading ]
All manner of misery was come upon them. They were seized first with
fears and terrors; going to escape these they fell into a snare, or
(as it is in the Hebrew) into a pit, out of which they could not get;
they were wasted, made desolate, and destroyed.... [ Continue Reading ]
No text from Poole on this verse.... [ Continue Reading ]
The prophet was deeply affected upon the prospect of this evil before
it came, JEREMIAH 9:1, and was now much more affected when he saw the
judgment was come; he wept plentifully and constantly, as for their
sins which had brought these judgments upon them, so for the judgments
themselves, as indica... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, until the Lord show me some favour. See the notes on
LAMENTATIONS 1:9.... [ Continue Reading ]
The eye and the ear are those organs of the body, by which the soul
exerciseth its senses to bring in all objects, whether pleasant or
sad, to the understanding to judge of them, according to the judgment
of which upon them it is affected with joy or sorrow, desire or
aversation, &c.; and the eye is... [ Continue Reading ]
As boys beat a bird from bush to bush, suffering it to rest no where,
so mine enemies, to whom I gave no cause, pursued me.... [ Continue Reading ]
DUNGEON seemeth not to be here taken literally, for the lowest and
nastiest place in prisons, which probably was the portion but of a few
of the Jews; but metaphorically, for the lowest and saddest condition
of misery. Their enemies had brought them into the deepest miseries,
to the cutting off of t... [ Continue Reading ]
Afflictions often in Scripture are called _waters_, ISAIAH 28:17,18
ISAIAH 59:19. I AM CUT OFF; that is, I am utterly undone, there is no
hope for me.... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, out of my deepest affliction, as Jonah out of the _belly of
hell,_ JONAH 2:2. I cried unto God, and called upon him for mercy.... [ Continue Reading ]
I in former great afflictions applied myself unto thee, and thou didst
hear me; show me now the same favour. Our former experiences of God's
goodness to us in hearing our prayers ought to hold up our hands in
prayer, mid beget a confidence in us that we, persisting in our duty,
shall find God the sa... [ Continue Reading ]
There was a time when I was in distress, and called upon time, and
thou didst draw near unto me. God is never far off from any of us, as
to his essential presence; nor is it possible that he should, for he
filleth all places. But he is said to be near us or far off from us,
as he manifests, or doth... [ Continue Reading ]
Thou hast been wont to take my part against my enemies, not like a
lawyer by word of mouth, but actually and really pleading my cause.
Thou hast redeemed my life; thou hast saved me from many a danger
which looked fatally upon me.... [ Continue Reading ]
Thou hast a perfect knowledge of men's perverse and unrighteous
dealings with me at this time; do thou judge betwixt me and mine
enemies, and deal with them according to what shall appear just to
thee.... [ Continue Reading ]
Thou hast been a witness to all their fury and rage, and all their
malicious and bloody contrivances against me.... [ Continue Reading ]
Whatever knowledge men get of things done from their eye or ear, thou
hast from thy omnisciency; thou knowest not only their malicious
actions, but words and thoughts.... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, thou hast observed and noted the motions or products of my
enemies lips, and their secret devices before they came out of their
lips.... [ Continue Reading ]
That is, at all times, when they sit down and rise up, I am their
song. Though probably the words have a special reference to their
sitting down at feasts, and at their merry meetings. I am all the
subject of their discourse, they spend their time in mocking and
scoffing at us, and at Jerusalem; we... [ Continue Reading ]
These three last verses are all but the same general petition, though
expressed in various phrases; the prophet had prayed, LAMENTATIONS
3:59, that God would judge his people's cause, here he prayeth that he
would also judge his enemies, he only desireth justice against them, a
recompence of the wor... [ Continue Reading ]
The word translated SORROW OF HEART is found no where else in holy
writ, which makes a certain particular explication of it to be
difficult, and hath given interpreters a strange liberty in
translating it _shield, sorrow, and grief_, _obstinacy or hardness of
heart, perplexity, abjection or breaking... [ Continue Reading ]
Bring them to a temporal ruin and destruction. How far such petitions
are lawful we have before showed, in our notes on PSALMS 69:22, &c.;
PSALMS 119:6, &c.; JEREMIAH 11:20, JEREMIAH 15:15: see also
LAMENTATIONS 1:22. It is hard to interpret all passages of this nature
which we meet with as propheci... [ Continue Reading ]