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Verse Lamentations 3:2. _HE HATH - BROUGHT ME INTO DARKNESS_] In the
sacred writings, _darkness_ is often taken for _calamity; light_, for
_prosperity_....
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CHAPTER 3 THE PROPHET'S SUFFERING AND DISTRESS
This chapter is intensely personal. None but Jeremiah could have
written these wonderful expressions of sorrow, the sorrows of the
people of God into whi...
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LAMENTATIONS 3. THE THIRD LAMENT. Here it is the singer that comes
chiefly to the front; whereas in Lamentations 3:1 it had been Zion,
and in Lamentations 3:2 it was Yahweh. EV hardly puts Lamentation...
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CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
A SUFFERING PROPHET
Lamentations 3:1-66
Again in chapter three the poet has adopted the acrostic style but in
a slightly different form from that of the previous Chapter s. In
Ch...
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He hath led me, and brought me into darkness, but not into light. I
AM THE MAN THAT HATH SEEN AFFLICTION - Jeremiah's own affliction in
the dungeon of Malchiah (): that of his countrymen also in the...
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ZION'S HOPE IN GOD'S MERCY
This third poem is the most elaborate in structure and the most
sublime in thought of all. The poet speaks not only for himself, but
for the nation. The order of thought is...
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I _am_ THE MAN] The author is a representative sufferer, an
eye-witness, and typical of Christ....
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JEREMIAH WEEPS IN THE DARKNESS
LAMENTATIONS
_ROY ROHU_
CHAPTER 3
JEREMIAH SPEAKS.
In this chapter, the writer speaks on behalf of all God’s people.
Much of what he says is true also of the troub...
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INTO DARKNESS. — The moral darkness of perplexity as well as misery.
The cry of the mourner was like that of Ajax (Hom. _Il._ xvii. 647),
“Slay me if thou wilt, but slay me in the light.”...
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אֹותִ֥י נָהַ֛ג וַ יֹּלַ֖ךְ חֹ֥שֶׁךְ
וְ לֹא
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THE MAN THAT HATH SEEN AFFLICTION
Lamentations 3:1
WHETHER we regard it from a literary, a speculative, or a religious
point of view, the third and central elegy cannot fail to strike us as
by far th...
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In this central and longest poem, Jeremiah identified himself
completely with the experiences of his people. In the first movement,
in language which throbs with pain, he described his own sorrows,
re...
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_Led, or driven me with the rod. (Haydock) --- God employs two,
Zacharias xi. 7. That of rigour was reserved for this prophet; (chap.
xxxviii.) none of them suffered more._...
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I am the man that hath seen affliction by the rod of his wrath. He
hath led me, and brought me into darkness, but not into light. Surely
against me is he turned; he turneth his hand against me all the...
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The letters of the alphabet are tripled in this chapter, which I had
omitted to mention. In the first two chapters each verse begins with
the successive letters of the alphabet, except that in the las...
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In chapter 3 we find the language of faith, of sorrowing faith, of the
Spirit of Christ in the remnant, on the occasion of the judgment of
Jerusalem in which God had dwelt. Before, the prophet (or the...
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HE HATH LED ME, AND BROUGHT [ME INTO] DARKNESS,.... Which oftentimes
signifies distress, calamity, and affliction, of one sort or another:
thus the Jews were brought into the darkness of captivity; Je...
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He hath led me, and brought [me into] darkness, but not [into] light.
Ver. 2. _He hath led me and brought me into darkness._] _Perstat
semper in metaphora a pastoritia,_ say some, who by rod in the
f...
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_I am the man that hath seen affliction_ I myself have suffered
affliction in this time of public calamity. He speaks, probably, with
a particular regard to the ill treatment he had met with in the
di...
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A LAMENT OVER GRIEVOUS SUFFERINGS...
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He hath led me and brought me into darkness, into various calamities,
BUT NOT INTO LIGHT, this being the manner in which the pious of all
times have regarded adversity, as though they had been shut ou...
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1-20 The prophet relates the more gloomy and discouraging part of his
experience, and how he found support and relief. In the time of his
trial the Lord had become terrible to him. It was an afflictio...
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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 t...
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IN HIS INITIAL DESPAIR THE PROPHET BEWAILS HIS OWN SAD CONDITION
(LAMENTATIONS 3:1).
In this section God is simply spoken of as ‘He', the only mention of
His Name being in Lamentations 3:18 where the...
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We are about to read a chapter which is very full of sorrow; while you
are listening to it, some of you may be saying, «We are not in that
condition.» Well then, be thankful that you are not, and whil...
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The first part of this chapter is one of the saddest in the whole Book
of God; yet I expect it has ministered as much consolation as some of
the brightest pages of Holy Writ, because there are childre...
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I am about to read a portion of Holy Scripture which may seem very
strange to some of you, but it belongs to a part of the congregation,
and I hope it may be the means of giving them comfort. I read i...
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CONTENTS: Complaint of God's displeasure and comfort to God's people.
Appeal to God's justice against persecutors.
CHARACTERS: God, Jeremiah.
CONCLUSION: Bad as things may be, it is owing to the mer...
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The Metre changes here. The letters of the Hebrew alphabet, twenty two
in number, begin three hemistichs, which make sixty six verses. It
would look better, and read more poetically, if the hemistichs...
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LAMENTATIONS—NOTE ON LAMENTATIONS 3:1 I Am the Man Who Has Seen
Affliction. Chapter Lamentations 3:1 has one speaker, a man who has
endured suffering, expe
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EXEGETICAL NOTES.—
(א) Lamentations 3:1. The author writes as if his own person was the
object on which all the troubles had been inflicted. I AM THE MAN THAT
HATH SEEN AFFLICTION BY THE ROD OF HIS WR...
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EXPOSITION
LAMENTATIONS 3:1
MONOLOGUE SPOKEN BY AN INDIVIDUAL BELIEVER WHOSE FATE IS BOUND UP WITH
THAT OF THE
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In this third lamentation he begins from the depth of depression and
despair. He begins with hopelessness, and hopelessness is always the
experience behind depression. Depression is the loss of hope,...
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Amos 5:18; Deuteronomy 28:29; Isaiah 59:9; Jeremiah 13:16; Job 18:18