-
Verse 22. IT IS OF _THE LORD'S MERCIES THAT WE ARE NOT CONSUMED_]
Being thus _humbled_, and seeing _himself_ and his _sinfulness_ in a
proper point of view, he finds that God, instead of dealing with...
-
Verses 22-42 are the center of the present poem, as it also holds the
central place in the whole series of the Lamentations. In them the
riches of God’s grace and mercy are set forth in the brightest...
-
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...
-
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...
-
MERCIES. lovingkindnesses.
BECAUSE. verily....
-
There are metrical irregularities in these _vv_. as they stand. We
should probably (with Löhr) read the first, "The Lord's compassion
ceaseth not"; "His love is not spent," and the second, which is no...
-
DISCOURSE: 1091
THE VIEWS OF A SAINT IN HIS AFFLICTIONS
Lamentations 3:22. _It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not
consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every
morning: great i...
-
IT IS OF THE LORD'S MERCIES— _This is the Lord's mercy, that he hath
not entirely consumed me; neither are his companions exhausted._...
-
II. HIS CONFESSION OF FAITH Lamentations 3:19-39
Since the poet's outlook was bleak he tries the uplook. He calls upon
God to remember his predicament (Lamentations 3:19) because he himself
is not abl...
-
It is of the LORD's mercies that we are not consumed, because his
compassions fail not.
[ IT IS OF THE LORD'S MERCIES ... WE ARE NOT CONSUMED ] - (, "I am the
Lord, I change not; therefore ye sons o...
-
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...
-
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...
-
IT IS OF THE LORD’S MERCIES. — It is, perhaps, part of the
elaborate art of this poem that Lamentations 3:22, which form its
centre, and that of the whole book, represent the highest point of
trust to...
-
חַֽסְדֵ֤י יְהוָה֙ כִּ֣י לֹא ־תָ֔מְנוּ
כִּ֥י ל
-
THE UNFAILING GOODNESS OF GOD
Lamentations 3:22
ALTHOUGH the elegist has prepared us for brighter scenes by the more
hopeful tone of an intermediate triplet, the transition from the gloom
and bittern...
-
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...
-
[It is of] the LORD'S (i) mercies that we are not consumed, because
his compassions fail not.
(i) Considering the wickedness of man it is a marvel that any remains
alive: but only that God for his ow...
-
CHAPTER III....
-
And I said, My strength and my hope is perished from the LORD:
Remembering mine affliction and my misery, the wormwood and the gall.
My soul hath them still in remembrance, and is humbled in me. This...
-
_‘NEW EVERY MORNING’_
The Lord’s mercies … are new every morning.
Lamentations 3:22
In the classical myths, Tithonus, a son of Laomedon, king of Troy,
was so fair and winsome a youth that Eos, or A...
-
_SHADOW AND SUNSHINE_
‘The wormwood and the gall … the Lord’s mercies.’
Lamentations 3:19; Lamentations 3:22
I. SPEAKING FOR HIMSELF, THE PROPHET PERSONIFIES HIS PEOPLE
(Lamentations 3
-
The first clause may be explained in two ways: The view commonly taken
is, that it ought to be ascribed to God’s mercy that the faithful
have not been often consumed. Hence a very useful doctrine is e...
-
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...
-
[IT IS OF] THE LORD'S MERCIES THAT WE ARE NOT CONSUMED,.... It was
true of the prophet, that he died not in prison, or in the dungeon;
and of the people of the Jews, who though many of them perished b...
-
Lamentations 3:22 [It is of] the LORD'S mercies that we are not
consumed, because his compassions fail not.
Ver. 22. It is of the Lord's mercy that we are not consumed.] That we
are yet on this side...
-
_This I recall to my mind_, &c. Here the prophet begins to suggest
motives of patience and consolation: as if he had said, I call to mind
the following considerations, and thereupon I conceive hope an...
-
God's Mercy and Power Revealed...
-
It is of the Lord's mercies, on account of the fact that He delights
in making known His fatherly kindness and grace toward us, THAT WE ARE
NOT CONSUMED, BECAUSE HIS COMPASSIONS FAIL NOT, they have no...
-
21-36 Having stated his distress and temptation, the prophet shows
how he was raised above it. Bad as things are, it is owing to the
mercy of God that they are not worse. We should observe what makes...
-
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 ha...
-
Lamentations 3:22 LORDS H3068 mercies H2617 consumed H8552 (H8804)
compassions H7356 fail H3615 (H8804)
of -...
-
THE PROPHET PRAYS HIS WAY THROUGH TO CONFIDENCE IN YHWH (LAMENTATIONS
3:19).
When our souls have reached their lowest point there is only one thing
to do, and that is to cast ourselves on God. That i...
-
Lamentations 3:22
This is one of those very bright thoughts which lie across this dark
book like an April ray upon a retiring cloud. There is no book in the
Bible which is more characterised by the i...
-
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...
-
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...
-
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...
-
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...
-
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...
-
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
-
LAMENTATIONS—NOTE ON LAMENTATIONS 3:22 God’s STEADFAST LOVE (his
“covenant mercy” or beneficial action on his people’s behalf)
NEVER CEASES, even in the face of Judah’s unfaithfulness and the
resultin...
-
EXEGETICAL NOTES.—
(ח) Lamentations 3:22. The hopefulness which had begun to lift a
desponding soul points to the ground on which it may become secure.
Its hazy outlook is seeming to clear, and, as in...
-
EXPOSITION
LAMENTATIONS 3:1
MONOLOGUE SPOKEN BY AN INDIVIDUAL BELIEVER WHOSE FATE IS BOUND UP WITH
THAT OF THE
-
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,...
-
Ezekiel 20:13; Ezekiel 20:14; Ezekiel 20:21; Ezekiel 20:22; Ezek