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Lamentations 3

Cambridge

Ch. Lamentations 3:1-21. Laments mingled with hope For remarks upon (a) the character of this ch., (b) its more elaborate acrostic structure, and (c) its probable date see Intr. chs. 1 § 4, 2 § 4, 3 § 2. The question which has most exercised commentators in connexion with the ch. is, whether we are to take the singular number, which prevails in it, as used (a) by an individual of himself, or (b) as representing the nation. Löhr, who (1893) followed Stade and Smend in adopting (b), “the community appearing under the figure of one who is visited severely by the Lord’s wrath,” has since (see Zeitschrift d. A. T. Wiss., 1894, pp. 1–16 and his ed. of 1907) accepted (with Budde) the other view. He further holds that the poem has a threefold origin. (i) Lamentations 3:1-24, before being brought to their acrostic shape, he considers to have formed a Psalm, not known otherwise, but quoted in its earlier stage by the author of Psalms 143, where Lamentations 3:3 is identical with Lamentations 3:6 here, only that there it is not yet acrosticized. (ii) Lamentations 3:52-66 he thinks are the words of another Psalm, surviving thus in its adapted form. (iii) The intermediate vv. (25–51) according to him are the composition of one living at a post-exilic date who desired to speak in the name of Jeremiah, and with the help of references to the sufferings of the prophet’s life to preach repentance.

In support of this view he quotes many parallels, more or less convincing, with passages in Jeremiah. He supports his view as to the different origins of (i) and (ii) by pointing out that in (i) Jehovah is viewed as the enemy, in (ii) as the friend, in (i) as rejecting, in (ii) as hearkening to prayer.

Moreover, in the former the poet is on the verge of despair, in the latter, he exhibits a consciousness of the hope inspired by Jehovah’s inherent justice. He adds that, while it is true that two such fundamentally distinct attitudes of religious thought might be experienced by the same man at different times in his life, he would not be likely himself to combine them in the same poem. Thus his theory needs the intermediate vv. (25–51) as the poet’s own. The above view, though not compelling acceptance as virtually certain (for the real change of tone from misery to hope comes in Lamentations 3:22), is yet not without some probability. On the other hand in support of the view that the community are the subject may be pleaded the analogy of the other poems in the Book, as in them the nation is clearly the subject. Ball, who adopts (b), remarks that in this ch. “the poet deals less with incident and more with the moral significance of the nation’s sufferings.

If this be the application here, we may note a remarkable parallelism between the language descriptive of Zion in her misery and that used in the story of Job as the typical sufferer. Cp.

Lamentations 3:2 with Job 12:25, Lamentations 3:15 with Job 9:18, Lamentations 3:16 with Lamentations 2:8, Lamentations 3:31 with Lamentations 5:18, and see further in Lamentations 3:7; Lamentations 3:12; Lamentations 3:30 below. It is the religious culmination of the book.” With regard to the theological tone of the ch. Löhr points out characteristic features in the middle portion of the three components, viz. (a) the universal sway of Jehovah, indicated in the title “the most High” (Lamentations 3:35; Lamentations 3:38), in accordance with which the evil and injustice that a man suffers from others cannot be wrought without His leave, and (b) the individuality of religion, as stamped upon each soul that seeketh the Lord (Lamentations 3:25) and has silently to bear His yoke (Lamentations 3:27 ff.). When these two features are combined, as here, then the conflict between personal consciousness and Jehovah’s omnipotence leads at once to the perplexing problem relating to the sufferings of the righteous. The narrator here does not pass beyond the general O.T. standpoint in explaining all suffering as punishment for sin and he has no counsel to offer but that of calm resignation and hope. Cp.

Psalms 37:7. If the Lord sends calamity, yet He will have compassion later.

Lamentations 3:1

  1. by the rod of his wrath] For the figure cp. Job 9:34; Job 21:9; Psalms 89:32; Isaiah 10:5. We should notice the absence of God’s name Lamentations 3:1-21, except in Lamentations 3:18, in contrast with its frequency afterwards, when a ground of hope is found in the Divine pity and purpose (Lamentations 3:22-40), and in the prayer of Lam 3:55-66.

Lamentations 3:4

  1. Here commences a series of figures illustrating the miseries endured. They find many parallels in the Psalms and Job. For instances of the latter see Lamentations 3:7. he hath broken my bones] For this phrase cp. Isaiah 38:13; Jeremiah 50:17.

Lamentations 3:5

  1. He hath builded against me, and compassed] Here as in Lamentations 3:3 we have to deal with the idiom by which two verbs are used where we should in English have a verb and adverb. Translate therefore He hath builded against me round about. gall] See on Jeremiah 8:14. The combination with “travail” suggests some corruption in the text. Löhr adopts for his translation (though with some hesitation) bitterness and wormwood. travail] weariness, hardship. From 1611 to the American edition of 1867 all editions of the Authorized Version had travel both here and in the case of Num 20:14. It was probably in comparatively recent times that the two modes of spelling came to be definitely appropriated to distinct meanings of the word.

Lamentations 3:6

  1. Identical with the last part of Psa 143:3. See intr. note. dark places] in the gloom of Sheol. long dead] or, for ever dead, permanently forgotten, never able to return into the light of God’s favour.

Lamentations 3:7

  1. Cp. Job 19:8; so with Lamentations 3:8, Job 19:7; Job 30:20, and we may perhaps add with Lamentations 3:5, Job 19:12.

Lamentations 3:9

  1. hath made my paths crooked] The writer, seeing that the direct way was as it were blocked, tried side paths, but found that they also failed to lead him in the desired direction. The figure expresses perplexity and dismay.

Lamentations 3:10

  1. Not only misery, but active forms of danger present themselves. We find the bear and lion in conjunction also in Hosea 13:8.

Lamentations 3:11

  1. He hath driven me from the path, and then sprung upon me and devoured me. desolate] appalled, stupified. Cp. Lamentations 4:5; akin to the word rendered “astonishment” in Jeremiah 5:30 (mg.), Jeremiah 18:16.

Lamentations 3:12-13

12, 13. Jehovah is now likened not to the beast of prey, but to the hunter. Cp. Job 16:12 f.

Lamentations 3:13

  1. shafts] lit. as mg. the more poetical sons. reins] See on Jeremiah 12:2.

Lamentations 3:14

  1. a derision] See on Jeremiah 20:7 f., and cp. Job 12:4; Job 30:1-9; Psalms 69:12.

Lamentations 3:15

  1. wormwood] See on Jeremiah 9:15; Jeremiah 23:15.

Lamentations 3:16

  1. broken my teeth with gravel stones] The metaphor from food is continued. The prophet is like one whose teeth are worn away by the continued action of grit mixed with his bread. Cp. Proverbs 20:17.

Lamentations 3:17

  1. thou hast removed (mg. cast off) my soul] The change to the second person is abrupt. LXX have “he has thrust away,” the Syr. (and so Targ.) “my soul is thrust away,” but, as Pe. remarks, this is improbable in view of Lam 3:31. The writer there, however, need not be the same as here; see intr. note. By adopting the 3rd person we should avoid the introduction of a direct address to God, which seems not to come earlier than Lamentations 3:19.

Lamentations 3:19

  1. God is now directly invoked. misery] mg. wandering, or, outcast state.

Lamentations 3:21

  1. This and the previous v. are akin in thought to Psalms 42:4-5 (Hebrews 5, 6), and, inasmuch as the words there corresponding to This I recall of the present passage have reference to that which follows, these words also are made (so Löhr and Pe.) to relate to the more hopeful thoughts that come in Lamentations 3:22 and onwards. But the structure of the poem, Lamentations 3:21 being the third (and last) of its group, and the previous context form an argument that the last words of Lam 3:20 are what the prophet recalls for his comfort. The humility arising from sin dwelt upon and acknowledged produces in due course a sense that contrition will be accepted and deliverance granted. Hence arises the change of tone in the section which follows.

Lamentations 3:22-23

22, 23. 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 now too short in its first part, we may safely extend by supplying from the former clause “New is thy compassion every morning.”

Lamentations 3:24

  1. The Lord is my portion] a frequent expression in the Psalms (Psalms 16:5, Psalms 73:26, Psalms 119:57, Psalms 142:5).

Lamentations 3:25-51

25–51. See intr. note.

Lamentations 3:27

  1. in his youth] in the time when his passions are strongest and therefore most need the discipline, which, if established in its seat then, will hold sway throughout his life. The words by no means imply that the writer was young at the time he used them. Rather he is looking back through a long life of trouble and the experience which he has gained in the course of it. Cp. Hebrews 12:7-11.

Lamentations 3:28

  1. The hortative form is better than mg. He sitteth alone, etc. For sitting alone in grief, cp. Jeremiah 15:17. The connexion is, inasmuch as suffering is really attended with benefit to the sufferer, let him submit readily to it. hath laid] The subject is God.

Lamentations 3:29

  1. Let him put his mouth in the dust] the Eastern way of expressing absolute submission by prostrating oneself.

Lamentations 3:30

  1. Let him give his cheek] Cp. Job 16:10; Isaiah 50:6; Matthew 5:39.

Lamentations 3:31-33

31–33. This group contains the three thoughts which produce the resignation, (a) because punishment will be only for a time (cp. Isaiah 54:8), (b) because God is by nature merciful, (c) because even in punishment it is in no angry or vindictive spirit that God acts.

Lamentations 3:33

  1. willingly] lit. as mg. from his heart.

Lamentations 3:34-36

34–36. Three species of wrong-doing on the part of the victorious oppressor are here enumerated; (a) To treat prisoners with cruelty, (b) To give an unrighteous decision at law: for the judges as representing God were called by His name (e.g. Exodus 21:6 with mg.; see Psalms 82:1; Psalms 82:6), and hence the expression “before the face of the Most High,” (c) To defraud a man of his legal rights (which might be done without an actual trial). The sense of the whole will depend upon the view we take of the last words. They may be rendered either, (i) as a question, Doth not the Lord regard (such acts)? so Löhr, following Böttcher and Nöldeke, or (ii) as R.V. mg. seeth not. Hesitation as to rendering the Heb. verb thus might be met by the change of one consonant (raẓ ?ah = approve for ra’ah, see).

Lamentations 3:37-39

37–39. The order of thought in this group is, All events are absolutely in the hands of God. Thus calamity and prosperity come in response to His command. But it is man’s sin that procures for him the former; he therefore may not complain.

Lamentations 3:38

  1. Cp. Isaiah 45:7; Amos 3:6.

Lamentations 3:39

  1. The E.VV., making the whole line to be a question, are more in consonance with the construction of the two earlier members of the group, than is the other proposed rendering, viz. Of what should a living man complain? Each (should complain) of his sins. In that case we should require mourn rather than “complain.” living] i.e. why should a man murmur at misfortunes, when they are due to him for his sin? a man … his sins] mg. (less well) a man that is in his sins.

Lamentations 3:40-42

40–42. Let us search] As it is through our sins that this evil is come upon us, let us (40) seek out what has been amiss in us and repent, (41) place ourselves before God in prayer, (42) confess our sin.

Lamentations 3:41

  1. with our hands] Cp. Exodus 9:33; 1 Kings 8:22.

Lamentations 3:42

  1. We … thou] The pronouns are emphatic in the original. Thou and we have been at variance. thou … pardoned] Observe how this clause forms a connecting link with the next group; similarly “mine eye” in Lamentations 3:48.

Lamentations 3:43

  1. covered] mg., better, covered thyself. Thou hast clothed thyself in wrath. This accords with the next line.

Lamentations 3:44

  1. That Jehovah is veiled by darkness from human eyes is a thought which frequently meets us. See 1 Kings 8:12; Psalms 97:2; Isaiah 45:15.

Lamentations 3:45

  1. For the thought cp. Nahum 3:6; 1 Corinthians 4:13. It was exemplified in the Middle Ages in England and elsewhere (see Ivanhoe) and is still to be seen in Eastern Europe in the Judenhetze.

Lamentations 3:46

  1. On the peculiarity of the alphabetic arrangement here see Intr., p. 321, and for this v. cp. ch. Lamentations 2:16.

Lamentations 3:47

  1. Fear and the pit] See on Jeremiah 48:43, of which this reminds us, and cp. Isaiah 24:17 f. devastation] mg. tumult. The original word occurs here only.

Lamentations 3:48

  1. runneth down with rivers of water] a still stronger expression than that of Lam 1:16, where see note. Cp. Jeremiah 13:17; Psalms 119:136.

Lamentations 3:49

  1. ceaseth not] Cp. Jeremiah 9:1; Jeremiah 14:17.

Lamentations 3:50

  1. Till the Lord look down etc.] Cp. Isaiah 63:15.

Lamentations 3:51

  1. affecteth my soul] The inflammation of eyes caused by continual weeping, or, better, the sights of misery on which he looks, add to his mental suffering. the daughters of my city] either those whose untoward fate has been already lamented (Lamentations 1:4; Lamentations 1:18, Lamentations 2:10; Lamentations 2:21), or the villages, daughter towns of Jerusalem. For this sense cp. (with mg.) Numbers 21:25; Joshua 17:11. In Psalms 48:11 “daughters” has the same sense.

Lamentations 3:52-66

52–66. See intr. note.

Lamentations 3:54

  1. Waters flowed over mine head] figuratively. So in Psalms 42:7; Psalms 69:2, which latter Ps. was traditionally ascribed to Jeremiah. I am cut off] Cp. Psalms 31:22; Psalms 88:5; 2 Chronicles 26:21; Isaiah 53:8.

Lamentations 3:56

  1. The word rendered “breathing” occurs but once elsewhere (Exodus 8:15 [Heb. Lamentations 3:11]), and has there the sense of respite, relief. Accordingly Ewald proposes (by a change of one consonant) to render my cry, and consider “at my cry” to be a gloss.

Lamentations 3:57

  1. Thou drewest near] Cp. Psalms 145:18.

Lamentations 3:58

  1. thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul] The enemy are likened to opponents in a suit at law. The Lord has been the writer’s successful advocate against them. He is therefore invoked once again to defeat them.

Lamentations 3:60-61

60, 61. Cp. Jeremiah 11:19.

Lamentations 3:62

  1. The lips] i.e. the utterances, governed by Thou heardest of Lam 3:61.

Lamentations 3:63

  1. song] Cp. Job 30:9. their sitting down, and their rising up] their whole course of life. Cp. Psalms 139:2.

Lamentations 3:64-66

64–66. For the anticipation of punishment here expressed see on Jeremiah 18:23; C.B. (Kirkpatrick) on Psalms 28:4.

Lamentations 3:65

  1. hardness] or, as mg. blindness, Heb. covering. Cp. 2 Corinthians 3:15. thy curse unto them] dependent on “wilt give,” or meaning, thy curse shall be unto them. Either of these explanations is more in accordance with the context than to make the clause an imprecation, May thy curse be upon them!

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