Verse 1-2
Lamentations 3:1-2. 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
discharge of his prophetical
office. Some indeed suppose that
he speaks in this and the
subsequent verses, to
Lamentations 3:21, in the
character of the people, but so
many passages manifestly refer
to his own personal troubles,
that such an interpretation
seems very improbable. He hath
brought me into darkness, but
not into light — Light is often
used in Scripture for happiness
or comfort, and darkness for
affliction and misery. The
prophet’s meaning is, that God
had been pleased to exercise him
with calamity. Perhaps he refers
especially to his being put into
the dungeon and the stocks, and
to the state of darkness and
distress which his mind was in
during these trials.
Verses 3-7
Lamentations 3:3-7. Surely
against me is he turned — The
course of his providence toward
me is quite altered. He was
formerly kind and gracious, but
now exercises an afflicting hand
against me, and that not
occasionally, or for a short
time, but continually, all the
day. The phrase, He turneth his
hand against me, is equivalent
to that which occurs Isaiah
1:25, I will turn thy hand upon
thee, where see the note. My
flesh, &c., hath he made old —
Hebrew, בלה, hath wasted, caused
to decay. See notes on Job 16:8;
Psalms 31:10; Psalms 32:3. He
hath broken my bones — The
anguish I feel in my mind is as
painful to me as if all my bones
were broken. He hath builded
against me — He hath blocked me
up in a strait place; he has so
enclosed me with calamities that
there is no escaping them; and
compassed me with gall, &c. —
Hath filled me with grief and
anguish of mind, which is no
less bitter than gall to the
mouth. He hath set me in dark
places, &c. — He hath confined
me to a dungeon where no light
enters; and I am secluded from
human society, as if I were out
of the world. He probably refers
to the pit of the prison into
which he was cast by the command
of Zedekiah. He hath hedged me
about — See Lamentations 3:5,
and the margin. He hath made my
chain heavy — He hath made my
bondage, or my imprisonment,
grievous.
Verse 8
Lamentations 3:8. Also when I
cry and shout — When, under a
conviction that, in my present
distressed condition, I cannot
deliver myself, and that no
creature can deliver me, I make
application to God in prayer for
deliverance, and am serious,
fervent, and importunate in my
addresses to him; he shutteth
out my prayer — Refuses to
hearken to it, or give me any
ease or relief; Hebrew, שׂתם,
the same as סתם, he hath
obstructed my prayer; “hath
barred my prayer from
approaching him.” — Blaney. Thus
sometimes God seems to be angry
even against the prayers of his
people, Psalms 80:5. And their
case is deplorable indeed when
they are denied, not only the
benefit of an answer, but the
comfort of acceptance.
Verses 9-13
Lamentations 3:9-13. He hath
enclosed my way with hewn stone
— He hath not only hedged it up
with thorns, Hosea 2:6, but
stopped it up with a stone wall
which cannot be broken through;
so that my paths are made
crooked — That is, I traverse to
and fro, to the right hand and
to the left, to try to get
forward, but I am still turned
back. Observe, reader, if we
walk in the crooked ways of sin,
crossing or swerving from God’s
laws, it is just with God to
make us walk in the crooked
paths of affliction, crossing
our designs and breaking our
measures. He was unto me as a
bear lying in wait — Surprising
me with his judgments; and as a
lion in secret places — So that
which way soever I went, I was
in continual fear of being
attacked, and could never think
myself safe. He hath turned
aside my ways — Hath blasted all
my counsels and ruined my
projects; (see above on
Lamentations 3:9;) and pulled me
in pieces — Hath torn and gone
away, Hosea 5:14. He hath made
me desolate — Deprived me of all
society, and of all comfort in
my soul. He hath bent his bow —
That bow, which was ordained
against the church’s
persecutors, is bent against her
sons. He hath set me as a mark
for his arrows — Which he aims
at, and is sure to hit: so that
the arrows of his quiver enter
into my reins — And give me an
inward and mortal wound.
Verses 14-19
Lamentations 3:14-19. I was a
derision to all my people — To
all the wicked among them, who
made themselves merry with the
prophet’s griefs and the public
judgments; and their song all
the day — Hebrew, נגינתם, their
instrument of music. The word,
says Blaney, “is commonly
rendered their song; but I
rather think it means a subject
upon which they played, as upon
a musical instrument, for their
diversion.” He hath filled me
with bitterness — A bitter sense
of these calamities. God has
access to the spirit, and can so
imbitter it, as thereby to
imbitter all enjoyments; as when
the stomach is foul, whatever is
eaten becomes acid in it. He
hath made me drunken with
wormwood — That is, so
intoxicated me with the sense of
my afflictions, that I know not
what to say or do. He hath
broken my teeth with gravel-
stones — Hath mingled gravel
with my bread, so that my teeth
are broken with it, and what I
eat is neither pleasant nor
nourishing. He hath covered me
with ashes — As mourners were
wont to be; or, as some render
הכפישׁני אפר, he hath laid me
low, or made me wallow, in
ashes, namely, because of great
sorrow and grief. These
expressions imply the height of
misery; that he received no
comfort or refreshment from any
thing. I said, My strength, my
hope is gone — I even began to
despair of God’s mercy;
remembering my affliction —
Reflecting on all the miseries
and hardships I had suffered.
Without doubt it was his
infirmity to think and speak
thus, (Psalms 77:10,) for with
God there is everlasting
strength, and he is his people’s
never-failing hope, whatever
they may suspect to the
contrary.
Verses 21-23
Lamentations 3:21-23. 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 and comfort. And
surely they are such as afford a
sufficient ground for trusting
in God under the severest
trials. It is of the Lord’s
mercies that we are not consumed
— It is not clear that this is
the exact sense of the Hebrew,
in which there is nothing for it
is of. The LXX. translate the
verse, τα ελεη κυριου, οτι ουκ
εξελιπε με. The mercies of the
Lord, because they have not
left, or do not leave, me: that
is, I rely on, and derive hope
and consolation from, the
mercies of the Lord, which still
continue to prevent and follow
me. Because his compassions fail
not — ου συντελεσθησαν, are not
finished, exhausted, or brought
to an end. They are new every
morning: great, &c. — Thy
mercies are renewed to us every
day, one following another; and
thy faithfulness in performing
them is as great as thy goodness
in promising them. God’s mercy
and truth, or fidelity, are
usually joined together. Blaney
connects these three verses
thus: “This I revolve in my
heart, therefore will I have
hope; the mercies of Jehovah,
that they are not exhausted,
that they fail not; new are his
compassions every morning; great
is thy faithfulness.” According
to our translation the prophet
represents himself as calling to
mind that, as a sinner, he
deserved to be cut off, and
delivered up to future
punishment, and should certainly
have been thus destroyed but for
the mercies of God; while his
people, for their sins, would
have been so totally consumed
that no remnant of them would
have been left. “As, however,
the Lord had mercifully spared
him, and had not utterly
destroyed them; as his
compassions were plenteous and
unfailing, and every morning
renewed to him, in the
continuance of his life, and
many unmerited benefits; and as
God had given many precious
promises to Israel, and to every
believer, and, in his great
faithfulness, had always
performed them to those who
trusted in them; so he found
there was yet encouragement to
hope, and to exercise patience
and repentance in expectation of
returning comfort.” — Scott.
Verses 24-26
Lamentations 3:24-26. The Lord
is my portion, saith my soul —
An interest in the favour and
love of God, and his presence
with me, my heart tells me, is
the best inheritance. And,
possessing these, I have that
which is sufficient to balance
all my troubles, and make up all
my losses. For, while portions
on earth are empty and perishing
things, God is an all-sufficient
and durable portion, a portion
for ever. Therefore will I hope
in him — I will stay myself upon
him, and encourage myself in
him, when all other supports and
encouragements fail me. Observe,
reader, it is our duty and
interest to make God the portion
of our souls, and then to enjoy
and take comfort in him as such,
in the midst of afflictions and
lamentations. The Lord is good
unto them that wait for him — To
them that patiently wait his
time; when he shall judge it a
proper season to afford them
comfort and deliverance; and
who, in the mean while, apply
themselves to him by prayer and
humiliation. It is good — It is
our duty, and will be our
unspeakable comfort and
satisfaction; that a man should
hope and quietly wait, &c. — To
hope that it will come, though
the difficulties that lie in the
way of it seem insuperable; to
wait till it does come, though
it be long delayed; and while we
wait to be quiet and silent, not
quarrelling with God, or making
ourselves uneasy, but
acquiescing in the divine
disposal.
Verses 27-30
Lamentations 3:27-30. It is good
for a man that he bear the yoke
in his youth — That he be inured
betimes to bear those useful
restraints which may give him a
right sense of the duty which he
owes to God, and the obedience
he ought to pay to his laws. For
the prophet’s expression is very
applicable to the yoke of God’s
commands; it is good for us to
take that yoke upon us in our
youth; we cannot begin too soon
to be religious; it will make
our duty the more acceptable to
God, and easy to ourselves, if
we engage in it when we are
young. Here, however, the
prophet seems to speak chiefly
of the yoke of affliction; many
have found it good to bear this
yoke in their youth; it has made
those humble, and serious, and
spiritually minded, who
otherwise would have been proud,
unruly, and as a bullock
unaccustomed to the yoke. If it
be asked, when we bear this yoke
so that it is really good for us
to bear it? we have the answer
in the following verses: 1st,
When we are sedate and quiet
under our afflictions; when we
sit alone and keep silence;
retire into privacy that we may
converse with God, and commune
with our own hearts, silencing
all discontented, distrustful
thoughts, and laying our hand
upon our mouth, as Aaron, who,
under a severe trial, held his
peace. When those that are
afflicted in their youth
accommodate themselves to their
afflictions, and study to answer
God’s end in afflicting them,
then they will find it good for
them to bear it; for it yields
the peaceable fruit of
righteousness to them that are
exercised thereby. 2d, When we
are humble and patient under
affliction; he gets good by the
yoke, that not only lays his
hand upon his mouth in token of
submission to the will of God in
the affliction, but puts his
mouth in the dust in token of
sorrow, shame, and self-loathing
at the remembrance of sin, and
as one perfectly reduced and
reclaimed, and brought, as it
were, to lick the dust, Psalms
72:9. And we must thus humble
ourselves, if so be there may be
hope. If there be any way to
acquire and secure a good hope
under our afflictions, as,
blessed be God, there is, it is
this way, and while we look for
it we must own ourselves utterly
unworthy of Lamentations 2:3 d,
When we are meek and gentle
toward those that are the
instruments of our trouble, and
manifest a forgiving spirit. He
gets good by the yoke that gives
his cheek to him that smiteth
him, and rather turns the other
cheek, than returns the second
blow. He that can bear contempt
and reproach, and not render
railing for railing, and
bitterness for bitterness; that
when he is filled with reproach,
keeps it to himself, and does
not retort it upon them that
filled him with it, but pours it
out before the Lord, Psalms
123:4; he shall find it good to
bear the yoke, and it shall turn
to his spiritual advantage. The
sum is, if tribulation work
patience, that patience will
work experience, and that
experience a hope that maketh
not ashamed.
Verses 31-33
Lamentations 3:31-33. The Lord
will not cast off for ever — The
truly penitent that put their
trust in him, and sincerely
desire and seek reconciliation
with him: though he may for a
time appear to estrange himself
from them, yet he will certainly
return to them. Though he cause
grief — Though, as a prudent
parent, he may see reason to
chastise his people by
affliction, yet as a kind and
tender Father, who pitieth his
children in misery, according to
the multitude, the unspeakable
greatness and abundance of his
mercies, he will have compassion
upon them. For he doth not
afflict willingly — Hebrew,
מלבו, from his heart, that is,
of his own mere motion, without
cause given him by the persons
afflicted; or freely and with
pleasure; nor grieve the
children of men — Much less his
own children. Hence judgment is
called his strange work, and
exercising mercy and
loving-kindness his delight.
Verses 34-36
Lamentations 3:34-36. To crush
under his feet, &c. — In these
verses certain acts of tyranny,
malice, and injustice are
specified, in the practice of
which men are prone to indulge
themselves one toward another,
but which the divine goodness is
far from countenancing or
approving by any similar
conduct. By the prisoners of the
earth, or of the land, as the
words may be properly rendered,
Blaney thinks are meant the poor
insolvent debtors, whom their
creditors among the Jews, as
well as in other nations, were
empowered to cast into prison,
and to oblige to work out their
debts; a power too often exerted
with great rigour and
inhumanity: see Isaiah 58:3;
Matthew 18:30; Matthew 18:34. To
turn aside the right of a man —
To prevent his obtaining, or to
deprive him of, his just rights;
before the face of the Most High
— In the presence of the just
and holy God, and under his
all-seeing eye, who takes
particular notice of all acts of
injustice, and will severely
punish them. The word עליון,
here used, undoubtedly often
means the most high God, and is
so understood here, both by the
LXX. and the Vulgate. Many
commentators, however, prefer
the marginal reading, a
superior, understanding thereby
a magistrate. And Blaney thinks
it cannot here mean God,
because, “though a person may be
made to suffer greatly by having
his judgment turned aside, that
is, by being calumniated and
misrepresented before an earthly
superior, yet all such malicious
attempts must fail and come to
nothing where God is the judge,
who cannot be deceived or
imposed upon.” This is certainly
true: but it does not appear
that the prophet referred to
this circumstance, but rather to
the effrontery and daring
wickedness of those who could be
guilty of such injustice, when
they knew they were before the
omnipresent God, and that his
eye was upon them, thus, as it
were, bidding him defiance. To
subvert a man in his cause —
That is, to prevent his having
justice done him, in a law-suit
or controversy, by any undue
interference; as by bearing or
suborning false witness, or
exerting any kind of influence
in opposition to truth and
right: the Lord approveth not —
Hebrew, לא ראה, seeth not: that
is, hates such conduct, and
turns away his face from it with
abhorrence and disgust. Thus we
read, Habakkuk 1:13, Thou art of
purer eyes than to behold evil;
and canst not look on iniquity.
The general sense of the passage
is, as God takes no pleasure in
oppressing the poor and
helpless, so neither will he
suffer any men to escape
unpunished that are guilty of
such acts of injustice and
cruelty, who never consider that
all the wrongs they do are
committed in the sight of the
Supreme Judge of the world; and
although for a time he thinks
fit to prosper such oppressors,
yet, in due time, he will call
them to a severe account for
their wickedness.
Verse 37-38
Lamentations 3:37-38. Who is he
that saith — That commands an
event to take place, or predicts
that it shall take place, and it
cometh to pass accordingly, when
the Lord commandeth not? — Or
who designs a thing, and brings
his designs to effect, when the
Lord is against him? “Haughty
tyrants may boast of their power
as if they were equal to
Omnipotence itself; but still it
is God’s prerogative to bring to
pass whatever he pleases,
without any let or impediment,
only by speaking, or declaring
his purpose, that the thing
should be done, as he did at the
beginning of the creation: see
Psalms 33:7. And as he makes men
the instruments of his vengeance
when he sees fit, so he can
restrain their cruelty whenever
he pleases.” — Lowth. Out of the
mouth of the Most High
proceedeth not evil and good? —
Do not calamities, as well as
prosperous events, happen by
God’s will and pleasure? The sum
is: Nothing comes to pass in the
world but by the disposal of the
divine providence, which is
directed by infinite wisdom,
justice, and goodness. The
inspired writer seems to be
arguing himself and the people
of God into a quiet submission
to the divine will in their
afflictions, from the
consideration of the hand of God
in them.
Verse 39
Lamentations 3:39. Wherefore,
&c. — The prophet here seems to
check and blame himself for the
complaints he had made in the
former part of the chapter,
wherein he appeared to reflect
upon God as unkind and severe.
And from the doctrine of God’s
sovereign and universal
providence, which he had
asserted in the last two verses,
he draws this inference,
Wherefore doth a living man
complain? a man for the
punishment of his sins? — No
calamity or trouble befalls us,
but what is the due reward of
our sins; and is designed as a
chastisement for them, in order
to our purification and
amendment, or for the trial of
our grace, and in order to the
exercise and increase of it. If
we view our afflictions in this
light, it will prevent all
murmuring and repining against
the providence of God. We shall
learn to be patient and resigned
under his chastising hand, and
even thankful that he
condescends to correct and try
us for our profit, and by
preserving us alive in the body
still gives us space for
repentance. “There seems,” says
Blaney, “to be a peculiar
emphasis laid on the words חי,
[living,] and גבר, [man,] in
this passage. גברis said to
denote a man, because of his
excellence and superiority over
all other earthly beings. While
a man therefore lives, and is
possessed of those privileges of
his nature, whatever he
undergoes must be less than his
sins have deserved, because
death, which implies the loss of
all those privileges, is the
allotted wages of sin.” Mark
well, reader, though we may pour
out our complaints before God,
we must never complain against
or of God. How cogent are the
reasons here suggested against
such a conduct! We are men, let
us herein show ourselves men.
Shall a man complain? Shall a
reasonable creature act contrary
to all reason, and an immortal
being forget or disregard his
immortality? Shall he be so
insensible of the value of the
privileges of his nature, and of
his obligations to God for them,
as to abuse them to God’s
dishonour, instead of using them
to his glory? Shall he take upon
him to censure or call in
question the dispensations of
infinite wisdom, justice, and
goodness toward him, and act as
if he thought he knew better
than his Maker what is good for
him? Shall a living man complain
— a man who has a thousand times
forfeited his life, with all the
blessings of it, but to whom it
is still continued, and with it
many of its comforts, and
particularly the means of
attaining life everlasting — a
hope, or a foundation whereon to
build a hope, of felicity and
glory for ever? A man for the
punishment of his sins? A
punishment infinitely less than
his sins have deserved? and a
punishment, or chastisement,
rather, which the omniscient God
knows to be absolutely necessary
to bring him to repentance and
reformation, if he will by any
means whatever be brought
thereto? Surely, reader, if we
be suffering for our sins,
instead of spending our time in
complaining and repining, we
ought to be employed in
repenting and reforming, and,
that we may have at least one
evidence that God is reconciled
to us, we should endeavour to
reconcile ourselves to his holy
and gracious will. Or, to
consider the matter in another
point of view: Are we punished
for our sins? It is then our
wisdom to submit, and kiss the
rod; for if we still walk
contrary to God, he will punish
us still seven times more, for
when he judgeth he will
overcome; but if we accommodate
ourselves to him, though we be
chastened of the Lord, we shall
not be condemned with the world.
Verse 40-41
Lamentations 3:40-41. Let us
search and try our ways — This
will be a more reasonable and
profitable employment than that
of complaining and murmuring
against the providence of God.
Let us search what our ways have
been, and try whether they have
been right and good or not. Let
us examine our tempers, words,
and works, and consider what
they have been, whether
agreeable or contrary to the
holy will of God. Let us try our
ways, that by them we may try
ourselves: for we are to judge
of our state and character, not
by our faint wishes, good
intentions, transient
resolutions, or even warm
affections, but by our steps;
and not by one particular step,
but by our ways, our whole
conduct; the ends we aim at, the
rules we go by, and the
agreeableness or contrariety of
the temper of our minds, and the
tenor of our lives to those ends
and those rules. When we are in
affliction it is peculiarly
seasonable to consider our ways,
(Haggai 1:5,) that what is amiss
may be repented of, and amended
for the future, and so we may
answer the intention of the
affliction. We are apt, in times
of public calamity, to reflect
upon other people’s ways, and
lay blame upon them, whereas our
business is to search and try
our own ways: we have work
enough to do at home; we must
each of us say, What have I
done? what have I contributed to
the public distress? That we may
each of us mend one, then we
shall all be mended. And let us
turn again to the Lord — Namely,
by a sincere conversion, even to
him who is turned against us,
and from whom we have turned; to
him let us turn by repentance,
reformation, and faith, as to
our owner and ruler. This
particular must accompany the
former, and be the fruit of it;
therefore we must search and try
our ways, that we may turn from
the evil of them to God; this
was the method David took, who
says, Psalms 119:59, I thought
on my ways, and turned my feet
into thy testimonies. Let us
lift up our heart, &c. — Let us
apply ourselves unto God by
prayer, without which we shall
attempt in vain to take the
preceding advice. Without
supernatural light from him we
shall search and try our ways to
little purpose: we shall still
remain unacquainted with
ourselves, and shall pass a
false judgment on our character
and conduct; and without his
renewing grace we shall not be
turned to him effectually. Now
for these blessings we must make
application to him in fervent
prayer, lifting up our hearts
with our hands, and pouring out
our souls with our words, in
confident expectation of
receiving what we ask.
Verses 42-47
Lamentations 3:42-47. We have
transgressed, &c. — Here the
prophet shows what will be the
effect of a proper searching and
trying of our ways; we shall be
convinced of our sinfulness and
guilt: and he here teaches us
that confession of sin must
accompany petition for the
pardon of it. For he that would
find mercy must confess as well
as forsake his sins, Proverbs
28:13; 1 John 1:9. Thou hast not
pardoned — That is, as the
expression seems here to mean,
thou hast not removed the
judgments brought upon us for
our sins. Thou continuest to
punish us according to the just
desert of our transgressions.
Thou hast covered with anger —
Either, thou hast covered
thyself with anger, hast covered
thy face, 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 hast pursued us to
a fatal ruin, without showing us
any pity. Thou hast covered
thyself, &c., that our prayer
should not pass through —
Whereas in our distress we had
no other resource but to apply
to thee for help, thou didst so
hide thy face and withdraw
thyself from us, that we could
have no access to thee or
intercourse with thee. The
expression is metaphorical, and
signifies no more than that God
would not hear their prayers in
their distress. Thou hast made
us the offscouring, &c. — That
is, thou hast made us extremely
contemptible in the eyes of all
nations, so that they value us
no more than the sweepings of
their houses, or the most vile
refuse, or contemptible things
imaginable. All our enemies have
opened their mouths — That is,
to mock, scoff, and reproach us.
Fear and a snare is come upon us
— That is, all manner of misery:
see the margin.
Verses 48-51
Lamentations 3:48-51. Mine eye
runneth down with rivers of
water — In this and the three
following verses the prophet
shows that the misfortunes of
his country constituted no small
part of his personal affliction.
Mine eye affecteth my heart —
Hebrew, עוללה לנפשׁי, preys upon
my soul, as the Vulgate renders
the expression, that is, my
grief wears out my health and
strength; because of all the
daughters of my city — On
account of the sufferings of the
inhabitants of my city.
Verses 52-58
Lamentations 3:52-58. Mine
enemies chased me sore — “The
prophet in this, and the
following verses, describes his
own sufferings, when his enemies
seized him and put him into the
dungeon, Jeremiah 37:16;
Jeremiah 38:6. He compares them
to a fowler in pursuit of a
bird; so, saith he, they sought
all opportunities to take an
advantage against me, and to
deprive me of my life and
liberty: and this they did
without any provocation given on
my part. So the word חנם,
without cause, signifies.” —
Lowth. They have cut off my life
— I was not only sequestered
from all human society, like a
dead man, but in apparent danger
of losing my life in the
dungeon. And their laying a
stone upon the entrance of that
dark pit resembled the burying
me alive. Waters flowed over my
head; then I said, &c. — When I
sunk down into the mire in this
dungeon, I despaired of my life,
just as if I had been sinking
over head in a river. I called
upon thy name, O Lord — I had
recourse to thee, O Jehovah, in
my distress; out of the low
dungeon — As Jonah out of the
whale’s belly. Observe, reader,
though we be cast into ever so
low a dungeon of calamity and
trouble, we may from thence find
a way of access to God in the
highest heavens. Thus the
psalmist, Out of the depths have
I cried unto thee, Psalms 130:1.
Hide not thine ear at my
breathing, at my cry — So he
terms his prayer. It was his
breathing toward God, and after
God. Prayer is the breath of the
new man, drawing in the air of
grace in petitions, and
returning it in praises; it is
both the evidence and
maintenance of the spiritual
life. Some read it, at my
gasping; when I lay gasping for
life, and ready to expire, and
thought I was breathing my last,
then thou tookest cognizance of
my distressed case. Thou drewest
near in the day that I called
upon thee — That is, thou didst
graciously assure me of thy
presence with me, and didst give
me to see thee nigh unto me,
whereas I had thought thee to be
at a distance from me. Thou
saidst, Fear not — This was the
language, 1st, of God’s
prophets, preaching to them not
to fear, Isaiah 41:10; Isaiah
41:13; Isaiah 2 d, of his
providence, preventing those
things which they were afraid
of; and, 3d, of his grace,
quieting their minds, and making
them easy, by the witness of his
Spirit with their spirits, that
they were his people still,
though in distress, and
therefore ought not to fear.
Thou hast pleaded the causes of
my soul — That is, as it
follows, Thou hast redeemed my
life, hast rescued it out of the
hands of those that would have
taken it away, hast saved it
when it was ready to be
swallowed up; thou hast given me
my life for a prey.
Verses 59-63
Lamentations 3:59-63. O Lord,
thou hast seen my wrong — Here
the prophet adverts to his
present sufferings, and the ill
usage he met with, concerning
which he appeals to God; as if
he had said, Thou hast seen that
I have done no wrong at all, but
that I suffer a great deal. He
that knows all things knew, 1st,
The malice they had against him;
thou hast seen, says he, all
their vengeance — How they
desire to do me a mischief, as
if it were by way of reprisal
for some great injury I had done
them. 2d, The designs and
projects they had laid to do him
a mischief. Thou hast seen,
Lamentations 3:60, and again,
Lamentations 3:61, Thou hast
heard, all their imaginations
against me, both their desires
and their devices to ruin me;
these, whether they show
themselves in word or deed, are
perfectly known to thee. 3d, The
contempt and calumny wherewith
they loaded him, all that they
spoke slightly, and all that
they spoke reproachfully of him.
Thou hast heard their reproach,
Lamentations 3:61; all the ill
characters they give me, laying
to my charge things that I know
not, all the methods that they
use to make me odious and
contemptible, even the lips of
those that rose up against me,
Lamentations 3:62; the
contumelious language they use
whenever they speak of me.
Behold, their sitting down, &c.
— That is, Behold at all times,
whether they sit down or rise
up, I am made the subject of
their merriment, and their
laughing-stock.
Verses 64-66
Lamentations 3:64-66. Render to
them a recompense, &c. — See
note on Jeremiah 11:20. The
verbs in these verses are not in
the imperative mood, but all in
the future tense, and certainly
should have been so rendered, as
indeed they are by the LXX.,
αποδωσεις αυτοις ανταποδομα
κυριε — αποδωσεις αυτοις — και
διας μου μοχθον. συ αυτους
καταδιωξεις εν οργη, και
εξαναλωσεις αυτους υποκατωθεν
του ουρανου κυριε. Thou wilt
render unto them a recompense, O
Lord — Thou wilt render unto
them the grief of my heart. Thou
wilt persecute them in wrath,
and destroy them from under the
heaven, O Lord. Thus also the
Vulgate, Blaney, and many
others. |