Verses 1-6
Lamentations 5:1-6. Consider,
and behold our reproach — Which
we suffer from the heathen
nations. Our inheritance is
turned to strangers — Namely, to
the Babylonians and others, to
whom our lands are given. We are
orphans and fatherless — All the
chief men being carried away to
Babylon, lest they should make
any fresh attempts to shake off
the Babylonish yoke, all that
were left in Judea were poor
people, destitute of almost
every thing. We have drunk our
water for money, &c. — When our
country was in our own
possession, we had free use of
water and wood, both which we
are now forced to buy. Our necks
are under persecution — We are
become slaves to our enemies,
who make us labour incessantly.
We have given the hand to the
Egyptians, &c. — We have been
obliged to stretch out our hands
to the Egyptians and Assyrians
for bread to support us. Whether
the expression here used implies
their begging it of them, or
buying it with money, is not
quite plain.
Verses 7-10
Lamentations 5:7-10. Our fathers
have sinned, and are not — Death
hath secured our fathers from
these evils, though they had
sinned; but the punishment they
escaped, we suffer in the most
grievous degree: see note on
Jeremiah 31:29. The expression,
is not, or, are not, is often
used of those who are departed
out of this world, Genesis
42:13. Servants have ruled over
us — Servants to the great men
among the Chaldeans, and other
strangers, are become our
masters, Nehemiah 5:15. We gat
our bread with the peril of our
lives, &c. — It was at the
hazard of our lives that we
brought in the grain out of the
fields, on account of the
robbers who infested the
country. Blaney thinks that the
prophet refers here to the
incursions of the Arabian free-booters,
who, he supposes, might not be
improperly styled, the sword of
the wilderness, to whose
depredations the people, on
account of their weak and
helpless state, were continually
exposed, while they followed
their necessary business. Our
skin was black like an oven —
Famine and other hardships
changed the very colour of our
countenances.
Verses 12-16
Lamentations 5:12-16. Princes
are hanged up by their hand — By
the hand of their enemies. They
took the young men to grind — To
grind at the mill was the common
employment of slaves, Exodus
11:5. The children fell under
the wood — They made children
turn the handle of the mill till
they fell down through
weariness: so some explain it
with relation to the former part
of the verse. But the expression
may be understood of making them
carry such heavy burdens of wood
that they fainted under the
load. The elders have ceased
from the gate — The elders no
more sit in the gates of the
cities, to administer justice to
every one, and keep things in
order. The young men from their
music — Those songs of mirth and
joy which used to be heard in
our nation are heard no longer.
The joy of our heart is ceased —
Since the enemy came in upon us
like a flood, we have been
strangers to all comfort. Our
dance is turned into mourning —
Instead of leaping for joy, as
formerly, we sink and lie down
in sorrow. This may refer
especially to the joy of their
solemn feasts: this was now
turned into mourning, which was
doubled on their festival days,
in remembrance of their former
delights and comforts. The crown
is fallen from our head — At
their feasts, at their
marriages, and other seasons of
festivity, they used to crown
themselves with flowers. The
prophet most probably alludes to
this custom, as we may gather
from the preceding verses. The
general meaning is, “All our
glory is at an end, together
with the advantages of being thy
people, and enjoying thy
presence, by which we were
distinguished from the rest of
the world.” — Lowth.
Verse 17-18
Lamentations 5:17-18. For this
our heart is faint — And sinks
under the load of its own
heaviness. Our eyes are dim —
See on Lamentations 2:11. Our
spirits fail us, and we are
almost blind with weeping.
Because of the mountain of Zion
— The holy mountain, and the
temple built upon it. Nothing
lies with so heavy a load upon
the spirits of good people, as
that which threatens the ruin of
religion, or weakens the
interest thereof: and it is a
mark of our possessing saving
grace, if we can appeal to God
that we are more concerned for
his cause than for any temporal
interests of our own. The Jews
had polluted the mountain of
Zion with their sins, and
therefore God justly made it
desolate; which he did to such a
degree that the foxes walked
upon it, as freely and commonly
as they did in the woods. It is
lamentable indeed when the
mountain of Zion is made a
portion for foxes, Psalms 63:10.
Verses 19-22
Lamentations 5:19-22. Thou, O
Lord, remainest for ever —
Though, for our sins, thou hast
suffered these calamities to
befall us, and our throne,
through thy righteous
providence, is thrown down; yet
thou art still the same God that
thou ever wast: thy power is not
diminished, nor thy goodness
abated. Thou still governest the
world, and orderest all the
events of it, and shalt rule it,
and superintend its affairs, for
ever and ever. Thou art,
therefore, always able to help
us, and art thou not as willing
as able? Is it possible thou
shouldest be unmindful of the
promises which thou hast made to
thy people? Our hope, therefore,
is still in thee, unto whom we
look for mercy and deliverance.
Wherefore dost thou forget us,
&c. — Wherefore dost thou act
toward us, in the dispensations
of thy providence, as if thou
hadst forgotten us, and forsaken
us, and that for a long time?
Turn thou us unto thee, O Lord —
Turn us unto thyself from our
sins and idols, by a sincere
repentance and thorough
conversion; and we shall be
turned — Effectually and
lastingly turned to thee, so as
to turn from thee no more. Renew
our days as of old — Restore us
to that happiness and prosperity
which we formerly enjoyed. But
thou hast utterly rejected us —
Hebrew, כיאם מאס מאסתנו, which,
it seems, should rather be
rendered, For surely thou hast
cast us off, &c., the prophet,
in this verse, assigning the
reason of the preceding
application. For God’s having
rejected his people, and
expressed great indignation
against them, was the cause and
ground of their pleading with
him, and praying thus earnestly
to be restored to his favour and
the enjoyment of their ancient
privileges. The Jewish rabbins,
because they would not have the
book to conclude with the
melancholy words of this verse,
repeat after them the prayer of
the preceding verse, namely,
Turn thou us unto thee, &c., a
prayer which we cannot too
frequently, or too fervently,
address to God, for ourselves
and others. And surely the
fervent zeal with which the
prophet beseeches the Lord to
have compassion on his people,
should excite us, at all times,
to pray earnestly to him,
especially for the protection,
safety, and prosperity of his
church, and the supply of all
its wants, whether it be exposed
to persecutions and sufferings
on the one hand, or the assaults
of infidelity, impiety, and vice
on the other. We may learn also,
from this humble and earnest
prayer of the prophet for the
restoration of the Jewish
nation, that, when God corrects
us, and afflicts us, even with
the greatest severity, we must
not despond or restrain prayer
before him, but have recourse to
him by true repentance and
faith, and implore his pardoning
mercy and renewing grace, as the
only way to obtain the light of
his countenance, and a
restoration to our former state
of peace, tranquillity, and
comfort. |