
Text -- Lamentations 3:43 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Lam 3:43-45
JFB: Lam 3:43-45 - -- Namely, thyself (so Lam 3:44), so as not to see and pity our calamities, for even the most cruel in seeing a sad spectacle are moved to pity. Compare ...
Calvin -> Lam 3:43
Calvin: Lam 3:43 - -- At the first view, this complaint may seem to proceed from a bitter heart; for here the faithful complain that they had been slain, and then that God...
At the first view, this complaint may seem to proceed from a bitter heart; for here the faithful complain that they had been slain, and then that God had executed his judgment as it were in darkness, without any indulgence; and the next verse confirms the same thing. But it is a simple acknowledgment of God’s righteous vengeance for in their extreme calamities the faithful could not declare that God dealt mercifully with them, for they had been subjected to extreme rigor, as we have before seen. Had they said that they had been leniently chastised, it would have been very strange, for the temple had been burnt, the city had been demolished, the kingdom had been overthrown, the people for the most part had been driven into exile, the remainder had been scattered, the covenant of God had been in a manner abolished; for it could not have been thought otherwise according to the judgment of the flesh. Had, then, the exiles in Chaldea said that God had smitten them leniently, would not such an extenuation have appeared very strange? and had also the Prophet spoken in the same strain? For the causes of sorrow were almost innumerable: every one had been robbed of his goods; then there were many widows, many orphans; but the chief causes of sorrow were the burning of the temple and the ruin of the kingdom. No wonder, then, that the faithful set forth here their aggravated evils: but yet they seek out no other cause than their own sins.
Hence they say now, that God had covered them over in wrath It is a most suitable metaphor; as though he had said, that God had executed his vengeance in thick darkness. For an object presented to the eye produces sympathy, and we are easily inclined to mercy when a sad spectacle is presented to us. Hence it is, that even the most savage enemies are sometimes softened, for they are led by their eyes to acts of humanity. The Prophet, then, in order to set forth the horrible vengeance of God, says that there had been a covering introduced, so that God had punished the wicked people in an implacable manner. But as I have said, he does not charge God with cruelty, though he says that he had covered them over in wrath. 196
He then says, Thou hast pursued us and killed us, and hast not spared They intimate, in short, that God had been a severe judge; but they at the same time turned to themselves and sought there the cause, even that they might not, by their own hardness, provoke God against themselves, as hypocrites are wont to do. And the consciousness of evil leads us also to repentance; for whence is it that men grow torpid in their sins, except that they flatter themselves? When, therefore, God suspends his judgments, or when he moderates them, and does not punish men as they deserve, then, if there be any repentance, it is yet frigid, and soon vanishes. This, then, is the reason why God inflicts deadly strokes, because we feel not his hand except the stroke be as it were deadly. As, then, simple chastisement is not sufficient to lead us to repentance, the Prophet introduces the faithful as speaking thus, “Behold, thou hast in wrath covered us over, so as not to look on us,” so that there might be no opportunity for mercy, that is, that they might be the judges of themselves, and conclude from the atrocity of their punishment how grievously they must have provoked the wrath of God. It follows in the same sense, —
TSK -> Lam 3:43
TSK: Lam 3:43 - -- covered : Lam 2:1; Psa 44:19
persecuted : Lam 3:66; Psa 83:15
thou hast slain : Lam 2:2, Lam 2:17, Lam 2:21; 2Ch 36:16, 2Ch 36:17; Eze 7:9, Eze 8:18, ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lam 3:43
Barnes: Lam 3:43 - -- In verses 43-66, far from pardoning, God is still actively punishing His people. Rather, "Thou hast covered"Thyself "with wrath and pursued (Lam 1:3...
Poole -> Lam 3:43
Poole: Lam 3:43 - -- Thou hast covered with anger either thou hast covered thyself with anger, or covered thy own face with anger, so as not to look upon us to move thy p...
Thou hast covered with anger either thou hast covered thyself with anger, or covered thy own face with anger, 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.
Haydock -> Lam 3:43
Covered thyself, as if not to see our distress.
Gill -> Lam 3:43
Gill: Lam 3:43 - -- Thou hast covered with anger,.... Either himself; not as a tender father, that cannot bear to see the affliction of a child; this does not suit with a...
Thou hast covered with anger,.... Either himself; not as a tender father, that cannot bear to see the affliction of a child; this does not suit with anger; but rather as one greatly displeased, in whose face anger appears, being covered with it; or who covers his face with it, that he may not be seen, withdrawing his gracious presence; or hast put anger as a wall between thee and us, as Jarchi: so that there was no coming nigh to him: or else it means covering his people with it; so the Targum,
"thou hast covered "us" with anger;''
denoting the largeness and abundance of afflictions upon them; they were as it were covered with them, as tokens of the divine displeasure; one wave and billow after another passing over them. Sanctius thinks the allusion is to the covering of the faces of condemned malefactors, as a token of their being guilty:
and persecuted us; the Targum adds, in captivity; that is, pursued and followed us with fresh instances of anger and resentment; to have men to be persecutors is bad, but to have God to be a persecutor is dreadful:
thou hast slain, thou hast not pitied; had suffered them to be stain by the sword of the enemy, and had shown no compassion to them; See Gill on Lam 2:21; here, and in some following verses, the prophet, or the people he represents, are got to complaining again; though before he had checked himself for it; so hard it is under afflictions to put in practice what should be done by ourselves and others.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lam 3:1-66
TSK Synopsis: Lam 3:1-66 - --1 The prophet bewails his own calamities.22 By the mercies of God, he nourishes his hope.37 He acknowledges God's justice.55 He prays for deliverance,...
MHCC -> Lam 3:42-54
MHCC: Lam 3:42-54 - --The more the prophet looked on the desolations, the more he was grieved. Here is one word of comfort. While they continued weeping, they continued wai...
Matthew Henry -> Lam 3:42-54
Matthew Henry: Lam 3:42-54 - -- It is easier to chide ourselves for complaining than to chide ourselves out of it. The prophet had owned that a living man should not complain, as i...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lam 3:43-48
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 3:43-48 - --
God has not pardoned, but positively punished, the people for their misdeeds. "Thou hast covered with anger," Lam 3:43, corresponds to "Thou hast co...
Constable -> Lam 3:1-66; Lam 3:41-66
Constable: Lam 3:1-66 - --III. The prophet's response to divine judgment (the third lament) ch. 3
As mentioned previously, this lament is ...
