
Text -- Lamentations 3:51 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Lam 3:49-51 - -- Or else, "because there is no intermission" [PISCATOR], namely, Of my miseries.
Or else, "because there is no intermission" [PISCATOR], namely, Of my miseries.

JFB: Lam 3:51 - -- That is, causeth me grief with continual tears; or, "affecteth my life" (literally, "soul," Margin), that is, my health [GROTIUS].
That is, causeth me grief with continual tears; or, "affecteth my life" (literally, "soul," Margin), that is, my health [GROTIUS].

The towns around, dependencies of Jerusalem, taken by the foe.
Clarke: Lam 3:51 - -- Mine eye affecteth mine heart - What I see I feel. I see nothing but misery; and I feel, in consequence, nothing but pain. There have been various t...
Mine eye affecteth mine heart - What I see I feel. I see nothing but misery; and I feel, in consequence, nothing but pain. There have been various translations of the original: but they all amount to this

The daughters of my city - The villages about Jerusalem.
Calvin -> Lam 3:51
Calvin: Lam 3:51 - -- He had said, that his eye flowed down, and then, that it was like a fountain, from which many streams or rivers flowed: he now adopts another mode of...
He had said, that his eye flowed down, and then, that it was like a fountain, from which many streams or rivers flowed: he now adopts another mode of speaking, that his eyes grieved his soul; and it is a sign of the greatest sorrow when he who weeps seeks some relief, and is at the same time overpowered by that external feeling. For many indulge in grief and inflame themselves; then the soul of man is like a fan to rouse the burning. But when we weep and our eyes shed tears, and when the mind in a manner exhausts itself, it is a proof of the greatest grief. And this great. grief Jeremiah wished to express by saying, that his eye troubled or grieved his soul
The latter part is explained in two ways: sonic render thus, “Because of all the daughters of my city.” But though this meaning is generally taken, I yet prefer the opinion of those who render the words thus, “More than all the daughters of my city,” for
TSK -> Lam 3:51
TSK: Lam 3:51 - -- eye : Gen 44:34; 1Sa 30:3, 1Sa 30:4; Jer 4:19-21, Jer 14:18; Luk 19:41-44
mine heart : Heb. my soul
because of all : or, more than all
the daughters :...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lam 3:48-51
Barnes: Lam 3:48-51 - -- The deep sympathy of the prophet, which pours itself forth in abundant tears over the distress of his people. Lam 3:51 Or, "Mine eye"causeth ...
Poole -> Lam 3:51
Poole: Lam 3:51 - -- The eye and the ear are those organs of the body, by which the soul exerciseth its senses to bring in all objects, whether pleasant or sad, to the u...
The eye and the ear are those organs of the body, by which the soul exerciseth its senses to bring in all objects, whether pleasant or sad, to the understanding to judge of them, according to the judgment of which upon them it is affected with joy or sorrow, desire or aversation, &c.; and the eye is the chiefest of these, because its evidence is more certain, and less subject to deceit. The prophet and most of the Jews were eye-witnesses to the evils which had befallen the Jews, and which at present were upon them; so as their hearts were the more affected. The word translated
affect is by some noted to signify to waste and consume , which are the effects of a deep affecting the heart with sad and miserable objects. Because of all the daughters of my city : our margin tells us that it may be also read more than all the daughters of my city ; according to which the sense is, that he was more affected with the state of Jerusalem than the tenderest woman that had lived in it: but it is as well, if not better, in this place rendered causally, showing the reason of his deep affliction, viz. all those miseries he had seen fall upon all the Jewish nation, or upon all the inhabitants of Jerusalem.
Haydock -> Lam 3:51
Haydock: Lam 3:51 - -- Wasted. Literally, "robbed." (Haydock) ---
I have felt more for my people than they have themselves. Moral writers often product this text, to sh...
Wasted. Literally, "robbed." (Haydock) ---
I have felt more for my people than they have themselves. Moral writers often product this text, to shew the dangers of an unguarded glance (Calmet) at women.
Gill -> Lam 3:51
Gill: Lam 3:51 - -- Mine eye affecteth mine heart,.... Seeing the desolation of his country; the ruins of the city and temple of Jerusalem; and the multitudes of those th...
Mine eye affecteth mine heart,.... Seeing the desolation of his country; the ruins of the city and temple of Jerusalem; and the multitudes of those that were slain, and carried captive; and the distresses the rest were in; this affected his heart, and filled it with grief; as his heart also affected his eyes, and caused them to run down in rivers of water, as before expressed; or, as the Targum,
"the weeping of mine eyes is the occasion of hurt to my soul or life;''
his excessive weeping endangered his life:
because of all the daughters of my city; not Anathoth, his native place, but Jerusalem; so the Targum,
"of Jerusalem my city.''
The meaning is, that his heart was affected at seeing the ruin of the inhabitants of Jerusalem; or of the towns and cities round about it, which that was the metropolis of. Some, as Jarchi, render it, "more than all the daughters of my city" p; his heart was more affected with those calamities than those of the most tender sex, even than any or all of them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Lam 3:51 Heb “at the sight of all the daughters of my city.” It is understood that seeing the plight of the women, not simply seeing the women, is ...
Geneva Bible -> Lam 3:51
Geneva Bible: Lam 3:51 My eye ( x ) affecteth my heart because of all the daughters of my city.
( x ) I am overcome with sore weeping for all my people.

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 3:51
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 3:51 - --
Lam 3:51, taken literally, runs thus: "Mine eye does evil to my soul" ( עולל with ל signifies to inflict an injury on one, cause suffering, as...
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 ...
