
Text -- Lamentations 4:9 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The speedy death by the sword is better than the lingering death by famine.

JFB: Lam 4:9 - -- Literally, "flow out"; referring to the flow of blood. This expression, and "stricken through," are drawn from death by "the sword."
Literally, "flow out"; referring to the flow of blood. This expression, and "stricken through," are drawn from death by "the sword."
Calvin -> Lam 4:9
Calvin: Lam 4:9 - -- The beginning of the verse is without any difficulty; for the Prophet says that it happened better to those who immediately perished by the sword tha...
The beginning of the verse is without any difficulty; for the Prophet says that it happened better to those who immediately perished by the sword than to others who had to struggle with famine, according to what he had lately said, that the punishment of Sodom was more tolerable, because it was suddenly executed. Sudden death is the easiest And the Prophet, when complaining that the ungodly prospered, so that the faithful sometimes envied them, says that they die as it were in a moment, and are taken away from the world; but he says that the faithful are held, as it were, captive by the snares of death, and protract life in perpetual languor. For this reason the Prophet now says that the punishment of death would have been light to the Jews. And yet we know that. a violent death is regarded by us with horror. For he who dies on his bed is said to yield to his fate, as he seems to pay what he owes to nature; but, he who is slain by the sword is violently snatched away, and, as it were, contrary to nature. Violent death, then, is always horrible. But the comparison used by the Prophet amplifies the atrocity of their punishment, because it would have been more desirable to have been killed at once than to remain alive to struggle with famine.
And he expresses himself more clearly by saying that they pined away, having been pierced through by the fruits of the earth There is here some obscurity, but by the fruits of the earth, we are no doubt to understand all kinds of food. Some consider that “defect,” or failure, is to be understood. But the Prophet speaks much more emphatically, even that all the productions of the earth took vengeance on this wicked people, by refusing the usual supply. The earth is the servant of God’s bounty and kindness; for it is the same as though he with his hand extended food to us, when the earth opens its bowels; so also the productions of the earth are evidences of God’s paternal love towards us. Now, when the fruits of the earth withdraw themselves from us, they are as it were the weapons to execute God’s vengeance. So, then, the Prophet means that the Jews had been pierced through by the fruits of the earth, and thus had pined away; as though he had said, that they had not been pierced by the sword, but had been wounded by famine, for the productions of the earth became, as it were, swords, while yet they sustain, as we have said, the life of men. 215
TSK -> Lam 4:9

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Lam 4:9
Poole: Lam 4:9 - -- During the siege many were killed by the enemies’ sword, many more perished by famine; the prophet saith the condition of those who perished b...
During the siege many were killed by the enemies’ sword, many more perished by famine; the prophet saith the condition of those who perished by the sword was much better than the condition of those who perished by famine, because they had a quicker death, and were sooner despatched and put out of their pain; whereas they who perished by hunger died a miserable, lingering death, gradually pining away, because they wanted corn and herbs, the fruits of the field, to uphold their souls in life.
Haydock -> Lam 4:9
Haydock: Lam 4:9 - -- For. Literally, "by the barrenness of the earth." (Haydock) ---
Such a death was, no doubt, more painful than to perish quickly by the sword. (Ca...
For. Literally, "by the barrenness of the earth." (Haydock) ---
Such a death was, no doubt, more painful than to perish quickly by the sword. (Calmet)
Gill -> Lam 4:9
Gill: Lam 4:9 - -- They that be slain with the sword are better than they that be slain with hunger,.... Not that they are better with respect to their state after dea...
They that be slain with the sword are better than they that be slain with hunger,.... Not that they are better with respect to their state after death, but with respect to their manner of dying. They that were slain by the sword of the Chaldeans, as many were, either upon the walls, or in sallies out against the enemy, these felt less pain, and had less terror of mind in dying, than those did who perished by famine; they died a lingering death, as it were by inches, and were in continual pain of body and uneasiness of mind:
for these pine away, stricken through for want of the fruits of the field: that is, those that died by famine gradually wasted or "flowed" away, their fluid parts by degrees went off; and though they were not run through with the sword, they were stabbed by famine, and were so distressed in body and mind as if a sword had pierced them; not having the fruits of the field, the corn and the wine, to support nature, and keep them alive. Jarchi's note is,
"they that were slain with hunger were inflated at the smell of the fruits of the field, when the enemies were roasting their flesh upon the grass without the wall; the smell entered into those that swelled by famine, and their bellies burst, and their excrements flowed out; and this is the death worse than that of being slain with the sword.''
And to this agrees the Targum,
"more happy are they that are slain with the sword than they that are slain with famine; for they that are slain with the sword flowed when their bellies were burst, by that which they ate of the fruits of the field; and those that were inflated with famine, their bellies burst through "want" of food.''
Most interpreters refer this clause to those that died of famine: but Gussetius z interprets it of those that were killed with the sword; and renders and paraphrases the words thus, "for they being stabbed, sent out"; by the open wounds, "a flux, which arose from the fruits of the field"; their food and nourishment being yet in their belly and veins, and so did not pine away through penury and famine; and their misery was short and light, in comparison of others: and so Abendana.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lam 4:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Lam 4:1-22 - --1 Zion bewails her pitiful estate.13 She confesses her sins.21 Edom is threatened and Zion comforted.
MHCC -> Lam 4:1-12
MHCC: Lam 4:1-12 - --What a change is here! Sin tarnishes the beauty of the most exalted powers and the most excellent gifts; but that gold, tried in the fire, which Chris...
Matthew Henry -> Lam 4:1-12
Matthew Henry: Lam 4:1-12 - -- The elegy in this chapter begins with a lamentation of the very sad and doleful change which the judgments of God had made in Jerusalem. The city th...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lam 4:1-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 4:1-11 - --
The misery that has come on the inhabitants of Jerusalem is a punishment for their deep guilt. The description given of this misery is divided into ...
Constable -> Lam 4:1-22; Lam 4:1-11
Constable: Lam 4:1-22 - --IV. The anger of Yahweh (the fourth lament) ch. 4
The fourth lament is similar to the second one in that they bo...
