
Text -- Lamentations 1:20 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Lam 1:20
By famine and pestilence.
JFB: Lam 1:20 - -- (Job 30:27; Isa 16:11; Jer 4:19; Jer 31:20). Extreme mental distress affects the bowels and the whole internal frame.

JFB: Lam 1:20 - -- (Deu 32:25; Eze 7:15). The "as" does not modify, but intensifies. "Abroad the sword bereaveth, at home as it were death itself" (personified), in the...
Clarke -> Lam 1:20
Clarke: Lam 1:20 - -- Abroad the sword bereaveth - War is through the country; and at home death; the pestilence and famine rage in the city; calamity in every shape is f...
Abroad the sword bereaveth - War is through the country; and at home death; the pestilence and famine rage in the city; calamity in every shape is fallen upon me
Virgil represents the calamities of Troy under the same image: -
Nec soli poenas dant sanguine Teucri
Quondam etiam victis redit in praecordia virtus
Victoresque cadunt Danai. Crudelis ubiqu
Luctus, ubique Pavor, et plurima mortis imago
Aeneid. lib. 2:366
"Not only Trojans fall; but, in their turn
The vanquished triumph, and the victors mourn
Ours take new courage from despair and night
Confused the fortune is, confused the fight
All parts resound with tumults, plaints, and fears
And grisly death in sundry shapes appears.
Dryden
So Milton -
"- Despai
Tended the sick, busiest from couch to couch
And over them triumphant Death his dart Shook.
Par. Lost, B. 11:489
Jeremiah, Jer 9:21, uses the same image: -
Death is come up into our windows
He hath entered our palaces
To cut off the infants without
And the young men in our streets
So Silius Italicus, II. 548: -
Mors graditur, vasto pandens cava guttura rletu
Casuroque inhians populo
"Death stalks along, and opens his hideou
throat to gulp down the people."
Calvin -> Lam 1:20
Calvin: Lam 1:20 - -- The people turn again to pray God: and what has been before said ought to be remembered, that these lamentations of Jeremiah differ from the complain...
The people turn again to pray God: and what has been before said ought to be remembered, that these lamentations of Jeremiah differ from the complaints of the ungodly; because the faithful first acknowledge that they are justly chastised by God’s hand, and secondly, they trust in his mercy and implore his aid. For by these two marks the Church is distinguished from the unbelieving, even by repentance and faith. To sigh and to mourn in adversities, and to lament also their miseries, are common to both; but the children of God differ greatly from the ungodly, because they humble themselves under his mighty hand, and confess that they deserve to suffer punishment; and further, they cast not away the hope of salvation, but implore his mercy. Then the Prophet introduces again the people as praying God to look on them. For the ungodly pour forth their complaints into the air; and when at any time nature dictates to them that they ought to address God, yet no prayer arises from a sincere heart.
There is no doubt but that the Prophet here shewed to the faithful how they were to lament their common miseries, even so as patiently to bear the chastisements of God, and also to seek deliverance from him, though they had provoked his wrath. For when we see that we are pressed down by God’s hand, we do not murmur, but the knowledge of our sins humbles us, and faith moderates our mourning, which would otherwise exceed moderation. And when we thus humbly flee to God, we in a manner unburden our sorrows into his bosom, as it is said in the Psalms, “Cast (or roll) on God thy cares.” (Psa 55:22.)
He then says first, See, Jehovah, for affliction is to me. He then expresses the manner of the affliction, because his bowels were bound, or troubled. The word is from,
TSK -> Lam 1:20
TSK: Lam 1:20 - -- Behold : Lam 1:9, Lam 1:11; Isa 38:14
my bowels : Lam 2:11; Job 30:27; Psa 22:14; Isa 16:11; Jer 4:19, Jer 31:20, Jer 48:36; Hos 11:8; Hab 3:16
for : ...
Behold : Lam 1:9, Lam 1:11; Isa 38:14
my bowels : Lam 2:11; Job 30:27; Psa 22:14; Isa 16:11; Jer 4:19, Jer 31:20, Jer 48:36; Hos 11:8; Hab 3:16
for : Lam 1:18; Lev 26:40-42; 1Ki 8:47-50; Job 33:27; Psa 51:3, Psa 51:4; Pro 28:13; Jer 2:35, Jer 3:13; Luk 15:18, Luk 15:19, Luk 18:13, Luk 18:14
abroad : Lam 4:9, Lam 4:10; Deu 32:25; Jer 9:21, Jer 9:22, Jer 14:18; Eze 7:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lam 1:20
Barnes: Lam 1:20 - -- Troubled - Or, inflamed with sorrow. Turned within me - Agitated violently. At home there is as death - i. e. "in the house"there a...
Troubled - Or, inflamed with sorrow.
Turned within me - Agitated violently.
At home there is as death - i. e. "in the house"there are pale pining forms, wasting with hunger, and presenting the appearance of death.
Poole -> Lam 1:20
Poole: Lam 1:20 - -- The petition is of the same nature as before, a petition for mercy, as the product of that pity and compassion which extreme misery begets in good s...
The petition is of the same nature as before, a petition for mercy, as the product of that pity and compassion which extreme misery begets in good souls, (and is ascribed unto God, though found in him in a much more perfect degree, Psa 78:38 86:15 111:4 ) through the eyes affecting the heart. The argument the prophet useth is drawn from the misery this people was now in, which he expresseth metaphorically, telling us their bowels were troubled, their heart turned, signifying the more inward disturbance of their mind; or more plainly, and that both generally, saying they were in distress, and more particularly by the great judgments of the sword and famine, the sword in the field, the famine in the city; unless the sword alone be meant both without and within the gates of the city. In all this the church justifieth God, confessing this was but the righteous product of her sin, by which, she having formerly subjected herself to God, had grievously rebelled; for as all men are born subjects to God, so by their sins they are become rebels; so it is a great aggravation of men’ s rebellion against the Lord, when they have formerly taken an oath of fealty to the Lord, and, as Moses said, avouched the Lord as their God.
Haydock -> Lam 1:20
Haydock: Lam 1:20 - -- Alike, by famine, &c. (Calmet) (Worthington) ---
Ubique pavor et plurima mortis imago. (Virgil, ֶneid ii.)
Alike, by famine, &c. (Calmet) (Worthington) ---
Ubique pavor et plurima mortis imago. (Virgil, ֶneid ii.)
Gill -> Lam 1:20
Gill: Lam 1:20 - -- Behold, O Lord, for I am in distress,.... Thus she turns from one to another; sometimes she addresses strangers, people that pass by; sometimes she c...
Behold, O Lord, for I am in distress,.... Thus she turns from one to another; sometimes she addresses strangers, people that pass by; sometimes she calls to her lovers; and at other times to God, which is best of all, to have pity and compassion on her in her distress; and from whom it may be most expected, who is a God of grace and mercy:
my bowels are troubled; as the sea, agitated by winds, which casts up mire and dirt; or as any waters, moved by anything whatsoever, become thick and muddy; or like wine in fermentation; so the word l, in the Arabic language, signifies, expressive of great disturbance, confusion, and uneasiness:
mine heart is turned within me; has no rest nor peace:
for I have grievously rebelled; against God and his word; her sins were greatly aggravated, and these lay heavy on her mind and conscience, and greatly distressed her:
abroad the sword bereaveth; this, and what follows in the next clause, describe the state and condition of the Jews, while the city was besieged; without it, the sword of the Chaldeans bereaved mothers of their children, and children of their parents, and left them desolate:
at home there is as death; within the city, and in the houses of it, the famine raged, which was as death, and worse than immediate death; it was a lingering one: or, "in the house was certain death" m; for the "caph" here is not a mere note of similitude, but of certainty and reality; to abide at home was sure and certain death, nothing else could be expected. The Targum is
"within the famine kills like the destroying angel that is appointed over death;''
see Heb 2:14; and Jarchi interprets it of the fear of demons and noxious spirits, and the angels of death.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lam 1:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Lam 1:1-22 - --1 The miseries of Jerusalem and of the Jews pathetically lamented, with confessions of their sins.12 The attention and compassion of beholders demande...
MHCC -> Lam 1:12-22
MHCC: Lam 1:12-22 - --Jerusalem, sitting dejected on the ground, calls on those that passed by, to consider whether her example did not concern them. Her outward sufferings...
Matthew Henry -> Lam 1:12-22
Matthew Henry: Lam 1:12-22 - -- The complaints here are, for substance, the same with those in the foregoing part of the chapter; but in these verses the prophet, in the name of th...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lam 1:20-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 1:20-22 - --
Since neither comfort nor advice is to be found with men, Jerusalem makes her complaint of need to God the Lord. "See, Jahveh, that I am distressed....
Constable -> Lam 1:1-22; Lam 1:12-22
Constable: Lam 1:1-22 - --I. The destruction and misery of Jerusalem (the first lament) ch. 1
This acrostic lament contains a variety of s...
