
Text -- Lamentations 1:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Lam 1:8 - -- As a woman separated from the congregation of God for legal impurity, which is a type of moral impurity. So Lam 1:17; Lev 12:2; Lev 15:19, &c.

JFB: Lam 1:8 - -- They have treated her as contumeliously as courtesans from whom their clothes are stripped.
They have treated her as contumeliously as courtesans from whom their clothes are stripped.

JFB: Lam 1:8 - -- As modest women do from shame, that is, she is cast down from all hope of restoration [CALVIN].
As modest women do from shame, that is, she is cast down from all hope of restoration [CALVIN].
Calvin -> Lam 1:8
Calvin: Lam 1:8 - -- Here the Prophet expresses more clearly and strongly what he had briefly referred to, even that all the evil which the Jews suffered proceeded from G...
Here the Prophet expresses more clearly and strongly what he had briefly referred to, even that all the evil which the Jews suffered proceeded from God’s vengeance, and that they were worthy of such a punishment, because they had not lightly offended, but had heaped up for themselves a dreadful judgment, since they had in all manner of ways abandoned themselves to impiety. This is the substance of what is said. We hence learn that the Prophet did not compose this song to lament the calamity of his own country as heathens were wont to do. An example of a heathen lamentation we have in Virgil: —
“Come is the great day and the unavoidable time
Of Dardania: we Trojans have been; Ilium has been,
And the great glory of the Teuerians: cruel Jupiter has to Argos
Transferred all things: the Danai rule in the burnt city.” 130
He also repeats the same sentiment in other words: —
“O country! O Ilium, the house of the gods! and the famous for war,
The camp of the Dardanidans! cruel Jupiter has to Argos
Transferred all things.” 131
He thus mourns the destruction of Troy; but he complains of the cruelty of God, and calls Him cruel Jupiter, because he was himself enraged, and yet the speaker was Pantheus the priest of Apollo. We hence see how the unbelieving, when they lament their own calamities, vomit forth blasphemies against. God, for they are exasperated by sorrow. Very different is the complaint of the Prophet from that of the ungodly; for when he deplores the miseries of his people, he at the same time adds that God is a righteous avenger. He does not then accuse God of cruelty or of too much rigor, but reminds the people to humble themselves before God and to confess that they justly deserved all their evils.
The unbelieving do indeed sometimes mingle some words, by which they seem to give glory to God; but they are evanescent, for they soon return to their perverseness. They are sometimes moderate, “If thou art turned by any entreaties.” In that case they expostulate with God:, as though he were deaf to the prayers of his servants. At length they break out into open blasphemies, —
“After it seemed good to the gods to subvert the affairs of Asia
And the undeserved nation of Priam.” 132 —
They regarded the nation which had been cut off unworthy of such a punishment; they called it an undeserved nation. Now, then, we perceive what is the difference between the unbelieving and the children of God. For it is common to all to mourn in adversities; but the end of the mourning of the unbelieving is perverseness, which at length breaks out into rage, when they feel their evils, and they do not in the meantime humble themselves before God. But the faithful do not harden themselves in their mourning, but reflect on themselves and examine their own life, and of their own accord prostrate themselves before God, and willingly submit to the sentence of condemnation, and confess that God is just.
We hence now see how the calamity of the Church ought to be lamented by us, even that we are to return to this principle, that God is a just avenger, and does not punish common offenses only, but the greatest sins, and that when he reduces us to extremities, lie does so on account of the greatness of our sins, as also Daniel confessed. For it was not in few words that he declared that the people were worthy of exile and of the punishment which they suffered; but he accumulated words,
We have sinned, we have acted impiously, we have done wickedly, we have been transgressors.” (Dan 9:5.)
Nor was the Prophet satisfied without this enumeration, for he saw how great the impiety of the people had been, and how mad had been their obstinacy, not for a few years, but for that long time, during which they had been warned by the prophets, and yet they repented not, but always became worse and worse. Such, then, is the mode of speaking adopted here.
He says that she was made a commotion, that is, that she was removed from her country. There seems to be implied a contrast between the rest which had been promised to the Jews, and a wandering and vagrant exile; for, as we have seen, the Jews had not only been banished, but they had nowhere a quiet dwelling; it was even a commotion. This may at the same time be referred to the curse of the law, because they were to be for a commotion — for even the unbelieving shook their heads at them. But the word,
TSK -> Lam 1:8
TSK: Lam 1:8 - -- hath : Lam 1:5, Lam 1:20; 1Ki 8:46, 1Ki 8:47, 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:9; Isa 59:2-13; Jer 6:28; Eze 14:13-21; Eze 22:2-15
removed : Heb. become a removing, or ...
hath : Lam 1:5, Lam 1:20; 1Ki 8:46, 1Ki 8:47, 1Ki 9:7, 1Ki 9:9; Isa 59:2-13; Jer 6:28; Eze 14:13-21; Eze 22:2-15
removed : Heb. become a removing, or wandering, Jer 15:4, Jer 24:9, Jer 34:17; Eze 23:46 *marg.
all : Lam 4:15, Lam 4:16, Lam 5:12-16; 1Sa 2:30
they : Lam 4:21; Isa 47:3; Jer 13:22, Jer 13:26; Eze 16:37-39, Eze 23:29; Hos 2:3, Hos 2:10; Rev 3:18
she sigheth : Lam 1:4, Lam 1:11, Lam 1:21, Lam 1:22, Lam 2:10; Jer 4:31

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lam 1:8
Barnes: Lam 1:8 - -- Grievously sinned - literally, "Jerusalem hath sinned a sin,"giving the idea of a persistent continuance in wickedness. Removed - Or, bec...
Grievously sinned - literally, "Jerusalem hath sinned a sin,"giving the idea of a persistent continuance in wickedness.
Removed - Or, become an abomination. Sin has made Jerusalem an object of horror, and therefore she is cast away.
Yea, she sigheth ... - Jerusalem groans over the infamy of her deeds thus brought to open shame, and turns her back upon the spectators in order to hide herself.
Poole -> Lam 1:8
Poole: Lam 1:8 - -- She is carried out of her own land into an enemy’ s country, and made a hissing and scorn to those who before reverenced her, (in all this God ...
She is carried out of her own land into an enemy’ s country, and made a hissing and scorn to those who before reverenced her, (in all this God is righteous, for all orders of men have grievously sinned,) because they have seen the Lord stripping her of all her blessings, and exposing her to the scorn and reproach of all men, as strumpets are exposed.
Haydock -> Lam 1:8
Haydock: Lam 1:8 - -- Unstable. Hebrew also, "removed," (Haydock) like a woman unclean. (Calmet) ---
Such were excluded from places of prayer, and were not allowed to t...
Unstable. Hebrew also, "removed," (Haydock) like a woman unclean. (Calmet) ---
Such were excluded from places of prayer, and were not allowed to touch a sacred book, or to pronounce God's name. Their husbands could not look at their face, nor give them any thing, but laid it down for them to take. (Buxtorf, Syn. 31.) ---
No condition could be more distressing. (Calmet)
Gill -> Lam 1:8
Gill: Lam 1:8 - -- Jerusalem hath grievously sinned,.... Or, "hath sinned a sin" r; a great sin, as the Targum; the sin of idolatry, according to some; or of covenant br...
Jerusalem hath grievously sinned,.... Or, "hath sinned a sin" r; a great sin, as the Targum; the sin of idolatry, according to some; or of covenant breaking, as others; though perhaps no particular sin is meant, but many grievous sins; since she was guilty of a multitude of them, as in Lam 1:5;
therefore she is removed; out of her own land, and carried captive into another: or, is "for commotion" s; for scorn and derision; the head being moved and shook at her by way of contempt: or rather, "for separation" t; she being like a menstruous woman, defiled and separate from society:
all that honoured her despise her; they that courted her friendship and alliance in the time of her prosperity, as the Egyptians, now neglected her, and treated her with the utmost contempt, being in adversity:
because they have seen her nakedness; being stripped of all her good things she before enjoyed; and both her weakness and her wickedness being exposed to public view. The allusion is either to harlots, or rather to modest women, when taken captive, whose nakedness is uncovered by the brutish and inhuman soldiers:
yea, she sigheth, and turneth backward; being covered with shame, because of the ill usage of her, as modest women will, being so used.

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 1:1-11
MHCC: Lam 1:1-11 - --The prophet sometimes speaks in his own person; at other times Jerusalem, as a distressed female, is the speaker, or some of the Jews. The description...
Matthew Henry -> Lam 1:1-11
Matthew Henry: Lam 1:1-11 - -- Those that have any disposition to weep with those that weep, one would think, should scarcely be able to refrain from tears at the reading of the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lam 1:1-11; Lam 1:8
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 1:1-11 - --
Doleful consideration and description of the dishonour that has befallen Jerusalem. In these verses the prophet, in the name of the godly, pours out...

Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 1:8 - --
But Jerusalem has brought this unutterable misery on herself through her grievous sins. חטאה is intensified by the noun חטא , instead of th...
Constable -> Lam 1:1-22; Lam 1:1-11
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...
