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Text -- Lamentations 2:1-10 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
His temple; but suffered the Chaldeans to destroy it.
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Wesley: Lam 2:1 - -- That is, thrown them down from the highest glory and honour, to the meanest degree of servitude.
That is, thrown them down from the highest glory and honour, to the meanest degree of servitude.
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Dealt with them as with a polluted thing; cast them off, brake them in pieces.
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Wesley: Lam 2:3 - -- God hath drawn back his assistance which he was wont to give the Jews against their enemies.
God hath drawn back his assistance which he was wont to give the Jews against their enemies.
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Wesley: Lam 2:3 - -- God consumed them, not in this or that part, but round about, as a fire seizing an house at once on all sides.
God consumed them, not in this or that part, but round about, as a fire seizing an house at once on all sides.
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Wesley: Lam 2:4 - -- That is, God, (whom by their sins they had provoked and made their enemy) behaved himself as an enemy.
That is, God, (whom by their sins they had provoked and made their enemy) behaved himself as an enemy.
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All their young men, and maidens who were pleasant to look upon.
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Wesley: Lam 2:6 - -- By the king and the priests are meant persons of greatest rank and eminency, though it is thought here is a special reference to Zedekiah the king of ...
By the king and the priests are meant persons of greatest rank and eminency, though it is thought here is a special reference to Zedekiah the king of Judah, and Seraiah who was the high priest; the former of which was miserably handled, the latter slain.
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Wesley: Lam 2:7 - -- The enemies with their triumphs and blasphemies, made as great a noise, as those that sang holy songs, or played on instruments, were wont to make to ...
The enemies with their triumphs and blasphemies, made as great a noise, as those that sang holy songs, or played on instruments, were wont to make to the glory of God.
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Wesley: Lam 2:8 - -- Artificers used with lines not only to mark out places for building, but also for destruction, to direct them what to cut off; and such a line is here...
Artificers used with lines not only to mark out places for building, but also for destruction, to direct them what to cut off; and such a line is here meant.
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Wesley: Lam 2:9 - -- They had but very few prophets, from this time to the time of the gospel, and very few of those at this time alive had any revelation from God.
They had but very few prophets, from this time to the time of the gospel, and very few of those at this time alive had any revelation from God.
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The whole city is in a mournful posture.
(Lam. 2:1-22)
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JFB: Lam 2:1 - -- The ark (compare 1Ch 28:2, with Psa 99:5; Psa 132:7). They once had gloried more in the ark than in the God whose symbol it was; they now feel it was ...
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JFB: Lam 2:2 - -- By delivering it into the hands of the profane foe. Compare Psa 89:39, "profaned . . . crown."
By delivering it into the hands of the profane foe. Compare Psa 89:39, "profaned . . . crown."
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JFB: Lam 2:3 - -- Worn in the East as an ornament on the forehead, and an emblem of power and majesty (1Sa 2:10; Psa 132:17; see on Jer 48:25).
Worn in the East as an ornament on the forehead, and an emblem of power and majesty (1Sa 2:10; Psa 132:17; see on Jer 48:25).
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JFB: Lam 2:3 - -- (Psa 74:11). God has withdrawn the help which He before gave them. Not as HENDERSON, "He has turned back his (Israel's) right hand" (Psa 89:43).
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JFB: Lam 2:4 - -- He took His stand so as to use His right hand as an adversary. HENDERSON makes the image to be that of an archer steadying his right hand to take aim....
He took His stand so as to use His right hand as an adversary. HENDERSON makes the image to be that of an archer steadying his right hand to take aim. Not only did He withdraw His help, but also took arms against Israel.
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JFB: Lam 2:5 - -- There is a play of similar sounds in the original, "sorrow and sadness," to heighten the effect (Job 30:3, Hebrew; Eze 35:3, Margin).
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JFB: Lam 2:6 - -- Rather, "He hath violently taken away His hedge (the hedge of the place sacred to Him, Psa 80:12; Psa 89:40; Isa 5:5), as that of a garden" [MAURER]. ...
Rather, "He hath violently taken away His hedge (the hedge of the place sacred to Him, Psa 80:12; Psa 89:40; Isa 5:5), as that of a garden" [MAURER]. CALVIN supports English Version, "His tabernacle (that is, temple) as (one would take away the temporary cottage or booth) of a garden." Isa 1:8 accords with this (Job 27:18).
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JFB: Lam 2:7 - -- The foe's shout of triumph in the captured temple bore a resemblance (but oh, how sad a contrast as to the occasion of it!) to the joyous thanksgiving...
The foe's shout of triumph in the captured temple bore a resemblance (but oh, how sad a contrast as to the occasion of it!) to the joyous thanksgivings we used to offer in the same place at our "solemn feasts" (compare Lam 2:22).
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JFB: Lam 2:8 - -- The Easterns used a measuring-line not merely in building, but in destroying edifices (2Ki 21:13; Isa 34:11); implying here the unsparing rigidness wi...
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JFB: Lam 2:9 - -- Her gates cannot oppose the entrance of the foe into the city, for they are sunk under a mass of rubbish and earth.
Her gates cannot oppose the entrance of the foe into the city, for they are sunk under a mass of rubbish and earth.
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JFB: Lam 2:9 - -- (2Ch 15:3). The civil and religious laws were one under the theocracy. "All the legal ordinances (prophetical as well as priestly) of the theocracy, ...
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JFB: Lam 2:10 - -- (Job 2:12-13). The "elders," by their example, would draw the others to violent grief.
(Job 2:12-13). The "elders," by their example, would draw the others to violent grief.
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Who usually are so anxious to set off their personal appearances to advantage.
Clarke: Lam 2:1 - -- How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud - The women in the eastern countries wear veils, and often very costly ones. Here, Zion ...
How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud - The women in the eastern countries wear veils, and often very costly ones. Here, Zion is represented as being veiled by the hand of God’ s judgment. And what is the veil? A dark cloud, by which she is entirely obscured
Instead of
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Clarke: Lam 2:1 - -- His footstool - The ark of the covenant, often so called. The rendering of my old MS. Bible is curious: - And record not of his litil steging-stole ...
His footstool - The ark of the covenant, often so called. The rendering of my old MS. Bible is curious: -
And record not of his litil steging-stole of his feet, in the dai of his woodnesse
To be wood signifies, in our ancient language, to be mad.
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Clarke: Lam 2:2 - -- The Lord hath swallowed up - It is a strange figure when thus applied: but Jehovah is here represented as having swallowed down Jerusalem and all th...
The Lord hath swallowed up - It is a strange figure when thus applied: but Jehovah is here represented as having swallowed down Jerusalem and all the cities and fortifications in the land: that is, he has permitted them to be destroyed. See Lam 2:6.
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Clarke: Lam 2:3 - -- The horn of Israel - His power and strength. It is a metaphor taken from cattle, whose principal strength lies in their horns
The horn of Israel - His power and strength. It is a metaphor taken from cattle, whose principal strength lies in their horns
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Clarke: Lam 2:3 - -- Hath drawn back his right hand - He did not support us when our enemies came against us.
Hath drawn back his right hand - He did not support us when our enemies came against us.
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Clarke: Lam 2:4 - -- He hath bent his bow - he stood with his right hand - This is the attitude of the archer. He first bends his bow; then sets his arrow upon the strin...
He hath bent his bow - he stood with his right hand - This is the attitude of the archer. He first bends his bow; then sets his arrow upon the string; and, lastly, placing his right hand on the lower end of the arrow, in connection with the string, takes his aim, and prepares to let fly.
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Clarke: Lam 2:6 - -- As if it were of a garden - "As it were the garden of his own hedging."- Blayney
As if it were of a garden - "As it were the garden of his own hedging."- Blayney
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Clarke: Lam 2:6 - -- The Lord hath caused the solemn feasts - By delivering us up into the hands of the enemy our religious worship is not only suspended, but all Divine...
The Lord hath caused the solemn feasts - By delivering us up into the hands of the enemy our religious worship is not only suspended, but all Divine ordinances are destroyed.
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Clarke: Lam 2:7 - -- They have made a noise in the house of the Lord - Instead of the silver trumpets of the sanctuary, nothing but the sounds of warlike instruments are...
They have made a noise in the house of the Lord - Instead of the silver trumpets of the sanctuary, nothing but the sounds of warlike instruments are to be heard.
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Clarke: Lam 2:8 - -- He hath stretched out a line - The line of devastation; marking what was to be pulled down and demolished.
He hath stretched out a line - The line of devastation; marking what was to be pulled down and demolished.
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Clarke: Lam 2:9 - -- Her gates are sunk into the ground - The consequence of their being long thrown down and neglected. From this it appears that the captivity had alre...
Her gates are sunk into the ground - The consequence of their being long thrown down and neglected. From this it appears that the captivity had already lasted a considerable time
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Clarke: Lam 2:9 - -- Her king and her princes are among the Gentiles - Zedekiah and many of the princes were then prisoners in Babylon, another proof that the captivity ...
Her king and her princes are among the Gentiles - Zedekiah and many of the princes were then prisoners in Babylon, another proof that the captivity had endured some time, unless all this be spoken prophetically, of what should be done.
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Clarke: Lam 2:10 - -- Keep silence - No words can express their sorrows: small griefs are eloquent, great ones dumb.
Keep silence - No words can express their sorrows: small griefs are eloquent, great ones dumb.
Calvin: Lam 2:1 - -- The Prophet again exclaims in wonder, that an incredible thing had happened, which was like a prodigy; for at the first sight it seemed very unreason...
The Prophet again exclaims in wonder, that an incredible thing had happened, which was like a prodigy; for at the first sight it seemed very unreasonable, that a people whom God had not only received into favor, but with whom he had made a perpetual covenant, should thus be forsaken by him. For though men were a hundred times perfidious, yet God never changes, but remains unchangeable in his faithfulness; and we know that his covenant was not made to depend on the merits of men. Whatsoever, then, the people might be, yet it behooved God to continue in his purpose, and not to annul the promise made to Abraham. Now, when Jerusalem was reduced to desolation, there was as it were all abolition of God’s covenant. There is, then, no wonder that the Prophet here exclaims, as on account of some prodigy, How can it be that God hath clouded or darkened, etc.
We must, however, observe at the same time, that the Prophet did not mean here to invalidate the fidelity or constancy of God, but thus to rouse the attention of his own nation, who had become torpid in their sloth; for though they were pressed down under a load of evils, yet they had become hardened in their perverseness. But it was impossible that any one should really call on God, except he was humbled in mind, and brought the sacrifice of which we have spoken, even a humble and contrite spirit. (Psa 51:19.) It was, then, the Prophet’s object to soften the hardness which he knew prevailed in almost the whole people. This was the reason why he exclaimed, in a kind of astonishment, How has God clouded, etc. 148
Some render the words, “How has God raised up,” etc., which may be allowed, provided it be not taken in a good sense, for it is said, in his wrath; but in this case the words to raise up and to cast down ought to be read conjointly; for when one wishes to break in pieces an earthen vessel, he not only casts it on the ground, but he raises it up, that it may be thrown down with greater force. We may, then, take this meaning, that God, in order that he might with greater violence break in pieces his people, had raised them up, not to honor them, but in order to dash them more violently on the ground. However, as this sense seems perhaps too refined, I am content with the first explanation, that God had clouded the daughter of Zion in his wrath; and then follows an explanation, that he had cast her from heaven to the earth. So then God covered with darkness his people, when he drew them down from the high dignity which they had for a time enjoyed. He had, then, cast on the earth all the glory of Israel, and remembered not his footstool
The Prophet seems here indirectly to contend with God, because he had not spared his own sanctuary; for God, as it has been just stated, had chosen Mount Sion for himself, where he designed to be prayed to, because he had placed there the memorial of his name. As, then, he had not spared his own sanctuary, it did not appear consistent with his constancy, and he also seemed thus to have disregarded his own glory. But the design of the Prophet is rather to shew to the people how much God’s wrath had been kindled, when he spared not even his own sanctuary. For he takes this principle as granted, that God is never without reason angry, and never exceeds the due measure of punishment. As, then, God’s wrath was so great that he destroyed his own Temple, it was a token of dreadful wrath; and what was the cause but the sins of men? for God, as I have said, always preserves moderation in his judgments. He, then, could not have better expressed to the people the heinousness of their sins, than by laying before them this fact, that God remembered not his footstool
And the Temple, by a very suitable metaphor, is called the footstool of God. It is, indeed, called his habitation; for in Scripture the Temple is often said to be the house of God. It was then the house, the habitation, and the rest of God. But as men are ever inclined to superstition, in order to raise up their thoughts above earthly elements, we are reminded, on the other hand, in Scripture, that the Temple was the footstool of God. So in the Psalms,
“Adore ye before his footstool,” (Psa 99:5;)
and again,
“We shall adore in the place where his feet stand.”
(Psa 132:7.)
We, then, see that the two expressions, apparently different, do yet well agree, that the Temple was the house of God and his habitation, and that yet it was only his footstool. It was the house of God, because the faithful found by experience that he was there present; as, then, God gave tokens of his presence, the Temple was rightly called the house; of God, his rest and habitation. But that the faithful might not fix their minds on the visible sanctuary, and thus by indulging a gross imagination, fall into superstition, and put an idol in the place of God, the Temple was called the footstool of God. For as it was a footstool, it behooved the faithful to rise up higher and to know that God was really sought, only when they raised their thoughts above the world. We now perceive what was the purpose of this mode of speaking.
God is said not to have remembered his Temple, not because he had wholly disregarded it, but because the destruction of the Temple could produce no other opinion in men. All, then, who saw that the Temple had been burnt by profane hands, and pulled down after it had been plundered, thought that the Temple was forsaken by God; and so also he speaks by Ezekiel, (Eze 10:18.) Then this oblivion, or not remembering, refers to the thoughts of men; for however God may have remembered the Temple, yet he seemed for a time to have disregarded it. We must, at the same time, bear in mind what I have said, that the Prophet here did not intend to dispute with God, or to contend with him, but, on the contrary, to shew what the people deserved; for God was so indignant on account of their sins, that he suffered his own Temple to be profaned. The same thing also follows respecting the kingdom, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:2 - -- He pursues the same subject, but in other words. He first says, that God had without pardon destroyed all the habitations of Jacob; some read, “al...
He pursues the same subject, but in other words. He first says, that God had without pardon destroyed all the habitations of Jacob; some read, “all the beauty (or the ornament) of Jacob.” But the other rendering is more suitable, that he had destroyed all the habitations of Jacob; and then that he had demolished in his indignation, etc. The word is derived from what means excess; but we know that all words signifying wrath are transferred to God, but they do not properly belong to him. God, then, in his violent wrath had demolished all fortresses, and cast them to the ground; and afterwards, that he had profaned, etc.
This profanation of the kingdom, and of the princes, corresponds with the former verse, where he said that God had not remembered his footstool for we know that the kingdom was sacerdotal and consecrated to God. When, therefore, it was polluted, it follows that God in a manner exposed his name to reproach, because the mouth of all the ungodly was thus opened, so that they insolently poured forth their slanders. That God, then, spared not the kingdom nor the Temple, it hence followed that his wrath against the Jews was dreadful. Now, as he is a righteous judge, it follows, that such was the greatness of the sins of the Jews, that they sustained the blame for this extreme sacrilege; for it was through their sins that God’s name was exposed to reproach both as to the Temple and the kingdom.
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Calvin: Lam 2:3 - -- Jeremiah expresses the same thing in various ways; but all that he says tends to shew that it was an evidence of God’s extreme vengeance, when the ...
Jeremiah expresses the same thing in various ways; but all that he says tends to shew that it was an evidence of God’s extreme vengeance, when the people, the city, and the Temple, were destroyed. But it ought to be observed, that God is here represented as the author of that calamity: the Prophet would have otherwise lamented in vain over the ruin of his own country; but as in all adversities he acknowledged the hand of God, he afterwards added, that God had a just reason why he was so grievously displeased with his own people.
He then says, that every horn had been broken by God. We know that by horn is meant strength as well as excellency or dignity and I am disposed to include both here, though the word breaking seems rather to refer to strength or power. But the whole clause must be noticed, that God had broken every horn of Israel in the indignation of his wrath. The Prophet intimates that God had not been angry with his people as though he had been offended by slight transgressions, but that the measure of his wrath had been unusual, even because the impiety of the people had so burst forth, that the offense given to God could not have been slight. Then, by indignation of wrath the Prophet does not mean an excess, as though God had through a violent impulse rushed forth to take vengeance; but he rather intimates that the people had become so wicked, that it did not behoove God to punish in an ordinary way an impiety so inveterate.
He then adds, that God had withdrawn, his right hand from before the enemy, and that at the same time he had burned like a fire, the flame of which had devoured all around. The Prophet here refers to two things; the first is, that though God had been accustomed to help his people, and to oppose their enemies, as they had experienced his aid in the greatest dangers, yet now his people were forsaken and left destitute of all hope. The first clause, then, declares, that God would not be the deliverer of his people as formerly, because they had forsaken him. But he speaks figuratively, that God had drawn back his right hand; and God’s right hand means his protection, as it is well known. But the Prophet’s meaning is by no means obscure, even that there was hereafter no hope that God would meet the enemies of his people, and thus preserve them in safety, for he had drawn back his hand. 149 But there is a second thing added, even that God’s hand burned like fire. Now it was in itself a grievous thing that the people had been so rejected by God, that no help could be expected from him; but it was still a harder thing, that he went forth armed to destroy his people. And the metaphor of fire ought to be noticed; for had he said that God’s right hand was against his people, the expression would not have been so forcible; but when he compared God’s right hand to fire which burned, and whose flame consumed all Israel, it was a much more dreadful thing. 150
Moreover, by these words the Israelites were reminded that they were not to lament their calamities in an ordinary way, but ought, on the contrary, to have seriously considered the cause of all their evils, even the provoking of God’s wrath against themselves; and not only so, but that God was angry with them in an unusual degree, and yet justly, so that they had no reason to complain. It follows, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:4 - -- He employs now another metaphor, that God, who was wont to defend his people, now took up arms against them; for stating a part for the whole, he inc...
He employs now another metaphor, that God, who was wont to defend his people, now took up arms against them; for stating a part for the whole, he includes in the bow every other weapon. When, therefore, he says that God had bent his bow, it is the same as though he said that he was fully armed. The bow, then, as we have before seen, means every kind of weapon. He then adds, that his right hand stood as an adversary. Here he more plainly describes what he had before touched upon, even that God had not only given up his people to the will of their enemies, but that he himself had held up a banner to their enemies, and went before them with an armed hand. Nor is there a doubt but that by the right hand of God he means all their enemies; for it was necessary carefully to impress this fact on the minds of the people, that the war had not been brought by the Chaldeans, but that God had resolved thereby to punish the wickedness of the people, and especially their desperate obstinacy, for he had omitted nothing to restore the people to the right way.
Whenever, then, there is mention made here of God, let us know that the people are reminded, as I have already said, that they had to do with God, lest. they should forget this, or think that it was adverse fortune, or dream of some other causes of evils, as men are wont in this respect to be very ingenious in deceiving themselves. And we shall see this more clearly hereafter, where it is said, that God had thought to destroy the wall of Jerusalem; but this thought was the same as his decree. Then the Prophet explains there more fully what is yet here substantially found, even that God was brought forward thus before the people, that they might learn to humble themselves under his mighty hand. The hand of God was not indeed visible, but the Prophet shews that the Chaldeans were not alone to be regarded, but rather that the hidden hand of God, by which they were guided, ought to have been seen by the eyes of faith. It was, then, this hand of God that stood against the people.
It then follows, He slew all the chosen men; some read, “all things desirable;” but it seems more suitable to consider men as intended, as though he had said, that the flower of the people perished by the hand of God in the tabernacle of the daughter of Sion; though the last clause would unite better with the end of the verse, that on the tabernacle of the daughter of Sion God had poured forth his wrath, or his anger, as fire
He repeats the metaphor which he had used in the last verse; and this is what we ought carefully to notice; for God threatens by Isaiah that he would be a fire to devour his enemies:
“The light of Israel shall be a fire, and his Holy One a flame of fire, and it shall devour all briers and all kinds of wood.”
(Isa 10:7.)
There God threatened the Chaldeans, as though he had said that his vengeance would be dreadful, when as a patron and defender of his people he would contend with the Chaldeans. He there calls himself the light of Israel and the Holy One; and hence he said that he would be a fire and a flame as to the Chaldeans. But what does he say here? even that God had poured forth lt is wrath as fire, that its flame had devoured all around whatever was fair to be seen in Israel. We hence see that the people had provoked against themselves the vengeance of God, which would have been otherwise poured forth on their enemies; and thus the sin of the people was doubled. It follows, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:5 - -- These words might seem superfluous, since the Prophet has often repeated, that God was become an enemy to his own people; but we shall hereafter see,...
These words might seem superfluous, since the Prophet has often repeated, that God was become an enemy to his own people; but we shall hereafter see, that though they were extremely afflicted, they yet did not rightly consider whence their calamity arose. As, then, they had become so stupified by their evils, that they did not turn their eyes to God, they were on this account often urged and stimulated, that they might at length understand by their evils that God was a judge. Now, as it was difficult to convince them of this truth, the Prophet did not think it enough briefly to touch on it, but found it necessary to dwell on it at large, so that the people might at length be roused from their insensibility.
He then says that God himself was to them as an enemy, lest the Israelites should fix their eyes on the Chaldeans, and thus think that they had been the chief movers of the war. He therefore says, that they had undertaken that war through the secret influence of God, and had carried it on successfully, because God endued them with his own power. And hence the faithful ought to have concluded, that nothing could have been more grievous than to have God as their adversary; for as long as they had suffered themselves to be defended by the hand of God, they were victorious, we know, over all their enemies, so that they could then brave all dangers with impunity. The Prophet now reminds them, that as they had been successful and prosperous under the defense and protection of God, so now they were miserable, for no other reason but that God fought against them. But we ought at the same time to bear in mind the truth, which we have noticed, that God is never angry with men without reason; and since he was especially inclined to shew favor to his people, we must understand that he would not have been thus indignant, had not necessity constrained him.
He has destroyed Israel, he says; he has destroyed all his palaces; and afterwards, he has dissipated or demolished all his fortresses; and finally, he has increased in the daughter of Judah mourning and lamentation;
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Calvin: Lam 2:6 - -- Then he says first, that his tabernacle had been overthrown by God. They who render it “cottage” extenuate too much what is spoken of; nor does ...
Then he says first, that his tabernacle had been overthrown by God. They who render it “cottage” extenuate too much what is spoken of; nor does the Prophet simply compare the sanctuary of God to a cottage. Then I take tabernacle in a good sense. With regard to the verb
He then adds, that God had destroyed his testimony. By the word,
He afterwards says, that God had forgotten the assembly, the sacrifice, or the tabernacle; for it is the same word again, but it seems not to be taken in the same sense. Then I think that
He says, in the last place, that the king and the priest had been rejected by God. We have already said, that these were as two pledges of God’s paternal favor; for, on the one hand, he who reigned from the posterity of David was a living image of Christ; and on the other hand, there was always a high-priest from the posterity of Aaron to reconcile men to God. It was then the same as though God shewed himself in every way propitious to the chosen people. Then their true happiness was founded on the kingdom and the priesthood; for the kingdom was, as it were, a mark of God’s favor for their defense, and the priesthood was to them the means by which reconciliation with God was obtained. When, therefore, God wholly disregarded the king and the priest, it became hence evident, that he was greatly displeased with his people, having thus, in a manner, obliterated his favors. It follows, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:7 - -- He proceeds with the same subject, and adopts similar words. He says first, that God had abominated his altar; 152 an expression not strictly proper...
He proceeds with the same subject, and adopts similar words. He says first, that God had abominated his altar; 152 an expression not strictly proper, but the Prophet could not otherwise fully shew to the Jews what they deserved; for had he only spoken of the city, of the lands, of the palaces, of the vineyards, and, in short, of all their possessions, it would have been a much lighter matter; but when he says that God had counted as nothing all their sacred things, — the altar, the Temple, the ark of the covenant, and festive days, — when, therefore, he says, that God had not only disregarded, but had also cast away from him these things, which yet especially availed to conciliate his favor, the people must have hence perceived, except they were beyond measure stupid, how grievously they had provoked God’s wrath against themselves; for this was the same as though heaven and earth were blended together. Had there been an upsetting of all things, had the sun left its place and sunk into darkness, had the earth heaved upwards, the confusion would have hardly been more dreadful, than when God put forth thus his hand against the sanctuary, the altar, the festal days, and all their sacred things. But we must refer to the reason why this was done, even because the Temple had been long polluted by the iniquities of the people, and because all sacred things had been wickedly and disgracefully profaned. We now, then, understand the reason why the Prophet enlarged so much on a subject in itself sufficiently plain.
He afterwards adds, He hath delivered all the palaces, etc.; as though he had said, that the city had not been taken by the valor of enemies, but that the Chaldeans had fought under the authority and banner of God. He, in short, intimates that the Jews had miserably perished, because they perished through their own fault; and that the Chaldeans had proved victorious in battle, and had taken the city, not through their own courage or skill, but because God had resolved to punish that ungodly and wicked people.
It follows in the last place, that the enemies had made a noise in the temple of God as in the day of solemnity. Here also the Prophet shews, that God would have never suffered the enemies insolently to exult and to revel in the very Temple, had not the Israelites deserved all this; for the insolence of their enemies was not unknown to God, and he might have easily checked it if he pleased. Why, then, did he grant so much license to these profane enemies? even because the Jews themselves had previously polluted the Temple, so that he abhorred all their solemn assemblies, as also he declares by Isaiah, that he detested their festivals, Sabbaths, and new moons. (Isa 1:13.) But it was a shocking change, when enemies entered the place which God had consecrated for himself, and there insolently boasted and uttered base and wicked calumnies against God! But the sadder the spectacle, the more detestable appeared the impiety of the people, which had been the cause of so great evils. For we ought ever to remember what I have often stated, that these circumstances were noticed by the Prophet, that the people might at length acknowledge themselves guilty as to all these evils, which they would have otherwise ascribed to the Chaldeans. That, then, the Chaldeans polluted the Temple, that they trod under foot all sacred things, all this the Prophet shews was to be ascribed to the Jews themselves, who had, through their own conduct, opened the Temple to the Chaldeans, who had exposed all sacred things to their will and pleasure. It follows, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:8 - -- The verb to think, has more force than what is commonly assigned to it; for it would be very flat to say, that God thought to destroy; but to think...
The verb to think, has more force than what is commonly assigned to it; for it would be very flat to say, that God thought to destroy; but to think here means to resolve or to decree. 153 This is one thing. And then we must bear in mind the contrast between this and those false imaginations, by which men are wont to be drawn away, so as not to believe that God is present in adversities as well as prosperity. As, therefore, men go willfully astray through various false thoughts, and thus withdraw themselves, as it were, designedly from God, the Prophet says here that the walls of Jerusalem had not fallen by chance, but had been overthrown through a divine decree, because God had so determined, according to what we have seen in many places throughout the book of Jeremiah: “See, these are the thoughts which God has thought respecting Jerusalem, which he has thought respecting Babylon.” The Prophet, then, in these instances, taught what he now confirms in this place, that when the city Jerusalem was destroyed, it was not what happened by chance; but because God had brought there the Chaldeans, and employed them as his instruments in taking and destroying the city: God, then, has thought to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion. It is, indeed, true, that the Chaldeans had actively carried on the war, and omitted nothing as to military skill, in order to take the city: but the Prophet calls here the attention of the Jews to a different thought, so that they might acknowledge that they suffered justly for their sins, and that God was the chief author of that war, and that the Chaldeans were to be viewed as hired soldiers.
He afterwards adds, that God had extended a line or a rule, as it is usually done in separating buildings. 154 And then he says, He hath not drawn back his hand from scattering; and so it was, that the ramparts and the walls mourned, and fell down together 155 We now see that what the Prophet had in view was to lead the Jews fully to believe that the destruction was not to be ascribed to the Chaldeans, but, on the contrary, to God. Added at the same time must be another part of what is here taught, that God would not have been so displeased with the holy city which he had chosen, had not the people extremely provoked him with their sins. It now follows, —
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Calvin: Lam 2:9 - -- He again relates in other words what he had said, that the walls of Jerusalem had fallen. But he now speaks of the gates and says, that they had sun...
He again relates in other words what he had said, that the walls of Jerusalem had fallen. But he now speaks of the gates and says, that they had sunk into the ground, or had become fixed in the ground; for it may be explained in both ways; as though he had said, that the gates had been no hindrance to the enemies so as to prevent them to enter the city. He thus derides the foolish confidence of the people, who relied on their defenses and thought the city impregnable. He then says that the gates had sunk, or had become fixed in the ground
He then says that God had destroyed and broken her bars; for no doubt the gates had firm and strong bars. He then says that neither the gates nor the bars were found sufficient, when God stretched forth his hand to the Chaldeans, to lead them into the city. He afterwards adds, that both the king and the princes had been driven into exile; for when he says, among the nations, or to the nations, he intimates that there was no more a king, for he and the royal seed and the princes were gone into banishment. The rest I defer until tomorrow.
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Calvin: Lam 2:10 - -- The Prophet here strikingly represents the grievousness of the people’s calamity, when he says, that the elders, as in hopeless despair, were lyin...
The Prophet here strikingly represents the grievousness of the people’s calamity, when he says, that the elders, as in hopeless despair, were lying on the ground, that they cast dust on their heads, that they were clad in sackcloth, as it was usually done in very grievous sorrow, and that the virgins bent their heads down to the ground. The meaning is, that the elders knew not what to do, and led others. to join them in acts of fruitless and abject lamentation. We indeed know that young women are over-careful as to their form and beauty, and indulge themselves in pleasures; and that when they roll themselves with their face and hair on the ground, it is a token of extreme mourning. This is what the Prophet means.
They were wont indeed to put on sackcloth as a token of repentance, and to cast dust on their heads; but their minds were often so confused, that they only thus set forth their mourning and sorrow, and had no regard to God; and hypocrites, when they put on sackcloth, pretended to repent, but it was a false pretense. Now in this place the Prophet does not mean that the elders by adopting these rites professed to repent and humbly to solicit pardon; but refers to them only as tokens of sorrow; as though he had said, that the elders had no resources, and that the young women had no hope nor joy. For the elders did lie down on the ground, as it is usual with those who have no remedy. We now understand the meaning of the Prophet. 157 It follows, —
TSK: Lam 2:1 - -- How : Lam 1:1, Lam 4:1
covered : Lam 3:43, Lam 3:44; Eze 30:18, Eze 32:7, Eze 32:8; Joe 2:2
and cast : Isa 14:12-15; Eze 28:14-16; Mat 11:23; Luk 10:1...
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TSK: Lam 2:2 - -- swallowed : Lam 2:17, Lam 2:21, Lam 3:43; Job 2:3 *marg. Psa 21:9; Isa 27:11; Jer 13:14, Jer 21:7; Eze 5:11, Eze 7:4, Eze 7:9, Eze 8:18, Eze 9:10; Zec...
swallowed : Lam 2:17, Lam 2:21, Lam 3:43; Job 2:3 *marg. Psa 21:9; Isa 27:11; Jer 13:14, Jer 21:7; Eze 5:11, Eze 7:4, Eze 7:9, Eze 8:18, Eze 9:10; Zec 11:5, Zec 11:6; Mat 18:33
he hath thrown : Lam 2:5, Lam 2:17; Jer 5:10; Mic 5:11, Mic 5:12; Mal 1:4; 2Co 10:4
brought them down to : Heb. made to touch, Isa 25:12, Isa 26:5; Psa 89:39
polluted : Psa 89:39, Psa 89:40; Isa 23:9 *marg. Isa 43:28, Isa 47:6
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TSK: Lam 2:3 - -- the horn : Job 16:15; Psa 75:5, Psa 75:10, Psa 89:24, Psa 132:17; Jer 48:25; Luk 1:69
he hath : Psa 74:11
he burned : Deu 32:22; Psa 79:5, Psa 89:46; ...
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TSK: Lam 2:4 - -- bent : Lam 2:5, Lam 3:3, Lam 3:12, Lam 3:13; Job 6:4, Job 16:12-14; Isa 63:10; Jer 21:5, Jer 30:14
that were pleasant to the eye : Heb. the desirable ...
bent : Lam 2:5, Lam 3:3, Lam 3:12, Lam 3:13; Job 6:4, Job 16:12-14; Isa 63:10; Jer 21:5, Jer 30:14
that were pleasant to the eye : Heb. the desirable of the eye, Eze 24:25
he poured : Lam 4:1; 2Ch 34:21, 2Ch 34:25; Isa 42:25, Isa 51:17-20, Isa 63:6; Jer 4:4, Jer 7:20; Jer 21:5, Jer 21:12, Jer 36:7; Eze 5:13, Eze 6:12, Eze 22:22, Eze 36:18; Nah 1:2, Nah 1:6
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TSK: Lam 2:5 - -- was : Lam 2:4; Jer 15:1, Jer 30:14
he hath swallowed up Israel : Lam 2:2; 2Ki 25:9; 2Ch 36:16, 2Ch 36:17; Jer 52:13
mourning : Eze 2:10
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TSK: Lam 2:6 - -- he hath violently : ""He hath destroyed the temple, as if it had been no better than a cottage erected in a garden, while the fruit is gathering, and ...
he hath violently : ""He hath destroyed the temple, as if it had been no better than a cottage erected in a garden, while the fruit is gathering, and then removed, or suffered to decay.""Psa 80:12, Psa 89:40; Isa 5:5, Isa 63:18, Isa 64:11
tabernacle : or, hedge
as if : Isa 1:8
the king : Lam 4:16, Lam 4:20, Lam 5:12; Isa 43:28; Jer. 52:11-27; Eze 12:12, Eze 12:13, Eze 17:18; Mal 2:9
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TSK: Lam 2:7 - -- cast off : Lam 2:1; Lev 26:31, Lev 26:44; Psa 78:59-61; Isa 64:10,Isa 64:11; Jer 7:12-14, Jer 26:6, Jer 26:18; Jer 52:13; Eze 7:20-22, Eze 24:21; Mic ...
cast off : Lam 2:1; Lev 26:31, Lev 26:44; Psa 78:59-61; Isa 64:10,Isa 64:11; Jer 7:12-14, Jer 26:6, Jer 26:18; Jer 52:13; Eze 7:20-22, Eze 24:21; Mic 3:12; Mat 24:2; Act 6:13, Act 6:14
given up : Heb. shut up, Lam 2:5; 2Ch 36:19; Jer 32:29, Jer 33:3, Jer 33:4, Jer 39:8; Eze 7:24; Amo 2:5
they have : Psa. 72:4-20, Psa 74:3-8; Eze 7:21, Eze 7:22
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TSK: Lam 2:8 - -- purposed : Lam 2:17; Isa 5:5; Jer 5:10
stretched : 2Sa 8:2; 2Ki 21:13; Isa 28:17, Isa 34:11; Amo 7:7, Amo 7:8
he hath not : Job 13:21; Eze 20:22
destr...
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TSK: Lam 2:9 - -- gates : Neh 1:3; Jer 39:2, Jer 39:8, Jer 51:30, Jer 52:14
her king : Lam 1:3, Lam 4:15, Lam 4:20; Deu 28:36; 2Ki 24:12-16, 2Ki 25:7; Jer 52:8, Jer 52:...
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TSK: Lam 2:10 - -- elders : Lam 4:5, Lam 4:16, Lam 5:12, Lam 5:14; Job 2:13; Isa 3:26, Isa 47:1, Isa 47:5
sit : Sitting on the ground was a posture of mourning and deep ...
elders : Lam 4:5, Lam 4:16, Lam 5:12, Lam 5:14; Job 2:13; Isa 3:26, Isa 47:1, Isa 47:5
sit : Sitting on the ground was a posture of mourning and deep distress. Hence the coin struck by Vespasian, on the capture of Jerusalem, has on the obverse side a palm tree, the emblem of Judea, and under it a woman, the emblem of Jerusalem, sitting down, with her elbow on her knee, and her head supported by her hand, with the legend Judea capta . Lam 1:1
and keep : Lam 3:28; Jer 8:14; Amo 5:13, Amo 8:3
cast up : Jos 7:6; 2Sa 13:19; Job 2:12; Rev 18:19
they have girded : Isa 15:3, Isa 36:22; Eze 7:18, Eze 27:31; Joe 1:8
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Lam 2:1 - -- How ... - Or, "How"doth " אדני 'ădonāy cover."He hath east down etc. By God’ s footstool seems to be meant the ark. See Psa ...
How ... - Or, "How"doth "
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Barnes: Lam 2:2 - -- Habitations - The dwellings of the shepherds in the pastures Jer 49:19. These are described as swallowed up by an earthquake, while the storm i...
Habitations - The dwellings of the shepherds in the pastures Jer 49:19. These are described as swallowed up by an earthquake, while the storm itself throws down the fortified cities of Judah.
Polluted - i. e. profaned it, made common or unclean what before was holy.
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Barnes: Lam 2:3 - -- Since the horn is the symbol of power, the cutting off of every horn means the depriving Israel of all power of resistance. The drawing back of God&...
Since the horn is the symbol of power, the cutting off of every horn means the depriving Israel of all power of resistance. The drawing back of God’ s right hand signifies the withdrawal of that special Providence which used to protect the chosen people.
And he burned ... - Or, "and"he kindled a fire in Jacob: as the active enemy of "Jacob,"Himself applying the torch.
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Barnes: Lam 2:4 - -- He stood with his right hand ... - i. e. that right hand so often stretched out to help now grasped a weapon ready for Judah’ s destructio...
He stood with his right hand ... - i. e. that right hand so often stretched out to help now grasped a weapon ready for Judah’ s destruction.
Were pleasant - Or, was "pleasant."Put full stop after "eye."Begin the third distich thus:
In the tabernacle - (or, tent) of the daughter of Zion.
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Literally,
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Barnes: Lam 2:6 - -- tabernacle - Or, covert Jer 25:38, i. e. such a tent of boughs as was put up at the Feast of Tabernacles. The words mean, "the Lord hath (as) v...
tabernacle - Or, covert Jer 25:38, i. e. such a tent of boughs as was put up at the Feast of Tabernacles. The words mean, "the Lord hath (as) violently destroyed His booth. as a man might tear down a shed in "a garden.""Compare Isa 1:8.
His places of the assembly - Or, "His great festivals"(Lam 1:15 note). It is the Word rendered "solemn feasts"in the next clause, and rightly joined there with "sabbaths,"the weekly, as the other were the annual festivals. It is no longer
Hath despised ... - Or, "hath rejected"king and priest. With the destruction of the city the royal authority fell: with the ruined temple and the cessation of the festivals the functions of the priest ceased.
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Barnes: Lam 2:7 - -- sanctuary - The holy of holies; "the walls of her palaces"are those of the sacred buildings.
sanctuary - The holy of holies; "the walls of her palaces"are those of the sacred buildings.
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Barnes: Lam 2:9 - -- Her gates are sunk into the ground - So completely destroyed, that one might suppose they had been swallowed up in an abyss. Her king - T...
Her gates are sunk into the ground - So completely destroyed, that one might suppose they had been swallowed up in an abyss.
Her king - The prophet’ s lamentation, occupied before chiefly with the buildings of the city and temple, now turns to the people, beginning with their temporal rulers.
The law is no more - The Jewish Law, the Torah, came to an end when it no longer had a local habitation. Its enactments were essentially those not of a universal religion, but of a national religion, and the restoration of the nation with a material temple was indispensable to its continued existence. It was only when elevated to be a universal religion, by being made spiritual, that it could do without ark, temple, and a separate people.
Her prophets also find ... - With the Torah, the special gift of prophecy also ceased, since both were unique to the theocracy; but it was not until the establishment of Christianity that they were finally merged in higher developments of grace.
Poole: Lam 2:1 - -- How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger? It hath been formerly observed that great states and kingdoms are often in...
How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger? It hath been formerly observed that great states and kingdoms are often in Scripture expressed under the notion of daughters, Psa 137:8 Isa 10:30 47:1,5 Jer 46:11 Lam 4:21,22 : the meaning is, How hath God obscured all the beauty and glory of the church and state of the Jews!
And cast down from heaven unto the earth the beauty of Israel that is, thrown them down from the highest pitch of glory and honour, to the meanest degree of baseness and servitude.
And remembered not his footstool in the day of his anger: the earth is called the Lord’ s footstool, Isa 66:1 Mat 5:35 Act 7:49 , but here plainly the temple is understood, called God’ s footstool, 1Ch 28:2 ; and the whole temple seems rather to be understood than the ark, for we read of no indignity offered to the ark by the Chaldeans, more than to any other part of the temple; God had suffered the Chaldeans to burn the whole temple, and it may justly be doubted whether those other texts that mention a worshipping at God’ s footstool, Psa 99:5 132:7 , be not to be understood of worshipping in the temple, for it was not the privilege of all the Jews to come so near the ark as to worship before that. The reason of the complaint is God’ s permission of the Chaldeans to burn the temple. See Jer 52:13 .
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Poole: Lam 2:2 - -- The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob, and hath not pitied as he hath had no respect to his own house, so he hath had much less res...
The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob, and hath not pitied as he hath had no respect to his own house, so he hath had much less respect to the common habitations of the Jews.
He hath thrown down in his wrath the strong holds of the daughter of Judah their military fortifications have been of no use to them, he hath made them to touch the ground, i.e. suffered the enemies to batter them to the earth.
He hath polluted the kingdom and the princes thereof that is, either delivered them into the hands of pagans, whom to touch they judged a legal pollution, or else dealt with them as with a polluted thing, east them off, or brake them in pieces. All this is made the effect of God’ s wrath, and his work; for as a man is said to do that which he encourageth others to do, and assists them in doing; so God is said to have done this, because he did not only suffer the Chaldeans to do it, but used them as a rod in his hand, inclining them to do it, and assisting them in the execution of his wrath.
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Poole: Lam 2:3 - -- He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horn of Israel that is, the beauty and strength of Israel, so horn signifieth by a usual metaphor in Scri...
He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horn of Israel that is, the beauty and strength of Israel, so horn signifieth by a usual metaphor in Scripture, Psa 74:4 Jer 48:25 , &c., the horn being much the beauty of the beast, as also that member by which the beast puts forth its strength in assaulting its adversary.
He hath drawn back his right hand from before the enemy either God hath drawn back his assistance which he was wont to give the Jews against their enemies; or Israel, through God’ s leaving of them, hath drawn back his right hand; but it seems rather to be understood of God’ s weakening the Israelites’ right hands, so as they were not able to hold them up (as before) against their enemies.
He burned against Jacob like a flaming fire, which devoureth round about God had consumed them, not in this or that part, but round about, as a fire seizing a house or heap of combustible matter at once, on all sides.
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Poole: Lam 2:4 - -- That is, God (whom by their sins they had provoked and made their enemy) behaved himself as an enemy, bending his bow, and stretching out his right ...
That is, God (whom by their sins they had provoked and made their enemy) behaved himself as an enemy, bending his bow, and stretching out his right hand, and slew their young men and maidens, who were pleasant to look upon; and had brought judgments upon them like fire, which devours without any discrimination.
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Poole: Lam 2:5 - -- See Lam 2:2 . Several pathetical expressions signifying the same things, properly imitating the dialect of mourners, whose passion suffers them not ...
See Lam 2:2 . Several pathetical expressions signifying the same things, properly imitating the dialect of mourners, whose passion suffers them not to speak according to art, but frequently they say the same things over and over.
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Poole: Lam 2:6 - -- The word translated
tabernacle (say some) signifies a hedge or fence , and they would have it here so translated, and so the phrase should denote...
The word translated
tabernacle (say some) signifies a hedge or fence , and they would have it here so translated, and so the phrase should denote God’ s withdrawing his protection from the Jews; but it is no where so translated. It is another word used Psa 80:12 89:40 . The most judicious interpreters think that the word here signifieth the temple , and the rather because of what followeth. By the
places of the assembly may be understood the synagogues. By
the king and the priest are meant persons of greatest rank and eminency, though it is thought here is a special reference to Zedekiah the king of Judah, and Seraiah who was the high priest, the former of which was miserably handled, the latter slain.
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Poole: Lam 2:7 - -- By
altar and
sanctuary seemeth not to be meant strictly here the places or buildings so called, which are said to be the Lord’ s, because h...
By
altar and
sanctuary seemeth not to be meant strictly here the places or buildings so called, which are said to be the Lord’ s, because he directed the making of them, and they were dedicated to his service, and used for no other use; but the stated worship and communion of the church of the Jews; as altar is taken, 1Co 10:18 . God, by his suffering the place to be destroyed where alone they might sacrifice, seemed to have abhorred his own institutions, as it is said, The prayers of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord . He saith the Lord also had destroyed the most stately of their civil edifices; and the enemies, with their triumphs and blasphemies, had made as great noise, to the reproach and dishonour of God, as before those that sang holy songs, or played on instruments, were wont to make in the temple to the honour and glory of God.
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Poole: Lam 2:8 - -- The term
wall in this verse seemeth to be taken in a metaphorical sense, for the strength and security of the Jews (the strength and security of a...
The term
wall in this verse seemeth to be taken in a metaphorical sense, for the strength and security of the Jews (the strength and security of a place lying much in ifs walls).
He hath stretched out a line: artificers use with lines not only to mark out places for building, but also for destruction, to direct them what to cut off; such a line is here meant.
He hath not withdrawn his hand from destroying God had gone on in destroying them: and had made their walls and ramparts feeble, and to shake like a man under some languishing distemper, that had no strength left.
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Poole: Lam 2:9 - -- Her gates are sunk into the ground that is, the gates of Jerusalem are destroyed and covered over with rubbish.
He hath destroyed and broken her bar...
Her gates are sunk into the ground that is, the gates of Jerusalem are destroyed and covered over with rubbish.
He hath destroyed and broken her bars the bolts of the gates are broken.
Her king and her princes are among the Gentiles Zedekiah and the nobles of Judah that were not slain were in miserable captivity.
The law is no more the law was no more read and opened, nor was there any more sacrifices offered according to the prescript of it, nor any solemn feasts kept according to the direction of it.
Her prophets also find no vision from the Lord they had but very few prophets amongst them from this time to the time of the gospel, and very few of those at this time alive had any revelations from God; we read only of this prophet, Ezekiel, Daniel, and three after the captivity, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi.
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Poole: Lam 2:10 - -- Sitting upon the ground, keeping silence, throwing dust on their heads, girding themselves with sackcloth, hanging down the head, were all of them p...
Sitting upon the ground, keeping silence, throwing dust on their heads, girding themselves with sackcloth, hanging down the head, were all of them postures, and actions, and gestures of mourners. The meaning of this whole verse is, that the whole city of Jerusalem was in a very sad state and condition, and all persons in it in a mournful posture; not the common people only, but the gravest of their magistracy and ministry, those who were wont to sit in the chairs of magistracy and of teachers. Their young women also, which used to be most brisk and frolic, those whose condition was furthest off from sorrow, and who were least disposed to it, were now all of them drowned in floods of it.
Haydock: Lam 2:1 - -- About. The troops of the enemy resemble those multitudes, which come from all parts to Jerusalem. Many kings could not raise such an army. (Calmet...
About. The troops of the enemy resemble those multitudes, which come from all parts to Jerusalem. Many kings could not raise such an army. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lam 2:1 - -- Obscurity. He continues to bewail the misery of Jerusalem. ---
Heaven, the highest glory, Isaias xiv. 12. ---
Stool; the temple, and the land. ...
Obscurity. He continues to bewail the misery of Jerusalem. ---
Heaven, the highest glory, Isaias xiv. 12. ---
Stool; the temple, and the land. The ark fell not into the hands of the enemy. (Calmet) ---
The punishment which the Lord permits, is justly ascribed to Him. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Lam 2:2 - -- Unclean, or treated it as such. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "he hath accounted profane the kings." (Haydock) ---
Joakim, Jechonias, Sedecias, and th...
Unclean, or treated it as such. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "he hath accounted profane the kings." (Haydock) ---
Joakim, Jechonias, Sedecias, and the royal family, were exposed to the greatest ignominy and sufferings. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lam 2:3 - -- Horn: beauty and power, (Haydock) the two kingdoms, the fortresses, (Calmet) and all their strength, denoted by horns. (Worthington) ---
Hand; ref...
Horn: beauty and power, (Haydock) the two kingdoms, the fortresses, (Calmet) and all their strength, denoted by horns. (Worthington) ---
Hand; refusing us protection, and aiding the Chaldeans.
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Haydock: Lam 2:6 - -- Tent: the temple, with the same indifference as if it had been a hut, built to guard the fruit of a garden, Isaias v. 5., and Psalm lxxix. 13. ---
S...
Tent: the temple, with the same indifference as if it had been a hut, built to guard the fruit of a garden, Isaias v. 5., and Psalm lxxix. 13. ---
Sabbaths. The Jews rested, but could offer no sacrifices in captivity. ---
Priest. Saraias was slain, and Sedecias imprisoned, &c., chap. lii. 10. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lam 2:7 - -- Cursed, or suffered it to be polluted, (Worthington) as he looked on it with horror, after it had been profaned by Achaz, &c. ---
Towers. Septuagi...
Cursed, or suffered it to be polluted, (Worthington) as he looked on it with horror, after it had been profaned by Achaz, &c. ---
Towers. Septuagint, "palaces;" Greek: bareon. ---
Feast. What a contrast! The temple used to resound with songs of praise and music: the Chaldeans fill it with insolent shouts of victory.
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Haydock: Lam 2:8 - -- Line, to level it with the ground, (Isaias xxxiv. 11.; Calmet) or to treat it with just severity. (Theodoret) ---
Bulwark. Literally, "the first ...
Line, to level it with the ground, (Isaias xxxiv. 11.; Calmet) or to treat it with just severity. (Theodoret) ---
Bulwark. Literally, "the first wall," (Haydock) or ditch, lined with palisades. Alexander [the Great] ordered the towers to be levelled, and the horses' manes to be cut, when Hephזstion died, to denote the general sorrow.
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Haydock: Lam 2:9 - -- Among, as slaves, or in prison. ---
Law has been neglected; and now it cannot be observed, as to the ceremonial part. There are no public instruct...
Among, as slaves, or in prison. ---
Law has been neglected; and now it cannot be observed, as to the ceremonial part. There are no public instructions. ---
No vision. When Jeremias was consulted, he had to pray for ten days, chap. xlii. 7.
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Haydock: Lam 2:10 - -- Ancients, even magistrates. (Calmet) ---
Canitiem multo deformat pulvere. (Virgil, ֶneid x.)
Ancients, even magistrates. (Calmet) ---
Canitiem multo deformat pulvere. (Virgil, ֶneid x.)
Gill: Lam 2:1 - -- How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger,.... Not their persons for protection, as he did the Israelites at the Red se...
How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger,.... Not their persons for protection, as he did the Israelites at the Red sea, and in the wilderness; nor their sins, which he blots out as a thick cloud; or with such an one as he filled the tabernacle and temple with when dedicated; for this was "in his anger", in the day of his anger, against Jerusalem; but with the thick and black clouds of calamity and distress; he "beclouded" r her, as it may be rendered, and is by Broughton; he drew a veil, or caused a cloud to come over all her brightness and glory, and surrounded her with darkness, that her light and splendour might not be seen. Aben Ezra interprets it, "he lifted her up to the clouds": that is, in order to cast her down with the greater force, as follows:
and cast down from heaven unto the earth the beauty of Israel; all its glory, both in church and state; this was brought down from the highest pitch of its excellency and dignity, to the lowest degree of infamy and reproach; particularly this was true of the temple, and service of God in it, which was the beauty and glory of the nation, but now utterly demolished:
and remembered not his footstool in the day of his anger; to spare and preserve that; meaning either the house of the sanctuary, the temple itself, as the Targum and Jarchi; or rather the ark with the mercy seat, on which the Shechinah or divine Majesty set his feet, when sitting between the cherubim; and is so called, 1Ch 28:2.
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Gill: Lam 2:2 - -- The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob, and hath not pitied,.... As he regarded not his own habitation the temple, nor the ark his fo...
The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob, and hath not pitied,.... As he regarded not his own habitation the temple, nor the ark his footstool, it is no wonder he should be unconcerned about the habitations of others; as of the inhabitants of the land of Judea and of Jerusalem, particularly of the king, his nobles, and the great men; these the Lord swallowed up, or suffered to be swallowed up, as houses in an earthquake, and by an inundation, so as to be seen no more; and this he did without showing the least reluctance, pity, and compassion; being so highly incensed and provoked by their sins and transgressions:
he hath thrown down in his wrath the strong holds of the daughter of Judah; not only the dwelling houses of the people, but the most fortified places, their castles, towers, and citadels:
he hath brought them down to the ground; and not only battered and shook them, but beat them down, and laid them level with the ground; and all this done in the fury of his wrath, being irritated to it by the sins of his people; even the daughter of Judah, or the congregation thereof, as the Targum:
he hath polluted the kingdom, and the princes thereof; what was reckoned sacred, the kingdom of the house of David, and the kings and princes of it, the Lord's anointed; these being defiled with sin, God cast them away, as filth to the dunghill, and gave them up into the hands of the Gentiles, who were reckoned unclean; and thus they were profaned. Jarchi interprets these princes of the Israelites in common, who were called a kingdom of priests; and makes mention of a Midrash, that explains them of the princes above, or of heaven.
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Gill: Lam 2:3 - -- He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horn of Israel,.... All its power and strength, especially its kingly power, which is often signified by ...
He hath cut off in his fierce anger all the horn of Israel,.... All its power and strength, especially its kingly power, which is often signified by a horn in Scripture; see Dan 7:24; this the Lord took away in his fierce anger, and left the land destitute of all relief, help, defence and protection; whether from its king and princes, or from its men of war or fortified places; all being cut off and destroyed:
he hath drawn back his right hand from before the enemy; either his own right hand, with which he had used to fight for his people, and protect them, but now withdrawing it, left them to the mercy of their enemies; or Israel's right hand, which he so weakened, that they had no power to resist the enemy, and defend themselves:
and he burned against Jacob like a flaming fire which devoureth round about; that is, his wrath was like a burning flaming fire, which consumes all around, wherever it comes; thus the Lord in his anger consumed Jacob, and left neither root nor branch.
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Gill: Lam 2:4 - -- He hath bent his bow like an enemy,.... God sometimes appears as if he was an enemy to his people, when he is not, by his conduct and behaviour; by th...
He hath bent his bow like an enemy,.... God sometimes appears as if he was an enemy to his people, when he is not, by his conduct and behaviour; by the dispensations of his providence they take him to be so, as Job did, Job 16:9; he bends his bow, or treads it, for the bending or stretching the bow was done by the foot; and as the Targum,
"and threw his arrows at me:''
he stood with his right hand as an adversary; with arrows in it, to put into his bow or with his sword drawn, as an adversary does. The Targum is,
"he stood at the right hand of Nebuchadnezzar and helped him, when he distressed his people Israel:''
and slew all that were pleasant to the eye; princes and priests, husbands and wives, parents and children, young men and maids; desirable to their friends and relations, and to the commonwealth:
in the tabernacle of the daughter of Zion he poured out his fury like fire; that is, either in the temple, or in the city of Jerusalem, or both, which were burnt with fire, as the effect of divine wrath and fury; and which itself is comparable to fire; like a burning lamp of fire, as the Targum; or rather like a burning furnace or mountain; see Nah 1:6.
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Gill: Lam 2:5 - -- The Lord was as an enemy,.... Who formerly was on their side, their God and guardian, their protector and deliverer, but now against them; and a terri...
The Lord was as an enemy,.... Who formerly was on their side, their God and guardian, their protector and deliverer, but now against them; and a terrible thing it is to have God for an enemy, or even to be as one; this is repeated, as being exceeding distressing, and even intolerable. Mr. Broughton renders it, "the Lord is become a very enemy"; taking "caph" for a note of reality, and not of similitude;
he hath swallowed up Israel; the ten tribes, or the Jewish nation in general; as a lion, or any other savage beast, swallows its prey, and makes nothing of it, and leaves none behind:
he hath swallowed up all her palaces: the palaces of Zion or Jerusalem; the palaces of the king, princes, nobles, and great men; as an earthquake or inundation swallows up whole streets and cities at once; See Gill on Lam 2:2;
he hath destroyed his strong holds: the fortified places of the land of Israel, the towers and castles:
and hath increased in the daughter of Judah mourning and lamentation; exceeding great lamentation, for the destruction of its cities, towns, villages, and the inhabitants of them.
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Gill: Lam 2:6 - -- And he hath violently taken away his tabernacle, as if it were of a garden,.... The house of the sanctuary or temple, as the Targum; which was demoli...
And he hath violently taken away his tabernacle, as if it were of a garden,.... The house of the sanctuary or temple, as the Targum; which was demolished at once with great force and violence, and as easily done as a tent or tabernacle is taken down; and no more account made of it than of a cottage or lodge in a vineyard or garden, set up while the fruit was, gathering; either to shelter from the heat of the sun in the day, or to lodge in at night; see Isa 1:8;
he hath destroyed his places in the assembly; the courts where the people used to assemble for worship in the temple; or the synagogues in Jerusalem, and other parts of the land:
the Lord hath caused the solemn feasts and sabbaths to be forgotten in Zion; there being neither places to keep them in, nor people to observe them:
and hath despised, in the indignation of his anger, the king and the priest; whose persons and offices were sacred, and ought to be treated by men with honour and respect; but, for the sins of both, the Lord despised them himself, and made them the object of his wrath and indignation, and suffered them to be despised and ill used by others, by the Chaldeans; Zedekiah had his children slain before his eyes, and then they were put out, and he was carried in chains to Babylon, and there detained a captive all his days; and Seraiah the chief priest, or, as the Targum here has it, the high priest, was put to death by the king of Babylon; though not only the persons of the king and priest are meant, but their offices also; the kingdom and priesthood ceased from being exercised for many years.
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Gill: Lam 2:7 - -- The Lord hath cast off his altar,.... Whether of incense, or of burnt offerings; the sacrifices of which used to be acceptable to him; but now the alt...
The Lord hath cast off his altar,.... Whether of incense, or of burnt offerings; the sacrifices of which used to be acceptable to him; but now the altar being cast down and demolished, there were no more offerings; nor did he show any desire of them, but the reverse:
he hath abhorred his sanctuary; the temple; by suffering it to be profaned, pulled down, and burnt, it looked as if he had an abhorrence of it, and the service in it; as he had, as it was performed without faith in Christ, love to him, or any view to his glory; see Isa 1:13;
he hath given up into the hand of the enemy the walls of her palaces; both the walls of the sanctuary, and the walls of the houses of the kin, and princes; especially thee former are meant, both by what goes before and follows:
they have made a noise in the house of the Lord, as in the day of a solemn feast; that is the enemy, the Chaldeans, made a noise in the temple, blaspheming God, that had dwelt in it; insulting over the people of God, that had worshipped there; rejoicing in their victories over them; singing their "paeans" to their gods, and other profane songs; indulging themselves in revelling and rioting; making as great a noise with their shouts and songs as the priests, Levites, and people of Israel did, when they sung the songs of Zion on a festival day. The Targum is,
"as the voice of the people of the house of Israel, that prayed in the midst of it in the day of the passover.''
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Gill: Lam 2:8 - -- The Lord hath purposed to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion,.... Either the wall of the city, as Aben Ezra; or the wall that encompassed the te...
The Lord hath purposed to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion,.... Either the wall of the city, as Aben Ezra; or the wall that encompassed the temple, and all the outward courts of it, as Dr. Lightfoot s thinks; this the Lord had determined to destroy, and according to his purposes did destroy it, or suffer it to be demolished; and so all were laid open for the enemy to enter:
he hath stretched out a line; a line of destruction, to mark out how far the destruction should go, and bow much should be laid in ruins; all being as exactly done, according to the purpose and counsel of God, as if it was done by line and rule; see Isa 34:11;
he hath not withdrawn his hand from destroying; till he made a full end of the city and temple, as he first designed:
therefore he made the rampart and the wall to lament: the "chel" and the wall; all that space between the courts of the temple and the wall that surrounded it was called the "chel"; and so the Targum, the circumference or enclosure; and these were laid waste together, and so said to lament: according to others they were two walls, a wall the son of a wall, as Jarchi interprets it; an outward and an inward wall, one higher than another; a low wall over against a high wall; which was as a rampart or bulwark, for the strength and support of it:
they languished together; or fell together, as persons in a fit faint away and full to the ground.
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Gill: Lam 2:9 - -- Her gates are sunk into the ground,.... Either the gates of the city or temple, or both; being broke and demolished, and laid level with the ground, a...
Her gates are sunk into the ground,.... Either the gates of the city or temple, or both; being broke and demolished, and laid level with the ground, and covered with rubbish; for as for the Midrash, or exposition, that Jarchi mentions, that the gates sunk into the earth upon the approach of the enemy, that they might not have power over them, through which the ark passed, is a mere fable of their Rabbins; and equally as absurd is the additional gloss of the Targum,
"her gates sunk into the earth, because they sacrificed a hog, and brought of the blood of it to them:''
he hath destroyed and broken her bars; with which the gates were bolted and barred, that so the enemy might enter; it was God that did it, or suffered it to be done, or it would not have been in the power of the enemy:
her king and her princes are among the Gentiles; Zedekiah, and the princes that were not slain by the king of Babylon, were carried captive thither; and there they lived, even among Heathens that knew not God, and despised his worship:
the law is no more; the book of the law was burnt in the temple, and the tables of it carried away with the ark, or destroyed; and though, no doubt, there were copies of the law preserved, yet it was not read nor expounded; nor was worship performed according to the direction of it; nor could it be in a strange land. Mr. Broughton joins this with the preceding clause, as descriptive of the Heathens: "her king and her princes are among Heathen that have no law"; see Rom 2:12;
her prophets also find no vision from the Lord; there was none but Jeremiah left in the land, and none but Ezekiel and Daniel in the captivity; prophets were very rare at this time, as they were afterwards; for we hear of no more after the captivity, till the coming of the Messiah, but Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi; so that there was very little open vision; the word of the Lord was precious or scarce; there was a famine of hearing it, 1Sa 3:1.
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Gill: Lam 2:10 - -- The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground, and keep silence,.... Who used to sit in the gate on thrones of judgment, and passed sentence i...
The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground, and keep silence,.... Who used to sit in the gate on thrones of judgment, and passed sentence in causes tried before them; or were wont to give advice and counsel, and were regarded as oracles, now sit on the ground, and dumb, as mourners; see Job 2:13;
they have cast up dust upon their heads; on their white hairs and gray locks, which bespoke wisdom, and made them grave and venerable:
they have girded themselves with sackcloth: after the manner of mourners; who used to be clothed in scarlet and rich apparel, in robes suitable to their office as civil magistrates:
the virgins of Jerusalem hang down their heads to the ground: through shame and sorrow; who used to look brisk and gay, and walk with outstretched necks, and carried their heads high, but now low enough. Aben Ezra interprets it of the hair of their heads, which used to be tied up, but now loosed and dishevelled, and hung down as it were to the ground.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:1; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:2; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:3; Lam 2:4; Lam 2:4; Lam 2:4; Lam 2:4; Lam 2:5; Lam 2:5; Lam 2:5; Lam 2:5; Lam 2:5; Lam 2:6; Lam 2:6; Lam 2:6; Lam 2:6; Lam 2:6; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:7; Lam 2:8; Lam 2:8; Lam 2:8; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:9; Lam 2:10; Lam 2:10; Lam 2:10; Lam 2:10; Lam 2:10; Lam 2:10
NET Notes: Lam 2:1 Heb “in the day of His anger.” As a temporal reference this phrase means “when he displayed his anger.” The Hebrew term “...
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NET Notes: Lam 2:2 Heb “He brought down to the ground in disgrace the kingdom and its princes.” The verbs חִלֵּל…...
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NET Notes: Lam 2:4 The singular noun אֹהֶל (’ohel, “tent”) may function as a collective, referring to all tents in Judah....
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NET Notes: Lam 2:6 The verb נָאַץ (na’ats, “to spurn, show contempt”) functions as a metonymy of cause (= to spurn king a...
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NET Notes: Lam 2:7 Heb “as on the day of an appointed time.” The term מוֹעֵד (mo’ed, “appointed time”) ...
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Geneva Bible: Lam 2:1 How hath the Lord ( a ) covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger, [and] cast down from ( b ) heaven to the earth the beauty of Israel, a...
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Geneva Bible: Lam 2:3 He hath cut off in [his] fierce anger all the ( d ) horn of Israel: he hath drawn back his ( e ) right hand from before the enemy, and he burned again...
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Geneva Bible: Lam 2:4 He ( f ) hath bent his bow like an enemy: he stood with his right hand as an adversary, and slew all [that were] pleasant to the eye in the tabernacle...
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Geneva Bible: Lam 2:7 The Lord hath cast off his altar, he hath abhorred his sanctuary, he hath given up into the hand of the enemy the walls of her palaces; they have made...
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Geneva Bible: Lam 2:8 The LORD hath purposed to destroy the wall of the daughter of Zion: he hath stretched out a line, he hath not withdrawn his hand from destroying: ther...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lam 2:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Lam 2:1-22 - --1 Jeremiah laments the misery of Jerusalem.20 He complains thereof to God.
MHCC -> Lam 2:1-9; Lam 2:10-22
MHCC: Lam 2:1-9 - --A sad representation is here made of the state of God's church, of Jacob and Israel; but the notice seems mostly to refer to the hand of the Lord in t...
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MHCC: Lam 2:10-22 - --Causes for lamentation are described. Multitudes perished by famine. Even little children were slain by their mother's hands, and eaten, according to ...
Matthew Henry -> Lam 2:1-9; Lam 2:10-22
Matthew Henry: Lam 2:1-9 - -- It is a very sad representation which is here made of the state of God's church, of Jacob and Israel, of Zion and Jerusalem; but the emphasis in the...
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Matthew Henry: Lam 2:10-22 - -- Justly are these called Lamentations, and they are very pathetic ones, the expressions of grief in perfection, mourning and woe, and nothing else,...
Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:2 - --
The Lord has destroyed not merely Jerusalem, but the whole kingdom. בּלּע , "to swallow up," involves the idea of utter annihilation, the fury o...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:3-4 - --
In Lam 2:3 and Lam 2:4, the writer describes the hostile conduct of the Lord towards Israel, by which the kingdom of Judah was destroyed. Thenius ut...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:5 - --
The Lord has become like an enemy. כּאויב is not separated from היה by the accents (Pesik and Mahpak before, and Kadma after); so that the...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:6-7 - --
In Lam 2:6 and Lam 2:7, mention is made of the destruction of the temple and the cessation of public worship. "He treated violently (cruelly)," i.e....
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:8-9 - --
The lament over the destruction of the kingdom concludes, in Lam 2:8, Lam 2:9, by mentioning that the walls of Jerusalem are destroyed; with this th...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:10 - --
The whole of the people have sunk into deep sorrow over this misfortune. The elders, as the counsellors of the city, sit on the ground in silence, f...
Constable -> Lam 2:1-22; Lam 2:1-10
Constable: Lam 2:1-22 - --II. The divine punishment of Jerusalem (the second lament) ch. 2
One of the striking features of this lament is ...
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