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Text -- Lamentations 2:20-22 (NET)

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Context
Jerusalem Speaks:
2:20 ר (Resh) Look, O Lord! Consider! Whom have you ever afflicted like this? Should women eat their offspring, their healthy infants? Should priest and prophet be killed in the Lord’s 2:21 ש(Sin/Shin) The young boys and old men lie dead on the ground in the streets. My young women and my young men have fallen by the sword. You killed them when you were angry; you slaughtered them without mercy. 2:22 ת(Tav) As if it were a feast day, you call enemies to terrify me on every side. On the day of the Lord’s anger no one escaped or survived. My enemy has finished off those healthy infants whom I bore and raised.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Women | War | Swaddle | Sanctuary | SWADDLE; SWADDLING-BAND | SPAN | SIEGE | Poetry | Nation | Measure | MAGOR-MISSABIB | JOEL (2) | INTERCESSION | Famine | Doubting | Day | Church | Caibalism | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Lam 2:20 - -- Not the Heathen, but to thy own people.

Not the Heathen, but to thy own people.

Wesley: Lam 2:20 - -- Wilt thou suffer women to satisfy their hunger with the fruit of their own bodies?

Wilt thou suffer women to satisfy their hunger with the fruit of their own bodies?

Wesley: Lam 2:22 - -- As my people were wont to be called together from all parts in a solemn day, so now my terrible enemies, or terrible things are by thee called togethe...

As my people were wont to be called together from all parts in a solemn day, so now my terrible enemies, or terrible things are by thee called together.

JFB: Lam 2:20 - -- As threatened (Lev 26:29; Deu 28:53, Deu 28:56-57; Jer 19:9).

JFB: Lam 2:20 - -- Or else, "children whom they carry in their arms" [MAURER].

Or else, "children whom they carry in their arms" [MAURER].

JFB: Lam 2:21 - -- (2Ch 36:17).

JFB: Lam 2:22 - -- Thou hast summoned my enemies against me from all quarters, just as multitudes used to be convened to Jerusalem, on the solemn feast days. The objects...

Thou hast summoned my enemies against me from all quarters, just as multitudes used to be convened to Jerusalem, on the solemn feast days. The objects, for which the enemies and the festal multitude respectively met, formed a sad contrast. Compare Lam 1:15 : "called an assembly against me."

Jeremiah proposes his own experience under afflictions, as an example as to how the Jews should behave under theirs, so as to have hope of a restoration; hence the change from singular to plural (Lam 3:22, Lam 3:40-47). The stanzas consist of three lines, each of which begins with the same Hebrew letter.

Clarke: Lam 2:20 - -- Consider to whom thou hast done this - Perhaps the best sense of this difficult verse is this: "Thou art our Father, we are thy children; wilt thou ...

Consider to whom thou hast done this - Perhaps the best sense of this difficult verse is this: "Thou art our Father, we are thy children; wilt thou destroy thy own offspring? Was it ever heard that a mother devoured her own child, a helpless infant of a span long?"That it was foretold that there should be such distress in the siege, - that mothers should be obliged to eat their own children, is evident enough from Lev 26:29; Deu 28:53, Deu 28:56, Deu 28:57; but the former view of the subject seems the most natural and is best supported by the context. The priest and the prophet are slain; the young and old lie on the ground in the streets; the virgins and young men are fallen by the sword. "Thou hast slain them in the day of thine anger; Thou hast killed, and not pitied."See Deu 4:10.

Clarke: Lam 2:22 - -- Thou hast called as in a solemn day - It is by thy influence alone that so many enemies are called together at one time; and they have so hemmed us ...

Thou hast called as in a solemn day - It is by thy influence alone that so many enemies are called together at one time; and they have so hemmed us in that none could escape, and none remained unslain or uncaptivated, Perhaps the figure is the collecting of the people in Jerusalem on one of the solemn annual festivals. God has called terrors together to feast on Jerusalem, similar to the convocation of the people from all parts of the land to one of those annual festivals. The indiscriminate slaughter of young and old, priest and prophet, all ranks and conditions, may be illustrated by the following verses from Lucan, which appear as if a translation of the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first verses of this chapter: -

Nobilitas cum plebe perit; lateque vagatu

Ensis, et a nullo revocatum est pectore ferrum

Stat cruor in Templis; multaque rubentia caed

Lubrica saxa madent. Nulli sua profuit aetas

Non senes extremum piguit vergentibus anni

Praecipitasse diem; nec primo in limine vitae

Infanti miseri nascentia rumpere fata

Pharsal. lib. ii., 101

"With what a slide devouring slaughter passed

And swept promiscuous orders in her haste

O’ er noble and plebeian ranged the sword

Nor pity nor remorse one pause afford

The sliding streets with blood were clotted o’ er

And sacred temples stood in pools of gore

The ruthless steel, impatient of delay

Forbade the sire to linger out his day

It struck the bending father to the earth

And cropped the wailing infant at its birth.

Rowe.

||&&$

Calvin: Lam 2:20 - -- Here, also, Jeremiah dictates words, or a form of prayer to the Jews. And this complaint availed to excite pity, that God had thus afflicted, not str...

Here, also, Jeremiah dictates words, or a form of prayer to the Jews. And this complaint availed to excite pity, that God had thus afflicted, not strangers, but the people whom he had adopted. Interpreters do, indeed, give another explanation, “See, Jehovah, To whom hast thou done this?” that is, Has any people been ever so severely afflicted? But I do not think that the comparison is made here, which they seek to make, but that the people only set before God the covenant which he had made with their fathers, as though they said, “O Lord, hadst thou thus cruelly raged against strangers, there would have been nothing so wonderful; but since we are thine heritage, and the blessed seed of Abraham, since thou hast been pleased to choose us as thy peculiar people, what can this mean, that, thou treatest us with so much severity?”

We now, then, perceive the real meaning of the Prophet, when, in the person of the people, he speaks thus, See, and look on, Jehovah, to whom thou hast done this; for thou hast had to do with thy children: not that the Jews could allege any worthiness; but the gratuitous election of God must have been abundantly sufficient to draw forth mercy. Nor do the faithful here simply ask God to see, but they add another word, Look on. By the two words they more fully express the indignity of what had happened, as though they said, that it was like a prodigy that God’s people should be so severely afflicted, who had been chosen by him: see, then, to whom thou hast done this

And this mode of praying was very common, as we find it said in the Psalms,

“Pour forth thy wrath on the nations which know not thee, and on the kingdoms which call not on thy name.” (Psa 79:6.)

And a similar passage we have before observed in our Prophet. (Jer 10:25.) The sum of what is said is, that there was a just reason why God should turn to mercy, and be thus reconciled to his people, because he had not to do with aliens, but with his own family, whom he had been pleased to adopt. But the rest I shall defer until tomorrow.

Calvin: Lam 2:21 - -- Here he relates in the person of the Church another calamity, that the young and the aged were lying prostrate in the streets; and he joins children ...

Here he relates in the person of the Church another calamity, that the young and the aged were lying prostrate in the streets; and he joins children to the old men, to shew that there was no difference as to age. Then he says that dead bodies were lying promiscuously in public places. He adds, that virgins and young men had fallen by the sword; by which he confirms the previous clause, for there is nothing new said here, but only the manner is shewn by which they had been slain; for slain by the sword had been the young men and young women without any distinction; the enemies at the same time had not spared the old, while they killed the very flower of the people.

But the Prophet at the same time shews that all this was to be ascribed to God, not. that the Jews might expostulate with him, but that they might cease vainly to lament their calamities, and in order that they might on the contrary turn to God. Hence he does not say that the young and the old had been slain by the enemies, but by God himself. But it was difficult to convince the Jews of this, for they were so filled with rage against their enemies, that they could not turn their thoughts to the consideration of God’s judgments. This, then, is the reason why the Prophet makes God the author of all their calamities; Thou, he says, hast slain in the day of thy wrath; thou hast killed and not spared. And though the people seem here in a manner to contend with God, we must yet bear in mind the design of the Prophet, even to teach the people to look to God himself, so that they might know that they had to do with him. For there ought to be a passing from one truth to another, so that men, conscious of their sins, should first give glory to God, and then humbly deprecate the wrath which they have deserved. It follows at length, —

Calvin: Lam 2:22 - -- Here he uses a most appropriate metaphor, to show that the people had been brought to the narrowest straits; for he says that terrors had on every ...

Here he uses a most appropriate metaphor, to show that the people had been brought to the narrowest straits; for he says that terrors had on every side surrounded them, as when a solemn assembly is called. They sounded the trumpets when a festival was at hand, that all might come up to the Temple. As, then, many companies were wont to come to Jerusalem on feast-days — for when the trumpets were sounded all were called — so the Prophet says that terrors had been sent by God from every part to straiten the miserable people: thou hast, then, called my terrors all around, — how? as to a feast-day, the day of the assembly; for מועד , muod, means the assembly as well as the place and the appointed time. 173

But we must ever bear in mind what I have already referred to, that though enemies terrified the Jews, yet this was to be ascribed to God, so that every one might acknowledge for himself, that the Chaldeans had not come by chance, but through the secret impulse of God. He afterwards adds, in the day of Jehovah’s wrath (he changes the person) there was none alive, or remaining; nay, he says the enemy has consumed those whom I had nursed and brought up. Here he transfers to enemies what he had before said was done by God, but in this sense, that he understood God as the chief author, and the Chaldeans as the ministers; of his vengeance. Now follows, —

TSK: Lam 2:20 - -- consider : Exo 32:11; Deu 9:26; Isa 63:16-19, Isa 64:8-12; Jer 14:20-21 Shall the women : Lam 4:10; Lev 26:29; Deu 28:53-57; 2Ki 6:28, 2Ki 6:29; Jer 1...

consider : Exo 32:11; Deu 9:26; Isa 63:16-19, Isa 64:8-12; Jer 14:20-21

Shall the women : Lam 4:10; Lev 26:29; Deu 28:53-57; 2Ki 6:28, 2Ki 6:29; Jer 19:9; Eze 5:10

of a span long : or, swaddled with their hands

shall the priest : Lam 1:19, Lam 4:13, Lam 4:16; Psa 78:64; Isa 9:14-17; Jer 5:31, Jer 14:15-18, Jer 23:11-15; Eze 9:5, Eze 9:6

TSK: Lam 2:21 - -- young : Deu 28:50; Jos 6:21; 1Sa 15:3; 2Ch 36:17; Est 3:13; Jer 51:22; Eze 9:6 my virgins : Lam 1:15, Lam 1:18; Psa 78:63; Jer 9:21, Jer 11:22, Jer 18...

TSK: Lam 2:22 - -- my terrors : Psa 31:13; Isa 24:17, Isa 24:18; Jer 6:25, Jer 20:3, Jer 46:5; Amo 9:1-4 those : Deu 28:18; Jer 16:2-4; Hos 9:12-16; Luk 23:29, Luk 23:30

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Lam 2:20 - -- The sense is: "See, Yahweh, and look! whom hast Thou treated thus? Shall women eat their fruit - children whom they must still carry?"the swaddled c...

The sense is: "See, Yahweh, and look! whom hast Thou treated thus? Shall women eat their fruit - children whom they must still carry?"the swaddled child being one still needing to be nursed and borne in their arms.

Barnes: Lam 2:21 - -- Omit "them"and "and,"which weaken the intensity of the passage.

Omit "them"and "and,"which weaken the intensity of the passage.

Barnes: Lam 2:22 - -- Thou hast called as in a solemn day - i. e. "Thou"callest "like a feast day,"i. e. like the proclaiming of a festival. My terrors round ab...

Thou hast called as in a solemn day - i. e. "Thou"callest "like a feast day,"i. e. like the proclaiming of a festival.

My terrors round about - The prophet’ s watch-word (Jer 6:25 note). God now proclaims what Jeremiah had so often called out before, "Magor-missabib."On every side were conquering Chaldaeans.

Poole: Lam 2:20 - -- Consider to whom thou hast done this that is, not to heathen, who never owned thee, nor were called by thy name, but to thine own people, called thy ...

Consider to whom thou hast done this that is, not to heathen, who never owned thee, nor were called by thy name, but to thine own people, called thy portion and thine heritage; let thy former relation to us, and our former acknowledgments of thee, prevail with thee. Wilt thou suffer, or should such a thing be, as for women to satisfy their hunger with the fruit of their own bodies, and that when they are very young? And shall thy ministers be slain, and that in thy sanctuary? Any human blood polluted it; shall not the blood of those that were the ministers of God be judged a pollution and profanation of it?

Poole: Lam 2:21 - -- None of what sex or age soever are spared: though the hands of the Chaldeans have done this, yet they have been set on and assisted by thee, and hav...

None of what sex or age soever are spared: though the hands of the Chaldeans have done this, yet they have been set on and assisted by thee, and have been but the executioners of thy wrath and displeasure.

Poole: Lam 2:22 - -- As my people were wont to be called together from all parts in a solemn day, when they were to meet at Jerusalem from all parts of Judea; so now by ...

As my people were wont to be called together from all parts in a solemn day, when they were to meet at Jerusalem from all parts of Judea; so now by thy providence my terrible enemies, or terrible things, are by thee called together against that holy city, whither thy people were wont to be called to thy solemn worship. Thou hast made me as a great mother to bring Up many inhabitants that were my children, and now the enemy hath consumed the far greater number of them.

Haydock: Lam 2:20 - -- Dealt. Literally, "gathered grapes," chap. i. 12. (Haydock) --- Long; quite small, Psalm xxxviii. 9. This has been denounced, chap. xix. 9., and...

Dealt. Literally, "gathered grapes," chap. i. 12. (Haydock) ---

Long; quite small, Psalm xxxviii. 9. This has been denounced, chap. xix. 9., and Deuteronomy xxviii. 53. (Calmet) It took place at Samaria, and in the last siege of Jerusalem, (Josephus, Jewish Wars vii., and viii.; Worthington) as well as at this time. (Haydock)

Haydock: Lam 2:21 - -- Killed. Literally, "stricken" (Haydock) with unusual severity. (Worthington)

Killed. Literally, "stricken" (Haydock) with unusual severity. (Worthington)

Gill: Lam 2:20 - -- Behold, O Lord, and consider to whom thou hast done this,.... On whom thou hast brought these calamities of famine and sword; not upon thine enemies, ...

Behold, O Lord, and consider to whom thou hast done this,.... On whom thou hast brought these calamities of famine and sword; not upon thine enemies, but upon thine own people, that are called by thy name, and upon theirs, their young ones, who had not sinned as their fathers had: here the church does not charge God with any injustice, or complain of hard usage; only humbly entreats he would look upon her, in her misery, with an eye of pity and compassion; and consider her sorrowful condition; and remember the relation she stood in to him; and so submits her case, and leaves it with him. These words seem to be suggested to the church by the prophet, as what might be proper for her to use, when praying for the life of her young children; and might be introduced by supplying the word "saying" before "behold, O Lord", &c.

shall the women eat their fruit; their children, the fruit of their womb, as the Targum; their newborn babes, that hung at their breasts, and were carried in their arms; it seems they did, as was threatened they should, Lev 26:29; and so they did at the siege of Samaria, and at the siege of Jerusalem, both by the Chaldeans and the Romans:

and children of a span long? or of a hand's breadth; the breadth of the palms of the hand, denoting very little ones: or "children handled", or "swaddled with the hands" c; of their parents, who are used to stroke the limbs of their babes, to bring them to; and keep them in right form and shape, and swaddle them with swaddling bands in a proper manner; see Lam 2:22; and so the Targum,

"desirable children, who are wrapped in fine linen.''

Jarchi d interprets it of Doeg Ben Joseph, whom his mother slew, and ate:

shall the priest and the prophet be slain in the sanctuary of the Lord? as very probably some were, who fled thither for safety when the city was broken up; but were not spared by the merciless Chaldeans, who had no regard to their office and character; nor is it any wonder they should not, when the Jews themselves slew Zechariah, a priest and prophet, between the porch and the altar; of whom the Targum here makes mention; and to whom Jarchi applies these words.

Gill: Lam 2:21 - -- The young and the old lie on the ground in the streets,.... Young men and old men, virgins and aged women; these promiscuously lay on the ground in th...

The young and the old lie on the ground in the streets,.... Young men and old men, virgins and aged women; these promiscuously lay on the ground in the public streets, fainting and dying for want of food; or lay killed there by the sword of the enemy; the Chaldeans sparing neither age nor sex. The Targum interprets it of their sleeping on the ground,

"young men slept on the ground in the villages, and old men who used to lie on pillows of fine wool, and on beds of ivory;''

but the former sense is confirmed by what follows:

my virgins and my young men are fallen by the sword; by the sword of the Chaldeans, when they entered the city:

thou hast slain them in the day of thine anger: thou hast killed,

and not pitied; the Chaldeans were only instruments; it was the Lord's doing; it was according to his will; it was what he had purposed and decreed; what he had solemnly declared and threatened; and now in his providence brought about, for the sins of the Jews, by which he was provoked to anger; and so gave them up into the hands of their enemies, to slay them without mercy; and which is here owned; the church takes notice of the hand of God in all this.

Gill: Lam 2:22 - -- Thou hast called, as in a solemn day, my terrors round about,.... Terrible enemies, as the Chaldeans; these came at the call of God, as soldiers at th...

Thou hast called, as in a solemn day, my terrors round about,.... Terrible enemies, as the Chaldeans; these came at the call of God, as soldiers at the command of their general; and in as great numbers as men from all parts of Judea flocked to Jerusalem on any of the three solemn feasts of passover, pentecost, and tabernacles. The Targum paraphrases it very foreign to the sense;

"thou shall proclaim liberty to thy people, the house of Israel, by the Messiah, as thou didst by Moses and Aaron on the day of the passover:''

so that in the day of the Lord's anger none escaped or remained; in the city of Jerusalem, and in the land of Judea; either they were put to death, or were carried captive; so that there was scarce an inhabitant to be found, especially after Gedaliah was slain, and the Jews left in the land were carried into Egypt:

those that I have swaddled and brought up hath mine enemy consumed; or "whom I could span", as Broughton; or "handled"; whose limbs she had stroked with her hands, whom she had swathed with bands, and had carried in her arms, and had most carefully and tenderly brought up: by those she had "swaddled" are meant the little ones; and by those she had "brought up" the greater ones, as Aben Ezra observes; but both the enemy, the Chaldeans, consumed and destroyed without mercy, without regard to their tender years, or the manner in which they were brought up; but as if they were nourished like lambs for the day of slaughter.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Lam 2:20 The MT reads אֲדֹנָי (’adonay, “the Lord”) here rather than יהוה (...

NET Notes: Lam 2:21 The MT reads לֹא חָמָלְתָּ (lo’ khamalta, “You showed no mercyR...

NET Notes: Lam 2:22 This entire line is an accusative noun clause, functioning as the direct object of the following line: “my enemy has destroyed the perfectly hea...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Lam 2:1-22 - --1 Jeremiah laments the misery of Jerusalem.20 He complains thereof to God.

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 2:10-22 - -- 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 2:20-21 - -- In Lam 2:20 follows the prayer which the city has been commanded to make. The prayer sets before the mind of the Lord the terrible misery under whic...

Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 2:22 - -- The imperf. תּקרא has perhaps bee chosen merely for the sake of the alphabetic arrangement, because the description is still continued, and the...

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 ...

Constable: Lam 2:20-22 - --C. Jerusalem's plea 2:20-22 This last pericope is a prayer to the Lord. 2:20 Jeremiah responded to this call to prayer by asking the Lord to consider ...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Lamentations (Book Introduction) In the Hebrew Bible these Elegies of Jeremiah, five in number, are placed among the Chetuvim, or "Holy Writings" ("the Psalms," &c., Luk 24:44), betwe...

JFB: Lamentations (Outline) THE SAD CAPTURE OF JERUSALEM, THE HOPE OF RESTORATION, AND THE RETRIBUTION AWAITING IDUMEA FOR JOINING BABYLON AGAINST JUDEA. (Lam. 4:1-22) EPIPHONEM...

TSK: Lamentations 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Lam 2:1, Jeremiah laments the misery of Jerusalem; Lam 2:20, He complains thereof to God.

Poole: Lamentations (Book Introduction) LAMENTATIONS OF JEREMIAH THE ARGUMENT This book in Greek, Latin, and English hath its name from the subject matter of it, which is lamentation; s...

Poole: Lamentations 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2 Jeremiah lamenteth the misery of Jerusalem, and its causes, and their enemies’ derision, Lam 2:1-17 . In exhortation to true sorrow...

MHCC: Lamentations (Book Introduction) It is evident that Jeremiah was the author of the Lamentations which bear his name. The book was not written till after the destruction of Jerusalem b...

MHCC: Lamentations 2 (Chapter Introduction) Lamentation for the misery of Jerusalem.

Matthew Henry: Lamentations (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Lamentations of Jeremiah Since what Solomon says, though contrary to the common opinion of the worl...

Matthew Henry: Lamentations 2 (Chapter Introduction) The second alphabetical elegy is set to the same mournful tune with the former, and the substance of it is much the same; it begins with Ecah, as t...

Constable: Lamentations (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Position The English title of this book comes from the Talmud (...

Constable: Lamentations (Outline) Outline I. The destruction and misery of Jerusalem (the first lament) ch. 1 A. An observer's...

Constable: Lamentations Lamentations Bibliography Archer, Gleason L., Jr. A Survey of Old Testament Introduction. Revised ed. Chicago: ...

Haydock: Lamentations (Book Introduction) THE LAMENTATIONS OF JEREMIAS. INTRODUCTION. In these Jeremias laments in a most pathetic manner the miseries of his people, and the destructio...

Gill: Lamentations (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO LAMENTATIONS This book very properly follows the prophecy of Jeremiah, not only because wrote by him, but because of the subject ma...

Gill: Lamentations 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO LAMENTATIONS 2 This chapter contains another alphabet, in which the Prophet Jeremiah, or those he represents, lament the sad condit...

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