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Text -- Lamentations 4:5 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
4:5 ה(He) Those who once feasted on delicacies are now starving to death in the streets. Those who grew up wearing expensive clothes are now dying amid garbage.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Zedekiah | War | Scarlet | Poetry | Famine | Dung-hill | Dung | Doubting | DUNGHILL | DUNG; DUNG GATE | DELICATE; DELICATELY | Colors | Church | COLOR; COLORS | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
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)

JFB: Lam 4:5 - -- On dainties.

On dainties.

JFB: Lam 4:5 - -- Or, "perish."

Or, "perish."

JFB: Lam 4:5 - -- Instead of the scarlet couches on which the grandees were nursed, they must lie on dunghills.

Instead of the scarlet couches on which the grandees were nursed, they must lie on dunghills.

JFB: Lam 4:5 - -- They who once shrank sensitively from any soil, gladly cling close to heaps of filth as their only resting-place. Compare "embrace the rock" (Job 24:8...

They who once shrank sensitively from any soil, gladly cling close to heaps of filth as their only resting-place. Compare "embrace the rock" (Job 24:8).

Clarke: Lam 4:5 - -- Embrace dunghills - Lie on straw or rubbish, instead of the costly carpets and sofas on which they formerly stretched themselves.

Embrace dunghills - Lie on straw or rubbish, instead of the costly carpets and sofas on which they formerly stretched themselves.

Calvin: Lam 4:5 - -- Here he goes on farther, and says, that they had perished with famine who had been accustomed to the most delicate food. He had said generally that i...

Here he goes on farther, and says, that they had perished with famine who had been accustomed to the most delicate food. He had said generally that infants found nothing in their mothers’ breasts, but pined away with thirst, and also that children died through want of bread. But he now amplifies this calamity by saying, that this not only happened to the children of the common people, but also to those who had been brought up delicately, and had been clothed in scarlet and purple.

Then he says that they perished in the streets, and also that they embraced the dunghills, because they had no place to lie down, or because they sought food, as famished men do, on dunghills. 211 It seems to be a hyperbolical expression; but if we consider what the Prophet has already narrated and will again repeat, it ought not to appear incredible, that those who had been accustomed to delicacies embraced dunghills; for mothers cooked their own children and devoured them as beef or mutton. There is no doubt but that the siege, of which we have before read, drove the people to acts too degrading to be spoken of, especially when they had become blinded through so great a pertinacity, and had altogether hardened themselves in their madness against God. It follows, —

TSK: Lam 4:5 - -- that did : Deu 28:54-56; Isa 3:16-26, Isa 24:6-12, Isa 32:9-14; Jer 6:2, Jer 6:3; Amo 6:3-7; Luk 7:25; 1Ti 5:6; Rev 18:7-9 brought : 2Sa 1:24; Pro 31:...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Lam 4:5 - -- They that were brought up in scarlet - literally, "those that were carried upon scarlet;"young children in arms and of the highest birth now li...

They that were brought up in scarlet - literally, "those that were carried upon scarlet;"young children in arms and of the highest birth now lie on the dirt-heaps of the city.

Poole: Lam 4:5 - -- This judgment reached not only to the common people, but to persons of the highest rank and order, whose misery was now so much the greater, because...

This judgment reached not only to the common people, but to persons of the highest rank and order, whose misery was now so much the greater, because so contrary to their former splendid state and way of living. They were wont to fare deliciously; now they wanted bread to eat, and were desolate in the streets. They were wont to eat upon scarlet carpets, or to lodge upon scarlet beds and conches; now they searched for their meat upon, or were glad to lie upon, dunghills.

Haydock: Lam 4:5 - -- Scarlet. Literally, "yellow;" croceis. (Haydock) --- Hebrew means purple. Those who have been educated in the most delicate manner, are forced ...

Scarlet. Literally, "yellow;" croceis. (Haydock) ---

Hebrew means purple. Those who have been educated in the most delicate manner, are forced to feed on the most disgusting things, 4 Kings vi. 25., and xviii. 27., and Deuteronomy xxviii. 54.

Gill: Lam 4:5 - -- They that did feed delicately are desolate in the streets,.... That were brought up in the king's palace, or in the houses of noblemen; or, however, b...

They that did feed delicately are desolate in the streets,.... That were brought up in the king's palace, or in the houses of noblemen; or, however, born of parents rich and wealthy, and had been used to good living, and had fared sumptuously and deliciously every day, were now wandering about in the streets in the most forlorn and distressed condition, seeking for food of any sort, but could find none to satisfy their hunger; and so, as the Vulgate Latin version renders it, perished in the ways or streets:

they that were brought up in scarlet: in dyed garments, as Jarchi; clothed with scarlet coloured ones, as was the manner of the richer and better sort of people, Pro 31:21; or, "brought up upon scarlet" o; upon scarlet carpets, on which they used to sit and eat their food, as is the custom of the eastern people to this day: these

embrace dunghills, are glad of them, and with the greatest eagerness rake into them, in order to find something to feed upon, though ever so base and vile; or to sit and lie down upon. Aben Ezra interprets it of their being cast here when dead, and there was none to bury them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Lam 4:5 The Hebrew word אַשְׁפַּתּוֹת (’ashpatot) can also mean “ash...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Lam 4:1-22 - --1 Zion bewails her pitiful estate.13 She confesses her sins.21 Edom is threatened and Zion comforted.

MHCC: Lam 4:1-12 - --What a change is here! Sin tarnishes the beauty of the most exalted powers and the most excellent gifts; but that gold, tried in the fire, which Chris...

Matthew Henry: Lam 4:1-12 - -- The elegy in this chapter begins with a lamentation of the very sad and doleful change which the judgments of God had made in Jerusalem. The city th...

Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 4:1-11 - -- The misery that has come on the inhabitants of Jerusalem is a punishment for their deep guilt. The description given of this misery is divided into ...

Constable: Lam 4:1-22 - --IV. The anger of Yahweh (the fourth lament) ch. 4 The fourth lament is similar to the second one in that they bo...

Constable: Lam 4:1-11 - --A. Conditions during the siege 4:1-11 This section of the poem consists of two parallel parts (vv. 1-6, 7-11). The Judahites had become despised (vv. ...

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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 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Lam 4:1, Zion bewails her pitiful estate; Lam 4:13, She confesses her sins; Lam 4:21, Edom is threatened and Zion comforted.

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4 Zion bewaileth her misery, confesseth her sins, Lam 4:1-6 . Miseries of the chief ones; women who killed and dressed their own children, ...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) The deplorable state of the nation is contrasted with its ancient prosperity.

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter is another single alphabet of Lamentations for the destruction of Jerusalem, like those in the first two chapters. I. The prophet her...

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 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO LAMENTATIONS 4 The prophet begins this chapter with a complaint of the ill usage of the dear children of God, and precious sons of ...

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