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Text -- Lamentations 5:14 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
5:14 The elders are gone from the city gate; the young men have stopped playing their music.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: War | Poetry | Patriotism | Nation | Government | Doubting | Church | BUYING | Afflictions and Adversities | AGE; OLD AGE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Lam 5:14 - -- Aged men in the East meet in the open space round the gate to decide judicial trials and to hold social converse (Job 29:7-8).

Aged men in the East meet in the open space round the gate to decide judicial trials and to hold social converse (Job 29:7-8).

Clarke: Lam 5:14 - -- The elders have ceased from the gate - There is now no more justice administered to the people; they are under military law, or disposed of in every...

The elders have ceased from the gate - There is now no more justice administered to the people; they are under military law, or disposed of in every sense according to the caprice of their masters.

Calvin: Lam 5:14 - -- Here the Prophet briefly shews that the city was reduced to ruins, so that nothing but desolation could be seen there. For when cities are inhabited,...

Here the Prophet briefly shews that the city was reduced to ruins, so that nothing but desolation could be seen there. For when cities are inhabited, judges sit at the gate and young men exercise themselves in lawful pursuits; but he says that there were no judgments; for at that time, as it is well known, they were wont to administer justice and to hold assemblies at the gates of cities. It was then the same as though all civil order had been abolished.

Then he adds, the young men had ceased from their own beating or musical songs. The meaning is, that there was so great a desolation in the city, that, it was no more a city. For men cannot dwell together without laws and without courts of justice. Where courts of justice are closed up, where laws are mute, where no equity is administered, there barbarity prevails, which is worse than solitude; and where there are no assemblies for legitimate amusements, life becomes brutal, for we know that man is a sociable being. By these words, then, the Prophet shews that a dreadful desolation appeared in the city after the people had gone into exile. And among the Chaldeans, and in Assyria, they had not their own judges nor any form of government, for they were dispersed and scattered, and that designedly, that they might not unite together any more; for it was the purpose of the Chaldeans to obliterate by degrees the very name of the people; and hence they were not there formed into a community. So justly does the Prophet deplore their desolation even in exile. It follows, —

TSK: Lam 5:14 - -- elders : Lam 1:4, Lam 1:19, Lam 2:10; Deu 16:18; Job 29:7-17, Job 30:1; Isa 3:2, Isa 3:3 the young : Job 30:31; Isa 24:7-11; Jer 7:34, Jer 16:9, Jer 2...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Lam 5:14 - -- The gate - The gate was the place for public gatherings, for conversation, and the music of stringed instruments.

The gate - The gate was the place for public gatherings, for conversation, and the music of stringed instruments.

Poole: Lam 5:14 - -- Our grave men were wont to sit and execute judgment in the gates, but now there is no such thing. Our young men were wont to play on music, and to h...

Our grave men were wont to sit and execute judgment in the gates, but now there is no such thing. Our young men were wont to play on music, and to have their merry meetings, but they are also ceased.

Haydock: Lam 5:14 - -- Gates, where sentence was usually passed. (Haydock) --- The Jews had judges at Babylon, (Daniel xiii. 5.) but not at first, nor everywhere.

Gates, where sentence was usually passed. (Haydock) ---

The Jews had judges at Babylon, (Daniel xiii. 5.) but not at first, nor everywhere.

Gill: Lam 5:14 - -- The elders have ceased from the gate,.... Of the sanhedrim, or court of judicature, as the Targum; from the gate of the city, where they used to sit a...

The elders have ceased from the gate,.... Of the sanhedrim, or court of judicature, as the Targum; from the gate of the city, where they used to sit and try causes; but now there was nothing of this kind done:

the young men from their music; vocal and instrumental; the latter is more particularly specified, though both may be intended; neither were any more heard; their harps were hung upon the willows on the banks of Euphrates, which ran through the city of Babylon, Psa 137:1.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: Lam 5:14 The elders have ceased from the ( h ) gate, the young men from their music. ( h ) There were no more laws nor form of commonwealth.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Lam 5:1-22 - --1 A pitiful complaint of Zion in prayer unto God.

MHCC: Lam 5:1-16 - --Is any afflicted? Let him pray; and let him in prayer pour out his complaint to God. The people of God do so here; they complain not of evils feared, ...

Matthew Henry: Lam 5:1-16 - -- Is any afflicted? let him pray; and let him in prayer pour out his complaint to God, and make known before him his trouble. The people of God do s...

Keil-Delitzsch: Lam 5:8-16 - -- Further description of the miserable condition under which the congregation languishes. Lam 5:8. "Servants rule over us," etc. עבדים are not t...

Constable: Lam 5:1-22 - --V. The response of the godly (the fifth lament) ch. 5 This poem, like the one in chapter 3, contains verses of o...

Constable: Lam 5:1-18 - --A. A plea for remembrance 5:1-18 5:1 Jeremiah called on Yahweh to remember the calamity that had befallen His people and to consider the reproach in w...

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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 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Lam 5:1, A pitiful complaint of Zion in prayer unto 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 5 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 5 A humble prayer, presenting to the Lord their great misery, Lam 5:1-15 , confessing their sins, Lam 5:16-18 , imploring deliverance, Lam ...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) The Jewish nation supplicating the Divine favour.

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter, though it has the same number of verses with the 1st, 2nd, and 4th, is not alphabetical, as they were, but the scope of it is the sam...

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 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO LAMENTATIONS 5 In this chapter are reckoned up the various calamities and distresses of the Jews in Babylon, which the Lord is desi...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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