Lamentations3
New American Standard
1I am the man who has seen misery Because of the rod of His wrath.
2He has driven me and made me walk In darkness and not in light.
3Indeed, He has turned His hand against me Repeatedly all the day.
4He has consumed my flesh and my skin, He has broken my bones.
5He has besieged and surrounded me with bitterness and hardship.
6He has made me live in dark places, Like those who have long been dead.
7He has walled me in so that I cannot go out; He has made my chain heavy.
8Even when I cry out and call for help, He shuts out my prayer.
9He has blocked my ways with cut stone; He has twisted my paths.
10He is to me like a bear lying in wait, Like a lion in secret places.
11He has made my ways deviate, and torn me to pieces; He has made me desolate.
12He bent His bow And took aim at me as a target for the arrow.
13He made the arrows of His quiver Enter my inward parts.
14I have become a laughingstock to all my people, Their song of ridicule all the day.
15He has filled me with bitterness, He has made me drink plenty of wormwood.
16He has also made my teeth grind with gravel; He has made me cower in the dust.
17My soul has been excluded from peace; I have forgotten happiness.
18So I say, “My strength has failed, And so has my hope from the Lord.”
19Remember my misery and my homelessness, the wormwood and bitterness.
20My soul certainly remembers, And is bent over within me.
21I recall this to my mind, Therefore I wait.
22The Lord’s acts of mercy indeed do not end, For His compassions do not fail.
23They are new every morning; Great is Your faithfulness.
24“The Lord is my portion,” says my soul, “Therefore I wait for Him.”
25The Lord is good to those who await Him, To the person who seeks Him.
26It is good that he waits silently For the salvation of the Lord.
27It is good for a man to bear The yoke in his youth.
28Let him sit alone and keep quiet, Since He has laid it on him.
29Let him put his mouth in the dust; Perhaps there is hope.
30Let him give his cheek to the one who is going to strike him; Let him be filled with shame.
31For the Lord will not reject forever,
32For if He causes grief, Then He will have compassion In proportion to His abundant mercy.
33For He does not afflict willingly Or grieve the sons of mankind.
34To crush under one’s feet All the prisoners of the land,
35To deprive a man of justice In the presence of the Most High,
36To defraud someone in his lawsuit— Of these things the Lord does not approve.
37Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass, Unless the Lord has commanded it?
38Is it not from the mouth of the Most High That both adversity and good proceed?
39Of what can any living mortal, or any man, Complain in view of his sins?
40Let’s examine and search out our ways, And let’s return to the Lord.
41We raise our heart and hands Toward God in heaven;
42We have done wrong and rebelled; You have not pardoned.
43You have covered Yourself with anger And pursued us; You have slain and have not spared.
44You have veiled Yourself with a cloud So that no prayer can pass through.
45You have made us mere refuse and rubbish In the midst of the peoples.
46All our enemies have opened their mouths against us.
47Panic and pitfall have come upon us, Devastation and destruction;
48My eyes run down with streams of water Because of the destruction of the daughter of my people.
49My eyes flow unceasingly, Without stopping,
50Until the Lord looks down And sees from heaven.
51My eyes bring pain to my soul Because of all the daughters of my city.
52My enemies without reason Hunted me down like a bird;
53They have silenced me in the pit And have thrown stones on me.
54Waters flowed over my head; I said, “I am cut off!”
55I called on Your name, Lord, Out of the lowest pit.
56You have heard my voice, “Do not cover Your ear from my plea for relief, From my cry for help.”
57You came near on the day I called to You; You said, “Do not fear!”
58Lord, You have pleaded my soul’s cause; You have redeemed my life.
59Lord, You have seen my oppression; Judge my case.
60You have seen all their vengeance, All their schemes against me.
61You have heard their reproach, Lord, All their schemes against me.
62The lips of my assailants and their talk Are against me all day long.
63Look at their sitting and their rising; I am their mocking song.
64You will repay them, Lord, In accordance with the work of their hands.
65You will give them shamelessness of heart, Your curse will be on them.
66You will pursue them in anger and eliminate them From under the heavens of the Lord!
Study Guide
Public-domain commentary and original-language notes for Lamentations 3.
Chapter Summary
In this chapter: The faithful lament their calamities, and hope in God's mercies. (1-41).
vv1-20
The prophet relates the more gloomy and discouraging part of his experience, and how he found support and relief. In the time of his trial the Lord had become terrible to him. It was an affliction that was misery itself; for sin makes the cup of affliction a bitter cup. The struggle between unbelief and faith is often very severe. But the weakest believer is wrong, if he thinks that his strength and hope are perished from the Lord.
vv21-36
Having stated his distress and temptation, the prophet shows how he was raised above it. Bad as things are, it is owing to the mercy of God that they are not worse. We should observe what makes for us, as well as what is against us. God's compassions fail not; of this we have fresh instances every morning. Portions on earth are perishing things, but God is a portion for ever. It is our duty, and will be our comfort and satisfaction, to hope and quietly to wait for the salvation of the Lord. Afflictions do and will work very much for good: many have found it good to bear this yoke in their youth; it has made many humble and serious, and has weaned them from the world, who otherwise would have been proud and unruly. If tribulation work patience, that patience will work experience, and that experience a hope that makes not ashamed. Due thoughts of the evil of sin, and of our own sinfulness, will convince us that it is of the Lord's mercies we are not consumed. If we cannot say with unwavering voice, The Lord is my portion; may we not say, I desire to have Him for my portion and salvation, and in his word do I hope? Happy shall we be, if we learn to receive affliction as laid upon us by the hand of God.
vv37-41
While there is life there is hope; and instead of complaining that things are bad, we should encourage ourselves with the hope they will be better. We are sinful men, and what we complain of, is far less than our sins deserve. We should complain to God, and not of him. We are apt, in times of calamity, to reflect on other people's ways, and blame them; but our duty is to search and try our own ways, that we may turn from evil to God. Our hearts must go with our prayers. If inward impressions do not answer to outward expressions, we mock God, and deceive ourselves.
Key Words
אֲנִי: I
גֶּבֶר: properly, a valiant man or warrior; generally, a person simply
רָאָה: to see, literally or figuratively (in numerous applications, direct and implied, transitive, intransitive and causative)
עֳנִי: depression, i.e. misery
שֵׁבֶט: a scion, i.e. (literally) a stick (for punishing, writing, fighting, ruling, walking, etc.) or (figuratively) a clan
עֶבְרָה: an outburst of passion
נָהַג: to drive forth (a person, an animal or chariot), i.e. lead, carry away; reflexively, to proceed (i.e. impel or guide oneself); also (from the panting induced by effort), to sigh
יָלַךְ: to walk (literally or figuratively); causatively, to carry (in various senses)
חֹשֶׁךְ: the dark; hence (literally) darkness; figuratively, misery, destruction, death, ignorance, sorrow, wickedness
לֹא: not (the simple or abs. negation); by implication, no; often used with other particles
Cross References
Lamentations 3Jeremiah's prophesied doom of feeding this people wormwood and gall is here realized in experience.
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Messiah, the ultimate antitype, literally gave His cheek to be smitten in fulfillment of this pattern.
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Jeremiah's literal imprisonment in the miry dungeon of Malchiah prefigures his and Israel's affliction.
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Direct verbal parallel: 'set me in dark places, as those that have been long dead.'
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God hedges up the way with thorns or stone so that the path cannot be found.
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The agony of crying out to God and being met with silence and shut-out prayers.
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Reflects the levitical promise that the Lord Himself is the believer's portion and inheritance.
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Echoes the confession that though flesh and heart fail, God is the portion of the soul forever.
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Christ's invitation to take His easy yoke is the spiritual antidote to bearing disciplinary grief.
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Verbal echo within the chapter on God shutting out prayers and covering Himself from supplication.
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Job's parallel complaint of crying out to God but being shut out or ignored.
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Enemies opening their mouths in derision; a typological link connecting Jeremiah's suffering to Christ.
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Job describes himself as their song, matching 'I am their musick' in Lam 3:63.
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Direct internal echo within the chapter; the speaker laments being a derisive song to the people.
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Parallel description of extreme physical wasting and skin made old as divine chastisement.
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The sufferer is set as a mark or target for God's arrows.
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Jeremiah's personal lament of becoming a laughingstock and derision all the day long.
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The righteous sufferer and ultimate Messiah becoming the song of the drunkards and mockers.
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The sudden cry of despair: 'I said in my haste, I am cut off.'
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God's unchanging character and mercies are the sole reason the children of Jacob are not consumed.
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The Lord waits to be gracious; blessed are all those who wait quietly for Him.
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Exhortation to rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him in silent submission.
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Putting one's mouth in the dust matches Job's ultimate posture of self-abhorrence and deep repentance.
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Stresses that calamity does not occur in a city unless the Lord has sovereignly permitted it.
God forms light, creates darkness, makes peace, and creates calamity; He is sovereign over both.
Paul's use of 'offscouring' (peripsēma) directly echoes the Greek translation of Lamentations 3:45.
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Jeremiah's famous desire for his eyes to be a fountain of tears for his people's ruin.
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Being hated and chased 'without cause,' matching the Hebrew phrasing used by the Psalmist.
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The classic cry to God out of the depths (low dungeon) of despair and distress.
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God's intimate knowledge of the believer's 'downsitting and uprising' contrasted with the enemies' mocking observation.
Identical prayer language of rendering a recompense according to the work of their hands.
Jeremiah's personal appeal for God's righteous vengeance upon his malicious, conspiring persecutors.
New Testament parallel of committing judgment to God: 'render to him according to his works.'
Being counted among those who lie in the grave, remembered no more.
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God acting as a hidden leopard, lion, or bear lying in wait to rend.
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The arrows of the Almighty's quiver drinking up the spirit within.
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