Lamentations 2:1-9

GOD AS AN ENEMY Lamentations 2:1 THE elegist, as we have seen, attributes the troubles of the Jews to the will and. action of God. In the second poem he even ventures further, and with daring logic presses this idea to its ultimate issues. If God is tormenting His people in fierce anger it must be... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 2:9

PROPHETS WITHOUT A VISION Lamentations 2:9; Lamentations 2:14 IN deploring the losses suffered by the daughter of Zion the elegist bewails the failure of her prophets to obtain a vision from Jehovah. His language implies that these men were still lingering among the ruins of the city. Apparently th... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 2:10-17

THE CRY OF THE CHILDREN Lamentations 2:10 PASSION and poetry, when they fire the imagination, do more than personify individual material things. By fusing the separate objects in the crucible of a common emotion which in some way appertains to them all, they personify this grand unity, and so lift... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 2:14

PROPHETS WITHOUT A VISION Lamentations 2:9; Lamentations 2:14 IN deploring the losses suffered by the daughter of Zion the elegist bewails the failure of her prophets to obtain a vision from Jehovah. His language implies that these men were still lingering among the ruins of the city. Apparently th... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 2:18-22

THE CALL TO PRAYER Lamentations 2:18 IT is not easy to analyse the complicated construction of the concluding portion of the second elegy. If the text is not corrupt its transitions are very abrupt. The difficulty is to adjust the relations of three sections. First we have the sentence, "Their hea... [ Continue Reading ]

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