Lamentations 4:1-12

CONTRASTS Lamentations 4:1 IN form the fourth elegy is slightly different from each of its predecessors. Following the characteristic plan of the Book of Lamentations, it is an acrostic of twenty-two verses arranged in the order of the Hebrew alphabet. In it we meet with the same curious transposi... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 4:13-16

LEPERS Lamentations 4:13 PASSING from the fate of the princes to that of the prophets and priests, we come upon a vividly dramatic scene in the streets of Jerusalem amid the terror and confusion that precede the final act of the national tragedy. The doom of the city is attributed to the crimes of... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 4:17-20

VAIN HOPES Lamentations 4:17 THE first part of the fourth elegy was specially concerned with the fate of the gilded youth of Jerusalem; the second and closely parallel part with that of the princes; the third introduced us to the dramatic scene in which the fallen priests and prophets were portraye... [ Continue Reading ]

Lamentations 4:21,22

THE DEBT OF GUILT EXTINGUISHED Lamentations 4:21 ONE after another the vain hopes of the Jews melt in mists of sorrow. But just as the last of these flickering lights is disappearing a gleam of consolation breaks out from another quarter, like the pale yellow streak that may sometimes be seen low... [ Continue Reading ]

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