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												Verse 1-2Lamentations 4:1-2. How is the 
												gold become dim — “How is the 
												glory of the temple obscured! 
												The sanctuary, which was 
												overlaid with gold, (2 
												Chronicles 3:8,) now lies in 
												ruins; and the stones of it are 
												not distinguished from common 
												rubbish. It is probable that the 
												prophet, in these words, alluded 
												to the priests, princes, and 
												chief persons of the country, 
												who, though they might have been 
												compared to the pillars, or 
												corner-stones of that sacred 
												building, yet were now involved 
												in the same common destruction 
												with the meanest of the people. 
												The precious sons of Zion, 
												comparable to fine gold — Those 
												that in honour and worth 
												exceeded others as much as fine 
												gold doth other metals, are now 
												disgraced and set at naught.
 
 Verses 3-5
 Lamentations 4:3-5. Even the 
												sea-monsters draw out the breast 
												— The very dragons have drawn 
												out the breast: so Blaney. Even 
												these fierce and destructive 
												animals are not so unnatural as 
												to neglect the care of their 
												young ones; whereas the women of 
												Jerusalem have been reduced to 
												that miserable necessity as to 
												disregard their children, as the 
												ostrich does her eggs. The 
												tongue of the sucking child, &c. 
												— Such was the scarcity of food, 
												that the women had not 
												nourishment sufficient to 
												produce milk to enable them to 
												give suck to their infants, and 
												when the children begged for 
												bread the parents had none to 
												give them. They that did feed 
												delicately embrace dunghills — 
												Lie down on dunghills, and seek 
												about them in hopes to pick up 
												something to eat.
 
 Verse 6
 Lamentations 4:6. For the 
												punishment, &c., is greater than 
												the punishment of Sodom — The 
												fate of Sodom was less 
												deplorable than that of 
												Jerusalem; for Sodom was 
												destroyed in an instant; but 
												Jerusalem endured a long siege, 
												and suffered all the miseries of 
												famine, sickness, and hostile 
												arms. In Sodom all were 
												destroyed together, and none 
												left to mourn in bitterness of 
												soul the sad loss of their 
												dearest friends; in Jerusalem 
												many survived to mourn the 
												deplorable fate of their friends 
												and country, and to suffer the 
												ignominy and miseries of 
												captivity. The original of the 
												last clause, ידים לא חלו בה, is 
												rendered by the LXX., και ουκ 
												επονεσαν εν αυτη
 
 χειρας, they did not cause hands 
												to labour, or be weary, in her: 
												and by Blaney, nor were hands 
												weakened in her.
 
 Verses 7-9
 Lamentations 4:7-9. Her 
												Nazarites were purer than snow — 
												It seems the word, נזיריה, ought 
												not to be translated here 
												Nazarites, or those who were 
												separated by a vow to God; but 
												princes, or chief men: so 
												Waterland understands the word, 
												as also Blaney, who renders it, 
												her nobles. We find the same 
												term applied to Joseph, as one 
												separated, or distinguished in 
												eminence and dignity above his 
												brethren, Genesis 49:26. By 
												being purer than snow, and 
												whiter than milk, seems to be 
												intended the whiteness of their 
												skin, or the fairness of their 
												complexion; and by their being 
												more ruddy in body than rubies, 
												or brighter than pearls, as אדמו 
												מפנינים, may be rendered, their 
												high state of health may be 
												meant. Their visage is blacker 
												than a coal — The famine, and 
												other hardships which they have 
												endured, have altered their 
												complexion, and made them look 
												dry and withered. They that be 
												slain with the sword are better, 
												&c. — That is, their case is 
												preferable to that of those 
												slain with hunger; for these 
												pine away, &c. — That is, they 
												waste away and perish by slow 
												degrees, and, before they quite 
												expire, suffer great misery. 
												Stricken through for want of the 
												fruits of the field — Pierced 
												with far more exquisite pain 
												through want of sustenance, than 
												if they had been run through 
												with the sword.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Lamentations 4:10-11. The hands 
												of the pitiful women have sodden 
												their own children — The 
												affection of a mother toward her 
												children is the strongest of all 
												natural affections, and yet the 
												famine hath forced that tender 
												sex to divest themselves of it, 
												and to boil and eat their own 
												children. Thus was the prophecy 
												of Moses, Deuteronomy 28:53; 
												Deuteronomy 28:57, most awfully 
												fulfilled; where see the notes, 
												and on chap. Lamentations 2:20. 
												The Lord hath accomplished his 
												fury, &c. — God’s anger hath 
												effected an entire destruction, 
												so as not to leave one stone 
												upon another.
 
 Verse 12
 Lamentations 4:12. The kings of 
												the earth, &c., would not have 
												believed — “The city was so well 
												fortified, and had been so often 
												miraculously preserved by God 
												from the attempts of its 
												enemies, that it seemed 
												incredible that it should at 
												last fall into their hands.” — 
												Lowth.
 
 Verse 13
 Lamentations 4:13. For the sins 
												of her prophets, &c. — That is, 
												of the false prophets, to whom 
												the inhabitants of Jerusalem 
												chiefly hearkened; and the 
												iniquities of her priests — Who 
												bore rule by their means, 
												Jeremiah 5:31; and instead of 
												discountenancing and reproving 
												sin in the people, as was their 
												indispensable duty, were 
												themselves guilty of many 
												flagrant acts of injustice, 
												oppression, and violence; 
												insomuch that, as is here 
												attested, they even shed the 
												blood of the just in the midst 
												of Jerusalem, the holy city; 
												that is, the blood of God’s 
												prophets, and of those that 
												adhered to them. The priests and 
												false prophets were then the 
												ringleaders in persecution, as 
												in Christ’s time the chief 
												priests and scribes were the men 
												that incensed the people against 
												him, who otherwise would have 
												persisted in their hosannas. 
												This was the sin which the Lord 
												would not pardon, (2 Kings 
												24:4,) and which, above all 
												others, brought utter 
												destruction upon that city. Not 
												that the people were innocent; 
												no, while the prophets 
												prophesied falsely, and the 
												priests abused the power which 
												their own office and the 
												doctrine of these prophets gave 
												them, the people loved to have 
												it so, and it was, partly at 
												least, to please many of them 
												that the prophets and priests 
												acted as they did. But the blame 
												is chiefly laid upon them who 
												should have taught the people 
												better, should have reproved and 
												admonished them, and told them 
												what would be the end of such 
												conduct: of the hands, 
												therefore, of those watchmen who 
												did not give them warning was 
												their blood required. Indeed, 
												the ecclesiastical men were the 
												chief cause of both the first 
												and last destruction of 
												Jerusalem. And so they are of 
												the destruction of most other 
												places that come to ruin through 
												their neglect of their duty, or 
												their encouraging others in 
												their wicked courses; which 
												shows us both how great a 
												blessing to a people a godly, 
												conscientious ministry is, and 
												how great an evil a ministry is 
												which is otherwise.
 
 Verses 14-16
 Lamentations 4:14-16. They have 
												wandered as blind men in the 
												streets — They strayed from the 
												paths of righteousness, and were 
												blind to every thing that was 
												good, but to do evil they were 
												quick-sighted; they have 
												polluted themselves with blood — 
												The blood of the saints and 
												servants of the Lord; so that 
												men could not touch their 
												garments — But they would be 
												legally polluted; and there were 
												so many of them, that a man 
												could not walk in the streets 
												but he must touch some of them. 
												They cried unto them, Depart ye: 
												it is unclean — Or, ye polluted, 
												depart, &c. “When they fled to 
												save their lives, they could 
												find no safe retreat, but every 
												body shunned and avoided them as 
												polluted; and used the same 
												words to express their 
												abhorrence of this defilement of 
												such persons, whose office it 
												was to cleanse and purify 
												others, as the lepers were by 
												the law obliged to pronounce 
												upon themselves, and cry, 
												Unclean, unclean: see Leviticus 
												13:45. The bloody garments of 
												the priests called to 
												remembrance the innocent blood 
												which had been shed by their 
												means, (Lamentations 4:13,) when 
												people saw their sin thus 
												retaliated upon them.” — Lowth. 
												They said among the heathen, 
												They shall no more sojourn there 
												— Even the heathen themselves 
												looked upon them as polluted 
												persons, unworthy of living in 
												Judea, or attending on the 
												worship of God in his temple. 
												And they concluded that such 
												impious wretches would never be 
												restored to their native 
												country, but would continue 
												always vagabonds. The anger of 
												the Lord hath divided them — 
												“God, in his just displeasure, 
												hath scattered and dispersed 
												them into foreign countries, 
												where no respect will be given 
												to their characters.” This seems 
												to be the language of their 
												enemies, triumphing over them, 
												as discerning that their God was 
												provoked with them, and would 
												have no more regard to them. And 
												therefore these heathen no more 
												respected the persons of their 
												priests or elders, but 
												considered them as peculiarly 
												guilty, and deserving of their 
												abhorrence and execration.
 
 Verse 17
 Lamentations 4:17. As for us, 
												&c. — The prophet, after having 
												digressed in the last five 
												verses to make observation on 
												the wickedness of those who had 
												been the principal cause of the 
												national ruin, here returns 
												again to the lamentable 
												description of the particulars. 
												Our eyes as yet failed for our 
												vain help — The help of the 
												Egyptians, which they had 
												expected in vain. In our 
												watching we have watched — We 
												have long waited with eager 
												desire and expectation; for a 
												nation that could not save us — 
												For succours from a people who 
												at last have wofully 
												disappointed us.
 
 Verses 18-20
 Lamentations 4:18-20. They hunt 
												our steps that we cannot go in 
												our streets — The Chaldeans, 
												employed in the siege, are so 
												close upon us, that we cannot 
												stir a foot, nor look out at our 
												doors, nor walk safely in the 
												streets. Our end is near — The 
												end of our church and state; we 
												are just at the brink of the 
												ruin of both. Nay, our days are 
												fulfilled, our end is come — We 
												are utterly undone; a fatal, 
												final period is put to all our 
												comforts; the days of our 
												prosperity are fulfilled, they 
												are numbered and finished. Our 
												persecutors are swifter than the 
												eagles — God has brought upon us 
												that judgment which he 
												threatened by Moses, of bringing 
												a nation against us as swift as 
												the eagle flieth, Deuteronomy 
												28:49. Such were the horsemen of 
												the Chaldean army. We could 
												nowhere escape them, neither by 
												fleeing to the mountains, nor by 
												hiding ourselves in the valleys. 
												The wilderness is in other 
												places put for the lower, or 
												pasture grounds. The breath of 
												our nostrils, the anointed of 
												the Lord, &c. — Our king, who 
												was the very life of us; was 
												taken in their pits — In those 
												toils his enemies had laid for 
												him. Some have supposed that the 
												prophet speaks this of Josiah, 
												but it seems more probable that 
												Zedekiah is meant, and his being 
												taken prisoner and led into 
												captivity is here alluded to. Of 
												whom we said, Under his shadow 
												we shall live among the heathen 
												— As long as he was safe, we had 
												some hopes of being protected, 
												and of preserving some face of 
												government, although we were 
												carried away into a foreign 
												country. The protection a king 
												affords his subjects is often, 
												in Scripture, compared to the 
												shelter of a great tree, which 
												is a covert against storms and 
												tempests: see Ezekiel 17:23; 
												Ezekiel 31:6; Daniel 4:12.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Lamentations 4:21-22. Rejoice 
												and be glad, O daughter of Edom 
												— A sarcastical expression, as 
												if the prophet had said, Rejoice 
												while thou mayest, O Edom, over 
												the calamities of the Jews; but 
												thy joy shall not last long, for 
												in a little time it shall come 
												to thy turn to feel God’s 
												afflicting hand; the cup of 
												affliction shall pass unto thee: 
												see Jeremiah 49:7, &c. The 
												punishment of thine iniquity is 
												accomplished, O daughter of 
												Zion, &c. — It was usual for the 
												prophets, when they denounced 
												God’s judgments against any 
												heathen nation, at the same time 
												to give gracious promises to 
												Israel; thereby importing that 
												God would never cast off the 
												Jewish people utterly, as he did 
												other nations, but would in due 
												time extend his mercy toward 
												them. He — Namely, God; will no 
												more carry thee away — Or, 
												rather, suffer thee to be 
												carried; into captivity — “These 
												and such like expressions, if 
												they be understood in a strict, 
												literal sense, must relate to 
												the final restoration of the 
												Jews.” — Lowth. He will discover 
												thy sins — He will manifest how 
												great thine iniquities have 
												been, by the remarkable 
												judgments wherewith he will 
												punish thee.
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