Saturday, May 12, 2018

Christ Through the Bible- Lamentations




Text: Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.



The destruction of Jerusalem in 587 BC was, without doubt, the most significant event to transpire in the political and religious history of Israel since the Exodus from Egypt. Scarcely any room for doubt exists that it was this momentous event which, on the human side, precipitated the writing of the Book of Lamentations.  In retaliation against the rebellion of his vassal king Zedekiah, Nebuchadnezzar had laid siege of Jerusalem for eighteen long months. Lamentations describes in the most vivid manner the terrible suffering to which the Jews were subjected during the assault. When the city finally was captured the Chaldean king ordered it completely demolished. To see their sacred beloved city go up in flames was a shocking—even unconceivable—experience. In spite of the incessant preaching of the prophets who warned of this very thing, the Jews were totally unprepared for it. For over a hundred years since the miraculous deliverance of Jerusalem in the days of King Hezekiah, the popular notion had been that Jerusalem was unbreakable and secure. Events had demonstrated the basic premise of their theology to be false. Added to the tremendous burden of their grief over what had occurred, their nation was feeling they had been utterly rejected by God. 

Lamentations is a sad book. The primary theme of the book is a lament over the terrible woes which have befallen sinful Judah and the destruction of the Holy and the Temple of God. The book consists of four laments (chs. 1-4) and one prayer (ch. 5) which were written in those distressing days following the capture and destruction of Jerusalem. As one reads the book, he can sense the depths of hopelessness into which the people had fallen. Jeremiah has attempted to capture the mood of the people. This was not difficult for him to do since he seems to have been personally involved in their suffering. For the most part, the poems contain descriptions of the plight of the people, their land, and their sacred city. Here and there are confessions of sin, declarations of repentance, and appeals for divine aid.  

1.  A Widowed City 1:1-22 

2.  A Broken People 2:1-22 

3.  A Suffering Prophet 3:1-66 

4.  A Ruined Kingdom 4:1-22

 5.  A Penitent Nation 5:1-22  


Lamentations is written entirely in poetic form. Hebrew poetry, as a rule, does not involve rhyme but instead is a poetry of thought. The second and third lines of each verse will repeat the thought of the first line in different words or develop further the thought of the first line or negate the thought of the first line. The four laments in the Book of Lamentations are in the form of alphabetic acrostics in which the author begins each verse with successive letters of the Hebrew alphabet. Chapters 1, 2 and 4 have twenty-two verses one for each letter of the Hebrew alphabet. Chapter 3 contains sixty-six verses since three verses are assigned to each Hebrew letter.


Lamentations is read in Jewish synagogues on the ninth of the month of Ab (which falls at the end of July or early August), a fast day which commemorates the destruction of the Temple.


We can see a picture of the Lord Jesus in the suffering of Jeremiah, and the people who rejected and persecuted the prophet portray the religious leaders of Israel who rejected their Messiah. Think forward some 600 years from Jeremiah's day into the future. If the feelings of Jeremiah, as expressed in chapter 3, are feelings common to every man, then what must have been the feelings of the Son of God! Read again Christ's words of lament for Jerusalem.


O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them who are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!


Behold, your house is left unto you desolate. For I say unto you, Ye shall not see me henceforth, till ye shall say, Blessed, is He that cometh in the name of the Lord. (Mat 23:37-39)


The Lord Jesus expressed the intensity of His suffering in the words spoken in Gethsemane [Mat 26:36-45]. They serve to reinforce the fact that His holy nature must have recoiled at the thought of bearing the sins of the world, and of dying at the hands of God's chosen race.


The name ''LORD'' used in Lamentations, is the name ''Jehovah.'' This name designates the covenant-keeping God, the God of redemption, and reflects the Lord Jesus Christ.


Although the lamentations of Jeremiah are directed toward the people of Jerusalem, the fundamental principles of the Bible, expressing both God's hatred for sin and His desire to see the sinner repent are also in view.


The word ''sin'' literally means, ''missing the mark.'' How vividly this is seen in the history of Israel, for no other nation has been so favored as that people! God delivered them by blood and by power from Egypt, brought them across the Red Sea on dry land, fed them for 40 years in the wilderness, and miraculously kept their clothes from wearing out and their sandals from becoming thin. With Joshua in command, they defeated the nations of Canaan. Their capital city, Jerusalem, was blessed by God. Their temple, and particularly the Holy of holies, became the dwelling place of God.


The glory of God filled the place.  Yet, Lamentations begins: ''How doth the city sit lonely, that was full of people; how is she become a widow! She that was great among the nations, a princess among the provinces; how is she become a vassal!'' (Lam 1:1). Why was this? The people had ''missed the mark.'' God had asked them to follow Him and to keep His statutes so that other nations might have the knowledge of the one true God. But Israel had failed and now was suffering the fruit of her sin.


Sin and its results cannot be disassociated; labor that is rendered must receive proper payment. If something is earned, it is unjust to hold back the wages. The condemned sinner can never accuse God of injustice. In Lamentations 1:18 the principle is stated: ''The Lord is righteous; for I have rebelled against His commandment.''  Paul writes in Roman, “the wages of sin is death.”


This law is absolute; it will never be changed. Chapter 2 of Lamentations makes no mention of Nebuchadnezzar nor the armies of Babylon [that destroyed Jerusalem and carried its people away as captives]. Why? Because Israel realized that the law of God was at work. The New Testament states it this way: ''Whatever a man soweth, that shall he also reap'' (Galatians 6:7).


You will find it an interesting to count the number of times the words ''He hath'' are used in chapter 2. God was executing His righteousness by paying the people of Israel the wages they had earned because of their sin.


Lamentations 3 presents another consequence of sin, the suffering of the innocent. Though the prophet delivered God's truth, he was hated, hunted and hounded. He suffered the most. The greater the innocence, the greater the suffering.

 
Chapter 5 of Lamentations is a prayer. It is a prayer of confession (v.1,7,16), and it is a prayer of hope (v.19). Note what that hope is founded upon: the eternal, never-changing God, the Redeemer. Then too, it is a prayer for future blessing (v.21).


We are reminded of that dark day pictured in John 6. Our Lord had begun to speak of His death and had indicated that the only approach to God the Father was through Him. At the mention of His impending death, the crowds that had followed Him for the loaves and the fish ''went back and walked no more with Him'' (John 6:66). To the handful of disciples that remained, the Lord Jesus posed this searching question: ''Will ye also go away?'' (John 6:67). The response of Simon Peter was filled with the language of faith as he replied, ''Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life. And we believe and are sure that Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God'' (John 6:68,69).


In Jeremiah's day, the prospects were bleak for Jerusalem and the nation of Israel, and the prophet mourned the predicted judgment upon their sin. Even so, he knew that restoration, return, and blessing could be found only in the LORD, the Redeemer. Likewise, the sinner, no matter how gravely he may have transgressed, how vile his past, how extensive his iniquity, can find cleansing, new life, and future hope in one person-- Jesus Christ. The Jehovah of the Old Testament is the Lord Jesus of the New. The tears of sorrow and suffering are wiped away by the One who cleanses and forgives all who come in faith to Him. [ Isaiah 53:4,5]
                                                                                                                                                         

There are some lessons that should be learned for this book.

Lamentations should serve as a wakeup call for America Christians. The message of the LORD’s judgment on His chosen people should warn us of the impending doom facing America if we fail to repent. God’s longsuffering patience for a nation is limited.  God patiently gave Judah a space to repent and that patience finally giving way to His attribute of justice, and Judah received due recompense. 




It is not the evil of the non-believer that brings about judgment on a nation.  It is the sins of those who call themselves Christian, followers of the LORD, that will bring judgment. What believers sow in terms of obedience to God in a secular nation largely determines what that nation will reap. Again, this is the guiding light of 2Chronicles 7:14. It informs us that God holds believers responsible. In the NT, this same idea is underscored in a non-theocratic context, 1Peter 4:17 states,

 For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God?


 Jeremiah 22:21 informs us that Judah was a materially prosperous nation like America – but the prosperity served to buffer God’s intended impact of His messenger and His message.
  

Such is the case today in a vast number of American churches: Most everyone is just playing church, going through the motions. Why? Because in our materialistic prosperity there are very few in desperate need of God as their only solution!  Few cries out to Him from physical and/or spiritual poverty! Few are America’s believers who have any needs today (that is revealed by the majority of prayer requests which are dominated by medically related needs). In the Book of Revelation, the Church of Laodicea serves as a replica of today’s American church.  Rev. 3:14-17  



The Church of Laodicea and the Church of America are parallels to ancient Judah, such similarities in attitude and condition in our country exist for God to rock our nation.  The blood of the innocent cries out for justice.  Our nation has carried out the exploitation of the most indefensible of all individuals – the unborn!  Such terrible, continued practices of exploiting the innocent child – coupled with the callousness of “Christian” political leaders and judges who do little about it will evoke the fury of The Almighty! How can the LORD not bring judgment on a nation who continues the practice of shedding innocent blood?  Jeremiah 22:3 and 22:17 speaks respectively in this regard-


Thus saith the Lord; Execute ye judgment and righteousness, and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor: and do no wrong, do no violence to the stranger, the fatherless, nor the widow, neither shed innocent blood in this place.


But thine eyes and thine heart are not but for thy covetousness, and for to shed innocent blood, and for oppression, and for violence, to do it.


The Book of Lamentations can be applied to America and should be understood as a warning and motivation for those who are His chosen in our nation. 1Peter 4:17 underscore the principle of God’s chosen ones being the guiding force by which God determines to bless or else curse an entire nation! Again, take careful note as believers go, so goes the nation.


For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God.


The American Christian needs to wake-up if God is not afraid to judge His own people in the Old Testament, then He is not afraid of judging His people in the New Testament – and the nation(s) wherein they reside. Deuteronomy 32:21-22 states regarding God’s “sinning Christians.


They have moved me to jealousy with that which is not God; they have provoked me to anger with their vanities: and I will move them to jealousy with those which are not a people; I will provoke them to anger with a foolish nation. 22 For a fire is kindled in mine anger, and shall burn unto the lowest hell, and shall consume the earth with her increase, and set on fire the foundations of the mountains.


American Christians have been blinded by the teaching that the judgment of God will be in the future and that the Christians will be removed from what happens to this nation.  Here is a thought that should give this teaching of escaping judgment some consideration.


God’s uses surrogates to enact His judgment. It is interesting how this theme is illustrated in the Book of Jeremiah, versus the Book of Lamentations. King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon brought about the destructive calamity that was a result from the sin of God’s people.  The Book of Jeremiah mentions Babylon at least 150 times.  In Lamentations, however, Babylon is never mentioned – only the Lord is specified as the one who will deal with Judah’s sin. The conclusion is that Babylon is the surrogate instrument of the LORD to achieve His ultimate purposes. Note this by comparing Jeremiah 50:23 to Lamentations 2:1



How is the hammer of the whole earth cut asunder and broken! how is Babylon become a desolation among the nations!


 How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger, and cast down from heaven unto the earth the beauty of Israel, and remembered not his footstool in the day of his anger!

This insight more than suggests that God uses other individuals and other nations (whom He dislikes too!) in order to invoke His wrath. It is well within the scope of the LORD judgment to use America’s most detested enemies to manifest His judgment on our nation.  Could the jihadist be the instrument of the LORD’s judgment on America and the other nations that have forsaken the LORD? 


That is the application of this surrogate principle; it is often His way of accomplishing shame, total humility, and repentance. Likened to Babylon ransacking Jerusalem, such godly actions bring the greatest disgrace – embarrassment that is both warranted and intended from and by the LORD for our good.


Jeremiah is giving us a warning that we should heed.  Christ is standing at the door of the American Church today knocking, asking to come in.  Will we heed the advice of Jeremiah and open the door and repent?

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