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14 Δεκ 2003 · Lamentations 4 gives graphic descriptions of the result of a long siege. Children are starving (verse 4), the noble and genteel have lost their arrogance (verses 5, 8), and the dead are better off than the others (verse 9). Most horrible of all is the cannibalism that is described in verse 10. One can only imagine the horrors that were taking ...
(Lam. 1:20–22) Look at us! (Lam. 2:20–22) Judge them! (Lam. 3:55–66) Avenge us! (Lam. 4:21–22) Restore us! (Lam. 5:21) Jesus, like Jeremiah, wept over the sins of Jerusalem (Matt. 23:37–39; Luke 13:34–35). Copyright © 1980, 1997, 2009 by Charles R. Swindoll Inc. All rights reserved worldwide. Chart taken from The Swindoll Study Bible.
David Guzik commentary on Lamentations 4, where Jeremiah laments the loss of the sons of Zion, declaring punishment to the daughters of Zion.
Lamentations Chapter 4 is a painful and vivid portrayal of the fall of Jerusalem, shedding light on the severe consequences of Israel's sin. The chapter paints a grim picture of how the prosperous city and its people suffer under the wrath of God.
14 Δεκ 2003 · Lamentations 4 gives graphic descriptions of the result of a long siege. Children are starving (verse 4), the noble and genteel have lost their arrogance (verses 5, 8), and the dead are better off than the others (verse 9).
(Lamentations 4:1-2) The dimmed gold of Zion. How the gold has become dim! How changed the fine gold! At the head of every street. The work of the hands of the potter! a. How the gold has become dim! Jeremiah lamented the loss of the precious sons of Zion, who were valuable as fine gold.
He laments the taking and sacking of Jerusalem and its amazing desolations (v. 11, 12). IV. He acknowledges that the sins of their leaders were the cause of all these calamities (v. 13-16). V. He gives up all as doomed to utter ruin, for their enemies were every way too hard for them (v. 17-20). VI.