Lamentations
I’ll bet you haven’t heard many sermons in church taken from
Lamentations. Preachers seem to skip
over this unpopular little book in the Bible with all of its doom and
gloom. The theme of Lamentations is human suffering
and God’s punishment for sin and about more human suffering and more of God’s
punishment for sin.
Lamentations describes in poetic form how the Jewish people
felt when they lost everything. How
they cried and mourned and despaired when in 587 B.C. the Babylonian army surrounded
the walls of their beloved Jerusalem
and kept them imprisoned inside the city for many weeks! How the citizens of Jerusalem were unable to get outside to their
farms and to their sources of food and how some of them resorted to cannibalism
and many starved to death.
The poetic laments describe the pitiful cries of little
children dying in the streets from hunger!
And desperate parents not being able to do anything. And later the soldiers breaking into the city
and burning and sacking it. And dragging
the people still alive away to Babylon
to be slaves. And the neighboring tribes
making jokes and laughing at them as it is happening. .
As bad as the suffering was, it worked to change a whole
generation. A rebellious Jewish nation
returned to faith in their God. The
Jewish people all knew that God was allowing them to suffer because they had
disregarded Him and ignored his laws.
For centuries they had sinned and sinned with abandon. And now it was finally catch up time! Their sins were catching up on them! Their God of justice would not wait forever!
Lamentations is a book of poems written about how it feels
when all has been lost. And poems about hopelessness and loss and shame. Not very upbeat topics. The poems seem to have been composed during
and after the time in which all this was happening. The first poem or chapter tells about how the
Jewish people’s feelings were hurt because their neighbors didn’t care. And it describes the defeat of Jerusalem in battle and
the temple being destroyed. The people
know that God has allowed this because of their rejection of Him. They know!
The next four poems
continue describing the homesickness of the people for their beloved homeland and
their memories of what they used to be.
Briefly faith in God is rekindled when they remember God in all his love
and mercy. (Lamentations 3:19-33) But
then the poet depicts defeat: death of loved ones, the loss of freedom, loss of
land, loss of respect, rape and cruelty and forced labor. And the knowledge that they brought it on
themselves!
The author of the book is unknown, but Bible scholars
believe that Lamentations was probably written by Jeremiah. God had made a covenant or a promise to the
Jewish nation that He would bless them if they would follow Him and worship Him
and that He would punish them if they refused to worship and follow Him. (Leviticus 26) It was a two way promise or covenant. The Jewish people quickly forgot the promise that
rejecting God would eventually have consequences. And their God of justice would eventually punish
them for their sins!
The books of 2 Kings and 2 Chronicles describe the moral
decline of the Jewish people over hundreds of years before finally God had had
enough and allowed the Babylonian army to destroy Jerusalem .
The Jewish kings and religious leaders were mainly responsible for leading
the Jewish people away from God. Soon
the people were worshipping idols and even killing and sacrificing their little
children to these idols. They believed
that their idols would give them a good crop and help them win a battle. All of
the other nations were worshipping idols and the Jewish people wanted to do
what everyone else was doing, even if they had to disobey God!
Over the many years before this disaster God had sent
prophet after prophet to the Jewish people to warn and plead with them to return
to Him. God wanted so badly for his
people to trust Him and He begged them to be kind and fair to one another. But sadly the Jewish people didn’t
listen. They had become a violent nation
constantly fighting against one another. And a greedy group, as they took advantage of
the widow and the orphan and treated their slaves poorly. Finally judgment was God’s righteous response
to sin and rebellion.
What can the book of Lamentations teach us? First of all that we are living under a
different covenant than the Jews of 587 B.C.
They were living under the Law and we are living under Grace because since
that time Jesus has paid the price for our sin.
Even unbelievers are not normally punished for their sins until the next
life. (2 Peter 2:4-10) And we do not bear punishment for sin we
commit, since Christ has suffered in our place.
The book of Lamentations shows how weak people are when they
try on their own to obey the Law, and how unable they are to serve God in their
own strength. This drives us to
Christ. (Romans 8:3) Even in these poems in Lamentations, glimpses
of Christ shine through. He is our hope
(Lamentations 3:21, 24,29) He is the
manifestation of God’s mercy and compassion. (Lam.3:22, 23,32). And He is our redemption and vindication.
(Lam.3:58, 59) God had promised them a
Messiah!
God’s judgment for sin is not a popular sermon topic in
Christian churches today. And it is not
fashionable for Christian leaders to preach about hell even though Jesus spoke
often about hell and hell is mentioned many times in the Bible. One of the pastors of a mega church of 45,000
people here in Texas
brags that he never preaches about God’s judgment for sin. He says he wants to make his congregation
“feel good”. It’s nice to feel good but in order to become followers of Christ
we will need to look at our sins and try to turn away from them and come to God
with a repentant heart.
The destruction of Jerusalem
in 587 B.C. and the lessons God taught His people were so significant that the
Jewish people started reading the book of Lamentations every year at an annual
service. They did not want to forget how
easy it had been for their people long ago to slip away from God and go down
the wrong path. They did not want to
have to learn those painful lessons all over again.
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