Lamentations
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Introduction[i]
The Lamentations of Jeremiah-a touching
expression of the interest which God feels in the afflictions which His people undergo
on account of their sins-will not require much explanation as to the general
meaning of the book. A few remarks may be useful, to shew the true character of
this book, and its connection with the dealings of God, as revealed to us
elsewhere. The first interesting point-to which I have already alluded-is that
the affliction of His people does not escape the eye of God. He is afflicted in
their affliction: His Spirit takes knowledge of it; and, acting in the heart of
those whose mouth He uses, gives expression to the feelings He has produced
there. Thus Christ wept over the hard-heartedness of Jerusalem, and invited its
inhabitants to do so likewise. And here also His Spirit not only reproves and
reveals things to come; He gives a form to the grief of those who love what God
loves, and furnishes the expression of it Himself.