THE THERAPY OF TROUBLE
The book of Lamentations is sandwiched between the books of
Ezekiel and Jeremiah. This
unusual book properly follows the book of Jeremiah the prophet
and priest because it was written by
him . It is the "Lamentations of Jeremiah" as he wept
over the city of Jerusalem following its desolation
and captivity by Nebuchadnezzar.
The prophet sometimes speaks in his own person; at other times
Jerusalem, as a distressed
female, is the speaker. The description shows the miseries of
the Jewish nation. Jerusalem became a
captive and a slave, by reason of the greatness of her sins; and
had no rest from suffering. If we allow
sin, our greatest adversary, to have dominion over us, justly
will other enemies also be suffered to have
dominion. The people endured the extremities of famine and distress.
In this sad condition Jerusalem
acknowledged her sin, and entreated the Lord to look upon her
case. This is the only way to make
ourselves easy under our burdens; for it is the just anger of
the Lord for man's transgressions, that has
filled the earth with sorrows, lamentations, sickness, and death.
Jerusalem, sitting dejected on the ground, calls on those that
passed by, to consider whether her
example did not concern them. Her outward sufferings were great,
but her inward sufferings were
harder to bear, through the sense of guilt. Sorrow for sin must
be great sorrow, and must affect our very
being. Here we see the evil of sin, and may take warning to flee
from the wrath to come. Whatever may
be learned from the sufferings of Jerusalem, far more may be learned
from the sufferings of Christ.
Does he not from the cross speak to every one of us? Does he not
say, Is it nothing to you, all ye that
pass by? Let all our sorrows lead us to the cross of Christ, lead
us to mark his example, and cheerfully
to follow him
As we read through this book in the comming weeks, we will find
many foreshadowings of the
Lord weeping over the city of Jerusalem. In His last week, when
he went up to the Mount of Olives and
sat looking out over the city, he wept over it saying,
"O, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killing the prophets and stoning
those who are sent to you! How often would I
have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood
under her wings, and you would not!"
Matt 23:37
The tears ran down his face as he looked out over the city that
had rejected him; this people that did not
know the hour of their visitation, and they had turned their backs
upon the one who was their Messiah
and their deliverer.
You will also find several foreshadowings of our Lord's ministry
in the book of Jeremiah's
Lamentations. For example, chapter 1:
How lonely sits the city that was full of people!
How like a widow has she become, {Lam 1:1a RSV}
This is highly suggestive of our Lord's weeping over the city.
Further on we read:
"Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by? Look and see
if there is any sorrow like my sorrow ..." {Lam
1:12a RSV}
This would certainly bring to the believing heart an immediate
remembrance of the great sacrifice and
those who watched the as he hung there. Then in chapter 2, verse
15:
All who pass along the way clap their hands at you; they hiss
and wag their heads
at the daughter of Jerusalem; {Lam 2:15a RSV}
This recalls the mockery of the multitudes. Then in chapter 3,
verses 14 and 15:
I have become the laughingstock of all peoples, the burden of
their songs all day long.
He filled me with bitterness, he has sated me with wormwood. {Lam
3:14-15 RSV}
Again in verse 19 of chapter 3:
Remember my affliction and my bitterness, the wormwood and the
gall! {Lam 3:19 RSV}
And verse 30 of that chapter:
Let him give his cheek to the smiter, {Lam 3:30a RSV}
This recalls Isaiah's prophecy, "I gave my back to the smiters,
and my cheeks to those who pulled out
the beard." (Is. 50:6) This was fulfilled by the smiting
of the Lord by the soldiers when Jesus was
brought before Pilate for judgment. So this little book captures
the agony and sorrow that was so much
a part of our Lord's life that it earned him the title, "A
man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief." (Is.
53:3)
The book of Lamentations is also unusual in the way it is put
together. There are twenty-two letters in
the Hebrew alphabet, which begins with "aleph," the
equivalent of our "a," and ends with "tau"
which
is the equivalent of our "t." (The letter "z,"
by the way, comes around the middle of their alphabet.) In
this book of Jeremiah's Lamentations, chapters one, two and four
form an acrostic, each chapter
consisting of twenty-two verses, and each verse beginning with
one of each of the letters of the Hebrew
alphabet, beginning with aleph and ending with tau. Chapter three
is interesting in that it consists of
sixty-six verses in triads, or triplets, in which every verse
making up each triad begins with the same
letter of the alphabet, so that there are twenty-two groups of
three altogether, one for each letter of the
alphabet. These chapters have been written very, very carefully,
according to the rules of Hebrew
poetry. Chapter five does not follow this acrostic plan, although
it does have twenty-two verses.
This is certainly an intriguing structure, but the real interest
of this book is in its content. It is a study in
sorrow, a hymn of heartbreak. This is the kind of book you might
read when sorrow strikes your own
heart, and sorrow comes to all of us at times. As Jeremiah was
looking out over Jerusalem, he saw its
desolation and he remembered the terrible, bloody battle in which
Nebuchadnezzar had taken the city
and sacked it, destroying the temple and killing the inhabitants.
Each chapter stresses and develops a particular aspect of sorrow.
Chapter one gives us a description of
the utter depths of sorrow, the desolation of spirit that sorrow
makes upon the human heart, the sense
of abandonment, of complete loneliness. Here you can see how vividly
the prophet has captured this
feeling as he pours out the feelings of his own heart. The people
have been vanquished and taken into
captivity; the city has been set on fire and totally destroyed.
Verse 16:
"For these things I weep; my eyes flow with tears; for a
comforter is far from me, one to revive my courage;
my children are desolate, for the enemy has prevailed." {{Lam
1:16 RSV}
Chapter 2 describes the thoroughness of judgment. At the beginning
of this chapter you have a
description of how the armies of Nebuchadnezzar utterly devastated
the city. Jeremiah, however, does
not attribute this destruction to the armies of Nebuchadnezzar,
but to the Lord. He looks behind the
immediate circumstance to what God is doing. As you read through
the chapter you can see how he
points out that everything has been destroyed, nothing is left.
There is nothing he can put his hand on
that has been preserved because of the thorough judgment of God.
Then in chapter 3 -- this long chapter of 66 verses where you
have the triads of the alphabet -- the
prophet speaks of his own reaction, his personal pain as an individual
contemplating this devastation.
He begins with these words:
I am the man who has seen affliction under the rod of his wrath;
he has driven and brought me
into darkness without any light; surely against me he turns his
hand again and again the whole day long.
He has made my flesh and my skin waste away, and broken my
bones; he has besieged and enveloped me
with bitterness and tribulation; he has made me dwell in darkness
like the dead of long ago. {Lam 3:1-6
RSV}
In chapter 4 you have what we might call the incredibility of
judgment, an attitude of unbelief as the
prophet remembers all that happened. Anyone who has been through
this knows about these aspects of
the times of grief. First, there is a sense of utter desolation.
Then comes an awareness of complete
devastation and deep personal pain, and then, as Jeremiah seems
to feel, a kind of unbelief that this
could happen, a sense of incredulity as he contemplates the destruction
of Jerusalem. Verse 2:
The precious sons of Zion, worth their weight in fine gold,how
they are reckoned as earthen pots,
the work of a potter's hands! {Lam 4:2 RSV}
As he looks out and sees the bodies of the sons of Israel -- these
precious young people who have been
destroyed, turning to clay and dust in the streets -- he says:
Happier were the victims of the sword than the victims of hunger
[There had been a terrible famine in
the city], who pined away, stricken by want of the fruits of the
field. {Lam 4:9 RSV}
And so devastating had this siege been that,
The hands of compassionate women have boiled their own children;
they became their food
in the destruction of the daughter of my people. {Lam 4:10 RSV}
This was of the most terrible sieges of all time. As the report
went out, it was unbelievable (verse 12):
The kings of the earth did not believe, or any of the inhabitants
of the world,that foe or enemy could enter
the gates of Jerusalem. {Lam 4:12 RSV}
In chapter 5 there is the utter humiliation of judgment, the feeling
that Jeremiah has been thoroughly
disgraced. He hardly dares lift up his head again. He says (verses
1-5):
Remember, O Lord, what has befallen us; behold, and see our disgrace!
Our inheritance has been turned
over to strangers, our homes to aliens.We have become orphans,
fatherless; our mothers are like widows.
We must pay for the water we drink, the wood we get must be bought.
With a yoke on our necks we are
hard driven; we are weary, we are given no rest. {Lam 5:1-5 RSV}
He describes how in verse 13:
Young men are compelled to grind at the mill; and boys stagger
under loads of wood. {Lam 5:13 RSV}The
old men have quit the city gate, the young men their music. {Lam
5:14 RSV}The joy of our hearts has
ceased; ... {Lam 5:15a RSV}The crown has fallen from our head;
woe to us, for we have sinned! {Lam 5:16
RSV}
What a description of the utter despair of the human spirit in
the grip of deep distress and sorrow! And
yet, in each of these chapters an insight is revealed, a lesson
that God teaches through sorrow that
otherwise would never have been learned. That is what we should
look for in this book.
The book is designed to teach us through what might be called
the therapy of trouble, what sorrow
teaches us. All through scripture we are told that pain and suffering
are God's instruments by which he
teaches us. Through suffering comes strength of character. Do
not be surprised that this is true. We
read in Hebrews of the Lord Jesus, "Although he was a Son,
he learned obedience through what he
suffered." (Heb. 5:8) There were things the Lord Jesus had
to learn and could learn only by living as a
man through times of suffering and sorrow. If he was not exempt,
why should we expect to be?
This is why it is never right for us to say, as so many of us
do, when trouble strikes, "Why should this
happen to me?" Well, why shouldn't it happen to you? As Hebrews
12, verse 10, reminds us, it is a
mark of God's love. He sent it to discipline us, to teach us,
and to train us.
Each chapter also reveals one particular aspect of sorrow as teaching
one particular lesson of grace. In
chapter 1 there is the sense of desolation and abandonment in
spirit, when suddenly the prophet says in
verse 18:
"The Lord is in the right, for I have rebelled against his
word;" {Lam 1:18a RSV}
While he was looking out over Jerusalem and feeling this awful
sense of desolation, he suddenly
realized that this was a sign that God is right. So he says, "I
have rebelled against his word."
That is the problem, and the lesson. Most of us are in the habit
of blaming God, either directly or
indirectly, for whatever happens to us, and our attitude is usually,
"Well, I don't know why this should
happen to me! After all, I have been doing my best. I have been
trying hard, and still these kinds of
things happen." And our implication is that God is unjust,
God is not right.
The apostle Paul says, "Let God be true though every man
be false." (Rom. 3:4) It is impossible for
God not to be right. It is impossible for man to be more just
than God, because our very sense of justice
is derived from him. It is impossible for man to be more compassionate
than God, for our feelings of
compassion come from him. You see, it is impossible for us ever
to sit in judgment on God. God is
right. When Jeremiah saw the utter desolation around him he learned
this. As long as he had anything
to prop himself up with, he could find fault with God, but when
he was left utterly desolate he realized
that the Lord was right.
In chapter 2 he gains more insight into this truth. He is made
aware of the thoroughness of judgment, of
how meticulously God has used the armies of Nebuchadnezzar to
lay everything to waste In fact, how
ruthless the Lord has been. But then he learns another insight
(verse 17):
The Lord has done what he purposed, has carried out his threat;
as he ordained long ago, he has
demolished without pity; he has made the enemy rejoice over you,
and exalted the might of your foes. {Lam
2:17 RSV}
In other words, God is faithful. Suddenly Jeremiah realizes that
this is consistent with the character of
God. If he says he is going to do something, he will do it. Nothing
can make him change. If you look
back over the history of Israel you discover that in the book
of Deuteronomy, God had said to Moses,
"Moses, if my people walk in obedience to me and love me
and follow me, I will pour unlimited
blessing upon them. I will open the windows of heaven and just
simply bless them until they can't stand
it. But if they turn, if they go aside, I will plead with them
and send prophets to them and work with
them and have patience with them." (And the record is that
for four hundred years, God put up with the
intransigence of Israel.) But God also promised that if Israel
followed after other gods, he would raise
up a nation to come in and devastate the land. That is exactly
what God said and that is exactly what he
did.
It is interesting that Jeremiah predicted how long that captivity
would last. It would last seventy years.
(Jer. 25:11 ) Why seventy? Well, in the law God required Israel
to allow the land to rest fallow every
seventh year. They were not to plow the soil or use it; they were
to let it rest. (This is a very practical
principle of agricultural conservation.) During the sixth year,
to make up for the lack of food, the Lord
would bless them with a superabundance of crops so they would
have enough food to carry them
through that seventh year.
But Israel never obeyed that command. They continued using the
land from the time they entered it. In
a sense they robbed God of seventy years of rest for the land.
They used it continuously for 490 years
so God sent them out of it and rested the land for 70 years.
How faithful God is to his promise. The Lord is utterly faithful.
There is a widespread belief that God
is so loving, so tenderhearted, that he just gives in when you
pressure him a little; that he won't do what
he says he is going to do. But that idea has been put to rest
forever by one of the greatest verses in the
Bible (Rom. 8:32): "He who did not spare his own Son..."
Think of that. When he was made sin for us,
God did not spare him. That is how unflinching God is in following
through on his word. "He who did
not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all..." And
yet that verse ends in glory, doesn't it? "...will
he not also give us all things with him?" One side of it
is just as true as the other. Jeremiah learned that
God is faithful by the thoroughness of judgment.
Then in chapter 3 where you read of Jeremiah's personal pain,
we come to a tremendous passage.
Suddenly, in the midst of a long wail, he says (verse 22-33):
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never
come to an end;they are new every morning;
great is thy faithfulness."The Lord is my portion,"
says my soul, "therefore I will hope in him."The Lord
is
good to those who wait for him,to the soul that seeks him.It is
good that one should wait quietly for the
salvation of the Lord.It is good for a man that he bear the yoke
in his youth.Let him sit alone in silence when
he has laid it on him;let him put his mouth in the dust -- there
may yet be hope;let him give his cheek to the
smiter, and be filled with insults. For the Lord will not cast
off for ever,but, though he cause grief, he will
have compassion according to the abundance of his steadfast love;for
he does not willingly afflict or grieve
the sons of men. {Lam 3:22-33 RSV}
In many ways, this is one of the most beautiful passages in all
the Bible. It reveals the compassion of
the heart of God. Judgment, as Isaiah says, is his strange work.
He does not like to do it. He does not
willingly afflict or grieve the sons of men. His mercies are fresh
every morning. In his own pain
Jeremiah remembers this: that behind all the desolation is the
work of love. God destroyed Jerusalem
because it was heading the wrong way. He destroyed it so that
he could restore it later, and build it up
again in joy and peace and blessing. The Lord does not cast off
forever; though he causes grief, he will
have compassion.
At the end of chapter 4, the prophet says in verse 22:
The punishment of your iniquity, O daughter of Zion, is accomplished,
he will keep you in exile no longer;
but your iniquity, O daughter of Edom, he will punish, he will
uncover your sins. {Lam 4:22 RSV}
The daughter of Zion is Israel. The daughter of Edom refers to
the country bordering Israel that was
always a thorn in their flesh. Edom is always used in scripture
as a picture of the flesh. The Edomites
were related to Israel. They were the children of Esau, who is
always a picture of the flesh. The prophet
is saying, "God will set a limit to the punishment of his
own. He never drives them too far. He never
disciplines them too harshly. There is a limit. The punishment
is accomplished. He will keep them in
exile no longer; but as to the flesh, it has been utterly set
aside and Edom will be punished."
Chapter 5 describes the humiliation of judgment, but in the end,
Jeremiah comes to another flash of
insight (verse 19):
But thou, O Lord, dost reign for ever; thy throne endures to all
generations. {Lam 5:19 RSV}
What does this mean? Well, it means that though man may even perish
in sorrow, God endures. And
because God endures, the great purpose and workings of God endure.
God never does anything
temporarily; all that he does endures forever. Jeremiah sees that
what God has taught him in his grief
will have a practical use. Even if he were to die in the midst
of his grief, God's purposes endure. God is
simply preparing now for a work yet to come. God is not limited
by time. He is eternal. His throne, his
authority, endures to all generations. In practical terms, the
prophet is realizing that after he has been
through this time of grief, he will have learned a truth about
God that will make him absolutely
impervious to any other kind of test. Once he has been through
this, nothing can reach him, nothing can
upset him, nothing can trouble him, nothing can touch him or overthrow
him. He is now ready for
anything. And in God's great purpose there will be an opportunity
to use that strength.
I often think of those words of our Lord recorded in the fourteenth
chapter of Luke when he tells his
disciples the two parables about counting the cost. One involved
the man who went out to do battle and
met a king coming against him with an army. Jesus said, "What
man of you will do that and not sit
down first and count the cost?" Or, in the other parable
about building a tower, who will not count the
cost to see if he has enough to finish the building?
Usually we interpret this as our Lord saying to us, "If you
are going to follw Me, you should think it
through. You should count the cost. You should see if you really
mean business and are going to carry
this through." Nothing could be further from the Lord's meaning.
What he is saying is, "I am the one
who has to count the cost. I, as your Lord and Master, do not
go out to build a tower without sitting
down first and counting the cost. Nor do I go out to do battle
with a fierce king without first being sure
that I have what it takes to win this battle."
In this passage, Jesus is explaining why he said to the disciples,
"Except a man forsake his mother and
father and son and daughter he cannot be my disciple." As
they wondered at this, he said "You are
wondering why I am so severe with you. I will tell you. It is
because I am going out to do a great work
of building. I will build my church and the gates of Hell shall
not prevail against it. I am going out to
do battle with a great foe, a foe of cleverness and ruthlessness,
and I have to be sure that the men who
follow me are men on whom I can depend. I have to count the cost."
In other words, "I have to get you ready for a battle that
is going to go on far beyond this life. So I want
men who will be mine. who will be absolutely, wholly mine so I
can train them, prepare them, and
bring them through trials and hardships, teaching them the great
principles. When we finally get up
against it, up against the real conflict, I will have men that
I can depend upon. But I will have counted
the cost."
That is what he is talking about. When we learn our lessons here
-- when we learn how to handle
sorrow and heartache and desolation of spirit in this limited
way here -- we will be prepared so that
nothing can overthrow us; we will be unconquerable in the battle
that God faces in the subjugation of
the entire universe.
I often think of this: What lies beyond this life? What might
my job be in the Kingdom? Is not God
preparing us now to do a mightier work in the future? Is he not
getting us ready to carry on a conflict
that will extend to the uttermost reaches of this vast universe
of ours? Of course he is. God never does
anything without a purpose. He never creates anything without
intending to use it. And all this lies
ahead of us. That is why it is so important that we learn how
to face up to sorrow and to learn what
God would have us to learn in the midst of it.