THE LAMENTATIONS OF JEREMIAH
From the 'Synopsis'
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. There is nothing more affecting than the sentiments produced in the
heart by the conviction that the subject of affliction is beloved of God, that
He loves that which He is obliged to smite, and is obliged to smite that which
He loves. The prophet, while laying open the affliction of Jerusalem,
acknowledges that the sin of the people had caused it. Could that diminish the
sorrow of his heart? If on the one hand it was a consolation, on the other it
humbled and made him hide his face. The pride of the enemy, and their joy in
seeing the affliction of the beloved of God, give occasion to sue for
compassion on behalf of the afflicted, and judgment on the malice of the enemy.
At the end of chapter 1, after full confession that it was Judah's sin that had
brought the evil upon them, and that Jehovah was righteous, the people call on
the eye of Jehovah to look on their sorrow, and judge those by whose wickedness
they were punished.
The second chapter is a very deep and touching
appeal. The desolation of Jerusalem is looked at as Jehovah's own work, on what
was His own, and not as that of the enemy. Never had there been such sorrow.
Not only had He polluted the kingdom and its princes, and had been as an enemy
against Jerusalem, and all that was goodly in it, but He had cast down His
altar, abhorred His sanctuary. He no longer respected what He had Himself set
up. Only we must remember that it was when the relationships of Jehovah with
His people depended, however long God's patience, on the faithfulness of the
people's obedience to Jehovah, on the old covenant. But this consideration
gives room for appealing to Himself. Still it is a solemn thing when Jehovah is
forced to reject that which He acknowledges to be His own. But it must be so if
the association of His name is only a means of falsifying the testimony of what
He is (v. 6, 7). And this brings before us the amazingly important principle
contained in the ministry of Jeremiah, not merely the substitution of Babylon
and the Gentile empire for Jerusalem and God's government in Israel, but the
setting this last aside in itself, the ground of God's relationship with man
where it subsisted, as that which could not subsist when put to the test.
In chapter 3 we find the language of faith, of sorrowing faith, of the
Spirit of Christ in the remnant, on the occasion of the judgment of Jerusalem
in which God had dwelt. Before, the prophet (or the Spirit of Christ in him)
spoke in the name of Jerusalem, deploring her sufferings and confessing her
sin, while appealing to Jehovah against her enemies, relating what He had done
in forsaking His sanctuary, and (from v. 11 of chap. 2) expressing the depth of
her affliction at the sight of the evil. But in chapter 3 he places himself in
the midst of the evil to express the sentiments of the Spirit of Christ; not,
it is true, in an absolute manner, according to the perfection of Christ
Himself, but as acting in the heart of the prophet (as is generally the case in
Jeremiah), expressing his personal distress - a distress produced by the
Spirit, but clothed in the feelings of the prophet's own heart - to bring out
that which practically was going on in the heart of a faithful Israelite, the
reality of that which was most elevated in that day of anguish and affliction,
in which alas! there was no more hope from the people's side than from that of
the enemies who attacked them, and in which the heart of the faithful suffered
without hope of remedy, yet much more on account of a people who hearkened not
to the voice of Jehovah, than on account of enemies raised up in judgment. What
has Christ not suffered! That which His Spirit produces in the midst of human
weakness, He has Himself undergone and felt in its full extent; only that He
was perfect in all that His heart went through in His affliction.
In
chapter 3 the prophet expresses then in his own person, by the Spirit of
Christ, all that he felt as sharing the affliction of Israel, and being at the
same time the object of their enmity - a position remarkably analogous to that
of Christ. What suffering can be like that of one who shares the suffering of
God's people without being able to turn away the evil, because they refuse to
hear God's message - like that of one who bears this affliction on his heart
with the feeling that, if this foolish people would but have hearkened, the
wrath of God should have been turned away? It was the lamentation of Christ
Himself, "Oh, if thou hadst known," etc. In the main Jeremiah partook of the
same feelings. But we see him more as being of the people, and participating in
his own person in the consequences of the evil, seeing himself under these
consequences with the people, because they had rejected his testimony. This may
be said of the Lord at the close of His life, or on the cross. But we see that
this sentiment, a little known in the case of Job, takes here the form of a
personal prayer, complaining of personal suffering. Jeremiah suffers for the
testimony, and for the rejection of the testimony. The first nineteen verses of
chapter 3 contain the expression of this state. It is altogether the spirit of
the remnant; and, with the exception of the sentiment I have just mentioned, it
is that expressed in many of the Psalms. Into it all indeed, if we go on to the
cross,* Christ Himself entered.
{*I add, "if we go on to the cross,"
because, though Christ may have felt much of it in His sorrow as He approached
the cross, there are expressions which apply to Him only as suffering there.
The direct proper application is to the remnant, as is the case with the
Psalms, and to Jeremiah in particular.
The prophet speaks as having
borne in his own heart the deep grief of that which Jehovah had brought upon
Jerusalem; but feeling it as one who knew God to be his God, so that he could
experience what it was to be the object of the wrath of God. He suffered with
Jerusalem, and he suffered for Jerusalem. But the truth of this relation with
Jehovah, while making him feel the affliction more deeply, sustained him also
(v. 22). He begins to feel that, after all, it is better to have to do with
Jehovah, although, in another point of view, this made it all the more painful.
He feels that it is good to be afflicted, and to wait upon Jehovah who smites:
for He will not cast off for ever. He does not afflict willingly, but from
necessity. Why complain of the chastening of sin? It were better to turn unto
Jehovah[1]. He encourages Israel to do so, and while remembering the affliction
of his weeping people, faith is in exercise until Jehovah shall interpose. It
is well that an affliction like this should be felt; the only harm is when it
is allowed to weaken confidence in the Lord.
The prophet calls to mind
the affliction of Jerusalem, and, remembering the way which he had been
succoured himself, he makes use of the kindness he had experienced to confirm
his assurance that God would shew the same kindness to the people. But with
respect to the proud and careless who reject the truth, their enmity against
God, manifesting itself in their enmity against those who were the bearers of
His word, he asks for the judgment of God upon them[2]. Thus relieved in
spirit, and his heart filled with the sentiment that, since the evil came from
Jehovah, that which gave so much depth to the sorrow was also a comfort to the
heart, he can return to the affliction itself, measuring its whole extent,
which the anguish of his soul prevented his apprehending till he had been able
to arrive at its true source. Now he can enter into details, although with deep
grief, yet with more calmness because His heart is with God. The sense of
trouble and distress at the thought of God's judgment falling on those whom He
loves is not sinful, although in Jeremiah's case his heart sometimes failed
him.
It is right to be troubled, and, as it were, overwhelmed, at
God's breaking, not perhaps the relationship, but His present connection with
that which was the object of His favour, that which bore the name and the
testimony of God. Christ felt this for Himself, though in Him distress went
much farther: "Now is my soul troubled, and what shall I say? Father, save me
from this hour." Only in Christ all is perfect; and if He feels in perfection
the profound distress of the object of God's love becoming the object of His
judgment, a feeling of unparalleled grief, seeing it at the same time according
to the perfection of God's ways, He can say, "For this cause came I unto this
hour; Father, glorify thy name!" He was Himself the necessary object of all
God's affection, and consequently (if the judgment was to glorify God) the
object also of a perfect judgment, that is, of a complete forsaking on God's
part. That which is dreadful in this thought is, that the change of relative
position was absolute and perfect in His case according to the very perfection
of the relationship. He suffered the forsaking of God, instead of enjoying
infinite favour which He knew.
There was something similar in the case
of Jerusalem; and Jeremiah, feeling by the Spirit of Christ the preciousness of
this relationship, and entering into it as sharing it, he suffers with that
which was thus judged of God. Only, although moved by the Spirit of Christ, he
must find the equilibrium of his thoughts, he must seek Jehovah to bring Him
into the affliction, amidst all his personal grief, and the true but human
workings of a heart that was shaken and cast down by the circumstances. He
attached himself to Jerusalem, as resting on her position before God, and not
solely and absolutely for God, and as God Himself, as did our blessed Lord.
There was an object between his soul and God (an object beloved also by God),
and it was not loved absolutely in God, and with the affection of God, and
hence the affliction had to reach this object, he being in it and of it, reach
his heart in this place - and then God draw it to Himself, so that he may look
at all from Jehovah's view of it. But Christ was Himself absolutely in the
place, for God's glory and the salvation of others. The judged thing from which
He was infinitely far, even as man, he was to be before God. Ever perfect, He
learned to the absolute fulness what it was to be this before God, and
glorified God there. But this, though we know it true, none can fathom. There
was in Jeremiah the right foundation, and he finds Jehovah, first of all in
spite of the affliction, but soon in the affliction itself, and he recovers
himself immediately, not from the affliction, but in the affliction, by the
power of God. Christ can say, "How often would I have gathered," etc. This was
the affection of God. Jeremiah confesses sin, and ought to confess it, as
himself in the place, though a testimony of God in it. But this thought changes
so far the character of the feeling (see chap. 1: 19, 20).
Christ
sought for nothing as a resource, as if self were concerned in it. His
affliction was unmixed and absolute to Himself alone, more profound (for who
could share it?) but perfect as being His alone. Thus, in John 12, when it is
Himself personally (for this Gospel sets the old vine aside as rejected), He
cannot desire that the hour of God's forsaking should come; He ought to fear
and be troubled, and He was therefore heard. But it is between God and Himself
alone. No other thought comes in between - it is wholly with God. Alas! had it
been possible, all was lost. But no; it is the absolute submission of the
perfect man, who seeks (and seeks nothing else) that the name of God may be
glorified according to God's perfection; that at all cost to Himself God's name
may be glorified. Not now as God, who must necessarily maintain its glory, but
as one who submits to everything, who sacrifices Himself, in order that God may
glorify His name. For this cause He has been supremely glorified as man - a
glorious mystery, in which the glory of God will shine forth throughout
eternity.
Jeremiah, having now found Jehovah in the affliction,
tranquilly measures its whole extent. But this is itself a consolation. For
after all Jehovah who changes not is there to comfort the heart. This is
chapter 4. He calls the whole to mind, and contrasts that which Jerusalem was,
when under the blessing of Jehovah, with that which His anger has produced. It
is no longer only the overwhelming circumstances of the present scene, but what
it was before God. The Nazarites pass before his thoughts; that which
Jerusalem, as the city of the great King, had been even in the eyes of her
enemies; the anointed of Jehovah, under whose shadow the people might have
lived (as we have already seen), although the Gentiles ruled - the anointed of
Jehovah had been taken in their pits, like the prey of the hunter. But the
afflicted spirit of God's servant, who bears the burden of His people, can now
estimate not only the affliction that overwhelms them, but the position of the
enemies of Jerusalem, and that of the beloved city. Nay, he who would have one
run to and fro through the streets of Jerusalem to find a just one, now sees
the enemies have slain the just in her midst (see v. 13 and Jer. 5: 1). The cup
of God's wrath shall pass through unto Edom, who was rejoicing in the ruin of
the city of Jehovah; and as to Zion, she has doubtless drunk this cup to the
dregs; but if she has done so, it was in order that she might drink of it no
more. The punishment of her iniquity is accomplished, she shall no more be
carried into captivity. All was finished for her: she had drunk the cup which
she confessed she had deserved (see chap. 4: 11; 1: 18-20). But the sin of
haughty Edom should be laid bare. God would visit her iniquity.
The
prophet can now present the whole affliction of the people to God, as an object
of compassion and mercy. This is an onward step in the path of these deep
exercises of heart. He is at peace with God; he is in His presence; it is no
longer a heart struggling with inward misery. All is confessed before Jehovah
who is faithful to His people, so that he can call on God to consider the
affliction in order that He may remember His suffering people according to the
greatness of His compassions. For Jehovah changes not (chap. 5: 19-21). The
sense of the affliction remains in full, but God is brought in, and everything
having been recalled and judged before Him, all that had happened being cleared
up to the heart, Jeremiah can rest in the proper and eternal relations between
God and His beloved people; and, shutting himself into his direct relations
with his God, he avails himself of His goodness, as being in those relations,
to find in the affliction of the beloved people an opportunity for calling His
attention to them. This is the true position of faith - that which it attains
as the result of its exercises before God at the sight of the affliction of His
people (an affliction so much the deeper from its being caused by sin).
This Book of Lamentations is remarkable because we see in it the
expression of the thoughts of the Spirit of God, that is, those produced in
persons under His influence, the vessels of His testimony, when God was forced
to set aside that which He had established in the world as His own. There is
nothing similar in the whole circle of the revelations and of the affections of
God. He says Himself, How could He treat them as Admah and Zeboim? Christ went
through it in its fullest extent. But He went through it in His own perfection
with God. He acted thus with regard to Jerusalem, and wept over it. But here
man is found to have lost the hope of God's interposing on His people's behalf.
God would not abandon a man who was one of this people, who loved them, who
understood that God loved them, that they were the object of His affection. He
was one of them. How could he bear the idea that God had cast them off? No
doubt God would re-establish them. But in the place where God had set them, all
hope was lost for ever. In the Lord's own presence it is never lost. It is in
view of this that all these exercises of heart are gone through, until the
heart can fully enter into the mind and affections of God Himself. Indeed this
is always true.
The Spirit gives us here a picture of all these
exercises. How gracious! To see the Spirit of God enter into all these details,
not only of the ways of God, but of that also which passes through a heart in
which the judgment of God is felt by grace, until all is set right in the
presence of God Himself. Inspiration gives us, not only the perfect thoughts of
God, and Christ the perfection of man before God, but also all the exercises
produced in our poor hearts, when the perfect Spirit acts in them, so far as
these thoughts, all mingled as they are, refer in the main to God, or are
produced by Him. So truly cares He for us! He hearkens to our sighs, although
much of imperfection and of that which belongs to our own heart is mixed with
them. It is this that we see in the Book of Lamentations, in the Psalms, and
elsewhere, and abundantly, though in another manner, in the New Testament.
John Nelson Darby
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[1] We have here a principle of the deepest interest, and most instructive.
I will follow it out with a little more detail. The principles are in the text.
Jehovah smiting His own altar and all the holy things, having been set up by
Himself in the midst of His people as marking them as His and the formal link
with them as their God, their destruction which broke that formal link, as far
as God's own ordinances went, put an end to the connection; and this, as one of
that people and living in that bond, had been the deepest distress to the
true-hearted Jeremiah; but while this, because they were of God, pressed upon
his heart, it led him, when he had got to the depth of the feeling, to the
Jehovah whose ordinances they were; Jehovah known in his heart takes then the
place of the ordinances which bound the people to Him, and his soul is drawn
out in confidence to Him who was within and beyond all those links. He feels
and speaks from the place of affliction, but his soul is humbled in him when
personally thus in intercourse with Jehovah, and so has hope. And this is a
sure and immovable anchor of faith when God our Father is truly known (see v.
22-26). He is brought quite low and subdued in spirit, but Jehovah is before
his soul and known, though he must wait for Him (v. 27-30), but Jehovah rises
up before him. He does not afflict willingly; and now he turns in greater
calmness of spirit to try his own ways (v. 39-42). Yet he looks fully at all
the sorrow (v. 42-49). But now Jehovah is in his heart, and the "till" (v. 50),
the full assurance of which flows from His very nature, for personally, when at
the lowest, he had called and Jehovah had drawn near to him, and pleaded the
cause of his soul, and he looks for Jehovah's judgment on his relentless and
causeless enemies. No doubt the call for judgment is characteristic of
Jehovah's relationship with Israel. Still, there will be such on all the open
enemies of the Lord.
[2] In all this the spirit of these passages is
wonderfully in accordance with that of the Psalms, as indeed is very natural.
The way in which Christ entered into it is spoken of in what is said on the
Book of Psalms. Christ passed, in grace, through all exercises as to it in
perfectness - Jeremiah and the remnant, that they might be perfected in their
own state and feeling as to it. See what follows in the text.