We are seeking to hear Jeremiah’s wisdom as he grieves over the traumatic destruction of Jerusalem. We have posted several times on this passage in Lamentations 3, thought not in this particular context of dealing with trauma. We have always noted, and do so again here, our dependence on Matthew Henry’s comments that we have found to be exceptional.
· 3:22-23: His compassions fail not. This seems strange, given the extreme horror Jeremiah had witnessed. Lest you think he was either blind or naïve or living in self-denial, earlier in Lamentations (2:17,21) Jeremiah had been very clear: the LORD had not pitied! This word pitied means simply, “to spare.” God had not spared the city or the nation. Destruction was total. Well, except, of course, that Jeremiah had been spared. And his assistant Baruch was spared (Jer. 45). A government worker who had befriended Jeremiah was spared (Jer. 39:16-18). And many poor people were given the land to cultivate, and people who had escaped Jerusalem before the Babylonians had arrived survived and returned to the city (Jer. 40:6-8). In other words, there was a remnant, something that meant a lot to Jeremiah. It meant that there was still the “seed” of a nation through which God could still keep His covenants with Abraham and with David. God’s compassions had not failed. This word is actually the term for “womb” and tells us that while God kept His promise of judgment, He still had a deep love for Israel. The Apostle Paul faced traumatic situations in his life, but this is how he described them: hard pressed … yet not crushed; … perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down but not destroyed (2 Cor. 4:7-9). Jeremiah, seeing evidence of compassion, realized that they had not failed. They were new every morning. Each new day was evidence that his worst fears were subsiding. He was still there. He still had a life to plan for and to live. Concerning God he had to be honest and conclude: Great is Thy faithfulness. This is Jeremiah, who earlier struggled with the truth that God was in the judgment and fury poured out on His people. But now he had to recognize God’s goodness and compassion.
· 3:24: The LORD is my portion. “Portion” in the OT has to do with one’s inheritance. Jeremiah was from a priestly family (Jer. 1:1). Of that family, among the priests and Levites, the OT frequently said that “the LORD was their inheritance” (e.g. Deut. 18:2). They did not receive a piece of land like the rest of the citizens of Israel, but “the LORD was their inheritance.” In other words, God would provide for them and be the source of their joy. But now, with the land under the control of the Babylonians, no one owned land anymore. Jeremiah sought to encourage himself and all who were left, to consider God to be their Portion. The traumatic situations in our lives give us a definite opportunity to make this fundamental truth a reality in our hearts. There is coming a time when we will depart this earth and leave it all behind. As Job put it, Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return there. The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed by the name of the LORD (Job 1:21). If I make the LORD my Portion, the source of my happiness, then I can “hope in Him” as Jeremiah said and did. (Be patient: we will continue in the next post.)