June 21, 2011
Central Truth
All of this earth will tarnish and decay with time.
How dark the gold has become,
How the pure gold has changed!
The sacred stones are poured out
At the corner of every street.
(Lamentations 4:1)
1
How the gold has grown dim,
how the pure gold is changed!
The holy stones lie scattered
at the head of every street.
2
The precious sons of Zion,
worth their weight in fine gold,
how they are regarded as earthen pots,
the work of a potter's hands!
3
Even jackals offer the breast;
they nurse their young;
but the daughter of my people has become cruel,
like the ostriches in the wilderness.
4
The tongue of the nursing infant sticks
to the roof of its mouth for thirst;
the children beg for food,
but no one gives to them.
5
Those who once feasted on delicacies
perish in the streets;
those who were brought up in purple
embrace ash heaps.
6
For the chastisement
1
4:6
Or iniquity
of the daughter of my people has been greater
than the punishment
2
4:6
Or sin
of Sodom,
which was overthrown in a moment,
and no hands were wrung for her.
3
4:6
The meaning of the Hebrew is uncertain
7
Her princes were purer than snow,
whiter than milk;
their bodies were more ruddy than coral,
the beauty of their form
4
4:7
The meaning of the Hebrew is uncertain
was like sapphire.
5
4:7
Hebrew lapis lazuli
8
Now their face is blacker than soot;
they are not recognized in the streets;
their skin has shriveled on their bones;
it has become as dry as wood.
9
Happier were the victims of the sword
than the victims of hunger,
who wasted away, pierced
by lack of the fruits of the field.
10
The hands of compassionate women
have boiled their own children;
they became their food
during the destruction of the daughter of my people.
11
The LORD gave full vent to his wrath;
he poured out his hot anger,
and he kindled a fire in Zion
that consumed its foundations.
12
The kings of the earth did not believe,
nor any of the inhabitants of the world,
that foe or enemy could enter
the gates of Jerusalem.
13
This was for the sins of her prophets
and the iniquities of her priests,
who shed in the midst of her
the blood of the righteous.
14
They wandered, blind, through the streets;
they were so defiled with blood
that no one was able to touch
their garments.
15
“Away! Unclean!” people cried at them.
“Away! Away! Do not touch!”
So they became fugitives and wanderers;
people said among the nations,
“They shall stay with us no longer.”
16
The LORD himself
6
4:16
Hebrew The face of the LORD
has scattered them;
he will regard them no more;
no honor was shown to the priests,
no favor to the elders.
17
Our eyes failed, ever watching
vainly for help;
in our watching we watched
for a nation which could not save.
18
They dogged our steps
so that we could not walk in our streets;
our end drew near; our days were numbered,
for our end had come.
19
Our pursuers were swifter
than the eagles in the heavens;
they chased us on the mountains;
they lay in wait for us in the wilderness.
20
The breath of our nostrils, the LORD's anointed,
was captured in their pits,
of whom we said, “Under his shadow
we shall live among the nations.”
21
Rejoice and be glad, O daughter of Edom,
you who dwell in the land of Uz;
but to you also the cup shall pass;
you shall become drunk and strip yourself bare.
22
The punishment of your iniquity, O daughter of Zion, is accomplished;
he will keep you in exile no longer;
7
4:22
Or he will not exile you again
but your iniquity, O daughter of Edom, he will punish;
he will uncover your sins.
The second law of thermodynamics is an expression of the universal principle of decay observable in nature. I still remember my professor making this statement in class one day. It struck as true, even beyond the classroom.
I've been married for only a few months, and in this small amount of time I've noticed a few things about myself. One, I'm wrong very frequently. Two, I'm chock-full of pride. When these two combine, I find it too easy to become angry and then speak and act out of hurt. What keeps me from hurting others is my return to my faithful verses: "[B]e quick to hear, slow to speak and slow to anger; for the anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God" (James 1:19-20), and "Let no unwholesome word proceed from your mouth, but only such a word as is good for edification . . . ." (Ephesians 4:29).
How long would it take for me to fail when I remove my heart from its purpose? We are created to glorify God, yet we revert to our own paths. We pursue the fleeting. We measure ourselves by the tide of humanity around us, but avoid comparison to the perfection of Christ. Israel had long given up on pursuing God. The refined gold had lost its luster and value. Compassionate women came to the point they were willing to sacrifice their children. The pure and white now was black as soot. They had turned from God and were pursuing obvious decay that the sin of this world brings.
I thank the Lord for surrounding me with friends who correct me lovingly before I pursue the wrong path too long. May we never be so far from God that Lamentations 4 could be written about our times.
1. How do you judge the quality or direction of your life?
2. Do you surround yourself with those who will correct you lovingly when you stray from what is right?
3. When trials come your way, what reminders or clues do you have that turn you back to the life you want to live for the glory of God?
WEEKLY FAMILY ACTIVITY
LAMENTATIONS 3 – EZEKIEL 2 (JUNE 20-24)
Read Lamentations 3:19-33.
What do you learn about God's love in verse 22? What do you learn about His mercy for each day in verse 23?
In verse 27 you see the word yoke. Do you know what a yoke is? Look up on the Internet a picture of an ox in a yoke and talk about what the yoke does for the animal. If the animal tries to go its own way, what does the yoke do?
Why is it important for us to submit or to live under the yoke of God's guidance? From what you learned in verses 22 and 23, why can you trust God's yoke?
ACTIVITY: Let's simulate what it is like to be led by a yoke. Set up an obstacle course in your house or backyard. Have each person get a jacket from his closet. The first person to go through the obstacle course should put his jacket on backwards without his arms in the sleeves. Then blindfold him. Now have another member of the family guide him through the obstacle course without talking. She will take the sleeves behind the "walker" and will use them to guide him through. As you are doing it, talk about God as our guide and how we need to be paying attention to Him to recognize His efforts to guide us along the right paths.